12 THE MOKNING OBEGONIAE, SATURDAY, JUNE 2S, 1902. BRITISH RECOGNITION OF CROMWELL ' CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS MAKES ANOTHER INTERESTING CONTRIBUTION TO HISTORICAL DISCUSSION. CHICAGO. June 17. At the meeting of the PW Beta Kappa Society of the TJnl verJty of Chicago, held here tonight, Charles Francis Adams delivered an ora tion on the subject, "Shall Cromwell Have a Statue?" Mr. Adams address was In pert as follows: "At about 3 o'clock of the afternoon of September S, 1655, the day of Worcester ami of Dunbar, and as a groat tempest was wearing Itself to rest, Oliver Crom well died. He died In London, In the pal ace of Whitehall; that palace of the great banqueting hall, through whose central window Charles had walked forth to the scaffold a little less than 10 years before. A few weeks later, 'with a more than re gal solemnity. the body of the great Lord Protector was.carried to Westminster Ab bey and Ifcere buried 'amongst Kings.' "Two years then elapsed; and, on the 12th anniversary of King Charles' execu tion, the remains of the usurper, having boen disinterred by a unanimous vote of tlie convention Parliament, were hung at Tyburn. The trunk was then burled under the gallows, while CrcmweU'i) head was set on a pole over the joof of Westmin ster Hall. Nearly two centuries of execra tion ensued, until, in the sixth genera tion, the earlier verdict was challenged, and the question at last asked: 'Shall Cromwell have a statue?' Cromwell, the traitor, the usurper, the execrable mur Herer of the martyred Charles! "As first, and for long, the suggestion , was looked upon almost as an Impiety, and, as such, scornfully repelled. Not only did the old loyal King-worship of England recoil from the thought, but, in dignantly appealing to the Church, it de clared that no such distinction could be granted eo long as there remained In the Prayer Book a form of supplication for K?ug Charles the Martyr, and of praise and thanksgiving for the wonderful de liverance of theec kingdoms from the groat rebellion, and all the other miseries antf oppressions consequent thereon, un der v.hich they had so long groaned. None the less, the demand was Insistent; and at last, b it only after two full centuries had elapsed and a third was well ad vanced, was the verdict of 1661 reversed. Toay the bronze ofilgy of Oliver Crom well massive in size, rugged In feature, characteristic In attitude stands defiant ly in the yard of that Westminster Hall, from the pole on the top of which, twelve score years ago, the flesh crumbled from his skull. A Dramatic Reversal. "In this dramatic reversal of an accept or verdiot this complete revision of opin ions once deemed settled and Immutable there is, I admit, a lesson an academic laoron. "Wo, too, as well as the English, have had our great rcbollion. It came to a dramatic close 37 years since; as theirs came to a close not less dramatic some seven times 37 years since. We, also, as they In their time, formed our contem poraneous judgments and recorded our verdicts, assumed to be irreversible, of the men, the issues, and the events of the great conflict, and those verdicts and Judgments, in our case as in theirs, will unquestionably be revised, modified, and in not a few cases wholly reversed. Bet ter knowledge, calmer reflection and a more judicial frame of mind come with the passage of the years; in time pas sions subside, prejudices disappear, truth assorts itself. "In England this process has been going on for over two centuries and a half, with What result Cromwell's statue stands as proof. "We live In another age and a dif ferent environment; and, as 50 years of Europe out-measure In their growth a cycle of Cathay, so I hold one year of 20th-century America works more progress in thought than 37 years of Britain during the Interval between Its great rebellion and ours. We who took active part in the Civil War have not yet wholly van ished from the stage; the rear guard of the Grand Army, we linger. Today is sep arated from the death of Lincoln by the same number of years only which separated 'the glorious revolution of 1BSS' from the oxecution of Charles Stuart; yet to us Is already given to look back on the events of which we were a part with the same perspective effects with which the Victo rian Englishman looks back on the men and events of the commonwealth. ' Statue for Robert E. Lee. "I propose on this occasion to do so; and reverting to my text. 