t -i-J.ty' '1 ir , " '. t -I . ' J- V THE MOKNTNQ OREQONIAy, TUESDAY, APBIL 3," 19(H). j&h rcjgomcm festered at to Postoflo at Portland, Orecea. as second-class matter. TEXEPHONES. Sdltorlal Xtooms....l03 1 Business Of&cs.. .en REVISED SUBSCRIPTION' RATES. Br Mall (povtacs prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month. ..... .40 83 Dally, Sunday excepted. pr year-...... 7 SO Dallr, with Sunday, per rear ...... 00 Sunday, per rear ............. 2 00 The Weekly, par year .........- 1 90 The Weekly. 3 months... ...... CO To City Subscribers I Dally, per week. delivered. Sundays eaeepted-lSe DatlT. per ntk, delivered, Sundays tneludedOn Tb Oreconlan does cot bur roema or stories frcra Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn aar manuscripts sent to It without solicita tion. No stamps should be Inclosed tor this purpose. Paget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, oSSos at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoms, Box 813. Tacoma postofflce. Eastern Busmen Ofilee Th Tribune build- tag. New Tors, cltr: "The Rookery." Chlcaro: the S. C. Beck with srjeclc.1 inn. New York. For sale In Ssn Francisco by J. K. Cooper. . . mci street, near me raiaoe noici. ana at Goldsmith Bros.. 238 Eutter street. T,r sals m Chicago br the P. O. News Col. JU Dearborn street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Showers. Brobably followed br clearing weather duties the after noon. PORTLAND, TEPSDAT, APRIL. 3, lOOO COLOSSAL FRAUDS. Shall we tell the secret of the sub sidy bill? Then It Is this: Ship con struction is booming. Let us hurry up and pass the subsidy bill; then we shall say to the people. Behold what the Re publican party has done for our mer chant marine, with Its subsidies! Vote for McKlnley and all the rest of us Republicans. Shall we confess the motives behind the Puerto Rico Infamy? Let us pass this bill. Then we can go before the Protected Interests and say. Behold your friends! Then we can go to the labor vote and say. Behold your for tress and high tower! As to the subsidy bllL haste must be made or It will be too late: for almost every day the news comes of keels laid, contracts signed, trans-Atlantic nnd trans-Paclflc lines organized, warships building In American yards for every where. To claim this present activity for a bill to go Into effect next Janu ary will be a work of extreme hardi hood. As to the labor vote. It Is doubtless sufficiently Informed bow large a part of the tariff goes into Its wages, and how much It achieves through its trades organizations. Then if we de duct the labor vote that .will go for Debs as a socialist, and that that will go for Bryan or McKlnley anyhow through partisan predilection, the game to he had through the Puerto Rico trap is not very promising. As to the Protected Interests, they are, apparently, well served, and have no excuse for displeasure. But have they all the votes worth having? MIVART AX OIIJCCT-LESSOX. Mlvart died In good time. Ills pass ing completes the hurried but Immortal drama of his last few months. In his protest against ecclesiastical Interfer ence with questions of positive science and In his tragic taking oft at the su preme moment of the controversy he has achieved fortuitous fame such as his laborious life-work never could have brought him. He did not, like Dewey. live on until idolatry faded upon see ing its object in his human frailties. Like Lincoln, he died Just In time to "make his place In history steadfast and serene. A lucky chance has enrolled him among the martyrs. At the grave of the Mlvart contro versy, stilled summarily by a ruling from which there Is no appeal, two things are to be said. One Is that the church can only a little longer presume to sit In Judgment upon the facts of the material world. It is the custodian of spiritual truth, but not of science or history. What the Bible says or coun cils decree concerning the primeval for est or the cataclysms and fires of the planet's Infancy, the Armament or the great deep, the burden of Tyre or the gardens of Babylon, may be Inter esting, but It Is not authoritative. The history of creation is not in Genesis, but In the rocks beneath our feet. In the light that streams from sun and star. In the laws that have been un covered by astronomy and chemistry. The history of man is not in Hebrew manuscripts so much as in the unim peachable records left In languages and In the silent but eloquent testimony of the human structure. The facts of sci ence must be passed upon by science. the religious needs of man must be met by religion. The soundness of Mlvart's position was that while he insisted on physical evidence for physical facts, he clung to the church for spiritual truth. To the soul hungering for God and righteousness It is as vain to offer blind chance or purposeless law as to seek In prayer and fasting the origin of the Psalms or the true history of Abraham. "Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's." The other thing that needs to be said Is that Mlvart's fears for Catholicism are probably baseless. If the church continues to Insist on deciding matters of scientific truth or historical record. closing the door of investigation to active minds, the fear of Dr. Mlvart was that it must "sink by degrees Into an effete and insignificant body, com posed of Ignorant persons, a mass of women and children, and a number of mentally effeminate men." But the condition upon which he hangs his con clusion Is almost Impossible of realiza tion. The Catholic Church has been slow to yield to the encroachments of science upon Its prerogatives. But so has the Presbyterian Church. The more rigid the traditions of a denomi nation, the more centralized Its con trolling power, the harder Is the task of modification. But we must remem ber that the discoveries and the hy potheses of science are taking hold upon the young men of all denomina