THE MOBBING OREGONIAtf, THURSDAY, MABCH 28, 1901. Entered at the Postofllce at Portland, Oregon, as sccond-clara matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms ICG I Business Office... OCT REVISEn SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance ' Dally, -with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year 7 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 O0 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 60 The Weekly. 3 months &0 To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered. Sundays ercepted.lBe Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to lC-page paper... ...... .........lc 10 to-82-page paper 2a Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication in The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlar," 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 tarn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. Sfo stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 953. Tacoma Postoffice. Eastern Business Omcc 4T. 48, 43 and 50 Tribune building. New Tort City.; 463 "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C Beckwith special agency; Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. 748 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold emlth Bros., 236 Sutter street; F. "W. Pitts. 1008 Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry sews stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 250 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 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 file In "Washington. D. C with A. YT. Dunn. 600 14th N. W. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kcndrlck. 000-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WATHER.-Occaslonal showers fin the morning, probably fair during the after noon; variable winds. I PORTLAND, THURSDAY, MARCH 28. For the title of the Portland Exposi tion of 1905 The Oregonlan has sur ges tedr AMERICAN PACIFIC EXPOSITION. The Lewis and Clark Centennial. Acquisition, of tlie Great Oregon ." Country. Expansion of the American Empire lo the Pacific Ocean. Hlshivajr of the World to the Orient. Centenary of Oregon, Western Mother of States. It is impossible In the main title to convey all the meanings that cluster about the celebration; yet the achieve ments, developments and ambitions In volved in the els-Rocky region are to an extent summed up in the -words "American Pacific." Nothing -Is so fit for commemoration in the history of the Pacific Coast as jthe Lewis and Clark expedition, for It was the first National undertaking looking to per manent occupation of the "country be "yond the Rockies. Cjalms based on discovery lay dormant, and in Califor nia the first beginnings of American assertion were in the seizure of Mon terey by Jonep in 1842, an act afterward disowned and apologized .for, and in the deliberate operations undertaken by Fremont In 1846, under instructions from "Washington. Jefferson's state pa pers make it clear that his plan of the Lewis and Clark expedition had dis tinctly in mind the ultimate acquisi tion of this country for the United States. There is, therefore, a 'logical and Important significance in the sug gested sequence of sub-titles "The Lewis and Clark Centennial," "Acqui sition of the Great Oregon Country" and "Expansion of the American Em pire to. the Pacific Ocean." Next to this recognition of the centennial of Pacific Coast expansion is the desirability of emphasizing the connection here af forded between the New World and the Old. Western civilization has long reached Cathay by way of the Cape of Good Hope, by Constantinople and by Suez. Now it Is beginning to recognize the more direct connection from the Pacific Coast of North America across the ocean to the shores of Asia. Growth of the United States and opening of China mark an poch in world history well worthy prominent place in such a celebration as this. In addition, we should include mention of Oregon as the mother of states, for out of the Oregon territory has been carved Washington and parts of Idaho, Mon tana and "Wyoming. The Oregon ter ritory originally included all United States territory between the Pacific Ocean and the Rocky Mountains. As to the Panama Canal, two things are requisite, if it is to serve any use ful purpose of the transcontinental railroads and their British stockholders in defeat of the Nicaragua project. One is that It must be rendered feasible enough, and the other it that it mustn't be too feasible. That is, arguments enough in Its favor must be devised to afford Congress and the Administra tion excuse for hesitation between It and Nicaragua, but something must be held in reserve, waiting the supreme exigency, which will render its acquisi tion and completion Impossible. Almost any amount of evidence and argument can be safely Indulged favorable to the Panama route, so It Is understood that when the time comes we can dem onstrate its physical impossibility. All this, it is scarcely necessary to observe, bas been prudently arranged. Panama has two good harbors, as against none at Brlto and a bad one at Greytown. Panama has only five locks to Nica ragua's nine; 38 miles of canal naviga tion to Nicaragua's 120. Panama can in time be made Into a sea-level canal "Without locks, traversed from ocean to ocean in five or six hours, and even with the locks under present plans in twelve hours, while the Nicaragua route will take thirty-three hours. No doubt appears to exist as to the feasi bility of the Panama Canal, provided the ordinary engineering problems be met with solutions already approved and fully relied upon, whereas in two important particulars the Nicaragua scheme is of doubtful workability. The first of these uncertainties Is whether the enormous