'Shall Cromwell Have a Statue?' and reading that text in the gloss of Carlyle's 'Latter-Day Pamph let' utterance, I quote you Horace's famil iar precept: Mutato nomine, de te Fabula narratur. and ask abruptly: 'Shall Robert E. Lee have a statue? I propose also to offer to your consideration some reasons why he should, and, assuredly, will have one. If not now, then presently. "Shortly after Lee's death. In October, 1S78, leave was asked in the United States Senate by Mr. McCreery. of Kentucky, to Introduce a joint resolution providing for the return of the estate and mansion of Arlington to the family of the deceased Confederate Commander-in-Chief. In view of the use which had then already been made of Arlington as a military cemetery, this proposal. Involving, as it necessarily did, a removal of the dead, naturally led to warm debate. The proposition was one not to be considered. If a defect in the title of the overnment existed, it must in Eome way be cured, as, subsequentlv, it was cured. But I call attention to the de bate because Charles Sumner, then a Sen ator -from Massachusetts, participated in it, using the following language: " 'Eloquent Senators have already char acterized the proposition and the traitor it seeks to commemorate. I am not dis posed to speak of General Lee. It Is enough to say he stands high in the cata logue of those who have imbrued their Hands In their country's blood. I hand him over to the avenging pen of history.' "This was when Lee had been just two .months dead; but, three-quarters of a century after the Protector's 6kull had been removed from over the roof of West minster Hall, Pope wrote in similar spirit: See Cromwell, damn'd to everlasting: fame, "And 1G years later, four-fifths of a cen tury after Cromwell's dlsentombment at Westminster and reburial at Tyburn a poIod from the death of Lee equal to that which will have elapsed In 1950, Gray wrote of the Stoke Pogis Churchyard Some mute Inglorious Milton here may rest. Some Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. "And now, a century and a half later, Cromwell's statue looms defiantly up in front of the Parliament House. When, therefore, an appeal Is In such cases made to the avenging pen of history, it Is -well to, bear this Instance in mind, while re calling perchance that other line of a greater than Pope, or Gray, or Sumner Thus the whirligig of time brings In his re venges. "Was, then, Robert E. Lee a 'traitor' was he also guilty of his 'country's blood?' These questions I propose now to discuss. I am one of these who in other days was arrayed in the ranks which confront ed Lee; one of those whom Lee baffled and boat, but who finally baffled and beat Lee. As one thus formerly ' lined up against him, these questions I propose to discuss in the calmer and cooler and alto gether more reasonable light which comes to most men when a whole generation of the human race lies burled between them and the issues and actors upon which we undertake to pass. "Was Robert E. Lee a traitor? Tech nically. I think he was Indisputably a trai tor to the United States, for a traitor, as I understand it technically. Is one guilty of the crime of treason; or, as the Cen tury Dictionary puts it. violating his alle giance to the chief authority of the state; while treason against the United States is specifically defined in the Constitution as 'levying war' against it, or 'clvimj their 'enemies aid and comfort.' That Robert E. Lee did levy war against the United States can, I suppose, no more be denied than that ho gave "aid and com fort to its onemies. This technically, but in history there is treason and trea son, as there are traitors and traitors. "And, furthermore If Robert E. Lee was a traitor, so also and indisputably were George Washington, Oliver Crom well, John Hampden and William of Or ange. The list might be extended indefi nitely. But these will suffice. There can be no question that every one of those named violated his allegiance, and gave aid and comfort to the enemies of his sov ereign. "Wnnlilnsrtois, a Precedent. "Washington furnishes a precedent at every point. A Virginian like Lee, he was also a British subject; he had fought un der the British flag, as Lee had fought under that of the United States; when, in 1776. Virginia seceded from the British Empire, he went with his state, just as Lee went with it 5 years later; subse quently Washington commanded armies in the field designated by those opposed to them as 'rebels,' and whose descend ants now glorify them ao the rebels of '76, much as Lee later commanded, and at last surrendered, much larger armies, also designated 'rebels' by those they con fronted. "Except in their outcome, the cases were, therefore, precisely alike; and logic Is logic It consequently appears to fol low that If Lee was a traitor, Washington was also. It is unneccesary to Institute similar comparisons with Cromwell, Hampden and William of Orange. No de fense can In their cases be made. Tech nically, one and all, they undeniably were traitors. Framers of Constitution. "Moreover, what availed the views or intentions of the framers of the Constitu tion? What mattered It In 1S00 whether they, in 17S7, contemplated a Nation or only a more compact federation of sov ereign states? Realities have an unpleas ant way of assorting their existence. How ever it may have been in 1SS. In 1EC0 a Nation had grown into existence. Its peaceful dismemberment was Impossible. The