V- -yi'H?", THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1901. Its rg0mcm Entered at the PoetsSee at Portland, Oregon, as Eeeend-etass matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Beams 186 Business Office. ..OCT REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mail (postage prepaid), in Advance Dally, -with Sund, per month S S3 Daily, Sunday excepted, per year 7 50 IaUy, with Sundaj. per year 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 CO The Weekly. 3 months DO To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays excepted 15c Dally, per week deMered. Saadaysrfncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 16-page paper .........Ic 16 to 32 page paper , 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply 'The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No etamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, once at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box 955, Tacoma PostJSce. Eastern Bu4nees Office The Tribune build ing. New York City; 'The Rookery." Chicago; t e S C Beekwlth special agency. New York. or sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold ml a Bros., SK Sutter street; P. W. Pitts. 100S Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Hand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 289 So gyring street, aad Oliver & 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. Bixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros.. 1012 Faraam street. ', Forsale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News " W. Second South street. For sale in New Orleans by Ernest & Co., Hi Royal street. On file In Washington D. C, with A. W. Dunn, 600 14th N. W. For sale in DenverT Cole., by Hamilton & Kerdrlck. 90S-SH2 Seventh street. l TODAY'S WEATHER. Increasing cloudi ness, probably followed by rain; winds shift ing to southerly PORTLAAD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17 It Is the opinion of The Oregonlan that the property of the state is not so much undervalued by the Assessors as Governor Geer supposes. Our people have got past the notion and habit of valutas property at what they suppose It may be worth some time In the far distant future; they estimate its value mere nearly upon their judgment as to tihat could be got out of it now. Fic titious values were placed upon prop erty in Oregon years ago, and an ex pensive political and social system was built up on these Actions, which it has been difficult ever since to carry. It is on this basis that officials of state, counties and municipalities are clamor ing everlastingly for more money. They must have it, no doubt, and the people must grub for it, dig It up, rake it to gether; but they will hardly be per suaded to believe that their riches are greater than they actually find them to be. The Oregonlan does not believe there Is much disparity in the assessed aluations of the counties, on the pres ent basis, If more money must be had and no doubt . must be had as fair ft plan tt equalization as any would be to Increase xthe present valuations of all the counties, say by 25 per cent But this could be done only by a state board. It is strange that Governor Geer should have said in his message that "the State of Oregon Is far above he State of Washington in actual wealth." We wish it were, but it is nut; and nothing is ever gained by pro ceeding ton erroneous assumption. Washington .has three Important cit ies; Oregon but one, and the secondary cities of Washington are larger and richer than those of Oregon. Washing ton's population exceeds that of Oregon by 10G.OOO, and Washington has twice as many miles of railroad, and more shipping, more coal and more lumber mills. These are facts that cannot be t linked, and Governor Geer would not hae made a statement so completely at variance with them, had he stopped to consider. It is well enough to stand up for one's own state, yet It is best to aoid erroneous comparisons. In default of footnotes and marginal references, we are lef,t in mystification as to what Governor Dockery meant when. In the course of his inaugural, he addressed these words to the, people of Missouri: All sinister efforts to estrange our people by attempting to array one class against another should be shunned as the pestilence that walk oth In darkness. We taktt it that not even In Missouri car. the average attendant upon inaug uration ceremonies Tail to make ,a nat ural application of Governor Dockery's w rd At the November electlQn the most eminent class agitator of modern times was pat one side by the voters of this country as a pestilence that walk eth in darkness. If Governor Dpckery means anything at all by his words, he means Bryan. Nobody else has at tempted to array one class against an other but the Bryan party in the Tmted States. The closing weeks' of the campaign Mr. Bryan confined his actlit!es to such lofty sentiments as comparing the poor apple-grower with the trust magnate, and bemoaning the fact that wives of the very poor do not pi ss.ss suck elegant seaside homes as do the wives of the rich, Efforts were made by Roosevelt and Hanna to show that this attempt to "estrange our peo rle' by "attempting to array class against class" should be shunned, but ti r . effect. All Bryandom echoed the clarrjr of its lord and master. Gov ernur Dockery, we doubt not, would re sert the Imputation that he Is a politi cal shyster without a particle of sincer- ,j in ale make-up, and that he is merely bandying: words without con s deration f their meaning. We can tnlj conclude, therefore, that certain popular Impressions are