n THE M0KX1XG OKKnONIAN. THURSDAY, FEBKUAIiY 21, 1901. Entered at the Postofuce at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms ICO j Business Office.. .007 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance . Dally, with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 7 CO 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, Sundays crcepted.lKc Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. "L'nlted States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to lG-page paper lc 10 to 22-page paper ...2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan.'' The Oregonlan does not buy poems or etorles from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should bo Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Paciflc avenue, Tacoma. Box 953, Tnsoma Postofilce. Eastern Business Office 17, 48, 49 and 59 Tribune butldlng. New York City; 4C9 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwith special agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros., 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry newsstand. For sale in Lo Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver &. Haines, 100 Ed. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street For sale In Omaha by H. C. Shears, 105 "N. Sixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co . 77 W, Second South street. For sale In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On nie In Washington. D. C, with A. W. Dunn, 500 14th N. W. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrick, 000-012 Seventh street. - TODAY'S -WEATHER. Cloudy and threat ening, with possibly occasional rain; variable w.nds. , PORTLAND, THURSDAY, FEB. 21. Very peculiar ideas of personal honor are harbored by Hon. A. S. Dresser, Joint representative for -Clackamas and Multnomah. Desiring nomination for the Legislature, he pledged himself, In the letter we print today, to sup port Mr. Corbett for the Senate. His letter also specifically Included a pledge to join In a caucus and to vote for Mr. Corbett in that caucus. We think we need do little more than call attention to the pitiful exhibit of duplicity set out on the first page of The Oregonlan today. "We should say, in view of this exhibit and of Mr. Dresser's course of action, that neither his word nor his bond was good for anything. "Was the pledge given on compulsion or under duress? What were the threats against Mr. Dresser's life, liberty or reputation that compelled him on the 10th day of April last to come to Portland and so licit aid to enable him to sit in the Legislature? What show of force left him no choice but to appear here as a man whose principal ambition in life was to help put Mr. Corbett in the. Sen ate? Or, If we suppose that he labored under a misapprehension of the facts, what view did he form of Mr. Corbett as an honorable and high-minded gen tleman, as a forceful man of affairs, as a prominent figure in the history of the Pacific Coast, that he has since seen reason to change? As Mr. Corbett has lived and toiled, saved, counseled and generously bestowed here for fifty years, so he was when Mr. Dresser sought to identify himself with him; so he is today. As Mr. Dresser was when he came to Portland with profes sions of friendship and loyalty on his lips, po he is today. That is, Mr. Dresser was a sneak then and he is a sneak now. Such men come and go. From the Philippines news comes al most daily of progress by the authori ties of the United States in pacifica tion of the islands. Through a judi cious admixture of generosity and se veritygenerosity to those who yield in good faith, severity towards those who are guilty of treachery, disloyalty and cruelty steady change is taking place in the aspect of affairs The civil com mission is everywhere at work, and the more capable of the people are being in vited to co-operation with the authori ties of the United States in the work of civil government. The party friendly to the United States is rapidly gaining ground. Great numbers of the fore most Filipinos are uniting with and are lending aid to pacification of the country. It is the purpose and it will continue to be the purpose of the Amer ican people to establish in those islands a government as free and liberal and progressive as our own, fully in accord with the principles of liberty and self government, on which the American Republic rests. When this comes to be understood, as it surely will ere long, the Filipinos "will not want the United States to withdraw. It is only the am bitious politicians who have made the trouble. Some . at them have been killed, others have fled, a few have been deported, and niimbers are sup posed to be in hiding places, seeking a chance to escape from the country. Aguinaldo has disappeared, nothing has been heard of him, with certainty, for more than a year, and the only remnants of his soldiery are a few groups of brigands, which our troops are hunting down. By constant exer cise of kindness and show of respect for their rights, customs and prejudices the people are being won over rapidly. The outlook is excellent for complete establishment of peace and order. The Salisbury Ministry is contem plating an extension of the land-purchase plan, by which tenants on Irish estates are enabled to become absolute owners of the land they till and occupy. The money to purchase it from the landlord is lent to them out of a special appropriation made for that purpose by Parliament. The price the tenant Is al lowed to offer averages a sum equal to the ordinary rent for seventeen years, and it is repaid to the state In ninety eight semi-annual installments equal to about one-half the former rent. At the end of forty-nine years they or their sons will own the title to the land. Since 1885, when this land-purchase system was enacted under Gladstone's Ministry, about 30,000 peasant proprie tors have been created by