THE MOjRNING OREGQNIAN, TUESDAY APRIL S, 1902. toe regmxtiftt i"ntered at the Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, as second-clars "matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In Advance Bally, with Sunday, per month . S3 Daily. Sunday excepted, per year 7 30 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The WeeTcly. per year 1 CO The Weekly. Z month W To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted,15o Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncludefi.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to H-page paper...... ...........lo 14 to 2S-page paper................ So Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the nanw' of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps ehould be inclosed tor this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 4T, 48. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City; 4C0 "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C. Bcckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Butter street; F. W. Pittsi 1008 Market street: J. K. Cooper Co.. 746 Market street, aearths Palace Hotel; Foster & Ofear, Ferry news etand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 305 Bo. Spring street. For sale in Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 420K street. Sacramento. Cal. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, 63 Washington street. For sale in Omaha by JSarkalow 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 C. H. Myers. On file at Charleston, S. C, in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale in Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. . For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrick. 000-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. 15th and Lawrence streets; A. Series. 1653 Champa street. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers, with south erly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 50; minimum temperature, 39; pre cipitation, 0.64 inch. ' PORTLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1002 THE FRENCH ELECTIONS. On Sunday, April 27, France will hold her election for the next Chamber of Deputies, and the canvass Is now In active progress which will decide the character of the French Government for the next four years to come. The ma jority of the Chamber of Deputies se lects the Ministry. The present Cham ber, elected In 1898, contains 584 Depu ties, elected In separate districts as nearly asposslble with 100.00Q popula tion. Under French law a candidate must have a majority. France In 1893 elected 235 Republicans, 98 Radicals, 57 Socialists, 82 Radical Socialists. 35 Rallies (Roman Catholic Republicans), 58 Reactionaries and' 7 scattering. The present Ministry, headed by "Waldeck Rousseau, represents a coalition be tween the Progressive Republicans, the Radicals and the more conservative So cialists. The polled vote In 1898 was 7,838,013, out of 10,231,532 electors. The absentees were nearly all Reactionaries. In 1898 the republic was in an over whelming majority, meaning by that, while there are various Republican fac tions In France, six out of seven votes cast in 1898 agreed In preferring a re public. The French Republic faces today no pretender. Twenty years ago Count Chambord, the Bourbon heir, was a live political figure. He was succeeded by the Count of Paris, the Orleanlst heir. Boulanger. in 1890, promised to become a successful military adventurer. The Duke of Orleans at one time had a popular following, but quickly lost It by his vices. Prince Louis Bonaparte, now a General in the Russian Army, has not developed into a pretender, -and the Dreyfus case, through the wisdom and courage of President Loubet, was tided over without driving France Into a military-clerical reaction under some ambitious soldier. Today, on the eve of her national election, France con fronts none of these perils the republic has won. The only contest today In France is whether the next government shall represent an alliance between 'the center of the Republican party and the Radical Socialist party or between this center and the moderates. The pros pect Is that the French voters will elect a Chamber of Deputies even more fa vorable to Premier Waldeck-Rousseau than the present Waldeck-Rousseau has shown Im eelf to be not only a strong man, but a most tactful statesman. He came Into power at a time when the existence of the French Republic seemed threatened by the contest between those who de manded and those who opposed a re vision of the judgment rendered by the iirst court-martial In the Dreyfus case. He has put an end to the Dreyfus scan dal without alienating the army or out raging the public sense of justice. He formed a Cabinet out of a Parliament where there was no real majority, and he has not only kept this heterogeneous Cabinet together but has made It a good working machine. He has averted conflict between the army and the civil power; has courageously reorganized the general staff, and has driven through both chambers the law regulat ing religious associations, the aim and effect of which has been to expel -the Jesuits alid other teaching orders from France. And yet he has done this with out exciting any serious resentment on the part of the Roman Catholic Church in France, for the church knows that the hostility of the government Is not directed at the church, but at the Jesuit schools, whose teaching Is subversive of Republican principles; that is, the state does not propose to tax Itself for the multiplication of Its foes. "While the Socialists in the Chamber of Deputies have supported Premier "Waldeck's leading measures, he has yielded to none of their extravagant demands save the project for old-age pensions. The present Premier of France has certainly deserved well of the republic, and the vote at the na tional elections this month will doubt less return a Chamber of Deputies that will be sure to continue his Ministry. President Doubet is an able man, both honest and brave, and with a