masonry dam across the San Juan River, the key to the whole Nicaragua enterprise, is really an engi neering possibility, or would be at any time liable to complete annihilation, end the second is the awful condition of the harbor -at Greytown," "where con tinual movement of great masses of black volcanic sand, small In specific gravity and inexhaustible in supply, has already closed up a once deep and spacious harbor, and may triumph over breakwaters and dredges alike. This is the argument for Panama, and we may expect to be- regaled with it from the Isthmian Canal Commission, from railroad attorneys In Congress, from the public-spirited and disinterested Mr. Nimmo, and possibly from the Ad ministration Itself. Do not Imagine, however, that this means we should actually build the Panama Canal. Dear, nol The Colombian Government has granted an exclusive concession -for the canal which has many years to run, the best trms we can get in It are pur chase's of minority stock, and Colom bia has no end of treaties with foreign nations promising them e.qual privi leges in enjoyment of the canal when built, Imagine Congress agreeing to an arrangement of this sort! Among the sources -of Information Ignored by the recent Oregon Legisla ture In failure to widen our scheme of taxation was the thoughtful and com prehensive report of the Secretary of State. Mr. Dunbar has made an ex haustive Inquiry Into the sources of rev enue approved Tfy recent experience In other states, and the one place he par ticularly points out where we should get revenue and don't is in taxation of corporations. Tn Oregon we are still trying to raise all our money by a gen eral property tax, which Is burdensome both on real estate and business, whereas In other states they raise as much as 50 per cent of their whole revenues from Indirect taxes, princi pally on corporations. Mr. Dunbar has gathered a great deal of testimony on this head, which will be found In ex tenso In his report. His recommenda tions are thus summarized: 1. That all corporations pay a reasonable feo, graduated according to the amount of capital stock. 2. That express, telegraph, telephone and surety companies pay a tax the- same as Insur ance companies now pay. 3. An Inheritance tax. 4. AH such taxes and fees to go Into the gen eral fund. "We now get $30,000 a year from the Insurance companies. Why shouldn't we get $100,000 from other corporations? That would take care of nearly one sixth of our annual expenses. We rec ommend M?. Dunbar's report to the careful consideration of citizens gener ally. It is full of Information pains takingly gleaned from many sources, and recommendations upon many of our troublesome problems. It Is the most Important contribution that has Issued from the state printer's office since the fine report of Mr. Kincaid, Issued in 1S97. Its historical value Is not as great as Mr. Kincald's report, but In study of our economic needs It is greatly superior. It is a pleasure to learn that the able and Incorruptlbfe voting machine con tinues to find favor with Legislatures and election boards. Its use has been widely extended In the cities of New York State, and the complaints we used to hear seem gradually giving way to commendation. The first state law au thorizing the use of automatic ma chines, we learn from Mr. Whlttler's review of legislation in 1900, was passed by New York in 1892, allowing towns to use the Myers automatic ballot cab inet at elections of officers. In 1893 Michigan and Massachusetts permitted the use of voting machines at local elections, and in 1894 New York author ized their use at all elections. Michi gan passed a similar law in 1895, Mas sachusetts in 1896, Minnesota In 1897, Ohio In 1898 and Indiana and Nebraska in 1899. Within the past year Rhode Island has created a voting machine commission, to examine machines and make regulations for their use by cities and towns. In Iowa the use of voting machines has been authorized at all elections, and a commission created to examine the various makes. In 1895 Connecticut authorized the use of Mc Tammany and Myers machines at local elections. The first permanent voting machine commission was established In New York In 1897. Massachusetts and Ohio followed In 1898. Owing to pres sure of other business, and possibly to the financial unresponsiveness of the manufacturers, the cause of the voting machine has been neglected in Oregon since 3,895, when a sample cabinet was set up at Salem and industriously shown to members during the session by the noted ballot reformer, Mr. Gra ham Glass, whose efforts for purifica tion of our elections have, however, been pursued In other and 'perhaps more .noteworthy channels. WHICH WAS THE BETTER PART? The Northampton (Mass.) Gazette thinks that . "ex-President Harrison would have lived longer If he had occu pied his time with less laborious work since leaving the "White House. In stead of taking life easy, as Mr. Cleve land has, he has been hard at work on Important and difficult law cashes. This has taxed his physical forces to the straining point. Mr. Cleveland has been wiser. He has refrained from active mental labor and devoted himself largely to fishing and hunting. This has relieved him of worrying about things, past, present and to come, and no doubt contributed to his peace of mind and length of days." General Harrison died of a disease that not seldom kills strong men in their prime, a disease that does not spare men of leisure and easy life more than it does men of severe intellectual Industry. "Washington was leading a life of leisure as a planter when he took a severe cold and died of some form of pneumonia In a few days at the same age of Harrison. John Qulncy Adams, who led a life of Incessant public activity and