tions. The young men of today are the church of tomorrow. When the general assembly of the Presbyterian Church met in Portland, in 1882, the chief subject of controversy was the Brlggs case. Throughout that keen and excited struggle young men fresh from the Seminary or their first pastorate sat with set teeth and blanched countenances as they realized the determined stand of the veterans to resist the conclusions of science as applied to creation and to the text of the Bible. They were voted down. They had no show. But thirty years from now those young men will be In the saddle. They will be the church. Thirty years from now the young Cath- ollcs who are Imploring; the dignitaries of their church for Instruction In mod ern science will be In control. They will be the church. There Is no denom inational restriction of the truth that Through the aces One Increasing purpose runs. And the thoughts of men are widened With the proems of the suns. It Is as true of the Old Church, as of ell the new ones, that In the time to come, not In this mountain nor yet at Jerusalem, not In set formulas nor yet In Iron-bound creeds on pain of anath ema, shall ye worship the Father, but unceremoniously in spirit and In truth. IRCLAXD'S PROGRESS UXDER VIC TORIA. When Victoria with the Prince Con sort visited Ireland In 1SG0. she was re ceived with a degree of enthusiasm that drew from her statesmanlike husband the following utterance In an address which he delivered in his capacity as president of the Royal Dublin Society: It Is Impossible not to feel deeply the marks of enthusiastic attachment which have been displayed to the Queen and myrelf by the warm-hearted Inhabitants of this, beautiful Island, and I most sincerely hope for an early termination to those sufferings under which the people hare so lamentably and yet with euch exemplary patience labored. Jf the Prince Consort In 18G0 felt sym pathy with the past mlsgovemment and misfortunes of Ireland, we may be sure that Queen Victoria did, too. The Prince always spoke authoritatively on such occasions for his royal wife; their marriage was a love match on her part, and to the day of his death she ac cepted his opinions wllh reverence and shared all his personal sympathies with the cause of humane government within her dominions. The sympathy that Queen Victoria felt for Ireland In I860 she doubtless feels today; the warm welcome that she received from Ireland in 1SC0 she deserved then and no less deserves today. Queen Victoria was not responsible for the cruel mlsgovem ment of Ireland that was executed un der the reign of George HI and his contemptible son, George IV. When George IV visited Ireland In 1821, he was most warmly welcomed by the people, high and low. In spite of the fact that he always cast his per sonal Influence In favor of the cnlel mlsgovemment of Ireland. When he was Prince Regent and pretended to be a Whig, he broke faith with his own party because Its leaders insisted upon the reform of Catholic disabilities. He broke faith with the English champions of Catholic emancipation as unscrupu lously as George III did when he re fused to carry out the promise of Cath olic emancipation which William Pitt had been authorized to make to the Roman Catholic members of the Irish Parliament to secure their votes for the act of union in 1S01. which extinguished the home rule government obtained by Grattan. When George IV became King, he was bitterly hostile to George Canning, because Canning, the political pupil and admirer In his youth of Pitt, was sure to favor Pitt's policy of Catholic emancipation at the first op portunity. George IV had always pre ferred the renegade Irishman, Lord Castlereagh, to Canning, because he was a bitter, despotic Tory In his mls govemment of Ireland. George IV therefore deserved no kindly welcome from Ireland, for he fairly earned by his treatment of Ireland Byron's de nunciation of him as "the fourth of fools and oppressors called George." But Queen Victoria's whole reign of sixty-three years has been marked by no reactionary policy toward .Ireland even under circumstances of transient excitement caused by the crimes of Irish Nihilists and Fenian pirates. The record of the reign of Victoria Is that of steady advance In the matter of Irish governmental reform. Early la her reign came the extinction of tithes. The personal friendliness of Queen Vic toria, and her sympathy with the dis tress of Ireland was always eloquently acknowledged by O'Connell, the great Irish liberator, who, while he was per sonally hostile to. Prime Minister Peel, never failed to express his admiration and respect for "the lovely young Queen" and loyalty to British Constitu tional government as he construed It In the stupid, short-lived Irish rebel lion of ISIS Its leaders were the recipi ents of the clemency of the Queen, for though Meagher and Mitchell were con victed of treason, their sentences were commuted to transportation. In I860 when Victoria vlsltqd Ireland, Irish re form had clearly made steady progress. and since that date until the present it has made comparatively rapid ad vancement. Under Gladstone's first ministry of 1S6S-1S73. the Irish Church was disestablished and educational re forms Initiated. In his second accession to powcf Gladstone passed the Irish land reform legislation of 1SS1-82, and subsequently, with the aid of Paraell, he accom plished further reforms. While Glad stone was finally defeated In his efforts to enact complete home rule for Ire land, nevertheless under the Salisbury Conservative Government not only no reactionary legislation has been enact ed, but by the action of Lord Salis bury's Government the cause of Irish governmental reform has been ad vanced beyond the legislation of Glad stone, for the county governments In Ireland are substantially today In the hands of the people through the most recent Irish reform act. Irishmen to day have little or no cause to complain of discrimination in England's mode of government. Irish Independence Is a po litical pipe opium dream, but home rule was defeated by Irish religious preju dice and Internal political dissension. Parnell was not thrown down as a lead er by Gladstone's own desire: he was thrown down by the Catholic clergy of Ireland, .