Premier like WaldeckrRousseau and a President like Ixiubet, France ought td be able to meet successfully any trial that comes to her during the next four yeara Within the next four years it is quite possible that there will come a clash of arms between Russia and Japan. In that event Great Britain would support Japan, and France has virtually an nounced that she would sustain Russia. President Loubet's visit to the Czar Is public notice that France is to act with Russia. In event of a great war be tween RuEsla and France on the one side and Japan backed by' Great' Brit ain on the other, France could not be In better hands than those of President Loubet and Premier Waldeck-Rousseau. If the resolution which recently passed the Chamber of Deputies be comes a law by the concurrence of the French Senate, the term of the next and of every succeeding Parliament will be six years instead of four. The strong support which all the French Republi cans gave this resolution for prolonging the term of the Chamber of Deputies to six years may be taken as an expres sion of their confidence in success at the Impending general election. THE DOUBLE LIFE. No- novelist ever contrived a stranger story of marital Irregularity than Is uncovered by the murder of Mrs. Charles A, Furbush and her little girl. In Philadelphia last week. But for the chance that led to the negro servant's, horrible revenge and consequent revelation of the double life that has been carried on for years by Charles A, Furbush, a wealthy manu facturer and broker of that city, the facts in this most unusual and revolt ing case would probably never have come to light. In the Fifteenth-street home Mr. Fur bush had a wife and two children. The house was a handsome one, and luxuri ously furnished with costly paintings and statuary. The woman was 47, good looking and affectionately regarded by her neighbors. The two little girls re sembled the father. The Spring Garden-street home was also grand, within and without In it lived a wife and one child, also a daughter. The day of the tragedy Mr. Furbush waB in New York, and returned In hot haste upon tele graphic summons. He was at the Spring Garden-street house a while, but spent most of the night away, dividing it between sorrowful watches at the side of the dead woman and equally distressful interviews at the hospital with his little Elolse, the second daugh ter, who was wounded but not killed by the murderous negro. In her Intervals' from suffering she recognized him, called him "Papa," and talked of their common misery. At the Spring Garden street house the lights were low, and In response to Inquiries it was said that the mistress of the house was ill, she knew nothing of the other Mrs. Fur buBh, she was no relation of hers, she could- not be seen. Owing to the reserve and delicacy ob served by the Philadelphia papers, out of respect to the man's position In busi ness and society and through sympathy with the relatives of both women. It is uncertain what are the facts about the relations of the man with his two puta tive wivea Whether he was married to both or to one, and which one, and whether either or both of them knew of the other family's existence, can at present only be surmised, though time may disclose all. It Is incredible that a woman of right Instincts could be consenting to such baseness. It seems Incredible that any woman with ordi nary knowledge of affairs would willingly bear children to a man who could never own them before the world. All that is. certain Is that this man, with all his wealth, business capacity, soclar- qualities and cultivated tastes, was a moral monster, in who.se excep tional case all rules of human nature are put to naught and all explanations fall to explain. ' Tet, however exceptlbnal his nature or his theories of life, his actions are indefensible by any code. Marriage as It is observed In Great Britain and the United States has been approved by the experience of the race in all the experi ments from promiscuity down through polyandry and polygamy. Supported by history, enforced by the law and sanctioned by religion, the marriage custom Is binding upon all men to be the husband of but one wife and to her to be true in wealth or poverty, joy or sorrow, good or 111. The punishment of this man', as he sat by the bier of the woman he had wronged, and thought of the other one agonized In grief and illness, that he had perhaps more deep ly wronged, of the children still living whose future he had blighted, of his own proud name now humbled in the dust, was very great, but no greater than he deserved. The duty was upon him of conforming to the custom of so ciety. If his nature was exceptional, that was his misfortune. There Is no excuse for offenses against the law of domestic sanctity. Man Is as bounden as woman to respect it If his tempta tion is greater, so is his strength. ' TONNAGE AND CROP PRICES. Oregon wheat; flour, lumber, salmon and other products are now going out to the world's markets on the lowest ocean freight rate that has prevailed since 1896. From the Antipodes sailing ships are bringing coal to this city at lower rates than those exacted from the m(nes In adjoining states. From Europe many cargoes of salt, cement, glass, Iron and building material are headed for this city at the lowest freight rate on record. Steam and sail vessels are coming- from Calcutta with bags for the Oregon wheat crop at the lowest rates that has been paid in ten years, while from the Orient tramp steamers are .cutting rates on sulphur, rice, mat ting and all other freight which can be secured to fill the vacancy under deck. Meanwhile new tonnage Is going 'into the water at a record-breaking rate all over the world. The slump in freights has, of course, called a halt In new contracts for ships, but like a soft 'snowball rolling down hill, the business has gained volume a3 It gained speed, and will not reach Its greatest proportions until just "before It comes to a halt This Is a bad season for the shipowners, but among the pro