Inexact, and that the history of the past seven months must be rewritten. That is, it Is Inconceivable that Dockery, being an k nest man and an enemy of class agi tation, could have made the Bryanic nldross he was believed to make at Kansas City, or have supported the Piatform there adopted, or have been elected Governor od the same ticket with Bryan and Stevenson. If Mr. Mockery had any self-respect to lose, he 'right have saved some of it by com pjslng as Inaugural address without reference to class hatred and the afore said pestjlaace. For thfe Eteaveaworth crime. Gover nor Stanley, of Kansas, is responsible. He had bea taught by more than one terrible object-lesson that the average Sheriff Is either a coward or a knave when confronted by a mob The Kan sas Sheriff, like the Colorado Sheriff who permitted his prisoner to be roast ed to death, was probably entirely will ing that the mob should work Its wliL What kind of a Sheriff Is a man who pleads in defense of a mob murder that the man roasted to death "was undoubtedly guilty"? Sheriffs are not courts for the trial and execution of persons accused of crime, and neither are mobs. Governor Stanley had every reason to believe that the mob would lynch the prisoner if possible; and he had no reason (to believe that the Sheriff- was either able or willing to protect his charge. Had Governor Stanley been a man of any sound ex ecutive sense -and courage, he would have peremptorily ordered the negro to be held until proper military force could be sent to protect him from the mob. The lynching habit grows on what it feeds. Every case of barbar ous lynch law Is multiplied by success and impunity. Governor Sandford, of Alabama, in a letter to Judge John Moore, of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, urges the Judge to use all means in his power to bring to Justice the perpetrat ors of two mob murders recently en acted. In Perry County a negro was lynched on mere suspicion of having burned a barn. The case in Henry County was still worse, where the negro was tried by a magistrate on the charge of stealing a bunch of keys and acquitted, but was taken by a crowd and shot to death. The Harvard pro fessor who is reported to have advo cated the enactment of burning at the stake of negro criminals at the South of course spoke with grim irony, meaning that If the people of those states at the South or North who per mit or at least condone the roasting of negro criminals by slow Are really ap prove of such punishments, they ought to be manly enough to enatft their barbarity. If the people approve of the ferocious cruelty of mob law, why not then enact it and burn negroes under law instead of trampling law under foot In order to burn them? Either ac cept legal responsibility for mob venge ance and cruelty, or defend the law against the mob by killing the mob that undertakes to kill and by hanging the leaders of the mob when they murder a prisoner. There ought to be manhood enough in a state to defend 'its laws against a gang of outlaws. Representative Tongue gave a good account of himself Monday in his an swer to Cushman of Washington, and reflected credit on his district and state. His most signal service, however, was in rebuking the mean-spirited opposi tion to river and harbor work. Few men in Congress are more capable in debate than Is Mr. Tongue, and as he had right on his side, his effort was not only creditable, but effective. The fact is that resistance to legitimate in ternal improvements springs from two sources, each of which Is equally dis creditable to Its originators. Mr. Cush man represents the spirit of sectional Jealousy, which is blind as Jealousy anywhere. It is a pleasant reflection for the farmers of Eastern Washington, to whom every fresh facility for water transportation down the Columbia means some cents a bushel more for wheat and some less a barrel on sugar, that they have sent a man to Congress who is small enough to resent Improve ment of the Columbia because every other Improvement he would like for Washington's benefit cannot "be had as soon as he could wish. The error of his representations and the unworthi ness of his attitude are well answered by Mr. Tongue. The other class of ob jections to this class of wprk will only serve to show the suspicious and dis honest nature of the objectors; for to assume that every public Improvement is a steal or job of some kind demon strates that the complainant, from his own consciousness, can only explain ac tivity by base motives. These detract ors have their sufficient answer in the record of Columbia River Improvement, in the Mississippi jetties and in the Sault Ste. Marie Canal, as well as in the high character and attainments of the engineer corps. There is more man hood in General Wilson than In the whole brood of his indirect defamers Poor Stanford is giving an impres sive illustration of the difficulty in per fecting universities while you wait. Without entering into the merits of the controversy over Ross, the Populist, or Howard, the historian, it is sufficient to point out that money alone cannot create a university. That is, It can erect buildings, buy books, install ap paratus and assemble instructors from the ends of the earth; but it cannot buy time, tradition or an atmosphere. Professor Howard seems guilty of an indiscretion in his open aspersion upon the university's management, and Ross was an undisguised agitator. Tet it is impossible to blink the fact that the Stanford method of acquisitiveness broods over Palo Alto no less than the Stanford benevolence. There is a pop ular superstition that money