complex system of tissues and liga ments, the growth of 7 years, could not be gently taken apart without wound or hurt; the separation, if separation there was to 'be. Involved a tearing asunder, supplementing a liberal use of the knife. Their professions to the contrary notwith standing, this the Southern leaders failed not to realize. "In point of fact thorefore, believing fully In the abstract legality of secession and the justice and sufficiency of the grounds on which they acted, their appeal was to the Inalienable right of revolution; and to that might by which alone the right could be upheld. Let us put casuistry, metaphysics and sentiment aside, and come to actualities. The secessionist re course in 1S1 was to the sword; and to the sword it was meant to have recourse. "That the leaders In secession were men with large views, and that they had ma tured a comprehensive policy as the ulti mate outcome of their movement I enter tain no doubt. They looked unquestion ably to an easy military success, and the complete establishment of their Confed eracy; more remotely, there can be no question, they contemplated a policy ot extension, and the establishment along the 6horcs of the Gulf of Mexico and In the Antilles of a great semi-tropical, slave-labor republic; finally, all my Inves tigations have tended to satisfy me that they confidently anticipated an early dis integration of the Union, and the acces sion of the bulk of the Northern States to the Confederacy, New England only being sternly excluded therefrom 'sloughed off," as they expressed it. " 'Secession is not Intended to break up the present Government, but to perpetuate it We go out of the Union, not to destroy It, but for the purpose of getting further guarantees and security' this was said in January. 1SCL and this in 1900 'And so we believe that, with the success of the South, the Union of the Fathers, which the South was the principal factor In forming, and to which she was far more attached than the North, would have been restored and re-established; that in this Union the South would have been again the domi nant people, the controlling power. "Conceding the necessary premises of fact and law a somewhat considerable concession, but perhaps conceivable con ceding these, I see In this position, then or now. nothing illogical, nothing provoca tive of severe criticism, certainly nothing treasonable. Acting on sufficient grounds of which those thus acting were the sole judge, proceeding In a way Indisputably legal and regular. It was proposed to re construct the Union In the light of ex perience, and on a new and, as they con sidered, an Improved basis, without New England. This cannot properly be termed a conspiracy; It was a legitimate policy based on certain assumed data, " legal, moral and economical." Virginia' "War Attitude. Continuing, Mr. Adams said that there was in Virginia's attitude during the -war much that appealed to the sense of the chlvalrlc The slave in Virginia was not a mere transferable chattel. To a large extent he was attached to the soil and the house. This fact, the speaker said, had a direct bearing on the moral Issue. Virginia did not take its place in the se cession movement because of the election of an anti-slavery President or from mere love of any peculiar Institution. "Virginia," said the speaker, "made state sovereignty an article a cardinal article of its political creed. So, logically and consistently, it took the position that, though It might be unwise for a state to secede, a state which did secede could not and should not be coerced. "To us now this nosltion seems worse than illogical; it is Impossible. So'events proved it. Tet, after all. It Is based on the great fundamental principle of the con sent of the governed." Three names, Mr. Adams said, are Im pressed on the military record of the Civil War Wlnfield Scott, George Henry Thomas, and Robert Edward Lee. Of the three, the first two stood by the flag; the third went with his state. Mr. Adams gave credit for equal conscientiousness In his decision, but each of them, he said, while to a degree a free agent, to a much greater degree was the child of anterior conditions. Lee Trne to His State. "Lee," continued the speaker, "indulged In no self-deception wandered away from the path In no cloud of political triumph. "Secession, as he wrote to his son, Ms nothing but revolution. The framers of our Constitution never exhausted so much labor, wisdom, and forbearance In ito formation, and surrounded it with 60 many guards and securities, if it was in tended to be broken by every member of the Confederacy at wilU It is idle to talk of secession.' "But he also believed that his personal allegiance was due to 'Virginia; that her secession, though revolutionary, bound all Virginians and ended their connection with and duties to the National Govern ment. Thereafter, to remain in the United States Army would be treason to Virginia, So two