i THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 21, 1901. fte rgom⁢ Entered at the PsstAtSee at Pertlacd, Oregon, az seeond-clus matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms lM i Business OC1C5...CG7 REUSED SUBSCRIPTION RATE3. By Mail (postage prepaid), in Advance Da.ir with Sunday, per raesth 9 83 Dai.r, Sunday excepted, per year T 30 Dato". -with Sundaj, per year 9 00 Emday per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 CO The Meekly. 3 months 60 To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays exccpted.lSc Dal.), per week delivered. Sundays lncluded.COi POSTAGE RATES United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to lG-page paper ...........lc 10 to 32 page jwper 2c Foreign ratqe do-jbK News or discussion Intended tor. publication In The Oregonian sbouM be addressed Invaria bly "Editor Tlietoregonlan." not to the name of any 'ndUiduar Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions er to any business matter should be addreseedclmply "The Oregonlap " The Oregonian does .not buy poems or stories from individuals, and -cannot undertake to re turn an) manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. . Puget Sound Bureau Oeptaln A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific aeauo.-Tacoma. Box 055. Tacoma PostfBce. Earcern Business Office Th Tribune build ing. New Tork City; 'The Rookery." Chicago: tte S C Beckwitta special agency. New Tork. For sale In San Fnncloo by . J. K. Cooper. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros , 28 Sutter street; "F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street: Foster & Orcar, Ferry Neus stand. t For stle in Los Angeles by B. F. -Gardner. 259 So Spring street, and Oliver A Htflnes, 100 Bo Ej rrng street. For cale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale in Omaha by H. C. Shears. 105 N. Six "entli street, and Barkalow Bros., 1G12 Farnam street. For 3ale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co 77 W Second South street. For sale In Ne'w Orleans by Ernest & Co , 115 Rojal street. On fiie in Washington D. C, with A. W. Dunn. 600 14th N W. For sale in -Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrl k. DOe-812 Seventh street. ' - TODAY'S WEATHER. Cloudy and threat wing, with northerly winds. PORTLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 21. "Antl" Journals are printing in full the Filipino petition for independence, which Teller of Colorado Introduced in the Senate the other day. It was said to have been signed by 2006 Inhabi tants of the Philippine Islands not a great proportion of 10.0D0.000. The rhet oric reminds one of a sermon by an uneducated negro preacher. Yet of course our "antl" Journals regard it as one of the greatest of the world's con tributions to the literature pf freedom. These petitioners say the inhabitants of the Philippine Islands never will submit to the authority of the United States. That, of course. But better people than they haVe said the same", yet have accepted that authority. "Dy ing in the last ditch" is an old story. The Filipinos are extremely careful to aold that ditch. They have been routed from every place they have oc cupied, no matter what their numbers. No people who are so poor fighters are fit for national independence. They couldn't create a real government, nor maintain one. Our forces are making steady progress in suppression of the. insurrection. The hunt for armed bands of Filipinos Is seldom rewarded, nowadays, by finding one. Considerable currency has been given to a rumored intention of Morgan, Hill, Rockefeller and others to perfect amal gamation of great railway properties and then to sell them to the Govern ment at such price as Congress would determine. This bargain would be easy of execution except for two things. One Is that the railroads don't want to sell out to the Government, and the other Is that the Government doesn't want to buy them. What, then, is the object behind the announcement? Taken in connection with recent fulmlnations against anti-pooling legislation, we can only conclude that the object Is the artificial creation of sentiment In favor of pooling legislation. It is impres sively declared that the cause of these recent efforts toward community of railway ownership is the antl-poollng legislation. This is one cause of those efforts, but it is not the only or the predominant cause. The harmonization of railroad Interests Is allied to har monization of iron interests or sugar Interests. It 1b perfectly pueVile for railroad men to say to Congress, Un less you give us pooling laws we will organize a trust and then sell out to the Government. The capital of the country is not half as anxious to sell What It owns as to find new openings Cor investment T.he efforts of railroad management In the direction of har mony have been truthfully explained by Mr. Hill as due to desire for peace, honesty and economy. We take It that these threats do not emanate from men like Morgan, Harriman or Hill, but from small-brained fellows anxious for sensation. As to the election of United States Senator, The Oregonian, while desiring to treat all with consideration and fair ness, can say no more, no less, than it cas said heretofore, namely, that it favors the election of Mr. Corbett, for the reason that It believes him to be the most efficient man for the interests of Oregon that our state can send to the Senate at this time. In business af fairsand these now demand attention more than at any time In our history Mr. Corbetfs energy. Judgment, tenac ity and efficiency are prdverblal. Through these qualities he has made a deeper impression on the business and Industrial life of Oregon than any other citizen of the state. "Without dispar agement