THE MOKKDJG- OEEGONIAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1900. Entered at the Postofllcc at Portland, Oregon, as eecon-J-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms 1G0 ' Business Office. ,.G57 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION HATES. "By Usil (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month S S5 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year. .. 50 Daily, with Sunday, per year 0 X Sunday, per jear 2 00 The "Weekly, per yar 1 50 The Weekly, 3 month 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundaj excepted.l5c Dally, per -week, delivered, Sundays included.20c POSTAGE RATES. "United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to lC-page paper Ic 10 to 32-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or, discussion intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed lnarla bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual, letter relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oreganlan." The Oregonlan do not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it -without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed for tblb purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 035, Tacoma Post office. Eastern Business Office The Tribune build ing, New Tork City; "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special agency. New Tork. For sale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 74G Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros- 236 Sutter street; F. VV. Pitts, 1003 Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry News stand. For sale in Los Angolcs by B. F. Gardner. 239 So. Spring street, and OU-er & Haines, 103 So. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street. For sale in Omaha by H. C Shears, 105 N. Sixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros.. 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 "W. Second South street. For sale In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On file in "Washington. D. C, with A. W. Dunn. 600 14th N. W. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 600-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S "WEATHER. Occasional rain; southerly winds. PORTLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 3. Accurate knowledge of the Intricacies of Multnomah County politics cannot be expected from newspapers throughout the state. "We shall forgive, therefore, a vote of censure passed upon Mult nomah County by the Salem States man for the reduction in real estate valuations made by Assessor Greenleaf In 1899. Whatever the fault in this transaction, it? was not the Multnomah taxpayer's. Mr. Greenleaf had two ob jects in view one was his own re-election, and how much sympathy he gained by the act is revealed In the fact of his defeat by Charlie McDonell, a young man without experience. The other object was a plan of the Mitchell ring, of which Mr. Greenleaf was a part, to put the Simon ring In a hole. The Simon element had limited the city's rate of taxation to 8 mills, and It was conceived good politics by the Mitchell element to make this 8-mlll limit ridiculous by reducing valuations so that the resultant revenue "would be Email. For these purposes the tax payers of Multnomah County are not responsible, and are therefore unde serving of the censure visited upon them. Perhaps we should do Mr. Greenleaf the credit of belief that valu ations were too high; but, however much this conviction was shared by taxpayers, they regretted the reduc tion, because of their certain knowl edge that It could only provoke re prisals from the rest of the state. The Statesman discovers a short memory in Its observation that no dis position to "cinch Multnomah County" ever existed before the reduction in valuation. Has it forgotten the regime of our State Board of Equalization, so called, when Multnomah County was represented by only one member, and when, despite the fact that this county was paying about one-third of the state tax, outside counties combined and put up its assessment about 20 per cent, In face of the fact that greater depression and greater shrink age of values existed in Portland than In any other part of the state? Human nature, let us remember. Is pretty much the same In city and country. No peo ple in any part of the state are more willing to pay their just share of state taxes than is the business community of Portland. Multnomah County would be satisfied with any Board of Review not organized -with an unfair combina tion in view. So long as a city gov ernment must be maintained here, valuations must be kept up to a fair point, or the city Itself will suffer. The reduction made by Mr. Greenleaf has fallen upon the people of Multnomah County with a multitude of burdens, which they are trying the best way they can to shoulder. They trust no added punishment is in store for an offense that was not of their commis sion. If alliance between ownerships of the transcontinental railroads proceeds at Its present momentum, and there is every reason to expect that it will, what will become of some of our local agitations? In general, we may be sure that costly quarrels will be elim inated. The allied ownership of the transcontinentals will feel that it can not, with its Great Northern, conduct a disastrous fight over Seattle terminal facilities with itself, as the Northern Pacific. This allied ownership will clear ly see the folly of building parallel lines ftrr the Northern Pacific, to compete In territory it already reaches with the O. R. & N. Without prejudice between routes, it will be apt to see the impro priety of haggling as Northern Pacific with Itself as the O. R, & N. over the price of trackage arrangements from Wallula to Portland. It will agree with itself on valuations and cost of maintenance, perform a simple opera tion in percentage, and the thing is done. Questions that people lie awake nights and tear hair over now will be settled amicably then In half an hour at Mr. Morgan's office, at the cor ner of Broad and Wall