M ..THE MORNING pREQONtfcN, -WEDNESDAY. 1TAY 22, fflfl. to rggmcra Entered at the Fostoffic at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms.. ...ldtt 1 Business Ofilce...667 REVISED EBBSCRIPXION KATES. Br Hall (postage prepaid), in Advance Dally, -with Sunday, per "month... .......- S5 Zauy, Sunday excepted, per year......... 7 50 Daly, -with Sunday, per year... 0 00 Sunday, per sear ......... ..... ....... 2 00 The "Weekly, per year 1 5 The Weekly. 3 month ..,..... W To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.l5 DaJy, per week, doiitered. Sunda included.20c POSTAGE HATES. United States. Canada and ilexlco: 30 to 16-page paper.... .................... .-le 16 to 22-page paper.. ........... r.... ...... -2c Foreign rates double. Hews or discussion intended for publication in The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the same of any individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter 6houId be addressed simply1 "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlarf does mot boy poems or stories 2rom Individuals, and cannot undertako 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, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. BoxOM, Tocoma Postoroce. Eastern Business Office IT, 8. 49 asd 5! tTr.bune building. New Tork City; 403 "The Bookery," Chicago; the S C Beckwlth special egency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. T48 Market street, pear the Palace Hotel: Gold smith Bros. 23 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 300S Market street; "Foster & Orear Ferry news stand. , For sale lnXos Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 559 So Spring' streetand Oliver A Haines. 100 60 Spring otreet. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1C12 S"arnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co 77 "W, Second South street. For sale In Ogden by W. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street On file in "Washington. D. C with A. "W. Dunn. BOO 14th N. W. ' ' On file at Bifffalb, If. X.. In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In Denr. Colo . by Hamilton & Kendrlck. -906-912 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Partly cloudy; west crly winds. PORTLAND,' WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, AN ISSUE IN FORMATION. Events are conspiring to bring the tariff issue prominently ..before the country, and with high tariff the Issue the Republicans will lose the elections of 1904. The two things that are conspiring to foster tariff agitation are theopera tions of the trusts and the prpblem of the dependencies and Cuba.' Mr. Carnegie's bestowal of $1000,000 in Scotland, made through protection, will open the eyes of many to the tariff's ultimate results, and the notable fact that nearly ail, jour; great protected trusts sen their "wares abroad cheaper than they do at homejcajajot "but pro duce disaffection 'jwlierev'er it Is dwelt upon. ThVrecent utterances of Mr. Schwab, of the steel trust, deprecating tariff reduction, wlr exert more influ ence against protection than for it among the people, whatever weight it carries with the Republican managers. The steel trust, representing as it does a capitalization of $1,100,000,000, without counting $304000,000 of bonds issued on top of the immense total of preferred and common stock, is peculiarly vul nerable to a demand fbr -withdrawal or protection. A trust in protected products is -prima facie evidence ojrT the disappearance of all need of protection. The theory of the protective tariff is that by keeping out foreign products we make sure of domestic competition sufficient to 're duce prices to the home consumer. But that reduction becomes an impossible dream the moment' that the trust steps In to harmonize managements and pre vent competition. These facts are so clear that the effort of trust magnates to retain the duties and the apparent desire of the Republican managers to support them are -exceedingly well cal culated to solidify sentiment in favor of tariff reform along these lines. Most ominous, alo is the impending struggle of our protected Interests to deny justice to Cuba and the depend encies. Large numbers have never fully persuaded themselves that our policy toward the dependencies is very far removed from the European sys tem called .colonialism. They will not oe reassured tby the rally of highly pro tected concerns to despoil Cuba,-Porto HSco and the Philippines by refusing them tariff concessions. They will, in fact, be revolted by the whole proced ure, just as they were by the Porto Hico performance. The fact is that the only obstacle at all formidable in the way of just and even generous treat ment to Cuba and the dependencies consists of these immense establish ments that have waxed fat under fa- ! voritism they bow hate to relinquish. Their stand is fast crystallizing senti ment in favor of tariff reform. There has never been a day since I the Presidential election of 1888 when J the Republicans could carry the coun try on the high-tariff issue. The an icwer to the McKinley bill was the heaviest odds (6S to 244) in the ; House of Representatives that the party has had against it since I the war. The election of 1892 disclosed a plurality for Cleveland of nearly 400.