THE MORNING .QKEGQNIAN, SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1001. Entered at the Postofflc at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms.... IOC I Business Office. ...667 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Sally, with Sunday, per month...........? 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 7 60 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The "Weekly, per. year ...... ............ 1 60 The Weekly, S months CO To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.l5c Ially, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 10-page paper....... ...... ............lo 23 to 32-page paper... ....... ....... ......2c Foreign, rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In. The Oregonian should bo addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertis ing; subscriptions or to any business matte should be addressed shnply "The Oregonian.' The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should bo inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound. BureauCaptain A. Thompson, tfflce at 1111 Pacific, avenue, Tacoma. Box 03&, Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office, 43, 44. 45, 47, 48, 40, Tribune building. New York City; 468 "The Rookery," Chicago; th S. C. Beckwith special agency. Eastern representative. For salo in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 74G Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros., 238 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street! Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 259 So. Spring- street, and Oliver & Haines, 10 So Spring street. For sala la Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by V. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street. On fllo at Buffalo. N. T., In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale in Washington, D. C., by the Eb bctt House news stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 900-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair; northwesterly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER-Maxlmum tem perature, 71; minimum, 48; no ralnfalL PORTLAJVD, SATURDAY, JULY 27. VOLUME OP RIVERS. An estimate by Captain Harts of the volume of water flowing in the Colum bia River, is interesting, in compari son with the volume of the Mississippi at New Orleans. Captain Harts made ils observations at The Dalles. At low water he found a flow of 108,000 cubic feet per second; at high water 1,600,000 cubic feet per second. At low water the discharge at New Orleans is 250,000 cubic feet per second; at ordinary high water 1,000.000 cubic feet, and at ex treme high water 1,200,000 cubic feet per second. To these figures from 10 to 15 fcer cent should be added for the flow through the Atchafalaya. This estimate as to the Mississippi Is from the most recent sources we have at hand. They are from Johnson's Cy clopedia, copyright 1854, compiled from the "Journal of the Association of En gineering Societies and Other Sources." The mean annual discharge of the whole Mississippi Basin into the Gulf of Mexico, including that by the Atcha falaya and bayou outlets, is estimat ed at 675,000 cubic feet per second. It Is larger, probably, than, the mean an imal discharge of the Columbia Basin, tut not greatly larger; for the Colum bia flows at low-water stage not more than two months In the year, and at the lilgh-water stage it carries a greater Volume than the Mississippi. Below the Ohio the Mississippi gains little in volume, losing by seepage and evap oration about as it receives from its lower affluents. The flow of the St. Iawrence much exceeds that of any river In North America. Various authorities agree that the mean annual discharge Is In excess of 1.000,000 cubic feet per second. The volume at Niagara is estimated at 390,000 cubic feet per second. It varies little throughout the year, since the Great Lakes above regulate the vol time and give it an even flow. OP SOME HISTORICAL INTEREST. It Is perhaps not possible to say with certainty who it was that originated the idea of a transcontinental railroad. It dates back nearly as far as the beginning- of railroad construction In America. Just about as soon as the railroad Idea got a start, and even be fore It was proven very practicable, men began to talk of a railroad across the American continent Among those for whom the honor has been claimed of publishing the first statements in advocacy of a railroad across the continent are Dr. Samuel X. Barlow, of Massachusetts; Lewis Gaylord Clark, Irvlng's and Bryant's literary friend, and L. W. Boggs, who was Governor of Missouri some sixty flve years ago. Some of Hall J. Kel ley's pamphlets on Oregon, published as early as 1833, contain the same sug gestion. The Boston Transcript claims the honor of the first written article In favor of a transcontinental railroad for S. W. Dexter, or to the man who wrote an article that was printed in Dexter's paper, the Ann Arbor Emi grant, in 1832. Yet we think there were earlier articles. Railroad con struction had begun in the United States as early as 1826. Rev. Samuel Parker, who came as a missionary to Oregon in 1835, wrote in ils journal of that trip that "there would be no difficulty In constructing a railroad from the Atlantic to the Pa cific Ocean." So difficult, however, was it that thirty-four years were yet to elapse before the first transcontinental railroad was completed. "PURELY FORMAL' There was joy in Porto Rico yester day, -but there was no joy in Wash ington. The cloud hung over the Island by the Foraker act had been dispelled by the Presidential proclamation of Thursday, and the islanders felt to lift their heads In the enjoyment of free trade with their adopted country. So much store did they set by this re lease that they requested the procla mation might issue on July 25, the third anniversary of the day when the American flag was first set up on the Island. Hitherto they have been dis criminated against Now they feel they are recognized as a part of us. Once they were aliens, now