qC others, it can be said with perfect truth tfc&t no other man has done so much for development of the state. In Its varied Interests, as he. We want things done for Oregon, at Wash ington. This is the one leading reason why The Oregonian advocates the elec tion of Mr. Corbett. Yet it may be added that Mr. Corbett holds sound and distinct opinions on all the Important questions of National polity now press ing for attention. His views on mon etary and business questions of Na tional import have always been of the soundest, he Is too broad a man to ac quiesce, under political pressure, in an erroneous policy toward our new terri torial possessions: his Judgment and persistency would be of highest value in securing In Congress support for the undertakings necessary for the com mercial and industrial progress of Ore gon and the Northwest The Orego nian favors his candidacy because It believes he would be mere useful In the Senate than any other man we could now send to that body. Its only care In this matter Is for the large in terests of the state and country Its desire on the subject Is not that of one or another who depend on politics for livelihood, for it wants nothing of gov ernment, Is not concerned about the in terests of office-holders, and Is of the opinion that they ought not to be per mitted to dictate the election of Sena tor. The spectacle of a crowd of of-Dce-holders at Salem, who are working simply for themselves, not for the state or the public weal. Is not an attractive one. The newly inaugurated Governor of Connecticut, George P. McLean, advo cates the reform of the present state constitution, under which It is possible fpr 20 per cent of the people to elect a majority of both branches of the Legis lature. Of tho 163 towns, 87 have two Representatives apiece In the House, while 81 have but one each. This rep resentation is based not upon popula tion, but upon land. New Haven, with a population of 108,000, and Union, with a population of 428, have the same rep resentation in the Legislature. Gover nor McLean proposes 'to give each town one Representative, and every town with a population of 10,000 and over an additional Representative 'for each ad ditional 10,000. The system of repre sentation in "Vermont Is as bad as that of Connecticut, and still more hopeless of reform. Each one of the 243 towns of Vermont, large and small, has but one Representative". Burlington, with 18,000 Inhabitants and about 3500 vot ers, has but one Representative, and the little town of St George, with but 30 votes, sends one Representative. Such a system Is a burlesque on popu lar government, since the 3500 voters of Burlington have no more voting power in the making of laws than If It cast but 25 or 30 vote3r as do some of the small mountain towns of the state. The result is a needlessly unwieldy and ex pensive lower house of 243 members, while the great State of New York, with Its enormous wealth and its population lof 7,268,000, and Its varied agricultural, manufacturing, marine and mineral In terests, has a lower house of but 126 members. Vermont, with about 343,000 people, a small, poor, Inland state, has a lower house almost double In number that of the Empire State. No wonder, with such a system of town representa tion, without regard to population, It is comparatively easy to secure the enact ment of stupid, sentimental legisla tion, and difficult to secure Us repeal. The small, mean clannlshness of the little towns makes them Jealous of the large towns, and they combine to per petuate legislation whosa burden they do not feel, but which has become wearisome and unprofitable to the large towns. The effect of this town system of representation is not only to repel the settlement ofc-alert, enlightened, liberal-minded, progressive people In the state, but to continue to swell the New England exodus to the West and the Pacific Coast. A LITERARY FORECAST. Definition of the literature of the twentieth century properly begins with the work of exclusion. We have no warrant of great poetry, great fiction or great essays of the artistic and con templative moods. But this negative process Is merely preliminary. It would be a mistake to stop here, and It would be a greater mistake to draw from hasty Inspection of commercial fields that our brains are running exclu sively or even preponderantly to busi ness. The work of the twentieth cen tury In the fields of thought Is to be as efficient as that of the nineteenth cen tury, and far more useful, and, as In all other centuries, the work In the field of thought will surpass the work in the field of action. It will be the task of the opening years of the twentieth century to di gest the prodigious accumulations of the nineteenth century. What our great minds have hitherto been doing is to get out immense quantities of base ore, which needs taking to the smelter. xWith the highest respect to Spencer and Buckle, as well as to the plainer case of Darwin and Draper, it must be said that our so-called philoso phy as well as our self-confessed sci ence, has done nothing more than to collect facts and arrange them In greater or less confusion, while the con clusions are yet to be drawn. Conclu sions have been attempted, but they are faulty. Morals have been drawn, but they are pernicious. The end of science, with Its discov eries, and philosophy, with Its specula tions, is application to the problems of human life; and of these problems the only ones worth while are those of the Inner man. v Whether a man reads by a tallow dip or a Tesla lamp Is of no con sequence compared with his progress or decline In ability to resist temptation; and all the wheels of industry and Im plements of the laboratory are nothing unless In some way they furnish levers