THE MORNING OREGONIAN. WEDNESDAY, JUNE IS, 1902, Jm rjegxmtcm Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as oecond -class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In Advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month , g Dally. Sunday excepted, per year &JJ Dall. with Sunday, per year Jjj Sunday, per year - Jr The Weekly, per year ; The "Weekly, a months w 2o City Subscribers A . , Dallj, per week, delivered. Sunday cxccptea.l5c Dallj.perweok. delivered. Sundays included.SOc POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper... .......... ...... 14 to 2S-pace paper .lc Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Orcgonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter thould 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 should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Offlee. 43. 44. 45, 47, 48. 40 Tribune building. New York City; 510-11-1-Trlbune building? Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Epeclal Agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street: J. K. Cooper Co., 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news Etand, Frank Scott, SO Ellis street, and 3. Wheatley. S13 Mission street. Tnr ki. in ios Anceles by B. F. Gardner, K9 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 305 So. Spring street. For sale in Sacramento by Sacramento News Co , 429 K street, Sacramento. CaL For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, S3 "Washington street. For eale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1C1 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co., 1303 Farnam street. For sale in Salt Lako by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 TV. Second South- street. For sale in Ogden by C. H. Myers. For sale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co , 24 Third street South. For sale in "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 906-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. 15th and Lawrence street; A. Series, Sixteenth and Cur tis streets; and H. P. Hansen. TODAY'S "WEATHER Fair and warmer; northerly winds. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 72. minimum temperature, 43; pre c'litatlon. 0.01 inch. PORTLAND, "WEDNESDAY, JUNE IS. A GOOD DAY'S WORK. The Oregonlan expressed no opinion upon the merits of the kindergarten issue which was adjudicated at the polls on Monday. It forebore, out of deference to the earnest desire of many of our best people, to whom the kin dergarten as an adjunct of the public school system has appeared In the garb of a Cause and almost a Religion. Yet Its opinion, we doubt not, -was suffi ciently apprehended by all who have been familiar with Its columns for any considerable length of time. No such person will for a moment question that The Oregonlan heartily approves the Terdict of the taxpayers. Is any one going to resist the tend ency to saddle upon the state the duties that devolve upon the man and woman, the father and mother? Is there any point whatever in all this long descent from sturdy self-reliance to social de pendence where the mad rush to pa ternalism can be called to halt? Some times it seems not, but the vote of Mon day indicates that in Oregon at least, nhere free text-books and free pencils have not yet followed free bridges, free libraries and free baths, a body of tax payers can sometimes be found who realize that whatever is called free costs somebody something, and who believe some duty and some responsi bility are left which parents cannot be permitted .to shoulder off upon the Gov ernment. If society is going down, It is going by the way of Individual neglect, slovenli ness, slackness. A race of men who earned their own education and their own books Is giving way to a genera tion that can. provide nothing for itself, but must be supported from the cradle to the grave with public this and public that, government prosecution of all in dustry, free everything. Parents have long since lost ability to educate their children and train 'them to law-abiding and mannerly citizenship, and- now they are fain to ask officialdom to take their offspring from the cradle, wipe their noses, wash their dirty faces, put the simplest of knowledge in their heads and toys in their hands. If the state is to be obliged to raise the children, then it must "have some thing to say about what children shall "be born, and what they shall do. Talk about the state's interest in having its children educated what is that Inter est to its interest that the criminal and hopelessly diseased shall not propagate their kind? If children are to be un loaded on the state, then the state will have something to say in regulation of the quality and quantity of that load. If the taxpayers have to shoulder the burdens of parenthood, they will require some of its discretion. On a small scale we can tolerate the habit of bringing children into the world for somebody else to take care of; but to adopt it as the wholesale and uniform system of perpetuating the race will not do. Authority must be commensur ate with responsibility. The taxpayer will not make an incubator of himself if he has fair warning and the oppor tunity to choose. Many thinkers, we may say most thinkers, agree with John Stuart Mill that if the duties of parents are to be thrown upon the state, then the state will be compelled to "regulate" the parents. That is, if the state is to take care of those who are to be bom Into the world, then it will be compelled also to take measures for regulation of the propagation of the race. If the state is to establish a general nursery, to re lieve parents of their duty to their chil dren and of responsibility for them, it will not leave to parental impulse the simple duty of procreation. It will be compelled to regulate that also though there are many who evidently think their responsibility ceases with that one duty. They get no further than the one Injunction. "Be fruitful." A cheerful aggregation of men from 60 to 75 and 80 years