-o jutvolced the English dis senters in clamoring for his dlscrown ment as leader of his party. Queen Victoria's reign has stood for govern mental reform In Ireland, and she de serves a respectful welcome. ixsuFFicrrsxcr op law. The wisdom of attempting to enforce morality by special statutory enact ment has become a subject for fresh discussion before the New York Leg islature through the Introduction of a bill making adultery a misdemeanor. The argument for this bill that the ab sence of the punishment for adultery made New York State "a place of resort for -men" from other states where adul tery Is punishable under the statutes was answered by the statement that there Is scarcely a pretense of enforcing the law against adultery In other states. Massachusetts has such a law, tout there Is no exodus ot adulterers from Boston, where the offense Is rela tively as frequent as It Is In New York. The criminal punishment of&dultery Is so rare In the states that make it Indictable that the laws against It amount to nothing. Adultery Is doubt less prevented and punished through moral, social and religious law, but Its legal punishment Is seldom enforced, and, as a measure for the promotion of good morals, the making of adultery punishable as a misdemeanor has had small success In any of our states. The states with laws to punish It aro most notable for Its frequency. The laws are practically unenforceable and a dead letter. This Is due to the fact that social and religious sentiment only can oppose Immorality effectually. The church has power to punish adul tery In Its own members with ecclesias tical penalties. When a divorce Is ob tained In violation of the Episcopal canon, and the parties or either of them marry new mates, they are living in adultery In Its view, but practically this church law against them Is a dead let ter. The clergy of this church are con spicuous advocates of the criminal pun ishment of adultery, despite the fact that they do not enforce the church law. The opponents of the bill ask them: "If practically the church law against adulterers In largely a dead let ter, what reason Is there to suppose the civil law would do any better?" In England adultery is not indictable under the common law, but exemplary civil damages are generally promptly awarded. . VALUABLE DATA. The quality- of Interest which the re cital of the common Incidents of the pioneer era will excite a few years say a quarter of a century hence is foreshadowed by the close, almost rev erent attention which the public of the present day gives to a simple state ment of the cvery-day routine that made up the lives of the settlers of ter ritorial Oregon fifty years ago. The details beginning with the snall's-pace Journey with ox teams across the con tinent, that covered a period of six months' continuous travel between the Missouri River and the dalles of the Columbia, and ending with a descrip tion of the beautiful wilderness of the Willamette Valley upon the possession of which the footsore emigrants entered with Joy and thanksgiving, are of ab sorbing Interest even now; later they will possess all the charm of romance, through which the thread of reality Just out of sight runs, giving substan tial fiber to the product There was published In the Eugene Guard a few days ago, and republished In The Oregonlan Sunday, a simple recital of the Incidents of a Journey by ox team across the continent In 1853. There was nothing remarkable in this Journey at the time. Hundreds of peo ple made It. Men did not hesitate to cut loose from civilization, and, with no better protection from the savages who swarmed the country than that afforded by an old-fashioned rifle and a few rounds of ammunition to each man, plunge Into the Wilderness with their families, with. If all went well, the certainty of a six months' Journey through a region barren of supplies be fore them. A later generation has censured these men as reckless. In point of fact, they were Ignorant of the risks of starva tion, disease and savage onslaught which they ran. Ignorance stood them In the stead of courage, but when Ig norance was dispelled by knowledge and the etupendcusness of the task was revealed to them, courage was not wanting to meet the exigencies of the situation. The simple recital above mentioned differs but little from that which any pioneer of the time of which It deals would give If asked, and yet. no doubt, thousands have read It with Interest who knew not one of the per sons mentioned as belonging to the company that made the old-time Jour ney, while the surviving few who from association have a deeper Interest In the story read it with "eyes moistened by the sacred dews of memory. That which was commonplace fifty years forty-five years forty years ago has become heroic now; later It will become marvelous, and later still It will challenge belief In vain, unless the oral In these recitals gives place while yet there la time to the written. There is a certain charm about folk lore, but It becomes babble, so far as duly accredited fact goes. In a few gen erations at farthest. Measures should be taken to make these matters his tory. Tedious detail Is not necessary, neither Is It desirable In dealing with the pioneer era. But better transcribed garrulousness which can be sifted and condensed by the historian a few years later than a barrenness of detail con cerning pioneer life that will invite In vention whereby to adorn the tale. The work of the Oregon Historical Society in collecting data for the history of the pioneer era is