streets. Such wares as the Northern Pacific wants, to haul to Portland this allied owner ship will prefer to have hauled In the cheapest way that is, down the Colum bia River. That is likely to be. more over, a dark day for the "common point" So long as taxation keeps the Columbia River open to Portland, this allied ownership will see no point in hauling grain to Astoria by rail, when it can be stopped and loaded on the chip at Portland. It Is happy for many of our poli ticians, local as well as National, that the free-silver craze has recovered. When the malady was rampant, like true valetudinarians, they shunned mental exercise. With utmost solici tude they forbore from opinions. It is well they did, and it will be better for them If they shall stay imperturbable. Events still are such that politics .are more potent than opinions. The con clnnlty of the past and present shows the folly of opinions and the wisdom of having none. Several of these gentle men want to be Senator. Only one man who offers himself to the public has convictions. Mr. Corbett has stated them clearly. Unlike other as pirants, h had them before, he has them now, and he will have them In the future. It will be seen whether he would be wiser to have none, like our little men. UNSANITARY HABITATIONS. The recent death from typhoid fever of Prince Christian Victor, of the se vere Illness of the Czar of Russia from the same disorder, has led the British Medical Journal, one of the most au thoritative organs of the medical pro fession of England, to call attention to the very marked proclivity of the royal families of Europe to attacks of this distinctively "filth disease," and to the numerous fatalities in their ranks that have resulted therefrom. This procliv ity the ordinary means of prevention are apparently powerless to ward off, It being pointed out that Prince Chris tian Victor, and possibly also Prince Henry of Battenberg, were Inoculated against typhoid on the trip to Africa, notwithstanding which both contracted and succumbed to the disease. The predisposition of the reigning families of Europe to this malady is ascribed as largely due to the fact that their homes are almost exclusively castles and palaces, the foundations of which were laid many years ago, and which, notwithstanding intelligent and costly attempts to modernize them in the matters of sewerage, ventilation, etc., are, from a sanitary point of view, scarcely fit to live in. Modern conveniences have been engrafted, so to speak, upon theBe royal and Imperial residences, and they have been supplied with luxuries of every kind, but the foundations remain, reeking with the accumulated filth of bygone ages, when sewerage, as ndw understood and ap plied, was practically unknown. There are, indeed, few royal residences the subsoil of whose foundations are not reeking with the sewerage of centu ries. Various attempts have been made to remedy this condition, but In the very nature of things they have been only partially successful. After the death of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales from typhoid some years ago, and the subsequent almost fatal Illness of his brother, the present heir-apparent to the British throne, Marlborough House, the town residence of the family, was subjected to a searching investigation, when It was found that this palace, 200 years old, was resting in a very marsh of sewage; a few years before inves tigation showed that Buckingham Pal ace, the Queen's town residence, in which the Prince Consort died from typhoid, was In a similar condition, the deadly miasms in this case being ren dered more noisome by the proximity of a metropolitan sewer, built of brick and serving St. George's Hospital, which, owing to faulty construction, was leaking in every direction. Em peror William spent an Immense sum of money a few years ago In providing a new system of drainage for his Pots dam Palace, and it is said his Berlin residences stand in great need of simi lar attention. Windsor Castle Is fa vored to some extent in this respect, 'as it stands on high ground; but It is still far from whplesome as a place of residence. The uniform good health of Queen Victoria and her gratifying length of years are due to her long sojourn each year at Balmoral and Os borne, relatively new palaces, and with healthful surroundings. Other royal residences that are from a sanitary point of view unfit for hu man habitation are those at Madrid, Stockholm, the Winter Palace at St Petersburg, the older portions of the Haufborg, Vienna, and the palaces at Turin, Florence and Naples. The Mar quise de Fontenoy, in a recent press letter, refers to these matters somewhat in detail, adding a warning to wealthy Americans who are prone to lease Eng lish and Continental country seats of an cient construction, where the same dan ger from typhoid lurks In defective drainage and consequent accumulation of filth. Accurate information upon a matter at once so dangerous and so revolting in its possibilities should suf fice to leave these old country seats tenantless as far as Americans are concerned. It Is doubtful, however, whether even the authoritative state ments and Implied warnings of the British Medical Journal will enable royalty to protect Itself from its hered itary environment these palaces, upon their noisome foundations, being a part of an inheritance from which they can not entirely escape, in spite of their deadly influences. OSCAR. WTLDE. When we remember Oscar Wilde's genius and early promise, his obscure and wretched taklng-off approaches the dimensions of a tragedy. His talents were prodigious, his philosophy had elements of great utility. His prose and dramatic writings are creations of genuine power and grace. His verse has the Indefinable charm of poesy. For example: For e'er yon field of trembling gold Be garnered Into dusty sheaves Or e'er the Autumn's scarlet leaves Flutter like birds adown the wold. I may have run the glorious race And caught the torch while yet aflame. And called upon the holy name Of Him who now doth hide his