- lOOO. Since then, threats made by the Democrats against money and business have subordinated the tariff question. But it is rapidly coming to the front. There is yet time for the Republican I majority in Congress to withdraw un Idue favors from the protected trusts land deal out justice to the Spanish islands. If it 4s not done, dearly will I the penalty be paid. "BY THEIR OWN HAND." It is easy to say that Dr. Babcock was temporarily insane from Mediter ranean fever and that General "Kapus was deranged from la 'grippe. Bui these are -at best uncertain groplngs after explanations where we do not knew. There are things In every life Ithat are shrouded from the public gaze svery heart knoweth its own bltter- iess. There is, when everything else jas failed to explain, the mysterious trealm where reason sits on her pre- ious throne, and where mutinies latch and revolutions brew among the rehic forces no eye-has ever seen or jalance weighed. Maltble D. Babcock was one of the lost promising men in the American 3ttlplL He was young, brilliant- studi- 3UB, beloved, high-minded. He left Bal- lore against the earnest protest of an fectionate congregation, for the pas-j borate, last year, of the Brick Presby terian Church of New Xork City, whose julplt has always been occupied by ilstingulshed men. His salary was 12,000 a year. His future 'seemed all lat highest ambition could desire. et he died in Naples, by his own hand, Imost in the presence of his devoted J "wire, and there is absolutely no evi dence, except the fond faith and hope of friends, that the suicide was any thing but deliberate. "We shall never know the sad mystery of his taking oft. There are a hundred misfortunes of mind and body that might overtake a finely constituted nature and make life seem to it no longer worth the living. Human nature prompts us to declare and Insist that he was Insane. De mor tuls nil nisi bonum. Right there we may ourselves some day be lying, be yond the reach of remonstrance, In need of the world-wide charity that thinketh no evil and remembers only our virtues. In much the same spirit as this let us speak of the devoted husband and father, the courteous gentleman, the winning friend, who in the basement of his Portland home yesterday morn ing took hasty leave of life, its troubles and disappointments. Its embarrass ments and failures together. It seemed to him, when he thought what life con tained, that for him all the profit in it had departed. It seemed to him that what he longer could fight for and hope to gain was worth less than the strug gle. So we say In fond extenuation of his awful deed that he was insane. And yet to be sure his judgment was at fault we should have to .know all that he knew, which is impossible. To know that life would have been kinder to him than death, we should have to read the future which no man can read. To say with certainty that his mind gave "way under its stress we should 'heed insight into the things of mind and spirit before which God has drawn an impenetrable veil. We only know that he has gone, and that the places that have known his struggles and his ready smile will know him no more forever. He was a good fellow, and his was a gallant heart. Peace to his ashes! THE FUTURE OF CANADA. The son of Louis Paplneau, who in 1837 was the leader of the French-Canadian rebellion against British rule in Canada, has published a letter denounc ing the agitation against the proposed erection of a commemorative tablet to General Montgomery in the City of Quebec. Among other things, Mr, Pap lneau points out that if Canada had joined the Revolution, when urged to do so by Benjamin Franklin, instead of re maining a colony of less than 6,000,000, it would now number over 20,000,000, and "the whole trade of the Northern States would have followed the natural course of the St, Lawrence; Toronto would have outstripped Buffalo and even Chicago; Montreal and Quebec would have eclipsed Boston and New Tork." Mr. Paplneau quotes the fact that the 76.000.000 of the United States include 1,000,000 English Canadians and 1,000,000 French Canadians; he Inquires why the great bulk of the immigrants from Europe land in the United States and so few in Canada, and Insists that as an independent na tion Canada would get a fair Share of immigration. The responsibility for Canada's not being an independent na tion is placed by 3dr. Paplneau upon "the united empire loyalists who set tled in Ontario Tory refugees of the American Reolutlon an Incubus on the progress of Canada." But he can hardly blame the bishop and his priests of the day of the American Revolution for using their influence to keep Can ada loyal to the British crown, for under the treaty of Paris of 1763 Great Britain -had kept faith with the hier archy of Canada and treated the Ro man Catholic population of Canada with justice', humanity -and toleration. The bishop and his priests of that day did not feel equally sure of good treat ment at the hands of the united Amer ican colonies in event of successful re-, hellion, because the Puritans of New England and the Scotch Presbyterians had always been Intensely hostile to the Catholic Church. The action of the ancient French hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church of Canada may not haVe been far-seeing statesmanship, measured by the issue of events, but measured by the best outlook for French Catholic Canada at the time, it was wisdom for French Canada to stand by Great Brit ain, against which there was then no complaint, rather than to risk ruin to the church at the hands of Great Brit ain by cancellation of ecclesiastical privileges, or the curtailment of those .privileges at the hands or the victori ous anti-Catholic Americans. So far as the present outlook for Canada is con cerned, it is as good as could fairly be expected, making due allowance for the fact that Canada is subjected to some natural limitations of climate and geog raphy upon her capacity for growth in population and commercial empire from which the United States does not suffer. We do not believe it Is true that if Canada had joined the Revolution the whole trade of the Northern States would have followed the natural' course of the St. Lawrence; that Toronto would have outstripped Buffalo and Chicago; that Montreal and Quebec would have eclipsed Boston and New Tork. The people of Canada are a very able, energetic people, vigorous in