fjrv TPE MOUSING OEGONrAN,' MONDAY, tviAT 27, 1901. . awipigpm v , Enter! et Jhc osfbOce at Portion fl. Oregon. , ,, i fei second-class matter. i (F ' i "j - , " ' ""TELEPHONES. ' " - - Editorial Rooms..... 106 1 Business Office.. .667 REVISED SUBSCBIPTJOX BATES. By Mall (postage prepaid).. In Advance DUly, with Sunday, per donU:.'i........? SS Dally, Sunday excepted, freryear... 7 50 Dally, -with Sunday, per year............. 9 00 Sunday, per year ........................ 2 00 The "Weekly, per year 1 50 The "Weekly, 3 months ....... ....... &0 To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered. Sundays excepted-lSc Dally, per week, delivered. -SundayOneluded.20c POSTAGE KATES. United States. Canada, and 3&eXleol 30 to 16-page paper,. ........... ...-W.........1C 16 to 82-page papers. .. .2c Foreign rates double. ' News or discussion Intended for publication in The Oregoniaa. should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the same of any Individual. letters 'relatlncto advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should .be addressed hnplyJ"Tbe -OregonUm.' The Oregoniaa does -not bay poems cr stories "rem Individuals, and cannot "undertake' to re turn any manuscripts cent to it -without wUci tatlon. -No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. ,,. T ' Puge$ Sound JJurean Captain A. Thompson, office sjjy. 7Paclc.vj3ine,"Tacoma. Box 855, TacomaPoBtolBceT-Sv - - Eastern-Business Office a, 8. 49 J13?0 Tribune building, New York City: -469 "The Bookery," Chicago; the, S. C. Beckwith special agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Franclsco-vby J. K. Cooper, 748 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. TV. Pitts. 300S Market street: Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand For ala to Los. Angeles iy B. F. Gardner. ?50 So, Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 10ft So. Spring otreet. For Bale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn treet. For sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Far-jam 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 at Buffalo, N. Y., In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House newstand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrlck. 000-912 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers and cooler; southerly shifting to northwesterly -winds. , XORTLA-VD, MONDAY, 3IAY 27, 1901. AJfdTHER. "WHITSIAX MYTH ESSAYIST- There are persons whose nature is Such that they must have heroes to "worship or io 4eify. It is this class of persons that adheres to the Whitman myth. Plain facts of history do not satisfy them. They want fables. For plain facts are prosaic, and fables ap peal to the Imagination, of which they are the offspring. Whitman was a veritable, though merely ordinary, historical character. He "was a pioneer of like quality with others. The contention of his wor shipers is that he "saved Oregon." That is, Oregon would have been lost to the United States but for his "Win ter ride." Nothing could be more unfounded. Admit that the purpose of his journey. and its sole purpose, was to Impress on the Administration at Washington a sense of the importance of Oregon and of the urgency of action for main tenance of the claims of the United States. That "was not the sole purpose of his journey, but only an incidental one. But admit it was the sole purpose. In fact, it was unnecessary, and the result would have been the same had he never made the Winter journey, and indeed had he never existed. No candid mind, without prepossessions, can study the history and reach any other conclu sion. There was an. American settlement in Oregon which was strong enough to assert the sovereignty of the United States, and -which, during Whitman's absence, organized the Provisional Government The first large migration to Oregon that of 1843 which had been assembling on the Missouri fron tier tor a. year before its start, was not organized by Whitman, for he, in fact, had nothing to do with it, and could have had nothing to do with it, till he overtook it on the Upper Platte, after which time he was very serviceable to it as an adviser and guide. But it could have come through, and no one doubts that it would have come through, without him. This reinforce ment confirmed the American ascend ancy, which already had been asserted In the country. In the Homiletic Review for July a son of Rev. Samuel Parker, who came to Oregon the year before Whitman came, is to publish an article which will assert once more that Whitman "saved Oregon." Advance sheets of the article are already furnished. But the effort is the fruit of the same fond ness for myth, and of the same dispo sition for hero worship so often manl iest heretofore. Nobody questions the historical p?Bc fiCWhitman among our pioneers. He did important service; but he didn't "save" Oregon. In fact, there never was actual danger of the loss of Oregon to the United States Irom the time of the restoration of the old status, after the War of 1812. The only question was what the northern boundary should be. It was the murder of Whitman that furnishes the ground for the myth which attributes so great results to his work as a pioneer. There Is a sort of people who worship the man whose life is a sacrifice to an effort or cause. With such, the Im agination supplies everything necessary to the apotheosis or deification. aioxcr IX SHIPS. There is great profit in ships, and subsidies are not needed. The fact that money is rushing into ship-building is proof ,enough. The great steamships are making large sums of money. Sam uel A. Wood, in Ainslie's Magazine for June, discusses the ocean steamship. as a type of modern business. He pre sents "valuable statistics as to capital, expenses and profits. The money-makers in the Atlantic trade, he says, are the large carriers of modern speed, such as the Hamburg American liner Pennsylvania and the Cunarder Ivernia. Vessels of this class cost from., $1,000,000 to $1,500,000 each. Such vessel earns $50,000 in a single voyage, at a cost of $20,000. But it costs $45,000 to run such a ship as the Xeutschland across the sea; yet when the passenger traffic is heavy the voy age pays well. Mr. Wood estimates that the cost of all the passenger and cargo carriers in service between Europe and the Atlan tic ports of America is $250,000,000. The wealth of the Hamburg-American Steamship Company is represented by ships .nd piers valued at $50,000,000. It employs oh its fleet 7000 persons and gives employment on land to nearly 9000. The White Star. Line pays New York City $217,000 annual rental for piers; the Cunard IAne, $120,000. and the American Line. $SS,000. Of the ships docking at New York, the estimated value is hs follows: The Hamburg- American Line, $15,000,000; North Ger man Uoyd, $15,000,000; White Star, 512, 000,000: Cunard, $10,000,000: American, Including: Red Star, $10,000,000; Atlantic Transport, $10,000,000; French, $8,000,000; Holland-America, $7,000,000. The Hamburg-American iiine's fleet consists of 109 ocean-going craft, of about 600,000 tons. The North German Lloyd's ton nage Is more than 500,000. The British line, the Peninsular & Oriental, has 58 ships, of 313,000 tons. There are about 100 American steamships In the foreign trade, at the port of New York, some of them of high rank. All the leading American shipyards are crowded with orders. Subsidies are not needed, and if subsidies are paid the money will go to men and to com binations already enormously rich. The great subsidy bill is a shameless graft. Tet it will be powerfully supported, and there is danger it may pass. THE BXGLISH NATURE. Of the charming essay which Pro fessor Brander Matthews contributes to the June Harper's, the most dam aging criticism that can be made Is, perhaps, his curious choice of its name; for while it purports to be a discussion of the debt our English language owes to good -King Alfred, it Is in reality a thoughtful and illuminative study in British and American ethnology. He traces the source of these two allied characters, In their laws, language, political- and literary achievement, and his conclusions are both interesting and Instructive. Mr. Matthews takes his text from that chief expositor of Eng lish, Stopford Brooke, thus: "The poetry of England has owed much to the dif ferent races which mingled with the original English race; it has owed much to the different types of poetry It ab sorbedGreek, Latin, Welsh, French, Italian, Spanish; but below all these admixtures the English jiature wrought its steady will. It seized, It trans muted, It modified, It mastered these admixtures both of races and of song." King Alfred is merely the convenient hook on .which Mr. Matthews hangs his contribution. It is our essayist's task to develop this process of original force persisting through assimilations; first in Britain, and then to extend the investigation to America. There survive in both these English-speaking races many if not most of the characteristics which Tacitus in a celebrated passage at tributes to the Teutons of 2000 years ago. Yet they have "been something modified. The English Teuton has taken on impetuosity and swiftness of perception from the Celt, enrichment from the Norman, strength from the Scotch. And in America a similar amal gamation has been going on. Just as the Angles, Saxons and JUtes had min gled in Great Britain to make the Englishmen, and had been modified by Celtic, Norman and Latin influences, so "here in the United States the Purl tan and the Cavalier, the Dutchman and the Huguenot and the German, the Irish and the Scotch and the Scotch- Irish, have all blended to make the American." If we trace the English law and lit erature from Alfred's noble beginnings down through the Norman conquest and then through QJmucer, we come at length to the masterful period of Eliz abeth, and it is interesting to come upon Mr. Matthews' contention that the true Elizabethans of today, in ven turesomeness and Imaginative energy, are not In Britain, but in America. Here it is, he avers, the characteristic energy of the English stock, most exub erantly displayed under Elizabeth, has gained In strength with its westward migration, "since every native Ameri can must be the descendant of some man more venturesome than his kin who thought best to stay at home." And for defense against our lack of poetry he quotes Lowell on the descendants of the Puritans, to the effect that they had enough of imagination, or they would never have conceived "the great epic, whose books are states, and which Is written on this continent from Maine to California." This is not a place one would, exrect to encounter the deadly struggle be tween Darwinism and Welsmannlsm, but here it is, in Mr. Matthews' Inter esting inquiry whether what we call a race nature is, after all, a real ihlng. Is the organism the legacy of heredity or the product of Its environment? The fact Is, of course, that the extreme po sition on each side Is modified by the other. We shall not concede to the op ponents of Welsmann that the charac teristics of the Greeks or Romans, for example, are not the results of any native predisposition to art in the one case or administration in the other, but due solely to circumstances of cli mate, of geographical situation and of historical position; nor fully agree that the Romans, had they been in the place of the Greeks, would have revealed themselves as masters of form, and the Greeks, mutatis mutandis, would have been warriors and lawyers. We shall allow that too much stress has doubt less been laid upon Inherent qualities and too little upon environment; but at the last we must recognize the wide ly different racial natures of Teuton and Celt, Roman and Gaul. And not the least of the evidences is the per sistence of theEnglIsh nature, which, through all its admixtures, "wrought Its. steady will." A TRUST AGAINST PORTLAND. .We find this in the Baker Republican, a paper which