to lift mankind from his lower to his higher nature. All-important, there fore. Is the bearing of science and phil osophy on the question of individual character, and here the most authori tative conclusions of the nineteenth century have simply led us astray. Students of social and governmental science have given us a world in whloh the aggregate Is everything and the in dividual is nothing. Man is the creat ure of natural selection, according to Darwin, or he Is the product of his cli mate, according to Draper. He Is sim ply the exact percentage inevitably doomed to be Insane or criminal accord ing to Buckle, or he is the necessary resultant of his Inheritance and envi ronments according to Spencer. Sociology, that Is to say, enthrones the race as a machine, and eliminates personal accountability. In govern ment It gives us the American doctrine of equality and the French maxims of Inalienable rights. In society it gives us extensive labors for amelioration of man's physical lot an effort to Impart character to him through philanthropic donations, and a demand for making him virtuous by removing all possibil ity of wrong-doing. This work has got to be undone, and the magnitude of the task Is discovered In the extent to which the error permeates every influ ential organized agency of civilization. The chairs of our universities are filled with socialists, and the pulpit has abandoned effort to reach the individ ual, in a fight to remove the sources and Implements of temptation. The ef fort of organized society is to make life a lotus-eater's dream, without dan gers or struggle. Nothing could be more Immoral. Nothing could be more dangerous to strength of charac ter. The brightest promise of the twen tieth century is that keen thinkers are arising on every hand to combat this tide of pernicious sentiment, and re-establish the peVsonal accountability of the Individual. The work, in fact, Is already beguand In all-the-eenturles-that have gone no more necessary or fruitful labor has demanded of the thinker a duty or enticed him with greater reward. ROYALTY'S ALTERED SPHERE. "Before half-past 2 o'clock on the morning of June .20, 1837, William IV was lying dead in Windsor Castle, while the messengers were already .hurrying off to Kensington Palace to bear to his successor her summons to the throne." This Is the graphic sen tence with which Mr. Justin McCarthy opened his "'History of Our Own Times," one of the most interesting though not the most accurate of the chronicles of the Victorian reign. Nigh updn 64 years have passed since that eventful and momentous day, and the interim has seen great changes pass over the Institution of sovereignty. Its governmental aspect Is not one of the most momentous aspects of the good Queen's reign, but it is an Important one, nevertheless, for the rise and fall of royalty make up one of the most fascinating threads in the annals of humanity. The reign of William IV 0830-1837), uneventful as compared with that of George IV (1820-1830), and short as com pared with that of George III (1760-1820), will forever stand out In history as a transition period. It marked the end of personal and the full arrival of constitutional government in Great Britain. He exercised the right to dis miss his ministers at will; but with him this prerogative passed away once for all from the hands of the ruler to the hands of the people. With William the old manner of sovereign ceased to be, but the new manner of sovereign had not yet arrived. It remained for Victoria to establish the new order, and that has been her work in government Because she has done It well, the mon archy abides In Britain, and the House of Hanover holds undisputed title to the throne. Victoria's service in the narrow gov ernmental sense has been to subordi nate direction of statecraft to that per sonal characteristic of royalty which was -expressed In the term so often er roneously applied "the first gentleman of England." The standard of King ship she bequeathes to the empire is that of personal character. Not a for mulator of measures or an intriguer with cabinets or a maker and marrer of public servants, the throne stands today for exemplary conduct, high ideals and dignified bearing. The King must be, if he measures up to the rec ognized pattern now, not & self-seeking potentate, but a model of all the virtues and graces of intellectual and accom plished social life. This Is not an empty office, as the superficial might suppose; for observa tion has abundantly confirmed Burke's dictum as to the superiority of man ners over law. He would be rash who should undertake to point out the law or set of laws enacted In the Victorian reign whose effect upon the English speaking world transcends the pro found Influence exerted by the person ality of the Queen and those, includ ing the Prince Consort, who have gath ered about her and left their impress upon English thought, customs and ideals. Domestic purity, social cleanli ness, honesty and kindliness have radi ated In unfllckerlng brightness from the British throne for sixty years, and have lifted mankind Immeasurably far above the levels revealed In celebrated lectures of Thackeray. This high standard confronts the Prince Regent. Upon the wav he meets his inheritance very largely depends not only mon archy In name In Britain, but the per petuity of every throne that still sur vives the shocks of liberty and the hand of time. , OUR TIMBER SUPPLY. The Burefau of Statistics in Washing ton is preparing a statement in regard to the standing timber In the United States that, when completed and given to the public, will be of great value. Advance sheets of this report give es timates showing that an area of 1,094, 946 square miles Ib covered by timber, and