CSrr , - THE MOTWrSTG OEEGQNTAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 19Q1. he vg&omaxu Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, as cecond-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms..... IOC I Business Offloe...CC7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By llall (postage prepaid). In Advance Sally, with Sunday, per month $ So Dally. Sunday excepted, per year.... T SO Dally, with Sunday, per ear 0 00 Sunday per year 2 00 The Weekly, per jcar 1 50 The Weekly. 3 months M To City Subscribers x Daily, per -week, delivered. Sundays excepted.lSe Dally, per week delivered. Sundays lncludedOc POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 10-page paper .......lc 1G to 32-pace paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan.'" The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it -without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau -Captain A. Thompson. oOlee at 1111 Paclflc avenue, Tacoma. Box D53, Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office 47. 48, 40 and f9 Tribune building. New York City; 40'J "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For aale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel: Gold smith Bros.. 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market street; Foster & Orear. Terry news stand. Tor sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 50 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 So. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by II. C Shears. 103 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., 11G Royal street. On file In Washington, D. C. with A. W. Dunn. 500 14th N. W. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & gendrlck. 000-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Cloudy to partly cloudy, with probably occasional showers; fresh southerly winds. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 The promise of statehood was not expressed In annexing Alaska, Hawaii, and the lately ac quired Spanish Islands. These omissions are without legal significance, but, excepting the peculiar cane of AInxkn, an Arctic desert bought to at once oblige a friendly au tocrat and bow him out of this hemisphere, tbey are of deep political Import. They mark the first significant refusal to contemplate statehood as the destiny of annexed territory. "Law and Policy of Annexation," by C. F. Randolph. Mr. Kandolph is at one with the other leading lights of anti-imperialism. An nexation, they say, to be defensible and permanent, must Imply statehood. That Is what Harrison said at Ann Arbor, that is what the Porto Kico claimants argued before the Supreme Court, that is thejegal ground upon which, aban donment of the Philippines is urged. The fact of statehood's inevitability, they say. is established by our uniform practice. Then they recount Florida, Louisiana, California, Oregon, etc, al ways excepting "the peculiar case of Alaska." Now what is the force of an exception in a case of this kind? The square of the hypothenuse of a right angled triangle Is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. But suppose we found one right-angled triangle, only one, whose hypothenuse squared was either greater or less than the squares of the other two sides what would become of the rule? "Why, it wouldn't stand for a moment. "We have a rule that the man who gets a majority of electoral votes is declared elected and then inaugurated. But sup pose the future historian found one case where a man receiving a minority vote of the college was declared elected and inaugurated--he would be obliged, of course, to formulate a new rule from the circumstances that would cover all cases. Or, let us say that after 1872 no President has ever been re-elected at the expiration of his first term. It works all right till we strike McKinley, and then it fails. The rule Is absolutely worthless. The force and pertinence of a rule arise out of Its uniformity. If statehood was not compelled in the case of Alaska by previous practice, no more Is it compelled in the case of the Philippines. It is imperfect knowledge or superfi cial reasoning that enables the Louis ville Courier-Journal to say: A city is entitled to exactly the fort of gov ernment Its people want, and so is a state. Any attempt on the part of the state to direct the city is a blow at republican Institutions more dangerous than the degradation of the city boss. This Is a patent fact, and yet e are constantly presented with the spectacle of legislatures undertaking to regulate the most vital affairs of the cities, with little knowl edge of the different conditions that prevail In town and country. The idea is, evidently, that the coun try members of Legislatures blunder ingly go to work to frame city charters, without information and advice from the cities, whereas the people of the city. If suffered to do so, would go to work en masse and make a perfect charter of their own. The facts are opposite. The charter is passed by the Legislature, it is true, but upon the recommendation of the interested dele gation, for one very natural reason if for no other, that the Legislature is the lawmaking poWer. The men who rep resent the city in the Legislature are the same men, in qualifications if not in name, who would frame the charter if It were framed by the city. "The peo ple" do not frame charters any more or less In the one case than in the other. Charters are framed by a few dominant efficient individuals, and it makes little difference what the system Is. A little difference it does, Indeed, make; and that is enough to render home manufacture of charters desira ble. That is. it helps legislation to take the work off the Legislature and com mit It to other hands. "Wisconsin, for example, has adopted a constitutional amendment forbidding Legislatures to enact city legislation. Cities and towns have to do their own incorporating. The result is