THE MOKNING- OUEGONTAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1900. VICTORIA IN LONDON Demonstrations Outdid Those of Jubilee Day. CELEBRATION OF THE VICTORIES The Queen' (i Drive Throusrh. the City Marked by Scenes of Un bounded Enthusiasm. LONDON", March 8. Queen "Victoria and the people of the greatest city In her Empire today celebrated the victories which they believe have transformed the campaign In South Africa from one of reverse to one of success. That Is the only explanation of the unbounded, un paralleled enthusiasm with which hun dreds of thousands hailed their sovereign. In many ways these demonstrations out did those of the Diamond jubilee, although there were no glittering pageants, no tri umphal arches, no procession of Princes, but only a dozen Life Guards, followed by a little old lady in the plainest black costume, who had come for a few days stay at Buckingham Palace, as she has done many a time before. Yet her hold upon the hearts of her people was prob ably never more strikingly manifested. Unlike that of the Diamond Jubilee, to day's popular outburst was almost im promptu. The fierce pride in the strength of a mighty empire that pervaded Lon don's exultation when the Queen last drove through the streets in 1897 had van ished, and in its place there were genuine thankfulness and rejoicing for the vic tories -which had succeeded months of gloom. The depth of feeling -which this demonstration represented could only be gauged by those who mingled with the crowd. Mothers In deep mourning for sons killed on the faT-off veldt struggled bravely with the most hilarious to catch a glimpse of the Queen, -whose womanly sympathy and thoughtfulness for the sol diers had touched their hearts. Often the long, cold vigils were rendered futile by tears that dimmed the eyes and blurred the vision as the royal carriage passed. As one very old woman said, "I've seen her many a time, but she said she -was sorry for my boy, and I must see her agai before I die." Thousands braved the raw east -wind and stood for hours waiting patiently who have often seen the Queen, and who, in ordinary circumstances, would scarcely budge to watch her pass. Among those were many personal friends of the sov ereign, for example, the Countess of Brownlow, a great friend of Victoria, and a favorite at court, who sat on the curb shirerlng for hours -with the crowd out side Buckingham Palace. In short, it was notfso much a desire to see the mon arch as it was an overwhelming need of an outlet for Jubilation over the war and a natural inclination to let the Queen see and share the gladness of her people, that prompted London spontaneously to make today one of the most memorable celebra tions of Victoria's, reign. It was quite different from the mad re joicings that marked the relief of Lady smith. Rowdyism was conspicuously ab sent, although the crowds reached such proportions that the number of police would have been quite Inadequate had the people been obstreperous. Moreover, In termingled with the -rejoicings of patriot Ism, there was a particularly keen appre ciation of the Queen's personality, her womanliness, her great age. This little touch of reverence for sex, rather than for sovereign, rendered the huge crowds tractable in the hands of the good-naturad police, and It was not a hard task to In duce them to surge back, and to make way for the royal carriage. When the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and "Empress of India did pass nodding, as it to many friends, Instead of bowing with royal restraint, there echoed under the roar of cheers many heartfelt expressions, such as "God bless, her," "God keep her." "She's a brave woman," and scores more like them. It was small wonder that now and again tears of Joy rolled down the cheeks of the aged sovereign. Stood tbe Fatljyue "Well. The semiofficial duties undertaken by the Queen during the day would have tried the resources of many women under 81 years of age. Starting early from Wind sor by train, she reached the metropolis shortly after noon. Until she reached Buckingham Palace there was never a moment of quiet. Cheers spread along her route like prairie fire. Previous to her arrival. Lord Roberts, General Buller and other heroes of the war had monopo lized the lung power of the waiting crowd, and such crowds were never seen in Lon don even on Jubilee day. Whenever a soldier or a sailor appeared he was al most mobbed, so anxious were the people to show Its patriotism. The staid equip pages of nobles, that never before wero guilty of displaying anything more start ling than a crest, were gay with colored streamers. Every house along the route to the palace made some attempt at deco ration. When the hoarse volley announced the royal approach, children and women were hoisted on the shoulders of men. The art students at Kensington, male and female, as on Ladysmith day, were again to the fore, bareheaded and singing patri otic songs, while throughout the medical students In large bodios-led' the cheering and singing. The scene on the quadrangle of the palace after the Queen's arrival when Lords and Commoners Joined in singing the National anthem, was unprecedented and will probably never be repeated dur ing the present reign. Viscount Cross and Mr. Chamberlain acted as spokesmen, and graciously greeted the royal visitor; but it was to Lady Buller that the Queen quickly turned with a grateful smile. Then. In the presence of the legislators of the United Kingdom, drawing the wife of the reliever of Ladysmith closer to her. she whispered words of thanks. After scarcely three hours of rest, Het Majesty made a tour of the city proper, amid the greatest enthusiasm. It is Im possible to