likely to prove of Incal culable value. It was delayed longer than It should have been, but our touch with the middle years of the century Is still sufficiently close to give to the data collected a quality of truth that determines the valuo of historical work. IX SOUTH AFRICA. The present military policy of the Boers la to delay Lord Roberts' ad vance and make It difficult by cutting off his advanced posts and breaking up his communications by suddenly con centrating upon them with superior forces, exactly the same kind of tactics that were employed against the com munications and detached posts of the Union forces by the Confederate Gener als at the East and the West during the Civil War. This kind of warfare was successfully practiced by the Con federate mounted riflemen under Stuart and Mosby in Virginia, and under For rest and Wheeler in Tennessee. The disaster to the British detach ment of two regiments of cavalry and two batteries under Colonel Broadwood cost the English a loss of 3S0 men. In cluding 200 prisoners and seVen guns. It Is the old story ot military careless ness that was Illustrated by General Gatacre near Stormberg Junction, De cember 10, and by General Butler's Chief of Artillery before Colenso, De cember IB, when eleven guns were lost There Is no excuse for a good cavalry officer being caught, as was Broad wood, In a so-called "trap" set by the Boers. His scouting was not thorough ly done by a competent officer or the "trap" would have sprung before his wagons 'and guns entered the ford. If the banks of the ford had been searched by shell fire, the Boers would have been flushed from their cover, but, on the contrary, the wagons and artillery were pushed forward without any proper examination of the ford, and the only wonder Is that any of the guns escaped capture. The fact that a Lieutenant of Remington's Scouts found a ford unoccupied by the enemy shows that with any decent kind of caution the whole disaster could have been avoided. Lord Roberts will be Joined soon by the Eighth Division, which, as soon as It arrives at Cape Town, will be met by orders to proceed at once to the front. With this reinforcement of 10. 000 men. Lord Roberts ought to be able to make his railway communications secure. When that Is done, the quick est way to recall the Boer forces from raiding would be to push forward with the main body. Lord Robefts has not mounted men enough to beat the Boers In their own peculiar tactics, but the march of his infantry through the Or ange Free State into the Transvaal would soon compel the Boer commander to call In his detachments and concen trate against Invasion. The enactment of the gold-standard bill, says the New York Independent, "had been so long foreseen that the final vote and approval of the act by the President excited but little public Interest. And yet this signal vindica tion of American honesty and Intelli gence might appropriately have been celebrated en the 14th of March by the ringing of bells and the roaring of can non throughout the land." It might have been more properly said that the enactment of this bill excited little public comment. It Is putting It too strongly to say that It "excited but Ut ile public interest," since Intelligent men, business men, men of finance and of -affairs the Nation over felt an Inter est In the passage and approval of this bill that mere ivnrrlo nnrl n. multrnllcltv of noises could not express. It was fot4'un,ncl road as the promise of a more rapid this reason possibly that such demo: stratlon as Is furnished by publlj. Jolcings and the ringing -of bells,-. not follow the enactment of this mosW Important bill. The transport Sheridan reached San Francisco from Manila Sunday, a veri table hospital-ship. A total of eighty six sick soldiers, fourteen sick sailors and eleven Insane makes up an allot ment of wretchedness sufficient to cause the most valiant to long for the close of the war In the Philippines. The disease aboard was fortunately nothing more contagious than typhoid fever. Though there are few maladies that subject patients In confined quarters to more pitiful sufferings than this one, it is yet possible to be on the same ship with typhoid and not contract the dis ease. It may be hoped. In humanity's name, that the necessary detention of the .transport in quarantine will be brief. It is said that the British Ministry believes the amount of the debt reduc tion In England in the past twenty-one years will be offset by the cost of the war In South Africa. The expenditure at the present time is about $50,000,000 a month, which is not far below the highest outlay of the United States in the War of the Rebellion. WarB are the most costly of enterprises, and the tendency Is constantly upward. The Increasing cost of war will doubtless ultimately be one of the strongest In fluences that make for peace, the pocket nerve of the nation, like that of the individual, being an exceedingly sensitive one. The course of Lentz and Sulzer In the Coeur d'Alene Investigation Is directed and pursued in conformity with one of tho cardinal principles of the Chicago platform, that there must be no Inter ference with mobs engaged In destruc tion of property. But Governor Steun- enberg didn't see It in that light. An Interesting sketch of General Macdonald's career, printed in The Ore gonlan yesterday, Is of value to those who have supposed no chance exists for a man to rise from the ranks to high position in the British Army. Again the preponderant valor and strategy of the Boers have achieved a military triumph. That Is to say, the British have fallen Into another trap. A MILITARY PROPHET. The ClinnRes Produced by Modern Conditions Foretold. A writer for the Westminster Gazette collects from M. Bloch's book on future war a book published a year or two ago, and several times referred to by The Oregonlan the following predictions about strategy and