THE .31QRNING UREGONIAN, MONPAY, JAOTARY .13, 1902. 5H ftr rgomcft Entered at the PpstoOce at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. ' KEVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month $ SS Daily, Sunday excepted, per" 3 ear T 50 Dally, with Sunday, per jear 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The "Weekly, per jear........ 1 &0 The "Weekly. 3 months., 50 To City Subscribers , Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted. 15c Daily, per week, delll ertdrSundays lncluded.;5J0c PPSTAGE "RATES. . United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 24-,p&Ge .paper ....,.....lc 1 to 2S-page paper. ......1 2c Foreign rates double. " News or discussion Intended, lor publication In The Orc'gonfan should' bd addressed Invaria bly "Editor-The Oregonlan." not to. 'the name of any Individual. Letter relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to anj "business matter should "be addressed slxnplj "The Oregonlan." TJie OftgonJan 4b.es notTbuj Jioems or stories Irom. Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any njanuficrjpts sent to 11 without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. -3. 4. 45. 47. 4S. 40 Tribune building. New Xork Clt; 4C0 "This Hookcry." Chicago; the S C Uockwith special .agency. Eastern rpre!ntatle.' - , For sale In San Francisco by L. E Loe. Pal ace Hotel now-a stand: Goldsmith Bros., 233 -Sutter fctret; F. W. Pitts. 1O0S Market street; J. it. Cooper Co . 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel: roster & Orear. Ferry news stand. For hale In I.os Angeles by B. F. Gaidner. 259 So Spring street, and Ou er & llaiaeB, 103 So, Spring Mreet. For sale In Cllcago bj the P. O. News Co., ,217 Dearborn .aUxet. " .. - - Eor'ealc in Omaha by Barkalow Bro?.. 1012 rarnam street. For sa'Xin Salt .Lake by -the Slt Lake Jfews Co . 77 IV. Second jSauth street. For falfl In Ogden by V C. Kind, 201 Twen ty -fiUh -tree. ard.C H. Mers. On fio xt Charleston. S. C, In tho Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For ale in Washington. D. C, by the Ebbctt TH6u;e news stand. For -ale In Den er. Colo . br Hamilton & ndrlck, l0G-9i2 Seventeenth street. TODAY'S "WEATHER-Cloudy and occaslon allj threatening; winds mostly northerly. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem .perature, 40, minimum temperature. i)0; clear. Philippines, but we'do not follow their recommendations. "Colonialism" has begun, and If the House programme is not balked la the Senate or at the White House, we shall have no cause for complafnt If the result Is the com mon resort of dependencies when their petitions for relief from oppression are "spurned with contempt from the foot of the throne." PORTLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 13. WHERE TO DRAty THE LINE. On general principles, the House an tagonists of the permanent Census Bu reau are to be condemned. All the world knows that the spasmodic cen sus Is a thing of shreds and patches, slow of action and precarious In con clusions. Everybody whose opinion Is worth having has long desired to see a permanent bureau established which might record the Nation's Inhabitants and progress In a scientific and serv iceable manrer. It Js disconcerting, therefore, to see this common-sense re form at once dashed to the ground be cause the all-pcrvadiag voice of the spoilsman demands that his particular personal property In the form of cen sus patronage shall not be Impaired. If the Government will agree to keep his men in, it can have a permanent bureau as well as. a temporary one the more permanent, in fact, the better. It is a matter of indifference to the Con gressman how the census gets on, or whether there Js any census at all or not, but It Is of the last importance that his men bp pished. "We must cry pause, however, at the proposea extension of this spirit of reform to the realm of Alaska land ofilces. Major Lacey, of the Sixth Iowa District, has introduced a bill reduc ing the number of Alaska land offices from three to one, on the ground that one can do the work and save so many salaries. He goes eo far as to say he regards it as "np longer necessary to antbropy. ilr. Hill's, career in this world has been characterized by accu mulation of wealth. When the money and credit he uses cease to return profit, Mr. Hill will no't manipulate' railroads. When he pretends that this Is not bis. basic rule of action, he is simply ridicu lous. All this may be said without dis paragement of Mr. Hill as a great busi ness organizer and railroad mannger. He discredits his. own common sense by these disingenuous lucubrations on his noble and self-sacrificing efforts to pro- Itect the people at the expense of his pocket to protect them against men or his own kind. THE PIONEER NO MOSSBAOIC. We are hearing a good deal these days about the pioneer spirit, and much In a tone which Implies that the thing thus named Is an Injurs; and a re proach, a thing to be cast ff In tfe interest of self-respect and progress. What, let us ask Bsr.lous.ly, Is or was this pioneer spirit, that It should bear so evil a character among a genera tion but once removed from those who created it and gave it to this country of Oregon as an endowment? The question Is worth considering. uncC pos sibly In seeking an answer It may be found that there has grown up ameng us some confusion of Ideas concerning things which 1'ls nn Injustice and al most an Impiety to conceive carelessly or falsely. First, who was the pioneer, and what manner of men was be? Regarded typically, he was an American so 03 BlmUated to the soil as practically to hav forgotten and lost his Old World traditions end motives He was at once the earliest and the most perfect prod uct of. r.aUve American conditions ths country has ever known or ever will know. The Atlantic cplonlsts never lost the sense of Old. World relationship and progress proceeds In 00 suck hurried or wholesale fashion; and, though "the new man" Is much In evidence