this method, for whom the land commission has ad vanced $82,600,000. But landlords with peaceable and industrious tenants have been unwilling to sell on these terms, and the problem today is, What shall be done to induce the remaining land lords to sell their lands to the tenants? T. W. Kussell, Member of Parliament from Ulster, a strong Conservative, urges the government to extinguish non-resident landlordship by extending the land-purchase plan into a scheme of universal tenant ownership, which would require the staking of the im perial credit to the extent of at least $486,000,000. Mr. Russell would add a state bonus to the price formerly of fered, in order to induce landlords to sell. In face of this proposed vast ex tension of the present plan of land purchase through government ad vances to the tenant, how stupid are the wild cries of the Clan-na-Gael that "Ireland "has become a dying nation, dying of thirty years of Parliamentary agitation." What a barbaric medley was presented in proceedings which in cluded the hissing of the name of Great Britain's dead Queen, the singing of the Boer national anthem, followed by an Irish national song! The contention of the Democrats that the United States is bound by the Tel ler resolution, and therefore can take no action on the proposed Cuban consti tution, is answered by the Republican leaders, who fairly say that "the Teller resolution is no pledge nor treaty; it is not superior to the Monroe Doctrine, one of whose provisions we violated when we interfered in the case of Cuba and took that colony away from Spain. It is at the utmost only a law of the United States, an expression of senti ment or expediency, constructed ac cording to the light which Congress had at the time of its passage; it is like any other enactment, subject to change or repeal, and is no bar what ever to this country taking whatever action may be necessary to guard its Interests in Cuba." There is undeniable force In this reply. It is clear as a matter of common sense that Cuba, for her own protection and national preser vation, cannot afford to be independent of reciprocal relations of a most inti mate character with the United States. If Cuba insists on absolute independ ence of the United States, why, then, she must put herself into a state of am ple defense against Spain, when that power pops up some day with a de mand on Cuba to pay an enormous debt which Cuba has repudiated. With out the Navy of the United States at her badk, Cuba will not be able for twenty years to come to prevent Spain enforcing the payment of this great debt at the cannon's mouth. The United States, as a matter of national self interest, could not afford to see Cuba surrendered or sold to a foreign power. If Cuba proposes "to paddle her own canoe" henceforth, the United States does not desire to interfere, but the United States in self-defense is bound to see that no foreign power shall take the craft when Cuba can no longer pad dle it. THE SECRET OP REFORM. "There is no law of social organi zation," says the Christian Register, "which will keep ignorance, self-indulgence, laziness, dishonesty and brutal ity from sinking to the low levels of shame and misery; there is no human power Which can shut out an honest, virtuous, frugal community from prog ress toward the enjoyments of peace and prosperity." Here are facts worth repeating; facts the value of which no years impair and no sophistry can sub vert. The history of the race attests them; life, individual and collective, everywhere mirrors them. "Hogarth's 'Idle Apprentice' and his 'Rake's Prog ress'," significantly declares the jour nal above quoted, "were not Idle Inven tions. He pictured what he saw." We are not to forget, though some times we seem in danger of sb doing, that the things he saw are still to be found. Suffering, shame, guilt, retribu tion, are real things provided for the Idle and the dissolute, according to laws that are never broken. Men and women cannot be saved from these things by legislation. Those who can walk should not be carried. They should, on the contrary, be allowed to walk, and, refusing to do so, should, as eventually, in spite of all "help," they will, be left behind and taken but slightly into the great movement known as progress. To assume the care of the children of an effortless, characterless man is to encourage Tiim and his kind in thriftless or dissolute habits. The "poor fellow" of the community where work is the standard of moral and financial character is in the first place self-elected to fill his lowly or dissolute station Jn life. The lowly is not necessarily unenviable, since if with it honesty, contentment and plenty abide, it repre sents an estate the value of Which Kings may envy but cannot compute. It is well to reflect that any change that does not improve the individual quality of men and women represents Imperfect effort "All the brushes which civilization has Invented for the human toilet would be useless In Cen tral Africa; all the refinements "of the table would be wasted upon the rude and roysterlng. But whatever awakens a desire for better things will suggest a way of getting them." Herein lies the secret of reform which they who pester Legislatures to pass personal purity laws and bedevil society In the interest of making the luxuries of life "free" for all have never yet discov ered. THE FUEL QUESTION IX ENGLAND. Among the resolutions that will be submitted by the council of the South of Scotland Chamber of Commerce for discussion at the annual meeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce, to be held next month In London, is the following: "Resolved, That as the fu ture of Great Britain lies In the power of Its manufactures, it is expedient that the question of the continued exporta tion of coal should be considered, and a decision in regard to it reached." The anxiety betrayed In this resolution