days after Virginia passed its ordinance he, bolng then at Ar lington, resigned his commission, at the same time writing to his sister, the wife of a Union officer: " 'We are now in a state of war which will yield to nothing. The whole South is In a state of revolution, Into which Vir ginia, after a long struggle, has been drawn; and, though I recognise no neces sity for this state of things, and would have forborne and pleaded to the end for redress of grievances, real or supposed, yet In my own person I had to meet the 1 question whether I should tako part against my native state. With all my de votion to the Union, and the feeling of loyalty and duty of an American citizen, I have not been able to make up my mind to raise my hand against my rela tives, my children, my home. I have, therefore, resigned my commission In the Army, and save in defense of my native' state, I hope I may never be called on to draw my sword.' "Two days before he had been unre-. servedly tendered, on behalf of President Lincoln, the command of'the Union Army then Immediately to be put in the field in front of Washington the command shortly afterward held by General Mc Dowell. "What otherwise did George Washing ton do under circumstances not dissim ilar? What would he have done under circumstances wholly similar? Like Lee, Washington was a soldier: like Lee, he was a Virginian before he was a soldier. He had served under King George's flag; he had sworn allegiance to King George; his ambition had been to hold the royal commission. Presently Virginia seceded from the British Empire renounced Its allegiance. What did Washington do? He threw in his lot with his native pro vince. Do you hold him then to have been a traitor, to have been false to his colors? Such is not the verdict of his tory. "Confronted with ' the question, 'What would I have done in 1SS1 had positions been reversed and Massachusetts taken the course then taken by Virginia?' I found the answer already recorded. I would have gone with the Union, and against Massachusetts. None the less, I hold Massachusetts estopped In the case of Lee. 'Le the galled Jade wince, our withers are unwrung ; but, I submit, however it anight be with me or mine, it does not He in the mouths of the descendants of the New England Federalists- of the first two decennials of the nineteenth century to invoke 'the aveng ing pen of history' to record an adverse verdict In the case of any son of Vir ginia who threw in his lot with his state in 1ESL" Judgment Agntnut Confederate. In rendering a verdict upon those who sided with the Confederacy, Mr. Adams said It should be given in accordance with the facts, and each individual should bo Judged on his own merits and not condemned en bloc ' The Englishman of today, he said, does not apply to Cromwell 'the standard of loyalty or treason, of right and wrong, applied after the Restoration: nor does the twentieth century confirm the nine teenth century's verdicts. Even slavery, he said, we may come to regard as a phase, pardonable as passing, in the evolution of a race. Mr. Adams' conclusion was as follows: "I hold It will certainly be so with our Civil War. The year 1555 will look upon Its causes. Its Incidents, and Its men with different eyes from those which we see them now eyes wholly different from those with which we saw 40 years ago. They for we by that time will have re joined the generation to which we be longed will recognize th'e somewhat essential fact, indubitably true, that all the honest conviction, all the loyalty, all the patriotic devotion and self-sacrifice, were not then any more than all the courage on the victor's side. True! the moral right, the spirit of nationality, the sacred cause of humanity even, were on our side; but among those opposed, and who in the end went down, were men not less sincere, not less devoted, not less truly patriotic according to their lights, than he who among us was first in all those qualities. Men of whom it was and Is a cause of pride and confidence to say: 'They, too, were countrymen!' General lite n Type. "Typical of those men most typical was Lee. He represented. Individualized, all that was highest and best ' in the Southern mind and the Confederate cause the loyalty to state, the keen sense of honor and personal obligation, the slightly archaic, the almost patri archal, love of dependent, family and home. As I have more than once said, he was a Virginian of the Virginians. He represents a type which is gone hardly less extinct than that of the great Eng lish nobleman of the feudal times, or the ideal head of the Scotch clan of a later period; but just so long as men admire courage, devotion, patriotism, the high sense of duty and personal honor all in a word which go to make up what we know as character Just so long will that type of man bo held In affectionate, rev erential memory. They have in them all the elements of the heroic "As Carlyle wrote more than Waif a century