jus now, and though his tribe and. bis vogue, we are glad to believe, are destined to a mighty Increase among us, let nobody Imagine that be Is going by any sleight of hand to recast, reinsplre and reorganize- the life and habit of the coun try. The Oregonlan character for genera tions to come. If not, Indeed, for all time, will hark back to the pioneer; and tho'ugh time and circumstance may modify and remold it, there must al ways bo In It some reflection of the thing, some color of the spirit out of which it has grown. And this Is well. We need, a new outfit of industrial purposes, with training and discipline In new arts, but "w'e could 111 afford, even for the sake of a grea.t mqterjal progress, to abandon the tradition, to cast1 off the spirit of the brave and strong ne.n who founded the country. NEW YEAR'S OREGONIAN. "" Canyon City- Xews. Any praiseworthy effort, any noble achievement or remarkable feat deserves not only our slleqt admlraUjsB. but also our unstinted praise and 'spontaneous ap plause. It Js this sentiment which impels, us, to say a few words about iFe- peerless, edition Issued by The "Morning Oregonlan, on the first day of the New Year". We deem Jt a preposterous, task to even at tempt to give a summary of the contents, of the superb edition. One must see it in order to appreciate such masterly, meri torious journalism. TSufBce It to say. how ever, that it contains- 64 pages, gives an, exhaustive account of the history, devel opment and present conditio, not ohly, of Oregon, but of the whole Pacific "North west; reviews tho mining condition, cattle raising, agriculture, lumbering, shipping, wholesale trade, and, in fact, is a verit able encyclopedia on all important sqb jects relating to the States of Oregbn, Idaho and Washington. And all this is narrated with such con summate skill and' such surpassing por snlcultv as" to excite the admiration of The Oregoniap insists on Improvement f'JiJSS of the channel at the mouth of. the Co lumbia River as the first and mo3t nec essary duty of the General Government to the people of the Columbia re gion. There are no detentions or dan gers In tbj& river abpvi Astoria compar able with those at the Columbia bar. Portland, the chief shipping porto the Columbia Basin, wants a Channel at the mouth of the river first "of all things Portland Can ship by ylver or rail, to or from Astoria. But first of all thta,gs U wants and must have a. deeper channel between Astoria- and the sea. Astoria Is but a river port; it is no more K sea port than Portland Is; there is mora illustrated, replenished with valuable sta tisllcs and enriched with maps ab'out the. "The -Village Parson" rcturiL to, Cr dray's lasl nisht after an abgence of a yjfcjr, and Judsng from the" reception it was accorded from a hous that fllkd the theater, there UT truth in the proverb, that absence-' maEes the heart'grow fond er. Th.e applause began at the firgt in timation' on the part 61t tiie wife of the persecuted parson that stie" was an hon est Woman and would, have none ot the 1 Villain, and l continued with scarcely an interruption all through the, long anu weary separation of the good, man and hjs wife, through the scene at tha pdrk where tjjpy arc nearly reunited, through the biting poverty tmd bitter woo which is the lot of both, a.nd to the triumphant finish. The play Is crowded asTfutt of ear iqteret as. it wilt hold, but tture. Is room far comedy here and there, and the audience wfs as. prodigal of its laughter as it was of its applause. The company which Is presenting the I play this, year s if anything sjtrongr tnan teat of last season. Howard Lange looks and ac3 like a minister, and makes a great deal out of the name part, his work In the later icts, when, he Is being hunted by officers of the law. being par. Uculnrly good. Sam C Miller as Feltx Gordon,, the UiaIn. succeeded in elieltlng most Important IocaUtleson 'the Pacific J se,vcral energetic hisses from tho gallery Coast. Truly, It was a monumental un- s everj mwuie ue uu me w dcr taking, and the acumen, expertnesjy ; m- fwua ansa couu vv-. "'"" and UVUtpiiaiilllCMl V llK Afuuuua Vfinrk 4,w, r ..,..,.. . i rpl T-n..HM. -1-.1 li4yi; M'P" itarie itar- Inventiveness d splayed In the ac- " v,,,. ,.,..., ... x,u ii.t.A..Y r w .r.,j.. .!.., t, ,i ' don. J. Norval Smith Is equal t r"?"r5"l u "V V"HHi K "'"-1 'nnlromrntonf AM?Tl,ftm Tn ay, without any fear of contradiction, 1 ;"vTr Ils h1 AX'7 I l'i- IS iX qUUU 1UIS. vji-uh--j , US S that The Oregonlan Is a prince among the journals of the West. The publishers of The Oregonlan have, by their pluck and Ingenuity, served thq State of Oregon in a most substantial I manner, and wo niay rest assured that such a, beneficent act .ul not fail to elicit thjo keenest satisfaction, as wall as the highest' unconstrained encomium. If the eastern people coum dc nrougnt to re.a tu imuiu A B W1aum..., i..i . , h . rnlp,mpnf nf six- nlchts and two matinees at tho Marquam Grand social dependence; and In these later provide" offices for political favorites In, days cosmopolitanism, tncluaing ac BEET SUGAR AND COLONIAL FREE DOM. Fxom $4 to $4 50 per ton is the rate realized by growers of the sugar beet. It may be somewhat higher In a few ' Jo'callties, but that Is ab'out the rate In -the districts of the beet-sugar esteb ilshments in Eastern Oregon and East ern Washington. The average produc tion of beets should be not less than ten tons per acre, but it requires good land and inJeJligeni labor to get that average result Our growers, we think, thus far have obtained not much more than six or spven tons, but it Is believed that experience will double this output tPields well cultivated have yielded as high as fifteen tons, and in a few in stances more. An average of eight tons to the acre, at $4, would jleld $32 per acre; and the question is what profit can be had from this yield. It will be wholly a matter of experi ence; but, of course, the bee't-sugar peo ple, both the growers of