they are Ameri cans, i Not so at Washington. ''The procla mation is purely formal," the dis patches sententlously say, "andv only in the body of the resolutions adopted by the Porto Rico Legislature, hereto fore published, does It appear that the island Is set free commercially today In commemoration of the anniversary of the planting of the American flae on the Island." Why this solicitude for , - -i formality and scrupulous avoidance of J joy, or even sympathy, with the Porto Rlcans? The answer Is that such a recognition would be a distinct repu diation of all that official "Washington has heretofore held dear on the in sular controversy. It would. In short, have been a practical reversal of the Government's attitude on a crucial question of policy. It has been the theory of the Admin istration and Its adherents that Porto Rico has been highly favored. How shall we rejoice over deliverance from bondage that did not exist? How con gratulate a people upon escape from the Foraker act, when we have always held that act to be the sum and sub stance of all gracious benevolence? It was perfectly well understood at the time McKinley; Beveridge and others abandoned ''plain duty" for the course laid down by the Protected Interests that free trade with Porto Rico would put Buch a burden upon the unhappy island as It could 111 sustain. Out of the kindness of our hearts we clapped on the duty, and, while incidentally establishing the desired precedent for the Philippines, we relieved Porto Rico of the thralldom of free trade through the beneficent medium of a tariff on her products. Take your proclamation, therefor, Porto Rico O take It with subdued joy, if not with trepidation. Lret no bell strike, or flag be flung to the breeze, or songs rise, or health of President McKinley or Governor Hunt or Treasurer Hollander be pledged. How can the cloud be .lifted when the sky was already of such dazzling brightness? THEIR OPPOSITE METHODS. They who take pleasure in the study of constitutional Institutions must often have had occasion to contrast the antagonistic methods of Cleveland and McKinley. This difference is forcibly suggested in the ostentation with which Secretary Long announces his course in the Schley investigation to have been formulated without consultation with the President It Is needless to say that no Secretary of Mr. Cleve land's would ever have taken so Im portant a step without Mr. Cleveland's knowledge and approval. There is, hardly a point In the Mc Kinley Administration where this In dependence of Cabinet officers, notori ously non-existent under Cleveland, is not prominently revealed. Hay had his way with the Nicaragua treaty and the Chinese complications. If McKinley had any views concerning either, they have been most studiously concealed. Secretary Gage ran his laudable gold standard and currency-reform propa ganda with a high hand, and must often have supplied tremulous agita tion to the conferences of Chandler, Wolcott and other silvern statesmen with the President. Perhaps the most noteworthy independence of all is that shown by Secretary Root in the Cuban negotiations. Boldly taking the bit in his teeth, he rushed the acceptance of the Piatt amendments through to Cuban consent, and was abundantly ratified by the good fortune which crowned his programme with success. That there may be merit of its own In each of these methods, the master ful of Cleveland and the complaisant of McKinley, is obvious, when we recall the sneers popularly indulged against Cleveland's Cabinet for being mere clerks in the Presidential office. Wo must, at any rate, recognize the fact that every man must work in his own way. The way Napoleon won his vic tories was not the way Wellington won his victories. The painstaking Tenny son and the Impulsive Byron arrived at high and enduring fame over widely sundered paths. Jackson and Cleveland made everything else bend to their iron wills. McKinley is -content to surround himself with capable assistants and give them authority commensurate with their responsibility. It is the misfortune of the strong man that when he is wrong no one can dissuade him. He will set the Nicaragua Canal back twenty years or restore the Hawaiian 'monarchy as resolutely as he will compel preserva tion of the gold standard or denounce the betrayers of tariff reform. The misfortune of the weak man Is that he will let' the opportunities of a firm de cision and resolute leadership go by. He who is always waiting for public sentiment to develop is at a disadvan tage with him who leads the right way, knowing that public sentiment will be quick to follow him. Things will some times turn up for the drifter. The resolute leader will turn things up for himself. Mr. Cleveland was often wrong, but there was something Inspiring In his way of prompt decision and unflagging adherence to his purpose. Mr. Mc Kinley's administrative policies have almost always proved wise when time and the Cabinet got through with them, but there Is something dispiriting In his easy way of waiting to see how things will turn out. Let Gage go ahead with his currency reform. If he slips up on it, it can leak out that the President never was in sympathy with it Let's see how Hay will come out in China. If he makes a mess of It we can hint that the President was always In favor of more drastic or more lenient measures. Let Root have his way with Cuba. If he miscarries, his course can be quietly disowned, and if he succeeds, we shall have the credit. Bv all means let Termer trn it nlnno mi the Schley investigation, and, however it turns out, each side can be assured of the President's distinguished consid eration. There are advantages, it is obvious, in the easy-going system, which are forfeited by the man of bolder fiber. Yet the people are apt to turn from such a man to his oDDoslte. Next time we shall have some man like Roosevelt or Olney or Carter Harrison; and when his highhandedness has wearied us, we shall be ready for an other trimmer. The pendulum does not stay long at either end of Its swing. AT LENGTH HIS REWARD. It Is two years ago the 8th of last April that Hollister McGulre died In the pitiless waters of the Umpqua, yet the. good that he did lives after him. and only now are the fishermen at the mouth of the Columbia begin ning to realize the merit of the work he planned for their benefit It has long been held on the Lower Columbia that artificial propagation of salmon Js a delusion and a snare, conceived only as a ruse to defeat the scientific doctrine that the only Injurious catch ing of fish Is that indulged outside the boundaries of Clatsop County. A fish caught at Astoria is a useful product of Industry. A fish caught In Baker's Bay or in the Upper Columbia is pre vented from spawning. It is gratify ing to see. therefore, this illuminative paragraph in the Astoria dispatches: There Is not the slightest doubt" that the "" -" C11W.