tactics, every one of which has been fulfilled with more or less precision In the South African War: That the war of the future would be a war ot sleets and entrenched positions. That to carry out frontal attacks wouli be Impossible without Immense lcss-it and great superiority In numbers; and that It would, therefore, seldom be resorted to. That with equality In numbers, modern wars would last longer than past wars. That decisive victories would be rare, the beaten side Immediately taking; up fresh posi tions to the rear, which would be prepared In advance. That artillery would be put out ot action by sharpsnootlng riflemen, who would kill off norms and men. That adequate reconnolssanee would be almost Impossible, and that an enemy's position would only bo revralei by the voile) s from their trenches. That even then, owing- to the use of smoke less powder, it would be Impossible precisely to locate them. That attempts to surprise an enemy would cften result In counter-surprises. That lntrenchments constructed for protec tion against modern artillery and rifle Ore would be Invisible. That the Us In officers would be abnormally large. That ambulance work, owlns to the great range ot modern weapons, would have to be carried on under Ore. with the result ot mu tual accusations of abusing the Red Cross flsg. In the Saturday Review (London) there is appearing a series of articles by a Brit ish officer, signed "Grey Scout," on the difficulties and surprises of the present war in South Africa, which seem almost a development ot Mr. Bloch's proposi tions. In one of his articles the writer dwells on tho ineffectiveness of shell and shrapnel fire against concealed riflemen, and the Impossibility of getting near enough the latter to dislodge them with out losing horses and gunners by rifle fire. This was demonstrated on the Mod der and on both sides of the Tugela. The next article points out that every disastrous frontal attack In South Af rica would have been Inevitably success ful with traditional armies and weap ons. The latest article deals with smoke less powder and scouting, tf which the writer seems to have had personal knowl edge, since he took part In some of the operations he describes. This confirm! every assertion made by Bloch from the ory. The British army has been scolded by arm-chair critics for neglecting recon nolssance and falling Into surprises "Grey Scout" points out that successful scouting Is no longer possible. Even elaborate lntrenchments are Invisible at short rifle range, and smokeless powder prevents their discovery even by a mod erately heavy dropping fire. Scouts are picked off long before they can find out' anything, and 'they do not know whether It Is done by pickets of an army. All the survivors can report on their return Is casual lies. s . HEW YORK RAPID TRANSIT. BesrlnnJnsr and Slarnlflcance of the Under-ground Tunnel. New Tork Journal of Commerce. The ceremony In City Hall Park Satur day afternoon wan amply Justified by the occasion. It might even have been more Imposing, more elaborate, and yet have been scarcely adequate to the Importance of the occasion. The commencement of the underground rapid-transit system la one of the great events in the history ol New York, not unworthy of companion ship with the construction of the Crotoa aqueduct and of very much more Import ance than the consolidation of New York, Brooklyn and Staten Island. The concentration of buslncfs Is abso lutely essential to Its transaction on a modern scale and by modern methods. Home reached an immense expansion, but most of ltd business was small and sub divided, for the business section and the resldenco section could not be separated by a long Interval, and houses and shops alternated much as they do In our country towns. In such a city business on a mod ern scale could not bo done, and In the modern world the growth of great cities has followed pretty closely along the line of the means of intra-mural transit, be ginning with pavements and then passing from tracks for horse cars to elevated tracks and cable and electric traction. After 10 or a dozen years of agitation, discussion and tentative movements the city has now embarked upon a system ot transportation that goes as far beyond the electric car aa that went beyond the omni bus. The Individual merely regards the d perhaps a morn comfortable way ot etting down town than he now enjoys. Fj)Ut to the municipality It means much (-more; it means the possibility of concen trating more business than ever before, because tho people to carry It on can bo brought from greater distances within the necessary time. The need for this has been created by the modern system ot constructing office buildings. The archi tect and tho manufacturer of steel beam have already combined to superimpose two or three times the JU'rnber ot persons win must be brought to business In tho morn ing and taken home at night- The streets are already as full of surface and elevated roads aa they can be without Impeding business Instead of accelerating It, and depreciating property Instead of advancing its value. Nothing remained but the tun nel. The tall building, then, and the under ground railroad are the. conditions with out which no very great additional de velopment of the city was possible. New York would grow without them, but it would grow slowly. Its business could enlarge, but only by spreading over more rpace. where concentration was essential. Following the tall building, which treble! or -quadruples the floor space In the busi ness section, comes the underground road which will carry to a more distant resi dence section the additional population needed to do business on that Increased floor space, and the ceremony of Saturday afternoon marks the beginning of an Im provement which will permit the vast commercial expansion -of New York during the 20th century. Tlin WESTMIXSTER COXPBSSIOJf. These