the beets and the manufacturers of beet sugar,, are -,-- opposed to the free admission of sugars irom uuoa and from the Philippine Islands. Cuba is a foreign country, and there is no probability that sugar from Cuba will be admitted Into "the United States free of duty. But the Philippines are under the sovereignty of the United States; and to the ulti mate admission of their products free into the United States there is but one alternative, and that is renunciation o,f tfce sovereignty of the islands. We cannot hold these islands and deny them advantages of open trde with the United States. Men who think of it would do well to study Burke's great speeches on "American Taxation" and .on "Conciliation With America." We shall not be able to hold the Phil ippines through the policy by which Qreat Britain, unmindful of Burke's warnings, lost America. INCIPIENT COLONIALISM. "The patriotism of Harvard was at tested on many fields of the Civil War and in the war with Spain. Boston does cot always loolc at things as the rest of the country looks at them, but its instincts are sound. Sound also are the instincts of the young men who go down to Cambridge to school from every state and territory in the land. It is cot a wholly negligible thing, therefore, that when Mr. Bryan talks to Harvard students on "colonialism" they pay him the unusual honor of remain ing in the hall to the end, of his long address, and frequently cheer him to the echo. Mr. Bryan has found It profitable to assume that our government of the Spanish islands is to be oppressive. It Was his cue to charge the Administra tion with the unjust and. burdensome treatment that constitutes "colonial ism" as It has its being under France and Germany, or as it had its being under George IIL His assumption was gratuitous, for our Administration ob viously can only be judged by its fruits. Because Parliament oppressed the American colonies, because bad Govern ors were sent out to India, did not afford sufficient evidence upon which to frame an indictment of the Fifty-seventh Con gress or the Governors that should be sent out from Washington. Since the elections of 1898 and 1900, however, evidence has been accumu lating. We know now something about what the Spanish islands have to ex pect Cuba is belnjj forwarded In preparations for her promised independ ence. Porto Rico is unprecedentedly prosperous, with acceptable administra tors and tariff equality with the step mother country. In the Philippines we have had the burden of an Insurrection on our hands a task from which we could not shrink, since even the "anti imperlallst" members of the Supreme Court have ruled that the Philippines are domestic territory, and our military activity there is not a war of conquest But in one important respect evidence Is being manufactured by Congress for Mr. Bryan's use. The tariff bill that has passed the House of Representatives is a first and a distinct step in "colo nialism." It offers, while we are hold ing the Philippines by force of arms, to deny them access to our markets on any other terms than those exacted from aliens. To export duties already In existence, and by us actually in creased, Congress adds the full Dingley tariff schedules on all Philippine goods seeking admission to our home ports. This is colonialism of true Georgian style, this Is discrimination which is put to shame by the treatment given its colonies by monarchic Great Britain. We sent out good Governors to the this way." Reform is all very well for the country at large, bu.t when it at tacks a branch of appointments al most exclusively apportioned among the Oregon delegation, it Is time to protest How can you expect us tp rustle up "the boys" on primary and election day, Mr. Lacey if you are going to shut off the supply of offices? Keep this thing up long enough, and there will be no expectant crowd about to see the pie cut or the plum tree shaken, and maybe no pie to cujt or tree to shake. No man who loves his country could wish to see a reduction ii the list of offices at the disposal of the Oregon delegation, however much he might fayor reform as a meat:s of en ticing votes to the party ticket As Mr. Lacey's name does not appear among the advocates of a permanent Census Bureau, we suggest to the Ore gon delegatjon that ft place an. Alaska land office at his disposal and get him to withdraw his bill. ARE THE PJEOPLE FOOLS f ' President James J. Hill's explanation to North Dakota farmers of the circum stances that gave rise to the consolida tion of railroad interests represented by the Northern Securities Company seems based largely on the assumption that the people are fools. He puts himself before them In the attitude of a philan thropist He says all those mighty ef forts of his, that have now culminated In the great railroad "trust," had as their objective the saH'atlon of the peo ple of the Northwestern States. Other bold, bad railroad magnates had de signs upon traffic lines reaching Into his sacied Northwest country, and Mr. Hill went-deep into his. pocket to defeat those evil designs and protect the dear people. Perish the thought that his own busi ness Interests were uppermost in his mind! Has he not seen the country expand and prosper since he began rail roading In the hard-wheat region? Has he not for two years been advertising the magnitude of the aquatic leviathans with which he will some day transmog rify the carrying trade of the Pacific? Does not, indeed, the only approved route across the continent He through his scnith city of the unsalted seas, di vine Duluth, and hjs queen city of Ori ental departure, saline Seattle? This being true, how could Mr. Hill refrain from leading all the world to that one safe, serviceable, remunerative and al together Jovely highway of commerce? President Hill is a hard-headed") far seeing man of action, but he is not an adroit talker. He doesn't chase rain bows; he is no dreamy altruist He succeeds In business because he under stands and puts