-11UB uio river are inose lurnea I out of the hatchery In im, when Commw-J sioner McGuire's marked salmon were 'given their liberty. Scores of those marked flan have been caught, and it Is interesting to nolo that all are large of size, as are the unmarked fish which are being taken. Neer before in the history of the industry have the sfelmou been so large, few falling below 25 pounds In weight The quality is unsurpassed, and this season's paclC will be an exceptionally fine one. Many of the gillnetters have heretofore regarded hatchery work as a useless expendi ture of money, but all are now com raced oi Its value to the Industry. Perhaps, on the whple, a man must be felicitated if the good work he does is understood and appreciated within so comparatively short a space of time as two years. Most men have to wait a good deal longer. And it is like most things in life that McGulre only lived to see his labors derided and himself threatened. Among these very fish ermen who now reap the benefit of the work he did, warrants were sworn out for his arrest In order to intimi date him from doing his duty. This was done while his family was at the seashore, so as to leave him the choice of arrest or separation from them. Every possible obstacle was laid in the way of his efforts to enforce the law. No one will ever know the pressure that was brought to bear on him from high and low to abandon his manhood for a demagogic allegiance to the Lower uoiumoia agitators. Over at Lone Fir cemetery, where McGulre Is buried, a marble shaft. raised by the order that he loved, tells the 6lmple story of his birth and death, and there a woman who comes to weep bitter tears over his memory tells the story of his domestic life, made happy for wife and children by his tender de votion. These do not tell the real les son of his work, which comes into the white-winged boats of the fisher as he hauls In the net that faithful serv ice shall In no wise lose its reward. The toller in this case is gone. The only part he can contribute to the life In which he once took such zest is "that his grave is green." But those who knew him at his work recall its difficulties and discouragements, and from its triumph now they take a mel-' ancholy .pleasure. And for this, too, the praise Is his. THE NEXT POPE. The great age of Leo XIII, who Is In his 92d year, makes it probable that a meeting of the College of Cardinals for the election of a pope is not far off. The maximum membership of the con clave Is seventy cardinals. There are now but fifty-five, of whom thirty are Italians and twenty-five are of other nationalities, so that It Is morally cer tain the next pope will be an Italian. Indeed, the next pope ought to be an Italian, for the selection as the head of the papacy of a Frenchman, a German, an Austrian or a Spaniard Would throw Europe Into a tremor and make the holy chair the football of international politics. It Is possible that the suc cessor of Leo XIII will gradually be come reconciled with the Italian Gov ernment. Rome will not return to the rule of the pope, and once again be the temporal capital of the church, for the city has doubled its population since 1870 because of the commercial ad vantage that has come to the city as capital of the whole Kingdom of Italy. The renewal of the temporal power of the pope would be of no value to the church, for it has gained in spiritual prestige since the temporal power was destroyed. The collection of "Peter's pence" was never so large as now. The conviction that no temporal power Is needed by the church is growing in Italy, and even in the Vatican itself. Despite the fact that Leo Xni has never abated his claims of temporal sovereignty, it is probable that the Vatican, under his successor, will be come more international in its admin istration and government, while re taining Rome as the seat of ecclesias tical authority and residence of the pope. It will probably ultimately be come reconciled with the Kingdom of Italy, and its, political influence will be due solely to its spiritual and religious force. Of course, this result will not be reached if the successor of Leo Is a man after his own heart, for Leo re fused to accept the proffered annuity of 3,000,000 lire, which would have be come his had he consented to render a subject's fealty at the court of the King of Italy. Leo has persistently protested " against the occupation of Rome, and has refused to compromise the Independence and dignity of the papacy. Archbishop Ireland, a cham pion of the pope's temporal power, points out that any concessions made by the King and Parliament of Italy and accepted by the pope would in volve the assumption that the head of the church is a subject which would be intolerable. Archbishop Ireland insists that the civil independence of the pope Is inseparable from the permanent maintenance of his spiritual authority. He concedes that during Leo's pontifi cate the prestige of the Vatican has been greater than it had been at any Other period in the nineteenth century, but attributes this fact exclusively to Leo's personal character and his re fusal to recognize the Italian occupa tion of the Papal States. It is certainly true that the Catho lic