excitement after he left the White House, died in the har ness at 80 years of age. It was Harri son's unlucky fate to contract pneu monia, a disease that the strongest and most robust'men not seldom die of, but it is altogether improbable that his professional labor since ..his retirement from the Presidency shortened his days. Like Mr. Cleveland, General Harrison was very fond of hunting ducks, and was a much better shot than his Demo cratic successor. He did not omit a proper amount of recreation from his life. He was a keen sportsman, and was fond of walking and outdoor exer cise. Other things being equal, Mr. Harrison's mode of life was better cal culated to promote length of days than that of Mr. Cleveland, who is four years younger than Mr. Harrison and has never, been as prudent In his personal habits of diet and exercise. Does any body suppose that if pneumonia should attack Mr. Cleveland he would stand much chance of life with his full habit? Does anybody suppose that Mr. Cleve land's life of comparative ease and leisure protects him from contracting pneumonia? But leaving all this su perficial speculation out of considera tion, it is by no means certain that John Qulncy Adams and Benjamin Har rison were Inferior to Mr. Cleveland in wisdom when they persisted In keeping In conspicuous touch with the people after leaving the Presidency. Mr. Har rison said three weeks before his death: I feel that I have some part In the world; that I have some duties to my country unper formed. 1 have convictions naturally and one must .stand by his convictions and spread them as widely as he can. So I am not going to go into a shell. Mr. Harrison was right; the fame he won in his profession, the very great service he did the cause of honest money in the campaign of 1896 by his speeches, were better than many ducks and much leisure. Mr. Harrison did not suffer himself to 'become fat-witted with drinking of old sack." He knew that those who are afraid of wearing out prematurely not seldom rust put. .He was a lawyer of the very first rank, which Mr. Cleveland never pretended to be. He possessed remark able gifts of public speech, which' were not part of the endowment of Mr. Cleveland. He was of a far different mental temperament and physique from Mr. Cleveland. He was not phleg matic; he was not a man 6f unusual alimentlveness; he had a keen, nervous Intellect, and had not become conspicu ous for adiposity. With his remarka ble public gifts and professional abil ity, he could not easily have withdrawn himself Into private life, and he was wise to have kept in close touch with the people In his life so long as he felt that he had any message to deliver that would command an audience. He was doubtless happier for his public and professional activity and labors, and doubtless he was more useful than If he had shot many more ducks and caught many more fish than has Mr. Cleveland. Mr. Cleveland doubtless de cided wlsel3r for himself, but we cannot say that General Harrison did not choose the better part, even If a life of absolute leisure would have prolonged his days, which Is exceedingly doubt ful. It Is not worth much to "live an oak a hundred year, to fall a log at last, dry, bald and sere." Better the short, active life of Harrison after he left the White House than the mere vegetation of jphn Adams, Madison, Monroe, Tyler, Fillmore and Pierce. He was a live man to the last; not a thing of political tradition and fading histori cal memory. A JiATIOXAL MILITIA. In 1792 Congress passed a National militia act which embodied the princi ple of universal military service. This act of 1792 has never been enforced. In war time the Federal Government has had recourse to the volunteer sys tem, for while It had a National mi litia law it had never attempted to support and maintain a militia. The states have organized their own militia under state laws, and while the Presi dent has the power under a statute of Congress to call" out these state troops for certain purposes, it is pretended that he cannot send them out of the country. The Government by its action has assented to this idea, for in 1898 the Btate guards were In several states mustered Into the United States service as volunteer regiments under a Federal law. The majority of our states do not maintain a home guard that is worthy of support. When the war with Spain broke out, not more than three states had militia ready to go to the front. Most of the states sent a rabble of raw recruits Into the camps of Instruction, and In many coses they were not even provided by their state governments with uniforms or guns. However de sirable It might be to have a reformed militia system, whose entire body would be Instantly available at the outbreak of foreign war in the service of the General Government, so that It could be sent beyond the borders of the country without the disorganization in cident to our Spanish "War, It Is not likely to be realized. Reorganization, adequate equipment and the training necessary to create an efficient body of citizen soldiery would cost more money than Congress would consent to appro priate, for. Including pensions, the United States npw expends annually about $387,000,000 for military and naval purposes. - Our regular Army of 100,000 men now costs $152,000,000 as compared with an expense of $156,000,000 for the German Army, five times larger. There Is, therefore, no reasonable hope that Con gress will reform our Militia system and create a National militia worthy of the name. We shall go on in the old way. A few states will take pains to provide a respectable body of National Guards, but the vast majority of the states will have nothing better than a nominal militia -utterly worthless to the General Government In time of