young was the company of Indian War Veterans who, with their wives, yesterday, as a feat ure of their annual reunion, partook of the hospitality of the association known as Daughters of Indian War Veterans. The majority of these folk of "ye olden time" are not well preserved, and most of them look, "old for their age," as they frequently assured each other was the case. The grizzly bearded faces of the men and the time-furrowed faces of thi women, the eyes of each and all spectacled or dim and lusterless, tell of hard years that are behind and hint of few years yet remaining. The enact- ment of the pension bill now awaiting oQly the signature of the President to become a law, the specific object of which Is to remove many of these men from -want during- the last stage of their life's pilgrimage, has been long over due. But "better late than never" say the veterans, and this estimate the pub lic cordially indorses. ANTI-ISM HAS SINS OP ITS OWN. Secretary Root's manly assumption of full responsibility for the payments to General Gomez and his expressed be lief that unless something of the sort had been done in Cuba we should have had the same sort of difficulties in Cuba that we have had in the Philippines, will give some of the antis, we may be sure, a bad quarter of an hour. He gives them the choice of two alterna tives, either of which. If they take It, bids fair to lead them to a point where they wish they had taken the other. The first anti-imperialist Impulse, on reading the Secretary'-s declaration, will be to jump up and shout on this wise: "Saved an Insurrection by treat ing Gomez and his crowd handsomely? Of course! We ought to have done the same thing In the Philippines. If we had only treated Agulnaldo, Mablnl and the rest as we treated Gomez, Instead of pursuing them with guns and real powder, all would have been well. These diplomatic and financial arrange ments with deposed chieftains and dis banded native armies are recognized and enforced by Great Britain and other competent powers. This is only another proof that our Philippine ad ministration has been 'all wrong' from the start." So far, so good. But at about this stage the antl will reflect that Cuba is the question before the house now, and that approval of Secretary Root's dec laration will be a thing of extreme awkwardness. The War Department Is now as it ever has been the scapegoat upon which all vials of wrath and dis content must be emptied. No, It won't do to commend Root Something else must be done. Nevertheless, the view of every prac tical mind will be with Secretary Root. The final arbiter of the complex prob lems which the Spanish War left with us is results. There is a wide differ ence between payments to Washington lobbies for Influence on legislation and payments to Cuban soldiers to keep the peace. One move Is to sway Congress, the other to create conditions. If rea sonable compensation to Gomez had the practical effect of keeping the peace, It was undoubtedly by far the cheapest way in which that -end could be reached. The United States was in Cuba, the custodian In trust of the Cuban people. Their Congress makes haste to pension Gomez. Our action was therefore justified originally and is justified now. It should be pointed out, however, that Cuba's case and the Philippines are not on all fours, and Secretary Root does not say so. He does Inti mate that stiffness with Gomez would have caused trouble, but he does not In timate that payments to Agulnaldo would have prevented trouble. Gomez was a soldier and patriot, Agulnaldo a cheap adventurer and freebooter. We had insurrection on our hands In Luzon without Aguinaldo's having any cause of complaint, and with the memory of that redoubtable pirate's $400,009 deal with Spain fresh in mind, the Ameri can people would never have sanc tioned a similar financial undertaking. It Ib true that salaries have kept the Sulu group contented, but equal appar ent content and friendship in Samar and Mindanao changed without any reason whatever Into malice and treach ery. The truth lo that hostility In this country to the Administration's neces sary course in Cuba and the Philippines Is soon to reckon with popular disap proval which will make it ashamed and apologetic as Rawlins and Carmack have been In the Senate. The truth is that the head and front of offending in our Philippine difficulties have been the antis themselves, who have not only hampered prompt and efficient effort at home, but have fomented rebellion abroad. The Luzon lnsurnectlon lies, not at the door of the War Department, which had no choice but to sustain the Army and repel assaults on American sovereignty, but at the door of anti Imperlallsm. whose pernicious activity in the Summer, Autumn and Winter of 1898 frlghtenea the amiable McKlnley from the path of firmness marked out by our officers at-Manila, and prevented the complete establishment of American rule and acquiescence of the Tagals. It does not He in the mouth of anti imperlalism, which is to blame for hes itation at home and secession abroad, to magnify and gloat over the embar rassments and difficulties Its own hands have raised up. Criticism of the War i Department is not going to be very well received In this country much longer Time is attesting the wisdom of our course, and the antis would do well to cease their hostility, for their own com fort now and their place in the verdict of history. PIONEER DAY. The annual reunion of the pioneers of Oregon will be .held in this city today. The accustomed programme will be ren dered In the Exposition building, and at Its conclusion a banquet furnished by citizens of Portland will be served by pioneer women and their daughters, resident of the city. This announce ment in substance has been made by the city press, and through programmes generally distributed during the past few daya It explains the appearance upon our streets of an 'unusually large number of gray-haired men and women, whose wistful eyes and timid, uncer tain movements call kindly