THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 14, 1901. te rjegorocm Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms Itxl . Business OHce...6G7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall (postage prepaid), in Advance Da-Iy. -with Sunday, per month $ 85 Da.iy, Sunday excepted, per year. 7 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 50 The Weekly. 3 months 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sendays excepted.l5o Dally, per week delivered. Sundays lncluded.20a, POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 20 to 16-page paper , lc IS to 32-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonian should b 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 stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Optaln A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 355. Tacoma Postfflce. Eastern Burin Ofllee The Tribune build ing. New Tork City; "The Rookery." Chicago: tho S C Beckwith special agency. New Tork. For sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 748 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold sm'th Bros., 296 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street: Fester & Ore&r, Ferry Hews stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 Bo Spring street. For E8ln 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.. 1C12 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co 77 W Second South street. For sale In New Orleans by Ernest & Co.. 315 Royal street. On file In Washington D. C. with A. W. Dii-n. BOO lth K W. .For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kerdrlck. 806-912 Seventh street. - TODAY'S WEATHER. Occasional rain; fresh to brisk southerly wind?. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, FEU. 14. Many tender people cannot reconcile themselves to expansion, because it sacrifices so many young men. They cannot endure the sight of youth cut off In Us flower. This sympathy Is commendable, but it is not broad minded. It Is proper in a sense, but it does not comprehend the general pur poses of progress and mankind. These kind-hearted folk are wont to contract the broad ethnical purpose to the nar row scope of the individual, instead of to widen the function of the indi vidual to the broad purpose of the race. They exalt the individual to the importance of the nation, and do not estimate him at his true worth as a unit. The race progresses at the ex pense of its members. It does so in the ant-hill, in the hive, and it does bo In human kind. Yet our sympathetic friends cannot look upon this sacrifice of young men with composure, and see In It the objective ends of the species. In their abhorrence and un reason they refuse to believe that this earthly plan, which is all-wise or It would not be, conspires for advance ment of the race and subjugation of the individual. Thus egoism comes to oppose expansion and war, although war and expansion have been potent factors In progress. Unconsciously we each Imagine ourselves the focus of the cosmic process. "With esoteric pre sumption we each think of ourselves as the climax of history and progress. Only by conscious effort, by humbling our native self-assertion, do we see the folly of our conceit. "We differ from the savage in that we can cast the light of reason upon our existence and behold truly our insignificant relation to the universe and our fellow men. Those of us who deplore the sad loss of young manhood and do not see its compensation, do not abstract our selves from egoism. Our conscious ness was given us for a purpose. "We should use It to cast about and get a truer perspective. Secretary Gage seems suddenly to have changed his mind on the subject of countervailing duty on Russian su gar, for the last heard from him was a determination to forbear a decision un til he had an opinion from the Attorney-General. No opinion has been ren dered, and Mr. Gage's motives for a change of plan can only be surmised. One could wish that the hurried de cision had been in accord with some ether influence than the clamor of the sugar trust. However, the matter is a judicial one, and can be rushed to a court decision, a result In every way to be desired. The Dlngley law, upon which the decision is based, is explicit ly designed to cover such evasions as Russia has adopted. Countervailing duties are to be levied "whenever any country, dependency or colony shall pay or bestow, directly or indirectly, any bounty or grant. . . . whether the same shall be Imported directly from the country of production or oth erwise, and whether such article or mer chandise is Imported in the same condi tion as when exported from the coun try of production or has been changed in condition by manufacture or other wise," etc The fact appears to be that Russia makes such terms with her su gar factories that they export at about SS per cent, of the home price. Hence the countervailing duty here on Russian sugar. This whole subject Is covered In the reciprocity treaty already nego tiated with Russia by the indefatigable Mr. Kasson, and awaits only the ac tion of our high and mighty Senators, too busy with politics to attend to busi ness. That treaty provides, among oth er things, that in return for certain concessions to American Imports into Russian ports, the countervailing duty will be foregone. If the Senate should by any cahnce hear that fresh reasons exist for prompt action on the Russian treaty, all hope of its ratification must be abandoned. It is perhaps desirable, on the whole, that Mr. Laurier should Inform his countrymen of the Alaska boundary, its status and destiny, inasmuch as his utterances, though he knows little or nothing about what will be done and cannot safely tell the truth If he did, will tend to appease Canadian clamor and make the people of the Dominion