estimate the extent of the crowds through which she passed before returning to Buckingham Palace, but the members were well up In the hundreds of thousands. After It was all over, and while a cheering crowd of 10,000 people still hung outside the palace, the Queen dined with the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Duke and Duchess of York, and the other members of the royal family. The Prince of Wales had been absent during the day, owing to the sale of the late Duke of Westminster's racehorses at Klngsclere, but the Princess had come in for a large share of the ovations. In response to a message from the Lord Mayor this evening. Sir Arthur Bigge the Queen's Private Secretary, wrote: "Her Majesty is not fatigued, and she Is much gratified and touched by the loyal and enthusiastic reception accorded her through this afternoon's drive." As the evening advanced the crowds In creased, red fire was burned, and the whole concourse took up "God Save the Queen." Then came blue lights and the strains of "Rule. Britannia" making th park ring. This was kept up until a balcony window was opened, and one of the royal party, believed to be the Prince of Wales, appeared. After a vociferous outburst, he disappeared, and then the crowd. broke up. and demonstrations such as have not been seen in London Jn many years came to an end. The Qu-een'rt Arrival. The Queen reached Paddlngton Station about 12:.X) o'clock today, and proceeded under a cavalry escort to Buckingham Palace. Throughout the demonstration there predominated a note of triumph, and the cheers that mad the murky streets ring Werc almost as much in honor of the British victories in South Africa as they were'trlbutes of a loyal people to a mon arch whose womanly sympathy has been so strikingly shown since the war be gan. The royal party's departure from. Wind sor was marked by more than usual In terest. For hours before the Queen start ed for London, crowds gathered in tha streets which had been announced as her route through the metropolis, and which were decorated with flags. It was foggy and cold, but no one seemed to care. At Paddington the station had been cleared of the general public, but outside thousands of people waited patiently. When the train from Windsor arrived, a tremendous cheer went up. Her Majesty came down the platform leaning on the arm of an Indian attendant, and entered an open landau, in which also sat Princess Henry, 'of Battenburg and Princess Vic toria, of Schleswlg-Holsteln. They all wore black. From the packed sidewalks and from every available window came a continuous roar of cheers, while hundreds of little flags were waved all the way to Buckingham Palace. The side street were packed, 10, 20, and sometimes 103 deep. But it was around the palace itself that the chief throng gathered. By 9 in tho morning, carriages, cabs and vehicles of every sort, people from the City and tho West End, and distant parts of the coun try congregnted In St. James's Park, which the palace fronts. By noon It was estimated that 50,000 people were gathered about the palace, patiently waiting. There were hundreds of police on hand, but they had little difficulty In keeping the crowd In order and opening passages for the peo ple, the members of the House of Com mons and members of the household, who were alone privileged to pass the great railings that shut off the palace. Those not fortunate enough to get near the palace Itself climbed up trees, brightening the bare park with . flags. The women's dresses, which were unusually gay, also enlivened the scene. Shortly'after noon the Duke and Duch ess of York drove Into the courtyard and received an ovation. Mr. Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, Joined the distinguished throng in the courtyard, unnoticed. As time passed the crowds outside grew more dense. Then, from Constitution Hill came the dull roar of distant cheers, and the cry, "She Is com ing," was passed from mouth to mouth. Now the roar was taken up by those within the precincts of the palace. Back on their creaking hinges flew the great gates and up went the royal standard. A patrol of police went by, there was a flash of steel as the Life Guardsmen and outriders trotted through the gates and then all hats flew in the air. A mighty cheer arose and slowly there passed a carriage, on the back seat of which sat a little black figure, heavily veiled, and nodding right and left. Still nodding vigorously. Her Majesty passed out of sight Into the quadrangle. There the Peers and Commoners assembled, sing ing "God Save the Queen." As Her Majesty entered the palace, outside there was pandemonium. Over the roadway which had been kept clear for the car riages, the crowds swarmed until It was impossible for those near the railing to move an Inch. Somebody started singing "God Save the Queen," and half a mile or more of people took up the strains. Those who saw the queen unveiled, say she looked remarkably well. Visit to the City. The Queen visited tho City this after noon, reaching its confines on the Em bankment opposite the Tempi steps at about 4 o'clock, where she was welcomed by the Lord Mayor and Corporation in their robes of state. The Lord Mayor presented Her Majesty with the city sword of state. With a smile, the Queen touched the sword and returned It to the Lord Mayor, saying: "I thank you for all that my City has done." to which the Lord Mayor replied: "Your Gracious Majesty's words will forever be treasured in my heart" Then the Life Guards trotted on, in pur ple and ermine and gorgeous uniforms, the Marshal and Sheriffs and Aldermen, with the gold-laced flunkies and lumbering state coaches left behind, and the somber dressed Queen drove quickly