war, and only a source of amusement to their fellow-countrymen In ' time of peace. Fortunately, the United States from Its situation and Its enormous re sources Is, as Sir Charles Dllke says, ""able to wait for war before making war preparations. No power will attack the United States. All powers will submit to many things and yield many strong points rather than fight the United States." "We are not likely to be at tacked, and we are not likely to need a stronger standing Army than we have at present. The popular Intelligence of our people perceives this, and for this reason It will always be difficult to place our military system upon a re formed basis. We are likely to go on without reformation until at some fu ture day, near or remote, we find our selves face to face with a great war against a great war power. What should we do? We should do Just what we have always done from the War of 1812-14 to the War with Spain; we should flounder about and blunder day and night for a few months, and at length regain our self-possession and our Yankee common sense and energy and beat our enemy to a pulp before we were through with him. With providence enough on part of the Government to keep a large surplus Btock of the most modern arms and ammunition always on hand. It would be an easy matter to repel the Invasion of any part -of our country by creating large bodies of mounted riflemen, who should be able, with the support of the highly trained horse batteries of the regular Army, to destroy any Army that would be able to invade our shores. Out of 75,000,000 of people It would not be difficult to raise rapidly an Army of 500,000 men, who were good shots and good horsemen. In a civilized country In possession of plenty of men who could ride and shoot, It would be easy to make short work, of an Invading army, provided the mounted Irregulars, who practiced the Boer tactics, were brave men, masters of their weapons and good hdrsemen. The comparative ease with which an army of Invasion could be repulsed from our shores ac counts for the popular Indifference to the reform of the National militia sys tem. With Great Britain the situation Is not Identical, for her shores are within easy reach of a hostile fleet, and she has but 40,000,000 of busy people upon which to draw upon for her mi litia. And yet we believe that Great Britain, by adopting some modified form of the Swiss system 'of conscrip tion, could defy Invasion by all Europe, even If her whole regular army was dispersed in South Africa, India and China. The Swiss -system dates from 1S74, and under what might be called "com pulsory volunteering" Switzerland is able to turn nearly 300,000 peaceful cit izens Into a real army on a "war foot ing as quietly as a railway company handles a sudden Increase of traffic If the Swiss system were adopted In the United Kingdom, three or four mil lion of citizen soldiers could be quickly placed In the field. Sir Charles Dllke says that Switzerland has a cheap but highly efficient militia, "the most Inter esting point about Which Is that, while field artillery Is supposed to be difficult of creation and only to be obtained upon a costly and regular system, Swit zerland produces an excellent field ar tillery upon a militia footing." The Swiss militiaman takes his kit and his arms home with him, and is bound to keep them always fit for inspection. Outside of about 200 professional sol diers, all the men In the Swiss Army are paid at certain dally rates for the actual time when called out, so that there Is no such thing as a permanent military caste, as in France. The ar rangements for mobilization, for com missariat and transportation are equal to that of any army In the world. By law every Swiss adult Is- bound to serve, but as the physical test Is a rigorous one, nearly 50 per cent ore rejected. The recruits who are accept ed in their 20th year are finally re tired at 50, and at this age they have devoted to drill a sum total of not quite six months. To this kind of cheap, non-burdensome but efficient system of conscription Great Britain will come at last for home defense, and In event of threatened Invasion by a great power such a system would be the best pos sible preparation of our people against impending war. The Hawaiian Legislature has under consideration the plan to establish at some suitable . point an experimental station for the systematic study of lep rosy. An appropriation of $25,000 will be made for the purpose. So great Is the dread of the disease that suspects are often sent to the leper settlement at Molokai Island, who would not, It Is be lieved, upon proper examination, be found to have a trace of it During a recent visit of the Joint committee of the Legislature at the leper colony sev eral of these unfortunates were found to be without the slightest trace of the disease. If such persons are able to stand satisfactorily a bacteriological examination, they will be dismissed as cured. As indicating the difference be tween intelligent consideration and the superstitious and Ignorant abandon ment of leper suspects to a horrible fate, the proposition to study this dis ease from the standpoint of modern medical science Is striking. The de spair of physicians for ages, leprosy, when once established, has not In the light of medical knowledge abated one Jot of the horrors that clung to It in the early history of mankind. The bac teriologist, however, has made himself acquainted with the cause and carrier of this disease, and now asks oppor tunity to demonstrate his power over It, not in a remedial but in a preventive sense. Opportunity will be given him sooner or later, of course, and perhaps nowhere else In the civilized world Is there a better place for his demonstra tion than In Molokai, the