think they are to be taken seriously In the matter of the boundary. As a mat ter of fact, however, the "Washington correspondent of the Chicago Record says that the report of the joint com mittee which surveyed the "temporary" boundary line between Alaska and Brit ish Columbia has completed its task, and copies of the report have been filed in Washington, London and Ottawa. It is added that the commission was unan imous, that the accuracy of the survey Is not likely to bo questioned, and "it probably will stand indefinitely, as nei ther government has good reason to be dissatisfied." This Is doutbless true. From the first announcement of this "temporary" arrangement, from the State Department's explanation of the terms of the agreement Before they were published, there bas been strong ground for suspecting that the United States and England intended this sur vey to be permanent, but called it tem porary to save the feelings of Canada. Under the agreement and by this sur vey the United States gets about nine tenths of all it ever olalmed. Canada will not be satisfied, but the temporary agreement has got to stand till both governments can agree on a permanent definition of the boundary. The United States has no motive for reopening the matter, and Great Britain may be qui,te satisfied that the Canadian claims are not well supported. King Edward will have something to say about the Alaska boundary, and he Is not likely to have his friendship for the United States dis turbed in behalf of an impossible con tention of an expensive part of his empire. Industrial discussion in the Scotch papers is uncovering a profoundly op erating cause of the gloom that seems to overhang the British iron and steel trades. Among the disadvantages of the British manufacturers in their com petition with the United States and Germany especial stress is laid upon the efforts of the labor organizations to keep down the amount of produc tion. The Edinburgh Evening News says of the Americans that they have, "above all, the strenuous efforts of the workmen to Increase the output. How Is It to be expected that our workmen, trained to regard restriction of output as -their sheet anchor, can suddenly be made to understand that it Is a fatal heresy?" A correspondent of the Glas gow Herald tells Its readers that in one American engineering company one man works six lathes, at another one man superintends eight automatic ma chines, in another one man works si multaneously a planing machine, a drilling machine and a shaping ma chine, another tends two cutting-oft machines, another works five special lathes, one man will look after 10 turret-head automatic machines at once, and in a screw factory one man is run ning 18 machines. This sort of thing the British workman will not consent to lest there should not be enough work to go around, and he Is already begin ning to take a vacation because the work that would a few years ago have gone to the shop where he is employed is now going to American shops. It has evidently not occurred to the British workingman that his Interests require the greatest possible activity of Brit ish factories, which will sell abroad their surplus product for what they can. get, and thus hold their foreign mar kets. All of which teaches that all the blind labor leaders are not on one side of the Atlantic. IT IS SERIOUS BUSINESS. National independence for Cuba is in compatible with just regard for the In terests of the United States. Tet we are pledged to assure independence to Cuba, and we must keep our word. The troubles of the hereafter we must meet as they arise. Some say we should de mand control by the United States of the foreign policy of Cuba and of for eign treaties made by the Cuban Gov ernment. But we cannot do this, for we have given our pledge to Cuba that she shall be an independent and sover eign nation She is framing her consti tution on this basis. If we keep the letter of our covenant we shall scuttle out of Cuba without any guarantees whatever. The Cubans, or that por tion of them in political control, expect us to go. If we do not go we shall soon see them assume a threatening attitude, and even rise In arms against us. If we go, we shall have lost all guarantees and Cuba, left to do what she will as a sovereign state, may form engagements with other nations and discriminate against ours, as she may think best for her own interests. Tet we are bound to withdraw from Cuba and leave the results to chance, fate and time. "When General "Wood tells the makers of the Cuban constitution that they must guarantee the United States against unreasonable tariff duties and discriminations; that they must permit the maintenance of coaling depots and naval supply and repair stations in con venient harbors; that they must guar antee protection of the credit of the island and prevention of unnecessary and unjust debts; that they must give assurance that they will avoid foreign entanglements and will protect the for eign population within their borders and respect their rights of property when he tells them these things he Is assuming a right on the part of the United States to dictate the constitution of Cuba. Tet here we are confronted by the pledge that our demagogues In Congress made at the beginning of the war with Spain. Let no one be mistaken about this business, for it is serious business, and it Is going to give us a great deal of trouble. POLITICS ATTACKING BUSINESS. The record of the Port of Portland Commission, as shown in the improved condition of the Columbia and Willam ette Rivers, Is an excellent one. Its work the past two years has been well done. Nine-tenths of the traffic carried between Portland and the sea consist of wheat, flour and lumber, hence It Is eminently proper that the members of the commission should be men vital ly Interested