THE MORNiyO OREGOyiAN, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 7, 1900. its rsgoracm Catered at the Postofllce at Portland, Oregon, as econd-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms 10(5 1 Business Office. ..GC7 REVISED UBSCRnTION BATES. By Hail (postage prepaid). In Advance Daily, with Sunday, per month ....$ 85 Daily, Sunday excepted, per -year 7 50 Dally, -with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per jear 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 50 The Weekly. 8 months 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered, Sundays excepted.l5c Daily, per week, deliiered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE KATES. Vnlted States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 10-page paper..... .lc 18 to 82-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In The Orcgonlan should be addressed Ixnaria "bly "Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adi ertls lng, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonian." The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from IndUlduals. and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It -without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at Ull Pacific a enue. Tacomc Box OSS, Tacoma Postofllce. Eastern Business Office The Tribune build ing. New York City; "The Kookery." Chicago; the S. C. Beck with special agency, New York. For sale in San Franolsco by J. K. Cooper, 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros.. 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street; Foster & Orear. Ferry News stand. For sale In Lo9 Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 100 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., 1812 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co , 77 W. Second South street. Fofeala In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On file In Washington. D. C. -Rita A. W. Dunn. 500 14th N. W. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 000-912 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Occasional rain, with fresh to brisk southerly winds. rORTLAJTD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7. What business Is It of Government whether rivers are improved or not, arid lands made fruitful, isthmuses cut or agriculture enlightened? An old theory of government would forbid the diversion of taxes to any of these pur poses; but if we examine the bases of that theory we shall find that the con ditions surrounding the problem have radically changed since the theory was formed. The immemorial aspect of government to man is unfriendly. It was his oppressive master. From child hood to old age he studied and labored to weaken its power and frustrate Its ambitious and insidious machinations. In most men. therefore, was born a superstitious dread of a strong govern ment. They swore eternal war upon centralization, they looked with misgiv ing upon every farthing withdrawn from industry by taxation. They wrung constitutions from kings, they de stroyed the divine right, they sent their rulers to the scaffold they quarreled with royal governors, they declaimed passionately about rights reserved to the state and other rights reserved to the people. "Whether government should be entrusted with any given task of magnitude, then, was a ques tion involving vitally, if remotely, the rights of man. All this has passed away. Under a constitution and representatives chosen by the people, the division of labor between government and private enter prise becomes one of pure expediency. Government ;s not a thing distinct from the people, it is only a function of the people, one of the varied forms in which the alms and activities of the race are manifested. Can we do this one thing, whatever it may be, better in our capacity as a government or as a society, or as Isolated individuals? We brought Bull Run water Into Port land as an act of government. It was too big a jod for private capital. The whole people, assessed on a basis of cjnsumptlon through a term of years under process of law, did the work through their legally chosen represent atives. If it had waited for somebody to do it as an investment, we should Still have been drinking muddy river water, except those who had perished from disease In the attempt. These great enterprises, like the opening of the Columbia River or the construction of the Nicaragua Canal, or the reclam ation of our arid lands, pay. They do not always pay the specific contribu tors, but they pay the whole Interested community. The canal at the cascades of the Columbia has many times repaid its cost In the transportation charges saved the vast grain-growing area of the Columbia basin. The Nicaragua Canal will put money in the pockets of the world's traders to the end of time, though the taxpayers of the United States may receive no return for much of their outlay. Introduction of econ omies of this 3ort into the imperfect form given us by Nature are costly but remunerative. Experience shows that very often in no other way than in Us governmental capacity can soci ety so cheaply and satisfactorily carry such enterprises to a successful end. We must also notice again, the pe culiarly advantageous position enjoyed by our Federal Government for rals 4ng money. There Is almost no limit to the millions that can be raised through the customs and Internal revenue, with out serious discomfort to the taxpayer. We are now abolishing Federal taxes that are not really burdensome, while state and city governments are put to It to make ends meet, and every few years see vast sums of private capi tal wiped out of existence through whole or partial failure of great cor porate enterprises. Numbers of great works are better done by government tzr the further reason that they have an Intimate relation to the public wel fare. This Is true of the political as pect of the Nicaragua Canal and of the Government responsibility for the arid portions of the public domain, both