Is friendly to Portland: Portland seems to wake up once In a while to the -necessity of a great smelter at hat point, that will accommodate the great mining belt surrounding her; but she soon falls asleep again. She ought to give us the smelter or decide we don't need It, and tell us so. Suspense is painful. Portland should have built a smelter long ago. Nothing would have been more beneficial to the mining industry of the entire Northwest, especially "Ore gon. There Is no reason why a smelter at Portland should not be successful as well as the plants at Tacoma and Ev erett. The Tacoma smelter is being Increased to 4"00 tons a day, and a cop per and lead plant is being added. When the improvements are made the works will give employment to 600 men. Tacoma treats ore from all parts of Oregon, ore that should properly be reduced at Portland. The mistakes, mismanagement and lack of enterprise of the past were se rious enough, but just now we are facing a worse situation. In the past we wouldn't go ahead If we could; now It appears that we couldn't if we would, without placating the lead trust, oth erwise the American Smelting & Re fining Company. This corporation is pretty .nearly the whole thing In the smelting and refining business. It has $50,000,000 of preferred stock and a large Issue of common stock. It has paid over $3,600,000 dividends on preferred stock since its organization, of which $359,000 has been paid thus far vin 1901. Its policy is similar to that of the Standard Oil Company. It ruthlessly crushes competition in the transporta tion and reduction of ore, but encour ages the producers of the ore the raw mafferial and permits them to realize good profits. It has recently submitted to the miners pf Colorado a schedule of payment for silver-lead ores. It is now negotiating for the consolidation of the silver-lead producers of the Coeur d'Alenes, Tvith a view to con trolling them. The course it is pur suing looks like a hold-up of the min ing interests of the Rocky - Mountain States, tiiough so excellent an authority as the Engineering and Mining Journal thinks not. The publication justifies the trust because the price of lead has been maintained "at a high level," re sulting "In great profit to all the miners whose ore has contained lead." That Is, the trust pays the miner a little more for his raw material as an excuse to maintain the New York price of lead at "a high level" and thus rob the con sumer. J. K. Clark, of. Montana, brother to United States Senator Clark, came to Portland recently to look over the field with a view to building a smelter. The location satisfied him, as everything necessary for the building and main taining of a smelter can be had laid down here on favorable terms. But the lead trust gave him food for thought. He found that a 200-ton smelter would produce from 20 to 40 tons of lead a day. Now, the trust owns all the principal refining plants In the country, and it would like to own all the smelters. It Is the only "pur chaser of lead In considerable quanti ties. Obviously, Mr. Clark must make some deal with the trust if he is to build a smelter in Portland with any assurance of making money out of It. The trust is preparing to build at Salt Lake a smelter of 2000 tons capacity, which will, doubtless, draw on the ores of Oregon, Washington and Idaho Portland's field. Portland is not asleep on the smelter enterprise. It is simply "up against" a gigantic trust, which is this year pay ing at the rate of 8 per cent on Its $50,000,000 of preferred stock. VALUABLE IMMIGRANTS. Italians are coming to this country by the hundred thousand, and are prov ing a most valuable addition to the population. They are hard workers, abstemious, strong hardy and Intelli gent. For the greater part they are peasants, thoroughly skilled in tillage. They have succeeded in winning a good living from the hill pastures and aban doned farms of New England. They are crowding to this country at the rate of 8000 a month, and Intelligent Ameri can observers are glad that they are coming, because there Is a place for them in the ranks of our agricultural workers, and our unskilled labor. Fifty years ago our unskilled labor was chiefly represented by the Irish peasant immigration which poured Into this country In a flood from 1846 to 1855. There is no more athletic race in the world than the Irish peasantry, and their strong arms built all our railroads and digged all our canals up to -about 1860. But the Irish Immigration Is not nearly as large as It was In the years following the famine of 1845-47, and the Irish are an energetic, race who soon get beyond the sphere of unskilled la-" bor. They soon become small farmers, mechanics, tradesmen, and their vacant places have been taken largely in rail road labor by the Italians. The Italian has not so powerful a physique as" the Irishman, and he is handicapped at first by his ignorance of the English language, but he soon "picks up" our tongue; he Is hardy, pa tient, industrjous and economical, be cause he comes Jfrom a land where these virtues are necessary to get 'a living. It is doubtful If any field laborers this side of India and China work so hard for so little pay as the Italian peasant is obliged to do In his native land. Italy is taxed' to death to support a very large standing army, and the Italian peasantry of recent years have been taking to flight by thousands. During the last fifteen years the hardy, vig orous Italian immigrant has made all our railroad cuts and embankments. His superior quickness and intelligence will ultimately enable him to leave 'the field of unskilled manual labor to the Slav, even as the Irishman abandoned it to the Italian. The capacity of the Italian immigrant for rapid improvement Is shown in the Argentine Republic, where climate and social conditions have favored his de velopment, and where he has attained the first rank in the industries of the country. Italians own nearly half the commercial firms in Buenos