that the total number of laws passed has been reduced 25 per cent, and the session laws have been reduced In bulk more than 50 per cent. Illinois has an arrangement greatly similar. Even here in Oregon the general in corporation act Introduced by Repre sentative Ford, of Marion County, in 1893, and pushed successfully to pass age by him at that session, shows signs of doing the work it was intended for. Incorporations under its provisions, without recourse to the Legislature, have been made by: HoodRUer "Wasco Beaver Hill Sumpter Ontario lone Antelope Granite John Day Drewsey Grass Valley Toledo Cottage Grove Tet if any of them got any better charter than they could have got from the legislature, we have not heard of it. On grounds of economy this move ment should be widened. In the Ore gon session laws of 1S99 the general acts occupy 247 pages, and the local acts 867. Lord Lansdowne's reply is all that could be desired by the able and sincere friends of the Nicaragua Canal, who wish it constructed in the time and manner approved by the transconti nental railroads and their British stock holders. It Is obvious that to create a point impassable it is important to con centrate British opposition upon the very. contention which is certain to be insisted upon by Congress. Through the help of Lord Pauncefote, and possi bly through the help of Secretary Hay, the British Foreign Secretary has been enabled to locate the Irreconcilable dif ference with remarkable discernment. Congress Is In doubt about the Clayton Bulwer treaty, so he makes little of that. What Congress Is determined about, as Its temper has clearly been revealed in recent discussions. Is that the United States shall have military privileges at the canal which shall be denied to Great Britain. If we are go ing to build the canal, we must have the right to protect it and to defend our interests thereabouts. The purpose of Congress in this respect is unmistak able. "Whether it is right or not, whether the provincial idea, of a canal that Is part of the American coast line is comparable with the grander view of a great international highway, open to the commerce of the world, in peace or war all this is aside from the ques tion, and profitless for discussion In view of the deadlock created by the best brains of two hemispheres. But the fixed determination of Congress be ing known, the course of Great Britain Is clear. She must insist on just ex actly what Congress will never grant. She must ins'st on the canal's being unimpeded in peace or war, and kept so by the power or powers responsible for Its control. She must expressly scout a "one-sided arrangement" under which the United States would enjoy greater privileges in and near the canal than Great Britain enjoys. She must ex plicitly rule out even such general ad vantages as Congress contemplates, such as, to quote Lord Lansdowne's exact words, would enable us "to take any measure . . for the purpose of protecting their National Interests." All of which is excellent, and to the point It would be sufficiently effective for all practical purposes, even If we hadn't Morgan's unfailing fund of words In the Senate, and even IE no one had bethought him of further clut tering up the situation by revival of the project at Panama. One of the welcome events of the year Is the annual "review of political and municipal legislation," given in the "Annals of the "American Academy of Political and Social Science." For a number of years (five, we think) this work has been done by Mr. E. Dana Durand, but this year the name signed to the review is Robert H. Whltten. The new man's work Is disappointing in one respect, and that Is the insignifi cant results reached by his Investiga tion of municipal affairs. From Mr. Durand's work it has always been pos sible to derive trustworthy indications of the tendency of municipal legislation. That tendency, as everybody knows, is in the direction of increased entrance of the municipality upon business func tions. Mr. Whltten'sT exhibit points the same way, but It is very scant. He finds that Iowa has authorized cities and towns to establish heating plants, Louisiana has authorized municipalities to expropriate private gas and electric light plants, and Texas has made it unlawful for cities and towns to lease or sell water systems except by vote of the electors. A law of New Mexico giv ing municipal power to regulate water and light rates has been set aside, Iowa has appointed a commission to revise and codify municipal laws, a municipal code bill failed to pass the Ohio Legis lature, and New Tork has its customary legislative wrestle with a Greater New York charter. No exception can be taken to the extension of lighting and water authority to cities, reported by Mr. Whitten. but we are aware from other sources that the absorption of business functions by municipalities is going on apace. In a sense this Is dan gerous, but it need not be so if It is held within proper limits. That is, we must have closer supervision and con trol of quasi-monopolistic municipal corporations, and we must find ways to exact revenue from use of franchises. The business way for a city to handle such things is not to go Into telephone and street-car enterprises on its own account, but to safeguard the interests of the public in duration and taxation conditions of franchises. If this duty were better discharged, we should hear less of municipal ownership. HAPPY IX THEIR. CHAINS. The Russian students are natural breeders of political sedition and riot. Given poverty, associated with schol astic Intelligence under an absolute form of government, and you are sure to have discontent and disturbance. Over 60 per cent of the student body in Russia are miserably poor, being wholly or partially dependent on char ity or educational endowments for sup port. On the 20th of February, 1899, the rector of the St Petersburg Uni versity threatened its 3700 students