face! Wilde's philosophy was the extreme of a sound Idea. He carried too far the righteous protest against enthrone ment of didacticism In art He drew men's attention to the truth, almost forgotten since the mortal part of Greece passed away, that the bestowal of pleasure Is a legitimate end of poetry, painting and sculpture, music and the drama, dress and conversa tion. Thus he was the antithesis, need ed, of the Puritan. We must not com plain of his tatreme position. We do not expect the truth at either end of the pendulum's swing; we can only ex pect the apostle to set out boldly the aspect presented by his side of the double shield. Unfortunately, the writer and think er iff overshadowed by the unspeakable morals of the man. The sacrifice of a gifted mind on the altar of sensualism, revealed In the career of Oscar Wilde, is among the catastrophes of litera ture, wickeder than Poe's, more abom inable than Villon's. The displeasure . visited upon nis wona may not cave been just; it was certainly salutary. Society's Instinct of preservation rises up at such times and vows that no quarter shall be shown to the moral wretch who defies Its canons. The race refuses to view the handiwork separate from the man. It will not imperil Its Ideals by giving countenance to his immorality through recognition of his genius. All this Wilde knew, or should have known. He brought upon himself his own degradation. THE CASE OF ROSS. Those Independent and accurate molders of public 'opinion throughout Oregon and Washington that find out what their views are on public ques tions so soon as The Oregonlan ex presses a contrary opinion are begin ning to be heard from on the subject of the removal of Professor Ross at Stan ford University. Having said the other day that the removal served the pro fessor right and Improved the univer sity, we are gratified to note that our pestilential critics hereabouts who had heard nothing of the matter before bristle with defenses of Ross and are sure that The Oregonlan Is in this case, as always, against free speech and honest thought We shall do these neighbors the favor of reiterating that In his enforced resignation Ross got exactly what he deserved. As head of Stanford University's de partment of economics. Professor Ross preached the doctrines of silverlsm in 1896. He preached Bryanlsm and so cialism to his classes in direct hostility to the purpose of the founder and Sup porters of the university. He was re monstrated with in vain, and was then very properly requested to resign. He was got rid of by Stanford University for the same reason that Brown Uni versity forced the resignation of Pres ident Andrews in 1896. When President Andrews was forced to resign his friends raised a loud out cry to the effect that Brown University had assailed "freedom of speech." This outcry was baseless. A college presi dent or professor Is free to hold any opinions he chooses, but if he teaches economical doctrines Intolerable to the institution and those supporting it, and conflicting with the doctrines they would have taught there, he has no more business to remain in his place than a clergyman has to occupy an or thodox pulpit and preach the rational Ism of Spencer or the agnosticism of Huxley. The trustees of Stanford Uni versity and the widow of its founder do not deny the right of Professor Ross to hold any opinions he pleases, but they have the clear right to say that he shall not preach them from his pro fessor's chair at the cost of the Univer sity and with the sanction of Its author ity. Suppose Ross saw fit to preach so cialism or nihilism, or anarchism or free love should he be retained on the plea that freedom of speech was In vaded by his removal? Free sliver and Bryanlsm have no more scientific standing with reputable scholars and thinkers in either Europe or America than ha3 nihilism or free love, and the advocacy of such views by Professor Ross was a fair indictment of his utter unfitness for the chair of economics in any University outside of Laputa. Another thing that rendered Ross persona non grata at Stanford was his militant Infidelity. It used to be considered quite the correct thing for undenominational schools to be offi cered and facultied by aggressive ag nostics. For a long time it was about as hard for the scientist to see any good in religion as for the theologian to see any good In science. The error of each Imperfection has long been ap parent What Ross believed, however, Is neither here nor there. It is a mat ter for the management of a university to determine, not what Its professors shall believe, but what they shall teach, and If they want to teach infidelity, they belong where that Is wanted. Mrs. Stanford thinks that, as Christianity Is the ruling and accepted religious faith of this country, good taste, as well as sound morals, cannot abide at tacks upon it in instructors of the young, who, if they have not Chris tianity in some of Its various adapta tions, will have no religion at all. The successful university. In a word, doesn't want Its chairs filled by cranks. Mr. Ross seems to have been a crank of varied and multitudinous crotchets. NO SECTIONALISM AFTER SURREN DER. The question whether General Robert EL Lee ever asked for a pardon has been settled by the publication of a letter written to President Johnson June 13, 1865, In which he applies "for the benefits and full restoration of all rights and privileges extended to those Included In the proclamation of am nesty and pardon." He was not Indi vidually pardoned, but under a gen eral proclamation of pardon to all who were not under Indictment he was In cluded. General Lee, as everybody knows who has read his life by his nephew. General Fltz Hugh Lee, went Into the war with great reluctance, as did Joe Johnston, Longstreet Bragg and Albert Sydney Johnston. None of these men was a secessionist All of them declared that, while they would feel obliged to fight with their states if they seceded, they did not favor or justify secession. Lee wrote his sister that he saw no justification for the