Ayres, with a capital of $150,000,000, and more than half Its workshops. Italian architects have built the greater part of Buenos Ayres; Italians have all 'the river carry ing trade and two-thirds of the coast ing trade; Italian peasants and men of business own nearly all the corn farms. The production of corn and ar tificial grasses has been created by the Italians, who' own rural property to the value of $50,000,000, and one In every eight Is a proprietor. The bulk of the engineering and milling, the paper and soap industries, almost all the hat and tobacco manufactures, most of the ce ment and marble works, a large part of the tanning and tinned meat business is in the hands of Italians. In wheat growing they form the enormous ma jority of the population. A Pledmont ese proprietor plants 67,000 acres in wheat; an Italian firm mows 12,000 acres of temporary grasses; an Italian, the foremost wine producer of South Amer ica, has 2500 acres under vines. The Italian vinegrowers of Mendoza and San Juan and Buenos Ayres produce every year 33,000,000 gallons of wine. All this has been done by uneducated, pov- J erty-strlcken Italian peasants In a few years. The Italian Immigrants who have performed this mighty work In Argentina are identical In quality and capacity with the Italian immigrants that were formerly condemned in the United States as useless or dangerous paupers. The popular prejudice against Italian immigration rests chiefly upon a confu sion of a genuine Italian peasant immi gration with the comparatively worth less, homicidal, mongrel, so-called Ital ian immigration from Sicily and Na ples. Sicily has been ruled In succes sion by Greeks, Romans, Moors, Span iards and Frenchmen; Calabria and Naples have much of this mongrel pop ulation. The difference in quality be tween these Italian mongrels of Sicily and the extreme south of Italy and the fine peasantry that p'eople Middle and Northern Italy Is shown by the fact that while Northern Italy shows no larger per cent of homicides than the most civilized countries of Europe, Southern Italy shows a very high aver- age for homicide. The highest average for h6tnlclde is found among the poor, brutalized miners of Sicily, who are ab solutely illiterate. Popular education has almost eliminated homicide in the Ticino, the ItaUah canton of Switzer land, where sixty years ago homicides were frequent and ignorance abounded. The criminal associations, like the Mafia, are confined to Sicily, Calabria and Naples, and it is this quality of so-called "Italian" immigrants that are as prompt to use a knife murderously in a trivial quarrel as an Anglo-Saxon would be to use his fist. The letter of Mrs. Dye's in the Sun day papr has; besides many other things of Interest, two points of testi mony which will engage the .attention of Oregonlans. She Is in the East, look ing into the sources of Oregon history. She has been to 3ee several members of the Clark family, of which George Rogers Clark, the noted Kentucky ex plorer, and William Clark, who came with Meriwether Lewis to the Oregon region in 1805, have been famous repre sentatives. In no case does the family spell Its name with the suffixed "e," which many people stubbornly persist in adding. If anybody wants final evi dence of the fallacy of the suffixed "e," Mrs. Dye's letter affords It. The sec ond point of testimony mentioned of her letter will cause Oregonlans regret. This is the ignorance in the East of Lewis and Clark."" Even at thecenters of culture and Information,, these great men are almost in complete oblivion. While some Oregonlans have, known this, many more have not, and to the latter the Information wili awaken a sad realization. -The 1905 centennial will eulogize and establish the memory of Lewis and Clark. We begin now to see how inadequate the celebration would be as a mere memorial. The means to revive the names of LewiB and Clark is the American Pacific Ex position. The memory of those explorers will give the event significance, -and the event will redound to. the .fame of Lewis and Clark. The 1905 centennial is the duty of the Pacific Northwest, and every ma'n, voman and child in the Pacific Northwest is in obligation to share that duty. We, of this coun try, are almost the only ones who know or sound the names' jOf LewiB and Clark. Here, then, is our opportunity to repay the debt we owe these two great bene factors of our prosperity. The people of Vancouver, -It is said, are not satisfied with the information given out in regard tb the condition of their closed bank, declaring that it is not sufficiently explicit. The attitude of the National bank officials seems to be that they alone are entitled to full Information In rbgard to matters that led to the closing of that institution, and that the depositors' Interests are of secondary importance. Depositors, on the contrary, feel that the losses, whatever they are, are theirs; that the money In the vaults, of whatever amount, Ib theirs, and that they are en titled to know all about existing condi tions and how they came about. The attitude of the Controller of the Cur rency in the premises may be neces sary, and.no doubt It is dictated by pru dence; but it is, nevertheless, In a de gree exasperating. Since, however, the only thing to be done by depositors Is to possess their souls In patience and await developments, they will show wisdom in so doing without making useless complaint. A man who has had personal experi ence In marketing berries makes a sen sible and timely suggestion In regard to berry boxes, old and new. "Scald the boxes in clean, hot water after each using," says Mr. A. H. Buckman. This is a practical, cheap and easy so lution of a vexed question. Strict compliance with It would leave nefther( the Food Commissioner nor the con sumer any just grounds for complaint, and it would not be hard on the pro ducer. Let a card bearing the words "clean boxes" be tacked to each crate 1 containing .berries, and if investiga tion proves the