ducers no regrets are expressed. The men who handle the ocean commerce of the world can be numbered by the hundreds, or the thousands, and they are now In a fair way to lose some of the big surplus that has been accumu lating during a number of years of prosperity. The producers and the con sumers are numbered by millions, and from the highest to the lowest they are reaping the benefit of low- ocean f relghta Not more than 100 individuals or firms are -Interested In the ships that carry to market the products of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, but 1,000,000 people in the three states profit by the reduction In these freights. An Iniqui tous tariff has enabled the salt trust to force prices up to unreasonable fig ures, but the decline in ocean. freights has started thousands of tons from Eu rope to Pacific Coast ports, where It can be landed and sold far below the prices exacted by the trust No matter how remote the producer or the consumer may be from the American seaboard, he Is certain to profit by any reduction In ocean freights which will admltvof his products reach ing a market at lessened expense for carriage. 'Rail lines which carry the products of-the Interior farms to tide water do not reduce their rates when crops are poor, freight scarce and the' foreign markets at low ebb, and accord ingly; the only relief that the American farmer can secure at such a time Is that afforded by low ocean rateS. When crops are bad In one part of the coun try, and good elsewhere, the railroads cannot move their transportation equip ment to the locality where freight is plentiful, and thus by competition equalize matters on a supply and de mand basis. With the ocean steamer It Is different The-Almighty has provid ed for these wanderers commercial highways on which all flags have an equai'opportunlty. When the crops are bad and freight Is scarce in certain parts of the world, the steamer can up anchor and steam to a port where conditions are more favor able. The producer in the unlucky dis trict which the steamer may-leave, as a partial offset for his poor crop, will have the call on trie steamer before she departs, however, at a very low rate of freight Even the producer who has been favored with a good crop receives an additional benefit by the competi tion of the various steamers that have been driven away from other parts of the world and flock in where freight la plentiful. Vessels now loading In this port are flying the British, -German, Austrian and ifcench flags. They have come here from the remote quarters of the earth, and they are after business and will take it or what they can se cure. A shipping trust that can bring the fleets of all of these big powers together and regulate rates Is as impossible as an International alliance that would sat isfactorily unite them. For this reason the producers of the world will period ically find relief from excessive freight rates in the assertion of the law of sup ply and demand, which in the case of ocean freights cannot be obstructed or nullified by combinations and mergers. POPULAR REVERENCE FOR POWER The humor of Mr. Samuel L. Clemens Is never quite so grotesque and com pelling as when its author attempts to divert It to some serious end. This has been the doleful fate of the humorist's ventures in statesmanship, but it is happily averted In the case of his an swer to "Does the Race of Man Love a Lord?" which ornaments the place of honor in the North American Review for April. Among the many frailties of our poor human nature, none lends itself more readily to banter than the instinctive homage paid to power, and In its lm pulslve.and ofttlmes unconscious mani festations Mark Twain has discovered a fruitful field for the employment of his peculiar talents. He has marked them all the worship paid to royalty by the nobility, the aristocracy's wor ship of the nobility, the worship every eminent class or individual irets in his own realm, large or small, from the King on the throne to the leader of the newsboya And he shows up with rare skill and much good humor the various modes In which this adoration expresses Itself. We can all recall the pleasure with .which the man who once has supped with the Emperor or walked down the steps of the Capitol with the Senator, or rode across country with the Governor, or shook hands with the vheavy-welght champion, or assisted Mrs. Quality to alight from her car riage, narrates the Incidents of, his tri umph to admiring and envious audi ences, and we all know h6w well pleased the most belligerent democrat Is to be recognized by the great man or photographed with Prince Henrb' or addressed In friendly terms by some person of great eminence or wealth. This all looks very pitiful to Mr. Clemens, though It Is far from being a new story. Dickens is full of carica tures of this universal propensity. Thackeray is apt to enter into the spirit of worship, and when he refers In Es mond,""perhap3, to the Duke as one of the greatest gentlemen In England, one feels that the novelist Is part of the admiring throng. But in Dickens there Is always som character like J6ey Bag stock who Is continually bringing up the story of how the Prince slapped him on the shoulder, or like Sir Leicester Dedlock, with his adoration of Lords Coodle, Doodle. Foodie, etc. This is partly due to the Identification of Thackeray with polite society, wllh which Dickens had no part or sympa thy. Mark Twain's new contribution to the subject consists, however, in his contention that the American loves a lord as much as the Englishman does, and that the worship of Power and Consplcuousness Is a common falling of humanity. To all this there Is to be taken grave exception, not so much "Ih its direct teaching as in its Implications. It Is the danger of comedy that It Is tempted to take Itself too seriously. Mr. Clem ens Is our greatest exponent of high comedy. Comedy In its high and true sense, as occupying Itself with the foi bles and frailties of- society, is his nat ural and exclusive mode