with the police if they should be disor derly in celebrating the university's "speech day," which occurs on that date. The students tried to break through the cordon of Cossacks be tween them and the heart of the city, and were beaten back with whips. An educational strike followed all over col legiate Russia, The government ex pelled some of the most unruly stu dents and imprisoned the most incen diary. Since that date the agitation has never really subsided, and on the 27th of January last a disturbance occurred in St. Petersburg, during which M. Bogolllepoff was shot and mortally wounded. The students are all satur ated with the eccentric economic, po litical, social and religious views of Tolstoi, and are radical socialists to a degree that would make them danger ous members of any well-ordered so ciety. From the ranks of students and educated army and navy officers have in times past been recruited the nihil ists of Russia, Their crimes, however. have never done any good, for the mere killing of a Czar or a Czar's Minister of Police does not mitigate the absolutism of the government. Another Czar in stantly succeeds, and the wheels of ab solute government are not arrested for a moment. The Russian peasantry worship the Czar living, mourn him dead, and rejoice in the execution of his murderers. Unfrocked priests, broken-down act ors, briefless barristers, bankrupt news paper scribblers, doctors sulking over their lack of patients, discharged sol diers, were represented among the lead ing spirits of the first French Revolu tion, because that was really a popular uprising, and its volcanic upheavlngs threw all sorts of men to the surface of society and politics. Danton was a lawyer, Robespierre an advocate. Ca mllle Desmoulins a clever journalist, Marat a doctor and Talleyrand a priest. But In Russia there never can be any such thing as a genuine political revolution until the Ignorant, sodden Russian peasantry ceases to worship the Czar, not only as an Emperor, but as the highest pontiff of the Greek Church. In the French Revolution there were soldiers enough In the serv ice of the King, but they fraternized at the first firc with the Insurgents. In Russia the cities swarm with sol diers, who take as much pleasure In beating a crowd of rioters -with their whips as a cowboy would in lashing the flanks of a vicious Texas steer. The student riots; the revival of nihilist plots against the Czar, will end as they always -have heretofore. In several hun dred young fellows of Intellect and In telligence being sent to Siberia to labor In the mines or burled ror years In the grave of the terrible dungeons of the fortress of the Neva. The drafting of rebellious students Into the army Is a terrible punishment to an educated, high-spirited young man, for the Rus sian army Is not like our own. In which no officer can with Impunity inflict per sonal violence upon the soldier. The methods of discipline in the Russian army are very severe when pushed to the limit of military license, and it is, of course, easily possible under the guise of military punishment and dis cipline to make a veritable hell of a private soldier's life. There is no hope for successful polit ical revolution in Russia until the masses of the Russian peasantry sym pathize with and support the insurrec tion, for out of the peasantry Is re cruited the army, and its Ignorance and superstition assures its inflexible, in corruptible loyalty. Revolutions that are successful never begin at the top of society. If the plain people, the tillers of the soil, the working masses, rise In revolt, victory Is probable, but In Rus sia there is no hope, for the masses are not discontented nor rebellious, so that If the top of Intelligent Russian society should declare lor constitutional reform tomorrow it would be utterly without popular support. The average Russian peasant has no aspiration beyond his present condition. The student is equally poor, but his Intelligence makes him malcontent with his misery, and his desperation makes him a reckless conspirator. FROM 11IRNEY TO LINCOLN". A correspondent, whose letter Is pub lished In another column, Inquires whether "the Republican party was founded by abolitionists." The Repub lican party was organized through a fusion of anti-slavery men of all types, save the abolitionists, who accepted the creed of Garrison and Phillips, refused to vote, described the Constitution as a covenant with death and an agreement with hell, and therefore pleaded for disunion between the slaveholdlng and non-slaveholdlng states. The real John the Baptist of the Republican party was James G. Birney, of Kentucky, the candidate of the so-called "Liberty" party, that polled 7000 votes in 1840 and over 62,000 in 1844. Birney was born and bred a slaveholder, was an able lawyer, who had risen to distinction in both Ken tucky and Alabama, where he had passed thirty years of his life. He in vain tried to have Kentucky adopt the plan of gradual emancipation, but, fall ing in this, he pleaded within lines of constitutional agitation against the ex tension of slavery Into new territory; he was not a disunlonist. like Phillips; he believed in the ballot. He was easily the brains of the sane anti-slavery men of the North. The famous Wllmot Proviso, passed by the House In 1846, for which Daniel Webster voted, was nothing but the voice of Birney; the free-soil platform of "Van Buren In 1848 and of John P. Hale In 1852 was noth ing but Birney's principle of opposition to the enlargement of the domain of. slavery. The Kansas and Nebraska bill, which carried with it the repeal of the Missouri Compromise of 1820, com pelled men of anti-slavery sympathies, who were opposed to the extension of slavery, to join hands for a common purpose of constitutional resistance to the further enlargement of slave terri tory. The Republican party drew to its standard not only a great many of the old-time anti-slavery