statement to be true, that grower's troubles on the clean-box proposition, and those of his dealer as well, will be ended; provided, of course, that he keeps up the scalding process and markets his berries in clean boxes throughout the season. The procrastination of state officials in the'pavis school money steal has its compensation. We are spared the sweat and fret and fever of sending him to Jail. This may be one, of the reasons he was allowed to get away. But, perhaps, If DavlB were less of a good fellow, there might have been a few obstacles set to his escape. That President McKInley may be much too easily "worked" for pardons by powerful political and personal in fluences is proven once more by the pardon of Alexander McKenzie's crook edness in the court business at Nome. Hanna, Hansbrough and others want ed that pardon, and It was enough. There is no probability that Senator McLaurin will beat Senator Tillman In. the contest In the Dembcratlc prima ries, to be held in South Carolina In November. But McLaurin shows a plucky spirit, and no doubt has the progressive people of the state largely on" his side. Wallowa Valley is reported at Wash ington to be the most beautiful and well-kept garden spot In the West. No reason appears for the statement ex cept the fact that It is true. Willamette Valley farmers may take comfort, be cause it was not meant to pique them. It Is deduced from science that Ore gon, geologically, Is very old. Oregon has been Inhabited by white people for nearly three-quarters of a century, and although we confess the number of fos sils here is large, such open ridicule from science seems very ungracious. There can be no reasonable doubt that a very considerable portion of the money lost to the State of Oregon through the Davis defalcation found its lodgment In the Radlr est'ate. The cir cumstances point clearly that way. The prose about Agulnaldo after poetry Is that he has changed from a George Washington into a common, every-day Bcrub. Of course, this is en ervating to the delicate natures 'of his erstwhile American admlrerst Our primary election laws are in congruous and unworkable. It is well, 'therefore, to have judicial examination of them before our people get into a hopeless muddle In trying to apply them. CONGRESS MAY 'RESTORE CANTEEN Washington special to Chicago Journal. Reports which already have been re ceived and are to be received by the Government from the several Army posts indicate that the canteen question will be reopened in Congress next. Winter. Accentuating the reports, from command ers of posts are those 6f volunteer Investi gators, clergymen for the most part; who, since the canteen was abolished, have been trying to find out whether the new order of things Is working for or against the common soldier. In every case where a commanding officer has respbnded to the request of the War Department for advice concerning the practical working of the anti-canteen law, he has said with emphasis that the change has worked the men untold haTm, has started a carnival of lawlessness and excesses in the groggeries -that have sprung up like mushrooms on the borders of every post, and made the task of main taining proper discipline Infinitely more difficult than it wa3 before. In practical ly every Instance of careful and Intelli gent Investigation by outsiders the re ports of the post commanders have been Indorsed. A notable illustration of this harmony of thought between men who, while, the anti-canteen bill was pending, were as far apart as the poles, Is found in re cent public utterances of Chicago clergy men, who formed a part of the volunteer committee which visited Fort Sheridan for the avowed purpose of finding out and publishing to the world that the oft-repeated tales of moral degeneracy as the result of the wiping out of the canteen were not true. Against their will these gentlemen have become convinced that the Army offi cers and the War Department at Wash ington were right last Winter when they besought Congress to permit the canteen to remain, and that their own precon ceived, notions were bb valueless aB the notions of mere theorists are nearly al ways apt to be. It was a contest last Winter between tho tnr4&m nnd thft nrfletlcAl moh. AS frequently happens, the former presented wnat seemea to De a peneoi case, uuu the experience and practical knowledge of the latter counted for nothing against it. But the inevitable reaction has set In and appears to be making rapid headway. Just what official form the matter will "assume has not yet been determined. The War Department is receiving "frequent re ports fr,om post commanders regarding the working of the new. law, and Is filing tTnnm nRiv tny ftlftlro visec TnfmA renOrtS. it should be B&ld, are be!n$ made in ac cordance with the usual custom Iri or der that the Secretary of War may have reliable information regarding the condi tion of the Army, and are nbt being called for as the result of any preconceived pro gramme In the department to attack the new law. Obviously, however, should the Tfi-nnrtn nenm tA luntlfv flUch a flteD. the Secretary, when he communicates with Congress; through the President, in De cember, will give that body whatever in formation he has, baaing upon u sucn suggestions ahc recommendations as at thnt tltnn irMiV Kfttn UtBO&f i Whether the Secretary will In terms recommend me repeal or me iuw, or wm content himself with a me,re statement of the facts, leaving Congress to make Its own deduction, is not known: but that his report, should the facts as a whole agree with those already at hand, will in effect amount to a severe condemnation of the Ihw. no matter which method he may adopt, Is generally admitted. It is believed that the work of the volunteer Investigators, all of whom are Intense temperance and prohibition en thusiasts, will help smooth the way to a repeal or modification of the law; and in this connection it is noteworthy that these people are being encouraged to take up their