that this standing timber repre sents 2,300,000,000 feet Of states hav ing the greatest area of standing tim ber, Oregon stands second with 54,000 square miles of forest to her credit Texas leads with 64,000 square miles;. Minnesota follows closely upon Oregon with 52,000 square miles; Washington comes next with 47,700. Other states mentioned In the list of those having the largest timber area are: Arkansas, 46,000; California, 44,700; Montana, 42, 000; Georgia, 42,000, and Missouri, 41,000 square miles. Following this estimate of our stand ing timber area and the possibilities which It represents to the lumber trade Is the statement that we are cutting our timber at the rate of About 40,000, 000 feet a year, an average which, if continued, will exhaust the present sup ply in about sixty years. The effort to restore our forests is, of course, not taken into account In this calculation, the object being to show what will re sult In case the present wasteful policy of using without replacing timber or protecting young timber Is- pursued through two more generations. In Min nesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, where the logger's ax and the lumberman's mill have been persistently active dur ing the present generation, there are in dications of a slight abatement In ac tivities during the past year. There has, Indeed, been a steady reduction of the average production of lumber in these originally magnificently timbered states during the last ten years. The maximum therein was reached In 1890, after which a gradual reduction was noted, until In 189S the minimum was reached. This shows, not that the de mand has weakened, but that the source of supply Is falling. Nature connot by ordinary processes or unaided growth, supply the 'ast In roads that have been and are being made upon her forest wealth. This is conceded, and, while representatives of the National Forestry Association are working in conjunction with officials of the Government to inaugurate a sys tem whereby the loss through com mercial demands may be made good by growth, the agents of the great lum ber companies are scouring the North west and have penetrated even to the Pacific Coast, for the purpose of secur ing a supply to meet the demands of their business. Large tracts of timber have been bought up In this Interest In our own state within the past few years a perfectly legitimate business transaction, by the way and for the first time In our history the fact that the forest wealth of Oregon may not be inexhaustible has been, though still vaguely, presented to our people. The export of lumber Is becoming a ver important Item in our foreign com merce. Statistics show that it has very nearly doubled in the last ten years. The total exports of wood and wood manufactures last year were val ued at 550,598,000, most of these forest products having been shipped from Pa cific Coast ports to South America and the Asiatic countries. There is every reason to believe that our lumber ex port will again be doubled in the first decade of the century. To meet this fact forests that represent the growth of centuries will fall. It will be the part of prudence prudence of the Ben jamin Franklin type, that is regardful of the interests and needs of posterity, to inaugurate early in the onslaught upon our forests at the behest of com merce and follow such measures of for est protection as will prevent the dissi pation by two or three generations of the grand timber heritage that has come down to us from nature, through uncounted centuries. It Is quite proper that all salmon which succeed in wending their way safely through the labyrinth of traps at the mouth of the Columbia should have the privilege of spawning unmo lested. Such a concession would be a merited tribute to the sagacity of the fish. Therefore, the willingness of Clat sop fishermen that salmon should prop agate If they can get past Clatsop County Is commendable and Wasco people are very obtuse If they cannot appreciate the charity of it. Wasco fishermen ought therefore to see. clearly how beside the real issue is their con tention that more fish should be al lowed to enter the river. It Is very strange that Clatsop County should un derstand the Importance of allowing fish to propagate more than does Wasco. Why, the simple fact that so few fish pass Astoria Is argument in superable for the Clatsop bill before the Legislature. Indeed, what is to be come of the Industry, If the salmpn which escape Clatsop shall not be al lowed to spawn? La grippe Is a great leveler. A sharp tussle with it turns statesmen and high Government officials for the time being Into whimpering, semi-invalids, whose sole pleasure In life Is to compare "symptoms" with fellow-sufferers. In proof of this, if proof outside of com mon experience is required, it may be cited that at a Cabinet meeting in the President's private apartments at the White House last Wednesday (the first Cabinet meeting, by the way, since January 4), all members being present, the entire time was devoted to a re hearsal of the Individual experiences of the several secretaries since last they met In combatting the popular ailment. Having thus relieved their minds, after the manner of the grip-enfeebled, the President and his advisers separated tot come together after the lapse of an other week, hoping by that time to be able to think of something besides themselves and their bodily "feelings." It is queer, but not strange, that they who have been hazed encourage, or rather do not discourage, the practice. Evidently they consider It an essential In a cadet's training. Certain officers at West Point, who were cadets them selves and experienced hazing, and who have the power to squelch the bar barous orgies, do