along the Embankment which was black with cheer ing people. Accompanying Her Majesty were the Princess Christian of Schleswig- Holsteln and Princess Henry of Batten- berg. The Life Guards trotted on through the thoroughfares of tho City, which were everywhere thronged. So quickly were the horses driven that the crowds scarcely had a chance to cheer before the con stantly bowing monarch had passed out of sight By 5 o'clock the Queen, going by way of Holborn and Oxford streets, had returned to Buckingham Palace. It was a repeti tion of the Jubilee drive, with the ex ception that it was so hastily planned that no attempts at decoration could be carried out But considering the short space of time it was astonishing to see the number of flags which appeared along the route of Her Majesty. Many Ameri can flags were displayed by American concerns. The whole metropolis assumed a gala aspect Thousands of people wore red, white and blue badges and flags while a body of students who had marched to meet the Queen singing "Rule, Britan nia,", had Union Jacks wrapped around their necks. Buttons and medals of Generals Roberts, Kitchener, Buller and White and others found a huge sale, and khaki ties and dresses were everywhere in evidence. The crowd outside Buckingham Palace had Increased shortly before midnight to 300.000, all singing patriotic songs. Finally tho Prince of Wales and Duke of York came upon the balcony and vociferous cheering followed. A few minutes later they disappeared, and then the Queen herself, accompanied by several ladles, made her appearance. This was the sig nal for the; national anthem a perfect roar of song, and for never-to-be-forgotten cheers. The blinds of the palace were drawn, but thousands remained to sing and cheer. BRINGS PEACE XEARER. Roberts' Success Indicates the Begin ning: of the End. LONDON, March S. Roberts' success yesterday, the best-Informed authorities are satisfied, brings peace perceptibly nearer. The experts anticipate that the burghers will make no further stand west of the Free State capital, and some of them even deduce, from the fact that the Boer forces are divided and have retreat ed in different directions, that demoral ization has set In, and that the Transvaal forces will next be found carefully en trenched In positions north of the Vaal River, at which the bulk of the Free Staters will abandon the contest and sue for peace. Elsewhere the news indicates that the conditions continue hopeful from a British point of view, the telegrams from Mafeklng alone showing any des pondency. Lord Roberts telegraphs he has cap tured a Krupp gun and a number of tents and wagons. He also announces that Gen eral Clements has occupied Norval s Pont. A special dispatch from Moltcno says that the British occupied Burghersdorp unopposed last night The Demand of Humanity. Chicago Tribune. According to General Davis, 75 per cent of the males over 21 are rtually In a state of abject poverty. "A few may own a machete or a hoe, but more have no worldly possessions whatever. Their food Is fruit and if they are wage-earners a little rice and codfish In addition." Hu manity demands that they be given un taxed food. No political party can suffer by doing that The Thrift of the Dutch. Chicago Record. The Dutch are a thrifty people. Many of their leaders are millionaires. President Krugers wealth Is estimated at J25.000.000. Consequently, In the market of Europe thj word of the African Boer Is as good as his bond. Anything that he buys he can pay for, and pay for In money. CONTROL OF PHILIPPINES GENERAL "WHEELER SUGGESTS A TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT. Trade Possibilities In the Orient Ap proaching Era of Unprecedented Prosperity. SAN FRANCISCO, March 8. General Joseph Wheeler favors giving the Philip pines a territorial form of government Said he: "I believe the people are ready for a certain kind of self-government Thes could be given the power to make laws, under such a system of government as has been adopted for our territories. The mu nicipal governments are all in the bands of the natives, and they get along without trouble or friction. Under a territorial form, the islands could be best con trolled." He reviews his impressions of trade pos sibilities in the Orient as follows: "England. Russia, Germany and France have braved war and pestilence in efforts to secure a share of the wealth which will come to them by commercial relations with these peoples. The treaty of peace cast upon us the responsibility of sov ereignty over from 9,000.000 to 11,000,000 peo ple, together with the islands which the inhabit containing an area three times that of our great and prosperous Empire State. "Very naturally, there may be honest differences of opinion as to whether every thing has been conducted during the two years in accordance with the highest wis dom and best possible judgment, but there should be no question among the Ameri can people as to the duty and wisdom of now uniting in a determined effort to take the situation as it stands, and so to con duct the affairs of our country as to add the most to its glory, honor, welfare and prosperity, it Is a friendly struggle for commercial supremacy in which our rival nations are using their best efforts, and. I say, let us, in a friendly but determined spirit use our best efforts also. "Our Pacific cities are now face to face with the Eastern shores of Asia. The Nicaragua Canal will bring our Gulf ports nearer to them than those of the Atlantic and Europe, With Manila as a great de pot, steamers from that emporium could reach the commercial ports of Eastern Asia as readily as it can be done by Eng lish steamers from Hong Kong. We must consider that about one-third