church, under Leo, despite its purely political losses, has already regained all It lost In Germany under Bismarck, and is very near to regaining its Influ ence In Italy. As to his successor, there is no other man so much talked of as Rampolla, the Secretary of State, a very abfe man, and said to be Leo's own preference; but his office puts him at disadvantage, and he does not ex pect to be the Immediate successor of Leo. He can afford to wait as he Is only 58 years of age. His candidate is Cardinal Angelo dl Pietro, -who owes everything to him, is 72 years of age and a Roman. He will be supported by Cardinal Rampolla's friends, and op posed by the antagonists of the Secre tary of State. It takes a two-thirds vote of the cardinals to elect a pope, and nobody expects to see a non-Italian elected. Abbe Sabatler, a learned Roman Catholic of Paris, is quoted as author ity for the view that as the power of the pope is absolute, it Involves the right of naming his successor if he sees fit That this view Is supported by reason and by actual "precedent Is at tested by no less than three Instances of church history. While a pope so nominated would be a true pontiff of valid status, all the probabilities are that the next pope will be chosen by the College of Cardinals, as has been the custom for more than eight centu ries. The cardinals will assemble In Rome, summoned by the papal secre tary. They need not choose one of their own number as pope; they may even name a layman, provided he re ceive orders before his installation, but a two-thirds majority must unite uDon one name, whether, as in the case of Leo XIII, in 1878, the decision be reached In two days, or In six months. as was the case in 1790, when Pius VII was elected to the pontificate. While the choice is usually made by ballot, all the candidates may agree to leave a decision to a small committee of two or three, which is known as election by compromise, which, however, Is seldom resorted to. Still less often Is the nom ination made by acclamation or "quasl insplratlon," when the cardinals with sudden and harmonious consent pro claim some nerson pontiff with one voice and without previous canvass. Under the precept issued by Secre tary Long, the Investigation of the Schley Court of Inquiry will be thor ough and exhaustive, and will finally put at rest a controversy of long standing, which, as Secretary Long suggests, would not have arisen if President McKinley had granted Sec retary Long's request to have Admiral Schley court-martialed as soon as It was learned at Washington that he had deliberately disobeyed his orders when searching for Spanish ships. Secretary Long also tried in vain to persuade Senator Hale, chairman of the committee on naval affairs, to In vestigate the Sampson-Schley matter by a cmlttee of Senators or a joint commrctee of both Houses. Secretary Latxg further says: The day wo learned that Schley had turneo. back, was the darkest day In all the history ot that war. President McKinley felt convinced that Admiral Schley had some good reason foi turning back, and -would not order a court martial. When Admiral Sampson took charge of the fleet, he refrained from ordering a court martial because ho was a Junior officer, and assumed that Admiral Schley would ask for a court of Inquiry when he learned that the Navy Department was dissatisfied with his course. Secretary Long does not pretend to condemn the conduct of Admiral Schley In actual battle with Cervera'a fleet, but he has already censured his man agement of the flying squadron in the endeavor to locate the Spanish ships in the Antilles, as well as his ideas of a blockade. The failure of the Presi dent to order a court-martial resulted in the trial of Admiral Schley by news paper; Admiral Schley's serious mis take was in not promptly calling for a court of inquiry at the time when he learned that the Navy Department was dissatisfied with his course. The Sec retary of the Navy did his duty In his official censure, but the President-did not do his duty, and now Admiral Schley is forced to take the right course at the last moment, which he ought for the sake of his reputation o have taken at the outset. The acquittal of Fosburgh by the jury, under orders from the Judge to return a verdict of not guilty on the ground of Insufficient evidence, was just; and yet the Judge was careful to say that the Chief of Police did his full duty In his Investigation, upon the results of which the defendant was Indicted. It Is quite possible, If not prob able, that the Chief of Police formed a correct theory of the murder, viz. that in a violent family quarrel May Fosburgh was killed by a shot that was fired accidentally, or at least was not Intended for her. She was certainly killed by a bullet from her brother's revolver, which has been missing ever since the murder, and there were a number of other very suspicious cir cumstances in the case. The pistol that killed the girl was held so close to her that there were grains of powder upon her clothing, and the masks worn by the alleged burglars were .made of pillow-cases belonging to the spare room in the Fosburgh house. There was no evidence of any burglars being seen about the city, and while the Fos burghs claimed 'to have been aroused from bed by the burglars, they were all fully dressed, even to their neck ties, when the doctor was summoned and the nearest neighbors arrived. It was a case that warranted the verdict of "not proven," and yet a good many fair-minded folk will always think that the Chief of Police was correct in his theory that in a family quarrel a chance shot missed the crow and killed the pigeon. Is the Northern Pacific about, tn ful fill Its ancient promise to build a direct line into Portland? If it shall come across from Mabton to the Columbia at the mouth of the Klickitat, thence down the river to Vancouver and across to Portland, it will avoid mountain grades and at the same time serve a large tract of fertile country that Is now without adequate transportation facili ties. It would command the traffic