In practice methods for the most part rational and sound. His railroads have been built without, subsidies, at reasonable cost, and they make money for the men who hold their, stock and securities. Mr. Hill's efforts, have been directed to making his rail roads pay, and he has been 'successful to a marked degree. He has made them pay by keeping expenses down and keeping rates up. Thero Is no evidence, that he contemplated reversal of this hard-fisted business policy, and was about to double the pay of emploj'es I and halve the charges to shippers. When Mr. Hill's eleemosynary propen sities become developed to this point, wo shall see how long the millions of hia SO-year-old friends will support him. The less cost of Mr. Hill's railroads should enable him to carry freight for less money than is exacted by his com petitors. This would be a good thing for the people along his lines. It would open the country to occupation by set tlers, who would vastly Increase its pro ductiveness, and this would give larger tonnage to the railroad. But his charges have not been less than those of his competitors. The melons behind Mr. Hill support him because of the larg returns he 1b able to get them on their. Investment and their loyalty to him is measured by the size of the profit he pays them. And the money he pays; them is taken from the people of these; Northwestern States," which he says he has been trying to preserve, protect and defend against the ravages of bar barian invaders from the south. He. seemingly thinks it would be truly frightful to subject the country to the unholy competition of those other men, who would not use Mr. Hill's, railroads or steamships or ports. But It is alto gether commendable for him to reach out Into the territory of the others and divert their patronage to his lines. Only unreasoning selfishness could object to this beneficent course. "When Mr. Hill ceases preaching that he is in business for sweet charity's sake, and that those who do not readily fall in with his plans" are destroyers'of commerce, perverters of truth and di verters of traffic, he will command more respect among thoughtful business men. He is in business for the same reason that other men are for money and power. This is not saying that his business methods have been or will be unjustly oppressive or ruinous, as busi ness goes, But business it is, not phli- auafntance with the wide world and a certain conformity to its judgments with assimilation of Us fashions and manners. Is universal. It was not so with the American plopeer He did not, in truth, cut loose from all that came before hla generation, for he carried Into the wilderness his religion, a certain rough-and-ready Intellectual culture and the fixed habits of civilized charac ter; but he had small connection and even less regard for what was epart from native conditions and life. The marks of hla independence are many. For example, the pioneer held fast to his religion, but he modified at will the established" forms of worship and the sectarian organizations of his time, as the Cumberland and Campbelllte soci eties bear curious witness. Likewise, hia speech, his clothing, the furniture of his house, his common occupations, his social practices all marked his sep aration from the outer world and illus trated the self-dependence an.d resource fulness of his life and character. And. verily, the life of the pioneer called for and gave oonstant exercise to high qualities. There was courage in the man who pushed his way Into the wilderness, fearless of its dangers and careless of its privations. There was an amazing Independence in the man who left the support and. protec tion of an established social order to hew out his own. career in the wikl3r And there was hardihood In him; for, as it has been eloquently said, "only the brave adventured, and only the strong endured." And, withal, there was in the American pioneer such fortitude as no race but his has ever displayed without the stimulus of heroic inclte mtit, or apart f ron. the hopes of reward or applause. Such was the American pioneer, and his achievements were In keeping with hjs character. He first gained from the savage and held for civilization and for his country the great regkm of Kentucky and Tennessee this under conditions of hazard and stress the like of which the modern world has never seen elsewhere. Established In this out post at the period of our Revolution, the pioneer, under pioneer leadership, moved forward upon the then British country north of the Ohio River, and as a result of a military campaign without parallel In history won for the new flag and for the American system the vast country which lies between the Ohio, the lakes, the Mississippi, and the Alleghany Mountains. At a later time It was the pioneer who, through the pressure he brought for an outlet to the sea, created a situation which re sulted In the addition of the Louisiana country .to our National territories. So much for the character of the pio neer and his general achievements prior to his connection with this special coun try of ours. It Is scarcely necessary to add the familiar story of hla. march to Oregon, of the singular combination of high motives which inspired him, of the. courage and, fortitude which marked his coming and his early life here. Only let us acknowledge, that the be ginnings of all that we have and all that we are came through the purpose and the energy of the pioneer. It was he who laid out the first roads, who first bridged our streams, organized civil government and set the wheels of a primitive Industry In motion here. Was there ever a generation of men which did its work better, or In the doing of It displayed finer traits of char acter? Are thos.e who so loudly lament the pioneer spirit doing for their day and generation better work, or are thej exhibiting higher or worthier qualities? We think not; and, hopefully as we look to tile future, there appears no prosr pect of a time