work wherever they care to. The War Department thinks that there has ben a substantial change in public opinion regarding the canteen since the bitter fight in Congress last Winter, and that this change will become more marked during the Summer and Fall. CLEVELAND, M'KINLEY AND SILVER " Heavy Responsibility of Certain Her publican Leaders. Boston Herald, Ind. Apropos of what has recently been said concerning Messrs. Cleveland, McKinley and the sliver issue, a correspondent asks us if it is true that Mr. McKInley, when Ih Congress, made a set speech denounc ing President Cleveland's attitude on the silver question. We are not aware that Mr McKinley ever delivered a speech of this kind In Congress, for, If our mem ory does not deceive us, the present Ex ecutive head of our Government was very careful during- his Congressional career not to commit himself too strongly one way or the other on the currency question. But It Is a matter of record that In 1888 Mr. McKInley was chairman of he com mittee on resolutions of the National Re publican Convention, which nominated Benjamin Harrison as Its Presidential candidate and as chairman of this com mittee had thrown upon him. to an un usual degree, the duty of drafting the platform of his party. The currency plank thus prepared and read by him to the assembled convention denounced Pres ident Cleveland in the strongest terms .because he had dishonored and discredited silver In our National currency system, and had endeavored by this betrayal of trust to place our country updn the basis of the gold standard. That the Republicans assembled from all over the country In" Chicago, enthusi astically Indorsed this sentiment, and that their subserviency to sllVer was one of the leading causes for the terrible financial straits In which we were landed five or six years later, Is a fact which should be borne in mind, and, so far as the historian Is concerned, will be borne In mind In judging of and commenting Upon the financial policy or our uovern- ment. From the time oeiore nis in auguration, In 18S5, that he wrote his let ter to Mr. Bland, advocating gold as a standard of currency, up to the time of his retirement front- the office of President In 1897, Mr. Cleveland was One of the few of our public men whose views respecting the place which silver should hold In our currency system do not admit of criti cism. The opinions which he entertained 16 years ago are those which the great majority of the American people hold today; but at that time It needed cour age, as well as conviction, to announce and to defend an unqualified gold stand ard. But for Mr. Cleveland there can be little doubt that our financial system would have been completely demoralized, and that the currehcy of the country would have sunk in one form or another to a sliver basis. In the work of pushing sliver forward and in denouncing Mr. Cleveland for his stalwart resistance, a number of eminent Republicans were aggressively active Senator Hoar, for example, announced himself as a blmetallst. and even went so far as to assert that he knew no busi ness man in Massachusetts who was not of the same way of thinking. Indeed, to say that one was a gold monometallst that Is, that there was to be no standard of monetary measurement except gold was to range one's self alongside of -President Cleveland In a so far as the Repub lican party was concerned decidedly un popular position. Thus, If Mr. McKinley denounced Mr. Cleveland as a betrayer of public trust because the latter would not aid the sllverltes in debauching our cur rency system, he was only for political purposes echoing what was a sentiment broadly entertained by the members of his own party: . 9 " 'Relations Witn Great Britain Philadelphia Record. Great Britain Is our greatest customer for provisions and raw materials. The total of her Imports from the United States last year exceeded $600,000,000. s Her trade Is worth more to us than Is that of all Europe combined. We are vitally Interested, then, in th maintenance of her ability to buy, and this ability, how ever great her earnings from her ship ping Interests and foreign investments may be, must be preserved by the en largement of her market for manufac tured products. AMUSEMENTS. Harry Corson Clarke, who is always welcome to a Portland audience, delighted a big one at Cordray's la3t night in his new comedy "What Did Tomkins Do?" which .has, undergone, a good many changes for the better since Its presenta tion here last winter. Clarke is- always funny, but- something in the silver hair and sunny temperament of old Colonel Tomkins seems to fit him exactly, and for three acts of a rather loosely Jointed comedy laughter that rippled from parquet to gallery and back to parquet again showed how glad the old friends of the comedian were to see him again. His easy Btage presence, the perfectly natural manner in which every speech, and gesture is given, and the winning personality of the actor enlist sympathy and Interest as soon as he appears, and after that there is nothing to do but laugh. The comedy is not so Involved in plot that It does not afford an opportunity for the intro duction of a number of, brand new jokes which were hailed with surprise and de light, for new jokes are worth going a long way to hear in these days of minstrel shows that start from New York with a last year's outfit and get here when their stock has been used and discarded by amateurs. But bright dialogue is not needed to keep up the amusement, for Colonel Tomkins' facility In getting out of one scrape Is only matched by the ease with which he gets into another, and Clarke makes people forget that he Is any one but Tomkins, and that the troubles of that old reprobate are not just as real to him as they are funny to the outsider. In the second act the actor gives abun dant proof of his versatility In his imita tions of Frank Mayo and of Henry Dixey as Irving. In the latter he far outshines Dlxey, and his make-up Is nothing