land Itself and the water supply. If a given piece of work can be done by Government but not by private enter prise, or if it can be done better, more cheaply or more safely in that way, that is the way to do it. We need not be deterred by old specters of too strong governments. The people are subjects, but also rulers. In the capa city of sovereigns they are not going to oppress themselves in their capacity as individuals. McKlnley is elected, but he is not laying the foundations o a dynasty any more than Jackson did, or Lincoln, or Grant. Discovery that oversight has left us fritbou! a. close ashing, jjeaeoa for- the Necanlcum and Ohana Rivers is an other reminder that fish and game leg islation must be expected at the com ing session, if not in the shape of meri torious enactment, at least in forms both political and predatory. The lob byist, we take It, Is already out with spear and net for the fine, f at run of trap and wheel men who, rumor sayB, have done reasonably well the past two years: and experience forbids a doubt of the customary bills from Clatsop, restricting all fishing to the lower river, and from Wasco, making life a burden to the daring cruisers of the bar. These rival philanthropists may be trusted to prove, as usual, mutually destruct ive. We certainly ought to have, if we can get it, a sane and intelligible re enactment of our fish and game laws, with any necessary amendments, as has been suggested by the sportsmen's organization. In this the danger is that commercial interests will suffer from Incompetent handling by experts in game fish and birds. There should be two laws ons for commercial fishing salmon, sturgeon, etc., and the other for regulation of amateur hunting and fishing. It would doubtless be advisa ble to have separate legislative com mittees for these two distinct objects. There Is an opportunity for the sports men to achieve something of real value, if they will prepare and secure the passage of a simple, adequate fish and game law. Only one thing is more im portant than this, and that is to help enforce the laws as they are now. It falls little short of a disgrace that our sportsmen glv practically no aid to officers of the law in detection and pun ishment of deerslayers. Perhaps Librarian Leach is within the bounds of strict accuracy when he calls tne Kelly book of 1830 the first book about Oregon, inasmuch as its contents appear to be, for the first time among publications, applied to the ter ritory then known as Oregon. Yet the Lewis aid Clark work (two vol umes, 1814), though printed under con tract for the United States Govern ment, wa? certainly a book, and "about Oregon," as well as other regions. Jon athan Carver's book, printed in 1779, contained mention of Oregon, but was primarily devoted to his travels (1776 1779), in the Lake Superior country. The Kelly book is certainly a , most valuable acquisition, and repays the library's three years of persistent ad vertising for it The scarcity of these early works would be cause for sur prise, inasmuch as they would likely be offered to possible purchasers here whenever found by collectors, if we did not remember the small store that must have been set by such books in the first few years, after publication. Their editions were, of course, very small, and doubtless most persons who bought them put little value on them after perusal. Probably many an early book of Western travel that would bring 525 today could be put to no more profit able use in 1S50 than to start the kitchen fire. Representative McCall, who wanted free trade with Porto Rico for Massa chusetts traders, doesn't want the Phil ippines under any programme a course of action which Is entirely con sistent with New England's historical attitude toward westward expansion, but which casts an unpleasant light over his doughty championship of Jus tice to the Porto Rlcans. Mr. McCall shows himself to have been bitten by the anti-Imperialist tarantula. He is dancing mad with liberty and inde pendence. That is, though liberty and Independence are two entirely different things, Mr. McCall shows his inability to distinguish between them. Political independence Is one thing, civil free dom is another. Massachusetts and Oregon are free, but they are not inde pendent, and in the same case are Can ada and Australia. Russia is inde pendent and not free. A transfer of sovereignty Is not sufficient cause for the inhabitants of territory to rebel. Abuse of power and mlsgovernment do furnish such a cause. What the American colonists "rebelled against was bad government. When the Fili pinos are similarly abused, will be their time for independence. They will get liberty and self-government under the United States. They couldn't get it un der Agulnaldo. These are unadorned facts, and hence they are unpalatable to that geographically and otherwise small portion of the Union which sees ruin to the- Republic every time the center of population moves westward or the House of Representatives Is reapportioned. A SAD TRAGEDY RECALLED. The announcement ot the death of Mrs. Abby Sage Richardson in Rome recalls a sad tragedy. Nearly thirty years ago Mrs. Richardson obtained a divorce from a drunken husband, named McFarland, whose cruel abuse of her when he was Intoxicated was no torious. Mrs. McFarland subsequently was sought In marriage by Albert D. Richardson, one of the most gifted members of the staff of the New York Tribune. He had been a famous war correspondent, and had published a book describing his adventures as a prisoner of war, for he had been cap ture! during Grant's Vlcksburg cam paign. Richardson was an able writer,' an upright man, and he had been at tracted to Mrs. McFarland by her su perior literary ability. McFarland, hearing that Richardson was paying his addressee to his divorced wife, swore that he would kill him. His first attempt was frustrated by Rich ardson, who wrested his pistol from his grasp. Some months after, McFarland, learning, that