when. Oregon wtlljiold a truer or better race of men, estimated in relation to Its times, than the race of- the pioneer. Those who deride the pioneer spirit have. It would seem, small conception ot what the pioneer spirit really was. The pioneer was no rock-ribbed con servative, no reactionary, no mossback. no block in the way of progress; in truth, the very spirit of innovation and progress was In him- His whole record, as (t may be traced from the "wilderness road" to the Paclfio Ocean, Is a record of restless energy and of per sistent courage In new ventures, of un ceasing progress. His tradition, like the character out of which it grew.. Is a noble one; and we- should be heedless, truly, to cast it oft or to wish to do so. What Oregon needs Is not to throw over the spirit of, the pioneer, but to revive It, fit It to newer times and make It our own. And, In truth, nobody need imagine that our domestio tradition Is to be thrust aside or lost New times are upon vb, and new conditions are creat ing new alms and habits. Change from the fashion and the social temper of old Oregon lg plainly begun; its mani festations are all abovrx us; but there will be no hasty revolution here. It Is not the way of a whole people to turn in a day from "old dispositions and mbtlvcs to new, and from long-fixed ways of doing things. The world's depth of water between Astoria and I and sentiments about Oregon would up Portland than there 13 hfow Astoria j dergo a radical cnange to tne great ana 1 . . m 11nnll-fe VfiHrfl tF IVti Al St. A WiaiA4 1 at low ac, ana tne vnqrnces aa uuiuv ablui ih. ur ut Lft ecu Asiuim, om the sear River transport beweenrPprt land and Astoria Is. and foreyervwi bs cheaper than rail transport; so. tie river between Pqrtlahd and Astoria 1 not the problem at all. The problem la the Columbia bar, Thedepth there at low water Is but nineteen, feet. The re iMs no concealing It Silence, is uselesF. Rivals know It Shipowners know it, If they who talk for Xstorfa. would cease, to worry about tha river chann, up to Portland and Join Portland in the ef fort necessary to make a channel for entrance and, exit at the mouth ot th?- nver. tcey woum aa spraetnmg to tn.e; purpose. Hanna ad, ForaKer a.rf. , ,f- n Ohio, Spoorjer and Quarles In Wj3m$ln, Cullom and Mason In Illinois, Fairbanks and Beverldge In Indiana, Mitchell and Simon In Oregon. These interminable conflicts between Senatorial machines are lamentable, and may all bQ. ascribed to a fundamental defect In our forn ot government If there were only offices enough to go around among all, peace would be speedily enthroned. Can't' we get more offices or reduce the ranks of the aspirants? The Seattle Post-Intelligencer Is edi torially In great doubt whether It la Wise to limit Philippine trade to Amer ican vessels. This Is proof conclusive t,hat Mr. Hill's prospective absorption of available trans-Pacific ships Is still pending. The Post-Intelligencer's able dnd disinterested vlews on transporta tion matters are almost as convincing and Illuminative as. are those o M.. Sam Elmore's Astorlan on the salmon problem". We may get, a lower tariff rate with the Philippines, just for a litthi sop to keep "protection" Inviolate. If. we can find a consistent principle In "protec tion," It Is worth while, since principles endure forever. In this case the endur ing principle is much the same aa that of the ship subsidy. If you forget it, ask the trusts and the bosses. In a sketch in The Oregonlan ot yes terday the names of two noted military men, Harney and Kearney, were jum bled together, and the result was "Philip Harney." It may be unnecessary to say that both, officers, Philip Kearney and William S. Harney, were In mind when the sketch was written; but it Is as well to make the explanation. These long and propitiatory reports and proipises from Great Northern, Bal timore & Ohio and Union Pacific are useful signs of tho times. They show the anxiety of our magnates to stand well with their subjects. Community of Interest finds Itself less omnipotent with human nature than with securities. Senator Hanna announces that he fa vors the Panama Canal. But no one should suppose that he does actually favor it, or favor auy canal, Support of Panama at this time Is the way to Obstruct Nicaragua and to prevent or Indefinitely postpone any canaL ' President Schurman, of Cornell Uni versity, and the president of the first Philippine Commission, declares f.or free trade with the Philippines, from which It Is an easy Inference .that President Schurman is not heavily interested in l either sugar or tobacco. The San Franolsco Call (Spreckels) has the hardihood to demand protection for sugar against Philippine imports, on. high moral grounds. It Is not surpris ing where the Call stands, but It is surprising it hasn't the decency to es chew hypocrisy. lasting benefit . qt the whole American people. pur complements to The Oregonlan I :ggy that bright reliable journal prosper ifi fame' and" In wealth until It attains the pinnacle of" success, are the sincere wishes of tho editors of this journal. Cofax Gazette. As usual, the. New Tear's number of Thft Orcgonla.n 13 a king ot its kind. It consists o$ fci pages, full to the hrlm of valuable historical, descriptive and sta tistical Information concerning Oregon, andfso much oCWashtngton and Idaho as lie within the valley of the Columbia River, aty onc a. part of "old Oregon," the. mother of Northwestern. States. The paper opens, with thft 3tory ot the Lewis and Clark expedition across the continent a century ago, and A succeeding pages the reader Is brought to the- present day. The Oregonlan never. does anything by halves, and its reputation I sustained In this edition. Chahalls B,ee-Nugget The .OtegohUn pulaliled a 64-page New Year 4dition that "wefsa hummer. It cov ered the "Sta teTof Oregon and tributary territory n "Washington and Idaho, giv ing careful rlte-ups of every county. There "la an article on Lewis County, and I Wft picture In