of the popu lation of the earth is concentrated in the Eastern half of Asia, and that these vast multitudes are rapidly learning to appre ciate the advantages, and, I might add, the necessity of high civilization, and they are also learning to realize the comfort which Is enjoyed by the people of the most civilized nations In the possession and use of the products, manufactures and mechanical developments which are there found. "Europe and America must purchase the silks, teas, coffee, hemp, spices and prod ucts of the handiwork of tho people of the Orient and this Immense population needs articles which American farms and factories are producing cheaper and better than those which are produced anywhere else on earth. Cotton cloth, such as Is manufactured in Southern cotton mills Is needed by the people of the East to the enormous value of four to five thousand million dollars. "England, with her navy, has ap proached China by the sea, and has estab lished firm footholds at favorable locations on the coast France has- acquired posses sions In Asia, which contain a. population four times as great and an area nearly 10 times as large as that of our Empiro State. England's dominions and depend encies in Asia now extend over an area of 1,600,000 square miles, and contains a population of nearly 3OD,0O0,O00. Russia has already in Asia territory exceeding in area 6,000,000 square miles, and contain ing over 19.000,000 people. Port Arthur, the great commercial and war port is firmly In her grasp. This gives Russia a power over Corea, which will add much to her strength. The completion of the Trans-Siberian Railway and Its branches, the opening of the Nicaragua Canal and the annexation of the Pacific islands to the United States will more thoroughly revolutionize the commercial relations of the world than has ever been done by all other Influences combined during the last three centuries. "It seems to me that there is but little limit to the possibilities which are before us, and we are certainly justified in the belief and hope that the United States is on the edge of an era of unprecedented prosper! ty." "VVithdraivnl of Troops. NEW YORK. March S. A special to the Herald from Washington: says: By direction of Acting Secretary of War Melklejohn, Instructions have been sent to Major-Gcneral Otis to return to the United States some time in May one battalion each of the Fourteenth, Eighteenth and Twenty-third Infantry. The withdrawal of those troops was recommended by Major-General Miles several months ago. He pointed out to the department that the three regiments designated would have been two years In the Philippines In June next There Is no doubt that the decision of the department to wltndraw three bat talions, which number more than 1200 men. Is Influenced to some extent by tho disorganization of the rebel army and the prospect that the American troops will no longer meet with resistance from an organized force. Notwithstanding the action of tho de partment in ordering home these bat talions, officers who have served In the Philippines, and who have just returned, say that -this must not be taken to mean that the rebellion has been suppressed. The insurgents are operating in small forces, which scatter upon the approach of American troops, but which reassemble and attack whenever a good opportunity presents Itself. A well-known officer In Luzon, writing to a friend in this city, gives It as his opinion that the rebellion will not be entirely suppressed in less than 10 years. Otis Cnsualty Report. WASHINGTON. March 8. The last casualty list received at the War Depart ment from General Otis follows: Appendicitis March 2. Tilden A. Lo gan. Twenty-eighth; diarrhoea March 1. Charles L. Slocum. Thirty-seventh In fantry; dysentery December 8, Henry Alexander, Twenty-fourth Infantry: Feb ruary 7. John McEachern. Corporal, Thltry-seventh Infantry: 24th, Willis C. Fulton. Seventeenth Infantry: 27th, Wil liam Banks. Forty-ninth Infantry; 27th, Ed Stroupr Thirty-eighth Infantry; 2Sth, James Pryor, Twenty-fourth Infantry: drowned 24th, John Hendrickson, Thirty seventh Infantry: enteritis 25th, Harvey L. Loeman, Eighteenth Infantry: typhoid fever 7th. Moss B. Robe. Nineteenth In fantry: 22d. William Walker. Ninth In fantry; malarial fever 25th. P. Gurule, Thirty-fourth Infantry: 27th, M. D. Crane. Thirty-fifth Infantry: 27th. Henry Tllley, Quartermaster-Sergeant. Ninth Infantry. Wounded in action January 20. George F. Bauday. Eleventh Cavalry: 20th. Pat rick Phelan. Eleventh Cavalry: Febru ary 23. William F. Kingdom. Thirty-seventh Infantry: 2Sth. Thomas Brown. Cor poral, Thirty-eighth Infantry. Variola 17th. Fred S. Johnson. Thirty third Infantry: 22d. Paul H. Phillips, Fourth Cavalry: 25th. Jose Martin. Hos pital Corps; 26th. Charles E. Ramsey, Thirtv-thlrd Infantry: March 3. James M. Woodland. Seventh Infantry: pleurisy February 23. Taylor Johnson. Twenty sftcond Infantry: chloroform anaesthesia 17th. Robert M. Bartlett Forty-second Infantry. The Rcpnlilicnnn Invltlnjc Defeat. Indianapolis News. If the men at Washington had the sllght 2st appreciation of the strength of public sentiment against the bill, they would not think of passing It Ex-Senator Wash burn, of Minnesota, does not put the case too strongly when he says: "In my judgment, the whole business Is Impolitic and ill-advised, and Is receiv ing the earnest condemnation of the American people. Leaders cannot afford to disregard, pifbllc sentiment so pro nounced." We warn the Republicans once more that they are inviting serious criticism and possible defeat 9 MANY INTERESTING EVENT Times Seem to Be Replete "With Cu- United states Investor. The tiniei bcem u on itv.oie with in- teteSUlib li.iiUict.1.1 OccUlTciiOco. 