enforced home of so many of the bloated, pallid, rot ting dead-alive victims of this most unclean scourge. Rumors regarding the relations be tween the Union Pacific and Central Pacific are too numerous and explicit to be trustworthy. It is probable that Mr. Harrlman himself would give something to be as sure as some of the papers seem to be that he had acquired control of the Southern Pacific. There appears to be no doubt that such a deal as has been written about has been attempted, and probably It will turn out successful; but there has been no measuring c strength and no ab solute assurance that the end sought has been accomplished. At the South ern Pacific annual meeting to be held In San Francisco April 3 the control of the property will be determined, and be fore that time nothing can be known positively as to Its exact status or Its relations with the "Union Pacific It seems very probable that close rela tions will be established, but nothing more than this can be said now. An educational trust to' embrace all the universities would be a good thing In one respect If It abated the rivalry now so prominent. The suggestion might be passed over without harm to the rellgloUB denominations of Protes tantism. Meanwhile, when we add to the union, labor trust and the various farmers' trusts one of universities, where will be the glassless house from which Industrial combinations can be assailed? So Kipling Is coming back to Amer ica to live. RestleBs as other geniuses, wherever he goes he wishes he were somewhere else. His neighbors seem to have somewhat of a reciprocal feeling. The California prune trust has cut Its prices for export. Will Mr, Babcock dare include the farmer in his bill to remove tariffs from trust-controlled products? Mr. Jeffries and Mr. Ruhlin will meet at San Francisco. It is thought the city has enough telegraph facilities for the match if It should not come off. General Corblnls going to the Phil ippines to study the military situation. The admission of the necessity Is quite a come-down for the gentleman. "Our Blnger" may have to get out of the Land Office. Now we know why he wanted to be Senator. PORTLAND AND SEATTLE CLIMATE The Seattle boom idea, which pervades the tentative grandeur of that fustian city, stops short ofno trick to ruddy the glow of Its Aurora. Nor do its citizens blush to goad the rosy-fingered goddess on to blowzy haste. One of the ways they have of booming their -town is that of misrepresenting their neighbors. Port land is used to -hearing itself slandered and does not mind It any more. But the statement has been advertised again that Seattle's climate Is better than Portland's, and that Its rainfall is less. The newspapers of Seattle are in no wise superior to their environment. They are well Impregnated with the swelling pomp ousness of the Seattle embryo, and so hardened Is the epidermis of their con science that they no longer feel the pricks of remorse when they distort the truth. The Post-Intelligencer the other day said that Portland's average rainfall in 10 years was 45.01 inches, and Seattle's 36.1S inches. The last figures are right, but the others are far on. If the authority came from the Weather Bureau at Se attle. Uncle Sam would do well to have the office disinfected of the Seattle idea. But the occasion of the false, statement Is interesting for thereon hangs a tale. Last week members of the Chicago Commercial Club visited the Northwest. Portland received them with conspicuous hospitality, showed them the nonpareil sights which all visitors delight In, and. under the handicap of a curtailed stay, entertained them in the best manner it knew. Nature generously assisted the citizens, arrayed herself In her most cap tivating charms, and smiled happy beams of sunshine all the timfe. But the Chl-cagoans- had pressing duties elsewhere, and, despite the bewltchihg Circe of Ore gon climate, left abruptly, leaving a trail of regrets behind. The Fallacy of Fame. These gentlemen had heard a great deal about Seattle. Seattle, the wondrous har bor, although Tacoma has a better; Se attle the commercial port, although Ta coma does more shipping the beauties of Puget Sound waters, the raptures of Puget Sound air; the ecstacies of Its mountains, more potential in Imagination, fable and song than celebrated Parnassus or mighty Olympus; the enhancements of superb Rainier and the velvet undula tions of its foothills; In fine, the inimi table grandeur with which the Almighty had painted that Inland sea In prepara tion and for the sole purpose of a mighty city on the western shore, all this and more, which present space cannot repro duce from guide books and boom liter ature, had filled the seething expectation of the visitors with such shaping fan tasies that apprehended more than cool reason ever could comprehend. But they cannot be blamed for their gullibility. If Oregon scenes are so grand unsung, they thought, of course, that those of Puget Sound must be grander still, since sung, for of Buch is the deceptive fidelity of boom literature. So, after a feast on Mount Hood's beau ty, on went the Chlcagoans, in the fond ness of their hope, on to Puget Sound. Tacoma got slight attention, for the vis itors were impatient to get to Puget Sound, and, of course, Tacoma is only a city of destiny, while Seattle Is the wholo thing over1 there. They arrived, they looked, they saw nothing. "This Is not Seattle," they thought in courteous si lence. Again they sought a single local habitation for the diverse shapes of their imagination Not a single one. All was as blank as a fog. They stepped down from the cars to the soggy, teredo-infected wharf which the city of ambition calls a depot, and vainly looked for the marks which Nature had set to the grandeur