of expression, even when he drops Into pathos or rises Into description. But high" com edy Is not life, and the foibles of the race are only a part and a very small part of ks character. This reverence for power is an instinct that cannot be laughed away. It belongs to no order of society or stage of civilization. It is an Incident of the reward that comes to the exceptional mind. It does not in dicate anything to our discredit that. rorce or character gives power and power gains recognition in America as It does elsewhere. Human nature is not made In monarchies or unmade In de mocracies. In reverence for power the whole world Is kin. , , There Is a little difference, through out the world, by reason of the variant circumstances that contribute to emi nence, but not much. In all history and under all forms of government power has been principally achieved, not delayed or inherited. Ancient Chal dea, Persia and Egypt were ruled by men whose successive authority was built up by revolution within "or inva sion from without Cyrus gained the throne of Media and founded the Per sian monarchy through his own efforts. Darius wrested dominion from the un willing hands of a revolutionary oli garchy. Caesar was the son of a Cap tain In the Roman Army, Napoleon was born in Corsica, the son af an Italian lawj'er. William the Conqueror was the Illegitimate son of a Duke of Normandy. The story of Joseph Is a familiar one In the ancient and mod ern world. The great Bismarck carved his own way up from obscurity to power, Gladstone was the son of a Liv erpool merchant, Disraeli's father was a struggling author. DeWltte, the fore most Russian statesman of the day, be gan life as. a railroad la-borer, and China's powerful dictator. Ll Hunir Chang, came into the army out of a humble village in a minor province in ,the empire, so little thought of that the date of his birth Is Involved in obscur ity. In general, then, men revere emi nence. In Old World or New, because It testifies to power. It Is not only the Influence and the consplcuousness the great enjoy. It Is the force of charac ter they have demonstrated. Only churlishness or embittered envy would withhold the tribute mediocrity pays to eminence. Its exhibitions can be made fun of so can everything else. Religion is parodied in sanctimonious ness -and sentiment In sentimentallsm. It is the mission of high comedy to make us laugh at Its caricatures of nat ural impulses. But its caricatures aVe not the real things. Veneration for the great and good Is not a weakness, though its absence is a weakness in Young America. It shows itself at times in ridiculous ways, and so does every other Instinct of the mind. Mark Twain does not permit any knowledge of this truth to escape 'him. through his entertaining essay. And It Is well he does not. It would spoil his comedy. Suicide Is under practically all cir cumstances the act -of a person tem pprarily bereft of reason the effect of a cause, more or less occult, which, rather than the act Itself, enlists sympa thy for the victim. Thus the young mother of four little children, herself but 23 years old, who took her own life at Fairvlew a few days ago, Is well en-. titled to the pity of the pitiful In the circumstances, whatever they were, that brought her life to so tragical a termination. The "woman's lot" as represented In this case, is not the less deserving of sympathy tender, Intelli gent and helpful because it Is a lot which myriads of women, by reason of strength, have borne.' uncomplainingly from youth to middle age Thoughtless ness, Ignorance and poverty combine to render the lot of the physically delicate young mother of many children any thing but an enviable one, or one easy, to bear, and censure may well be silent when a woman so situated forgets In despondent misery those dependent upon her and gives up the struggle. A sermon enlightening to the thoughtless and helpful to the overburdened might be preached from a text of which a suicide of this class is a ghastly object lessoni The physician, for obvious rea sons, is the proper person to deliver such a sermon, and manly men and conscientious women will be the better fitted 'for the discharge of the more sa cred duties of life by hearing It Dr. Edmund J.James, president-elect of the Northwestern University, has this to say on coeducation In his first communication to the board of trustees: There are many signs of a marked reaction in the public mind on the subject of coeduca tion. Not only has the system ceased to make new converts, but there arc Indications that it Is losing ground In tho very territory which it had so completely won. One hears oftener the claim that the Increasing number of women tends to feminize the Institutions where they are. In some cases to such an extent as to dis courage the attendance of men. It Is urged with increasing persistence that the social dis tractions and dissipations form a very serious problem, while others emphasize the fact that tho broad difference In the future careers of the two sexes should find a more adequate rec ognition In the college, curricula. If this estimate is correct. It merely shows that experiment has worked out a problem that no amount of discus sion could settle. It' does not prove tha't young women cannot keep up with young men in college studies, but sim ply that It Is not worth while, under the differing conditions of their lives, to do so. Matters of this kind settle themselves, one way or the other. All that they want Is time and opportunity. Nature may be relied upon to do the rest to the satisfaction of the majority of those concerned. The street-car accident In Alblna, by which a little girl was killed last Sat urday, Is an exceedingly shocking and deplorable event Since, as it appears from the evidence, the child ran heed lessly Into a moving car in the effort to escape from another danger, real or fancied, there can be no blame attached to the motorman. nor. Indeed, unless it can be shown that the cow that fright ened the child Is a vicious