of the rich Klickitat Valley and liberate a large area of white pine in the west ern part of Klickitat County. Not only wouia such a road give another outlet to Portland from competitive territory in Eastern Washington, but it would place Portland In advantageous con nection with the Yakima and Kittitas Valleys, affording the thriving cities of Ellensburg and North Yakima access to a tidewater mart without a climb over a mountain range The Northern Pacific should be encouraged to build this short line to Portland The Oregonian said not long since that President McKinley, under pres surepolitical, social and personal had abused the pardoning power by turning loose a large number of financial delin quents and bank thieves practically all of this sort of criminals for whom clemency had been asked by Influential friends or politicians. In certain quar ters it has been deemed a sufficient an swer to this statement to say that President Cleveland pardoned about as many of this sort of criminals as Presi dent McKinley has done. But The Ore gonian knows not why either of the Presidents should have pardoned so large a number of these offenders, or why It should be an argument that, In asmuch as President Cleveland par doned many, President McKinley should pardon more. If there Is any de scription of rascals greater or worse than these bank rascals, who swindle people out of their money, nobody knows of them. Secretary Long's precept bears un mistakable evidence of an unfriendly attitude toward Schley, and the stress laid upon "reasons controlling" his departure from Cienfuegos to San tiago Indicates a purpose to make him pay dearly for his technical disobedi ence of Sampson's orders. Schley will hardly escape unfavorable comment from the court on some of the many counts, though he deserves and should receive commendation for his part in the Santiago victory. Mr. Kennan doubtless .will not be seriously Inconvenienced by his expul sion from Russia. What facts nis fu ture romances need that he hasn't al ready acquired imagination can sup ply. Considering the advertising the Czar is thus jriviner him. he oucht to have the good grace to say nothing ao out it THE TRANS-PACIEIC CABLES. " Boston Transcript After all the talk in Congress at the last session regarding the laying of a trans-Pacific telegraph cable, it appears that the British Government has out stripped us In the matter. So far we have proceeded only to the stage of authoriz ing a cable to the Hawaiian Islands un der Government supervision, at a cost of $3,000,000, a measure to this effect having been passed by Congress on April 11 last. The British Government, on the other hand, has proceeded to a survey of the route. Is manufacturing the cables and erecting the necessary station-houses and expects to have its trans-Pacific cable in operation by the end of next year. The obstacles thrown In the way ot the United States Government taking up the project by those who had private axes to grind are likely to prove costly fo the United States in the long run. The British cable is intended primarily to strengthen Great Britain's hold upon the sea power of the world, but it is also likely to prove a profitable business en terprise. Commerce follows lines of com munication, and the construction of a cable from Vancouver, B. C, to the Aus tralian coast will tend to bring these two British colonial possessions Into more in timate trade" relations to the disadvantage of the Pacific Coast ports of the United States. The new line is to keep all Its stations upon British territory. One sec tion includes lines from the New South Wales and New Zealand posts to Norfolk Islands, and thence to the Fiji Islands. The other section will be from the FIJI Islands to Vancouver via Fanning Isl and. The total length of the cable will be 79S6 nautical miles, allow ing 10 per Cent for slack. Tlje length of the proposed American cable to Manila by the route which was declared practicable by the Government engineers was 7493 miles, and while Congress was considering its practicability the British Government stepped in ahead with the construction of a still longer line. Doubtless the argument will be made by the "cable monopoly" when this mat ter is again brought to the attention of Congress, that the British cable will answer all the requirements of the United States, and that it would be folly to lay another 'cable with the trans-Pacific busi ness fully accommodated by one line. But a single line will not assure the perma nency of communication which is the first requisite of ocean cable service, and the United States as a militant world power, needs its own line for strategic purposes as much as does Great Britain. The existing charges for messages to the United States will be materially reduced by the operation of the British cable, as messages may come from Luzon via Australia, Instead of by way of Egypt, as has been the case. With the con struction of the lino to the Hawaiian islands, the completion of an American line to our other -new possessions ought to be taken up. The "ocean of the future" tho Pa cific, must be ours. If the United States hopes to secure commercial supremacy upon It and with Its vast frontage and Its islands In the Pacific it ought to have such supremacy it must secure direct lines of communication, regardless of the objections of the timid or the opposition of corporations, which always fear the competition of Government ownership. t Mrs. Dye and Her Boole. Buffalo Sunday Times, July 21, 1901. Mrs. Eva Emery Dye was a recent vis itor to Buffalo from Oregon. Mrs. Dye's "Stories of Oregon" is being used in the public schools there and gives the chil dren a thorough knowledge of their state. "McLoughlln and Old Oregon" Is a chron icle relating to the early settlement of the Northwest and of Dr. John McLough lln, a leading factor In the Hudson's Bay Company. Mrs. Dye Is now writing a story of Lewis and Clark, two famous explorers and two of the first white men tb cross the Rocky Mountains and reach the Pacific Coast The people of the