se cession of Virginia, and that he had never approved of slavery, but had considered it a great evil, from which he had always wished there was some constitutional deliverance. A man of Lee's eminence, holding such opinions, would naturally be one of the first as was Longstreet, to recognize that the war was over, and that It was the duty of the Southern people to render obedi ence to the Government It Is an Interesting fact that the Con federate archives at Washington con tain a letter of August 11, 1S63, in which Jeff Davis refused to accept the resignation of General Robert E. Lee as commander of the Army of North ern Virginia. Lee tendered his resigna tion August 8, 1863, just five weeks after his defeat at Gettysburg. Lee in his letter of resignation, and Davis in his reply, make it clear that Lee desired to abandon the Civil War, since the fall of Vjcksburg had made the down fall of the Southern Confederacy only a question of time. It is clear, from the promptness with which General Lee sought for complete political rehabilitation, that he was not a man of Intense sectionalism, like Davis, Toombs and General Early. He was, like Longstreet determined, when he sheathed his sword, to keep the peace between the sections, in spirit as well as In letter. Lee survived the war only five years. Had he been granted the same length of days as his class mate. General Joe Johnston, he would. like him, have always cast his influ ence against sectionalism In the South. Had Abraham Lincoln, who enjoyed the confidence of both North and South as to his integrity of purpose, and Robert E. Lee, whose influence over the Southern people was very great both survived the war ten years, it Is quite probable that many serious political mistakes on both sides would have been avoided. The dearest wish of both these Southern-born men would have been to heal the wounds of war as rapidly as possible, and with the Confidence which both these men en joyed In their respective sections, and the public respect with which both were universally regarded, they would have persuaded their people on both sides to approach the problem of re construction with freedom from pas sion and prejudice, compared with the bitter strife that took place under the demagogic administration of President Johnson. Had' Lee survived the war a dozen years, he would have been found with Lamar, and Bayard, a stiff Gold Democrat for he came of conservative Federalist stock. He would no more have been a free-sllverlte or a Populist than Longstreet or Buckner; for, like them, he knew no sectionalism after surrender. "Christian Science cannot Intelli gently be handled by one who does not know anything of Its nature," says somebody. The statement is proved both by malpractice and by mortality of the science. Healers evidently can't handle It because they don't know any thing about it The only objection to the science Is that It Is far In advance of human evolution. After we shall have lived a few million years more and sloughed off our physical being, we shall be all spirituality and never sick. Our great handicap Is that we have lived so many years before ac quiring spiritual consciousness that our grosser nature is a fact When we shall have reduced Christian Science from an lmpolpably inane to a tangible concept we may have a medicine. Christian Scientists are quite proper in their ar raignment of citlclsm. If the concept is hazy and heterogeneous for Us ex ponents, perhaps criticism is likewise. Because state money is not equally distributed, by all means let us dls trioute it as unequally as possible. This wisdom seems to Inspire certain of our wiseacre citizens. Certainly, If Marlon County has a graft, let us give another to Crook County. If Lane County gets a fat share, let us give -a fatter one to Union or Baker. Let us remove con siderations of expediency from appro priations and substitute others of profit Let us change the purposes of legislative acts from those of govern ment to others of gain to individuals. Our all-wise propounders of govern mental function seem to labor under the idea that our public Institutions serve personal Instead of state objects. They confess thereby an unenviable frame of mind. Taxpayers get more injustice out of petty litigations than litigants get Jus tice. A backyard fracas between housewives or a squabble over a hen roost Is elevated to a sublime question of justice by self-seeking lawyers. Their business Is to exalt molehills to mountains. Consequently their opin ions about the blessed quality of un strained Justice should be balanced by others which are not charmed by busi ness perplexities. Absolute Justice Is more feasible by squelching backyard altercations than by cinching taxpay ers. To be sure, a certain amount of justice Is extracted by adjudication of petty squabbles, but nobody yet has been able to compute the measure of it Sad ghost of Jefferson! Democrats will have a worse nightmare than the other. If they don't watch out Re publican Jefferson of the common peo ple! A specter which In flesh made Kings and Princes quake may rise some night to point Its avenging finger at the scions of Democracy. What would Jefferson say, should he see a Royalist in Congress? Democrats truly should not sleep these nights. This break-neck pace toward imperialism is faster even than they who devised the stays and balances of the Constitution apprehended. The Royalist delegate from Hawaii a Democrat! Our friends should not sleep these dark, wintry nights. We are getting, to be well educated. Farmers raise a rumpus when anything is subsidized except farming. Manu facturers do likewise when the matter of business' comes up to them. Ship builders think subsidization of any in dustry other than theirs Is opposed to public policy. It is good there is such a thing as life. Otherwise we could not be educated in the school of political economy. The Spooner bill 13 not as Important now as it was a year ago. The elec tion has virtually given by popular vote to the President the authority It was sought by resolution