con firms the opinion recently expressed in an official report by Rufus Fleming. United States Consul at Edinburgh, to the effect that the fuel question dis turbs the far-sighted British manufac turer more than any other of the many that now confront him. Simply stated, "he cannot shut his eyes to the mean ing of $3 50 coal." This opinion is for tified by well-known facts. All coal de posits in Great Britain are known, and there are few fields that have not been worked for a long period. Prominent mining engineers predict that the work able seams of coal In Scotland will be practically exhausted in twenty-five years, and that the best of the coal in several English "districts will "not last longer than 1930. The enormous drain upon these fuel storehouses of the ages is wilnesed in the figures, which show that the coal output In Great Britain in 1900 was considerably more than 200,- 000,000 tons; the recklessness of this drain, to which the resolution' above quoted points, is shown in the state ment that one-fourth of this vast bulk was exported. Anxiety upon this point is not new. Three years ago the Institute of Mining Engineers at the annual meeting in London strongly urged an export duty of 12 cents per ton on coal, but man ufacturers took no notice of the propo sition, and nothing came of It The high prices of coal which have pre vailed for the past eighteen months, however, presented an argument of an other kind, and the earnest attention of manufacturers has been awakened to a question that threatens the basis of their industries. True, the danger is not imminent, but a quarter of a century Is not so long, and In the mean time serious embarrassment to trade, already boldly menaced by competition, must result As shown in the Consular report to which reference is above made, the metal trades in Great Britain have greatly declined since January, 1900. The difference in the beginning and at the end of that year was that between "enormous activity and practical stag nation." This decline was a feature of the last six months of the year, during which time American and German com petition became sharply manifest Es pecially in the early Autumn, offers of American Iron and steel at reduced prices had a crushing effect on the market. In this emergency the in creased cost of coal becomes serious, and, though but one factor in the vexa tious problem that confronts British manufacturers of iron and steel. It is one that cannot be eliminated therefrom. AN IMMORTAL ADVENTURESSt Thackeray is the greatest novelist of the "Victorian age. "Vanity Fair" is his greatest book, and "Becky" Sharp is its most memorable character. Why Is "Becky" Sharp Immortal? She was only a very brilliant, clever adventur ess. This no more explains the impres sive quality of the heroine of "Vanity Fair" than the fact that Sir John Fal staff was a most dissolute and worth less adventurer explains the fact that he is the most immortal character that Shakespeare ever drew. "Becky" Sharp is immortal for the same reason that Falstaff inspired "Prince Hal" to mur mur over his supposed dead body, "We could have better spared a better man." "Prince Hal" knew that Falstaff was a liar, a thief, a coward, a cheat, a rake, a drunkard, but he could not for get the memory of his fas'cinating in tellectual sparkle; his gibes, his flashes of merriment that were wont to set the table in a roar. It is something so with "Becky" Sharp. She is an adventuress, a liar, a hypocrite when hard pressed to suc ceed In her intrigues, and yet she Is a most brilliant and accomplished woman. Her natural brains are fine, her wit keen, her vivacity captivating. She admits that she reverences nothing but prosperity, admires nothing but success, and confesses that the hard lines of poverty in childHood and the petty grinding tyranny and insult she suffered In her life as a governess had made her into a woman without faith, hope or charity. She has a certain frankness, at times. Inherited from her French mother, and In one of these mo ments said she would have found It very easy to be good if she had been born rich; and this is the clew to the whole woman. Had she been a woman of commonplace talents, she would have been content to live and die a drudg ing governess, but she was full of tal ent and ambition, and was determined to be a social queen or perish in the effort. She is not a dissolute woman in the sense that she is a born sensualist. She is no more dissolute by nature than Napoleon, but, like Napoleon, she is intensely ambitious, has no use for vir tue that is Its own reward. Virtues that declare no dividend in some personal or social advantages are not virtues, but infirmities, to "Becky" Sharp. She is df the same type of am bition as Beatrix In "Henry Esmond." She would not choose a dissolute life for its own sake, but had she been the wife of an honest peasant she would have left her husband without hesita tion to be the mistress of a King. "Becky" Sharp, however, is a better woman than Beatrix, for If she could have captured a man whose character commanded respect among men and who could have supported her decently. Instead of marrying a horse jockey and a gambler, like Captain Rawdon Craw ley, she would have been a good wife. She despised Amelia for preferring worthless George Osborne to gallant William Dobbin, and she never was so proud of her husband as when he thrashed Lord Steyne. She shows her better nature when she exerts herself to persuade Amelia to marry Dobbin, despite the fact that Dobbin has just denounced her as a woman of disrepu table character to Mrs. Osborne. From start to finish, "Becky" Sharp is so cleverly drawn that she retains the sympathy If not the admiration of the reader to the last We think of her early life as a brilliant, gifted child that never had any childhood in the humane senEe of the word; of her life as a young woman, left an