in the two greatest indus tries of the Columbia Basin. Men rep resenting these Interests have been serving the board. They are heavy taxpayers and men of unquestioned standing in the community. In their conduct of the affairs of the Port of Portland Commission politics has had no part, and it Is accordingly somewhat surprising to learn that one of the most valuable members of the commission has been omitted from the new board because he was identified with a polit ical faction which opposed the election of the majority of the delegation No objection would be raised if this mem ber was replaced on the board by a man having property and business in terests equally as important as the member who is crowded out. The work of the Port of Portland tor the past few years showed such satis factory results that a burden was lifted from Columbia River shipping by repeal of the compulsory pilot law. Much of the credit for the defeat of this graft on commerce is due to the efforts of the menfber of the commission who Is to be deposed because his political views are not in accord with, those of the delegation from this county. His place on the board Is slated for one of the men most actively engaged in try ing to force compulsory pilotage again on the port A substitution of this kind will not improve the working qual ities of the commission. As it now stands the organization is working in harmony and doing all that it was ap pointed to do. Any change at a critical time In the growth of our marine traffic Is bound to be attended with danger of impairment of the commission's effi ciency. Portland Is in need of a dry dock, but It Is not at all necessary to make the drydock measure a vehicle on which Inexperienced men can ride Into power, supplanting those whose business interests are identical with the best interest of the port. The ma jority of the. Multnomah delegation, and for that matter the majority of their constituents are in favor of the drydock, and it would seem that it could be pro vided without removing from office a set of representative business men of the city. If they must be legislated out of office, care should be taken that their places are filled with men of equal responsibility and with equally great interests at stake. In turning out Messrs. Flanders, Wil liams and Brown, and incidentally forcing the retirement of Mr. Wilcox and Mr. Ladd, the manipulators of the new Port of Portland bill have assumed a grave responsibility. The work of these men speaks for itself. Politics should have no place in a matter of such vital importance as the improve ment of the channel from Portland to the sea. Men of the Wilcox caliber have no time or inclination to engage in petty politics, and the port Is a loser when their aid is rejected in matters of such great public concern. OUR CHRISTIAN EXAMPLE. The Federated Trades of Astoria pro pose to boycott the Astoria & Colum bia River Railroad because it employs Japanese as laborers. The objections to the Japs are not stated, so we are thrown upon conjecture. It might be, for one thing, that these Japs are sad broilers and spend their earnings mak ing night hideous along the Barbary Coast, or on the other hand that they avoid excesses and save their money. Perhaps they smash the freight con signed to the Federated Trades and so are objectionable for their destructive awkwardness. Another reason might be that they are unprofitable servants for the railroad company, which seems not to know its own business and needs this artificial stimulus to prudence. Tet, as none of these things is alleged, we are more inclined to regard the offense of the Japs to He in the fact that they are human beings, not white In color and not affiliated with the Federated Trades. Doubtless, they would be re fused admission if they craved. It, so the fundamental and unmitigated and un atonable crime of these workingmen consists in their accident of birth. It is an unworthy ground of persecution. Let us suggest to these boycotters that whatever is to be done with these laborers, whether mobbed or starved, they are here. They are here, moreover, In consonance with law and treaty, as citizens of a friendly power, whose aid we were glad enough to accept on the march to Pekin, to which we are glad to sell our wares, and toward which we assume the attitude of Christian guide, philosopher and friend. If an Asiatic is to be mobbed or starved in the United States, what shall be done with an American in China? If our trades unions are to declare war on Japs and Chinese in the United States, then let China and Japan close their doors upon American wares. Let the $434,000,000 of merchandise sent across the Pacific the past three years be turned back upon our own ports to congest markets and stop manufactures, and then see how organized labor will like that. When we go over to Asia, we must be respectfully treated. For every mis sionary that is bundled out of house and home, we must throw a few hundred coolies into the Amoor. If they demur to trade with us, fleets shall riddle their ports and allied armies pillage their temples and sacred tombs. But If they come over here, oh! how different! They must bdy our goods and furnish employment to our labor at the can non's mouth; but when they are .here they are "foreign devils," to be hated and anathematized. We will boycott anybody who gives them work, we will teach our boys to maltreat them as they go innocently about their tasks, we will attack their camps by night and visit upon them every ignominy. Then we complain at their slowness In appreciating the Christian religion. Civilization has waited patiently these thousands of years for Astoria to dem onstrate the boycott in all its simple beauty, yet grand and gloomy magnifi cence. It has already boycotted the O. R. & N. and all who do business