of a "Western idea. But It was raining. Drip, drip, until the world seemed like one vast sponge, even more than when the Alaska rush was on. They looked to the harbor; nothing but the dimpled serenity of the tide leaping to meet the rain. They looked to the city; nothing but the dingy, soggy shacks of a frontier town. They looked to heaven. But the Infinite hid his smile behind a wet blanket. They looked to each other. A common mind seized them. They gripped their purses with convulsive memory of rumors. Then they drove to the -shanty hotel, wonder ing if even this climax of creation was a hoax and ruminating on the philosophy of a gentleman named Shakespeare, who observed, among other things, that the ample proposition that the hope makes fails in the promised largeness. How Seattle Got Even. Seattle pride was hurt. Immediately It bethought Itself of getting even. It had often sneered at Portland as a "Web foot" town and boasted of less rain than Portland, so here, obviously, was a case for explanation. Therefore, the very estimable "Pee Eye" came out In a long article to tell all about It and to furnish sop for citizens. Of course, facts made no difference with the "Pee Eye." Pre varication is the food on which certain sorts of greatness feed. Out of the arch ives of its genius the paper evolved Port land's average rainfall for 10 years to be 43.01 inches. The fact is that the climatic conditions of Western Oregon and West ern Washington are almost Identical. Both have a large rainfall, but neither less nor more than the other. At some places on Lower Puget Sound the pre cipitation approaches or- exceeds 100 Inches. The further up the Sound the less the rain falls. Tacoma has slightly less rain than Seattle, and Portland slightly, but not appreciably, more than either. The following Is the record in inches for the past seven years. Portland I Seattle 1S94 39.32ilS94 41.05 1S95 30.761S&5 29.69 1895 44.131S9G 42.S3 1S97 42.42 1S97 41.53 1898 33.90 1833 29.28 IS93 37.13 1900 36.4S 1S99 42.21 1900 3S.22 Average 3S.7I Average .36.85 The record of rainy days of the two cities is: Portland lS9t , 1893 , 1S96 , 1897 1S9S 1699 1900 , Seattle 1894 1895 1896 1897 .176' .1351 JS7 .130 .lb5 .157 .154 .181 .162 .164 .1G4 .144 .164 1898 1899 i 1900 .163 Average 159 Average ..163 fol- The record of mean temperature lows: Portland ! Seattle 1894 .51.9 1894 .50.4 .51.2. .51.1 .51.5 .52.2 .51.3 .52.8 .52.0 1S95 1896 1S97 1S98 1899 1900 .52.0 1S95 .52.6 .53.1 .52.6 .51.8 .53.5 1896 1897 1893 1899 1900 Average 52.5 Average Sheldon's Latent. New York Evening Sun. The Rev. Charles II. Sheldon proposes another reform. He wants a Christian theater. "And by Christian theater," he says, "I would mean also a theater owned and controlled entirely by Chris tian people, as much sb as any church organization. In addition to all that, I would mean also by Christian theater an Institution in which all the actors and actresses were decidedly and positively Christian men and women." Of course, the plays of Shakespeare and loliere. Goldsmith and Sheridan, Ibsen and Suder mann woud be 'excluded. But If the playwrights and actors had to be Chris tians, why should the same rule not hold In the case of everybody. else, down to the speculators on the sidewalk and even the persons in the audience? The Pity of It. New York Evening Sun. The good people of Cincinnati dearly love a Duke. They hoped that a chair broken by Mr. Zimmerman's son-in-law, Manchester, would be offered for compe tition at the sale of the household effects of the father-in-law. It Is a pity that some of His Grace's receipted bills were not sold as relics. They would have been delightful curiosities to add to the collec tions of these admirers of an effete arls- l tocfacy SANGER, PLATT AND DEPEW. New York Evening Post. Colonel Sanger's appointment as Assist ant Secretary of War undoubtedly gives us an official of greater technical fit ness for his position than that of any man who has filled it for a generation. His personal qualifications are also ad mittedly of the highest. The only thing which will give his friends a single qualm Is the fact, which Piatt hastens to reveal, that Colonel Sanger, while his appointment was pending, went to the boss' office to explain away the crime of being an Independent Republican and re former. This was done, we presume, at the suggestion of those eminent "harmo nlzers," Secretary Root and President McKlnley. Any one can see now, how ever, that It was entirely needless. It did not reconcile Piatt to the appoint ment; that remains bitterly distasteful to him; it only gave him the chance to say in public with malicious joy that Colonel Sanger crawled before him like any other office-seeker. How much more Boldierly and manly an attitude it would have been to refuse to crouch, and If there was any speaking the devil soft to be done, to have left it to experts In that art, like Root and McKlnley! As for Piatt, the Sanger appointment Is evidently one cup more of humilia tion for him. He professes to like It. but the wry faces he makes as he drains it off are more eloquent than words. Never was an arrogant boss compelled bo openly to stultify himself. Up and down. In nubile and In private, he had declared that Colonel Sanger would not and could not be named for the Assist ant Secretaryship; that If he was, he could not be confirmed by the Senate. With a rashness of which he would not have been guilty in his more astute days, ho committed himself In the most hard and fast way. and risked his entire pres tige as autocratic dispenser of New York patronage on this single cast. He bas lost, and the watchful politicians will see In It still another reason to shake their heads sorrowfully .and write "Ichabod" after the name of the