beast, unfit to be staked out to graze, where children are passing, to any one else. It Is one of those sad casualties that human foresight is powerless to prevent and which go to make up the great sum of human suffering and bereavement The most that can be said of it was said In the beginning of this paragraph, and we can only repeat that the event Is exceedingly shocking and deplorable, the only palliating feature In the case being that death resulted without in flicting suffering or disfigurement upon the hapless child. For falling to pray for the Czar at a church festival in Berblkl, a town of Polish Russia, a CatholIc priest was ar rested1 in the midst of divine service on Easter Sunday. His congregation re sisted, a scrimmage resulted, and a number of people were wounded before a semblance of order was restored. In cidents of this kind can scarcely be said to create a prayerful spirit or tend greatly to sbothe the Irritation of the Catholic Poles against the government Perhaps these people can be compelled to render lip service in prayer for the ruler who Is to them, by hereditary taint, their oppressor, but It Is not in the power of the Procurator of the Holy Synod himself to control their thoughts and feelings. It Is here that human will and human intelligence triumph over oppression, saying to its expo nents: "Thus far and no farther." The Canadian Pacific Is opposed to the Chinese exclusion bill. This Is In deed ominous, for the Canadian Pacific is among the most powerful members of Congress. It has taken the lead In delaying the Nicaragua Canal, and has retained Its differentials and bonding privileges In eplte of all that could be done by Americans with Congress and before the Department of Justice. New England is the closest ally of the Ca nadian Pacific, and how Its Senators can go against It on the Chinese question Is Inconceivable. Boston Is not all sen timent It has an eye to Its trade con nections. The salmon season opens one week from today. Cannerymen and fisher men, profiting by past experience, are prepared to meet each other on the basis of "sweet reasonableness" In the matter of prices for. fish, while, If the assumption that the good run of salmon last year was due to artificial propaga tion holds, fish will be more abundant In the Columbia River than for many years past. Hence the cKeerful prog nostication that this will be a good year for the salmon industry. THE -MULTNOMAH DEMOCRATS. , Pendleton East Oregonlan. It la bruited about the state' that the Multnomah Democrats are considering a proposition from the Simon Republicans to form a coalition for the purpose of de feating the Republican ticket, city and county, This object is to be desired the defeat of the Republicans of Multnomah County. But. as t6 the coalitlbh with Joseph Simon, and j his cohorts, there Is not the slightest doubt that it will be the most disastrous movement that can be entered into by the members of the De mocracy of that county. It will be to place over' the entire Democratic ticket of Oregon the hoodoo of a man who ha3 Just received the most thorough beating at the hands of his party that ever a man was given with the bludgeon of the voter." Joe Simon has been discredited. Ho has been told by members of his own organi zation to go something like 2,000,000 miles back, and, after arriving at his destina tion, to sit down in a chair into the seat of which a can of glue has been poured. To tie up with Joe Simon at this time of all times means to injure the cause of the Democracy more severely than in any other way that could be suggested. If the Multnomah County Democrats de sire to end all chances of success in the present campaign, let them enter into a political partnership with Joe Simon, and then well may all effort cease and the fight be given up. It will take from the strength of George E. Chamberlain, who will be the Demo cratic nominee for Governor, the. major portion, and there will be no more like lihood that he will be elected than that he will take a trip to the moon upon the back of a wild cayuse. As the situation stands, Mr. Chamber lain Is a strong candidate. Coupled with Joe Simon by the act of the Multnomah County Democrats, he will be in no hope of success. Joe Simon is at this juncture a good man to have upon the other side. He Is one with whom no one can afford to be associated politically. THE LOGIC OF "SCUTTLE." Protection "Without Sovereignty Re sponsibility "Without Power. New York Sun. Another Philippine debate is soon due In the Senate, this time upon the bill-for the temporary government of the Islands. The substitute bill and accompanying report of the minority of Mr. Lodge's committee Indicate the course of the op position. Now, as at every previous stage of necessary legislation concerning the Philippines, the alternative policy Is sim ply Scuttle. This time there Is a slight variation or addition to the main Idea, the abandon ment of American sovereignty. The mi nority substitute proposes that the United 'States shall hold the Islands, until peace Is established, the obligations, of the Paris treaty are carried out, and elec tions have been held for the adoption of a constitution and the establishment of an Independent government Then, hav ing proclaimed to the world the fact that the Philippine Republic is an'lndependent and sovereign nation, we are to proceed to negotiate with Great Britain, Ger many, Franco and such other powers as the President may deem necessary, for the perpetual inviolability of that sover eign nation from foreign Interference. In other words, having relinquished all claims to American sovereignty, and hav ing withdrawn from the Islands, we are yet to be responsible to the rest of the world for the new republic's behavior, and also responsible tp the Filipino Re public for the continued preservation of its Independence against assault by other nations! Suppose the experimental republic fails? Suppose the proposed negotiations, with the other great powers fail?. Suppose that one of them finds