Are the Words Aliont Which Controversy la Xovr Raging. "By the decree of God, for the manifes tation of His glory, some men and angels ara predestinated unto everlasting life and others foreordained to everlasting death. These angels and men, thus predestinated and foreordained, are particularly and un changeably designed, and their number Is so certain and definite that It cannot be either Increased or diminished. "Those ot mankind that are predestin ated unto life, God, before the foundation of tho world was laid, according to His eternal and Immutable purpose and the secret counsel and good pleasure of III: will, hath chosen In Christ unto everlast ing glory, out of His mere free grace and love, without any foresight of faith or good works, or preseverance In either of thorn, or any other thing In the creature, as conditions or causes moving Him there unto: and all to the praise ot His glorious grace. "As God hath appointed the elect unto glory, so hath He. by the eternal and most free purpose of His will, foreordained all the means thereunto. Wherefore they who are elected being fallen In Adam, are redeemed by Christ, are effectually called unto faith In Christ by His Spirit working In dueseaaon: are Justified, adopt ed, sanctified and kept by His power through faith unto salvation. Neither are any other redeemed by Christ, effectually called. Justified, adopted, sanctified and saved, but the elect only. The rest of mankind God was pleased, according to the unsearchable counsel of H' own will, whereby He extendeth or withholdeth mercy as He pleaseth. for the glory of His sovereign power over His creatures, to pas by and to ordain them to dishonor nnd wrath for their sin. to the praise of His glorloua Justice." a I'lnln Duty- or PInIn Perfidy. Chicago Inter Ocean. Rep. Republtca'-B In Washington still propoe to "comprorrlsa" with Pue-to Rico. They put forward va-lous schemes to silence the prot-B'- of the p-ople on the one side without offending tte sugar and tobacco lobby on the other. Net one of these schemes la more than a political expedient. Not one of them pretends to be more. Yet ds political expedients they ore all bound to provo absolutely futile. "Cur p'nin duty is to abol'sh all cus toms tariffs between the United States and Puerto Ulco and give her freo access to our markets." said the President on Dcctmber 5. Those wordei have been Im printed Indelibly an the National con science. They cannot be wiped out by any trick or subterfuge or expedient. They mean that Puerto Rico must receive ab solutely "free access to our markets." without halt or hindrance, or "plain duty" must be flouted. There can bo no middle way. no com promise. Blther the Republicana'ln "Wash ington break faith or keep It, fulfill their proml'e or repudiate It, hold fast to their platform or desert It. That Is the naked truth that no pre tensrs can veil, that no excuses can dis tort. On it, the Republican party will be approved or condemned next Fall, and all the words that can be spoken will not bury It out of sight. Plain duty or p.ain perfidy which shall It be? Tommy Atkins. A British army chaplain, the Rev. E J. Hardy, has publshcd a book on "Mr. Thomas Atkins." In it, the origin of the sobriquet to given: Thomas Atkins was the name of a sentry who, when the Eu ropeans In Lucknow were fljlng for the Residency, from the mutineers, refused to leave his post, and so perished. After that It became the fashion to speak of a conspicuously heroic soldier In the fights with the rebels as "a regular Tommy At kins." The British soldier has every rea son for pride In his nickname. Thomas Is a flrst-rate hand at Inventing nick names, several pages of which are given in this book ot Mr. Hardy's. The Gren adier Guards were nicknamed "The Coal heavers," because they were at one time allowed to work In plain clothes at odd Jobs for private employers. The Seventh Foot were the "Elegant Extracts, be cause at one time all their officers 'had been chosen from other corps." "The Forty-sixth owed their name of "The Lacedemonians" to their colonel's stirring speech on the ancient Spartans. Like many other regiments. "The Gallant Fif tieth" received several nicknames "The Blind Half-Hundred," from their ophthal mic troubles In Egypt, and "The Dirty Half-Hundred." because In their Penin sular fights they wiped themselves with their black facings. The One Hundredth Regiment are "The Old Hundred" and the "Centipedes." The Twenty-elihth were called "The Fore and Afts," because. standing back to back, they repelled a front and rear attack before Alexandria In 1S01. The Cheshire Regiment has been christened "The Lightning Conductors," because 'In tho Irish maneuvers of 1SS9 several men were struck by lightning dur ing a night march." Chaplain Hardy has many stories to telI,'among them that of a Tommy who, deserting from his hospital. In the hlua flannels of a patient, "stripped a scare crow m a potato field, and gave It my blue things In exchange." It was a thoughtless custom for a regimental band to practice the "Dead March" whenever It was seen that a patient was' beyond hopo of recovery. Among regimental pets, the goat of the Welsh Regiment is renowned. The Rev. Mr. Berry narrates the story of a goat who, when on the march, "used to be drunk three or four nights In the week." Tommy had not the heart to stop Billy's liquor, and Billy's life was cut short In consequence. The Seaforth Highlanders' custom of bringing In the new year Is appropriate and pic turesque. Ai five minutes to midnight the oldest man In the regiment, arrayed as Father Time. Is played out of the bar racks gate, to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne." After the clock strikes, comes the youngest drummer boy, as the New Year. "Who goes there?" says the sen try. "The New Year." replies the small boy. "Advance. New Year: all's well, is the sentry's response. The boy finishes