to confer upon him through Congress, and the Repub lican party Is not under the necessity of declaring a definite policy. Since there are thirty-three" counties in Oregon, it follows logically that state bounties, appropriations and in stitutions would serve public Interests better in one place than in another. The Jews as Drinkers. The Humanitarian. The nations who are most sober at the present day, in whom this craving for excessive alcohol is least in evidence, are those .who have been drinking it longest The inhabitants of vine-growing districts are peculiarly sober, but this has not been always so, for the records of Scrip ture clearly give account of scenes or. drunken debauchery among the Jewish and other Eastern peoples, which, even in our own drunken country, would be held to be disgraceful. The warnings against the vice, moreover, run through both the Old and the New Testament At the present day, however, the Jewish na tion is remarkable for Its sobriety, and this in spite of their being scattered abroad in all countries, and consequently under varying climatic conditions. Their poverty and squalor, in many Instances, are extreme, and yet the craving to drown their sorrows in alcohol is a thing almost unknown among them. Moderate drinkers most of them arc, but the tendency to excess, the tendency to use the drug not as an article of diet and for the pleasurable- sensations it pro duces, but as a means of satisfying an inordinate and uncontrollable craving, prevails among them only to a very lim ited extent They have remained for ages an almost pure race, intermarriage with members of .other nationalities and re ligious persuasions is not common among them, and the explanation of their present sobriety is that, as in the case of tuber culosis, alcohol has worked out its own salvation by killing off, directly or Indi rectly, those who had the hereditary In clination toward it SAVE THE TRASH. The great Englsh library economist, Ed ward Edwards, Is responsible for the dic tum, "The trash of one generation be comes the highly prised treasure ot an other." My appeal la In behalf of the coming generation, as well as the pres ent when that which may now be regard ed as "trash" will be counted as treas ure. That great mass of unorganized materials, some of which are constantly getting in the way of the busy worker of the present, accumulating In the counting-house and the office, or littering up the library and study at home. Is large ly made up of matter that If saved, would sometime be of value to the historical in vestigator. This Is so by virtue of the well-understood fact that ev.ery scrap ot writing or printing, every record of a fact becomes, by the mere passage of time, a historical document Its value may be much or little, as the fact it re cords is mora or less Important and as the difficulty of obtaining It from any other source is greater or leas. Now, the importance ot the facts re corded depends on a variety of circum stances, practically impossible to antici pate. Generally speaking, we may be cer tain that any material which happens to be saved will find its use sooner or later. So well grounded is this belief that all of the great European and American li braries which collect documentary ma terials have long since abandoned as sheer folly the policy of discriminating among the papers offered. They simply receive everything. To illustrate, la looking over my bibliography of Oregon materials In he library of the Wisconsin Historical Society. I notice, among tho pamphlets, such things as theBe pamphlets of the Board of Agriculture, of the Board of Irrrlgatlon, of the Portland Board of Trade, "Portland Illustrated," etc Clip pings from Oregon, newspapers, for ex ample, "Astorla'B Gala Day," from The Oregonlan, clippings from religious pa pers containing notices of the work of the early Oregon mlssslonarles, etc., etc These are simply examples taken at ran dom from a list of several hundred pamphlets on Oregon, carefully filed away In the fireproof racks of the mag nificent new library building erected at a cost of more than half a million dol lars by the people of the State of Wis consin. There they will be seen and used by the historian of 500 years hence, in all probability much more than, they are used now by students In Pacific Coast history. Much of this matter Is of the kind commonly regarded as trash, and its destruction ordinarily goes on at an extremely rapid rate. But for public in stitutions whose business It is to col lect copies ot everything In the shape of printed matter, and for an occasional private collector, these things with their high value in certain lines of Investiga tion, would very soon be as completely lost to the world as though they had never existed. The above applies equally to newspapers, which If they can only be saved for a qquarter of a century or more, become highly Important historical documents. The difficulty Is to save them, a difficulty which present day collectors of Civil War papers sufficiently appreci ate. Accidentally copies are saved here and there, which, when gotten together at great cost, may possibly make a file. But I desire especially to call atten tion in tltis connection to written rec ords, of which presumably only a single copy has ever existed. Here the chances of accidental preservation are exceeding ly small. Unless special efforts are made to preserve them they are almost sure to be lost It Is for this reason that public officers are required by law to keep rec ords and transmit them to their succes sors in office; for this reason our court house officers are provided with the iron safe and fireproof vault, where current records can be kept and the archives of the county, with their wealth of possibil ities for local history, saved to the gen erations of the future to whom their value will be progressively greater and greater. In every community which pro vides proper facilities for the purpose. Its public records are reasonably safe. But there are still In our newer states many wooden or brick