a pretext for break ing its treaty obligations? We are out of sovereignty, but up to the ears in re sponsibility for the Filipinos. Protection without sovereignty, respon sibility without power such Is the logic of the logicians of Scuttle. The Tovra of Unite. Boston Evening Transcript Into an ounce of brandy put a small dose of cocaine; drink the mixture, and In 10 minutes you will find yourself in the mental and nervous condition which is the normal state of the citizen of Butte. . Butte never sleeps. It Is as wide awake at 2 In the morning as .at midday, every shop open, every industry in full blast The life of the town depends upon the mines and tho smelter; and these never stop. Day In and day out, the year round they work continuously, with three eight-hour "shifts" of men, one stepping in as Its predecessor steps out; from year's end to year's end neither Industry ever drops a stitch. The shift that comes off at midnight, but eat, drink, and be served with Its amusements, like the others. So It happens that every door in down, of boarding-house, shop, saloon, theater, and all the rest, stands always ajar. So far as buslnees is concerned, there is literally no day, no night One hour Is like all the rest; every hour is an hour of hustle. To the stranger It ap pears like delirium; to the man of Butte It is a matter of course. The result Is easily foretold; quick ex haustion and early death. The man of Butte is an octogenarian at 40. a senile ruin at 55. Oo one lives to be old, In the accepted Eastern use of the word; you wil lnever see that white and venerable and beautiful old age which has so firm a place In our life, our poetry, our very religion. Overstrung nerves snap; brains crumble; nearts yield to their load. Perplexities Thnt Come With. Trplet Philadelphia Times. "I was called," said a physician, "to at tend triplets. The three youngsters, a few weeks old, lay 3ldc by side in a crib, and it was a physical Impossibility to tell ono from the other. Each had a different aliment The mother knew that one had a cough, but did not know which It was. Mother and doctor waited for a cough be fore deciding to which of the trio It be longed. "A different medicine was prescrlbel for each, and the anxious mother was per plexed to know how she should avoid giv ing the wrong medicine to the wrong child. The doctor came to the rescue by placing a piece of red flannel around the nec,k of ono bottle, and a strip of simi lar material around the arm of the child to whom it was to be given. White linen and a piece of green cloth were used re spectively for the other two." i - To Hcnrlk: Ibsen. On entering his 75th year, March 20. 1002. Edmund Qosse in the Athenaeum. Red "star, that on the forehead of the North Hast flared so far and with so fierce a blaze. Thy long vermllllon light still Issues forth Through night of fir-woods down thy "water ways. And draws us up Its sinister, wild rays; Lower It falls and nearer to the sea But still tho dark horizon flames In thee. All stars and suns roll tholr predestined oonrse. Invade the zenith, hang on high, and turn; rhrust onward by some god-like secret force. They sparkle, flush, and, ere they fade, they tjtrrri. Each quenched at last In its historic urn;i .Each sloping to Its cold, material grave. Tet each remembered by the light It gave. Thy radiance, angry star, shall fill the sky When all thy mortal being hath decayed: Thine is a splendor never meant to die. Long clouded by man's vapors, long delayed, But risen at last above all envious shade. Amid the pearly throng of lyric stars Thy fighting orb has lamped the sky like Mars. And when the slow revolving years havo driven All pearl and fire below the western wave. Thbugh strange new planets crowd our startled heaven. I Thy soul will still bear on Its architrave The light reflected that thy luster gave. Hall, burning Star! a dazzled Maglan, I "Kneel to thy red refulgence till I die. THE RIGHT TO EXCLUDE. San Francisco Bulletin. Senator Mitchell of Oregon based his argument on the Chinese exclusion bill on the ground that a nation has a right to exclude undesirable immigrants. Such a right Is based on the general welfare of the American people, and on the same principle as the policy of protection to American labor. It has been contended that If the existing treaty with China should expire, the right to exclude Chi nese would be swept away. Senator Mitchell's position Is that the right to exclude undesirable Immigrants docs not depend upon the consent of the government whose people are excluded. The acquiescence of such government Is desirable on grounds of amity, but If any government whose people are considered undesirable declines to consent to exclu sion, the right of exclusion Is not thereby affected. The right to exclude the products of labor Is universally admitted. The only question Is as to the policy of exclusion. "When duties are levied that add a sufficient percentage to the cost of placing goods of another nation on our market the goods of that nation are virtually excluded. It makes little dif ference whether goods are denied a land ing, as in the case of infected goods, or are made by legislation so costly that the foreign owners -of the goods abstain from trade In such goods. Sme years ago the European countries prohibited the importation of American pork on the pretext that It was an un healthful article of food. The United States did not assume that the right of prohibition did not exist but that the two governments had no right to prohibit on a fraudulent pretext They 'had no right to brand an article of American ex port as unfit for consumption without proving the fact of unfitness. There Is in point of principle no difference be tween excluding the products of labor and In excluding labor. What the Chi nese want Is to sell their labor In the American market They would, as a, rule, rather live in their own country and sell the products of home. labor in this country than come to this country. Senator Mitchell has not proclaimed a new principle