at the officers' mess, after which the fun begins. i An Enstcr Problem Solved. A curious question has arisen in England nhnnf hp date of Easter day this year. The rule laid down in the Book of Com mon Prayer, which to tho authority there, is as follows: "Easter day is always the first Sunday after the full moon which happens upon or next after the 21st day of March: and If the full moon happens upon a Sunday. Easter day Is the Sunday after." The hours of sunrise and ouneet are different In England from the United States, except on the two equlnoctal days, England being In a higher latitude than any part of the United States. Tho hours of the changes of the moon are also dif ferent. In the latitude of Baltimore the full moon, which happens on or next after March a this year. Is on April 14. at S:02 P. M. There can be no doubt, therefore, that In the United States and In all coun tries of the same latitude. April 15 Is East er day. But in England the full moon haDnens on Sunday. April 15. at 1 o'clock A. M. Therefore, according to the strict rule. Easter day there should be April 22. and that would be a different Easter from ours. The question thus raised in England Is of business aa well ns of religious im portance, for Monday in Easter week Is a bank holiday, and no uncertainty could ue allowed. The attention of the Cab'not was called to the matter, when, as a correspondent of the New York Sun states. tho Attorney-General solved tne aimcuity by declaring that the Parliament had en acted a law In former years nxing tne paschal full moon for tho year 1900 on April 14. In defiance of the calendar and the actual fact. The same question, the Attorney-General said, had arisen In 1818 and in 1S43, and a fictitious or legal full moon became necessary to prevent having different Easter days In different parts of the United Kingdom. I IS! The Same Old Itrynnlsm. New York Tribune. Bryanlsm In 190 means Just what It meant in 1&& That is the salient fact oi the Nebraska Democratic platform, which has been put forth with Mr. Bryan's full approval. It is true that on some ques tions the quondam "boy orator" trims and hedges. Such is tho case particularly In respect to issues that have arisen elnco 1596. But after all. the pith of the matter Is Indisputably contained In the opening paragraph, which says: We, the Democrats of Xebraska. In conven tion assembled, do hereby reofnrm, and Indorse. In whole and In part. In letter and In spirit, the platform adopted by the Democratic Na tlnrat Convention held In Chlcsjro In 106. That Is sufficient. It establishes beyond all doubt or question the fact that Mr. Bryan stands this year, as he stood four years ago. for free coinage of silver at-the ratio of 16 to 1, for a Socialists income tax, and for packing the Supreme Court of the United States for political purposes. That Is what Bryanlsm meant In 1!96. That is what it means In 1900. It is the same old Bryanlsm. si The Cut Xall Revives. According to the Wheeling Register there Is a renewed demand for the Iron cut nail as against the wire nail, which has for years been displacing It. "It ap pears," says the Register, "that experience has proven that the wire nail Is sadly lack ing for certain purposes: at least, it aoes not supply the place of the cut nail, and the building trade is generally recognizing the fact and returning to a greater or lees degree to the use of the iron-cut nail. All of which Is of special Interest to Wheeling, once the home of the cut-nail Industry. The demand has grown so strong that there Is soma difficulty In sup plying It." i o The Dlsarnated Cltlaen. PORTLAND. April 2. (To the Editor.) Disgusted with the President, Senate and politicians, the undersigned would like to say for the privilege of voting for Roose velt and Olney. or Olney and Roosevelt: I will pay $25 toward a campaign fund for the honor. I have spoken to six men to day and five of them said they would do the same. It would bo a good Joke on the poli ticians, who look on all citizens as suck ers, to havo the big dally papers take this up and get about 1.000.000 men to subscribe. I believe ltould be done. W. C. i A Testimonial. Philadelphia Press. "I've called." said the patent-medicine man, who was after a testimonial, "be cause I understand our tonic did you good, and" "l'cs," the victim Interrupted: "it did mo good nnd proper. Two more bottles would probably do me completely. What! going? Good day." I i It la n Corker. Boston Herald. One difficulty the Democrats are going to have In trying to make a campaign Issue out of the Coeur d'Alene trouble is that Governor Steunenberg, who as sumes the responsibility for calling in the troops, is a Democrat. This fact is something of a corker. i Superstitions Collide. Indianapolis Journal. "A horseshoe, you see, got wedged In the switch." "Did It derail your car?" "Not much. My caro was No.' 13." Inexpensively Mnnnsed. Detroit Journal. 'Your capital Is not large." "But quite sufficient- You see, our busi ness Is peculiar In that It does not neces sitate any evasion of the laws." The Perverse. Post Wheeler In New Tork Press. Silently I sit. Soberly I walk. All tendernees of It Banished from her talk! Could I Jest or sing-. Or forret a while Could I tell her anything That would bring her smile! It wss murder red. It was murder white. Those few bitter wcrds I said On that bitter night! Twas a devil lay Curled within my soul! I would give my life away To take back the whole! It la mln- to weep. It Is mine to bow. Cut the devil In me deep I Will not let me now. N0TB AND COMMENT. April weather came In on schedule! time. The Marquis of Queensberry rules do not apply to the Chinese Boxers. It is now up to the powers to hold a piece conference to determine the man ner of partitioning China. Hanna advises the party to stand by the Administration, but he falls to in clude directions how to find it. A case 102 years old