attention to their presence. They are here by Invi tation of the officers of the Pioneer As sociation, supplemented by that of many citizens of Portland, whose cheer they have so often tasted on similar oc casions. The Pioneer reunion is, literally speak ing, an "old subject" so old that there is nothing new to be said about it. Yet, so Indulgent Is human nature upon this theme that The Oregonlan ventures year after year to rehearse the story of the long ago, In connection with the stereotyped welcome to Its associates of the olden time, confident of a respectful If a wearied audience. To the extent that pioneers men and women enjoy this annual reunion, Tht?l Oregonlan congratulates them upon their appearance In the city today. To the extent that they enjoy life, it wishes them a continuance of Its tenure. To the extent that they enjoy the re hearsal of the incidents of the dear old times, thinly veiled in the mists of memory. It rejoices with them In the onoortunltv ta pnoaJc And. to Union. This is the one occasion which bids defiance to the dogmatic declaration that "old things have passed away," Hinging back Into the very face of time and change a bold denial of the state ment. The pioneer era can never pass away beyond at least temporary resur rection, as leng as actors In the drama have strength and spirit left with which to appear upon the stage and- rehearse its Incidents, recount its dangers and recite its pleasures. Pioneers, The Ore gorflah, one of your number, a co-laborer with you for our common inter ests in the past, rejoicing with you for the future of Oregon, again bids you welcome to Portland. A HISTORIC OCCASION. That class of our fellow-citizens a small and rapidly dwindling class known as the "Indian War Veterans," or ouch numbers thereof as were per mitted by their growing Infirmities to leave their homes and come hither, held their annual reunion In this city yester day. These men form the remnant of a stalwart band who about the middle of the past century made ready answer to the call for volunteers to defend the menaced homes of the border and all Oregon was then border land, as reck oned from the meridian of civilization and went out sturdily against the sav age foe. What stirring times those were the months of a Summer now nearly half a century old! How soon the muster rolls were full of names! How the streets of the village rendez vous rang with the cheers of the men! How they resounded with the galloping feet of horses and the clanking spurs of riders eager to be off to the defense of the settlers, whose isolated homer the threat .of torch and massacre shad owed! All that was long ago; yet in the memories of the survivors who rode away to the fray, and of the women who performed the more trying if less valiant part of waiting and watching in pioneer homes, the events of those times stand out distinctly, hallowed but undlmmed by the touch of time. But if the going out of the volun teers against the Indians Is so well re membered, what of tnelr homecoming and what of their hardships and dan ger and strife that lay between?Of these we heard something yesterday from the lips of the veterans who gath ered at a table spread by their de scendants in a banquet hall in this city. The forced march, the chilly biv ouac, the night surprise, the ambus cade, the call to battle, the dead left upon the field, the wounded carried to the rear, arid later the bearing home now and then, stark and gory, of a friend and neighbor, a husband and father, to waiting ones, cruelly bereft of these events the veterans spoke. These were the incidents of our early Indian wars; they are. Indeed, the In cidents of all ware, though, when the civilized soldier meets a savage foe, the, details of the encounter are often more harrowing than the fact of death itself, In the barbarities perpetrated upon the wounded and the dead. Who that has read the pathetic story told by Eliza beth B. Custer, of campaigning on the plains with her husband, General Cus ter, who perished with his command in the battle of the Little Big Horn, in June, 1876, has not recoiled with added horror from the picture of that bloody scene, at the statement that it was found that "Raln-In-the-Face," the fiendish ally of Sitting Bull," had "vcut out the brave heart of that gallant, loyal and lovable man," Colonel Tom Custer? And who among the veterans assembled yesterday did not recall with a shudder the story of the death of Captain A. J. Hembree, of Yamhill County, as told in his mutilated body found upon a Yakima battle-field In 1855 and later brought back for burial in the graveyard near his home, a white bandage around his head telling that his scalp hung at the belt of a savage chief? Perhaps it is not well to recall these Incidents, yet they be long distinctively to the history of a time that the reunion of Indian "War Veterans with thinning ranks touching ly commemorates year a'fter year. The reunion of yesterday was, how ever, made joyful by the announcement that the Indian War Veteran pension bill had passed the United States Sen ate and was now "up to the President," Veterans but now weary with hope de ferred assumed for the time the sprlght Hnes3 of youth and wrung each other's hands In effusive congratulation. The President was eulogized as the friend of the bill, and Representative Tongue as an Indefatigable worker In Us In terest. Past trials and disappointments were forgotten in present pleasure and future promise, and the veterans sep arated in high spirits, feeling that at last Just recognition for service ren dered had come to them. The Orego nlan adds Its congratulations, and sup plements them with the hope that this long-delayed bounty of the Government will be ample for the purpose of Insur ing against want In their declining years the men who defended the Infant settlements of Oregon from the- sav ages that "menaced their existence. THE MEAT SUPPLY. The question of the meat supply is one of the most prominent and, in a way, the most interesting of -any now