Richardson would shortly marry Mrs. McFarland, sought out Richardson In the Tribune office and shot him down. Richardson lingered a few days in great agony, and before his death was married to Mrs. McFar land, to whom he willed all his prop erty. The marriage ceremony was per formed by Henry Ward Beecher, and among those present was the Rev. O. B. Frothingham, the famous Liberal Unitarian preacher of whose religious society Richardson was a member. Beecher and Frothingham both made this tragedy a subject of pulpit dis course, Beecher avowing his solemn conviction that the relations of Mrs. McFarland and Richardson had always been absolutely beyond reproach. Richardson never paid his addresses to Mrs. McFarland until she was a di vorced woman, and his only offense was that he had once advised Mrs. McFarland to separate from a man whose drunken brutality made life with him degrading companionship. McFarland was tried for murder and was defended by John Graham, a fa mous jury lawyer, who had defended General Sickles In his trial for the mur der of Key. McFarland was acquitted on the ground of Insanity. He sur vived a few years, but was shunned by everybodj, and died a social out cast He was a malignant wretch, for he confessed to a prominent lawyer. In whose office he had once -been a clerk during the war, and who visited him in prison, that he "did not shoot Rich ardson because he believed he had se duced Mrs. McFarland, but because he was determined that if she was di vorced from him no other man should have her." After her husband's death Mrs. Rich ardson rose rapidly Into favor as a writer of superior ability and versatil ity. She was a woman of very win ning personality, and was welcome in the best literary circles of New York and Boston. She bore herself always with dignity, and carried the bitter cross of her husband's murder with resignation, devoting herself to the care of her children by her first marriage. The few thousands of dollars willed her by Richardson enabled her to live In comfort unt'l her literary reputation had become firmly established by her versatile pen. THE LEGAL EXFORCEMEXT OF TOTAL ABSTIXEXCE. The "Vermont Legislature on the 23d ult rejected the local option referen dum bill that had been under consider ation In both houses. The vote in the Senate was 17 against to 12 for, and in the House it was 140 against to 92 for. The sentiment in the Senate, as evi denced by polls of voters at prominent points, is opposed to the present pro hibitory law, and the friends of local option aver tnat if the question was submitted to popular vote the prohibi tory law would be relegated out of ex istence. Many legislators who see clearly the evil of attempting to enforce a law not sustained by public senti ment excuse their legislative action upon the ground that this Legislature was not elected upon the Issue of pro hibition or llrense; hence, without in struction from their constituents, they deemed it best to allow the matter to go to the next Legislature, when that Issue can be made paramount in each locality. There are sinister influences which keep the law upon the statute book, because it provides revenue for the cheap attorneys who, as city grand jurors and prosecuting attorneys, draw from it considerable annual revenue. In Vermont, under the corrupt admin istration of the prohibitory law. the wholesalers seem to go free. With the retail rumseller the method Is a sim ple one of regular monthly payments In the form of J5 or $10 for "first of fenses," which, with costs of from 57 to 514 in each case, make very fair pickings for the prosecuting officers. It Is managed so as to have a monthly job in disposing of the cases so that the costs can be multiplied. The Burlington (Vt) Independent once announced that twenty-seven cases were before one Judge in one day; that the state's attorney got "travel" for 162a miles, and that his swag for that day amounted to 5213 50. The Sheriff got 577 58, out of the same cases, and the Justice 560 12. Of course care Is taken to record only "a first of fense" in order to avoid sending the rumseller to the house of correction or driving him out of business, and so kill ing the goose that lays the golden egg for the ' official. The Independent showed from the records how a single person, "a dummy" for one of the ho tels, net even the bartender, but a man of all work. Inside of three months was prosecuted eight times, paying 55 or 510 each time for "a first offense." It Is a matter fully understood by the deal ers that they must pay about so often so that the officials can .have a "divvy," and that If they do that they won't be pushed enough to hurt them any. So notorious are the abuses that are made possible under the Vermont prohibitory liquor law that it was vigorously satir ized by the late Charles H. Hoyt, in his play, "A Temperance Town," which ex poses the Inquisitorial cruelty of the law undet which a man had been sent to jail for sixty years In an accumu lative sentence because he could not pay a fine of 57000, and had to work It out at the rate -of 30 cents a day. The only remedy for such cumulative sen tences was through the Interference of the Governor, by whom the victims of this bigoted law were generally par doned after serving a few years. It is impossible to resist the conclu sion that prohibition does not exist except in the statute-books in the ur ban centers of the states where it is nominally maintained. There has been a gradual abandonment of prohibitory laws In many states; and there Is con spicuous failure to enforce them where they still exist Maine and Vermont are both sure to follow the example of Massachusetts and Iowa and substitute local option for prohibition, which Is a breeder of corruption under law wher ever it exists. In Froude's history of England Is told the story of the sump tuary laws enacted by Edward IV, un der which It was sought to fix the qual ity of diet on a man's table and the cost and cut of his clothing. Even un