has Just been set tled In the Court of Claims In Washington. The leading lawyers on both sides must have been on a vacation. It is reported upon good authority that a Salem business man, upon having pre sented to him a blli for $5 23. spent 13 minutes getting a nickel changed so that he could pay the exact amount. When he at last found the pennies, he remem bered that his creditor once got the best of him by 1 cent in making change and refused to pay more than to 22. The cred itor did not spend any time disputing ove? tho matter. The Summer resort business Is a leading Industry ot New Hampahlre, and the Stats Labor Commissioner fittingly treats of It as ot any other large financial and com mercial enterprise. He finds that $10,443, 000 has been Invested In Summer-boardeS property, and that tho number of visi tors to the state during last season was 174,250. Each one of this number only haa to leave behind him an average of $19 above cost of keeping to net 17 per cent on the property said to be Invested In tha business. That Is way ahead of farming or cotton manufacturing or almost any other New Hampshire Industry, which could be named. Streaks o sunshine, , Spots o rain. Flowers bloomln" Down the tare, Birds a slngln' Here an' there, Slossoms tallln Everywhere. , in the branches Specks o" green , Where the leaves can, Just be seen. Drops a gleamln' On the gram. 6hlnc like diamonds Whenjoupap Fragrance noattn' On the hrc-ete. Hummln sounds O bugs an" bees. Sleepy feelln" All aroun. That Is April . Out o' town. The saucy, pugnacious British sparrow has few friends, but Is, generally speak ing, pretty well able to take care of him self. Once In a while ho gets a well-deserved drubbing, to the delight of all be holders. An Incident of this kind occurred out on Nineteenth street recently. A number of blackbirds nest In the trees on some of the double blocks In that section, and are made pets ot by all the residents, and feel very much at home there. Sev eral of these beautiful birds, with their glossy plumage glistening like a black Jug In the sunshine, were strutting along tho street and enjoying themselves in a dig nified way, when a sparrow alighted near them and began jawing at and abusing them. The blackbirds paid no attention for a time, but as the noisy nulsanco kept, following them up and becoming moro abusive, one of them finally turned suddenly and gave the sparrow a prod with his bill which knocked him oft his feet- As soon ns he got up the blackbird went for him again, and despite all his screeching, knocked him over into a pud dle and continued to peck at him. The noise attracted a number more blackbirds from the adjacent grounds, and they heartily applauded their champion, and some of them lent a beak at pummellng the poor sparrow, who continued screech ing and put up the best fight he could. When he finally got out ot the puddle, his plumage was so bedraggled and he had been so roughly handled that he could not fly, nnd was very glad to escape under a gate into an adjoining lawn and seek ref uge In a prickly shrub where the black birds could not get at him. They walked around the bush for a while and finally flew away. The sparrow then came out and sunned himself In the sun. and then tviih a. "who cares a d V expression. went off to engage in another row with some one of his own size. Game Warden QulmTy calls attention to the fact that most of the farmers do not need education to know thtt the In sectivorous birds are their best friends, but the expansion of agricultural education 13 impressing this fact to the degree of Im portance It Is entitled to. Recently two quail were sent to the Agricultural Col lege of Michigan by a farmer who wroto that he killed them because they wero eating his grain. He wished an examina tion made of tho crops of the birds, which was done and the result made public la neither crop was found any grain, but in one of them was found 4D0O seeds of tbo false nettle, a very troublesome weed, which goe3 to show clearly, as most ot the farmers know, that the quail. Instead of being an enemy, was really a great help. Professor Barrows, of the Agricul tural College of Michigan, says that tha quail and other birds eat of very larga variety of noxious weed saed, besldeo grasshoppers, chinch bugs and other In jurious insects. He recently examined a quail's crop and found it full to 1U utmost capacity of span and measuring worms, both of which are among tha farmers' numerous enemies. Sometimes the fruit farmer Is inclined to shoot the birds In his fruit trees, but those who have made a study of the sub ject contend successfully that the farmer can well afford to raise fruit for the blrd3 in order to corapensato them for the ser vice they render to him. This department Is endeavoring to give all the assistance It possibly can for the protection and preservation of lcsectlvous blrd, be they game birds, song birds or others. Thero have been but a few convictions In the past year for the killing of these Insec tivorous and song blrdi, and still greater pains are to be taken In the future for tha enforcement of a wise and Just law, look ing to the eafe-guardlng of our birds. Spring- Fever. Joslah, Wink In Baltimore American. Lazy, lazy, lazy! Hit's de fprlngtlme ccmln sho. Hit's put de tlah'dneae) In man back Twell I caln't wuk no mo. Lazy, lazy, lazyl Twell I caln't shovel coal. But Marry do de washln For de white folks, bresa 'er soul. lazy, lazy, lazyl Want to git out In a boat. En watch de co'k a-bobbln. En' Je-s' lay dan en' float, Tlahd tiah'd. tiah'd! Hit mua be In de alh. En' Marty she'd be lazy. Ef she had d? time to epafh. 'La.tr. lazy. lazyl Jes es feeble es kin be. I's zoos too tiah'd to eat de stuff Bat Marfy cook foh me. - Tiah'd. tiah'd. tiah'd". I es caln't draw mah breff. When Marfy done dat washln She cn take hit borne huhseIt ' - 4&-i-i i - l-- - - -sTA. 1314- -. 4ft - . .- V,. -t