Northwest honor these "Pathfinders," and in 1905. at Portland, Oregon, will be cel ebrated "The Lewi3 and Clark Centen. nlal." This promises to be a grand expo sition. Captain William Clark's and Cap. tain Meriwether Lewis' expedition lasted two years and its details will give a his tory of marvelous events. Captain Clark, through his kindness and tact was able to make negotiations with the Indians. Thomas Jefferson planned the expedition and it was his special wish thai the In dians should be treated kindly. Mrs. Dye's book will be written in her usual natural style, with appeals to the tender feelings of the heart. Her pen pictures are extremely realistic. Mrs. Dye Is a graduate of Oberlln Col lege, being a classmate with her husband. She came "East last Spring in search of material for the Lewis and Clark book. She visited libraries, gaining the most or her Information, however, from Major William Hancock Clark, of Detroit, the oldest living grandson of the noted ex plorer, and at the old Virginia home of Julia Hancock, where Captain Clark was married. In and around Washington and Philadelphia she gained much lnforma. tion. At St Louis she found many good stories and procured many pictures for Illustrations. Mrs. Dye's book will with out a doubt be one of the most Interest ing narratives of the opening of a gate way to the Northwest t Christianity and History. Cardinal Gibbons in North American Review. Christianity has dominated all modern history. Its morality, based on the loving kindness of an Eternal Father and the mystic brotherhood with the God-Man has renovated the face of the earth. It has set firmly the corner-stone for all fu ture civilization, the conviction of a com mon humanity that has been deeply root ed in us by no stoicism, but by the story of Jesus Christ and by the lives and deaths of countless Christian men and women. It has clarified at once the sense of sin and the reasons for hope. It has touched the deepest springs of efficient conviction; preached successfully, in sea son and out of season, of mercy and Jus tice and peace; affected Intimately every function of domestic life; thrown a shel tering veil of sanctity about maid and mother and home; stood out against tho fierce ambitions and illicit loves of rulers and the low passions of the multitude. It has healed and cleansed whole legisla tions, and "filled out with a vivifying spirit" the noble but Inorganic letter of great maxims that a Seneca or an Eplc tetus might utter, but could not cause to live. It has distinctly raised the social and civil life of all civilized humankind. It bears within itself the antidote of a cer tain divine presence, whereby it overcomes forever those germs of decay and change that cause the death of all other societies. Its earliest writers and exponents had a subtle sense of its true character when they took over from paganism and ap plied to the work of Jesus th symbolic myth of the phoenix, emblem of a na tive, organic and Indestructible vitality. The Bandit and the Bonds. Philadelphia North American. A Bandit, being elected to office won fresh notoriety as a bold and successful Railroad Robber. His feme as a Thief was spread throughout the Land. By virtue of His Office the Bandit advertised that he had bonds for sale not his own bonds, but thooa of the unhappy people over whomihe ruled. Nobody would buy the offered bonds. "Why is this?" demanded the Aston ished Thief. "My subjects are perfectly solvent and Good for their Money." "The Explanation is," replied a Timid Investor, "that while our People are Good for any Amount, nobody of my Careful Temperament is anxious to deal with them through a Notorious Crimi nal." "This," shouted the Indignant Bandit, "is not a Personal Matter. It Is a hideous and unwarranted attack on the Credit of the City." Moral: Municipalities that want to bor row money should be careful to select de cent agents. MR. M'KINLEY AND RECIPROCITY New York Times. How strongly does Mr. McKinley really desire to get through the Senate some tangible concessions of reciprocity? This is the essential point In the Re publican Congressional programme for the next session. No one doubts that the President has a certain desire in this di rection. All who have talked with him agree in reporting it It would be strange if he had not He has learned much in his four years In office that was only a vague Impression before. He has un learned some things. He knows now that In many of the most important lines of Industry there is no more need for pro tection from foreign competition than he himself has for swaddling clothes. He knows, further, that in some important lines there is an actual need for foreign markets, which the high tariff duties tend to close. He knows that In the chief Eu ropean countries there is a well-founded feeling of resentment toward the United States on account of the selfish and arbi trary commercial policy which we pur sue. His own efforts to assuage this feel ing by the negotiation of treaties of re ciprocity, though authorized by law and approved by his party platforms, have been resisted in the Senate In a manner that has made the situation more trying and vexatious than before. He sees that there Is a considerable and growing sen timent In tho business community In favor of a more rational and progressive policy; he has done all apparently that seemed to him practicable to secure some respect for this sentiment, and he has been de feated and almost flouted. The question now is how far he Is prepared to go in the use of his great Influence with his party to bring the Senate Into harmony with his own convictions and with the advancing public opinion of the country. With all respect for the sincerity of the President we fear he will not go very-far. Mr. McKinley Is profoundly convinced that the substantial unity of the organiza tion of his party is absolutely essential to the welfare of the country. He will do nothing that he can avoid that is likely to imperil that unity. He will not try to constrain any element In the party that Is ready to