'iu Ulu- ii)u uiu a. tew oi witae, ma ai.aue to tne tunumsmiig revoauou m cguuc tiun wit a lac j. u.ru-.vciiue lauroaa, Uu. rtceiversnip oi trie bill tea Suites Aii.uith ioiupajiy votuerwise Known is ints riour Irusi;, the organization ot tne bnuea Aieuub Semng company, tne purchase oi the control of tne Jbne 'Aceynone Com pany by tne Telephone, Tcefarapn & u Die Company of. Amouea, the neavy de cline in tne va.ue of tne snares ot me American ou&ar Reumng company, tne big crop In the quotation, on .rieil Tele phone sioca, tiic great increase in the ioana of the New lork banks, the reve lations regarding the astomsning pronts now being made in tne iron ana steel in dustry, and the heavy transactions In Government bonds In anticipation of the passage of the refunding measure. Sel dom is there more lor tnose interested in financial aiiairs to talk about Many of tho events enumerated above may be looked upon as the logical outcome of the great boom in stocks which set in about the fall of 1S97. Speculative management Is answerable for the horrid collapse of the Third-Avenue Rahroad. The Flour Trust has come to grief because It was a monstrosity at its birth. The new United Metals Selling Company Is an outcome of the as yet Ill starred Amalgamated Copper Company project The break In the stock of the American Sugar Refining Company is the Inevitable outcome of the attempt to per petrate a monopoly In the sugar refining business and to keep the stock of the Sugar Trust at other than its intrinsic value (If we may be pardoned the use of such an uneconomic expression). The de cline In Bell Telephone is undoubtedly due to the mistaken judgment on the part of certain speculators In bidding the stock up In anticipation of "plums," which it now seems likely will not be realized. In a way, too, the great Increase In the loans of the New York banks carries the mind back to the speculation of a year ago, as the bank statements since the opening of 1900 unquestionably reflect a tremendous ly heavy movement on the part of the hanks In shifting their funds from loans highly speculative to those involving a minimum risk. And we suspect that the refunding measure now before Congress is not unremotely related to the occur rences of 1899. It is conceivable that this measure Is purely a bit of -ax-grindlng for the beneiit of certain interests whose ventures in 1899 did not "pan out" as favorably as was anticipated. These reflections lead us to add that the next few years are likely to witness a good deal of clearlng-up of the effects of the recent senseless speculation. The United States Milling Company is proba bly but the first of a long line of trusts that have got to face the music. No doubt a good many more features will have to be evolved before the Amalga mated Copper Company is In a position to accomplish the purpose of its promoters. Some of those features are likely to be anything but pleasant to certain interests. If the Sugar Trust actually reduces Its dividend (as It would unquestionably be sound business policy for It to do), the stock is bound to be greatly demoralized. dropping perhaps to 75, and possibly even lower (since it Is even hinted that the dividend may be passed altogether); the effect upon the general market might be" very disastrous. Wo have danced, and sooner or later we have got to pay the fiddler a pretty price. Think of the hundreds of millions of wa tered trust securities which never have been sold, and which some one is "lug ging," but on which the banks will not make ans. Atlas bore up the heavens on his shoulders, but we do not believe that his staying power is possessed by the interests that are now supporting the trusts which have been started In the last two yean: Think of the new compet ing plants that have been, and are being, rushed Into operation, as a result of the tremendous advance in commodity prices. But when the present extraordinary de mand for commodities has been supplied, there will begin an era of competition such as was not previously witnessed, with lower prices than the past has ever recorded. All this may be some time In coming about, but the beginning of the end Is certainly to be witnessed in con nection with many of the financial oc currences which are now attracting pub lic attention. CHARLES PS UNDOING. Mr. Morley Analyzes the Causes of the ICing'si Downfall. In his fifth paper on Cromwell, In the March Century, the Right Hon. John Mor ley attributes the undoing of Charles I In part to the blindness and Incoherency of his designs: Tho undoing of Charles was not merely his turn Tor intrigue and double-dealing; It was want of vision Into facts, blindness to .signs, blundering mlsmeasurement of forces, disheveled confusion of means and ends. Unhappily, mere foolishness In men responsible for the government of great states Is apt to be a curse as heavy as the crimes of tyrants. With strange self-confidence, Charles was hard at work upon schemes and combinations, all at best most difficult in themselves, and each of them violently Inconsistent with the other. He was hopefully negotiating with tho Independents, and at the same time both with the Catholic Irish and with the Pres byterian Scots. He looked to the support of the Covenanters, and at the same time he relied upon Montrose, between whom and the Covenanters there was now an an tagonism almost as vindictive as a Cor slcan blood-feud. He professed a desire to come to an understanding with his people and Parliament, yet he had a chim erical plan for collecting a new army to crush both Parliament and people, and he was looking each day for the arrival of Frenchmen or Lorralners, or Dutchmen or Danes, and their march through