Whigs, but thou sands of anti-slavery Democrats, like United States Senator Hamlin, of Maine, and Governor George S. Bout well, of Massachusetts. Not only the abolitionists did not "found the Repub lican party," but they were its brilliant enemies In 1860, for Wendell Phillips unceasingly stigmatized Lincoln In that campaign as "the slavehound of Illi nois" because Mr. Lincoln had distinct ly approved of the compromise meas ure of 1850. which included the fugi tive slave law. Our correspondent's question, "Did the Republican party in 1860 demand the Immediate abolish ment of slavery?" is answered by the terms of that platform. In which is dis tinctly disavowed any purpose to Inter fere with slavery where It existed. The abject compromise measures passed by the Republican party to conciliate the South; the language of Lincoln's in augural, show clearly that the Republi can party stood simply in favor of the policy of non-extension of slavery Into new territory, and of non-interference with it where it existed in the states. The slave states seceded, not because they were afraid for the perpetuity of slavery, but because they were dragged out of the Union by a successful con spiracy of secessionists. The ordinance of secession was not submitted to a popular vote in any of the states, and the whole movement was dying of inan ition until the conspirators, seeing that it was necessary to save it by "sprink ling blood on the face of the South," fired at Sumter, and when that shot was returned the pride and passion of sec tion on both sides ruled the hour; every man reached for his rifle, and the war went on with varying fortune until its last ditch at Appomattox. The vast majority of the Confederate, soldiers were poor whites who owned no slaves and were really impover ished by slavery, but the moment se- cession shrewdly drew the fire of Sumter the whole South jumped to Its feet musket in hand, not to save slavery, but to vindicate and defend their seotion. If they had not seceded, slavery might be in full existence to day; if they had not seceded, it Is quite probable that the Northern Democracy would have composed their quarrel and Lincoln's successor In that event was likely to have been a pro-slavery Dem ocrat. So far "as "bounty for the slaves" is concerned, Lincoln, at the famous Hampton Roads conference, offered the South $400,000,000 for Irs slaves Lincoln said: "Stephens, let me write 'Union' at the top of that page and you may write below It what ever you please," which was really of fering the South the same blank sheet of paper on which to write Its terms of peace that was extended before the war In the shape of the Corwln compromise. As for the historic attitude of Wendell Phillips and the abolitionists who fol lowed his counsel, refusing to vote and shrieking for disunion, it is very ably and accurately set forth by E. Warner in another column. Not only Mr. Phil lips did not do any good, but he did a great deal of harm, for in his speeches he always forgot that the people of the North were as responsible for slavery as the people of the South; he was an anarchist bf the sort that is illustrated by the Chinaman who, desiring to eat roast pig, set fire to and destroyed his barn in order to cook his shoat. So Phillips was ready to burn the fabric of the Union over our heads to get rid of slavers'. Sane folk looked forward with Lincoln to the day when the whole people would be willing to be taxed to remunerate the South for its slaves If they would voluntarily abolish it or consent to adopt a plan of grad ual emancipation. It is not true that Mr. Phillips won the anti-slavery fight; It was begun on sound, broad, consti tutional lines by James G. Birney, be fore Phillips' day, and on the lines laid down by Mr. Birney, the leader of the "Liberty" party, the Republican party was founded; on these lines of no more slave territory and constitutional re sistance to the encroachments of the slave power, the Republican party fought and won the battle. To this victory Phillips contributed nothing but Jeers and' sneers at far wiser men than himself, who refused. In order to smoke out slavery, to burn the fabric of the Union over our heads. From Bir ney dates the sane opposition to slav ery voiced by Greeley, Chase, Sumner, Seward, Hale, Hamlin, Thad Stevens, Wilmot.. Corwln. Lincoln, Andrew. Phillips was as brilliant, as erratic and as useless a political Ishnjaelite as John Randolph, of Roanoke; he had no fellowship for any sort of an anti-slavery man except he belonged to his own little vituperative cult of non-voters and dlsunlonlsts. He was fairly described by Bob Toombs as "an infernal ma chine set to music." The findings of the New York courts in the libel cases against the German ship Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse for services rendered at the time of the big dock fire have been made public. The court awards $20,000, to be divided among 2S tugs, the largest share amounting to $2000 and the smallest to $30. This award Is about one-tenth the amount asked for. and will have' a tendency to discourage such reprehensi ble conduct as was engaged in by the human hogs in charge of some of the tugs at the time of the fire. Few If any of the tugs attempted to save the lives of the unfortunates who had thrown themselves from the burning ships Into the water, and had one-half of the fleet of tugs which made a rush for the costly Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse di verted their efforts to the three less valuable ships, scores of lives might have been saved. Human life Is about as cheap in New York City as it is any where in the world, but in this case the courts have equalized the matter somewhat by lessening the Incentive for the crime which was committed by the tugboat harpies last June. One of the calamities against which no thrift can provide and which no fore sight can turn aside is the "funnel shaped cloud" bearing