der such imperious tyrants as this great warrior King of England, and the no less imperious Henry VIII, these sumptuary laws soon fell Into a state of somnolence and obsolescence. The prohibitory liquor law carries its death In its clothes. You can educate the people Into moderation and decency In the matter of drinking, which is not to a large majority of the people of the civilized world in itself a sin. Drinking In moderation is no more il legal than eating In moderation. There is less drunkenness now than formerly, although drink is cheap and plentiful. Laws against drunkenness and public nuisances need to be enforced against rich and poor alike, but total absti nence cannot be forced upon people by law. All such attempts have failed. The refusal to license such places does not prevent the sale. As human nature stands today, the saloon can be regu lated by the law, but It cannot be ex terminated. Better the open saloon than the subterranean dive. HIDDEN LAXDSOAFE OF THE SEA. The American trans-Pacific cable will, in the very necessities of the case, be an accomplishment of the near fu ture. In taking up the matter, which Congress is urged by the President to do, an interesting report of a survey made by the Navy Department will be considered, which will throw much light so to speak, upon the ocean floor. A sketch of the first part of this survey was nlade public a year ago. and the entire report is now accessible. From this It is found that the surveyors of the ship Nero, in their later sound ings, measured a submarine abyss be tween the Midway Islands and, Guam the actual depth of which was found to be 5269 fathoms, or within 66 feet of six miles. This, the lowest depres sion of the ocean bed yet discovered, was named the "Nero Deep," in honor of the exploring vessel from which it was sounded. A practicable route for the proposed cable ha3 been found, avoiding- the "Nero Deep," of course. That from San Francisco to Honolulu was surveyed some years ago, and no obstacle to cable-laying was encountered. From Honolulu to the Midway Islands the ocean bed Is an almost level plain of soft mud at an average depth of about 2700 fathoms. Between these Islands and Guam the depth Increases to about 3000 fathoms, but the character of the bed is, for the most part unchanged, although it is broken in a few places by reefs and ranges of hills, one of which, rising to the southward, finally comes up as the Ladrone Islands. The practicable route to Guam lies north of the "Nero Deep," the southern lim its of which have not been determined. Between Guam and the Philippines the bed of the ocean Is more broken than io the eastward, but no serious obstacle to laying- and working a cable was found. On the route from Guam to Yokohama a submarine mountain range was en countered, one peak of which rises to within 500 feet of the surface. It was not easy to find a pass for the cable through these mountains, but a prac ticable route was finally located. North of this range the ocean bed slopes grad ually eastward into the great Japan ese Deep, which until within relatively recent years was. the lowest submarine depression known. The report Is interesting as a study of the hidden landscape of the sea, which, outside of any commercial rea sons, will bear study and investigation. The tramp is the father of the hold up. The genus Is readily recognized by trained peaci officers, and obeys orders to move on when he knows they are positive and final. Portland's present administration has done well, in the main, in keeping the community free of these menaces to life and property. Of course, driving the profession from one city to another Is not a permanent solution of the problem, and perhaps not one altogether Christian or nelgn borly. Punishment is the only true corrective. Every highwayman possible should be shot dead In his tracks; and for those arrested the only proper des tination is the gallows. The hold-up should be made a capital offense. It Is noteworthy that the Treasury reports show the voluntary retirement of over 1200 banks from the National system within the year, besides those that have failed under the law's opera tions. New formations under the law of March 14 ure, of course, experiments. Secretary Gage sbows a positive loss In the Investment of circulation based on 5 per cents of 1904. It Is evident we are yet far from having provided Induce ments sufficient to transfer our state and private banks Into the National system an end desirable on many ac counts. We Invite attention to the careful discussion of Oregon's unoccupied lands, printed yesterday. The Investi gation there rehearsed makes it clear that among the causes of Oregon's slow growth must be reckoned that of ab sentee landlordism. The Legislature might appropriately put on foot an of ficial inquiry into the whole subject. Why Mr. Towne accepts the appoint ment for a few days' term In the Sen ate Is not disclosed and probably Is futile to speculate. Perhaps It' Is In this sort of empty fame that his nature takes Its greatest satisfaction. The act does not comport with char acter of the first rank or of real dig nity. The man who killed his little child by running a hot poker down Its throat as a penalty for crying serves one good end. Let us be reminded that cruelty Is not the peculiar possession Of anv race or longitude. Even the Boxers reserve their torments for their enemies Suspicion that the canal procedure in Congress is partly dictated by railroad opposition Is justified by experience. And yet the course taken is quite cor rect The treaty comes before the bill, logically and diplomatically. Massachusetts gives McKlnley 182,000 plurality. This Is within 6000 of what it did in 1?96. The mugwumps went for Bryan, but the young men took the gold standard and expansion. Xexr Llrht on nn Old Problem. New York Times. Hawaii's selection of an anti-Administration delegate to Congress, according to the Honolulu Bulletin, is something for which President