not do It, or have not, perhaps because they think there can be no Improvement over the methods of discipline to which they were subjected. There Is no greater pleasure than in seeing others going through the same tribulations through which we have gone. If officers were In charge at West Point Who had never felt the joys and sorrows of hazing, the prac tice might more readily be stamped out. Recognizing the need of home food, something that the men enjoy and that will add pleasing and wholesome vari ety to their ration, the German Gov ernment will Eend at once 2400 tons of sauer kraut to its soldiers in China. A German firm of Philadelphia has con tracted to furnish and ship the order The kraut will be packed in barrels and casks, and a train of cars will be required to move It to the Pacific Coast, whence it will receive quick dis patch to Tien Tsln. As a holiday re membrance from the Kaiser, the kraut will reach his army In the Orient a lit tle late, but there can be no doubt of the gustatory wolcome that' it will re ceive. In his brief article on "The Remedies of Trusts," which we print today, Pro fessor Bascom uses an apt and striking comparison. Speaking of the danger ous tendency of corporations towards trusts, he says: "Corporate action has been our most remarkable development, and one of the most successful of our productive agents. How, then, has It so suddenly taken on an Inimical form, and, like an Infuriated elephant broken from the hand that has held It to serv ice?" It Is necessary to apply more searching remedies than moral suasion to an Infuriated elephant. The W. C. T. U. is unfortunate, if not otherwise, in abetting the interests of saloons by having the canteen abol ished. If duty could be transmitted through the medium of bigotry and monomania without refraction, the age of miracles would not be past. Since Bryan says reorganization must be within the party, he should remem ber, when he replies to Cleveland, that he considers himself within the party and Grover outside it Students of Stanford University threw one of their fellow-members Into a pond the other day. Advertising of West Point has evidently given that Institution some Ideas. Alger has been advised repeatedly that he will have to wait for posterity for justice. However, he should not take it so seriously as to get mor tally 111. If it took all that toll and trouble to get China's agreement to the joint note, how much more will it take to keep her agreeing? Kruger will not come to the United States at present In fact, he will let Dewet win the Independence of his country. Lord Salisbury now has a chance to emulate Cleveland by firing an ulti matum of bis own In the Venezuela case. New York Journal of Commerce Striking- evidence of the rapid growth of the cotton industry in Japan is af forded by Mr. Shepperson's "Cotton Facts," which gives the consumption of cotton In Japan for three years as roi lows: Bales. ISM ,. , , 747,362 1808 C44.S1S 1807 .. S1B.S22 The amount of American cotton used was S6.334 bales in 1S97,. and 220,597 bales in 1S99. The Japanese production of cot ton Is trilling, and little native cotton is spun The largest amount of cotton comes from British India, and there is a small consumption of Chinese cotton; the great bulk of the fiber used In Japan ese mills comes from India and this coun try. The number of spindles in Japan at three dates la as follows: Spindles. 1300 1,273.706 1835 580.D45 1890 277.S05 The production Is already far beyond the local consumption, and a third of the product has to be exported to China, where it competes with the exports of this country and England. How serious this competition is depends upon the cost of production, and of this the rates of wages afford no real indication. They do, however, indicate that wages are rising In Japan to an extent that greatly Im pairs the advantage which a few years ago cheap labor seemed to give her as compared with the Western World. In five years the wages of men have ad vanced 55, and the wages of women have advanced 66 per cent. It would give very valuable Information II we could closely compare the efficiency of labor in Japan, England and the United States. The materials for this are insuf ficient. There is no doubt that more persons are employed for a given amount of production in Japan than in Western countries, but it is difficult to say pre cisely how much. "Cotton Facts" pub lishes an official Japanese table showing the number of spindles, the consumption of cotton and the yarn produced, in which the employes are apparently those employed in spinning mills only. The weaving Is largely done on hand looms In the homes. Assuming that the number of persons employed is the number in spin ning mills, the number per 1000 spindles was 52 in 1S90. 70 In 1895 and 50 in 1800. As to this discrepancy it may be conjectured tnat running the mills continuously with double shifts was not general 10 years ago, but was five, years ago; and that since 1895 there has been Increased effi ciency of labor dud to practice. The mills run 22 hours a day with two shifts of operatives, so thwt these figures indicate 25 persons per 1000 spindles per shift. The last census of the United State3 does not separate the number of persons employed in spinning from those in weav ing mills, and In giving the number of persons employed per spindle it gives the whole number employed in the manufac ture of cotton. Dr. Schulze-Gaevernltz's exhaustive Investigation of cotton manu facturing In England gives the number of persons employed per 1000 spindles In various countries and at different dates as follows: England. 