down upon the earth, Instinct with destruction and moving with resistless power over the habitations of men. Thus far this men ace of disaster charged at once with portent and execution has not crossed the Rocky Mountains to the westward, nor has It wrought special ruin In the Atlantic States. The South and South west and the Middle West as far north as Iowa are the districts that have suf fered most severely by the tornado. Birmingham, Ala., Is the latest victim of the cyclone's violence, and, looking about her streets and suburbs today, she can only be thankful that her dead do not number more than twenty-flve and her scores of wounded In most cases were more seriously frightened than injured. There seems to be a slight Inconsist ency In the religious belief of Mr. Flower, of Albany. While engaged in building an ark on which to float out of a second deluge which he believes to be due, he left his offspring In care of the angels. If the angels were to be de pended on to fulfill a task which has now fallen to the-Boys' and Girls' Home at Portland, It would seem like a waste of labor and timber to build an ark to escape a Spring freshet According to generally accepted belief, angels In the role of life preservers have no choice of weapons, and would be fully as will ing and ready to pick a Flower out of the flowing tide as they would to feed and care for his neglected children. Mrs. Nellie Brown, of Hood River, lives to congratulate herself that she escaped with her life from an unwise entanglement looking to marriage with a man of such fiendish instincts as those developed by the murder of Ed son V. Benjamin. She will not be quite sure of her life, of course, until her whilom lover Is brought to justice, since he is one of a class of ungov erned and practically ungovernable men whom a woman, unwise enough or unfortunate enough to entertain for a time as lover or husband, can neither live with nor escape from. After all. Castellane is worth a few less shucks than Manchester, and It may be that the Zimmerman girl got a worse son-in-law for her papa than Anna Gould got a husband for her mil lions. What does Bryan mean by wanting renomlnatlon? No aspirant for Presi dent however good, Is entitled to three consecutive termi. TRUTH OF WENDELL PHILLIPS. OREGON CITY, March 23. (To the Edi tor.) There is one feature In the oration of Mr. Minchln which has not been no ticed, so far as I am aware, by any of his critics. It is the falsehood embodied In his basic or central Idea. In one para graph it reads, "Wendell Phillips was a born fighter, and he fought to win. . . . He fought the whole united Gov ernmentand he won!" Mr. Phillips did not fight for the abolition of slavery un der the Government'. He fought or con tended for a dissolution of the Federal Union because of the existence of slavery In the Southern States and he did not win. He and Garrison and their followers took for their rallying cry. "No Union with slaveholders." The United States Constitution, they said, was "a cove nant with death and an agreement with hell"; therefore, the non-slaveholdlng states should "come out and be separate." The main burden of their lectures and writings, as set forth in the columns of Garrison's Liberator, the anti-slavery standard and the anti-slavery bugle, was to argue the pro-slavery character of the Constitution and to clamor for a peace able dissolution of the Union a withdraw al of the North from the South thus vir tually leaving the slaves to their fate under their taskmasters. Strange as it may seem today, one meth od to accomplish this dissolution was to refrain from voting. All who voted under the Constitution were partakers in the crime of slavery. Garrison and Phillips made this proinjnent In their writings and speecnes, ana it was ecnoed ty tne gim tongued lecturers sent out by the parent society to do missionary work In the great Middle West north of the Ohio River. Another method of these dlsunlonlsts was to make war upon all the religious sects and benevolent and secret societies of whatever name "that did not come out openly and denounce the Government un der which they enjoyed protection and the privilege of existing. To fellowship a slaveholder in church, lodge, or social club, or to strike hands with any who did thus fellowship with him, or to de liver a public address upon any subject without ringing :n the question of slav ery was counted as one of the deadly sins, and no sarcasm was too bitter, no denunciation too strong to fall from the "silver-tongued orator" upon the heads of those so sinning. It was thus that Wendell Phillips made of himself a "social outcast." There were men in Massachusetts as well born as Wendell Phillips, holding a3 high a social position as he ever held, and his peer in every respect, excepting only his gift of oratory, who were anti-slavery, were never backward in expressing their condemnation of the system, and yet they never lost social cast Charles Sumner, John G. Palfrey, Horace Mann, and others, were as noted for their hostility to slavery as was Phillips. But they never exaggerated, never overstated their case. ana, instead of suffering social ostracism, they were exalted 'by their constituents to positions in the councils of the Gov ernment where their great abilities were of practical benefit. And had Wendell Phillips stood with those men Instead of using his splendid gifts In measuring out to them envenomed and personal abuse. It might be truthfully, as It is now falsely, said of him that "he planted the flag of freedom on the ramparts of slavery." In reviewing the history of the anti slavery agitation we look in vain for a practical effort on the part of Phillips and his co-workers for the emancipation of the slave, or for the amelioration of his condition in any manner whatever. How, let us.ask, could the process of non voting have helped the slave? How could the withdrawal of the free from the salve states