made in unworthy ways will never do Its pos sessor any lasting good. It Is a su perstition, pure and simple, yet it must have been derived from cumulative ex perience with cases where cause and effect were traceable more closely than in the checked history of Stanford. There is homely reason In the fact that the institution beside whose birth stood devoted agonlzers in prayer and self sacrifice inherits vitality different from the one founded with millions as a mon ument1 to vast wealth and personal be reavement. Central Pacific leases, stock gambling and fast horses whatever in fluence they have, is not In the direc tion of wisdom, or grace, or solidity of character. This is not to reflect upon President Jordan's administration or upon Professor Howard's Instruction. They are doing, let us say, the best they can. As for Ross, the university is well rid of him. University chairs are not the proper places for harle quins and charlatans and men of the Bryan order of intellect. The gold production in 1900, accord ing to the Engineering and Mining Journal, was 5256.462.43S, against $313, 641.534 in 1S39. The war in South Af rica paralyzed the largest producing area, otherwise the world's production would have been some $356,000,000. As it was, the United States was the larg est producer, her output being 578.65S, 755. That of Canada was $26,000,000, Australasia $75,000,000, Rhodesia $1,613, 3SS, British India $9,369,188, and British Guiana $2,126,964. The United States and the British Empire produced, it Is ooservea, mucn me larger part of the world's gold product Russia produced $23,090,862, the Transvaal is credited with $6,845,046. and China with $5,500, 000, but no other country produces as much as $3,000,000. The Anglo-Saxon countries .hold evidently the present sources of the world's yellow money metal, which Is, of course, greatly to their discredit. Africa should still be possessed by the Kaffirs, Canada and Alaska by the Indians, and Australia by the Bushmen. Nothing is worse than occupation without consent of the governed, unless it is to succeed where others have failed. THE MILITARY BOGEY. Militarism is one of those things which a group of politicians in Senate and House profess to view with alarm. They affect, in their debate on the Army bill, to be filled with consterna tion, as they contemplate the menace of tyranny and despotism, the danger to liberty, but poorly concealed in this bill, as the claws of some great mon ster In the sooth-seeming paw. A car toon of the late political campaign showed every American laborer with a soldier on his back. The regular Army at the present time comprises 67,500 men. If the total should be brought up to 100.000, the percentage of regular soldiers to the whole population would be about thirteen-hundredths of one per cent. This is something short of the proportion of one soldier to the back of every citizen. Within the continental limits of the United States we are not likely to need for a long time to come a greater num ber of soldiers than those of the old Army say 25,000 men. But In the Phil ippine Islands we shall need a good many, no doubt, for some time yet. The number there will, however, be reduced as soon as resistance shall cease. Tet it will probably be neces sary to keep from 60,000 to 75,000 men In the Philippines for a year or two to come. The Government, by the vote of November last, Is under direction from the people of the United States to quell the Insurrection. The pretense that we are trampling liberty under foot there, or shall undermine liberty at home, is estimated by people of common sense at what It Is worth, which is less than nothing. If ever there was danger that our country would fall under the rule of militarism, it was in the period of the Civil War, at the close of which there were more than one million men In arms. These vast forces melted away in a few months, without slightest menace to our political system. Even with a regular Army of 100,000 today, the ratio of soldiers to the whole pop ulation will not be greater than it was in 1810, and at other times in our Na tional history. The American people cannot be terrified at the prospect of an Army only a fraction as large in proportion as that of 'peaceful Holland or Scandinavia, and not even so large as at several periods of our own former history, not including the Civil War. WESLEY AXD BISHOP POTTER. Bishop Potter finds New York bad, thinks the whole country is given over to the materialism of wealth, the Mam mon of unrighteousness, so he organ izes a great crusade against vice, and arraigns the law as responsible for the failure of the gospel. This was not the method that John Wesley pursued when he found all England given over to. drunkenness and licentiousness. He did not hold the law responsible or war on vice in the vain hope to smother it by statute. He warred on the vi cious and preached religion into the un regenerate hart of man. He found the pulpits of England occupied by deaf mutes or disgraced by drunken fox hunting parsons. He held that the only remedy for the evils bred by the de pravity of human nature was the spir itual regeneration of the individual. He rekindled religious faith. He re formed society through replacing a dead with a living pulpit. Wesley knew that if he could reform the unre generate hearts of his vast audiences by rekindling their religious faith, the evil haunts which had known them would know them no more. This was Wesley's way of forcing alehouses and dramshops into bankruptcy; this was Wesley's way of warring effectively against drunkenness and licentious