body and mind, of high intelligence and keen aptitude for trade and commerce; but the Canadian waterways are closed through the long Winter, and the great Canadian railways are obliged during a large part of the year to forsake the ice-bound Canadian ports and seek American terminals. This causes a dis crimination against Dominion ports, so that Montreal, the natural outlet both for the Great Lakes and the Canadian Pacific, has only 7 per cent of the grain exporting of the two nations. Can it be thought that adhesion to the cause of the American Revolution would have lpwered the rigor of the Canadian Win ter? Unless the Canadian ports ceased to be ice-bound there could be no pos sibility that Montreal and Quebec could have eclipsed Boston and New Tork. The Canadian railways today prefer Portland (Me.) as a great terminal sea port to St. John. While the St. Law rence is geographically the shortest route to the British ports, It is and must always remain a dangerous route, as the high rate of insurance on ships that pass through the gulf shows beyond reasonable dispute. Canada is prosperous, and counts justly upon a continuance of her pros perity, for In her Northwest territories she has a vast tract of wheatgrowlng country from which at no distant day she will have a larger surplus for ex port than the United States. Her coal exports have a value of $4,000,000 today, against $1,000,000 up to 1885. The ex ports cf Canadian lumber In 1872 were valued at more than $15,300,851; by 1900 there had been an Increase to $23,607, 058. Canadian exports of cattle have risen from $1,152.'334 in 1S7S to $9,050,776 in 1900. The exports of Canadian but- ter in 1896 did not exceed in value $500,- O00; now they exceed $5,000,000. The value of bacon and hams exported in 1890 was some $500,000; now they have a value of $13,000,000. Her cheese ex ports have risen from between 53,000,- 1 00Q and $4,000,000 to $13,000,000. Canada's export of fruit Is worth today $3,500,000, and the export of wood pulp, begun only a few years ago. Is worth already $2,000,000 j early. The Dominion began last year to manufacture pig iron for export, and Sault Ste. MarIe will soon become a large producer. There were at least 12,000 Americans who crossed the border last year to make homes in Canada, and in the present year the Ca nadian Government expects to welcome at least 20,000 settlers from our side of the boundary. The inducements which Canada offers are millions of acres of arable land in the great, unsettled Ca nadian Northwest, which the govern ment Is ready to give away to bona fide homeseekers. The government not only offers its land free, but grants subsi dies for irrigation of arid regions; and over 200 canals have already been con structed in various places, bringing a million of waste acres under cultivation. WISCONSIN'S NERVY GOVERNOR. It Is unfortunate for the State of Wis consin that its campaign for a primary reform law should have been inter preted by his friends as a movement in antagonism to so able and efficient a statesman as Senator Spooner. Because this apprehension was Indulged is one prime reason for the betrayal of direct primary laws at the present Wisconsin Legislative session. For the rest, its defeat is, of course 'accounted for by the inevitable antipathy of machine politicians. The fight over the bill, and Governor La TTollette's ringing rebuke of the Legislature in his veto message, are advertising primary reform very effectively and putting before the coun try another representative of the sturdy outspoken type of Governor, whom the people delight to honor. Primary reform was a distinct issue In Wisconsin's election of 1900, as It was in Oregon. The Republican state platform, upon which Mr. La Follette was elected Governor of Wisconsin, con tained a pledge that a Republican Leg islature, if chosen, would enact a sweeping primary election law, by which all local, state and other candi dates, save those, of the judiciary, should be nominated precisely as such officers are now elected that is, by di rect popular vote and without the in? tervention of delegates, conventions or party caucuses This was the party promise, and Governor La Follette, in his message to the Legislature, urged that it be kept. This close parallel to the Oregon situ ation leads us to expect a' still closer" correspondence, and in this "we are not disappointed. Machine politicians, there as here, undertook to defeat the refoi m, in hope ot perpetuating their own power of naming candidates. The Wis consin Republican machine naturally wanted to perpetuate itself. It did not want to be snuffed out of existence by a law which would enable the voters to select their own candidates without machine help. Therefore, it substituted a half-way measure called the Hage melster bill, -which resembled the pri mary election law promised in about the same degree, say, as the doubtful and conflicting Oregon statutes of 1901 resemble the Bingham bill, to which our Multnomah delegation was pledged, but which they threw out In the back yard without ceremony. Governor La Follette arose to the situation without fear. He had insisted that it was the plain duty of the Wis consin Legislature to keep the Repub lican, reform promise, and he did no think it his plain duty to approve a primary election law that was trans parent fraud. Accordingly, he vetoed the "bill in a ringing message, in which he charged thatrthe act had been forced through by the joint efforts of a com bination of Federal office-holders, cor poration agents and machine heelers, who had moved in a body upon the State Capitol, taken possession of its corridors, followed members to' hotels, tempted them with vicious allurements and brought some of them to the Capi tol in a state of intoxication to vote for the worthless measure. Through its provocation of