have brought freedom to the latter section? And how could the class ing together as a "brotherhood of thieves" the churches, the benevolent orders and the voting anti-slavery men. and denounc ing "Washington and the framers of the Constitution as the dire foes of freedom how could all this tend In a single de gree to loosen the bands of the oppressed? And yet this was all and singular of the Phillips and Garrison agitation. Only this and nothing more. It was a vast amount of wild energy and brilliant talent thrown to the winds. It spent Its force mainly against such antl-'slavery voters as saw the subject In its true light, and as has been aptly expresed by another, "saw It whole." Those who remember what the general sentiment was at the outbreak of the rebellion know that the war was not car ried on by the Government for the over throw, of slavery, but solely for the pres ervation of the Union. It was so de clared more than once by President Lin coln. Not one soldier In a thousand en listed for any other purpose. Lincoln had I to wait ior tne creation of sutncient puo Hc sentiment to back him up before he ventured to Issue his emancipation proc lamation "as a war measure," and so scrupulous was he to keep within legal and Constitutional bounds that he except ed from his declaration of freedom those states and parts of states of the South that had not declared for secession. The Constitution, as all know, was amended at a subsequent date, so as to make wholly free every section of the country. It was all accomplished under the lead ership of men whom Wendell Phillips, "with his marvelous gift of rhetorical epi gram, had struck and stung without mercy." "It was the one weapon with which Nature had endowed him," and In its use he wrought hate and all un charltableness without the slightest ad mixture of good. His blows weighed not so much as a feather in thrlklng off the slaves' shackles. Had the leaders of the South refrained from inaugurating the rebellion, the slave would be In his chains today for oil that Phillips and Garrison and their brood of followers did or could have done by the methods they taught and practiced. If the brewers of malt and spirituous liquors, and those Interested in their sale should combine today to force their entry Into all places where their sale Is now restricted, and the Government was forced to destroy all the distilleries and all the liquors It could reach before It could quell the uprising, It would be Just as consistent to name "Brother Wool ley," Mrs. Nation, or some other Im practicable temperance -agitator as the chief factor In suppressing the sin of drunkenness as to name Wendell Phillips as the great leader who won a victory over slavery. The cases would be paral lelone as true as the other, and both ridiculous. " ' In writing this I am not censuring Mr. Minchin. If censure should fall anywhere It should be upon his teachers. It was his misfortune to glean from fiction, sup posing It to be fact It seems to me his case was rightly decided by Judge Will lams, and there It should rest It Is no light matter to crush a young man with savage criticism, even though his ambi tion may have led him to violate the rules laid down by literary censors. It Is, how ever, a duty we owe the young to use whatever ability we have to make cor rections when we see so much that Is both false and pernicious passing Into history as fact E. WARNER. England Cannot Grow Tobacco. Baltimore Sun. In nearly all European countries to bacco Is cultivated and manufactured under state supervision and as a leading source of public revenue. It Is a state monopoly in Franco, Austria-Hungary, Italy and Spain, and In other countries it is subject to state regulation and heavy excise duties. It Is a curious fact that in England the cultivation of to bacco as a crop is prohibited by a tax so high on every acre sown with to bacco seed that no Englishman could afford to grow It, except as Mr. Joseph Chamberlain grows orchids as an ex pensive fad. The origin of this prohibi tion is still more curious. It originated in the reign of Charles II, when Parlia ment passed a law forbidding the growth of tobacco In England for the express nuroose of encouraging trade with the new colony of Virginia. PRESIDENT'S GROWING POWERS; Chicago Times-Herald. It "is a popular notion in this .country that the President is merely the servant of the people, chosen to execute the de crees of Congress, and having none of the autocratic powers exercised by Con gress. This popular notion Is correct so tar as the Constitutional functions of the President are concerned. At the same time there Is much apprehension among students Of our political system concern ing "the growing powers of the Presi dent" In adjusting some of the problems grow ing out of the recent war we have seen Congress practically abdicate in favor of the President. The framers of the Con stitution rightly appreciated that in a republic the popular branch of the gov ernment must be paramount. We have recently seen the President become the autocratic ruler of hundreds of thousands of people In Cuba and of millions of peo ple in the Philippines. He has appointed and removed officials without asking the consent of the Senate. The laws promul gated by the Taft Commission In the Philippines declare that they were en acted "by the authority of the President of the United States" not Congress. Of course everyone understands that the President Is exercising this authority under the all-embracing phrase of "war power." In the March Forum, however, Henry Litchfield West, of Washington, shows that the power of the President is growing through causes which operate dally, and which are not accidental and extraneous, like the sudden and unex pected acquisition of territories beyond the seas. Mr. West discovers the secret of this executive power in the "golden stream" which flows through the White House to the remotest corners of the Re public This stream has Its source in the National Treasury. The extent of this stream which the President Is able to divert Into the pock ets of his supporters Is given by Mr. West as follows: State Department 318 Consular and diplomatic ap pointments ? 