before the public Recent events, such as the meat riots In New York and Chicago, and the groat advance in prices, point to conditions that certainly will- tend to decrease of consumption In the United States. We are the greatest meat eaters In the world, and have been from the earliest settlement of America; but It may be taken as certain that the consumption of meat in our country will tend henceforth toward a reduction to the basis or proportions long ob- served in older countries. The growth of population exceeds the growth of meat supply. Investigation discloses the fact al ready that while the crops of cotton, corn and oats have steadily increased during the last twenty years, the pro duction of cattle has 'fallen off. The World's Work, in its current Issue, cites in support of this statement that the production of cattle In 1900 was 5 per cent less than It "was in 1884, and the production of hogs was 10 per cent less in the year first mentioned than It was In 18S2; and this In spite of the In creased population and the demands of the export trade, and asks: "Why this lessened production, and what, If any thing, has the so-called beef trust to do with It?" The following table. Intro duced at this point, is of Interest: 1SS2. 1800. Total number of hoes 44,OoeloOO 3S.000.000 Hogs used by Western packers v 0.000,000 22.000.000 It will be seen that the packing in dustry made substantial growth during this period, in spite of the decline In production. While It Is not necessary to 1 infru: that, ono Julk any thine: to do -with the other. It Is asked, with the signifi cance of conviction on the affirmative side of the question, whether or not the consolidation of the packing business has caused lower prices to be paid to the farmer. The journal above quoted considers that the most Interesting question that has been raised by the whole discussion of the Increased supply of butchers' meat Is whether, along with the enor mous benefits that the great packing houses have conferred on mankind, they have discouraged the production of the normal supply, and it goes on to say: "The Improvements made by the pack ers In killing, shipping and saving hogs and cattle, and by the utilization, of the hy-products of the slaughter-house, de serve to be reckoned among the most important practical benefits of modern organization." The result that ought to follow is cheaper and not dearer meat. Any combination that Increases the cost to the consumer Is at once puton the defensive. This Is the popular count In 'the Indictment of the packers and the one to which they will be required to plead. Their business has grown enor mously; from their profits have accrued many large fortunes. Meat Is higher to the consumer than ever before in the history of the country; the price of cat tle on foot has been but slightly ad vanced. Putting this and that together, the indictment against the meat trust will stand, notwithstanding the marked Increase In production as shown by the statistics of the livestock business. The big rush of settlers and miners at Fort Hall reservation yesterday was but a repetition of similar "outbreaks" at various polnta In the West. Every new mining camp, no matter In what part of the world it Is located, numbers among Its Inhabitants a certain number of restless "sooners." who, like the soul of the late John Brown, go marching on. At Thunder Mountain will be found the men who were with the vanguard at Cripple Creek, Leadvllle, Rossland, Nome and Dawson;' and later at Buf falo Hump. Representatives from Cool gardle, Johannesburg and other remote districts are there, and even the griz zled old veteran who has followed every stampede since the Golden, Cariboo min gles with the younger restless spirits. So with the professional honieseeker. He Is always a little too late In the rush to secure Just what be expected, and, with his settler's right still unimpaired, he pulls out of the lottery and awaits the opening of another reservation. The rush for reservation lands has been a feature of life In the West and Middle West for the past fifteen years, and it is a safe prediction that if some of the attendants on these periodical rushes had devoted as much time and energy to Homebuilding as has been wasted in homeseeklng, their rewards would have been greater. Good government land desirably located Is not as plentiful as It was. In the West, but Oregon and Washington still contain some very at tractive districts where bona fide set tlers who are willing to work can secure desirable homes much easier than by a wild plunge Into a reservation-opening lottery. It Is a matter of Tegret that the passage of the river and harbor bill was delayed until too late to get in through it a full Summer's work at the mouth of the Columbia this year. Work of this character moves slowly in its preliminary stages, and If pushed to the utmost now could only result in a brief season's work. Hence the ad vance In jetty and channel Improve ment hoped for this year will fall far short of the- legitimate expectations of the last Winter and early Spring. How ever, the passage of the bill, though late, will cause renewed activities lnc the engineer's office, and many odds and ends of construction and repairs will be taken up and gotten out of the way for next season's larger develop ments. A French vessel Is coming from Liv erpool to Portland in ballast to load wheat at 2Ss 9d, the lowest rate ever paid for such a long voyage for a single cargo. The vessel making the trip would show a loess were it not for the fact that the French bounty amounts to several thousand dollars. In other words, the French Government presents the shipowner with a sum sufficient to enable him to take Oregon wheat to market at a lower rate than can be met by the owner of an unsubsldlzed ship. Ao the American farmer is the sole gainer by the operation, he will prob ably continue to favor a shipping sub sidy bill for the French, British. Ger mans or any other nation which he is not taxed to support. . The