McKlnley should blame nobody but himself. He insisted upon appointing a Governor closely identified with antagonism to native, as distin guished from foreign, Ideas and Interests, and though he had tnus " offended the prejudices and disappointed the hopes of a large majority of the islanders, ho neglected to insure the political safety of the Dole faction by withholding the franchise from a part or all of their op ponents. As a result the new territory has struck a blow, decidedly humiliating. If not particularly Important, at the man and party that ao recently created It. It seems that many of the Hawaiian Repub-' liens warned the President about the nar row limits of Mr. Dole's popularity, but their advice was not heeded, and even the measure that was expected to win the un dying gratitude of the natives the grant ing of manhood suffrage was twisted Into an effective argument against the Repub licans. "Why," asked the Ingenious Wil cox, "If the party honestly supports man hood suffrage, did the President appoint as Governor an opponent of that meas ure?" The question was obviously a pertinent one, and It had a great effect upon the suspicious and disaffected part of the Islanders. The Bulletin is of the opinion that the natural tendency of the Wilcox, or Independent voters, is toward the liberal Ideals and sound principles of the Republican party, and it finds. In the outcome of the election simply a proof f that "these voters will not accept without protest a Governmental personnel which Is to them much what the reinstatement of the monarchy by Cleveland would have been to the annexationists had Cleveland been successful." The situation Is cer tainly a curious one, and it demonstrates asaln the beauties of consistency, the dangers of inconsistency. American Capital In Jamaica. Review of Reviews. Jamaica has no desire for annexation to the United States.. Whatever may have been former attempts in that direction, the inhabitants of the island are today as British as those of Great Britain. In spite of the present deplorable finan cial condition; In the face of the disaffec tion due to excessive taxation, although the representatives of the people have refused to legislate with the members appointed by the crown. Jamaicans do not look to annexation as their ultimate sal vation. As in th case of the Danish West Indies, though In a different sense, the remedy is now looked for from with in. And again It is the advent of the United States in the West Indies that furnishes the basis for stimulation. Capital is the present cry emanating from Jamaica. It was American capital and American brains whfch during the past 10 years partly redeemed the island to itself. From the Governor down to the lowest-caste coolie, all have praise for what the Americans have done. But will the Investment of United States cap ital continue? Such Is the burning ques tion of the hour. Can the people of Ja maica keep on depending on Americans as their exploiters, or will they at last be forced to lend a hand themselves? All indications point in the direction that ' in Lite icjlll &UJ1 ui buus reuivi " United States, a great trade lc U sorng up between this Island and the mainland. Then. Porto Rico likewise produces the Identical staples with Jamaica. Before long shipments of 'fruit from Cuba and Porto Rico will prove these Islands to be rivals of consequence to the British col ony which has long held the monopoly. From "Does Jamaica Contain a Lesson in Colonial Government?" TTHl Buddhism Come to the Front? Professor F. W. Rhys Davids, in North American Review. It would be blindness to omit in any estimate of the position of Buddhism as a living force it is not at all improbable that It may turn out, eventually, to be the most '.mportant point of all the quiet but irresistible way In which Buddhism is making its Influence felt, quite apart from any religious propaganda, in the thought of the West What Schopenhauer said has often been quoted, but will bear quoting again: "If I am to take the re suit of my own philosophy as the stand ard of truth, I should be obliged to con cede to Buddhism the pre-eminence over the rest In any case. It must be a sat isfaction to me to find my teaching In such agreement with a religion professed by the majority of men." This would be neither the place nor the time to under take any discussion of this utterance. It 13 enough to point out that Schopenhauer is. In all probability, the most influential philosopher among those now followed in Germany; and that the influence of Ger many, at all events In intellectual mat ters. Is afr present, if not Indeed, In the ascendant, at least exceedingly powerful. It Is not probable that any considerable number of people, either In Europe or America, will ever range themselves openly on the side of Buddhism, as a pro fession of faith. But It cannot be de nied that there are certain points In the Buddhist view of life that are likely to Influence, and to Influence widely, with increasing intensity, the views of life, of philosophy, of ethics, as held now In the West And not only the view of life, the method also, the system of self-training In ethical ' culture, has certain points which the practical Western mind is not likely, when it comes to know it to ig nore. The present results have been brought about by the knowledge or Buddhism professed by a few Isolated stu dents. It Is only when the texts have been properly edited, fully translated, so studied and summarized, that they have been made accessible to every one Inter ested In questions of philosophy and ethics, that the full power of such truth as there is In the Buddhist theory will be felt It cannot be considered as at all Im probable that the 20th century will see a movement of Ideaj not unlike In Impor tance to that resulting at the time of the Renaissance, and due, like It, to the meeting together in men's minds of two fundamentally different Interpretations of the deepest problem man has to face. Irrigation