ness. Wesley knew that while we can edu cate a man to know the consequences of putting his hand in the fire. It would be absurd to pass a law ordering that all fires be put out because some man or men, in spite of experience, were determined to continue the game of playing with fire. Wesley knew that the Christian education that lifts the people up to a determination to live wisely, soberly and cleanly Is the only thing that makes the saloon fall into decay, and closes the doors of gambling-houses and kindred places of ill repute. Wesley knew that, do the best we can with "law, it saves nobody in the sense of moral reformation or regen eration. He knew that law seeks to se cure the largest peace and order and security for the law-abiding, and to protect decent society from the incur sions, violence and turbulence of law less, indecent, rapacious and piratical people. John Wesley did not expect to create a great civilization out of men and women who cannot be trusted to walk the streets until all the world's life had been expurgated of all Its evils, Its temptations and its vice. He did not seek to bottle up the possible sinner by assuming to keep him in ignorance of evil; but he taught the free choice between good and evil, between wisdom and folly, and solemnly warned the sinner of the consequences of sin. John Wesley succeeded so completely that, without any change In the law, the whole moral face of society was transformed in England and subse quently by the evangelists of Wesley's great church at an early day in Amer ica. Bishop Potter does not follow Wesley's methods. He does not seek to remedy human Ills by arousing a pas sionate religious enthusiasm to organ ize a "great awakening" of the souls of the vicious. He Is content to believe that when he has driven vice to pull down its shutters, to extinguish its red light, to drink behind a screen and gamble behind locked doors, the world is the better for his labors. It is pos sible, of course, that if Bishop Potter and those who agree with him should attempt to reform the whole moral face of society by the religious methods of Wesley, they might fail, for there Is more philanthropy among the people today than there is religious faith. Nevertheless, the American pulpit would proceed by right lines if It Imi tated Wesley and appealed directly to the heads and hearts of its hearers, and sought to exhort and educate their flocks to righteousness instead of seek ing to expurgate the world of all evil and temptation by legislation for the benflt of society's "lame ducks" who -j cannot keep up with the procession. The pulpit seems to hold the law responsible for the presence of sin and temptation, when the truth Is that to the public moral opinion created by the parent the school and the church, the law must look for Its life. We do not believe that the world Is more vicious or Bocial life more dissolute or law on the whole less effective than it was fifty years ago; but if this indictment drawn by the pulpit Is sound, the pulpit can not escape responsibility for it If the pulpit was as alert, alive to its duty, as it was when Wesley and Whitfield preached directly at the heads and hearts of the vicious instead of con tenting itself with impeaching the law for the presence of vice, it la probable that vicious callings would obtain fewer followers and a smaller num ber of victims. The law and the gospel have their distinct work to do in the government of society, and a dead or dull or demoralized or paralyzed pulpit cannot fairly Indict the law for falling to do the work of the gospel. Nobody expects that the pulpit can extirpate vice, but the pulpit seems to forget that the public opinion which the pul pit Is able to create by the education of its congregation Is the measure of the power of the law to purify the social atmosphere. SERIOUS PHASES OP HAZING. The New York Independent thought fully points out that a very serious phase of the hazing evil, still existent at West Point, lies in the conflict of genuine with spurious ethics. These students, for example, are to be taught absolute truthfulness. They must not lie under any circumstances, on penalty of being ostracized and compelled to leave the Institution. This Is as It should be, for a lie is cowardly and courage is a soldier's prime qualifica tion. Yet these students, under oath to obey the rules of the school, are brought to consider it a higher obliga tion to conceal each other's disobedi ence of the nules against hazing. la other words, because the false senti ment of the school forbids "telling," they, even when suffering to a degree that makes it Impossible to suppress hysterical crying, voluntarily stuff the mouth with cotton rather than betray the broken oath of their brutal com rades to the officers who might be with in earshot. Here, says the Independent, is falsehood which rises to perjury, of which these young men are guilty, per haps all of them, while presumably cul tivating the virtue of truthfulness. The cadets probably do not so an alyze their conduct, but is not this analysis correct? In the conflict of duty do they not prefer the spurious to the genuine? And Is this what the Nation wants of its military leaders of the future, whom at large expense it is educating to uphold its honor, when oc casion arises before the world?" Only less pernicious In an ethical sense Is the general Idea that seems to prevail among military students of the higher classes that personal physical humilia tion Is necessary to eradicate individual conceit, or. In the students' vernacular, "freshness." Young men who have been taught that