this manly veto the Wisconsin Legislature has done more to advance the cause of direct primary reform than it would have done by quiet redemption of its, pledges. All over the country the press Is ringing in praise of his sturdy action, and an Impetus is assured for primary nominations that will help it along very materially. Incidentally,1 the episode may remind us how strofigiy the veto ing and non-pardoning Executive or the stern and heavy-sentencing Judge intrenches himself in the hands of the people. . The highest qualification for affectionate and enthusiastic popular regard in a public official Is that he is "his own man." SDATIMEXTAE VERDICTS. Sentimental juries have been 'made the subject of reproach to America by foreign critics, and yet outside Great Britain the record of t European justice not only Is not better than our own, but far worse. No capital punishment is inflicted for murder or any other gfeat crime in Italy or Switzerland, and while capital punishment Is not prohibited by law in France, Austria, the German States or Russia, never theless murderers when convicted do not Invariably suffer capital punish ment, as they do in Great Britain. In France or Spain, when some great crime is committed under circumstances of great and revolting atrocity, the as sassin Is pretty sure to undergo the guillotine or the garrote. Political as sassins and anarchist bomb-throwers suffer the death penalty in France, Spain, Germany. Austria and Russia; but in France sentimental juries quite often acquit a murdered who pretends that he or she took life because of some transport of fury born out of love'or jealousy. Sometimes It is an "injured" husband who murders his wife because "he loved her so deeply" that he could ont refrain from cutting her throat, If not with neatness, at least with dis patch. Sometimes It is a "wronged" wife, or perhaps only a "wronged woman," who vindictively skills the slren,that stole her lover. Whenever It i$ possible to plead "the grand passion" in abatement for assas sination, the murderer in France has an excellent chance to escape with small punishment. Even if convicted of murder, the death penalty is seldom inflicted upon these sentimental stab bers or shooters of either sex. A mur der committed for purposes of robbery would be punished with death, but a murder committed to avenge a real or fancied social wrong would hardly be punished with the ax or rope. The wan ant for execution does not Issue; j commutation is obtained and pardon ultimately secured. Xn the 27tfi ult. Comte de Comulier, who shot and killed at Paris his beautiful wife, last November, was acquitted of the charge of murder, and the verdict was received with applause. The Countess had been separated from her nusband some four years, having left him with the ap proval of her family, because of his brutal .and inhuman violence, expressed by words and blows. The Count, in his defense, alleged that the Countess'and her solicitor, M. Leroux, were maintain ing an intrigue, and that he shot and killed her in the house of the lawyer. The friends of the Countess, who was the daughter of the Count de Vlanney, said that M. Leroux was simply acting as her legal adviser In the matter of her projected suit for divorce from the brutal husband, whose cruelty' had forced her to leave him four years be fore her death. - According to this French verdict, a man wjho has" driven his wife to leave him by abuse has a, right to murder her on the mere suspicion of an in trigue with the lawyer she employs tq press her divorce suit. This French verdict outdoes in its enormous outrage on justice the worst of our Sentimental verdicts. A man who had not lived with his wife for four years, because his cruelty had driven her to take to flight, could not murder her with im punity in America as" she left the house of her legal adviser in her suit for di vorce. And- yet this verdict was Ap plauded in Paris. An American jury might acquit a man who made strong proof that he had in a fit of Tage mur dered the Invader of his home, but no American jury Would ever acquit a man of murder who-confessed that he had shot his wife, whom he-had driven from home, to death in a public doorway on the mere suspicion that her visit to her legal adviser in her suit for divorce was merely a mask for an intrigue. The American jury would say that he was a most cruel, foul and cowardly murderer, for whoHe crime there was no" excuse or extenuation. He mur dered his wife out of pure vindictlve- ness, because he knew that the trial I for divorce wpuld make a legal record of his marital Inhumanity t and under the pretext of "wounded honor" he murdered, not the legal adviser he pre tended was her paramour, but the poor woman he had with curses driven from his home fpur years beforef The latest report off the Bureau of Statistics shows that Portland has shipped .more than one-ninth of all of the wheat exported' from the United States for the first ten months of the current cereal year. There are but three other ports in the United States that leaft Portland in prominence as a wheat exporter New Orleans and Gal veston by less' than 10 per cent, and New Tork by about 50 per cent. The foreign wheatj exports of the metropolis of the Pacific Northwest, for the cur rent cereal year, are greater than those of Philadelphia, Baltimore, Duluth, Mo bile, Norfolk and Portsmouth combined. This remarkable showing made by Portland id a great tribute to the Co lumbia River as a commercial highway. While Portland has exported one-ninth of all of the wheat 'shipped from the United States, the State of Oregon pro duced last year only' about 6ne-thirtlelh of the entire crpp of the cpuntry. It is thus plain that Portland, through its admirable locatioij, has handled the; wheat of a vast territory beyond the confineaof the State of Oregon. This