the Hope of the West. No view of Irrigation can be apprecia tive which regards it as merely an ad junct to agriculture, writes William E. Smythe, In the Atlantic It Is a social and economic factor In a much larger way. It not only makes a .civilization, in the midst of desolate wastes; it shapes and colors that civilization after its own peculiar design. It forbids land monop oly, because only the small farm pays whon the land must be artificially wat ered. By the same token it makes near neighbors and high social conditions. It discourages servile labor by developing a class of small landed proprietors who work for themselves and need little help beyond that which their own families sup ply. We can expect no millionaires to grow from such surroundings, but neither should there be any paupers. There Is another Influence peculiar to Irrigation. This Is the influence which makes for co-operation. Irrigation Is not and never can be an Individual enter prise. A single settler cannot turn a river to water hla own patch of land, nor can he distribute the waters flowing through a system of canals. The result Is that co-operation precedes Irrigation, and Is speedily woven Into the entire In dustrial and social fabric of the com munity. In localities which have been longest established thia principle has ex tended Itself to stores, factories and banks. These things will not come sud denly to pass, but they will come be cause the condition and surroundings of the time and place will strongly favor. If not actually compel, the result Such are the hopes of arid America. What other part of the world offers a fairer prospect to mankind? A Call Upon Rev. Mr. McLean. EUGENE, Or., Dec 4. (T6 the Editor.) In your Monday's Issue Rev. Robert McLean, of Portland, Is reported to have said In the course of a sermon against evolution that &00 leading scientists of England have rejected the theory. His own words, as given In -your columns, are as follows: "As a scheme for dispensing with God and Christianity It was not only publicly repudiated over their own names by more 'than 600 of the leading scientists of Great Britain a few years ago, but probably Is repudiated today by the great mass of scientists and scholars In all countries. This fad. for fad only It is, leads to naturalism," etc Now. It may be that 600 "leading scien tists of Great Britain" have denied over their own signature that evolution Is a "scheme for dispensing with God and Chrlstlaulty," for no one supposes for an instant that It Is such, but If Mr. McLean really means to say that 600 leading scientists of England have rejected evo lution, will he kindly favor us with the names of the same? Respectfully, F. L. WASHBURN. American Motors Please the British London Graphic From America, as usual, comes the newest Invention, a steam motor travel ing as quietly as the most luxurious of carriages, with no smell, no jar, no noise and no vibration, answering to the touch as obediently as a perfectly trained thor oughbred horse, more untiring and swift er. It was a pure delight to speed along the roads In the keen Autumn air, Im bued with a sense of security and free dom. The machinery of these motors Is very delicate, and will probably require further improvements to make It thor oughly practical; but even fit present, for amateurs, for Invalids, for dilettantes, these luxuriously cushioned and absolute ly comfortable carriages give the great est amount of pleasure, and promise to be the vehicles of the future. Tho Dead Highlanders. From "Ian Hamilton's March," by Wins ton Spencer Churchill. "Near a clump of rocks IS Gordon High landersmen as good as the one I had Just talked with lay dead In a row. Their faces were covered with blankets, but their gray-stockinged feet for the boots had been removed looked very piti ful There they lay. stiff and cold on the surface of the great Banket Reef. I knew how much more precious their lives had been to their countrymen than all the gold mines the lying foreigners say this war was fought to win. And yet In view of the dead and the ground they lay on, neither I nor the officer who rode with me could control an emotion of illogical anger, and we Bcowled at the tali chimneys of th Rand." SENATOR PRYE OS SUBSIDIES. It is quite natural that the shipping subsidy bill should be given preference over every other measure oefore Congress. America's merchant marine is growing at a pace never before equaled? every ship yard In the country is crowded with or ders; new plants are coming Into existence and old ones are being enlarged; sea going vessel property has not paid such big dividends since the Civil War as It Is paying now. On every hand are evi dences that shipbuilding and ahlpownlng are at present proving the most remuner ative investments in whtcn capital can be placed. Every day of this prosperity makes- the appeal of the subsidy grafters appear all the more ridiculous and unjust and lessens the probability of public alms being bestowed for such an unworthy purpose Senator Frye's speech In the Senate contains not a single new feature It is the sumo old buncombe that has seen oratorical sorvieo since the measure was first proposed. In continuing his speech on Wednesday, however, Mr. Frye flashed some light on a new phase of the situation. It had been asserted that 00.000 tons of foreign ves sels would come in at once under the pro vision which enabled foreign-built vessels to participate in the BUbsidy. Mr. Frye hastened to assure the Senate that he would offer a substitute for the present provision, so that It could be determined exactly how many vessels would be en titled to American registry. Here is con sistency with a vengeance. The subsidy grafters have persistently stated that all that was asked of the Government was a sum sufficient to enable the Americana to meet the foreigners on even terms. If this were true, why this grand rush of 500,000 tons or shipping to the American flag? If the subsidy will do no more than