with It. Now' it boycotts the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad and all who do business with it. The consummation cannot be far off. When it has boy cotted everybody and everything trying to do business with it, and Is securely bottled and corked from the outside world, its citizens can swap jackknlves with each other to their hearts' content In uninterrupted peace and splendor. THE JACOBITE SUCCESSION. A notice declaring Edward VII a usurper and Mary IV the rightful Queen was posted on the gates of St. James Palace and at the Guild Hall on the night Queen Victoria died. It. was the work of a member of the Jacobite League. The Grand Duchess Maria Theresa of Austria-Este, who is mar ried to Prince Louis of Bavaria, is the excellent woman referred to as Queen Mary IV of England. If the succes sion to the throne had not been changed by the acts of settlement of 1689 and 1702, this Princess might be Queen, as she Is lineally descended from Hen rietta, Duchess of Orleans, who was the daughter of Charles I. As it Is, she is neither de jure nor de facto Queen of Great Britain and Ireland. The male line of James the Second ended in Cardinal Tork, his grandson, who died in 1S07. His grandson, Charles Edward, the Pretender, who was de feated at Culloden in the Jacobite Re bellion of 1745, died leaving no legiti mate children In 1788. The female line of James the Second ended with Queen Anne, who died In 1714 leaving no chil dren, although she had been the mother of seventeen. It was the strong desire of Queen Anne, despite the fact that the act of 1702 gave the succession to Electress Sophia of Hanover, the grand daughter of James the First, by the exclusion of a Catholic from the Eng lish throne, that she should be suc ceeded by her brother, known by the Jacobites as James the Third, and In France as the Chevalier St. George. The conspiracy to secure this succes sion of the son of James n included a number of very influential English men. Among them were the famous statesman, St John, Dean Swift and Francis Atterbury. The conspirators Intended to get rid of the Act of Set tlement by having the son of James n renounce Rome. Henry TV of France had abjured Catholicism and made his peace with Rome to secure the peace ful possession of the crown of France, and James III could afford to abjure his faith to obtain the English coronet. It is probable that the conspiracy would have succeeded had It not been for the sudden death of Queen Anne, which caught the conspirators unpre pared for action. A few prominent Whig noblemen of the Protestant fatth, like the Duke of Argyle, acted with great promptness and courage in at once calling a Royal Council and pro claiming the Elector of Hanover King of Great Britain, under the title of George I. Had the Queen's life been prolonged another year, the conspiracy would doubtless have been crowned with success, for nobody wanted the German Prince for a monarch. The son of James II was a gallant soldier and a man of polished manners. Had he consented to become a Protestant, Queen Anne could have probably se cured for him the crown. The Jacobite succession, If it rested on blood, does not lack representatives among the English nobility today, for the Dukes of Queensberry, Grafton, Richmond and St. Albans are each de scended from illegitimate sons of Charles II by his mistresses, Lucy Walters, Barbara Vllliers, Louise de Queraudilles and Nell Gwynne. The royal marriage act of 1772 forbade the marriage of any English-born descend-, ant of George II without the King's consent, and after that age without the consent of Parliament. Society can have just as many wards as it is willing to support. It can have just as many parasites as It Is willing to feed. It can devote just as much of Its substance to philanthropy as is the measure of Its charity, and none of that substance so appropriated will be left over. The recipients of poor relief absorb all that is given them, which In the long run does not relieve their distress. Public charity Is pre carious because it hazards the resources of society and bestows them upon the non-producing indigent. Poor relief should be a private enterprise, because then utmost discrimination Is em ployed. We are well enough acquainted with the extent to which England was Impoverished by its poor laws In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The proposed law for care of homeless children In Oregon has a worthy but Ill advised motive, and therefore Is a pre carious measure. If passed, it will open the way to Infinite abuse. The Oregon Legislature is asked to set up the office of Dairy and Food Commissioner who shall "pro'tect" us from short-weight butter and adulter ated food. The only ideal "protection" is gumption, and for every citizen to have it. Has it come to such an Im potent pass that the Government must inspect every mouthful a citizen eats? Next we shall need an Inspector of nursing bottles and of false teeth. But who will examine the food of our many inspectors? If the Legislature sees fit to create a food Inspector, the burden should not be loaded on taxpayers, but on those who, without gumption, must have the luxury. But it may be suggested that, whenever citizens can not pick out what is good to eat, they should stop eating, and whenever they cannot scratch their backs without the aid of a Government official, they should deny themselves the pleasure of scratching. "Our delegation" in the Legislature need not spend much time in trying to build up a political machine in Mult nomah County for County Judge Cake by passing House bill No. 76, to em power County Judge Cake to remove the road supervisors now in office and appoint others, for the constitution, article iv, section 23, provides: The Legislative Assembly shall not pass spe cial or local laws In