self-respect is a vir tue are made to do silly things or pain ful things in order to take this notion out of them. Upon this hypothesis It Is almost unanimously declared that It Is "good for the new men to be hazed," and the Job is delegated to the natural bullies of the class, who, as some of the witnesses have reluctantly admitted, "did not seem to know when a man had enough." It is sufficient to say of this defense of hazing that it Is but a pretense for the practice of what gives amusement by giving pain the brutal bully's pastime. The brutal cruelty of the custom Is considered the least of the evils that arise from or are fostered by hazing, since, relatively considered, few cadets have been permanently Injured by it physically. Reduced to its simplest form of expression, hazing means that a member of the higher class feels free to give orders to the newcomer to do any difficult, disagreeable or silly thing, and if he refuses he is compelled to fight. Surely, no just or honorable man whose judgment has not been warped by a spurious code of ethics will refuse to Indorse the sentiment that this Is a mean, unmanly, un-Chrlstian way oi treating a younger companion, utterly wrong In Its Inception, an outgrowth of that brutality of Instincts which exists in heedless boys and which It has been the purpose of true culture through generations of painstaking endeavor to eradicate. There can be but one re sponse to the assertion that "we do not want brutes in the Army as officers over enlisted men." The view of the Governor In the mat ter of a Reform School for wayward girls is in line with that of The Ore gonlan as presented at various times. In reference to this subject he says: "Surely no rule of ethics can be cited in Justification of the process of reform ing the boys and neglecting the girls of the state, who In equal number need the fostering care of a protecting com monwealth." This Is in full accord with a statement, presented somewhat differ ently in The Oregonlan a few days ago, and this journal supplements, as it preceded, the hope expressed by His Excellency that the, Legislature now in session will give this matter careful consideration that will , bear practical results. While It is not probable, as stated by the Governor, that the num ber of neglected girls In the state who heed the fostering care of a protecting commonwealth Is equal to that of neg lected boys, the smaller number should be looked after. Many parents whom the knowledge that their boys are be ing educated in vlleness on the streets does not in the least distress make more or less strenuous effort to protect their girls, hence the number of way ward girls Is not as great as that of unruly boys. But it is great enough, and the problem of their neglect is seri ous enough to cause just apprehension in regard to their part in the statistics of crime a few years hence. The Chief of Police of this city could no doubt furnish all the data that inquiring leg islators may need In order to make their duty clear upon this point Astronomers are busy with prepara tions for observing' the total eclipse of the sun, which will occur on the 19th of May of this year. An expedition will be sent by the United States Naval Ob servatory to Sumatra, where conditions for securing views of the eclipse will be excellent Its extreme duration of six-minutes will render this eclipse of especial value for purposes of observa tion. Congress has appropriated $10,000 for the expenses of the expedition, and the party, under direction of Professor Skinner, will sail for Manila on a Gov ernment transport some time In March, en route to Sumatra. It is confidently expected that some of the secrets In regard to the luminous properties of the sun that have hitherto eluded scien tific inquiry will be secrets no longer after this eclipse. A set of magnificent cameras of gigantic, proportions and scope are being made in Washington, by which a series of photographs will be taken. These are depended upon to show the structural details of the halo surrounding the sun with a deflnlte ness that it hss heretofore been Im possible to secure. General Dewet Is reported as very angry at the success of the burgher peace commission in distributing Paul Botha's book. He probably is disgust ed, too, with the text of the appeal Issued by the central peace committee at Kroonstad, which Includes W. D. Dewet, ex-Assistant Chief Command ant; three ex-members of the Volks raad and two Justices. This commit tee in their appeal say, among other things: The country is literally one vast wilderness. The farmers and their families have lost every thing. Ruin and starvation stare them in the face. All this misery Is caused by a small, obstinate minority, who will not bow to the Inevitable, and who make the majority suffer. Any encouragement to men still in command to continue the hopeless struggle can only in jure us and cauBe further misery. The committee denounoe ex-President Steyn and General Dewet as the only obstacles to peace, and assert that Kruger and the late Transvaal Govern ment have been willing twice to accept the British terms, but that Steyn re fused to surrender, continued the war and encouraged the burghers to hope for European assistance. Among recent deaths Is that of ex United States Senator James W. Brad bury, at his home in Augusta, Me., in the 99th year of his age. He was born in York County, Maine, the 10th of July, 1802, and was-graduated at Bow doin College In 1825. Among his college friends were Longfellow, Hawthorne and Franklin Pierce. He was elected in 1847 to the United States Senate as a Democrat, serving