the center of the pase de voted to hops represents a Lewis county, Washington, hopyard scene. The Lewis and Clark expedition, the lumbering and F shipping business, mining and other big enterprises of the Northwest are treated at length in the paper. This Is the most ably edited special edition ot dny news paper ever issued in the Northwest. Ashland Tidings. The Oregonlan annual ,ls$ued New Year's morning. Is fully equal to and $t some respects surpassed Us special editions of past years. Its H pages are, crammed with matter full of live Interest to the people of the state, as well as to thou sands of Eastern people who are looking westward for homes. A feature, which gives the edUlon peculiar historic Inter est i-s the graphic and comprehensive ar ticle upon the effect of the Lewis and Cark expedition upon the westward ex pansion of the United States., t is 9. very timely article. Forest Grove Times, The New Year's numbor of Tho Orego nlan was Immense. It consisted ot 64 pages, packed trom urst to last witn in formation concerning Oregon and the great Northwest Thq whole range of knowledge concerning this vast rcglpn seems to be covered by this number, leav ing nothing to be dcsred on the part of any one wanting information in regard to the history, geogiaphy. climate, produc tions or statistics. It is a wonder In newspaper-making, and adds one more to the many laurels The Oregonlan has won dur ing its career. Heppner Gazette. The mammoth annual number of The Or egonlan contains 64 pages, and Is replete with accurate information from every county In Oregon. In- fact the' entire Northwest Is covered, showing the re sources and advantages offered for the Investment of capital, and the induce ments to homeseckers. A wide circula tion of this paper la the East will cer tainly bring a great many people to the West Woodburn Independent The Morning Oregonlan isucd a New Year's edition of 64 pages, and treated of the resources of this grand and rich state in an exhaustive manner. It is very readable and Illustrated to an extromely tnteresting degree. A copy of this issue will be highly prized by any ono in tho East deliberating upon the advisability ot moving to Oregon, and will assuredly solve the problem to his satisfaction. Lebanon Criterion. The New Year's number ot The Ore gonlan wa3 an Immense affair. It con tained 64 page3 of Interesting reading about Oregon and her resources. Port land received special attention, as also did tho coming Lewis and Clark Centen nial. There 13 nothing that is better to send to your friends in the East than a Jew Year's number jof The Oregonlan. V . it XQT& AXDb COMMENT: , The 1DCG falc is rapidly, becoming tangible. Camcgla m.us.t ?Pt his. pheckjbooks by :Iie grors. Meanwhile Uje placid cow; Is quietly, hopp ing. a fearQlebs, i&p. jenc Fortunately nobody Is empowered to legislate against an open "Winter. Senator Quay say he will not resign. Hq'tajEi marehah'is, rlally' necessary." MosJl of the, newly made pugilistic matches will have no strike about tfiem. Tfte fqajtoajl, season is, at an end, and barbers are again doing an average" busi ness. Alfred Austin is surely going to push the sale ofhis poems in the American market Trainer Croker, has Ipft the Tammany menagerle, but the tiger will still bear watching. Editor Bryan was accorded a reception nt Harvard that Candidate Bryan found it impossible to get In spite of all the war clouds over South America, there docsa't appear to, be any prqbpect of a rain of law. Palma thinks afflce-hqldlng in Cuba Is eajy'r but wait tUl he gets to appointing janitors in the public buildings. Colorado has been obliged to call an extra session of the Legislature. Perhaps this is Judgment on the state for its suf frage law. JT. P. Morgan's new grandchild possesses cdy, "The Geisha, will be the opening an QUtnt of clothes worth $3000. but it Is hllh Th!t pntnMv ornrprl nn Inmrnse tri- t . - . . . not on recora mat it cnes any lees ire- court Is a funny German woman. Jos ephine MacMahon is clever a the chfid, and the remainder pf tho company is up to requirements. The play is weil mqunt ed. It will run all the week. "Te Pel!.la" Ttjulsht. Pollard's Australian 4uvcml0 Opera Company of GO youngsters is on Us first American tour of the United States and Theater tonight The pretty musical com- bill. This comedy scored an Immense tri umph in Lopdpn. Australia and South Africa, where it has bc.cn produced. The story of "The Geisha" is as fpllqws; The first act takes place in the cqurtyard of the teahouse of Ten Thousand Joys. The officers of H. M. S. "Turtle have been visitors to this spot, and flirted with the geishas. Lieutenant Fairfax has been the mp.s,t serious offender, and has become enam ored of O Mimosa San, the chief geisha. He is engaged to. Molly Scamore. The Marquis Imarl, -Chief ot Police and Gov ernor of the province, has also fallen in love with O Mimosa San, and in order to gain her affections, soils out Wun III, te proprietor of the teahouse. MoHy. who has disguised herself as a geisha, is also sold to the Marquis, who bids her In at a very low price- The second act takes place In the pal ace garden, where the Marquis gives a chrysnnthemum fete in honor of his ap proaching marriage to O Rolll FolM San, otherwise Molly. The Marquis,' designs are frustrated bv O Mimosa San. dis guised as a fortune teller, and Juliette Dlamont. a French girl, who loves him for his position. She takps Molly's place as the bride; thus Mimosa wins her lover Katana, the Captain of the Guard: Molly her Reginald, and Juliette the Marquis. XellJ Co,ljany Co.ming:. Charles Astor Farmer, manager for James Neill and the Nelll 'company, ar rived in this city yesterday from Cali fornia. Since it was last here the Nelll company has visited Honolulu and will return there again next season. Mr. Nelll Is now making a special tour, presenting Glyd,e Fitch's war play of "Barbara Friotchie" only, which broke all records for "big financial receipts last Summer In