any of the following enumerated cases: That is to say: Sub. 7, for laying, opening, and working on highways, and for the election or appointment of supervisors. It is a favorite modern notion that our forefathers knew little about gov ernment. But they foresaw all com ing "gangs." It is a wide gap between the early patriots of the Republic and the Ore gon Legislature. The very Idea of sending congratulations to Kings and Queens! Tet the Oregon Legislature has felicitated the Queen of Holland. But perhaps we should be thankful because that Is harmless legislation. Even in levity, however, our solons should do the business right. It may do to extol Wilhelmina's beauty, but true virtue in a woman cringes from any testimonial. The woman suffrage amendment has been voted down at Salem, not be cause legislators oppose woman suf frage, however, but because the state rejected the change only last June. If Indians demand the "natural, In alienable right" 'to kill game in de fiance of the white man's law, they should demand the right to do so only with bow and arrow. We seem to be getting along very comfortably under the empire. Few of the millions of people who were coerced Into voting for It appear to have noticed the change. The Island of Panay Is said to be "pacified." Inasmuch as we have no advices to the contrary, we have no authority for believing It Carnegie despises the Navy. Tet much of his wealth came from armor plate. He is a traitor to the agents that made him. Maybe, if the Idaho Legislature visit Salem, both states will enjoy a whole some respite from legislative ills. If you want to go to Buffalo next Summer, prepare to get a soft job on the Oregon exhibit committee. Mrs. Nation has gained a smashing reputation as a woman who does a smashing business. ' If the Boers are going to light to the end, the British should not be so eager for the end. ENLARGEMENT OF THE VATICAN. Pope's Residence to Have One Thou sand -Roonis More. Rome Future pilgrims to Rome will be interested to learn that alterations for their benefit are in prospect. Up to the present the Vatican enjoys the distinction of being the largest palace on earth. It contains 11,000 rooms. Before very long, however, It will receive another addition to Its bulk, which will bring up the number of rooms to 12.000. The pope has decided to erect three new buildings. One, containing S00 rooms, will be used to house the pilgrims coming to Rome, while the other two, which will be much smaller, will be added to the Vatican museum. In one of the new buildings will be placed all the artistic offerings which Leo XIII has received during his pontificate. They amount to more than 3000 objects and will shortly be added to the artistic treasures of the Vatican. This same new structure will contain most of the great treasures of the Vati can. Among these is a magnificent golden chalice of exquisite workmanship, in crusted with jewels of great value, which was given by Cardinal York when he was appointed archprlest of the basilica of St. Peter's. When Rome was pillaged by the French in 1798 this valuable piece of plate was fortunately overlooked and it re mains to this day as a relic of the youth of 22, who, recognizing the utter hope lessness of the Stuart cause, devoted him self to the celibate life of a prince of the church. There is a general housecleanlng going on in the Vatican. The famous Borgia apartments are be ing converted into a musaum of renais sance art. No more fitting frame for the various" objects which exhibit the strange ly, preternaturally awakened art seneo of this time could be found than these rooms, in which the early master of decorative art, Plnturicchio, blended tints and arranged designs with an effect so magic that it must be seen to bo compre hended. A beginning for this museum has al ready been made and curiously wrought and inlaid shrines, bits of bronze and sculpture, majolica, Luca della Robb'.a waro and the like are as yet sparsely dis posed in corners and against the some what bare walls of the rooms. No idea Is, of course, given of the splendor and luxury which obtained here when Alexander VI, who was famed for his love of luxurious jjisplay, inhabited the place. The Sala del Papi is hung with beautiful arazzi, all after old de signs, representing tho story of Prokris and Cephalos, and pieces of ancient artil lery, armor, curious for its historical memories, flags, banners and the like are exhibited there. Marshall's Mind "Wns Creative. Kansas City Star. Justice Marshall's method of reasoning Is shown In his decision upholding the authority of Congress to incorporate tho Bank of the United States. "Although among the enumerated powers of govern ment," he said, "we do not find the word bank or incorporation, we find the great powers to lay and collect taxes, to bor row money, to regulate commerce, to de clare and conduct a war and to raise and support armies and navies. The pow er being given, it is to the interest of the nation to facilitate its execution. Through out this vast Republic, from St. Croix to tho Gulf of Mexico, from the Atlan tic to the Pacific, revenue is to be col lected and expended, armies are to be marched and supported. Is that con sruction of the Constitution to be pre ferred which would render these oper ations difficult, hazardous and expensive? Can we adopt that construction, unless the words Imperiously require it, which would impute to the founders of that In strument, when granting these powers for the public good, the intention of Imped ing their exercise by withholding the choice of means?" As a matter of pure law he might have given the opposite decision. His theory of government was at the bottom of his ruling. Marshall was not learned in the history of Jurisprudence. He frequently ended a decision by saying: "These seem to me to be