once all-powerful boss. Senator Depew, of course, now laughs merrily at the whole affair. His furlbund airs of Tuesday and Wednesday were all a joke, It appears. He must have been winking all the time when he explained to the reporters how It was his solemn duty, his sworn Constitutional obligation, to oppose the Sanger appoint ment. "My oath, my oath," he said, tragically, "dc not ask me to violate that!" Alack! It was only his excellent fooling. If we ever take him seriously again, may We be condemned to hear his old stories. LOW PRICES FOR EXPORT. A Fale Position That Cnn't Expect to Last Ffcrever. New York Journal of Commerce. Selling abroad at lower than domestic prices Is not a new thing, but until re cently it has been merely an Incident of trade. It is now looming up into a lead ing feature and arousing ill-will In un expected political circles. The foreign market has been of relatively small ac count; no great effort was made to secure It; if orders came from abroad they were filled with the sort of goods that were manufactured for the home trade, often to the Injury of the foreign importer, as so many of our Consular reports show. The manufacturer was glad to sell abroad a surplus that was pressing heavily on the home market, and there were sub stantial economic reasons why he should sell this surplus at anything above the actual cost of production. But the Wire Nail Trust of four or five years ago used the foreign market as a means of keeping Its plants employed while it was raising domestic prices to three or four times what they had been, and by making an abnormal profit on the goods sold at home practically subsidized the exports. Since that time the exports of Iron and steel have become a large factor In trade. Oftentimes the open price has been lower here than abroad, but rall3 have been re peatedly sold abroad for less than the prices maintained here by a close combina tion of the rolling mills assisted by a sub stantial duty on foreign rails. The same has been true of some other products, and It Is believed to be a common prac tice. The bill of Mr. Babcock to put steel products on the free list has received an amount of favorable consideration from Republicans that Is surprising. The lead ing iron and steel Industries need no protection, but they object to a removal of the duties because it Is their plan to exclude foreign competition from the home market and make abnormal profltB hero out of which they can make good losses If they have to be Incurred In meeting foreign competition abroad. The public sentiment which has cheerfully supported the protective system, In the belief that our Industries could not meet foreign competition at home without pro tection, looks with small favor upon the protection of Industries that can export their goods to every quarter of the globe. The position of these Industries is very much like that of the Russian sugar in dustry; with the assistance of the Gov ernment, domestic prices are maintained so high that goods can be exported at a loss if necessary to find markets for them, and are normally sold to foreigners for much less than they are sold to our own citizens. We laugh at 'the Germans for taxing themselves on sugar In order to sell sugar cheap, perhaps at less than cost, in this country and England: but many of our people, many of the Influen tial men in the Republican party, believe we are doing exactly the same in regard to many articles, notably Iron and steel. We are paying prices that cover ex ceptional rates of profit to enable the manufacturers to sell their goods to for eigners for less than they will sell for at home, and perhaps In some cases for even less than cost. The comments upon Mr. Babcock's bill Indicate that this pol icy Is regarded with marked disfavor, and if the exports continue to be no mere incidental Unloading of a surplus, but an essential part of the trade which the manufacturers are eager to secure, it may be doubted whether the public will continue Indefinitely to sustain a eystem of high prices at home in order to make low prices abroad. t SILVER-TONGUED. An Expression as Old as Imaginative Literature. HAMMOND. Or., March 26. (To the Ed itor.) To settle a local argument, between men who have no access to books of ref erence, will you kindly answer the follow ing? To whom -was the expression, "the silver-tongued orator," first applied? T. FRANZEL CRAWFORD. It would be Impossible to answer pre cisely such a question, for the epithet is 03 old as imaginative literature. "Golden mouthed" was a common epithet applied to an orator in Greek literature, and from the days of Fisher Ames, In Washing ton's Presidency, down to date, we find "silver-tongued" applied to every man of notable eloquence by his- admirers. Ed ward Everett, Henry Clay, Wendell Phil lips and E. D. Baker have been called "silver-tongued," and a good many orators of far less note, including Tom Fitch, of Nevada. Of course, all eloquent men are not "silver-tongued," for such an epithet was never applied to Webster; the epithet properly "refers to a peculiar melodious sweetness of tone In the orator, but it has been applied to a good many public speakers whose voice had a deal more brass than silver m It. NOTE AND COMMENT. !' Wanted A few thousand more.