orphan without money or friends, obliged to become an ill-fed, ill-clothed. Ill-paid teacher in a school presided over by an Ignorant, vulgar woman. This bril liant, friendless, poverty-stricken girl resolves to make a marriage that means rescue from penury at the first opportunity. She angles for stupid Joe Sedley and nearly lands that fat floun der; then she fascinates Sir Pitt Craw ley and marries his shiftless son. The gambler-husband Is a dull fellow, a dissipated dragoon, whose Ignorance and animalism soon wear out his wel come. The wife's brilliant wits are soon employed successfully in increas ing the family income and enlarging her area of distinguished, aristocratic acquaintance. Then comes the intrigue with Lord Steyne, its discovery, the separation between husband and wife. This is "Becky" Sharp's Waterloo. She has played her cards well, but luck has been against her. She has lost and she goes Into social Siberia on the Conti nent, a comrade for gamblers and kin dred shady folk. "Becky" Sharp is Thackeray's great est character; his only memorable woman, save Beatrix, who is a chip off the same block. Amelia Is an amiable creature, but a goose' Laura Is a dull, domestic fowl; Ethel Newcome is a cor rect, high-bred English girl; Blanche Amory is a very mean woman, without brains or passion enough to make her interesting. They are all wooden In dians or blue and white china dolls compared with "Becky" Sharp, who is Thackeray's only memorable flesh and blood vital female figure. The failure of both Dickens and Thackeray to draw a fine, noble woman of the quality of the heroines of Scott, George Eliot or even Charles Reade, marks either the limitations of their experience or the power of their imagination. Thackeray evidently thought in a large way women tended to be either "Becky" Sharps or Amelias, modified somewhat by the fortuitous circumstances of early friendly formative influences, or the reverse: This is not the picture of women we And in Shakespeare or even in Fielding, whose Amelia is a far finer type of impressive good womanhood than anything wrought by Thackeray. Thackeray had seen the type of female adventuress he paints so powerfully In "Becky" Sharp. He never saw the type of Maggie Tulllver or Dorothea, so he never painted it. As every thoughtful observer expect ed, the unrebuked, lawless violence of Mrs. Nation has begotten violence. A clergyman Who led a band of riotous prohibitionists at WInfleld, Kan., last week struck a barkeeper with a hatchet on the head and severely wounded him, and since that date a woman, the wife of a saloon-keeper, has been shot to death by a mob. The students in a Methodist college have declared in fa vor of lynch law. It is high time for the law and order element of Kansas to step in and enforce order, unless they wish to have the good name of their state disgraced throughout the country. The Kansas Senate the other day killed the bill restoring capital pun ishment The representatives of the people have not manliness enough to restore the death penalty, but they complacently view a mob inflict the death penalty in the most barbarous form of torture. The law was grossly violated when the mob burned a negro to death at Leavenworth', but Bible quoting Mrs. Nation did not sally forth with a hatchet to smash the windows of these barbarous outlaws. She reserved the protest of her hatchet for men whose lawbreaking consists in the Ille gal sale of liquor. If logical, she ap proves of lynch law, whether it appears In the form of roasting a negro or Wrecking a "Joint" It Is now set forth with utmost con fidence by medical science that the source of malarial fevers Is the bite of mosquitoes, and that yellow fever, one of the malarial types, Is produced or transmitted by a mosquito of a par ticular kind. The Pan-American Med ical Congress, in session recently at Havana, authorized this statement: The board declares that the specific cause of yellow fever Is still unknown: that It can bo transmitted only by mopquitoe; that, In con sequence, disinfection of clothing, premises and other things Is unnecessary; that dirt and filth have nothing to do with the Inception or the continuance of the disease that It may occur and spread even In the cleanest locali ties; and that only one kind of mosquito can convey the yellow fever. An article on this subject from the Boston Herald, printed In The Orego nian today, will serve to give an idea of the nature of these discoveries and their importance. If the conclusions be correct, we have in them the most re markable of all the discoveries of med ical science. Mr. MacLean, in the Canadian House of Commons, .urges Caoada to follow the example of Russia and impose a retaliatory tariff' upon 'the United States. The government representa tives made no reply; they are sensible men, who know that when it comes to the matter of retaliation, the United States can squeeze Canada in various ways quite as hard as Canada can the United States. The difficulties between the United States and Canada can be settled only by a spirit of justice and a willingness to believe that compromise is not seldom sound statesmanship. Canada could accomplish nothing by following Mr. MacLean's policy of a re taliatory tariff. Its imposition would only provoke retaliation, and the result would be a long delay in obtaining a full and satisfactory settlement of the Alaska boundary question. We were told by our reformers last Spring that It was shameful the way the charter of the, City of Portland had been Jockeyed with In politics. Prom ise was made that if their Legislative ticket ..were elected this wrong should be righted and a charter should be en acted solely for the good of the city, with no political trading. But in fact all jobbery of politics with the charter known heretofore .and It has been rank pales Into Insignificance in compari son with the attempt of the "delega tion" at this session to trade every thing in the cjty for votes for United States Senator, now and two years hence. Censurable as Simon has been, this discounts all his performances completely He simply isn't "in It." Strife between railways in Oregon has brought into the Legislature a bill to compel all new roads, when built, to pass over or under other roads, at every crossing. In a state so new as Oregon, such regulation is premature. It would too greatly increase the cost of building new roads and would go far toward .keeping new roads out of Portland and other towns, which could scarcely be entered without crossing existing roads. It would greatly bur den short roads, to be built here and there, yet obliged to get Into terminal points. In the hands of the great rail roads, already established, if would be a heavy club with which to beat down small local enterprises. Denounce the President for doing what is necessary In the Philippines without authority from Congress, and then keep Congress from enacting- the authority. This is the antl programme, and nothing could be more beautifully simple. Shortages are reported in the school lahd accounts In 1894 and 1895. That was six and seven years ago, and this, we take it, is as closely upon the heels of such things as our Legislature can decorously tread. Legislative animadversion upon labor conspiracies to injure persons and prop erty of employers is resented by labor leaders at Washington and defeated at their solicitation. It is a significant confession. Mr. Mays and his friends are indefat igable in their factional activity with charter and other things. This Is well. Make hay, etc Opportunity may not pass their way soon again. The compulsory pilot Jblll is an effort to force all pilotage on the river Into the hands of such skill as that which has piled up the steamer on the Morri son bridge. MOSQUITOES AND MALARIA. The Latent, Perhaps. Greate.it, Vic tory for Medical Science. Boston Herald. Among the great achievements of sci ence In the 19th century, our victories over disease give special distinction to the closing decade. Consumption, the most fatal of all diseases, has been found curable In its incipient stages by con tinuous living In pure air; dlptheria has been conquered by the anti-toxlno reme dy: malarial Infection has been traced to Its sole cause in the bite of a certain species of mosquito, and this has just been followed by the corresponding dis covery that yellow fever Infection like wise originates With the same Insect This latest discovery Is a direct outcome of the occupation of Cuba by the United States, and It Is probably not too much to say that its value to humanity Is immense ly In excess of the costof the war with Spain. Yellow fever thu3 appeal's to be a par ticular virulent form of malaria. This seems to account for the close resem blance of that disease to certain forms of malaria, so that at our Army hospit als at Santiago In the late war, one was often mistaken for the other by the sur geons. These discoveries will not only effect radical changes in dealing with malaria and yellow fever, but economic results of far-reaching Importance may be looked for. The knowledge of these diseases, and consequently of the proper methods of treating them, can hardly fail to Change the relations of civilization to the tropical regions of the earth. Malaria is a disease so universal In its range as to comprise vast areas of the temperate zone in its fields of Infection, as well as the greater portion of the tropics, where Its most fatal forms pre vail. It has, therefore, been the chief bar to spread of modern civilization In the tropics, and, in Its guise of yellow fever. It has converted certain cities and districts, into veritable plague spots; for Instance, Havana, Vera Cru2, Rio da Janerio, and a large portion of the Afri can Coast. Malaria and yellow fever have been chiefly responsible for the long ac cepted dictum that It Is physically Impos sible for the white race to flourish in the tropics. With the source of the evil known, and the remedy accordingly made possible, will not the dictum itself lose Its authority, and the Vast tropical re gions, the most fruitful portions of the earth, be added to the undisputed domain of modern civilization, as represented by the white race? The white race can live and civilization flourish almost anywhere when Infectious disease is kept away. As a rule, life is more agreeable for most persons in warm weather than In Cold, and In mild cli mate than In a rigorous one. So with prop, er clothing and det, life In tropical cli mates can probably be made comfortablo and healthful. The main thing is to keep mosquitoes away. By the proper use of screens, and, perhaps, of ointments obnox ious to Insects, there should be no great difficulty In this, so that, with well ar ranged, portable nettings, it would even be possible to sleep safely In the open air. Hitherto the needed precautions against these Insects have not been taken, since they have been regarded merely as a painful annoyance, rather than the ter rible pests that they have been discovered to be. There are remedial means as well as preventive. While Infection from mos quito bites can be diminished immensely by proper screening, etc., It can hardly be wholly avoided. But, in case this hap pens, the remedial methods- that have been devised promise to make the illness slight and recovery almost certain. Pro fessor Koch announces that he has been entirely successful with his experiments with Inoculation against malaria, both to prevent infection and to cure; and like results are reported from applications of the yellow fever serum of Dr. Bellanza ghi. Altogether, the conquest of malaria and yellow fever must mean benefits Inesti mable or the human race. Here In this country yellow fever has Inflicted enor mous damage In the South, and that sec tion" has