Kent or Suffolk upon his capital. While negotiat ing with men to whom hatred of the Pope was the breath of their nostrils, he was allowing the Queen to bargain for 100.0C0 crowns In one event, and a second hun dred In another, from Antichrist himself. He must have known, moreover, that nearly every move In this stealthy game was more or less well known to all those other players against whom he had so lm provldently matched himself. These blind and Incoherent designs were all his own. He had advisers who told him the truth. Mazarin's envoy assured him more than once, "without any dis guise, and with much freedom." how deep ly the Scots were dissatisfied with his evasive proposals, and how the English Moderates, as well as the Scots, would scarcely hear any more of coming to torms with him. His English friends at Oxford perceived that nothing short of a miracle could save him. He might. It was true, by some turn of the Continental wheel, obtain help from abroad, but there was no sign of It." Or he mlcht get pood annles from Ireland, and of these there was no sign either. Or It was possible that the Scots wou'd place their forces at his dlspwal. and with them and the Eng lish Rovallsts he might redi the King dom of England to Its old obedience But such a combination a? this, the religious question belnsr still left oon. would be Indeed on of those miracles over which only baffled reactlorl-ts. emigres and kings In exile are capable of brooding and dreaming. ELECTRIFIED PILGRIMS speech op rnop. w. Gordon aic- CABE AT NEW ENGLAND DINNER. Virginia. Played Leading Part In Xn. t Ion's History Spanish "War Ce mented North and South. Everybody who attended the New Eng land dinner on Friday nfght came away from the banquet-hall commenting on the speech of Professor William Gordon Mc Cabe, of Richmond, which was the hit of the evening. It reminded the older members of the society of the speech de livered by the late Henry W. Grady at the New England dinner In New York several years ago. There were many who said that Mr. McCabe's speech excelled the eloquence and surely the wit of Grady, savs the New York Sun. Mr. McCabe is a veteran of the Civil War, having commanded a battalion in Pickett's division. He was educated at the University of Virginia, and when the war was over he traveled extensively abroad. On one of these trips he met Tennyson and he became one of the poet's Intimate friends. He is a classical scholar, and several years ago he established a fitting school for boys at Petersburg, Va. After awhile he removed the school to Richmond, where he still conducts It, and it is" known as the best college prepara- tory school In the South. Wherever he Is known, Mr. McCabe Is In great demand as an after-dinner speaker, particularly In Boston, but It is not often that he can be brought up from the South to de liver a speech. It was only because of his personal regard for ex-Judge Henry E. Howland, president of the New Eng land Society, that he consented to come to this year's New England dinner. The speech follows: "Your president. In Introducing me, has with cruel facetlousness spoken of me as one of the 'heroes of the war.' It Is true that down In my country you may hear people (utterly devoid of imagination, and envious, perhaps, ot my 'record') shame lessly declare that the only people I've ever slain were some of my oldest friends, whom I've talked to death with stories that belong to the Pliocene period of anec dotal development, or which, at the very latest, may have cheered the Aryan hordes on their weary westward march from the tablelands of Asia. Never but once be fore, I confess, have I ever been remotely alluded to by my ungrateful countrymen as 'a hero of the war,' and that was years and years ago, when some of us here to night looked at each other only along the deadly barrels of burnished steel and when my wildest dreams never pictured a time when I should gaze, as I am gaz ing tonight, full Into New England eyes, brimming over with such kindliness and gracious welcome as makes even an 'un repentant rebel feel thoroughly at home. "Thank God, old 'comrades of the other side.' the only bead drawn here tonight Is not the bead of wary marksmen along gleaming steel, but comes bubbling up In sparkling beauty from these foaming beakers, wherein we pledge not only lip, but heart, the prosperity and honor of our common country, greeting each other with the glad hall which stirs our hearts here tonight as deeply as when well-nigh 2000 years ago (falling from the lips of choiring angels) It stirred the hearts of startled shepherds watching their flocks on the dim Judean hills under the shim mering stars 'Peace on earth, good will toward men.' "But much as I have enjoyed hearing these speeches, one thing, I confess, had puzzled me n little, and that Is that well nigh every one of your distinguished ora tors has Insisted (directly or by Implica tion) that tho Pilgrims really founded and shaped the destinies of our nation, and that but for New England patriotism and Puritan devotion to duty and to prln- nClplcthat JIttle revolt of '76 would have proved somewhat of a fiasco. God forbid that here or elsewhere I shall seek to abate one jot or one tittle of the debt that the Nation owes to stubborn New England grit and sagacious New England statecraft But as in matrimony, the point of view of May and the point ot view of December are not always easily reconcilable, and sometimes end In the divorce court; so may it be In post-pran-dlal oratory. In your December oratory, as here tonight, you naturally have un folded to you the New England point of view; But come down to Virginia and clink glasses with me in May. when we meet to celebrate (In far more