courthouses, without proper vaults. In such cases it Is by no means unusual to And valuable collec tions of records In garrets and out of the way places where they are In more or less danger from the" whims of unhiatorical Janitors, and are always liable to be con sumed by fire. I have even learned of one county officer, a superintendent of schools, who deliberately made a bonfire of tho accumulated records of bis 'office on removing from an old courthouse to a new one. I trust however, that this Is a unique case. When we come to the records mad 3 by minor public officers, such as school clerks, for example, there Is much greater danger of loss. This Is true for the double reason that there is no safe place of deposit, as a rule, and these records are not always sufficiently prized to in duce the best care possible. I.baVe in my posssesslon a teacher's register cov ering the years 1859-1S67 in a rural school in Grant County, Wisconsin. It was res cued from the mildew and vermin of an old garret, whereas it should have been kept as a precious thing. In, the office of the district clerk. But this case of dere liction Is in Its turn surpassed by cases, also coming under my direct observation, where school districts and cities 40 years old and more, have preserved only a small portion of their school records through th regular official channels. The trouble has been that such rec ords have not been appreciated at their full value. The school register In my possession, contains matter of the high est historical Importance, throwing light not only on the local con ditions in that district but also upon the general educational his tory of Wisconsin. It Is, or will be in time to come, so valuable to the student of Wisconsin institutions, that I mean to turn it over to their state historical so ciety. I have mentioned but a few classes of "trash." There are many more that might be mentioned. The study of 'his tory Is rapidly beng transformed from the merely political to the truly Institutional character. We in America are no longer satisfied to have a bare sketch of the po litical progress of our country and our states; we know that here something more is possible, and we are demanding it We want to know how our several Institu tions, the elements in the great complex of modern life, came Ut be what they are, and how they have contributed to the total result Therefore, the historian must study separate institutions, educa tional, religious, manufacturing, commer clal, as well as political, and this last must be studied with a minuteness not re quired In the past All this means a vastly increased de pendence upon local records and docu ments of every description. If these be found In abundance, the historian can make the past live again in the mind of the present generation, and speak to It of the strivings, the successes, the fail ures, which all life Involves. It is only when studied in this careful minute way that the past can afford sure and safe guidance to the present But when so studied history becomes the true chart by which to direct the forces- of social progress. I cannot forbear to cite one Illustration ot the way In which progress in a certain line has been hindered in nearly all of our American states, on account of the fail ure to bring forward the teachings of his tory, as developed in the older common wealths. About 1S30-40 occurred the so called "education revival." having Its cen ter In Massachusetts and Its personal em bodiment in Horace Mann. The common schools all over New England were in a deplorable state. What were the reasons? They were various. But standing out among them in perfect clearness was one yrhich, might b deemed fundamental. That was the great evil of small dis tricts. Every student ot education saw It; It was a patent fact The remedy was equally clear. The trouble had come about in Massachusetts and Connecticut by their departure from the Colonial pol icy of township schools under a town ship board. The remedy lay In reversing the process, in centralizing where de centralization had wrought the evil. But it was hard to retrace the steps ot the downward process, and while something Was soon done in that direction, it was not till 1859 that the dlstrlot system was abolished in Massachusetts, and it was still later when the fully developed town ship system took Its place. Now, it would scan that the newer states In their edu cational arrangements would have avoid ed this failure shown to be so pernicious In the old. But not so. Custom and habit rather than philosophy based upon experi tnce, controlled, and the process of di vision and subdivision went on in the newer states, just as it had gone on in the oldor with the same Inevitable result the deterioration of the rural school. Then after awhile, when the evils of the sys tem became absolutely unendurable In a particular state, the tide would turn In the other direction, the natural remedy would be applied, and always with suc cess. Wisconsin i3 still struggling against the evil, although she has now been work ing" toward the township system for many years. I know of no more striking illustration of the fact that in the absence of a clear historical demonstration of the folly of doing eo, men will reproduce the evils of the institutions familiar to them, as well as the good. Had tho history of education In our American states been thoroughly worked out, or had It been worked out at all, when the newer states adopted their systems of education, it would simply have been impossible for such stupendous mistakes to be made. As It was, the knowledge of the evil was confined to tha few, and they the men who had little Influence In the making of the laws. Society everywhere needs to know its past better than lt,has ever known it be fore. In order to do this, the body of the people must co-operate with the historical investigator by saving up for him ma terials from which alone the truth can be obtained. JOSEPH 8CHAFER. Department ot History, University of Oregon. STATUS OF THE CANAL. Davis Amendment to Ha.y-Pa.nnce- fote