wheat has floated seaward ; through Portland harbor because of a down-hill haul from the farthermost wheat farm 6f -Idaho, Washington and Oregon to Portland, and a deep and rapidly im proving channel to the sea. As with Wheat, so with other products of the farm. Portland never has been and never will be compelled to depend on the limited territory which must suffice for less favorably located cities. At the head of navigation for ocean vessels,-In the natural gateway of an em pire of marvelous natural wealth, Port land has expanded from the "mud Jandlng between Oregon City and As toria" to one of the big seaports- of the country. The Columbia River annually carries seaward from Portland a com merce of over $20)000,000, and it 1b stead ily increasing as the' channel in the river is Improved. It is not alone Port land and Oregon that profit by this highway to the sea, bu as shown by the wheat exports, this river Is hand ling the products of an immense area beyond the state line. Any improve ments that will facilitate or cheapen the handling of vessels on the river will confer relatively the same benefits on the interior 'farmer that will be enjoyed by the citizens of Portland. Andrew Carnegie quits business with $200,000,000 in cash. How did he get so vast a sum? Primarily, through the favor of the Government, which "pro tected" him against foreign competi tion during long years, while he used his opportunity to deny to labor Its just share and at the same time to extort from consumers unconscionable prices. The donation of $10,000,000 which he is now making so ostentatiously in Scot land was taken away from those to whom it rightfully belonged in America Observe that Carnegie SQt this .money under pretense of "protecting" the American worklngman. If is a consist ent outcome of the whole colossal fraud that the money now goes to Europe. The Rev. S. B. Dexter, Who. was ohe of the committee making an investi gation of drinking among soldiers at Fort Sheridan, has come out squarely as an advocate of the restoration of the Army canteen. "I have talked with Army officers and enlisted mfen, as well as the officials and citizens of High wood," he said, "and I am convinced that the canteen Is a benefit to the sol diers. It seems certain that they will secure drlQk somehow. This being so, I have become convinced that less phys ical and moral injury tcomes to them when the1 canteen Is -open." The Massachusetts Legislature re cently voted by the narrow margin of 70 to 71 to sustain the law against fish ing on Sunday. It used to be a crime to be found driving on Sunday or rid ing except "on an errand of mercy or necessity." , The valuation of Multnomah County Is to be largely increased, on the "as sessment rolls, this year. It is felt, of course, that there should be more money for local officials to spend. The taxpayer is merely the spoil of officialdom. The Rev. Percy S. Grant, of the Prot estant' Episcopal Church; New York City, in a recent sermon declared that he beUeved with, 3ohn Wesley and many other great thinkers that animals have .souls. M'KINIEYD: THE ORTRWST St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The entire country wilt" regret the af fliction which has compelled Mr, Mc Kinley to cut short his tour at a time when only about a third of It- was com pleted. In the case of the Northwest this sympathy will be mingled with dis appointment, although, of course, the disappointment will be lost sight of In the presence ot the sympathy. Historic ally, some' of the most interesting por tions of the country were still ahead of the President in the circuit which had been marked out. Mr. McKinley, who is still In California's metropolis, San Fran Cisco, has already visited its ancient capital at Monterey. He has passed through part of the locality which saw, back in those memorable Summer days of 1846, the raising of the flag inscribed with the star and the bear in that "bear flag revolt" which was designed to form the "Republic of California," prepara tory to its annexation to the United States. In the region in which he is stopping at the present moment and In part of that through which he has passed, the history was made which ad vanced the United States' southwest ern boundary to the Pacific, Mr. McKinley Is still at an age which makes him one of the youngest of the Presidents, yet the things which have just been mentioned, and many ot the principal events In the history of the region which lies just ahead of him on the route which had been marked out for blm -to traverse, have occurred within his own lifetime, The great Northwest has become United States territory since his birth. What was called the "Oregon country" figured on the map for many decades before Mr. McKinley was bom, but he was over two years old when. In the treaty with England in the. 'days of Polk, it became part of the American domain. The Tankee skipper, Gray, dis covered the Columbia in 17S2, and Lewis and Clark in 1805 sailed, down from Its headwaters to the Pacific, Astor put up his little fur-trading factory at the spot which bears his name as far back as 1811, which passed out of hlfl hands during, the War of 1812. Wyeth, Kellej , Spalding, Marcus Whitman, the Lees and many other Americans Whose names are identified with the early annals of Oregon were in that country long before the President was born, but he is almost old enough to remember the day when England,' s joint occupation of it ended, and when, as undisputed American ter ritory, the StarB and Stripes were first raised over the regiqn now comprising the States of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, and parts of Montana and Wyoming If tho Prnsident had been permitted to ipass through the course which had been marked out before his affliction came, he would have seen many things which Would have revived