18S7 3 England, 1837 7 Germany, 1861 20 Germany, 1832 , 8 0 Mulhouso. about 18S5 7.6 Alsace 0.5 Italy 13 Bombay "3 The number In Bombay 15 years ago appears to be about the same as that in Japan at present If the number of per sons employed In Japan Is eight times as great as the number employed In Eng land, the advantage Japan enjoys In low wages Is much more than offset. The yarn exports of Japan, chiefly to China, were less than half a million pounds eight years ago; they were 17,300, 000 pounds In 1S99. 56,045,000 in 1S97 and 91. 776,000 pounds In 1898. The consumption of cotton per spindle Indicates the fineness of the yarn rather than the efficiency of tne iaoor or the machinery. Mr. Shep person gives it as 36.72 pounds per an num in England. 69.33 on the Continent, 50.45 for all Europe, and 96.5 for the United States. His tables of spindles and cotton consumption Iriuicate for Japan 154 pounas per shift. For the lower counts of yarn, up to 20s, the Japanese mills control their own and the Chinese markets. Reflection) of a Spinster. Judge. If love's eyesight wero good pyjamas would never have been Invented. Good men are products of the Imagina tions of religious women who have never married. If God only lends people something to love what bad judgment ho sometimes uses in not calling the loan. A handsome man divides women into two classes those he knows he can kiss and those he thinks he can as soon as he has time. Confusion between a man's sorrow at being found out and sorrow for what he has done has been one of tho scandals of morality. A girl kissing a married man is like a child playing with electricity, who does not like the shock when It comes, but cannot resist trying it once more. Some men are as easily entertained as the one who had a habit of taking off his wife's wedding ring whenever he wanted a little excitement. Not Half Paid. New York Telegram. Mr. Barrle was one day at Waterloo station In a hurry to catch a train. He was hastening from the bookstall laden with papers, "a good niany sixpenny ones among them," he dolefully relates, when. In rushing around a corner, he fell Into the arms of Rudyard Kipling, equally In a tearing hurry. They turned on each other with scowling faces, then smiled In recognition, and asked each other whither he went. Then Kipling, exclaiming, "Lucky beggar, you've got papers!" seized the bundle from Barrle, flung him some money and made off. "But you did not stoop to pick up his dirty halfpence, did you?" queried one of Mr. Barrie's hear ers, amusedly. "Didn't I, though!" re turned Barrle, and added ruefully, "but he hadn't flung me half enough." Hard on Poor Lo. St Louis Post-Dispatch. What would the noble red man think If he could know that election disturbers and repeaters are classified as "Indians"? Would he not be justified In resuming his war paint? Possibly n Bad Negative. Philadelphia Inquirer. A Roumanian has discovered a way per manently to print a photograph on the SKin, and in a few years the professional beau will look like a tattooed man. Don't Ask Too Much. Denver Republican. Professor Loeb has a good chance to prove the truth of his theory by shaking the salt cellar over the corpse of Colo rado Populism. Ave Maria. Byron. Ave Maria! blessed be tho hour! The time, the clime, the spot where I so oft Have felt that moment In Its fullest power Sink o'er the earth so beautiful and soft While swung the deep bell in the distant tower. Or the faint dying day-hymn stole aloft. And not a breath crept through the rosy air. And yet tho forest leaves seemed stirred with prayer. Ave Maria! 'tis the hour of prayer! Ave Maria! 'tis the hour of lovet Ave Maria! May our spirits dare Look up to Thine and to Thy Son's Above! Ave Maria! Oh I that face so fair! Those downcast eyes beneath the Almighty Dove What though, 'tis but a pictured Image? strike That painting is no idol 'tis too like. GENESIS OF ELECTORAL COLLEGE Kansas City Star. Under the provisions of the Constitu tion, the President and Vice-President of the United States for the term beginning March 4 have not yet been elected. The second Monday In January Is election day by act of Congress. On that day one week from tomorrow the 447 electors chosen last November will assemble In their respective states and vote for the two highest officers of the Nation. The result of the balloting will be forwarded tQ the President of the Senate, in Wash ington. On the second Wednesday in Feb ruary he will bpen the communications from the members of the Electoral Col lege in the presence of the two houses of Congress and announce the result The electors chosen last November are bound In no way except by their sense of honor to vote for the candidates of their parties. They might cast their ballots for Pettlgrew and Edward Atkinson if they desired, and the country would have no recourse. All that the Constitution says Is that they shall "vote by ballot for President and Vice-President one of whom, at least, shall not be an Inhab itant of the same state with themselves." For the last 100 years the custom of the electors voting for the choice of their constituents has hardly been violated. One Instance of the sort was In 1S21. when one elector refused to vote for Monroe on the ground that only Washington was worthy the honor of" being the unanimous choice of the people for President The election of 1797 was the last In which the electors availed themselves of their Constitutional prerogative of Independent action. By 1800 the candidacy of Jefferson and Adams was tacitly recognized, and four years later the first nominations were made by Congressional caucus. This method was continued until the time of Jackson, in 182S. His candidacy was in dorsed by state Legislatures and political clubs. The National party convention system was Inaugurated In 1832. Since that time the electors have abided strictly by their implied