Puritanical fashion- than this) tho anniversary of the first permanent English settlement In Amorica, yonder at Jamestown, where more than a year before the landing of tho Mayflower was convened the first leg islative assembly in the New "World, and you will hear our after-dinner orators unblushlngly declare that when the dun warcloud lowered In the East and the foolish policy of Lord North had denied tho chartered liberties of our Old Domin ion and her sister colonies of New Eng land, It was a Virginian, George Mason, who drew the lmmortnl bill of rights; that It was a Virginian, Richard Henry Lee, who first moved In the Continental Con gress that 'these colonies are and of right ought to be free and Independent states'; that It was a Virginian, Thomas Jefferson, who drafted the Declaration of Independ ence, and that It was that glorious 'rebel' and great Virginian, George Washington, who made It good by his sword. "Come to us with your memories of Lexington, where the shot was fired that went echoing round the world; come to us with the story of Bunker Hill, where the old Puritan spirit blazed high and de feat wore tho mantle of glory, and we will stand uncovered before yonder noble monument In Richmond, from which looks down upon us In Imperishable bronze the counterfeit presentment of the Nation's greatest son, seated In easy "majesty on his mettled steed, serene and resolute, such as he may have seemed to his rag ged New England soldiery and his own Virginian riflemen In deerskin leggings and fringed huntlng-shlrt. as he rode slowly down his lines under tne Cambridge elms on that summer's morning more than a century ago; while grouped beneath him stand the heroic figures of those great Virglnlanp who shared with him and with your fathers the perils and the glory of guiding the new Nation out ot the dark and narrow bondage of royal tyranny Into the broad sunllght-of republican freedom. "I can but think, sir. that a blending of tho two points of view gives us the truer perspective as to our national de velopment. What you call the Puritan spirit, of which you are Justly proud, has never, I think, been confined to New Eng land alone, nor do I believe that Virginia can claim exclusive heritage in the gra cious and generous qualities of the Cav alier. Isn't It, after all, the American spirit differentiated by environment? En vironment Is, as we all know, a potent factor in national development, and I have often speculated as to what would havo been the result had the Mayflower, owing to her lost reckoning, 'fetched' as far south as she did north, of her original destination, and had that cargo of 'godly klckeis' landed at Jamestown Instead of at Plymouth. "In thp light of alleged events In 1S14. I can't help fancying what a tremendous lot of 'seccsslon'sts all of you would have been In '61, with a wealth of historic ar gument as to 'strict construction' that no Yankee Cavalier could even have met successfully except with the heavier ar tillery. Grant and Sherman would In evitably have been 'rebels' Wendell Phil ips would have threatened some Bob Toombs of Massachusetts that he would yet call the roll of hl3 slaves at the foot of Bunker Hill monument, and Jeffer son Davis of Brookllno would have saun tered across Boston Common humming a stave about hanging John Andrew on a sour apple tree. "Well, honest confession being good for the soul. I will say that I was not one of those 'Jingoes' who clamored for war with Spain. Not all the glories of Ma- nlla Bay or of Santiago would have URIC ACID Causes Hore Diseases in the Human System Than Any Other Poison. 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Swamp-Root Is so remarkably successful that our readers are advised to write for a wrought this reconciliation, but I now believe, and I think you believe with me. that this Spanish war has definitely brought about two results, which have gono far to Justify in my eyes all the blood and all the treasuro expended by tho nation to secure them; one, and that tho paramount one, the thorough confi dence now reposed by the whole North and "West In the deep-seated patriotism of the South: the other, the tightening of tho blood tie between our young "West ern giant and that grand old mother-land beyond the seas, home nest of Puritan and Cavalier alike. "And Just here, as an old Confederate soldier who for four years backea his honest convictions with his sword. I want to tell you men of Puritan blood, why we Southern men (and our children after us) must always have an especially soft place In our hearts for New England. AVe fought as ever flghts the freemen ot Anglo-Saxon strain, and In good fath, the faith of brave and honorable men, accept ed tho stern arbitrament of the sword, the pitiless logic of the heavier battalions, as settling at once and forever, the practical Interpretation of the Constitution. But for years after the war (let us speak frankly), these dreadful years of recon struction, when all our Southern land that for four.years had been girdled with steel and Are, still lay prostrate In what old Isaiah fitly terms the 'dimness of an guish,' press, pulpit and political rostrum. North and "West, persistently demanded of us a thing Impossible to men In whose veins coursed the blood of the old cham pions of freedom, and who had been nurtured In those principles that since tho days of Runnymede have been the com mon heritage of all English-speaking folk that we must prove the sincerity of our acceptance by confessing the unrighteous ness of our contention and by expressing humble contrition for our misdeeds. This tho South steadily refused to do with an unshaken resolution, worthy to touch a responsive chord in the breast of the sturdiest