until 1853, when he declined a renominatlon. During his term he served as chairman of a se lect committee on French spoliations. Upon retirement from public life he re sumed the practice of law, which he continued until about 10 years ago. To the end of his days he retained "his faculties and his interest In the affairs of the day. Among his political con temporaries were Webster, Clay, Cal houn and Jefferson Davis. Not the least among the perplexities pointing to grave results that afflict China just now Is the fact that the only statesman in the empire the man to whom the eyes of the nations turned In the late crisis as being the only Chinaman able to grapple with the sit uation, is in his dotage and wholly un able, from purely natural causes, to rise to the emergency. There Is no more pitiful spectacle than that presented by senility vainly striving to discharge du ties that tax robust manhood In the accomplishment. Poor, old Li Hung Chang! It is unfortunate that his country needs so sorely the man that he once was, and doubly unfortunate that there seems to be no one to take his place in all the Chinese Empire. The ill wind that is blowing between Senators Pettigrew and Hanna prom ises to blow good to the people at large in preventing a vote on the ship sub sidy bill. While Pettigrew, in a spirit of personal revenge against Hanna In opposing this bill, because the latter went some thousands of miles out of his way to defeat him last Fall, he has strong support In opposing the bill on the basis of the greatest good to the greatest number. The West Is bringing strong influence to bear against the bill, and even Senator Frye, next to Hanna its strongest champion, admits that the measure must be amended in "a spirit of compromise" In order to give It any chance to get through this session. The smallpox scare In New York City has stimulated the enforcement of com pulsory vaccination in Kansas City. The St. Loui3 and Chicago authorities are making vigorous efforts to save those cities from epidemics, and in some Minnesota towns and cities house-to-house vaccination has been enforced. Boston is free from the disease, be cause its health department persistent ly urges the Importance of vaccination. The prevalence of the disease is evident from the fact that from July lv 1900, to December 28 last there were 7796 cases of smallpox reported to the au thorities at Washington. During the same period In the previous year there were 2487 cases, or less than one-third as many. Teller, Towne, Cannon and Petti grew congratulate Dubois; but can they suppose that free coinage of sliver Is nearer fulfillment through Dubois' elec tion, or that the "great principle" for which "the old guard" (of silver fools) stands, and for the sake of which It congratulates Dubois, is anything more than the passing craze of a clump of shallow sciolists, which has been dis credited, as they have been, forever though one or two of them may still sit for a time for benighted constituencies in the Senate? Democratic State Senator Owen R. Washburn, who is bitterly denounced for having deserted to Quay, is a preacher and editor of a local weekly paper In Crawford County. He was elected to the State Senate of Pennsyl vania two years ago by a fusion of Democrats, Populists and Prohibition ists. The Democratic members of the Legislature have adopted resolutions denouncing Washburn, who is a "Ver monter and ten years ago was a con ductor on a street railway in Spring field, Mass. England Is alarmed when she sees the progress of the United States, and thinks she is not getting ahead. . She need not be. The United States Is go ing forward at a rapid pace, but if England will look out of the opposite car window she will see she is making some progress. Li Hung Chang is said to be suffer ing from Bright's disease. If China had not discovered the world he would not know what Is the matter with him. The powers ordered China to sign that joint note once too often. THEDAllESBJATRAlLWAYPROJECT Effort "Will Be Made to Have Repeal lng Clause Stricken Out in Senate. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. Representa tive Moody had intended offering an amendment to the river and harbor bill striking out the clause repealing the boat railway project, but after a conference today with the Washington and Idaho Representatives, concluded, in view of tho fact that all amendments offered to the committee's bill had been rejected by a vote of three or four to one, that It would be better to allow the bill. to go to the Senate and there undertake to have the repealing clause stricken out If Senator McBrlde returns in time, he will probably be able, as a member of the commerce committee, to have this object accomplished, as he did two years ago. Representative Moody is of the opinion that the delegation will be in a better position in the future to secure the adop tion of a new project by retaining the law already authorized by Congress, with the available balance, than if they have to begin anew. He also feels that the improvement at The Dalles is much more apt under these condition, to receive fa vorable action by the supervisory board of five engineers created by the present bill than it would otherwise. Senator Si mon has been urging the Quartermaster's Department to retain the steamer Argyll, of Portland, as a Government transport for carrying forage to the Philippines, but has been told that the Buckingham, of Seattle, has been offered at $350 per day, while $600 is asked for the Argyll, and that only one transport is now need ed. If in March, when large shipments will again be made, the Argyll is offered at a reasonable rate, she may be again employed as a transport, otherwise, for age will be shipped from Portland at so much per ton. The House public lands committee fa vorably reported Repreeentatlve Jones' bill extending the free homestead act to the opened portion of the Colviile reservation. Presidential Nominations. WASHINGTON, Jan. l.