equalize the alleged difference in cost of building and operation, why will the unpatriotic foreigners desert their own flag in order to get their vessels under the banner of a hated commercial rival? The answer can be found in the present results of the French shipping subsidy. The bitter political hatred existing be tween the two nations does not prevent thousands of pounds of English money being invested in French bounty-earning vessels, and the Clyde shipyards are shap ing the plates, making the rivets and practically "building" these French ships, which are sent across the Channel "knocked down." to bo put together in a French yard. In order that they may earn a bounty. British ships are all making money, but they draw no subsidy from the government, and when France, the United States or any other nation has any subsidy favors to bestow, this past mas ter in the science of marine commerce will secure share of the spoils. And what of the producer, who supplies uie freight which keeps the ships moving? Why 'should he be taxed for the benefit of a selct coterie of shipowners and builders? The business of producing the cargoes for the ships Is conducted with out the government aid. "Last year," said Mr. Frye, "of all the enormous exports and Imports of the United States, only 9 per cent were car ried in American bottoms, and the United States paid to foreign nations, principally Great Britain and Germany, $500,000 per day for doing carrying trade work for this country." The Inference drawn from this state ment Is that the payment of a subsidy would enable America to do this -work as cheaply as it was done by the foreigners. Perhaps It would, but tho producer would still be forced to pay the freight, and in addition, the subsidy. Here Is the man ner in which the problem works out not amoncr the shipbuilding constituency of Mr. Frye. or in the palatial offices of Grlscom's American line, but right here at tide water, where the producer and the ocean carrier are thrown In direct contact: There are 20 ships in this port today, all loading wheat and flour for Europe, Africa and the Orient. These 20 ships are owned by 17 different individ uals or firms. They will carry away about 2,500.000 bushels of wheat, grown by at least 1500 farmers, who receive no sub sidy for growing wheat in competition with the pauper labor of India, Russia and tho Argentine. Having no protec tion whatever in their business, these 1500 farmers should not be forced to pay a subsidy tax tp Increase the already large profits of the 17 shipowners, who are carrying their product to market not from any patriotic motive, but because there is money In the business. With the exception of a couple of French vessels, none of the fleet now In the river draws a subsidy from any government They sail the world over, taking cargo where ever It can be found, and successfully competing with other ships. No matter how great a subsidy might be paid to shipowners, freight rates would still be unaffected, for the simple reason that owners would base their rates on what tho traffic would bear, and not on what they might be able to do the work far. American ships have loaded In this port at 30 shillings, and paid a handsome profit on the Investment; but that did not prevent their owners taking 45 shillings when they could get it Divested of in cidental verbiage, the subsidy question la this: Bhall millions of producers bo taxed to Increase the profits of a few hundred shipowners and builders? PLEASAXTRIES OF FARAGRAPHERS Benefits of Intellectual Contort "Did you hare an Interesting literary club meeting. AllceT" "Ob, yes; every woman there was working on a. new pattern of Battenberg lace." Indianapolis Journal. After the Defalcation-"1 understand," said the. reporter, "that the defaulter's method was very simple." "Very!" said the hank official, with a sigh, "He Just took the money!" Puck. Pardonable. Gentleman flee here! I'm not coins to pay any such rates as you charge. Do you think I'm a fool?" Cabman (apologet ically) What else could I think, sir, -when you took a cab Instead of a street carT New York Weekly. Despondent Fair One Do you know, dear, one. I'm. afraid I must be setting very old! Consoling Friend Nonsense, darling! Why do you think eo? Despondent Fair One Because people are beginning to tell me bow very young I am looking! Punch. Too Jtuch. Gusher My wife has promised to watt for me at the gate of heaven, if she is the first to go. Flasher Tut tut You shouldn't be so revengeful as to make her wait through eternity, simply because she made you wait while she fixed up sometimes. Life. Delirium Tremens. Coroner Was there any thing to lead you to believe that the deceased was non compoe mentis when he took bis life? Witness Would ye moind axin me that ques tion In English? Coroner Well, do you think he was suffering from temporary insanity T Witness Faith, 'twas Jlst th opposite av tem perance insanity, beta" that crazy- wid drink he was. Philadelphia. Press. They have called to solicit the firm's assist ance for a local charity. Greene Suppose we ask this gentleman that is coming up the aisle. Gray No; he I dressed too well, and ho has too much the tir of enterprise and activity. He is undoubtedly an usdeTling on a small salary. We will tackle that slouchy-looklng. woebegone, little man at the desk. He Is sure to b the bead ot tba establishment Boston 1 Transcript . . NOTE AND COMMENT Even the footpads seem to be enjoying a share In the general prosperity. All we need 13 link boys to be Just like dear old I,unnon, don't you know. If only a Nebraska Senator should die there might yet be a chance for Bryan. But the Senator would have to die "pretty soon. Hon. Charles A. Towne Is probably glad that the Democrats passed him up. If he had been inAdlal's place Governor Llnd never would have been able to find him. A little more ot this weather and he Council will be compelled to pass an ordi nance making It the duty of citizens to shovel the fog off