Puritan ever born under the shadow of Plymouth Rock. It did touch such a chord in the heart3 of some of your bravest and best, who In those dark days of doubt and suspicion, when It re quired no mean courage to do so, stood up, and with that antique Puritan fear lessness that has ever scorned to sell the truth, to serve the hour, proclaimed their belief that the word of brave men of their own blood should be trusted fully by the nation. "The first plea for genuine reconcilia tion, the first expression of absolute con fidence In our plighted word came from New England; fitly enough from Lexing ton, on the 100th anniversary of the birth of the Nation, and fell from the lips of a puritan of the Puritans, yet withal as knightly In his gentle courtesy and splen did daring as any cavalier who ever rose at the bridle-rein of Rupert of the Rhine Francis Bartlett. of Massachusetts, who never forgot that disastrous day to the Federal arms at Port Hudson, when riding In at the head of his men. he, the only mounted officer In the assaulting col umnhe distinctly heard the Confederate officer commanding In his immediate front, touched the generous admiration of hl3 foemars reckless daring, shouting to his- men. 'For God's sake, men, don't shoot as brave a chap as that,' and so for a time this Puritan cavalier rode un harmed Into that hell of fire. "Only a few years after, at Keene, N. 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Y. ffil 1 n Sold by all Druggists, nfffl One-half the 60 ct. size one-quarter the $1 aire. free sample "bottle and to be sure and men tion reading this generous offer in The Portland Daily Oregonlan. object-lessons given by Southern men in this Spanish War to silence forever tho cavll3 ana doubtings of many austere pa triots who for 30 years and more had proved themselves as 'Invincible in peace as they had been invisible In war.' Above the first fierce mutterings of the com ing storm, rose high and clear yonder at Havana the voice of Fltzhugh Lee, onco the beau a.tbreur of the army of North ern Virginia, demanding, with soldierly directness, prompt Spanish recognition of the sanctity of American citizenship. Then, when the die was cast, and the Olympla on that memorable May morning, stood into Manila Bay, on the bridge close alongside George Dewey, of "Vermont, stood Tom Brumby, of Georgia (God rest his noble soul). And so. when the American flag was first unfurled to the breeze over the first American possession in the East ern world, the son of an old Confederate Colonel stood at the halliards. Ten days later, at Cardenas, the first crimson liba tion of the war was poured out on tho altar of Cuban liberty, and the brave young blood of that gallant lad, "Worth Bagley, of the Old North State, son, too, of an old Confederate soldier, cemented forever the reconciliation between North and South. And as in quick succession tho names of Hobson and Blue and Fighting Joe "Wheeler blazed In official dispatches, the thunderous shouts of a reunited peo ple drowned even the Iron-throated plau dits of the guns. As Marshal Ney said, when he saw the beardless young French conscripts rushing In all the Joyous valor of their youth upon the Russian guns at. "Weissenfels: C'est dans lesang! Cest dans le sangl 'It's in the blood! It's in the blood!' "Many of you. doubtless, traversing that noble hall of "William Rufus, have entered the corridor of St. Stephen's, and there, glancing down the long line of gleaming statues, have paused to look upon tho calm, majestic features of John Hampden, the most able and resolute man In tho kingdom, who fell on the Parliamentarian: side of Chalgrave Field, and Immediate ly opposite upon the grave, romantic face of Lucius Carey, Lord Falkland, 'that in comparable young man,' as Clarendon calls him, who In the very flower of his young manhood gave his life for his King in that unhappy civil strife. "It may well be, that when this genera tion shall have passed away, and the mo tives and convictions of men shall be ap prehended without passion, that tha young American treading some one of those stately avenues that lead to our Na tional Capitol, shall pause opposite the presentment In bronze of Grant and of Sherman to gaze upon the heroic figures of Lee and Jackson. God forbid that war, civil or foreign, should come again in this, our time. He who ha3 once seen the suffering and sorrow and desolation that it brings to happy homes can never wish to see it again. But should it come, men of the North and of the East and of the "West, I speak for my people that people who never yet faltered In half way defiance to a foe or In half-way welcome to a friend ere the first call to arms of our common country shall have died upon the breeze, you shall hear the tramp of our legions as they wheel Into line to touch elbows with the stal wart sons of New England, eager to keep time with cadenced step to the music of the Union aye, to hedge round with stubborn steel that Starry Banner, that symbolizes once more to us as to you the majesty of American citizenship and the Indestructibility of Republican insti tutions." Translated From Goethe. SEA-STILLNESS. "Tlefe Stllle herrscht lm Waaser. Stillness deep the sea Is folding; Motionless extends the main; Vexed the eollor stands, beholdlcgr Lengths ot calm-encompaeied plain. From no aide no atlr advances; Awful alienee, dread as death; In those vast and far expenses Not a billow heavca a breath. o Classifying Himself. Chicago Tribune. "I understand you are playing to full houses," said the hotel clerk. "You are the leading man, are y6u not?" "No, sir. I am the misleading man," re plied the heavy villain of the company, who was striding gloomily about the hotel office.' I