pledge. Even during the Hayes-Tllden controversy, when the pres sure was Intense, every elector stood fast. It Is not generally understood that the Constitution falls to specify how the elec tors are to be chosen. It delegates this matter to the states, saying only: "Each state shall appoint, in such manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors equal to the whole number of Senators and Representatives to which the state may be entitled In Congress." Early in the Republic's history the Leg islatures themselves appointed the elec tors. Then It became the custom In most states to allow each Congressional dis trict to choose one elector, while the ex tra two were chosen at large by the whole state. This plan, in turn, was abandoned for the present method, by which all the electors are voted for on one ticket Oc casionally, in recent years in close states one minority elector has been chosen. This has been due either to mistakes in the marking of ballots or to the personal unpopularity of one of the majority elec tors, whose name has been scratched. Michigan has furnished the only devia tion lately from the general custom of choosing all electors on one ticket In 1S92, the Democratic Legislature, foresee ing that the state would probably go Re publican, passed a bill under which each Congressional district chose one elector and the other two were selected at large. The consequence was that nine Republic an and five Democratic electors were chosen. It is by no means certain that this would not be the better way to man age the choice of the Electoral College. Under the present system the result of an election is apt to hinge on New York, Where a change of a few hundred votes may swing the state's 36 electors from one party to the other. If electors were chosen by Congressional districts. New York State would always have a divided vote in the Electoral College. This would tend to deprive the state of its present undue prominence In a Presidential con test. While amendments to the Constitution are proposed In almost every Congress to provide that the President be chosen by popular vote. It Is doubtful whether any change will be made for many years, at least. Dr. Albert Shaw points out in the Review of Reviews that the founders of the Government provided for the Electo ral College not so much because of dis trust In the people as on account of the conditions under which they were living. The lack of means of communication and of newspapers kept the mass of the peo ple In Ignorance of the ability of most public men. For this reason the framers of the Constitution thought it best to in trust the selection of the President to chosen electors from each state. Circum stances have, changed since that time, and with them the real mode of choosing tho Chief Magistrate. While the letter of the law remains unchanged its spirit has been adapted to the needs of the present PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Tho Nurse I bee pardon, Mr. Stuffer, but Dr. Plllery says you eat too much. Mr. Stuff er Eat too much? "Why, the thing is Impos sible. I shall have to get a new medical ad viser. Boston Transcript. Tess Jack proposed last night and I ac cepted him. Jess Did you, dear? By the way, dqn't attempt to cut glass with that diamond, as I did. or you'll make another nick In the stone. Philadelphia Press. A Kegular Thing. "Daughter." said Mr. Glddlngs, "Is that young Mr. DInsmore a man of regular habits?" "Oh, jes, papa," replied Miss Glddlngs. "He proposes regularly every Thursday night." Detroit Free Press. Her Troubles. "No," said the Society Re porter, "It Is not so hard to get descriptions of the costumes. The hard pirt Is to write the descriptions so that each lady will con sider herself tho best-dressed woman pres ent." Baltimore American. Anxious. 1 er beg your pardon. Miss Clara, but that was an awfully strong punch you made for me last night." "Why, It didn't do you any harm, did It?" "Well, I don't know. I have been worried to death ever since for fear I proposed to you." Life. "Why did you give that teacher you sent us so good a character? The fellow is perfectly useless!" observed the Chairman of one Scot tish School Board to the Chairman of an other. "Eh, man." was the reply, "ye'll have to gle him a far better character berore ye get rid o' him!" Tlt-Btts. Contentment. Giles A happy New Tear to you, marm, and hope jou'll bo as lucky this year as I was last. Lady Oh, thank you very much. Giles; but you surely forget that you lost your wife In the Spring, and broke your leg In the Summer. Giles Yes, but t'other leg's all right, and as for paw Soosan. It might have been I to be took Instead. Punch. Sometime, Somewhere, Christine Rossettl. Unanswered yet? The prayer your lips have pleaded In agony of heart these many years? Does faith begin to fall, Is hope departing. And think you all In aln those falling tears? Say not the Father hath not heard your prayer; You shall have your desire, sometime, some where. Unanswered yet7 though when you first pre sented This one petition at the Father's throne. It seemed you could not wait the time of ask ing. So urgent was your heart to make It known. Though years have passed since then, do you not despair; The Lord Will answer you sometime, some where. Unanswered yet' Nay, do not say ungranted; Perhaps your part ts not yet wholly done; The work began when first your prayer was uttered. And God will finish what He has begun. If you will keep the Incense burning there. His glory you shall see sometime, somewhere. Unanswered yet? Faith can not be unan swered. Her feet are firmly planted on the Rock; Amid the wildest storms she stands un daunted. Nor quails before the loudest thunder shock. She knows Omnipotence has heard her