advance of 3 cents per bushel in July corn in Chicago yesterday Is prob ably a mild Introduction to the squeeze which Is awaiting the men who sold 5,000.000 bushels of corn dnd now have but 2,000,000 bushels contract grade with which to fill the orders. The busi ness of selling something which one does not possess Has ground the finan cial life out of hundreds of Chicago Board of Trade speculators, but the agriculturist, who at times has suffered the needless depression of the products of his farm by the manipulations of these chronic bears, will not extend the full measure of sympathy that Is usually given the under dog In the fight. The Illinois Idea Is that the tariff is the father of the trust and the trust Is the father .of Imperialism. This ar raignment of old Grandfather Protec tion would have done credit to the Chi cago and Kansas City platform. Bryan may eye It with jealous envy as a rival of his cross of gold, etc It will please our American Cobdenltes to be thus assured that In tariff reform lies the solution of the- expansion problem. It is awkward, however, that the Demo crats In Congress could not be Induced to vote for free trade with the Philip pines: The Spooner compromise is probably worth while, not so much for the pitiful 20 per cent, concession It glyes to Cutia, but for the defeat it involves to the beet-sugar Insurgents. The reduction will help Cuba just a little and hurt no one. It would be a fitting rebuke to the long and ungracious delay of Con gress if Cuba should reject the whole proposal and do all the business she can with Great Britain. Senator Spooner succeeded in putting our Philippine affairs in the hands of the President; he advocated the same course for the Isthmian canal, and how he seems lit a fair way to carry through a similar scheme for Cuban reciprocity If there were such a thing, as militant Imperialism, Spooner wotifd be Its chlof exponent. GREAT DESPAIR AND GREAT HOPE Harper's Weekly. It must have been with a pang, self-hid or self-owned, that most readers of Mr. Herbert Spencer's latest and perhaps last word to the world came upon his avowal of disbelief in a life hereafter. It Is made with nothing of that arrogance of the elder: scepticism which the elder credence used so rudely to call Infidelity. But thinking carefully over the claims of rev elation, and collating them with the facts of experience and observation, he has found no real grounds for expecting that if a man dies, he shall live again, and he says so without apparent regret. The regret and the emotion are the reader's, ttnd they form together the pang which he has to reason away before he can realize that Mr. Spencer's conclusion Is for himself alone, and has nothing whatever to do with the truth of the mat ter. In a certain measure he speaks as one having authority; his eminent serv ices In behalf of the higher civilization entitle him to the most reverent atten tion. - When such an agnostic declares that he knows no sufficient cause for faith In the things unseen, on which "the fainting soul relies" more than on all the visible and tangible realities of this world, he commands ourdeference so Im peratively that for the moment the breath of our dissent Is taken away, and we de spondently humble ourselves to his opin ion. In like manner, though in less measure, the wise and good and helpful woman who was laid to what she believed her everlasting rest, the other day in Massa chusetts, and who in the words Bhe her self had written for her funeral spoke thc same unfaith from her open grave In flicted the same pang. Through a long life she had fought the good fight; she had kept the faith In humanity; but in what she had learned, and In what she had lived, the physician Zakschcwski had found no more reason to think she should live again than the philosopher Spencer uve again man me pnuusupjit:: diremu. Neither of these great spirits bade us J doubt, far less entreated us to renounce any hope that comforted or sustained us; they simply bore their testimony to the unbelief where the soul abides. Still the other day, about the time that the philosopher was speaking from his book to the reader, and the physician to the hearer at her grave, those words that weigh upon the heart, certain poor men slowly perishing in the foul air of a coal-mine in Tennessee were affirming the hope denied by the sages. To those they should not see again on earth they scribbled with pencil on such scraps of paper as they could find or chanced to have at hand a few brief, simple mes sages which have an august solemnity as well as an inexpressible pathos: We are shut up in the head ot the entry with a little air. and bad air coming pn us fast. It Is now about 12 o'clock. Now. dear wife, put your trust In the Lord to help you and my little children. . . . Woods says that he Is safe In heaven, and If he never sees the outside again he will meet his mother In heaven. . . . Elbert (his son) said for you all to meet him In heaven. Tell all the children to meet with us both. . . . Ellen. I want you to live right and com to heaven. J. 1. VOWELL. Dear Wife and Baby: I want to go back home and kiss the baby, but cannot; so good bye. I am going to"beaven. Meet me there. , JAMES A. BROOKS. To George I. Hudson's "Wife: If I don't see you any more ... I want you to meet me in heaven. Good-bye. Do as you wish. GEORGE HUDSON. Dear, Darling Mother and Sister: I am going to heaven. I want you all to meet me In heaven. Tell all your friends to meet me there, and tell the church I have gone to heaven. . . . I have not suffered much. Tour boy, your friend, JOHN HENDON. It would be a wrong to the faith which dictated these words to claim for them greater authority than Is due to the de spair of the philosopher and the physi cian; but It would be an equal wrong not to claim as much. This Is an affair that belongs to the whole of humanity, and every one that lives Is equally authorized to utter himself upon it. Whatever any one says Is of the same weight as any thing that another