their sidewalks every morning. An Indiana man has discovered per petual motion. If, as there is reason to suspect, Its other name is Agulnaldo, he ought to be able to f get something for the discovery. Philadelphia Is now clamoring for an investigation of her police force. She may be a little slow, but she Is sure that she can prove herself Just as bad as New York If she can ge the facts bo fore the public. The Navy arch In New York City Is not yet to depart Into the rubbish heap though it is to be disposed of as rub bish, for President Guggenhelmer, ot the Municipal Council, says that under tho city charter there Is no other wuy. ao the South Carolina interstate and West Indian exposition will receive the arch. which will be taken down with all the care possible, and transported to Charles ton, where It will be reconstructed. A United States patent for a piece ot land. Issued to Barnabas Norton during the Administration of Martin Van Buren, April 15, 1S37, has been filed la Flint Mich. The patent Is written on sheep skin and bears the signature ot Presi dent "Van Buren. The remarkable con trast between that far distant date and the present time Is shown in the fact that the autographs alone would prob ably command as much today as 120 acres it land wa worth when the natent was issued. An old resident of the county said that the land covered by the patent was wortn In those days about 1150. The document had never befora beon flld for record. Another poker debt case has passed through the Appellate Courts of TNew York, and, as usual, the debtor wins. This case differs from the conventional dispute over a gambling debt In that the debtor and defendant in the case acknowledges his debt His plea In de fense was that he was about to pay up when he was Informed that the winner had publicly denounced him as a welcher, or as a man who was not In the habit of paying bis poker debts. TS so enraged him that he determined not to meet his obligation to his detractor. The court did n6t consider this phase ot the question, but simply held that a gambling debt was not collectible by law. Bishop Thompson.of Mississippi, sald the other day: "I suppose there is a largAr percentage of old men In Missis sippi than In any other state at least, it seems so to me, and I have been in a good many. By old I mean from SO to 50. Theyare not decrepit old men who hug the fireside, but are quite lively old fellows. One of them whom I' knew, a man 89, recently got a little tqo lively. He went out after dark without a lan tern, fell Into a ditch, and was broken up Just as If he were china. I forget how many bones were broken." "How do you account. Bishop, for this large proportion of old men In Missis sippi?" asked some one. x "Well," said the Bishop, "there is no chance to become rich In Mississippi. Everybody knows it and does not worrv himself into an early grave tryin to." The melancholy days have come, the Baddest of the year, and any one who desires to get much work done must hustle. It Is so late when daylight comes that ona hardly gets fairly started on anything before the night comes, when no one except newspaper men and some others can work. Work is also Impeded by the dense fog. which the public have to put up with, as It Is the fate of Lon don &nd other large cities to be visited bv such fogs at this season. On the 20th the sun will reach Its greatest declina tion, and the shortest day In all the year will be here, and then the days will begin to grow longer and everybody will be glad of It It may be set down as a generally accepted fact that the days are not so long as they used to be. the sun does not shine as brightly as it used to, the girls are not so pretty as they used to be, nor the boys so well be haved, and there is not so much fun as there used to be. r The Evening Wind. William Cullen Bryant. SDlrlt that breathest through my lattice: thou That cool'st the twilight ot the sultry day! Gratefully flows thy freshness round my brow; Thou hast been out upon the deep at play. Riding all day the wild blue waves till now. Roughening their crests, and scattering high their spray. And swelling the white sail. I welcome thee To tho scorched land, thou wanderer of the sea! Nor I alone a thousand bosoms round Inhale thee In the fullness of delight; And languid forms rise up. and pulses bound Livelier at coming of the wind at night; And lanqulshlng to hear thy welcome sound. Lies the vast Inland, stretched beyond the sight. Go forth Into the gathering shade; go ffrth God's blessing breathed upon the fainting earth! Go, rock the little wood-bird in his nest; Curl the still waters, bright with stars; and rouse The wide old wood from his majestic jest o..i- tmrrt th innumerable boughs. The strange deep harmonies that haunt his breast. . . , Pleasant shall be thy way where meekly bows The shutting flower, and darkling waters pass. And where the o'ershadowlng branches sweep the grass. Stoop o'er the place of graves, and softly sway The sighing herbage by the gleaming stone. That they who near the churchyard willows stray. And listen In the deepening gloom, alone. May think of gentle souls that passed away. Like thy pure breath, unto the vast unknown, Sent forth from heaven among the sons of men. And gone Into the boundless heaven again. The faint old-man shall lean his silver head To feel thee: thou shalt kiss the child asleep. And dry the moistened curls that overspread His temples, while his breathing grows mor deep; And they who stand about tho sick man's bed Shall Joy to listen to thy distant sweep. And softly part his curtains to allow Thy visit grateful to his burning brow. Go but the circle of eternal change. Which Is the life of nature, shall restore. With sounds and scents from all thy mighty range. Thee t thy birthplace of the deep once more. Sweet odors In the sea. air, sweet and strange, Shall tell the homesick mariner ot the shore; And. listening to thy murmur, he shall deem JHe bears the rustllne leaf and running twfc.