stood in constant dread of its Inroads. With Us nature known, it will not be a difficult matter to rid ports like Havana and Vera Cruz of it entirely, and radically different quarantine methods against Its entrance In this country will be In order. And It seems likely that a new era In tropical civilization will date from the beginning of the 20th century, at whose threshold these discoveries were made. Gallatin in Antl-Inipcrlallnm. New York Times. The Democrats In the Senate cannot readily give up the notion that there Is a Constitutional difficulty In the way of administering the new territory acquired by the United States through the treaty with Spain. We venture to commend to their careful attention the views of Al bert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treas ury under Mr. Jefferson, whose argu ments Anally prevailed with the Presi dent. Jefferson at first held that the acquisition of Louisiana required a Con stitutional amendment to sanction the action he had taken. "Our peculiar se curity," he wrote, "is In the possession of a written Constitution; let us not make It a blank paper by construction." To this conception Mr. Gallatin, by far the soundest and clearest and most conscientious reasoner of Mr. Jeffer son's Cabinet, not excepting Mr. Madi son, who had not nenrly his moral fidel ity and courage, replied: To me It would appear, first, that the "United State as a Nation have aft Inherent right to acquire territory. Second That whenever that acquisition Is by treaty, the Fame constituted authorities In whom treaty-making power Is vested have a constitutional right to sanction the acquisi tion. Third Thnt whenever the territory has been acquired. Congress has the power either of ad mitting into the Union as a new state, or of annexing to a state with the consent of that state, or ot making regulations for the gov ernment of such territory. Reviewing the clause that reserves to the states or to the people the powers not delegated to the United States, he points out that all treaty-making is for bidden to the states, and that the pow er of acquiring territory, if reserved, must be reserved to the people at large. He concludes: If that be the true construction of the Con stitution, It substantially amounts to thin, that the United States are precluded from and re nounce altogether the enlargement of terri tory; a provision sufficiently Important and singular to have deserved to be expressly en acted. Is It not a more natural construction to say that the power of acquiring territory la delegated to the United States by the several provisions which authorise the several branches of Government to make war, to make treaties and to govern the territory of the Union? To this reasoning Jefferson, not un aided by his sense of the tremendous po litical convenience of the doctrine, yielded. Winn by Flattery. Brooklyn Eagle. The people of the state re-elect Sena tor Hoar, and even revere him, because they know that he believes with all his heart that, however wrong they may be on the Philippine question, they are Im measurably greater than the people of any other state can possibly become. It is difficult to resist that kind of flattery, and In Massachusetts they do not try. They simply crown the flatterer with laurel. From the "Miflt" Column. Albany Democrat. Arthur Dunn, The Oregonlan's Wash ington correspondent, has Just been elect ed president of the Gridiron Club, and re cently presided at a banquet at Which there were four Cabinet officers. And yet Congressman Tongue says this corre spondent is a very stupid man. i The Shlp-Sbbjildy Ship. Philadelphia Times. "I stand on the beach," says Hanna, "But to save me I can't iy "Whether that ship Is heading for shore Or going the other way." MANSFIELD ON" STREET 3IAXXERS. Ills Ideas Are Too Radical, hut There Is Something: In Them. Chicago Tribune. Richard Mansfield criticises with great severity the manners of tho men of the present day. He mourns because men no longer lift their hats to women with elabo rate and sweeping gestures and because they no longer rush to the curbstone and uncover when they see a. lady approach ing on the sidewalk. Mr. Mansfield has been so closely associated with the char acter of Beau Brummel that it Is only natural he should miss the stately and formal manners of an earlier day. But he is also a modern actor, and should there fore make more allowances for the great ly altered conditions of life which have brought with tham a corresponding change In the manners of the people. If Chicago men, for Instance, should adopt the rule of rushing to the curbstone when they see women approaching whom they know, and saluting dlgnlfiedly as these women pass, they would be likely, while rushing to their saluting stations, to bump Into and Incommode seriously other pedes trians. On the Crowded streets of a great city different rules of politeness must pre vail than on a leisurely and fashionable boulevard. It has been rarely charged against American men. even by the m6st preju diced of their European critics, that they are lacking In deference to Women. The criticism has more commonly been that In this country the average woman Is a qiieen and the man her willing and obedi ent slave. Mr. Mansfield would be the first to admit that true politeness Is more a matter of kindly deeds than of genu flections and gestures. And, Judged by this standard, he would nlso probably agree that the modern American does not suf fer by comparison with his ancestors of three or more generations ago. At the same time It must be confessed that the quick, nervous, absent-minded business man of the present day does lack the graceful and stately manner of the typical "gentleman of the old school." That he would be benefited by a study of the repose and ease which were then the rule Is also true. But he should not be too much blamed for what he is not re sponsible