show fight, unless It be in order to conciliate a more powerful element that is equally ready to show fight Now, it must be conceded that at the present time the opponents of reciprocity and of all relaxation of the absurd and outworn protective tariff are entirely ready to fight, and the friends of tariff reform In the party are not. Tho anti-reformers are contending for their pockets. They are In the enjoyment of profitable privileges. They have the monstrous privilege of taxing their fellow-citizens for trading with their foreign competitors. From this they have made and are making great and continuous profits. These profits are so large that they can afford to sell and do sell In many cases their surplus prod ucts in foreign markets at prices far be low what they charge at home. Men do not give up such advantages unless they aro forced to do so, and it Is very hard to force these men. They are a compact, united body, trained by long experience In all the arts of Influencing legislation. Party success is nothing to them except as It promotes their own interests. Party discipline is valuable to them as a weapon In their own hands. Turned against them, It has few terrors. They never hesitate to betray and defeat a party man who is nqt enlisted on their side. Even Mr. Mc Kinley can do little with them unless he is able and ready to threaten them with opposition that will Induce them to save part rather than lose all. He may come to this in the long run. He Is nowhere near that point now. The protectionists aro not deceived about reciprocity. They know perfectly what It means, and that, as far as It goes, It goes straight in the direction of free trade. They have fought it In its mildest form on that account, and they will continue to do so Until they are compelled to compro mise. The only voice they will listen to is the voice of the pedple at the polls, and even to this they will be found very deaf. If Mr. McKinley should see that the ad vance of public opinion was becoming dangerous to his party, ho might make himself the Interpreter of that opinion, and secure some attention for Its de mands. But he would have to be very clear In his conviction, much clearer than he has as yet shown any sign of being. Courage of the Darker Races. Spectator. In India there are races, like tho Benga lees and some of the tribes of Madras, who cannot by any provocation be in duced to fight, or be trained as soldiers, and they live side by side with others, like the Ghoorkas secured for us by tho intellectual acumen of one man, Mr. Brian Hodgson and the Mohammedan converts in Madras called Moplahs, who aro both probably braver than the very bravest of the white races. Why are the former such exceptional soldiers, while It Is fancied fhat their close kinsfolk In the Shan States and Indo-China are rather timid? Is the cause merely the Rajpoot cross in tho Ghoorkas, who physically show no signs of it, but look like rather inferior Mongols; or is it, as we half suspect, that tho Indo-Chinese are not cowards at all, but men who have lost something, not so much of their nerve as of their self-confidence? The whole fufure of the French occupation of Indo-Chlna, or of ours, if we should over supersede them, depends upon the response to that question, to which as yet the answer Is most Imper fect Then does the difference depend upon habit upon difference of diet a sub ject involving the entire future of Chris tianity in India or upon religion, as so many observers affirm as regards all Mus sulman converts, or purely upon race? Even as regards Chinese there is a most amazing conflict of eVidence, competent observers declaring that they are essen tially timid, while others equally compe tent assert that they have innately all fhe capacities of soldiership a difference explained by Chinamen themselves by at tributing to the people of different dis tricts entirely different characters. As a matter of fact, Chinese from Yunnan have beaten French regulars; whllo Chinese from Shantung seem unable to stand up tb any Europeans, or even to Japanese, who spring from the same race. In Africa the Investigation is even more pressing. for African armies are yet to build. There Is a great body of evidence t!o show that the higher African races, though purely black, such as the Bantu, are decidedly brave, and If crossed with the Arab, ex ceptionally so; but many experts, includ ing, we fancy, all Boers deny this, and attribute true bravery to the blacks only when under certain Influences, of which severe discipline is one. There is, we be lieve, a difference of opinion on the sub ject even in the Southern States of tho Union, where knowledge must be exten sive and practical a difference so great that It can be explained only by wide dif ferences in tho origin of tho quondam slaves, who belonged originally to at least four unconnected tribes. Wall Street By the Ticker. S. E. Kiscr in Leslio's Weekly. There by the ticker some one lies. The floor Is red with stains. And while a face is turning gray The busy ticker croons away Of losses and of gains. There by the crooning ticker lies Hope, love, ambition, pride: For him who wields th etraglc pen A tale is there to barrow men Who hurry on outside. Somewhere, perhaps, a little faco Is pressed against a pane In eager watchfulness for ono Who, while the changing seasons run. Shall let her watch In vain. There by the ticker some one lies Whose weary faco is gray. And at his feet a mocking pile Of fragile tape keeps growing while Tho ticker croons awayt tfOTE AND COMMENT. He who fights and runs away Had best look out for E. Maclay. Now Speaker Henderson Is going to Ber lin to see whether or not Emperor William will do. Most people are willing to take it for granted that the plaza blocks are worth seeing at 5 A. M. A censor could have beon employed to good purpose In tho text-book department of the Naval Academy. Denmark Is still trying to palm off that job lot of Islands on Uncle Sam, but 30 far she declines to quote him any dis counts. The Retail Clerks' Association has doubled in