his recollection of one of the most interesting chapters of American history. The map of the United States as It was at his birth 1n 1844 would look odd if placed beside the map of to day. Not only did the earlier map not contain the region between the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific, but Texas also was missing from it. Very nearly 1,000,000 square miles of territory in the far West, in the contiguous part of the United States, was added to America's do main In the early days of Mr. MoKin ley's boyhood. This la about a third of the present area of the United States, ex clusive of (Alaska, and the accessions of 1S98. Swinging through r the States of Oregon, Washlhgton and Montana, on the line whldh he Was to travel on his course eastward, he would have passed over ter ritory ruled by England's Hudson's Bay Company until a 'time within the recol lection, of hundreds ot thousands of per sons still living. Utes, SiOux, Pawness, Blackfeet and others ot the fiercest war--riors which civilized men ever encountered in the wild regions of the world held sway in the great Northwest and along the country's northern border through the tier ot states marked out in his itinerary as originally arranged, until long after he reached manhood's years. The names of Long, Lander, Bonneville, Stansbury, Fremont and other explorers -would have risen In his mind as he rode through the country which they helped to bring to the world's attention. The names and personality of Kit Carson, Jim Bridger, John Colter, Jim. Baker, Chief Josephv Red Cloud, Sitting Bull and other white and red plainsmen and mountaineer's would have gained concreteness and vividness for hlm'as he swept across the vast ex panses which they have made classic ground for all Americans. The Pacific Looming; Up. 'St. LOuIs Globe-Democrat. In former days only a few scraps of news came from the region of the world's greatest ocean. The attention of civilized nations was centered elsewhere. All that has been changed within the last four or five years, especially In the United States Our western boundary has moved across the Pacific and the gates 6f the Orient are at our own doors. This coun try is happily situated In relation to the vast body of water leading to the most populous regions of the earth. At our Pacific ports a ship of any draft can re ceive her cargo and go to its destina tion along a straight line. No conti nents need be rounded and no canals traversed It is practically a ferriage from harbor to harbor, whether in Asia, Australia, South America or the innu merable Islands between Alaska and Cape Horn. No transportation Could be surer, safer, cheaper or more direct. Henceforth, it Is clear, the Pacific must play an important part In American po litical affairs. It Is to be a main outlet for the production of this country and for the expansion of Its commerce. The Nicaragua Canal, the largest wdrk of transportation improvement ever Con templated by tho United States, will be an arm of the Pacific joining West and Bast together. That canal and the sys tem of Pacific railroads will make the Uhited States the connecting link for traffic between the two hemispheres. Any political party that Obstructs the development of trade in the Pacific will run against the Americah spirit of en terprise and be run over by American destiny. The farmers, manufacturers, merchants and artisans of this country need the Pacific, with all that it implies, Ih their business, and politicians who attempt to block the way will be taught a lesson. No Limit to Our Expansion. Indianapolis News. Tbe simple fact Is that this country to day, with its opportunities and ideals, is almost as different from what It was when Bryan first made his appeal for the Presi dency as it is from the country that ex isted before the Civil War. We have, world Ideas where before We had merely sectional ideas. Our manufacturers are talking of the markets of India as they used to talk of the markets of Indiana. We see no limit to the expansive power of American enterprise, and we face it with the full flush of confidence. A revo lution is taking place in the South, as a result of these things. Losing somewhat the traditional fear of race domination, the South is facing the future as It never did before. AM0SEMENTS, In "Arrah-na-Pogue," the pliy pre sented Tiy Chirles Erin Terner at Cor dray's last night, that inimitable Irish actor proved that he is possessed M really great talents, tor not only was his Impersonation of Shaun the Post good In itself, but it was so good as to rise superior to very Indifferent support nd make the evening's entertainment well worth sitting through. As the simple-hearted, honest, happy-go-lucky Irish peasant, Mr. Verner is certainly at his best, for no character could fit him mora perfeotly. He has that rare facility of drawing a very faint boundary line be tween humor and pathos, and he Is not more droll as village wit than tender as a lover. His brogue rolls easily and naturally from his lips, for It Is the Ian. gunge they love best, and one does not hear it In such perfection this sjde of the boss. Even such a company as he has selected to support him cannot ruin the beautiful lines of Beauclcault. and certainly the playwrlter could have asked for no better Interpreter of what he in tended Shaun to say than Mr. Verner, The support was strengthened last night by the addition of Ida Maloon. a decided ly pretty little actress, who in the name part gaVe evidence of considerable tal ent. Loul9 Belmour made a good vllllan of Michael Feeny. and the remainder of the cast were on hand to assist In mak ing up the stage pictures. . "Arrah-na-Pogue" will be repeated tonight. COMING ATTRACTIONS. Harry Cora on Clarke at Cordray's. Harry Corson Clarke, who first became known to Portland play-goers as the comedian