the conclusions to which we are conducted by the reason and spirit of the law. Brother Story will furnish the authorities." His mind was of the cre ative order. It is one thing to follow precedents extending back for years; it is another and far more difficult matter to build up from its foundations a system of Constitutional law which shall com mend Itself to future generations as a logical and consistent whole. Marshall was one of the few men in the history of the world who have had this ability. Mexico's Opportunity. New York Journal of Commerce. It is not Incredible that the statesmen of Mexico should be seriously considering the adoption of the gold standard, though there are against the change the two con siderations that the country produces much silver and very little gold, and that the decline of silver has been checked. Mexico has experienced, though perhaps in a less degree, the losses and commer cial disturbances Incident to a declining monetary unit, the increase of the specu lative element in business, increased foreign obligations, unusual profits for a time on capital, and a good deal of suffer ing by the recipients of wages and sala ries. But for the present that experience is over, and silver Is comparatively steady. The advantages our silverltes supposed a country would receive from a decrease in the value of money was whol ly illusory, and many of the Mexicans understand this and the country is blessed with some very intelligent and far-sighted statesmen. It is not Impossible that they should deem the present period of com parative steadiness on the part of silver a convenient one for getting the country's currency upon a common basis with that of practically all the rest of the commer cial world. University "Progxess." Chicago Chronicle. Newman's deflnlition of university, "a center of Intellectual activity," Is grow ing obsolete. President Eliot, of Harvard, has just announced that the dental college, the veterinary college and the once proudly boasted medical college of that institu tion are to be consolidated under a single head. Now we know why corn-cuttera call themselves "professor," and why manicures expect soon to wear cap and gown. President Eliot finds that students are more and more inclined to neglect clas sics, mathematics and physics for stud ies "leading to more utility in the actual activities of modern life." Which is eu phemistic for hurry up and get money with your university degree. At the rate higher learning, once so called, is turning Into mere "filthy lucre," the day cannot be a century off when the lovers of learning as a purely Intellectual and moral attainment will have to choose the seclusion of their homes. The univer sities will have gone over bag and bag gage to utilitarianism. i Hon. H. W. Corbett. Fossil Journal. There is perhaps no man in Oregon more conspicuous in the affairs of fin ance, commerce, Industry and the state than is the Hon. Henry W. Corbett ex United States Senator and candidate of the Republican majority of the State Leg islature for re-election. Mr. Corbett's life is so inseparably interwoven with the growth of Oregon that no history of the state can be complete without as cording to him prominent and illustrious mention. Mr. Corbett has been one of the builders of Oregon. There Is not a pub lic enterprise to which Mr. Corbett has not given substantial aid. His generos ity also has gladdened many a heart Of charitable impulses, public spirltedness and progressive ideas, Mr. Corbett has been an invaluable mainstay to the City of Portland. Few have done as much for the city; none more. DECIDEDLY CLEVER. Anti-Imp crlnllst Acumen "Worthy of a Better Cause. New York Evening Post. With the most earnest desire to please everybody, especially the imperialists, tho Evening Post has not been able to do so in the Cuban controversy. Yet our sole offending is, they themeselves being wit nesses, that we say the right thing at the wrong ime. When Congress rushed the President off his feet and Into war with Spain we pointed out that an excitable public assembly was 111 chosen to pass on such momentous questions. Nonsense, cried the imperialists; the action- of Con gress Is cool and deliberate, being none other than the mature and firm decision of a mighty people. Less than three years have passed, and these same imperialists are asking indignantly if they are to be bound by "hysterical resolutions passed by a wild, excited and unreasoning Con gress." We maintained that Congress was swayed by hysteria, but that we should be bound by its action if the President let the excited body have its head. Now those who at the time yelled themselves into ' a fury, declaring that Congress was calm and wise, speak of it as a pack of maniacs by whoso pledge to Cuba it would be madness for the county to feel Itself bound. The only difference is that the Evening Post perceived both the hysteria and the binding nature of the resulting obligation at tho wrong time wrong, that is, for Imperialistic purposes. Another illustration of our entire in ability to win the approval of imperial ists, try as we will, is to be seen in the matter of recognizing the Cuban republic. A mythical, peripatetic Cuban republic they were all wild to recognize any time from 3S96 to 1S9S. Its famed capital, Cu bltas, does not now figure In our own United States census of Cuba, though this covers the very smallest towns and aldeas. The Cuban, republic of those days was an entity up a tree, or ona mule's back; we had scruples unpatriotic, of course about recognizing it. The Impe rialists would have recognized it out of hand, though they could not even see It. Well, now we have an actual Cuban re public In the making, certified to by our own military Governor as the product of a people "now ready to proceed to the establishment of a general government which shall assume and exercise sover eignty, jurisdiction and control over the Island." One would have expected tho imperialists to fall over each other with enthusiasm in recognizing such a Cuban republic. But no; they begin to mutter strange suspicions about a "mob in Ha vana," about, the "good Cubans," the "real Cubans," not wanting a republic, and so on. 