-names for the 1505 fair. It looks as if the only way to supres3 Mrs. Nation Is to elect her Vice-President. The announcement of the failure of the Delaware peach crop is due in a few days. . - . The end of the Boer War seems to be subject to postponement without previous notice. The Chicago drainage canal flows mer rily on, in spite of the damning of St. Louis people. It is all very w.ell to advise the sluggard to go to the ant, but he usually winds up at the uncle's1. Emperor William has said enough fool ish things in public to be called tho Bryan of Germany: The libraries Mr. Carnegie has founded, being all In America, "will not Increase the demand for William Waldorf Aster's book. ", Now doth the foolish, little bea . "Waste every shining hour By making stores of honey that He never will devour. King Edward has applied for an In crease of salary. He can Ho this with out fear that his employers 'will tell him. that they can find a hundred men who will fill his position better for half as much as they are paying him now. A Russian military paper tells of a Lieu tenant who overheard a Sergeant giving a recruit a short lecture upon his duties. "The military service," said the Sergeant, "requires little prayer to God, .and a. strict attention to the orders of & supe rior." Somewhat astonished at this singu lar definition of military duty, the dfflcer ventured to ask the Sergeant for his au thority. Whereupon the Sergeant pro duced an ancient volume, containing the following: "The military service re quires little; prayer to God, and strict at tention to the orders of a superior." A Washington Mrs. Malaprop has broken out again. A learned gentleman was telling In her presence recently of some discoveries of excellently well-preserved human remains mummies. In fact somewhere out In A Izona or In Texas, or In some other dry part of the United States. "They were In a really wonderful state of preservation," said he. "I'm not at all surprised to hear It," said Mrs. Malaprop, who never Is sur prised to hear anything. "I'm told things keep 'forever in those dry climates. Tho soil IS so Impregnated with alcohol, you know." ' The late Queen Victoria was very anxious that the royal farms at Windsor should be carried on by her successor, and she has left her famous herds of Shorthorn, Devon and Hereford cattle to King Edward. The Shaw and Flemish farms were established by the Prince Consort, and they have been principally devoted to tho breeding of pedigreed stock, and for many years past the Queen had been a large prize winner at the lead ing shows. The dispersion of her royal herds would have been a national loss, but they will be 'fully maintained In every respect by King. Edward. The. Queen also had farms at Osborne and at Aber geldle Mains, where t.here is a very fine herd of pure-bred Aberdeen Angus cattle. The most successful scheme for ascer taining who are really the good clerks in any branch of the Goyernment service was recently employed by Census Direc tor Merrlam, upon whom the duty of get ting rid of some of hi3 help now lies rather heavily. The usual way for ascer taining the ones to be dismissed is to ask the plain question. But Merriam did it the other way. He asked which of the clerks each division chief wished to keep. Each chief, with an eye single to having his work done well, made ou a straight list. No drones were included in It. The chiefs thought they would be -allowed to retain these clerks. Instead of that the director ordered the transfer of these good clerks to divisions in wrilch there are to be no dismissals at the' present. Now the chiefs who were caughj by the trick are wondering how they are to fin ish the work they have on hand with the inferior clerks that are. left. PLEASANTRIES OF PAItAGRAPHERS In Puritan Massachusetts. "No, I always at tend church In the evening." "And why not In the morning?" "In the morning! Why, t golf In the morning." Cleveland Plain Dealer. At the Opera. "You see that woman up there In the first tier of boxes That's Mrs. Glltsoaker." "How can you tell? Her face is turned the other way." "I know her voice." Life. Educational. "Now." paid, he. "do you really think the theater an 'educational institution?" "I know It Is." said she. "Some of the loe He"t fashions ever seen originated oh the stage." Indianapolis Press. Tsacher Jimmy. It you found IS pennies and another boy should take two-thirds of them away, what would 'each of you .have? Jimmy I'd have six pennies, an he'd have a good thumpln 'less he'd handed back the rest of cm mighty quick. Tit-Bits. "You may not have a saloon In the village," remarked the recent Kansas arrnal, "but It must be dreadfully unhealthy other wayi. "Why do you think so?" "For the last hour I've noticed a constant stream of men going Into that drug store." Philadelphia Times.. Dear Girl. Papa There, there! You needn't klBs me any more. Tell me what you want. Out with It. Daughter I don't want anything. I want to give you something. Papa You do? What? Daughter A son-in-law. Jack 'asked me to speak to jou about it. Philadelphia. Press. t The Song- of the Trnec. ' Josh Wink In Baltimore American. (Lord Kitchener has arranged a seven-day truce to prepare for peace In South Africa.) The drums of the war are silent, The guns of the war are still. The shout3 of the war have died away On crimsoned plain and hill. k ' : The battle flags and bannera , 4- Sway Idly In disuse. And the smile of peace makes all things bright, "When the bugles sound a truce. The Tjugles sing H gladly . They sing It with might and 'ma'n And the echoes wake from peak to peak To carry the refrain. From camp to camp the message Bids all the warfare cease. And the battle smoke drifts far away, "With the buglas singing peace. A i And the song of peace sighs softly O'er every sunken mound; It chants In the saddest symphony A requiem profound; It whispers to the dreamers: "Your country loves the beat The gallant ones who died for her"- "With the bugles singing "Rest." , A truce to the crashing cannon j A halt to the marching feet For 4he bugle calms all the wrath of men ' "With Its benediction sweet, And war no more may ravage. Nor Death again stalk loose, ' For the song of peace enthralls us all. "When the bugle sounds a. truce.