1,000,000 Treasury Department 743 customs, revenue, marine hospital, etc 617,355 Postofflce Department 4015 Postmasters 6,931,000 Interior Department 747 pension officials, land office agents, etc 1,997,640 Department of Justice Judges, attorneys, marshals, etc. 1,126,000 Total ?U,671.99o This list is by no means complete, as It does not include the War and Navy De partments, owing to the difficulty In as certaining the exact number of commis sions Issued. Making a conservative esti mate, however, it is safe to say that the President annually offers to his friends and supporters the sum of 520,000.000, a total distribution of 580,000,000 during his term of office. Instances of the all-prevailing potency ot this "golden stream" In shaping legis lation and promoting personal political advantage are too well known to need recalling at this time. Grant and Gar field triumphed over cabals and factions through the use of this power, while Har rison secured a renomlnatlon at Minneap olis through the work of office-holders. The golden prize is dangled above the heads of legislators, and they readily cringe and bow before the Executive. Congress has bent its neck to the yoke of the President upon numerous occasions within the last four years, notably In the case of the Porto RIcan tariff bill. Mr. West believes that American statesmen will soon be compelled to undertake the task of devising some means to curtail the President's growing power. The only remedy appears to be through the extension and enforcement of the merit system. ' Republican Purty and Phillips. SANDY, Or., March 22. (To the Editor.) Please be so kind to answer the follow ing questions through The Oregonlan: Was the Republican party founded by abolitionists, or what caused it to be founded? Did the Republlcin party in 1S60 demand the immediate abolishment of slavery? If npt. why did the slave states secede? If they had not seceded, would there not have been good prospect for granting them at least 10 years' time for the abolishment of slavery, and for getting a bounty by the Nation therefor? It seems to me that, if the abolitionists did anything towards furthering the abol ishment of slavery In the United States, it was by teasing tlje South Into rebellion, through the non-success of which the masters lost their staves. Oratory, like poetry. Is always Inclined to overdraw the "picture" of Its hero. That Wendell Phillips was not a very wise min may be concluded from the fact that he was a "greenback man," and was an admirer of Dennis Kearney. When the sand-lot orator was stumping the State of Massachusetts for Ben. But ler In September. 1S78, Mr. Phillips said In an article, published in the Irish World, that "the Republicans are laughing now and trying to make fun of Mr. Kearney: but they shall soon laugh the other way." That there always Is a character behind eloquence Is true. But that does not necessarily prove It to be Impossible to tell a He with eloquence. If It does, then we are more equally born than I thought T. H. ANDERSEN. Glad to Be Morgancercd. New York World. In true Mark Tapley style the London Spectator Is positively cheerful, almost enthusiastic, indeed, over the prospect that the British steel trade will be "Mor ganeered" out of existence. It remarks that "In so far as Mr. Mor gan' corporation provides our engineers with cheaper steel." it will mitigate the severity of all competition in finished products of steel. But all these consol ing reflections, It will be noted, are based on the strange assumption that If the whole nation Is benefited the closing out of a few Ironmasters Is not of vital Im portance. What Abont the Hired MnnT Baltimore American. They talk about the servant girl, suggesting this and that To make her life more happy In the mansion or the flat. They say to teach her music, and to cultivate her mind. And never, ner apeak to her In voice that is unkind. But What about the hired man Hired man tired man Frequently the fired man What about his life? No one ever sighs for him; Books nobody buys for him. Or Intimates that pies, for him, Should never know a knife. The ladles sip Young Hyson at the Esoteric clubs'. And weep about the hardships of the maid who bakes or scrubs. They advocate a. fashion plate upon the kitch en wall. And "higher aspirations" they propose for one and all. But What about the hired man Hired man tired man Soon or late the flred man What about hid lot? No one ever thinks of him. Or sends out fancy drinks for him. Or talks of fashion's kinks for him, Or gives to him a thought. They write to all the papers on the "servant question," now. And Mrs. Talkso Tellum-Whott gets up and makes a bow. And shows the. ladles how to act, the servant girls to suit," And all her hearers vow that her, remarks are "awful cute." But What about the hired man Hired man tired man After while the fired man; Who's concerned for him? He-must keep his hustle on. And toll and tug and ni'rtle on. With work to test his muscle on. Or else his chance Is 'slim. NOTE AND COMMENT. ' " - Editor Bryan seems to be determined to keep down his end of his railway trans portation contracts. No paragrapher has yet had the hardi hood to remark that England has Seen Botha's a good deal lately. A suit to recover 5 cents has been In stituted In Rochester. It was not known before that Mr. Sage had any interests there. Happily, the people who commit mur ders to show how much they are In love usually include themselves In their list of victims. People wo have been mistaking Min ister Wu for a laundryman should be In formed that he will not wash any more than will some of his statements. Personal. General Nelson A. Miles will not