short of marvelous. He completed his specialty bill with a typical song In the last act, and in this act he also broke Into a little pathos which was exceedingly artistic. Ann Hathaway, a graceful and charm ing younjr lady, did the little that was given her to do as Daisy Plant in a fashion which made her the star of the support. Miss Hathaway is easy and nat ural, and her scene with her lover in the second act betrayed a talent which will one day win a name for her. Max Stelnle, always a favorite In Portland, appeared in a German role which he made highly amusing, and sung a couple of songs, the first one cood, the second rather too old to take very well. Rose Swain played Violet Plant wkh much grace and spirit, and used a sweet voice with good effect in a "coon" lullaby. Percy S. Sharpe did a good piece of character work as Hamil ton Grimes, and the remainder of the cast was fair. "What Did Tomkins Do?" will be the bill the rest of the week. "Saar Harbor." Portland theater-goers are manifesting an unusual interest in the engagement of Heme's play, "Sag Harbor," which comes to the Marquam Grand Thursday, May 30, for a three night's engagement. The fame of this play In the East pre ceded It here and as It will be the last Important attraction of the season to reach us from the East, the Indications are that a succession of fashionable audi ences will be in evidence throughout the engagement. "Sag Harbor" is said to be the moot distinctly American play now before the public. Eminent critics in the East pro nounced It the best of . all the Heme plays and this Is saying a great deal when One remembers "Shore Acres," "Margaret Fleming" and "Griffith Daven port." The sale of seats will open to mortow (Tuesday) v morning at 10 o'clock. Notes of the Stage. George L. Baker, of the Baker City Theater, has returned to his Eastern Oregon home after a brief visit In Port land. - Manager John L. Cordray has returned from a business trip to Salem. Mr. Cor dray's portrait recently printed In The Oregonlah, .was reprinted In the last issue of the New York Dramatic News. t. R. Roberts, who last year played a short engagement at Cordray's, has made a hit In New York, and has been engaged by Jacob Utt to play In Mra. Leslie Carter's new drama, "La Du Barry." Education West and East. Chicago Chronicle. D. K. Pearsons, of this city, who has been giving away a fortune to build up colleges East and West, has reached the conclusion that the East .ought to build Its own colleges and that he will here after give hla money to Western Institu tions exclusively. The decision reached by Dr. Pearsons, based on investigation of comparative re sources and relative needs. Is logical. The East has been amassing wealth for centuries. For It to seek money In the young and poor West, which has only begun rearing Its Institutions, Is selfish, grasping and unreasonable. Increase of population entitles the West to all Its own money and alt the East can return of the money the West has earned for It. The standard of education set up In the West Is uniformly higher and more authoritative than that Which character ized the East In the corresponding period of growth, numerical, industrial and so cial. It Is not only relatively and uni formly higher. Nevr Zealand Census. The preliminary returns of the census enumerator of New Zealand give the white population of that colony as 773. 440. This Is an Increase for the decade of 146,780, or at the rate of 23.42 per cent Thirty years ago. In 1871, the population of New Zealand, exclusive of aborigines, was 256,260, and these figures have been more than trebled. In the recent census more particular attention was paid to counting the Maoris than ever before. It Was generally supposed that they were gradually dying out, but the return of the native population Is now given as 43, 078, an actual Increase of 3228 over the number Bhown five years ago, when they were counted In April, 1896. This brings the total population of the colony up to 516,518. New Zealand has an area larger than that of Great Britain, while her population Is only a little more than that of the City of Glasgow. Many Italians. "Boston- Herald. Notwithstanding the fact that the Ital ians are coming to America by the thou sands every month, the population of that country has Increased 4.000.000 since 1681. It looks as If there would be steer sjgfc passengers this- way for some time '.o come. From Lands Afar. Frank L. Stanton. r. . Love cannot ease his hungering- heart to ay If skies are dim or blue. Nor waft one prayer from llpa you taught to pray. Sweetheart, to you. n. I look with longing o'er the hills and plains I cry to the cold ekles Far dashlnsr down their desolate white raini Over 'your dreamlnr eyes. lit I rhtver in a world of bloom and llsbt, Frontins a heaven above, Knowlnff the night the dark dlvldln? night Is over on t love. IV. And oh! the Mrfow and the wild unrest Bitter, and dark, and deep! I could not lay one flower on your dear breast If God should whisper. "Sleep!" V. Tet till the last sad shadow veils the sun To all eternity, Dream still; and in your dreams may there be one Beautiful dream of me! . JCOTE. AND. COMMENT- One run In nine innings may be called pretty fair ball. The population of London is 6.573,784. That is almost as many people as Chicago claims. The Scotch newspapers seem to think that Carriegie is all right, but his money's no good. Now M. de Rodays is out of, a. job ha ought to devote & little leisure time to target practice Now King Edward Is going to visit Ire land. His Majesty certainly is fond ot taking long- chances. In abolishing typewriters from Turkey, the Sultan makes prizefighting In his domain practically Impossible. 