of law, but by restating an old one hna placed exclusion on Impregna ble ground. The late Senator Thurman declared In the debate on the restriction act of 1SS4 that the right to exclude un desirable immigrants was Inherent in a nation's sovereignty. Exclusion has been opposed on th6 ground of policy. It has been asserted that the United States would lose more by exclusion than It would "gain. This might be true of one country and not of another. Much would depend upon the character of immigrants and much upon the value of the trade of. the country whose people it was pro posed to exclude. On these points the nation which adopts an exclusion policy Is the judge of what is best for itself. The Oregon Republicans. Seattle Washlngtonlan. The Oregon Republican State Convention has taken very advanced ground toward satisfying" the public sentiment of that part of the Re publican party which soma yeara ago gave Its allegiance to the various so-called reform forces. The Oregon platform emphatically Indorses the war being made by President Roosevelt upon the trusts; urges the passage of the MItchell-Kahn Chinese exclusion bill; favors the creation of a department of labor; Roose velt's Irrigation plans; election f Senators by direct vote and the initiative and referen dum. What more do the reformers want? "We predict a sweeping victory for Oregon Republicanism. The reform elements have had similar allurements from the Democracy, but have always largely fought shy of a very close Intimacy with that party because they had no proof of Its sincerity. Now that the Republican party is making similar overtures It Is probable- that the bulk of reformers will go back Into the ranks and take off their coats for the whole Republican proposition because they have usually found the Republi cans doing what they promised. If the next Republican State Convention In Washington should go an equal length in the same direc tion, the old bourbon Democrats would And their ranks decimated till the effort to All their delegations would become discouraging. Really those reforms, when analyzed, seem to be in harmony with old-line Republican principles. The Mltchell-Kahn Chinese exclusion bill Is the one which has received the Indorsement of organized labor, and should pass. President's Roosevelt's acts and plans are certainly good Interpretation of Republican doctrines. The direct Senatorial vote is as much a Republican tenet as any other. Most Republicans favor It. As the election lu Oregon occurs earlier than that is Washington, we shall note the result of this move on the part of our frlenda in Oregon with very great Interest. The men who went out of our ranks after these reforms were sincere men. - if they can be Induced back Into the ranks by such a platform as Oregon's and got into enthusiastic service, tha party will be strengthened in a direction where it most needs strength. BEX BOLT. The Oregonlan is asked to print this most famous of the poems of Thomas Dunn English. with an account of Its origin and first publica tion, un 1843 N. P. Willis, who. with George P. Morris, was publishing "The New Mirror," a literary and society weekly at New York, asked Dr. English for a poem, to help their undertaking, and suggested a sea song. Eng lish tried it. after renewed presslntr. but couldn't get on; and drifted finally Into remi niscence and Imagination and produced "Ben Bolt." He wrote to Willis telling him to burn It If he did -not like It, and something would be sent when tho writer was more In tho vein. Willis published the song with a commendatory line. It had no title, and was signed "T, D. E." It took hold of the popular heart at once, was fitted to music, and was everywhere re cited and sung. Everybody whoso memory runs back fifty years and more will recall the enormous vogue the song had and kept, during a long period. Following is the poem: Oh! don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt, Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown. Who wept with delight when you gave her a smile And trembled with fear at your frown? In the old churchyard in the valley, Ben, Bolt, In a comer obscure and alone, They have fitted a slab of the granite so gray And sweet Alice lies under the stone. Under the hickory tree, Ben Bolt, Which stood at the foot of the hill. Together we've lain In the noonday shade And listened to Appleton's mill. The mill wheel has fallen to pieces, Ben Bolt, ' The rafters have tumbled In, And a quiet that crawls round the walls as you gaze Has followed the olden din. Do you mind the cabin of logs, Ben Bolt, At the edge of the pathless wood. And the button-ball tree and Its motley limbs. Which nigh by the doorstep stood? The cabin to ruin has gone, Ben Bolt, The tree you would seek In vain; And whore once the lords of the forest waved Grows grass and the golden grain. And don't you remember the school. Ben Bolt, With the master so cruel and grim. And the shaded nook In the running brook. Where the children went to swim? Grass grows on the master's grave, Ben Bolt; The spring of the brook Is dry. And of all tho boys who were schoolmates then There are only you and I. There Is change in the things I loved, Ben Bolt; They havo changed from the old to the new But I feel in the depths of my spirit tho truth There never was change in you. Twelve months twenty have passed, Ben Bolt, Since first we were friends yet I hall Thy presence a blessing, thy presence a truth, Ben Bolt of the salt sea gale. NOTE AND COMMENT. It seems to be a good deal of a con fusion movement. Even though the salmon run every yeir they are caught once In a while. The Queen of the May will be crowned with Icicles, if this sort of thing keeps up. There seems to be always room for one more foreign prince In Uncle Sam's heart. And still the bunco man doesn't move on. But perhaps he hasn't been invited to. Are there ho more fragmentary parties ! for whom tho Democrats .have an- affin ity? The Ahkoond of Swat ought to join the procession of potentates headed to these