San Francisco. It will be presented in Portland January 20, 21 and 22. A ME3RB IDEALIST, If reciprocity with the Philippines would destroy the open-door policy In China, that settles it Even if protec tion and the open door are Irreconcil able, let us pretend that their harmony la, heavenly. Secretary W'hwn pronounces Pennsyl vania and Connecticut tobacco the equal of thq best Cuban article. Com t mon charity compels the conclusion that Uncle James doesn't smoke. The star-eyed goddess. Is. avenged. Colonel Wattcrspn has lived to see a gohi-standara man chosen by Kentucky Democrats for the United States Sen ate. V The blame for the collision of the Walla Walla and the Max lies with a law of physics. Two bodies cannot, oc cupy thesame space at the same time. It's a joke, a huge joke, that row in the Port of Portland Commission, and it's too bad that the Interests of the city will have to stand for it. British subjects have almost stopped enlisting fortho Boer War. Evidently they belleve'wlth their statesmen that the war is ended. Game laws, Jet us not forget, arc meant to protect game not that It may live, but that we may kill it. Vale Gasette. The Portland Oregonlan has again put out a most excellent annual number, con sisting of 64 pa?es of well-written matter descriptive of Oregon and its resources. Tho Oregonlan has, perhaps, dono more than all other publications combined to acquaint the people of the United States with tho resources of the Pacific North west ' Yakima Herald. The Portland Orcgonian's annual sou venir number is the. most elaborate and comprehensive of all the specials issued by the different papera of the Northwest this Winter. It has gathered information from all parts of Washington and Ore gon, and gives it to its readers in Its usual elaborate style. The number Is well worth preserving for future reference. Port Orfprd Tribune. The Orcgonian's New Yeaj edition is teeming with valuable information for the homes'eeker. the miner and the manufac turer. No more valuable present could be sent to friends in the East, and Jts price, including postage, 3 but 3 cents. Ip con tains a write-up of every county in the state. Davenport Times. The Oregonlan got 'out a special edition last week of about Qt pages, devoted most ly to Oregon and "Washington. It is a mammoth affair, and for the Eastern ' reader furnishes valuable information; but for home consumption well, it is too big. t Hall (fettle Should ExdIrIh. Atlanta Journal. Hall Cainc says he Is Indebted to the BJole fof much of h!3 literary success. There are people who will regard this as sertion as rank blasphemy. "Vl;ose Theories llnve No Pusiiiblc Ilattm tq Facts." ?roidence Journal. Senator Hoar is the Jeremiah of the "antl-lmperiaUst." and, like hl3 proto type, he, speaks in season and out ot sea sont thpugh there be no one to hear. His latest address on tho subject was deliv ered, before the Young Men's Catholic Assbcla'tion1 of Boston. He called atten tion to the harmonious relations between the United Stgtes and Japan, and ex pressed the conviction that If the Fili pinos had been treated like the Japanese they would be our cordial friends today. They would be, he said, "listening to our counsel and Informing themselves by our example. Their schools and universities would be filled with youth stuJjlng our language and history, fitting themselves to learn the great and noble story of the men who builded this Republic. We should already have made of tuem a brave, honorable and noble people, look ing upon the present with satisfaction and upon the future with hope." This Is a pleasing picture and the triv ial" circumstance that it Is purely imag inative does not make it less pleasing. Yet tho fact remains that the Filipinos are not the Japanese, but a very different people, aqd that the relations we had wRh 'them were wholly unlike those we had with their neighbors from the very od'tset japan was remote from the West ern world. It is true, when Commodore Terry rediscovered it; but it hag an old civilization and a settled government, and its; people, were eager, as the event showed, to embrace, new Ideas. The Phil ippines, qp the other hand, came into our possession by conquest, under conditions that forbade, the repognition ot their in d,cpend.cncc. Jt would have been a shirk ing 'of duty, a crime against civilization, even, o lqae the Filipinos to themselves. It Is l(lc to pTacg upon Amorjcan shoul ders the responsibility for their political Incapacity, "If. says Senator Hoar, "f hey arc exhibiting he traits which be long to'woakness and subjectlpn. It Is we who are Jargoly responsible. If the Fili pinos bo treacherous, It Is we that have made him treacherous; If he ha cruel. It Is we that have made him cruel; If he be sayqge, it is we that hae dashed the cup of liberty and civilization from his lips." The. notion that a people who resist good government caro for "liberty and civilization" could only occur to one whose enthusiasm for an idea hau run away with him. In the same speech Senator Hoar had a word for the Boer,?, no less than for Aguinaldo languishing "in pris on," comparing them by inference with tfeo men 0 Thermopylae and Marathon and with the PJlgrira Fathers. This Is all ycry well for a prophet of "antl-im-perlallsm," bu.t It is no statesmanship worthy of th.e senior Senator from Massachusetts. quently than any other baby. Perhaps King Edward will be able to pull off a very fair sort of a coronation, even if his cousin of Germany won't con descend to come over and act as the star. attractipp. Kipling is not taking anjr more chances on "Lest Wo Forget" He has given his countrymen a few pointers with an In timation that they will be excellent things to remember. Oscar Straus, of New York, ex Mlnlster to Turkey, called" on Secretary Hay and left a Christmas, present with which Mr. Hay was Relighted. It was a copy -of Oliver Goldsmith's "Life of Shakespeare," an early and rare edition, but it had a greater value than its liter ary rarity In having come from the library ot George Washington. Washington q personal bookplate, the familiar arms of his family, on which the American flag was modeled, adorns the inside of the cover, and the signature of the first Presi dent appears, on the title page a. clearly, as; It It had been written yesterday in stead of more than 100 years ago. The print is excellent and the binding fine. As tamers and keepers of animals, dark men never succeed. Visits to zoos and to menageries show them to be Invariably fair fellows, with yellow 07 brown hair and with blue eyes. 