'Arty one can see how Impossi ble It is to please such Inconstant minds. "We fear that we shall have to give up trying. It is an awful thing to be con scious of their displeasure; but we com fort ourselves by reflecting that, every thing by starts and nothing long as thej are, we may soon expect to be lauded to the skies for the same things that now win us their condemnation. "Jnstlce" in Kentucky. Boston Herald, Ind. The statement of one of the counsel for the defense In the trial of Henry E. Youtsey, who was on Tuesday sentenced to imprisonment for life as a. principal In the assassination of Governor Goebel, is an Impressive one. Youtsey himself, after sentence was pronounced, declared his innocence, and that he had been con victed through "base and infamous sub ornation of perjury." To this by Itself no great Importance would attach. But when his counsel makes a public state ment that, of the 123 persons summoned as possible jurors in the case, 124 were Goebel Democrats, and the 12 who actu ally served all belong to the Goebel fac tion of the Democratic party, there is cer tainly an appearance of unfair partisan ship, seeming like a determination to convict. Scarcely anywhere In Kentucky are the citizens so unequally divided in their political attachments that a fairly drawn panel could be so one-sided. Nor do we believe it just to suppose that Republicans or antl-Goebel Democrats would not render as conscientious and righteous a verdict in the trial of a case of this nature as the partisan jury who sat in the box. The counsel further In timates that much of the evidence wa3 perjured, although he acquits the Judge and the commonwealth's attorney of knowledge of the fact. Convictions ob tained under such circumstances do not redound to the honor of justice. Remem bering what manner of man Goebel was. It is impossible to presume that his fol lowers are the only honest men in the state. The Kansas Uproar. Chicago Inter Ocean. The fact that many men desire alco holic stimulants causes the saloon to ex ist, even in violation of prohibitory laws. If those who do not wish to drink were licensed to smash saloons, would this appetite be suppressed? Illinois officers of the law have power summarily to de stroy any gambling device. Yet men con tinue to play games of chance. Would the licensing of private citizens to destroy gambling devices lessen the prevalence of the gaming instinct? Few so believe. Civilization differs from savagery chief ly in this: Instead of permitting the individual to Interpret and enforce the laws, It requires him to delegate that task to his chosen representatives. The proposed Kansas statute seems distinctly a return to savage methods. It virtually authorizes the complaining witness to be Judge, Jury and Sheriff. The courts may sustain it as a proper extension of the police power, but It will have the fatal defect of all legislative attempts to make crimes of acts which many men do not regard as even sins. To say that men cannot be made moral by act of Legislature is like a red flag to a bull with the extreme prohibitionists. Yet It Is fundamental truth. Legislation may regulate and restrain appetites whose indulgence is held immoral, but it cannot suppress them. That Is why prohibitory liquor laws are never completely suc cessful. Some day Kansas and other prohibition states will realize these facts and return to common-sense methods of dealing with the liquor traffic. Henry W. Corbett. Baker Republican. t Since so much has been written about Mr. Corbett, wo will say that on the score of energy It may be doubted If he is behind any man In Oregon. But in the skill In which that energy Is applied and directed, he is the peer of any man In the state. On the great political questions of the day he makes his analysis scientifical ly and carefully, always leaving out the study of some fancy, and even the fads which are so prevalent in these days. There is always a sound basic principle upon which he found3 his conclusions. He has none of that strange conservatism too often found in the pessimist nor the qualifications which are found in the spendthrift The highly balanced poise of his judgment are qualifications which go to make up a safe yet effective legislator. He is honest, Just and upright. These qualifications recommend themselves to the people, and why such a man is not at once elected our Senator is hard to under stand. And lie Must Have Money. (Topeka State Journal.) If Mrs, Nation should undertake to smash the distilleries she would en counter serious trouble. They are the source of a large portion of Uncle Sam's Income. No Cats' Paws. Albany Democrat The- play now Is to secure new votes. Depend upon it they will not come from the Democratic side of the house. They have been tried and found compact NOTE AND .COMMENT. i Good morning; are you still a darkhorsa for Senator? There are yet a. few seats left .fa tho United States Senate. Come early and avoid the rush. ' Paris dressmakers are on a. strike. l The American woman can now wear old clothes without apologies. I Oregon counties are much liko England. Whonever a mine Is discovered in tone, another wants to annex it Perhaps if the "reins of government" In China could bo dispensod with, much of the trouble would evanesce. No change In the Senatorial situation Is in sight. Of course, any potential chango is kept completely out of sight' How does It happen that the jlumblng business has not