Treaty Still Fendi In Senate. New Tork Commercial Advertiser. All the mass of material relating to this canal that has been accumulating these 10 years past has boiled down to the treaty negotiated last Winter by Mr. Hay and Lord Pauncefote, the Hepburn bill, rassed by the House and pending In the Senate, the report of the Walker Commission, nearly ready to be made, and the treaty with Nicaragua and Costa Rica giving the United States control ot the right of way for the canal, which the representatives of those powers In Wash ington are said to be prepared to make whenever our State Department is ready. Out of these or, rather, out of the two main acts, the treaty and the bill, when each shall have been modified to fit the other the final legislative authority to build the canal will come. The treaty preceded the bill. It was signed February 5, when the canal bill of Senator Morgan was pending in the Sen ate. The Senate seemed eager to pass the Morgan bill without waiting for a treaty amending the Bulwer-Clayton treaty. It was Induced to wait for the Walker report, and In the meantime Mr. Hay and Lord Pauncefote did their work. It gave to the United States the right re nounced by both powers In 1850 to build and own and control exclusively an Isth mian canal, but adopted to govern it the rules of neutralization of the Suez Canal, in the treaty of Constantinople in 1833, to which the adherence of other pow ers was to be asked. American public opinion made no objection to the clauses safeguarding commerce in time of war and securing equality in use to all na tions in time of peace; but there was outcry against the prohibition of defen sive works and the implied right given an enemy's warships to enjoy the same security In the canal as our own. Tes timony of high military and naval au thority that these objections were futile, since the real defense of the canal lay in sea power, did not convince, and the com mittee on foreign affairs reported the famous Davis amendment to remove them. That added to the treaty a provis ion, also copied from the treaty of Con stantinople, where It safeguarded the Ot toman Empire, providing that none of the neutrality conditions and stipulations should apply "to nteasures which the United States may find It necessary to take for securing, by its own forces, the defense of the United States and the maintenance of public order." This amendment was reported early In March, but no action was taken on it up to the time Congress adjpurned. It remains with the treaty as unfinished executive business in the Senate. Mean while the House had passed the Hepburn bill. This was a simpler and clearer measure than Senator Morgan's. It Is only two pages long, and empowers the President to obtain right of way from the two republics, build and protect the canal, and authorizes the Secretary of War to make contracts for its "excava tion, construction, completion and de fense," at a cost not to exceed $140,000,000. The original draft had been modified In a report of Mr. Hepburn, February 19, ,by softening the authority to "fortify" to "protect" and "defend," and it was be lieved by the friends of the Davis amend ment that its reservations had brought the bill and the treaty into harmony. The Senate, however, let both go over to this session, when they will come up for consideration, together with the Walker report and the treaty with the Central American states. Give Tbem Four-Footed Targets Pittsburg Dispatch. Late reports from the Adlrondacks and other hunting regions raise the question whether it is not necessary to preserve the uame more strictly In order to pro vide the hunters with a supply abundant enough to save them from the present disposition to bag each other. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS The Innocence of Childhood. Papa (reading) And there was a man who fell anions thieves, Little Harry "Where? Did he est sent to the Legislature? Chicago Times-Herald. Different Views. She (at football game, as player Is carried oft field) iTO't It perfectly awful? He I should say It is I Why, that tel low is no more unconscious than I am he's playing" to tho gallery. Brooklyn Life. A Lack of Faith. Mose Ah bad mah rab bit's foot right in mah pocket, and still she refused mo! Pete Doan he rash, nlggahl Does yo' reckon yo-' knows bettah what am good fo yo' dan dat rabbit's foot does? Puck. Spring: ot Conduct. She What is it you like so much about football? He Oh, tha vigorous exercise and the fight for victory. She Nonsense! Tou like the way we girls praise you when it Is all over. Indianapolis Journal. Enjoyment Worth the Punishment. "Wil lie," said the elder sister at the juvenile par ty, "you'll he 111 if you eat any more, and then you -xon't be able to go to school tomor row," "Well," said Willie, with a sigh, "it's worth It." Moonshine. Boy Please, sir. may I have the afternoon off? My grandmother Is to be buried. Em ployerThis is the eighth grandmother you have buried since the football season opened. Boy I know It, sir. I come of a very old family, and my ancestors can't stand the ex citement of the game. They're dying off very fast. Tit-Bits. At one of the railway-construction works In tho vicinity of the city a Roman Catholic cler gyman takes a great interest in tho mem bers of his flock who are engaged at the cut ting. On Saturday he saw one of them, enter ing a "pub." Tind hailed him. hut Pat simply looked, and walked in, "Waiting till .be came out. the reverend gentleman accosted him thus: "Pat; dln't you hear me calling?" "Yes, your ravrlnce, I did, but but I bad only the price of one." Glasgow Evening Tunas. NOTE AND COMMENT. Kruger defies England as effectively as terrier behind a picket fence does a bulldog. Maybe Kruger meant to except himself; when he declared the Boefrs will fight to the death. The survival of the fattest is a doc trine which does not apply to our friend the turkey. . If the Sultan savs. "Call around tomor row," It will be because he never heard of Kentucky. Croker has been taxed In England. This Is poetic