says, if we put aside the prophets of the religions. Because we can hardly read the messages of those dying men without tears is no proof that thoy knew more than those who deny the faith that they affirm. But we must not forget. In our reverence for the piety that despairs, the reverence, due to the piety that hopes. The miners suffocating In the pit where each breath drawn poisons the little air that Is left to breathe are all going to heaven. They are sure of it; they call .with all the love In their hearts to those they must part from here to meet them there. They have no slightest fear of not meeting their friends there; pne of them is already in heaven. If 13 an exaltation whose sublimity Is lost in Its passionate certainty. In its presence the martyrs live and triumph again; again the blood stained arena, the raclc the block, the manifold tortures and deaths bear testi mony to the deathless rapture of tho Im memorial trust that became religion and civilization In Christianity. We shall never have palpable assurance of Its truth, but on the other hand all the think ing and all the learning will not disprove it. The Referendum In Oregon. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Aside from National matters, the Ore- rgon election was Interesting because of the triumphant success or a new legislat ive system submitted to the people the adoption of the Swiss Idea' of referendum and Initiative. This was submitted In the form of a .constitutional amendment, which declares that, while the legislative power is vested In a Legislative Assem bly, consisting of a Senate and House of Representatives, yet "the peoplo reserve to themselves power to propose laws and amendments to the constitution Independ ent of the Legislative Assembly, and also reserve power at their own option to ap prove or reject at the polls any act ot the Legislative Assembly"; and it Is conse quently provided that, whenever 8 per cent of the legal voters petition for specific legislation, the same shall be submitted to popular vote, and shall become law if approved by a majority voting thereon; that any enactment of the Legislative Assembly may be submitted to popular vote by such Assembly, acting voluntar ily, and must be submitted when request ed by 5 per cent of the voters; and that the veto power of the Governor shall not extend to enactments voted on with ap proval by the people. This Is a remarkable advance In popular legislation, but the proposition was so strong that only one vote was cast against It In the Legislature; that both the Demo cratic and the Republican conventions hastdned to approve It, and that it was carried Monday by practically the unani mous vote of the state. Waller "Will Have Support. Minneapolis Tribune. Major Waller has returned to the United States. He talks like a soldier and a man. When his marines started In to discipline Samar, they had "seen their dead." in Kipling's phrase. The state In which they found the bodies of slain Americans was Indescribable and mad dening. Major Waller had orders from General Smith to kill all insurgents that would not surrender. He killed about 500, all men, and all slain in battle but the 11 traitors. The' natives of Samar started out to exterminate the Ameri cans. All that would not give- up the Idea were exterminated themselves. Waller says he left Samar a howling wilderness, and we think he did welL We suspect the American people will agree with him. We more than suspect that they will like the way he talks. Now he is going to Washington to give some personal atten tion to the coffee-coolers of the marine staff, who got him court-martialed to prevent his well-earned promotion to com mand of the corps, and save a soft bed for the fat body and lazy bones of one of their number. We suspect that, the Amer ican people will sympathize with him In this mission as much as they did in -his Samar performance. OREGON'S OFFICIAL RESULT. St Louis Globe-Democrat. The official figures In the vote on Con gressmen In Oregon tell a story which the country will be Interested In reading. Of course. It la known that the result on Governor In that state Is of no partisan significance. A bolting faction ot the Re publican party took away enough votes from the Governorship candidate to let the Democratic nominee get ahead of him. The Democratic candidate, out of a total vote of about 71.CO0. has a lead In the neghborhood of 300. If there had been no wrangle among the Republicans their candidate- for Governor would have been elected by a plurality ranging anywhere from 10.000 to 15.000. All the rest of the Republican state ticket was elected by. long leads. The Republican margin In tne Legislature is greater as a result of the late election than it was in the recent body. It Is the contest on Congressmen, how ever, which Is of the greatest Interest and significance. In 1S0S, the preceding off year, the margin for the two Republican candidates for Congress In Oregon was 994. It was 12.C9S in the canvass of 1900. when the Presidential excitement ran the vote up to high figures. It was 15.221 In last week's election. These figures tell the 6tory. Usually a party's lead In a Presidential year, m the states In which It has a lead, is greater than It Is In any canvass until the succeeding Presidential campaign. The canvass this year In Ore gon made a sharp departure from that rule. The majorities In last week's elec tion were far ahead of those of two years ago, when there was ah especial Incen tive, on account of the Presidential cam paign, to get out a large vote. This rise in the Republican wave means something. It means that on the Issue of National expansion, 'which will be dom inant In the Congressional canvass throughout the country this year, the Re publican party Is Invincible. The voice of Oregon on this question Is the voice of the entire Pacific Coast and of the en- --- ----- --- - -- - r "re "West. It is .the voice of the United States as a whole. National expansion, as expressed In the question of the retention of