for. The world changes and each age brings with It a change In man. ners. The average man is chiefly a prod uct of hla surroundings, In manners as in everything else. A Financial Monarch. Baltimore Sun. Mr. J. P. Morgan, of New York, Is a financial magnate of such tremendous Importance that English speculators In the stocks In which he Is Interested "are taking out insurance policies on his life to protect themselves In the event that a panlo follows his death. Policies have been taken out In London, It Is reported, which in the aggregate amount to many million dollars. Mr. Morgan consequently stands in the same class as the late Queen Victoria, whose life had been in sured heaiily by shrewd and thrifty Eng lish tradesmen. The New York financier Is represented to be In the b3st of health, with apparently many years before him. Englishmen have been startled, however, by his recent plunge Into the billion-dollar steel pool. A man who engages In such gigantic operations, they argue, Cah not suddenly pass out of life without causing disturbances in the financial world. American Insurance companies are more conservative than the British con cerns, and none of them Issue policies on tho plan which seems to be In such gen eral favor In England. Insurance of this kind is a form of gambling which differs little In principle from the most reckless games of chance. Mr. Morgan's present robust state of health warrants the ex pectation that ho will attain a ripe old age, in which event the Insurance com panies will collect enough premiums to protect them from loss. On the other band, some sudden spell of illness .might end his life at any time, entailing heavy losses upon the companies, and perhaps forcing soma Into bankruptcy. The game Is a risky one for Insurance concerns and their stockholders. The Flan: of England. New York Sun. What is the "flag of England," mean ing the national flag of Great Britain? This question has puzzled a good many Americans recently, and, according to one English writer, has puzzled even a good many Englishmen. The union flag blue, with the crosses of St George, St An drew and St. Patrick upon It ought real ly to be the national flag, but Its use Is restricted almost wholly to the army, the regiments of which have carried as the "Queen's colors" for 60 years, and will now carry It ns the "King's colors." With various devices this flag Is 'used as the banner of certain high official.;, as the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, tho Viceroy of India and the Governor-General of Can ada. The British Navy uses the white en sign, n white flag showing the red St. George's" crose, with the union flag as a canton or small subdivision in the upper corner nearest the staff, and the Royal Naval Reserve uses the blue ensign a blue flag with the union In the corner as a canton. The use of both white and blue ensigns Is governed by stringent laws. Of course, the royal standard, or, more properly, royal banner, being the personal flag of the sovereign, cannot be the na tional flag. The only other flag Is the red mercantile flag, which Is familiar to all, a red field, with the union as a cinton in the corner. This probably must be taken as the British national flag; and so It seems to be accepted, the world over. Oregon Already Hn One Lair. ' Chicago Tribune. Evil days are ahead of the cigarette. Agitation looking to Its suppression, in wholo or In part, has spread over the land. An Investigation- just completed shows that tho Legislatures in at least 13 states are considering the adoption of more or less drastic measures, that 11 states already have laws on their statute books prohibiting the sale of the paper wrapped weed, and that the W. C. T. U. and other "organizations are urging the adoption of stringent legislation in half a dozen other commonwealths. The states under the first head are; Illinois, Minnesota, California, Indiana. Montana, "West Virginia, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, Delaware, Massachusetts, North Carolina. Michigan. ' Under the second head are: Rhode Island, Vermont, Iowa, Ohio. New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Mississippi, Connecticut, Arizona, Georgia. Texas, Among the states where the women and schoolteachers are seeking to arouse their legislators to action are: Tenhes8ee, Oregon, Maine, Washington, Utah, "Wisconsin. So far as known, but two states in tho entire 45 are paying no particular atten tion to tho subject Wyoming and Louis iana. The Door Opened Toward Him. Youth's Companion. Right side and wrong side lie so close together that the ability to generalize from a single example Emerson's defini tion of genius is sometimes misleading. A New Orleans lawyer who was recently asked to talk to the boys of a business school prefaced his address by a few ex tempore remarks: "My young friends," he said, "as I ap proached the entrance to this room t no ticed on the panel of the door a word eminently appropriate to an institution of this kind. It expresses the one -thing most useful to the average man when he steps Into the arena of life. It was" "Pull!" shouted the boys, with a roar of laughter, while the horrified politician recognized that he had taken for his text the wrong side of the door. xote" and comment Is 'the state song to bo "Just One Sen ator"? "Tho Dark and Bloody Ground" seems to have shifted to Kansas. The massacre of women is not the most effective Way to promote temperance re form. People who have railroads which they need in their business had better nail them down. Naturalists declare that the lobster Is becoming extinct. They should push their Investigations a little further. The members of the Legislature may think they are tired, but they ought to see the condition of the public. Edwin Markham has been called tho Alfred Austin of America. Puzzle Find the man who got the worst of it. There Is yet a little