-The President sent the following nominations to the Senate today: Naval Constructor Francis B. Bowles to be Chief Constructor and Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair in the Navy; Lyle F. Bellinger, of Georgia, to be a civil engineer In the Navy. Volunteer Army promotions First Lieutenants to be Captains: W. H. Butler, Forty-ninth In fantry; H. F. McFeely, Forty-second In fantry: Second Lieutenant to be First Lieutenant, W. Huffman, Forty-ninth Infantry; E. E. Hackett, Jr., Forty-second Infantry: Sergeants to be Second Lieutenants: H. F. Sykea, Forty-second Infantry: C. W. Stewart, Thirtieth In fantry; H. H. Goodyear, Twenty-eighth Infantry. Regulars Second Lieutenant F. Dallman, Eighth Cavalry, to be First Lieutenant: Edward P. Rockhlll, of Penn sylvania, to be Assistant Surgeon, with rank of First Lieutenant Morgan's Canal Resolution. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. Senator Mor gan has introduced a resolution declara tory of the non-effect of the Clayton Bulwer treaty upon the right of the United States to construct the Nicaragua Canal. The resolution recites the proto col with Nicaragua and Costa Rica as a preamble, and then proceeds as fol lows: "Resolved, That the Clayton-Bulwer treaty of July 4, 1850, gives no right to Great Britain to demand that the Con gress of the United States shall with hold Its ratification of said agreements or shall abstain from legislation to pro vide for their prompt execution. "That the ratification by Great Britain of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty of Febru ary 5, 1900, as the same has been amended by the Senate, is not a condition prece dent to -legislation by Congress in pro viding for the execution of said agree ments with Costa Rica and Nicaragua: nor are the principles or provisions of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty any Just or admissible ground of objection on the part of the Government of Her Britannic? Majesty to enactment of a law by Con gress providing for the execution of such agreements with Costa Rica and Nicar agua." Salt and Minlnf? Larrs. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. The House committee on public lands today decided against reconsidering the favorable action previously taken to Include salt mines un der the placer mining laws. Good-by, Senator Chandler. Chicago Times-Herald. Life in the United States Senate will be pleasanter for the enforced retirement of Senator William E. Chandler. It is doubt ful if a single sincere tear is shed over the departure of the incorrigible wasp from New Hampshire who for 30 years has been buzzzing and stinging about in the political life of Washington. With undoubted ability, Mr. Chandler's nature was so overstocked with gall and worm wood that it is difficult to comprehend how he ever succeeded In public life. His crushing defeat shows how little sympathy the people of New Hampshire had for the quixotic Ideas of Senator Chandler on bimetallsm and anti-expansion. It also demonstrates how complete ly he had estranged the constituency that thrice elected him to the Senate. His career proves that a man can make his mark but not enduring friends with a rasp. . PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Poor Stuff. Do Reader Is Scribbler a great poet? Do Booker I guess not. He had an ode accepted by a celebration committee. New York Weekly. A Point In Ethics. "What Is the law of compensation?" "Well, here's how It Is: Tho things we don't want are given us to console us for our lack of tho things we want." Chi cago Record, Benevolent Party My man. don't you think fishing Is a cruel sport? Angler Cruel ? Well, I should say so. I have sat here six hours, have not had a bite, and am nearly frozen to death. Tlt-Blts. Mr. Selfmade Remember, children, when I was a boy I often went to bed hungry, and seldom had a square meal. Little Tommy who Is tired of hearins about it) Well, that Just shows how much better off you are since you've known us. Life. Not Over Yet. "Dear me! This Is really ex asperating," sighed Agulnaldo, after reading the dispatch. "What's the matter, lover in quired his wife, anxiously. "Why, small bands of Americans still continue to annoy our troops." replied the stepfather of his country. Puck. A Bit of Philosophy. Josh Wink in Baltimore American. Though men may heap the dollars up . In golden, gleaming plies. Though they may bask beneath the light Of fickle Fortune's smiles. Yet. when Death beckons unto them. And murmurs, "Come with mo," They're Just as dead that day, my boy, As you and I will be. The dollars, and the Joy they bring. The Jewels and the wine. Must linger ever on this side They cannot cross the line. The poorest, meekest of us all, And he who Is most proud. Are on a level, for there are No pockets in a shroud. No pockets for the shrouded has No need of pockets more But all his deeds the good and bad They all have gone before. ' And when he fares to Heaven's gate His future fate to seek, 'TIs well. If haply there may bo A tear stain on his cheek. Tis well for on our balance sheet No dollars have a line, But every one of sorrow's tears Like gleaming Jewels shine. And all the smiles that we have coaxed To drive cut misery Weigh in our