the Philippines, Is a winning iseue. The Republican party Is committed to expan sion by the voice of President Roosevelt and by the expression of the Republican majority in Congress. The flag In the Philippines will stay up. On this Issue the Republican party will sweep the country In the Congressional canvass of 1902. German Humor of the Real Brand. Sonn und Montags Zeltung (Vienna). The diligent newspaper reader has lat terly been considerably embarrassed. He has read the spirited toast which the Czar and President of the French Repub lic have exchanged, and he hears of noth ing else but hymns of peace and assur ances that the alliance between Russia and France has no other object In view than the tranquillity of Europe. In pres ence of the toasts of the Czar and M. Loubet the German Emperor cannot keep silent. He also delivers a speech, which he addresses to the Alsatians, whom he has Just gratified by the repeal of the "dictatorship paragraph." What Is It he says? It amounts to a psalm to the peace of Europe, of which Germany is lauded as the guardian. We read a report of pro ceedings In the Italian Parliament. What is It we find? That the agreement be tween France and Italy is a guarantee of peace, implying the maintenance of the balance of power In the Mediterranean and the Adriatic. England, France, Ger many, Russia, Austria-Hungary', Italy In a word, all the principal European pow ersdeclare themselves unconditional de fenders of peace. This Is calculated to muddle the attentive newspaper reader. He aska himself who It Is that threatens peace, as so many and such mighty pow ers are exhausting themselves In assur ances that they are its protectors. Ho carefully studies the map of Europe, and It Is not surprising If he finally suspects that there must be a secret danger to peace, perhaps from a new triple alliance, for Instance, between the principality of Llchtensteln, Switzerland and the Republic of San Marino, for all the other European States are engaged In the great peace con cert organized by the dual and the triple alliances and constantly proclaiming that circumstance with alarming expllcltness. w WoodrOTT Wilson's Four Points. New York Commercial Advertiser. Dr. Wilson unites four qualities which In combination are unusual. He Is, in the first place, a scholar of real eminence. His two most serious works, "Congres sional Government" and "The State." have, since their first appearance, been regarded as authorities by European stu dents of political science. He possesses exceptional literary gifts, his style being lucid, philosophical and strong, finding Its best exemplification In his two books, "Divslon and Reunion" and "Mere Litera ture." As a speaker, too. he is very pleas ing, saying what he has .to say In a straightforward, convincing fashion and with much the same grace of expression that Is found In what he writes. That he Is an able administrator and one of a very practical turn of mind, sane, judicious and efficient. Is also thoroughly well known, and might, in any case, be as sumed from the fact that he has been unanimously selected for this Important administrative office. Finally and this is by no means to be Ignored he Is im mensely popular with the whole student body, who admire him as a man and will make his task of government by just so much the easier. Republican View of Tariff Revision. The Republican Congressional Conven tion of the Eleventh Wisconsin District adopted the following as one of the planks of Its platform: "That many of tho industries of thl3 "country have outgrown the need of a pro tective tariff is made evident by the fact that the American manufacturer has en tered the markets of the world and Is successfully competing with the manufac turers of all other countries. Many of the tariff schedules adopted to foster Infant industries have fully served that purpose and have now become a means of aiding and building up powerful trusts and com binations, and enabled these to exact from the American purchasers the payment of higher prices than they exact for the same class of goods sold in foreign countries. We therefore favor a revision of the tariff, without unreasonable delay, which will place, upon the free list every article and product controlled by any monopoly, and Buch other articles and products as are beyond the need of protection." FarcTTellt If Ever Fondest Prayer; Lord Byron. Farewell! If ever fondest Drayer For other's weal availed on high, Mine will not all be lost In air. But waft thy name beyond the sky. 'Twere vain to ype&k. to weep, to sigh; Oh! more than tears of blood can tell, "When wrung from guilt's expiring eye. Are In that word Farewell! farewell! These lips are mute, these eyes are dry. But In my breast and In my brain Awake the pangs that pass not by. The thought that ne'er shall sleep again. My soul nor deigns nor dares complain. Though grief and passion there rebel; I only know we loved In vain I only feel Farewell! farewell! . The Last Word. Matthew Arnold. Creep into thy narrow bed. Creep, and let no more be said! Vain thy onset! all stands fast; Thou thyself must break at last. Let the long contention cease! Geese are swans, and swans are geese. Let them have It how they will! Thou art tired, best be still. They outtalked thee, hissed thee, tore thee? Better men fared thus before thee; Fired their ringing shot and passed. Hotly charged and sank at last. Charge once more. then, and be dumb! Let the victors, when they come. When the forts of folly fall. Find thy. body by the walll NOTE AND COMMENT. June seems to be repentant. This is not a job for amateur blood hounds. Panama hats tell which way the money Is blown. Mr. Beach is to be congratulated on hla handsome majority. Life, liberty and the pursuit of convicts don't always go together. One Mohr railroad on the Columbia makes a good deal of difference. Posses may come and posses may go, but Tracy and Merrill go on forever. Some dentists would rather writG ads of the profession than make Its code of ethics. We