time left for work If the legislators feel that they would be benefited by a change of employment. Now It Is reported that General Wheeler wants to go back to Congress. Nothing Is too desperate for the game old fighter. The London newspapers say they see the end of the Boer war. Those London newspapers are always looking back ward. Altgeld Is abusing Grover Cleveland. If he can get a rise or two out of Petti grew, Grover will stand a ' good chance for a third term. The Mexican Herald does not believe that the Mexican dollar can be driven Out of.the East. "The big business houses of the Far East," It says, "and the Chi nese compradores, always accustomed to the Mexican dollar, give it the prefer ence. Few other coins have been better received in any part of the world. And any one who knows the Intense conserv atism of the Chinese may well doubt If. even in the Philippines (where there are not a few Chinese traders), a new dollar can wholly drive out the tlmo-honored Mexican coin. On the mainland the Mex ican dollar is a standard of value, and the Chinese are marvelously well ac quainted with every feature of It, and can detect a counterfeit In the dark!" An official of Cramp's shipyard says that it costs from $4000 to JS000 to launch a battleship. "The building of the ways for the ship to slide down over Is tho main Item, and then comes the greasing," he said. "Every Inch of timber over which the vessel slides must be covered with a lubricant. Different firms use different substances, but soap and tallow form the main ingredients of them all. At the Cramps's we use a layer of beef tallow and a layer of soft soap, and, taken altogether, between one and a half tons of the stuff Is required to put a move on the average battleship. The tal low Is spread on first, to the depth of about three lingers, and the workmen use big flat trowels to make the surface as smooth as possible. Then they pour over the soft soap, which Is just thick enough to run, or about the consistency of tar. As a general thing, the double coating answers the purpose admirably, and the ship glides into the water as if it was sailing on air. If it sticks, as has happened in a few cases, It Is likely to spring some of the vessel's plates, and accidents of that kind are so costly that nothing' Is spared to avert them." t PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPIIERS Maud I don't like to see you throwing your self at Fred. Elizabeth Why not? He's a good catch. Tit-Bits. A Tempting Thickness. "Is that Ice thick enough to skate on, little boy?" "No. sir; It's only jest thick enough to try and see If It's thick enough!" Puck. That's "Why. "How can you go with Fred Squandret, Laura? He's such a spendthrift." "What If he Is? He spends It nearly all on me." Philadelphia Evening" Bulletin. Mostly Bluster. "The mnn who Is waging war on the modern prizefight It a regular Don Quixote." "You think so?" "Of course: he'a only fighting -windmills." Philadelphia Press. Carrie (joyfully) Harry has proposed to me! Bertha Oh, well, I wouldn't mind. He's such an odd creature, you know. Tou never can tell what he Will do. Boston Transcript. Church You say she's an enthusiastic Chris tian Scientist? Gotham Well, I should say so! "Why, she can eat a plate of etewed tripe and think It's Ice cream. Yonkers Statesman. She "Was Posted. "The bride must have studied the marriage service a long time." "What makes you think so?" "When the of ficiating clergyman faltered she prompted him." Chicago Record. Observing the Proprieties. Mrs. Chugwater Joslah, that niece of mine down in Aurora has married the allm-legged young fellow from St. Louis who used to come and see her now and then. She sends me her wedding cards. I Bupposewe ought to make some reply. Mr. Chugwater Certainly. Send her our regre'ta or something of that kind. Chicago Tribune. Manrlce Thompson. (Jame3 Whltcomb Riley's tribute to his friend.) He would have holiday outworn. In sooth. Would turn again to seek the old release. The open fields the loved haunts of his youth. The woods, the waters, and the paths of peace. The rest the recreation he would choose Be his abidingly; long has he served And greatly aye, and greatly let us Use Our grief, and yield him nobly as he de served. Perchance with subtler senses than our own And love exceedlns ours he listens thus To ever-nearer, clearer, pipings blown From out the lost lands of Theocritua. Or. haply he is beckoned from us here. By knight or yeoman of the bosky wood ' Or, chained In roses, haled a prisoner Before the blithe Immortal, Robin Hood. Or mayhap. Chaucer signals, and with him And his rare fellows he goes pllgrlmlng; Or Walton signs him o'er the morning brlnt Of mystic waters, 'midst the dales of Spring. Ho! Whereso'r he goes, or whosoe'r He fares with, he has bravely earned the boon. Be his the open, and the glory there Of April buds. May blooms and flowers of June! Be his the glittering dawn, the twinkling dew. The breathless pool or gush of laughing streams. Be his triumph of the coming true Of all his loveliest dreams. Cleon and I. Charles Mackay. Cleon hath a million acres, ne'er a one have I; Cleon dwelleth In a palace. In a cottage I; Cleon hath a dozen fortunes, not a penny I;-' Yet the poorer of the twain is Cleon. and not I. Cleon. true, possesseth acres, but the land scape I; Halt the charms to me It yleldeth money cannot buy. Cleon 'harbors sloth and dullness, freshing vigor I; He In velvet, I In fustian, richer man am I. Cleon Is a slave to grandeur, free as thought am I; Cleon fees a score of doctors, need of none have I; Wealth-surrounded, care-environed. Cleon fears to die; Death may come; he'll find me ready happier man am I. Cleon sees no charms In nature, in a daisy I; Cleon hears no anthems ringing in the sea and sky; Nature sings to me forever, earnest listener I; Stale for state, with all attendants, who would change? Not I.