Justice, for he does tha taxing in New York. The I-told-you-so man has droDDed the election and Is getting into training for next Summer's yacht race. Waldersee reports he is pacifying the country around Pekln. He should avoid getting the situation well In hand. "Four years more of the full windbag" was not a popular sentiment even In Ne braska, where they are used to those things. When the French feel that England .'a sufficiently Insulted, they will mark tha boundaries of their country "exhibit A." and point them out to Kruger. That Zimmerman girl may have done a better Job than Anna Gould, after all. Manchester Is a far prettier name than Costellane, and Infinitely more uppish. The Democrats accuse the Republicans of wanting to reorganize the Democratic party, but the Republicans are perfectly willing to entrust that Job to Bryan and Jones. Our esteemed contemporary, the Con gressional Record, has missed a number of issues, but we understand it is making arrangements to resume publication n the near future. If the victims at the Stanford-Berkeley football game, last Thursday, had been players, a great many facetious peo ple would have trenchant things to say about the mortality of the sport Bryan says he feels good because he re tains the confidence of his associates. Perhaps he has not heard the talk of re organizing the party or Jones' declara tion that he is out of it A municipal ordinance which assumed to prohibit any woman from going into a building where there Is a liquor sa loon, or from standing or loafing within 50 feet thereof, has been condemned as unreasonable and unconstitutional by the Kentucky Court of Appeals. It Is sug gested that the ordinance might bo valid if its operations were confined to disreputable characters, but It would probably bo somewhat difficult to define such characters so that the police would know whom to arrest and whom to let go. The court declares that it knows no rule of law which prohibits a well-behaved woman from going Into or near a saloon, where her purpose and manner are lawful. Some people who have read the ac counts of the tremendous slaughter o deer by Indians in Wyoming have an idea that if deer are so numerous there as reports indicate they really need thinning out Granting that the slaugh ter is all that has been reported. It Is nothing compared to the slaughter of deer in Southern Oregon a few years ago by "skin hunters." The skin of a deer when thoroughly dried only weighs a few ounces, yet it was no Infrequent thing in those. days to see heavy truckloads of these skins in bales, hauled through the streets of Portland. These skin hunters killed deer by thousands, and left their carcasses to rot where they were skinned. Sln.ce this killing of deer for their skins has been practically stopped, the ani mals are becoming more numerous and presently there will be hosts of them. A venison cutlet or haunch, from ' a good fat buck. Is a very agreeable change from the eternal beef, pork and mutton, but lean deer are not worth cooking. President Judge Arnold, of Court of Common Pleas No. 4, In the City of Philadelphia, has recently expressed him self very emphatically In favor of the divorce laws ot the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which are more liberal than those of the State of New York, where marital infidelity is the only cause for absolute divorce, permlttng the inno cent party to marry ag.'ln. "Our divorce laws are wise and Just," says Judge Ar nold in a recent opinion. "I do not agree with those persons who occasionally de nounce them. The hatred, misery, sin and crime, which so often flow from ln dlssolute marriage connections, require a remedy. "Wife-beaters and deserters should be deprived of the opportunity of inflicting further misery on their part ners. Desertion as a cause of divorce has milch warrant of scripture. In St Paul's first epistle to the Corinthians, chapter vll, verse 15, he wrote: 'But if the un believing depart, let him depart A broth er or a sister Is not under bondage in such cases'; and commentators on the Bible have held this text to mean that desertion dissolves the marriage." The Veteran's Last Battle. "W. T. Dumas In Atlanta. Journal. The veteran sits In his easy chair on his porch at the hour of noon. And looks thro' the clouds of his long stemmed pipe o'er the bountiful mead ows of June, Till the fire dies out of the odorous leaves that under their ashes are hid. And the fire Is quenched in his yet keen eye by the drop of its tremulous lid; Then he nods and he dreams, forgetful of all the mortgage, the crops, and the rain; For the bugles and drums of the long ago are echoing loud In his brain. Let the busies and drums call on, call on, shrill blast and voluminous roll; For they sound to the conflict enacted again on tho field of the slumberer's sout Although In the trenches they've moldered away for many and many a year. In rank upon rank, resplendent with arms, the men and their leaders appear For phantasy marshals those squadrons of ghosts that sweep o'er the hoof-cut plain. And the keen, bright swords ot the long ago are flashing anew In his brain. Let the bugles and drums- play on, play on, the scintlllant sword blades wheel; The battle runs riot In tempests of lead and terrible whirlwinds of steel; And onward the riders thro columns ot smoke sweep down In the heart of the fray. The veteran borne In the midst of the charge on the back of his strenuous gray; But he falls' from his saddle, still clutching at air, and the battle Is over again; By the bullet that wounded him long ago today he is stretched with the slain. The bugles and drums have ceased, hava ceased, the cannon roar not on the bill; The stillness of noon has been broken alone by the pipes of the locust shrill; He slips from the arms of his easy chair and lies outstretched on the floor. As he fell from his horse in bis younger days and lay in the dust and the gore. The doctor will come and mutter "his heart." but never a doctor can know He was killed by the bullet that wounded Elm ones In a. battle of long ago.