favor when we're dead, As you and I will be. NOTE AND COMMENT Wanted Somebody who will Pat Crowo Agulnaldo for $25,000. Good morning: have you sent your grip remedy to the President? Certainly the Supremo Court needs re lief. Will lawyers grant it? We trust it 13 Mars signaling to us, and not Venus trying to work up a flirtation. Hoke Smith says that free silver is dead in the South. This makes Its decease unanimous. Roberts does not want to receive any more honors until Kitchener has won them for hlra. All the powers admit the influence of tho United States in China, but node seems to feel it At last the British have a good chance at the Boers, but it doesn't seem to do them much good. Bryan, our Minister to Brazil, has made a mess of diplomatic etiquette. He seems worthy to wear his name. Hon. Blnger Hermann has no 'distant relatives. They are all at Washington on tho Government payroll. If Governor Geer"s message were an annual document Instead of a biennial, would it be only half as long? Another man has set out to reach the pole, and if he gets a long enough start on the foolkiller ho may succeed. That negro thief who was arrested yes terday may not be a good man, but ho certainly has the right ring about him. General Grant chased a band of Fili pinos out of his district One of these days, when he least expects ,lt, he may equal his father. The W. C. T. U. has shown it Is against temperance because It has not demon strated that the Army canteen was any thing but temperate. Max Nordau says that one day the yel low civilization will overcome the white. What a great day that will bo for Joseph Pulitzer and W. R. Hearstl Hanna must crack the whip if he wants the old stagers of the South to dance Atlanta Constitution. What's the matter with patting a little ragtime? A Chicago man who tried to save his bank book from Are was burned to death. Let us be thankful that so few of us will ever be placed in the same peril. If the Martians are like the god for whom their planet was named, it seems probable they gave tho Czar the tip on which he called that peace conference. Alvord, tho defaulting New York bank teller, stole JTO.OOO, and only got 13 years In the Penitentiary. This Is another blow at the superstition that 13 Is an unlucky number. There seems to be a profound secret somewhere about Agulnaldo's death from the fact that he is keeping so quiet about it. But maybe he is not dead, only Pat Crowed. F. Hopklnson Smith Is making war on the "Uncle Tom's Cabin" shows. Perhaps his wrath would be abated if he was al lowed to plant lighthouses along the pivth of Eliza when she crosses the Ice. With a tobasco sauce diet at West Pqlnt and embalmed beef in the camps, the Army officer must occasionally pine lor the fare of a private citizen, who eats things like his mother used to make. The Chamber of Commerce has appoint ed a committee to report upon the need of a flreboat We know all about the need of a flreboat What we are shy on are ways and means for getting o. flre boat "Posterity," says the Philadelphia In quirer, "Is to be congratulated on tho fact that Mr. Markham will never write an other poem on tho opening of the cen tury." If it were possible to amend by striking out the last six words, tho cause for congratulation would bo greater. Women need not lament that manhood Is depraved, despicable and oppressive, and that It forgets Its proper sphere. Fact is, their own fathers were men and were sons of women, and were the best people who ever lived. If their fathers were otherwise how did they beget so perfectly? Young women alumna of the High School cannot be blamed for wanting to keep away "outside girls." In a matrimo nial market, where the feminine stock far exceeds the masculine.iny addition to the former naturally would hazard, to an In ordinate degree, the equilibrium of supply and demand which even now is sadly dis turbed. ( Do be careful, Mr. Teslo, or it's likely you will find You will do some dreadful damage with your scientific mind. You can listen all you want to for a message from the stars. And can fly your klto to gather what the peo ple say in Mars, But you mustn't get to fooling with conditions here below. For there's much to bo discovered on this planet yet, you know; And if you're not very careful you will find without a doubt You've Invented something useful. If you b don't t watch. r out January Sanahlne. Oh! the sunshine's mighty pleasant In the early days of Spring, When the breakln up of Winter sort of bright ens everything. When the buds Is all a-swellln' an the robin's here again Come to sing his cheerln gospel to the thirst In' hearts of men When the cricks is brimmln' over an' the grass Is gettin' green. An' the season seems the gladdest an tho best you've ever seen. An' the sunshine's bright an cheerln when the Summer days is here; When the fields are growln yellow an the harvestln' is near; When there's not a cloud or shadow In the heavens overhead. An the western sky at sunset Is a glowln flame of red; When the twilight likes to linger till the gol den Bummer day , Seems to last till nearly midnight 'foje It gently fades away. But the sunshine in the Winter that's tho time it seems the best When the weary clouds retire for a badly needed rest. When the mountains we last saw them such a dreary while ago Still are there, an' now are wearin' Winter coats o' shining snow; When a bracln. stlrrtn' feelin' seems to thrill the very air. An' ole Nature is astonished Into smillh' everywhere, ' That's the time we're needln' of it though It's good In Spring an' Fall Still the January sunshine la the vary best of alt O