'Thus at the Zoo logical Garden in New York thce Is not a keeper who Is dark. John McMullen, of the lion-house, has light hair, a yellow mustache and violet orbs. Lover, of the wolyes and foxes, Is still more markedly blond, and In the antejope-houe, the snr.kehouFc and the small mammal-house light colors still prevail. One ot the most pronounced blonds at the zoo was John Thompson, who is now In Honolulu making cast- ot fishes for a museum there. Thompson was one of the most success ful keepers the zoo has ever had. Not only snakes and turtles (his speclaltj), but lions, foxes, wolyes, 4eec and many other animals toqk to him naturally, and he was never scratched or bitten. Ir a Multitude There Is Danger. Vale Gazette. , """ From present indications Eastern Ore gon win again havp to be content with out a prominent candidate on the next Republican state ticket The. only" gentle men from this part Of the state who have announced their Inteqtiqn to bo can didates Def0rc the' next state convention are Judge Lowell ard W. J. Furnish, both of Pendleton, who have both an nounced their candidacy for Governor. It Is unfortunate for Eastern Oregon jha't these gentlemen, both from the sranc town, should announce themselves both for the same office, a3 about the only purpose the candidacy of each will serve will be to kill off the other. And, unless the unforseen happens. Governor Gccr will be renominated without any very serious opposition. Eastern Oregon Is cer tainly entitled to 'some recognition, and If the "cow counties" could unite on Will iamson of PrincYillc for Secretary of State, or Young, of Baker County, for State Printer, or Miller, of Ontario, fpr Attorney-General, we would be almost sure of success. And there Is no gpjd reason why Eastern Oregon should' not ask for and receive all of these places on, the ticket as we have about two-thlrdff the area and one-third the population of the entire state? "Washingtonlans have been surprised a numher ot times during the holidays by seeing the Rdosevelt boys, and especially. Theodore, making their way about the White House grounds, and even intq he street, without either hat or cap. Thco- r dore recently surprised the White House attaches by going out during one of the coldest days without hat, overcoat or gloves. Kermlt Roosevelt seldom wears hs hat, unless going lntq the street, not thinking it worth "hile to protect hi? head while about the grounds. Archibald haa the same abhorrence of a head cov ering, and President Roosevelt never puts on his hat when escorting; Mrs. Rooseyclt or others to the carriage, or bids good bye to friends on the pdrch. A friend of the Roosevelt family who has frequently visitcd them at Oyster Bay says If Is an pld custom that still crops out, for In that part of"?few York and across the fine In Massachusetts neither men nor women bother themselves with hats either Summer or Winter. It Is juet an Oyster Bay habit, he says. , Neutrality TowartJ Boer ad Bripn. New Yoiic Triune Two Boer meetings call upon the Pres ident to present the further shipment of supplies from this country to the Brit ish army In South Africa, the Imputation apparently being that such shipments were in violation of established princi ples ot neutrality. Ifsuch be the meaning of the resolution we. must regard it as quite mistaken. Upon no ground is the peaceful commerce of this country to be restricted or Interfered with merely be cause a war exists in some foreign land. That principle v was established by Thomas Jefferson a century ago, and hae been consistently maintained ever since Citizens of the UnitcdxStates have a per fect right to sell horsqs and mules and rifles and cartridges to whomsoever they, please, be it Brltqn or Boer. If Kitchener is short of horees he can get them here. If Botha is short of ammunition he can get it here. But in each case the pur chaser; must lake his goods across the hfgh seas at his own rlsfc. . ELEAS4STKIES PF PARAGRAP1JERS. "r.a thla !nentlon teat -will, aa you say, throw jrqxconi In llie shade,' what Is it?" "X wireless rfano, for use Ir flat-houses "Life. " Alaa! Firt Man She fa a most lovabljj woman. Secopd Man Jsn't she7 "Jua'j the. ynd that you never fall In love with. Detrol Free Press. Sneaking, of the responsibilities that richea hrius. no" sooner hae oar wealthy class e leafr.d to pronounce "chef" with confidence than chauffeurs" Tiegln to'come In. TPuck. "W"ell Bcsun. "IIa e jou made any progress with jpur ne,w noel?" asked his friend. "Oh, yes," said" the hustling, young author. "I'si selected d name and a press arent." Brooklyn Lire. "" " " Papa Tommy, if you had a little more spunk ou would stand better In jour class. iow da you know what epunk Is? Tommy Yes, sir. It's the past particle of spank. Chicago News. Alice J beUc Maud's fiance fays that what be most ad&lrcs In her is her marked lnde pendence of judgment. Irenes-Tea. She was the oply girl in her sqt who would accept him. larlem Life. An mateur Photographer's Mljtake. "She was rather inclined to accept kjm, till he took a picture of her. That was. too much, so she said "No." " "I see. 'He developed tne wrong nsgathe." Pnlladclphla Evening Bulletin. Hanson Ttcr.c wa$ a time I couldn't abide Pus'lclgh; but I declare. "If, he bapp't become really "agreeable ot late. Toster You "don't mean it Hanson Yes; he hasn't called at my I place for a month or two. Boston Transcript.