prayer. And cries, "It shall be done sometime, somewhere!" NOTE AND COMMENT. There promises to be something doing at Salem this week. Mrs. Carrie Nation is crazy. Will the W. C. T. U. believe It? A band of Boers is reported to havo been badly routed. More British, must ba in a trap. McKinley couldn't help having the grip sine-) he always stands In with the ma jority. Apparently that Duke thinks it la worth a whole lot of money to marry Queen Wilhelmlna. ' Thank goodness hazing is unknown to the Filipinos, or we might never quell tha Insurrection. If the statesmanship of some legislators wore as faulty as their grammar and English, would they still be statesmen? Now that ho has heard from tha Elec toral College, James K. Jones may pos sibly bo persuaded to give up tho light. If soldiers have to be hazed in order to be such, the Boers are doing a service for which the English should feel grate ful. After practicing on the Colorado lions. Colonel Roosevelt will be bettor qualified for a fiesh brush with the New York tiger. Americans have offered Kruger a man sion. Evidently they have forgotten Dewey. But Kruger Is married, so may be they haven't. Is England serious In Its Intention to add its own amendments to the canal treaty and to malign the superlative wis dom of our Senate? The fact that the center of population has not budged an inch since McBrida returned shows that ho Is not so many as he might be. A Senator Is going to lecture on "From Lincoln to Hanna." He would Increase his range vastly If he substituted Pettl grew for Hanna. Aftti. two whole days of hard work In Portland, the members of the Legislature mil be glad to get back to Salem for a hard-earned rest About the only crimes that have not been charged to the mosqultos are the Leavenworth lynching and the abduction of young Cudahy. So little has been heard from Hon. G. W. McBrlde lately that It Is supposed ho has retired to some secluded spot to com pose a swan song. Controller Color says New York Is not so black as It Is painted. The outlook for reform there, however, Is fully as blue as It could well be. If China Is wise she will charge up tha loot against the European powers, and be able to have something coming to her when tney demand their indemnity. Cleveland Is up against It good and hard now. Bryan can refuse to restore him from Innocuous desuetude by declining to pilnt an thing from or about him. A yacht named America Is being built to defend t'.it America's pup. Tbls cer tainly should quicKcn Sir Thomas's Imagi nation and .stimulate hls endeavor. Is It syllogistic to conclude thatRoberts would receive a grander glorification for going back and finishing tho war than he has received for leaving It unfinished? Bryan can run every four years and rest between whiles. But with Agulnaldo It Is a case of having to run all the time. No wonder the election news killed him. If F. Hokklnton Smith la right about "Uncle Tom's Cabin" being a crime, wtoat may be said of the plas founded on that book, which multiply all the char acters by two? In a prizefight at Denver the other day "Young Corbett" broke Joe Bernstein's jaw. With his main battery out of action, of course, the latter had to allow the de cision to his opponent The West Point cadets promise to stop hazing, but it their promises are of tha same material as the evidence they gave at tho Booz Inquiry, they should be re quired to give a bond with every promise. The people of Omaha have found vent for their Indignation at their small cen sus showing and the escape of Pat Crowe by burning a pesfhouso. There Is always a safety valve for a surplus pressure of anger. If people have the Ingenuity to find it Clackamas fishermen ask for an open salmon season. Did they ever hear of Clatsop County, and do they know a bill Is before the Legislature for prohibiting salmon fishing above tide water? Do they not realise that the salmon will be exterminated unless the fish are allowed to propagate? Let Clackamas not ignore Clatsop's Interests. Congressman Tayler, who represents President McKinley's old Ohio district In Conere&n. the other day received from tha Philippics a magnificent set of chessmen. Each plcc Is most elaborately and artis tically carved, the king and queen pieces being six inches high. The set is of Chi nese manufacture, and is a present from an ofliccr now ou duty in the Philippines. S me of tha ci-fcij enthusiasts In Congress who have st.cn the pieces declare they are of the class used only by imperial persons in China. Taken dry as a powder, well washed down with copious libations of water, salt has been used for years as a simple home remedy. The only reason that the cure Is not worse than the disease Is that It gets washed down Immediately, and a half-teaspoonful, which is usually a dose. Is gone in1 a wink. One woman, well known in New York, vows it is better than any nerve specialist, and clings to salt now as a life-preserver. On the chatelaine which she wears hangs a little box filled always" with salt Occasionally she takes a half-spoonful, the "grains of prevention," she calls them. Berlin has conceived a novel law of fur thering the right development of children. This provides for an Interchange of city and country children. Thus the poor classes of Berlin, who cannot afford fam ily outings, are enabled to send their chil dren to the country, and in exchange they receive the children from the country home, who are thus provided with the Mberal education town life affords. Recip rocal selfish Interest in their own prompts considerate treatment of the visiting chil dren in each home. The plan works so successfully the intention now is to ex tend it and make it international, estab lishing an exchange of children between- I different countries. i i