of the old Frawley company, and who his since added to his reputation by starring on his own account, will begin a week's engagement at Cordray8 next Sunday night In his new comedy, "What Did Tomkins Do?" This play was written for Mr. Clarke, and the part he assumes is the kind that fits him best, that of an old and rather hilarious gen tleman. Mr. Clarke is said to have a strong supporting company, and promises fine costumes and settings. Notes of the Stage. The Frawleys are in their fifth week at Seattle. John F. Cordray has returned from a brief business trip to Seattle. The Cummlngs stock company Is play ing a successful engagement In Los An geles. ' "Sag Harbor" made a decided hit In San Francisco, even without Mr. Heme to play Cap'n Dan Marble. Mrs. Flske recently closed her season In Detroit. She will play next Winter In her own theater In New York. So successful has been the engagement of the Nelll company In San Francisco that they are considering an indefinite stay in that city. George L. Baker, manager of the Ba ker City Theater, and formerly assistant manager of the Marquim, Is spending a few days In Portland. a 1 .. Chlneae Mother-inc-Law Treatment. Mrs. S. L. Baldwin, of Brooklyn, who lived for more than -20 years in China, has completed a translation of the accepted authority on Chinese etiquette, written by Lady Tsad, of the Han dynasty, nearly 18 centuries ago. It contains the following Instructions on the correct behavior of a wife toward her husband'e mother: When your mother-in-law sits, you. should re spectfully fetand. Obey quickly her commands. In the morning' early rise And quietly- open the doors, Making no noise to awaken her. Her toilet articles hasten to prepare; Her washbowl and tfiwei. Her toothbrush and- powder. All bring: together. Let not the Water be too cold or too hot when the motheT-uvlaw awakens: t-. All these things respectfully present to her, Then Immediately retire to an side, Until her toilet Is Completed. " Then approach and present the morning saluta tions. Again retire and prepare her tea. Quickly and cheerfully carry it to her; After which the breakfast table arrange, tlace the spoons and chopsticks straight. The rice cooked solt, and Let the meat be thoroughly done. From ancient days until now Old people have had sick teeth; Therefore let not the food be so- dry That your mother-in-law -JVith labor vainly eata. Dally the three meals Thus carefully prepare. When darkness comes. And your great one (mother-in-law) desires to sleep, Carefully for her spread the bed,' When she' may peacefully rest. And you may retire to your room. Following these instructions. All your superiors will praise ou, All that know you will esteem you as good. Belated, out Valuable. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Commissioner Schurman's statement I that the collapse of the Filipino Insur rection was due to the re-electfon of President McKinley, though belated, is valuable, as coming from one more thor oughly conversant with the ' situation In Luzon, both before and since the elec tion, than can be supposed of the news paper writers who made the same dec laration a long time previously. Mr. Schurman's evidence carries with it the clinching of the Indictment brought against the Bryanite anti-Imperialists, which accused them of being the real backbone of the Insurrection. What a delicious memory for Bryanltei to ru minate upon! Yonng Men to the Front. Boston Journal. It is a far cry to 1901, but this fact now seems certain that the Republican Presidential nomination three years hence will bo to a younger man (than Senator Hanna), to a representative of the newer type of Republicanism. The forward and expanding policies of the Republican party have drawn to it in the past few years the younfe men of the Nation, and the Republican party of today is more distinctively a yoUng men's party than ever before in its existence. Another J. Louisville Courier-Journal. "Has It occurred to jou that the intlal letter J played a not inconspicuous part in the recent game of pitch and toss ih Wart street? In former times of storm and stress we had J. Gould and J. Fisk. Now we have J. Plerpont Morgan, J. R. Kefene, J. J. Hill, J. Stlllman, J. Schlff, J. H. Moore, J, W. Gates. J. Loeb and George J. Gould.' New YOrk Press. Why omit the J public? Telling the Bee. BUgene. Field. Out of the house where the slumberer lay. Grandfather came one Summer day, And under the pleasant orchard trees He spako thla wise to the. murmuring bees: "The clOver bloom that kissed her feet And the posy bed where she used to play. Have honey store, but none so sweet As ere obr little one -nent away. O bees, sing soft, and bees, slag low; For she Is gone Who loVed you bo." A wonder fell on the listening bees, fJnder those pleasant orchard trees. And in their toll that Summer day Even their murmuring seemed to sayi "Child, O child. he grasa is cooi. And Ihe posies are waking to hear the song Of the bird that swings by the shaded pool. Waiting for one that tarrieth long." Twas so they called to. the little one then. As If to Call her back again. O gentle bees. I ha-ve, come to say. That grandfather felt asleep today. And we know by the smile on grandfather's face Re has found his dear one's biding place So. bees, alng soft, tfnd.bees, sing low. As over the honey fields you swwp To- the trees- abloom and the flowers ablow Sing ot grandfather fast asleep; And ever beneath these orchard trees Find cheer and shelter-, gentfe bes. NOTE AN11 C0MME8L n. Mr. Morgan seems to have bought every thing In Europe except the throne. Pettigrew isn't talking about the strike. He is one of the bloated himself now- The Congressional Record has not yet printed a line about ths Washington, xnur der. . . Did It ever occur to any one'thnt. per haps that Philadelphia doctor who -manded $K0,COO