two years, but the small boy who eats the green apple does the same thing In two seconds. Either the correspondents at Astoria are seeing double or the salmon have ranged themselves emphatically on the side of artificial propagation. There will be fewer sealskins this sea sons, but the chances are that the wives of the Kansas farmers will not be ablo to purchase the usual number. From recent utterances by prominent Democrats, we gather that the name ot the next Democratic candidate for Presi dent will not begin with William Jennings. It might be a good Idea to Inaugurate an investigation to determine which of the two cup challengers Is the faster. It seems to be Impossible to decide it by racing. Judging by the action of the Russian authorities yesterday it Is evident that the Czar has been a constant. If not an appreciative, roadcr of the works of George Kennan. There is no probabllty In tho rumot that Emperor William Is going to end tho Boer War. If tho struggle could havo been terminated by talking, Webster Da vis would have settled It. Archbishop Katzen of tho Roman Cath olic diocese of Milwaukee does not be lieve In Christian Science, of which ho recently said: "Christian Science is fun damentally wrong. It Is founded on pan theism, from which all its theories aro drawn. Christian Science does no harm whei it convinces some person who Is suf fering from an imaginary 111; Indeed it does some good, but when it tells a man with his leg cut off that he only Imagines that his leg is off and thus keeps him from the care of a physician, when med ical help could save his life, then It Is wrong deplorably wrong." m A suburban, resident was Journeying from his homo to his place of business one morning this week, when he observed on a lot near the car line a goat moored to the "for sale" sign of a real ostatc dealer, and browsing on the grass and stones within his reach. Noting the name and address on tho sign he called at the deal ers' establishment on his arrival in town and said: "I see you have something for salo out on tho Mount Tabor trolley line." "Yes," replied tho dealer with Interest "Are you looking for an Investment?" The suburbanite said that he was in a small way, and the real estate man, much to nis surprise, offered to Jump on the car and go out to show him the prop erty. Having a little time on his hands, he agreed, and, In the course of halt an hour the two stood gazing at tho goat, tho sign and the surrounding coun try. - "There," exclaimed the dealer, "I'll let you have that for $2000." "What?" "I said I'd let you have it for ?2000. You'll be able to sell it for twice that Inside of 10 years." "Sell what for twice that?" "Why the lot, of course." "Shucks, I don't want to buy any let I want the goat" There was no sale. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS "Haven't you any of your grandmother's old things, Mrs. Newdash?" "No; but 1'te gota lot of candlesticks, old tables and chairs that belonjed to a woman who lived next floor." Detroit Free Press. Mrs. Crabshaw I suppose you'd be awfully frightened if I should send you a telegram while I'm away in the country. Crabshaw In deed I would, my dearl I don't know where to raise any more money to send you. Fuck. "Is he what you would call a self-mada man?" said one multimillionaire. "I should say so," answered tho other. "Why, I can re member the day when ho had scarcely a mill ion dollars to his name." Washington Star. Hoax I seo Rocksle, the gambler, is going to retire on his fortune and sell out his place. There's a chance for some fellow with a llttlo capital to get In the .swim. Joax Ah I Tako a dive to get Into the swim, eh? Philadelphia Kecord. "Don't you, think you could drive that mulo without the uso ot profanity?" inquired tho person ot refinement "Yes," answered, tha canal-boat man. "I reckon I could get along all right. But it would get powerful lone some for the mule." Washington Star. He was obviously anxious, and she seemed almost willing. "I shall refer jou to papa," said she, with a becoming blush, "before giv ing you a final answer." "But I am perfectly willing to tako you without any reference," said he, magnanimously. Indianapolis News. "Why, dear, what's the matter with you? Bay news from your husband?" "Oh! worso than that. He writes mo that is longing for me and kisses my picture every day." "That's no reason for crying." "Yes, but I find I put mother's photograph in his trunk in mistake for mine." Brooklyn Life. "You will And. tho work easy," said Mrs. Hauskeep. "We live ery simply, and there are no children to " "Oh, Ol'll not tako the place av there's no children," Interrupted tho applicant. "The Idea! You'ro an exception to the rule." "Well, av there's no chllder, all the dishes OI break '11 be blamed on me." Philadelphia Press. "Well," asked the professor, "did you at tend our commencement and meet our grad uates?" "No," answered the editor, "I don't attend, but I've met them all, I guess. How many joung men did ou graduate this year 7" "Two hundred and twele," answered the pro fessor. "Then one of them must be 111." said the editor. "Up to date, two hundred and eleven havo been around to strike me for a Job." Indianapolis Sun. Rain. Laura Spencer Portor. in Tho Atlantic Tho patient rain at early Summer dawn; The long, lone Autumn drip; the damp, sweet hush Of Springtime, when tho glinting drops seem gone t Into the first notes ot tho hidden thrush; The solemn, dreary beat Of Winter rain and sleet; Tho mad. sweet, pasaionato calling of the showers To tho unblossomed hours; Tho driving, restless, midnight sweep of rain; The fitful sobbing and tho smile again Of Spring's childhood; the fierce, unpltylng pour Of low-hung, leaden clouds; the evermore Prophetic beauty of the sunset storm. Transfigured into color and to form Across the sky; O wond'roua changing rain! Changeful and full ot temper as man's life; Impetuous, fierce, unpltylng, kind again. Prophetic, beauteous, soothing, full of atrlfe; Through all thy changing passion hear not wo Th' eternal note e the, Unchanging Sea, il