arc going to have a new treaty with Spain. This one will be cheaper than that now in use. The impression is growing that the Boer War is really over. jThe Boers them selves have begun to believe It. J. P. Morgan is to dine with King Ed ward, and the servants are worrying about which to call "your majesty." And meanwhile have the guards at the Penitentiary been given better rifles or taught to shoot the ones they have? The President has made a few mistakes, but with a fresh crop of graduates to set him right he will have no excuse for repeating them. A good many people are trying to per suade themselves that a two-room shack at the seaside Is more luxurious than & comfortable house at home. General Miles has not yet succeeded In getting far enough back to suit the Ad ministration. When he does he will ba allowed to remain seated. Chicago physicians are puzzled over tho case of a man whoso heart beat after death. Yet dead beats are no rarity In other parts of the country. A New York police captain is going to visit Prince Henry. The Prince's con duct while in thic country certainly en titles him to such an honor. President Henry Smith Pritchett, of tha Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who responded to the toast, "Science." at the Columbia alumni dinner recently at Sherry's Illustrated his subject with one Incident that was very much appreciated. "Science," he said, "is now a word to conjure with. In a Boston school tho other day a teacher said to a small boy: " 'Who won the battle of New Or leans?' " 'Why, Jim Corbett, of course,' was the answer. " 'How did that happen?' asked the teacher, not placing Corbett's name and thinking to set the boy right. " 'He won,' was the prompt reply, 'be cause he had more science than the other guy.' " President John Henry Barrows, of Ob erlln College, is a recent Interview, tells how Mrs. Barrows had been convinced that Insurance Is something more than a "matter of paying premiums." Mrs. Bar rows, the professor said, had scoffed so frequently at the Insurance business that he permitted his insurance policies to lapse. One day. however, he was per suaded by an energetic agent to take out a new policy. That very afternoon Ober lln was thrown into the greatest excite ment by the appearance of clouds of smoke pouring from the windows of the president's residence. After the chemical extinguishers had done their work It was found that a whole closetful of Mrs. Bar-" rows' best gowns had fed the flames start ed from." an overheated chafing dish. The loss was promptly paid and Dr. Barrows said he got keen enjoyment from Mrs. Barrows' change of heart. An additional twinkle came Into his eye when he read this letter: , John Henry Barrows, D. D.. President Ober lln College Dear Sir: Inclosed And draft for $300. We note that this policy went Into effect at noon ar-d lire did not occur until 4 a dock. Why this delay? Charles H. Cramp, the veteran ship builder of Philadelphia, told the other day of his visit to Czar Alexander of Rus sia, the father of the present ruler, when he received the first order for constructng in his yards a warship for the great em pire of Northern Europe. "The Czar received me standing among some dozen or more of his naval digni taries," he said, "and while he was gra clousness itself I was none the less embar rassed. You sec, I was not used to that sort ot thing, and really was wondering every minute just what would happen and what I would be expected to do. The ' Czar stood rather close to me as we talked, and I found myself wishing I were a bigger man, as he towered above me. Then, all of a sudden-, he asked: " 'Mr. Cramp, in what school of naval architecture were you educated?' " 'Your Highness, I answered, T was educated In my father's yards. He was educated In his father's yards. We found ed a school of naval architecture." "What put that Into my head I will never know," continued Mr. Cramp,, "but It took the trick. The Czar caught mo by the hand and said: 'Mr. Cramp, you were educated in the school that I am glad to have build ships for my navy.'-" PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Mike Say, Pat. phwat Is a wather-spanlel? Pat Sure, he must be some rllltlv av thlm grayhounds we read about. Harvard Lampoon. Blonde Bridesmaid The ushers haven't seated your Aunt Maria wltn the family. Other Bridesmaid (sister to tho bride) Xo; she sent only a pickle fork! Life. Mother I am surprised. Ethel, that you should talk so Impertinently to papa. I'm suro you never heard mc talk that way to him. Ethel Well, you choosed him, and I didn't. Detroit Free Press. First Newsboy I'll bet you tuppence to a penny'orth" o' nuts that Skcptar wins, the Dur by. Second Newsboy Done. Third Newsboy I'll hold the stakes. First Newsboy Yes, but who's a-goln to 'old you? Punch. At the Menagerie. "What does the tiger re mind you of?" asked the mother of little Doro thy, expecting, of course, she would say a kit ty. "Why," replied Dorothy, seriously, "he reminds me of a barber pole." Ohio State Journal. Counting Them. "Mr. Woodby WItte says that there are only eight Jokes In the world." "I should never have suspected from his ef forts to amuse." answered Miss Cayenne, lan guidly, "that ho had found so many." Wash ington Star. Brlggs Funny about Harry. He was saying only a few weeks ago he wouldn't have Maude If there wasn't another woman In the world, and now their cards are out. Griggs That's all -right- There Is another woman In tho world. Boston Transcript. Another Wild Exaggeration. "I understand," said the owner of the Blue Devil, "that you ran over a man yesterday." "Nothing of the kind." replied the little man. who Is winning fame with his Bed Flash. "It was only a 10- year-old girl." Chicago Record-Herald. Sure Market. "This picture Is very much below the average," said the art connoisseur. "I hope you are not going to offer It for salo here. In Paris." "Oh, no," responded the art ist, "I am going to save that for some of those 1 American millionaires." Chicago Daily News. I