yet attracted tie atten tion of Mr. J. Plorpont Morgan?, The peanut butchers on the Erie Rail road have been abolished. Who wll shapa the literary taste of tho public new? Down In Kentucky they are wSiderlng why the citizens of New York .are so much alarmed about a threatened water famine. i Governor Nash will pull off a" finish fight on his own account if Jeffries and Ruhlin insist on that 20-round boxing match. Ll Hung Chang has been passing tho death sentence on a number of men al ready deceased. He probably fears that they have as many lives as Agulnsldo. After a most exciting canvass ot tho Electoral vote. Congress has made tho startling discovery that McKlnuy and Roosevelt were elected In November. Ladles down In WlnfleW, Kansas, still are smashing bevel plate, And full ruefully tho liquor men the wifckago contemplate: t Although Mrs. Carrie Nation has departci from the state, Her ax goes cleaving on. Isn't it nearly time for the antls topass a resolution of sympathy with the. Manila merchants who have been caught selling arms and ammunition to the Filipinos? Maine shipbuilders are developing tho schooner rig to such an extent that they are putting together a vessel of that typo with no less than seven masts. Big six masted ships, rigged in schooner 'fashion, have proved to be remarkably ocanomical and successful In carrying huge cargoes of coal and other heavy stuff, and how a step onward to seven masts is oh foot The new giant of its class will have a keel length of 336 feet, a breadth k 54, a depth of hold of 32, and a tonnage oj about 4000. This Is a rarely Interesting .move ment In the construction of sailing Vessels, How much further is it to go? Will the seven-master. If satisfactory, be fojowed by an eight-master, and possibly a 10 masted schooner, In a score of years or less? It may even be that the middle of the century will welcome a sailing iyvia than with a dozen masts of the schooner rig. Yankee Inventiveness and erkrgy take long looks ahead. It ain't no use o talkln', a. feller don't tel right. When all the sky Is clear an' blue, an no a cloud's In stent; i When weather acts like that, of course a lltlia while 'twill do. But It don't do your-health no good when.lt lasts a week or two; The dry air fevers up your blood, an' ffils your J'lnts with pain. An' nothln' does you good except a stlddy sjell o' rain. ' I know they call that mossback talk, an pb- My always will, But Jes' the same, that's how you feel.) up here in ole Yamhill; ; Clear weather's good fur harvest time, an' we can use the sun . t A little while in every year, but its work sbn Is done. An' we don't care If six months goes, before it shines again, All we're partlc'lar about's a stlddy spell b' rain. ' You talk about your beamln skies an glowlr sun at night, Thoy never at their best was half as beautlfia a sight As when the trees Is bendln down to get ths shlnin' drops An' In the fields they're fallln on an' blesslif all tho crops. While grass Is springln up knee deep alotntf the wlndln lane, An' everything's rejoleln In a stlddy spell tf rain. t PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS The Kansas Meaning. "What does W. C. T, U. stand for In Kansas?" "Wreckage, Carv nage. Turmoil, Upheaval." Ohio State Jour nal. "The Rev. Mr. Meeklngs Is a good fellow, Isn't ho?" "Yes. They say he Is not only i fine golf player, but a fairly good clergyman." Life. His Method. "Does that young man next door to you play his trombone by ear or br note?" "Neither. By brute foree." Chlcag Times-Herald. "I hope you will be lenient with me, your Lordship," said the thief, as he stood up to b sentenced; "I have a good many dependent on me for their support." "Children?" asket the Judge. "No, police detectives." Tlt-Blts. They Don't Speak Now. Ida I want to hav some pictures taken. Can you recommend & photographer? Ada Flashem! I've heard that he has a way of making the homeliest peopls look absolutely handsome. Philadelphia BuU letin. Second Thought. "It cannot be," sighed th maid. "I respect you highly, Mr. Hunniwell, but wo are Incompatible." "Well, I suppoaa It cannot be helped," the young man replied, pocketing his chagrin and looking about for his hat. "But It defeats all my cherished hopes. I had planned a house In which X fondly imagined we might be happy. It wis to have had a pantry twice as large as tfce ordinary size, with a roomy closet In which, to stow away the new cooking utensils and things that a woman naturally buys when & peddler comes along." "Stay, Harry," sb said falterlngly. "Perhaps I have been too hasty. Give me a day or two to think It over. It Is not Impossible that that " Chicago Tribune. The Apple Barrel. Edwin L. Sabln In New LIpplncott. It stood In the cellar low and dim, "Where the cobwebs swept and swayed, Holding the store from bough and limb At the feet of Autumn laid. And oft, when the days were short and drear And the north wind shrieked and roared, We children sought In the corner, here. And drew on the toothsome hoard. For thus through the long, long Winter-time, It answered our every call With wine of the Summer's golden prime Sealed by the hand of Fall. The best there was of the earth and air. Of rain and sun and breeze. Changed to a pippin sweet and rare By the art of the faithful trees. A wonderful barrel was this, had we Its message but rightly heard. Filled with the tales of wind and bee. Of cricket and moth and bird; Rife with the bliss of the fragrant June When skies were soft and blue'; r Thronged with the dreams of a harvest moon O'er fields drenched deep with "dew. Oh, homely barrel, I'd fain essay, Your marvelous skill again; Take me back to the past, t pray", As wllllngUy now as then Back to the tender morns and eves. The noontides warm and still. Tho fleecy clouds and the spangled leaves Of the orchard over the hill.