fee needed the menrrt Jfo twitter ho-w we cwt. the trout AVIU not bite as thejr ought. A circumstanca mott hard to bar. Jfow that they can't bo bought. The Dowager Empress has now con cluded to take a back seat. The old lady Is nearly strenuous enough to take it In the New Tork stock exchange. "I don't care." Upton Ud. "if my yacht Was beat, for another I've gachC" But theisecaad was bulU And it caused hta to wullt "When the first beat her out a whole lachu Carter Harrison Is said to have aband-5, oned his ambition to be President. It Is understood that Adlal E. Stevenson has done the same thing. Te need not feel to great. O trees. Because je leave In, Spring. For floes not every servant girl Do that same very thins? A reader contributed the following: She was returning from the links on,. foot along a shaddy by-street, but the April sun was golden, she was wearing; a new dress. She was young, and. best, of all. He was with her. She was rad iant. He suggested taking a car. "We will at the next corner," she said. "I always wait for the car at that corner. There is a little grocery store there, kept by a funny German family, a rolyrpoly" , papa and mamma and two little flaxen- haired boys. The children amuse me Immensely. I want you to see them. ' I am quite Intimate With them. They have christened me 'The Picture Lady, because one day I brought my kodak and photographed them on the grocery steps. I must show you the picture; Just too cute, with their little fat elbows and knees' poking out through the holes In their clothes. See. there Is one of them now, the elder, and my special conquest. I have accepted all sorts of gifts from him sour oranges, stale candy, dried apples, and even a dead mouse that he had caught In a trap. Dear little chapl Isn't he picturesque, now?" Then the dear little chap caught sight of her and shouted: "Hello, Picture Lady!" and dropping his bread and molasses he ran after hef'to the corner. "Say. I've got a horse!" he announced With much Importance. "Didr you know that I've got a horse?" "Why no. Ricard, I don't know," sh, answered sweetly. "Is it a rocking horse?" "Naw," contemptuously; "it's a 'live' horse, one that can eat hay, an trot, an' go 'he-he-he I" "Oh my!" gasped she, endeavoring to appear suitably Impressed, and In an evil moment she added; "la It a big horse, Ricard?" "Yes, Sir," with emphasis. "It's as' big as as "Ricard looked vainly around , for a suitable object of comparison. "Well. It's head Is blgger'n your head," fie asserted. "Did you knoW its head is blgger'n your head?" ."NoVI didn't know." VlPslots 'bigger; arid Its earab big- ieir'n your ears,, loo!" , "Mercy, what a giant horse it must he," she said. "And Its feet "Here Ricard stopped to peep under the hem of her golf dress "Oh, its feet's even so much blgger'n jour feet." A faint tinge of pink stoje into her cheeks at this, and he saw itand smlted mischievously; but Ricard was oblivious f of everything except the necessity of impressing her with tha enormous slao of his horse. "Say," he Iterated "did you know its feet's ever an ever so much blgger'n your feet?" "No," faintly. "Well they are; an" its le " "Ricard!" The word cut the golden sunshine like a knife, and Rlcard'a In nocent eyes were lifted to hers In amaze ment, "I was only tellln' you that my horse's le" with flaming face she darted at him and seized his dirty little hand. "Good bye, Ricard, good-bye, dear; the car Is s coming." She precipitated herself into the middle of the street so recklessly that the motorman rang the alarm bell", yet, as she lifted her foot to the step Rlcard's , keen little eyes were making notes, and he shouted after her, triumphantly: "There, I knowed my horse's le " The car door slammed, and she breathed. He sat down beside her. but looked dreamily back toward the grocery store. t "Dear, picturesque little chap," he . murmured. PLEASANTRIES OF PABAGIIAPHBRS Short Term Usually. Tourist How long does the Sheriff hold ofllce In this county? Native' (of Bloody Gulch Just as long as he eofltlnuea to draw first. Iuck. Bifklna (who is giving a party) What do you get an evening for waiting at entertain ments f Waiter SfUo shillings, sir; but if there Is to be singing I must aslc sir. air. Tit-Bits. And Now Look at Him! "See that magnate over there?" "Yes. What of him?" "Well. 20 years ago that man arrived in New York City with only & million dollars in his pock et." Lire. ' The Difficulty. Manager I am sorry that you wish to resign. What ! he trouble? Star It la too- much of a strain on me to try to live up to the salary your press agent says I get. Baltimore American. Greening (shopping with hto wife) Here la something- that will make you a nice dres. ifrs. Greenlng-Oh. nobody is wearing that this season Greening Well, what's the matwr With this piece? Mrt. GreeningOh. that's too common. Everybody is wearing It -Chicago News. . In Hallelnia Town. - Frank L- 8tanton in Atlanta Constitution. The namln o' the settlement wus hard to t bring about; Each feller made suggestions, an still we wus In 4ntlhtr So, we belt a big town meetin', an' 'peansd like Providence We named her "Hallelula," an we've aU been happy sence! . They ain't no growlers In it on every plane, an1 slope The sure Is shinin brightly the Stirs airwhis perin' hope; k 4 An' alt the fplks ll tell you, fer miles an miles aroun They ain't no thorns along the road to Hal lelula Town! 'Twua Insplratloa in it that Hallelula- namefj t brur.g about good feelln', it sot our soula aflame! An' what to ua air mansions in cities of re nown. So Idng as we at: happy in Hallelula Town? For there the "birds air singin'. the fields air flowerin' fine; The sun Jest don't know nothln but how"' to rise- an' shine! - - . An' what a blessed world 'twould be without a care or frown. If folks' would only emigrate to Hallelula , ' Town!