'General Dewet Is anxious to meet Gen eral Botha. He would also like to hear from General Kitchener. Germany Is going to get her troops out ot China. When It comes to peace making, your Uncle Samuel Is right at the head of the class. Whit la so rate as a day In June? la what the poets s&y. But we wish to risa to observe rltht now There's nothlnsr the matter with May. The announcement that the two -South Carolina senators had resigned was- not: accompanied by reports ot any Indignation meetings. Although 74 years old. Gideon Hawley. of Erie, Penn., Is still running an engine on the Lake Shore Ballroad. He began, railroading In 1S46, and has been with the Lake Shore since 1S52. A few days ago Hawley was put through a severe exam ination, the railroad officials believing that It was about time he should retire. To the surprise of the company, not a trace of color blindness or dim vision or de fective hearing could be found. "One day," writes an American In Havana, "I came- across an old Cuban woman sitting disconsolately on a rock hear Morro Castle. She told me in Span ish thatfor three days she had had noth ing to eat h"t a loaf of bread and coffee. She -looked it. I gave her a Spanish dollar, and then followed In her wake. She entered the first cafe she came to and bought a drink and a cigar. I coWdn't help laughing to see her as she walked along the street, puffing away at the weed purchased with my money. She seemed perfectly contented. The Cubans, even the women, would rather smoke than eat. They take only two meals a day break fast about 10 o'clock and dinner at 4 In. the afternoon." Mirrors that one can see through are a new Invention already coming Into use. They are of so-called "platinized glass," beln backed with a compound made, of 95 per cent silver and 5 per cent platinum, and, optically speaking, they are exceed ingly curious and interesting. Looking Into a glass of this kind one finds a first rate reflection; it Is a mirror and nothing more. At the same time, a person on the other side can see directly through It. For example, a glass of this sort placed In front of Jhe prescription desk In an apoth ecary shop perfectly conceals the pres cription clerk and his apparatus. Thus the privacy of that department Is secured, while on his part the clerk Is able to riurvey the shop and .see everybody who comes In just as if the mirror were ordln, ary glass. It Is transparent to him., but Is like any common mirror from the point of view of people in front. It iseaslly seen that glass of this kind is likely to be useful for a good many purposes. It can be put in the doors of dark bath rooms, or of any other rooms where pri vacy Is desirable and light Is wanted. PLBASASTRIES OF PARAGBAFHERS The Kentucky tailor 'What slae will you have these hip pockets pint or quart? Yon kers Statesman. "What Did He Mean? Biter Have you read my last poem? Boeder I hope so. Philadel phia Evening Bulletin. Easily Recognized "Where's Mr. Schnorer?" "He's In the next room." "Are you surer "Yes. I Just overheard him taking a nap." Philadelphia Times. Encouraglnff Him. Mr. Tlmmld (reeling his way) I wouldh't-er-dare think of marrying, because I haven't enough money to ask a. girl to become Miss Passay Couldn't you bor row a little! Philadelphia Press. He r sot that dressmaker's bill of yours to pay. ana I paid It. It was $500, and took every cent I had. She How good ot her! Oh. I told her to divide the blU Into four quar ters, and send you one at a time. Life. His Ruling Passloft. Ida I wonder how Nan persuaded him to propose? Ada Oh, she ftp pealed to his vanity. You know that hatband she gave him Christmas? "Well, the design ing thing embroidered on It "Size No. 8." Harper's Bazar. X Practical Man. Head of Arm I can't havti you arrlvlns- so late In the morning, sir. "Where do you live? New clerk A-fLawnvIllo close to the city. Bf23Tif firm Um! I see. Well, moye further away, and come In on an express train. New York Weekly. Pure Carelessness. Mr;. Flskuff, (after con versing with neighbor) Johnny, whose fault was It that Tommy TufBn got a black eye? Johnny Flskuff His own. Mr. Flskuff (Very deliberately) Are you sure, now? Johnny Flskuff Dead sure! Why, he left an opening you could drive a band wagon through. Puck. Hampson I hear that your engagement with Miss Minks is broken off? How's that? Hill Well, you see, that beast ot a parrot ot hers was always yelling, "Oh, Charlie, you shouldn't." Hampson But what difference did that make? Your engagement was not a se cret. Hill No; and my name isn't Charlie. Glasgow Evening- Times. One Man's "Wisdom. New clerk That young lady in front wants to look at some r!ng4 exactly like she has onr. Says she Is thinking of purchasing a duplicate for her sister. Old Jeweler Huhl You needn't waste any time on her. The ring she has is an engagement ring, and she merely wants to find Out what It cost. Chicago News. Badinage Jack Miss Peehy's poodle is deadif1 Did you hear about it? Tom Yes, I'm going up to call on her. Jack To condole with her. I suppose? Tom No; to propose to her. now that my rival's out of the way. Jack Ah! You want to get In before aha takes up with some other puppy. Philadelphia Press. The maid Of course, mem, I'm awful sorry, about your losing your husband, and I'd like lo make things agreeable to you; but I see you have set the funeral for Thursday. You'll have to change It. The mistress Have to change It, Jane? The maid You can't have forgotten, mem, that It Is my day out. Boston Transcript. The Good Great Man. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. How seldom, friend, a good man Inherits Honor and wealth, with all his worth anii pains! It seems a story from the world of spirit "When any man obtains that which he merits. Or any merits that which her obtains. For shame, my friend! renounce this Idle strain! What wouldst thou have a good great man. ob tain? "Wealth, title, dignity. & golden chain. Or heap of corses which his sword hath slain? Goodness and greatness are not means, but ends. Hath he not always treasure, always friends The good great man? Three treasures lovo and light. And calm thoughts, equable as Infant's breath; And three fast friends, more sure than day or night Himself, his Maker and the angel Death. i4iL v.-X "-