shores. Congressmen arc now distributing seeds. With them the harvest will come in November. This business of shifting January weather Into an April diy can be very easily overdone. It is not surprising that the Boer war keeps on going, considering the frequency with which It is wound up. New York seems to have substituted Low and dry for the ancient and ac cepted expression, high and dry. Already therpopular physician Is begin ning to keep solid with his patients by advising a month at tho seashore. Perhaps, after all, tho Danish purchas ing agent merely meant to distribute Christmas gifts among our Congressmen. If Mr. Hanna becomes a candidate for President he will know what to do with the money he gets out of the subsidies on his ships. Bryan has not written a great deal lately. He must be devoting the time he formerly spent at literature combing the hayseed out of his hair that accumulates there during the night. King Edwardjdeslres- that the Prince of Wales come to America. He evidently, Is anxious to have the young man en joy at least one good time before he as sumes the responsibilities of the throne. General Funston has been called to ac count for his public conversations. A General who wants to keep on the good side of the JVar Department should buy a gag and use it from the time he lands In this country. Peter Smds, of Germantown, a Phila delphia suburb, has an extremely Inter esting collection of photographs of no table persons taken whiles they were en gaged In their favorite, and in soma cases, their sole recreation. Mr. Sands values his collection chiefly because in each Instance the recreation Is truly the favorite one of the subject of the photo griph. Thus, Andrew Lang, Grover Cleve land and Rudyard Kipling are seen fish ing. H. G. Wells and H. T. Knatchbull Hugessen are playing cricket. Ian Mac laren Is on the links. The poet Swinburne Is swimming, William Watson Is reading Persian and the laureate Austin is gir denlng with a spade. W. D. Howells is walking, Henry James Is sketching, George Moore is painting, John Oliver Hobbes Is playing chess, Mary E. Wil-kins- Is In her aviary, and Mrs. Humphry Ward is riding on horseback. J. Edward Addlcks announcement that he has built a stone wall around Dela ware reminded Senator Burrows of the, time Senator Ell Saulsbury, from that state, had a few words In the Senate with the late John J. Ingalls, of Kan- " sas. Saulsbury had Invested In some, Kansas bonds that were repudiated, and) he naturally didn't think well of the state. He arose one day and took half an hour to express his opinion of Kan sas. When he had finished, he had de nounced the people, the climate, the coal ' and about everything else In the state. Senator Ingalls uncoiled himself from his chair and arose. In mock humility ho commented on the rebuke Kansas had received. Then he began a panegyric on Kansas that brought every Senator Into the chamber and held the galleries en tranced. It was one of the most eloquent speeches ever made by Ingalls. He went back to the days of thes Missouri com promise and reviewed the history of Kan sas, dwelt on the soldiers the state fur nished for tho Civil War and swept down to the date on which he was talking. Then he stopped a moment, looked at Saulsbury and said: "And, Mr. President, this is the state that has been assailed In this chamber by a man who represents In part In part, Mr. President a state which has two counties when tho tide 13 up and three when the tide Is down!" Saulsbury had nothing more to say. PLEASAXTRIES OF PARAGRArilERS A Master. "Is ha a master of English ?' "Yes, to Judge by the liberties he takes." Detroit Free Press. Chloe Is your husband a breadwinner? Su san 'Deed he Is; he's won do prize atjj. dozen cakewalks. Yonkers Statesman. "Do you ever advise your patients to take exercise, doctor?" "Oh. jw; it's perfectly safe, to do so. They never take it." Indianapolis! News. A Sacrifice. "Yes. you see he was told he'd have to stop drinking during office hours." "And has he actually stopped?" "Well, yes, he's stopped having office hours." Philadelphia Press. Sign of Death. Jlmson I have h'eard that It Is a sign of death If a dog howls beneath your window. Jester Beneath my window? You bet! I would kill any dog that would dare to do It. Ohio State Journal. Resignation. Employment .Asent I'm sorry, Mrs. Hauskeep. but I'm sure I haven't a cook that would suit you. Mrs. Hauskeep Never mind; I've gotten over all that Just send ohe and let me see If I could suit her. Philadelphia Press. On tho Last Day's Skating. Parson Jones Once there was a little boy who went skating on Sunday. Now, do you know what terrible thing happened to that little boy? Boy Y-yes, sir. .1 s'pose his folks made him go to church three times the next week to pay for It, Judge. His View. She The minister asked for fur ther contributions today for missionary work. He H'm. He's an ecclesiastical jingo, Isn't he? She What do you mean? He Why, he's calling for war on Sin and Satan, and demand ing big appropriations to carry on the fight. Town and Country. Something Awful. The Girls Wot yer all dressed up fer, Willie some of yer folks dead? WUHe Worse an' dat. The Girls Goln ter be took ter de dentist's? Willie Worse an dat. The Girls Gee. Willie, w'ot'a goln ter be did ter yer? Willie I'm goln ter have my plctur took. Leslie's Weekly. Two young ladles were talking the other day about a third 'who had just become engaged to a widower, who plays tho cornet and has four children. "What could be worse." exclaimed one, "than four children and a cornet?" "Noth ing." said the other "except, perhaps, six chil dren and a trombone." Tlt-Blts.' Of Course Not. "My son," said the parson to a small boy who was digging In a back lot, "don't you know that It Is a sin to dig on the SablSath. except In case of necessity?" "Yes, sir." replied the youngster. "Then why don't you stop It?" asked the good man. " 'Cause this Is a case of necessity," replied the young philosopher. 'A feller can't fish without bait." Chicago Dally News.