accompany Adjutant-General Corbln on the latter's trip to the Philippines. People who want to know why should ask him. Mr. Carnegie has so far mnnaged to keep out of politics, for which happy cir cumstance he can thank the Fates for not marrying him to a sister of John R. Mc Lean. There Is no hurry about the Nicaragua Canal, anyway. It cannot be built till the dove of peace comes down to liberate the mules who are now carrying on divers and sundry wars. The Jeffries and Ruhlin fight is to take place at San Francisco. Why did not this occur to the promoters of the fight be fore they went up against so many cities in which there is a sentiment against prize-fighting? Mining item, St Petersburg, March 26. The discovery of a mine under the Im perial palace has created considerable excitement, but it Is not expected that there will be a rush to the vicinity for the present, at least One of the most ludicrous mistakes made by the telegraph was caused by the loss of a single dot In a telegram from Brisbane to a London news agency. As it reached London it read: "Governor General twins first son," which the news agency "edited" and sent around to the papers in the following form: -'Lady Kennedy, the wife of Sir Arthur Ken nedy, Governor-General of Queensland, yesterday gave birth at Government House. Brisbane, to twins, the first born being a son." The telegram arriving in the small hours of the morning, there was no time to check It or refer to De brett, and It was published by most of the newspapers In London and the prov inces, and caused an unexpected sensa tion. Sir Arthur's friends pointed out with conclusive force that some one had blundered, as there never was a Lady Kennedy, Sir Arthur being a bachelor. The repeat message, which followed, read: "Governor-General turns first sod," re ferring to a railway ceremony. Officers of the White Star line were scouring New York recently In search of Rev. Thomas Aldred, of Nashville, Tenn., who arrived on the Oceanic with a lurid tale of depravity at sea. He made accu sations regarding gambling for high stakes In the first cabin, flirtations In the second cabin and Sunday-night dances In the steerage. Robert Bruce Ismay. head of the White Star line, happened to be a passenger on the Oceanic as well. Mr. Ismay la credited with Ordinary per- -ceptlon, yet he saw nont of the strange things related by the Nashville clergy man. Therefore he sent a number of company employes through the hotel dis trict In an effort to locate the minister and hear his allegations in detail. It seems to be an unwritten law on ship board that flirtations are not barred, so long as the other passengers make no protest Still, if Rev. Mr. Aldred can bring proof that he saw two cabin pas sengers of the opposite sex kissing each other In public, the White Star officials will probably post a prohibitory notice, which will put osculation In the same class with professional gambling. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Ada Jack says he wouldn't marry the nicest girl Irving. Dolly Pshaw! As If I'd hae him! Tit-Bits. Taking a Liberty. Kerrigan We're thinking av naming him Garge Washington. Casey Have yer got Kelly's permission? That's th' name av his goat! Puck. Innocent. The Father My daughter, sir, must have the same amount of money after she Is married that she had before. The Suitor I wouldn't deprive her of It for anything. Brooklyn Life. Gas Bills. Campaign Manager Here's a bill of ?200 from one of your speechmakers during the campaign. Candidate Very well, put It Into the drawer marked "Gas bills." Ohio State Journal. Advice. Ranter We're getting up an ama teur theatrical society and we're looking for a good motto; something appropriate, you know. Banter What's the matter with "Think twice before jou act" ? Philadelphia Press. The Viewpoint. "Golf." said the ex-bicycllet. "Is a fine game, but it doesn't amount to much In the way of exercise." "Golf," remarked the x-gambler, "is splendid exercise, but It's an Infernally poor game." Chicago Tribune, Our Berlin correspondent telegraphs that in the obituary notice or the late Baron von Stumm-Halberg In the Times of the 11th Inst, the expression "political pariahs." used with reference to the ex-Court Chaplain Stocker, should read "political parsons." London Times. Bertha I do hate that Mr. Poller always making remark about one's dress. Edith You A silly! He saM your gown was a perfect dream. I don't see why you should be mad at that. Bertha I had been wearing that gown three days, and that was the first time he notlcod It. Boston Transcript. Coincidence."! ain't making any Insinua tions," said the Cornfed Philosopher, "but I have noticed that the man that sees the first bluebird every year Is the same man that once owned the fastest horse In the county and had the smartest dog and prettiest wife, and all that sort of thing." Indianapolis Press. 9 The Children Are Lonj? Awny. Frank L. Stanton In Atlanta Constitution. I set here. In the evenln'. by the old-time fire place, I see the firelight flicker, Ughtln' my wrinkled face; An I say I say to the old man as I've said for many a day: "The children hae left us lonely the chil dren are long away!" Well, he gives ma n word of comfort strokln my thin gray hair. An' he sas: "The flowers are bloomln' still, an the birds sing cerywhere!" But I feel the teardrops fallln. an' ever I algh an" say: "The children have left us lonely the children are long away!" The same sun rises each mornln' an brightens the sky above. The brlzht green on the meadow, the violets speak of Love; An' the love o' the Lord Is with us In the darkness an the day; But ever I'm mlssln' the children: They are so long away! We never can keep 'em with us In the home their lovt has blest; When the birds are fledged, forever they leae the mother nest. An' so, as the shadows gather, forever I sing an" say: h "The- children havp left us lonely thechlldrea , are long away!" J