ago, so now 'Whom do you wish to resemble? Him you set on a high column. Who Is to have a statue? means, Whom shall wc consecrate and set apart as one of our sacred men? Sacred; that all men may see him, be reminded of him, and, by new example, added to old -perpetual precept, be taught what is real worth in man. Show me the man you honor; I know by that symptom, better than by any other, what kind of man you yourself are. For you show me there what; your Ideal of manhood Is? what kind of man you long Inexpressibly to be, and would thank the gods, with your whole soul, for being If you could.' "It is all a question of time; and the time is, probably, not quite yet. The wounds of the great war are not altogeth er healed, lt3 personal memories are still fresh, its passions not wholly allayed. It would, indeed, be a wonder If they were. But I am as convinced as an unlllumined man can be of anything future, that when such time docs come, a Justice not done now will be done to those descend ants of Washington, of Jefferson, of Rut- ledge, and of Lee, who stood opposed to us In a succeeding generation. "That the National spirit is now su preme and the Nation cemented. I hold to be unquestionable. That property In man has vanished from the civilized world is due to our Civil War. The two are worth the great price then paid for them. But wrong as he may have been, and as he was proved by events in these respects, the Confederate had many great and generous qualities; he also was brave, chivalrous, self-sacrificing, sincere and patriotic So I look forward with confidence to the time when they, too, will be represented In our National pan theon. Then the query will be answered here, as the query In regard to Crom well's statue put 60 years ago has recent ly been answered In England. "The bronze effigy of Robert E. Lee, mounted on his charger and with the In signia of his Confederate rank, will from its' pedestal in the Nation's Capitol look across the Potomac at his old home at Arlington, even as that of Cromwell dom inates the yard of Westminster, upon which his Bkull once looked down. When that time comes Lee's monument will be educatlonal-lt will typify the historical appreciation of all that goes to make up the loftiest type of character, military and civic, exemplified In an opponent, once dreaded but ever respected, and above all, it will symbolize and commem orate that loyal acceptance of the conse quences of defeat, and the patient up building of a people under new condi tions by constitutional means, which I hold to be the greatest educational les son America has yet taught to a onco skeptical but now silenced world." FOURTH OF JULY RATES LOWER COLUMBIA RIVER. The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company has named a one-fare round-trln rate between all stations on the Portland Astoria route, account Fourth of July. Selling dates are July 3 and 4. with July 6 as return limit. T!cket office. Third and Washington. ILWACO AKTD XORTH BEACH. The favorite seaside steamer T. J. Pot ter will make her Initial trip to Ilwaco Saturday, June 28. leaving Ash-street dock at 12-30, noon. Returning, leave Ilwaco Sunday evening at S. arriving Portland early Monday morning. Tickets and berth resenatlons at O. E, & N. office. Third and Washington. Women with pale, colorless faces, who feel weak and discouraged, will receive both mental and bodily vigor by using Carter'a Little Liver Pills. INDRASAHMA IS EN ROUTE! XBW PORTLAND fc ASIATIC LIXER HAS SAILED FROM YOKOHAMA. North Pacific Oriental Liner Sail From Tncoma With Less Than 200 Tons of Cargo. The mammoth Indrasahma, the largest steamship in the service of the Portland & Asiatic Steamship Company, sailed from Yokohama for this port Wednesday, and will reach Portland about July 13. She has about 5000 tons of Inward cargo and a large number of Oriental passen gers for Victoria, at which port she will call before coming to Portland. The In drasahma is in command of Captain Charles Craven, a brother of Captain W. E. Craven, of the Indravelll. Like his genial brother of the Indravelll, who Is senior master of the fleet. Captain Cra ven, of the Indrasahma, Is a Royal Na val Reserve man, and has-een service all over the world. The Indrasahma fol lows the Indrapura. now in purt, and will take out a slightly larger cargo than Is being loaded by that vessel. Trans-Paclflc business is very light at present, but the Indrapura will go out with about 4000 tons of flour, cotton, lum ber, etc In spite of the slack business the Portland & Asiatic Line has man aged to get its liners out without less than half a cargo most of the time, and until the past few months has had them running full, but the Pugct Sound lines have not been faring so well. One of the Marus sailing from Seattle Is reported to have sailed with but 250 tons of freight, and it was thought that this was about the limit for small cargoes, but the North ern Pacific liner Victoria, which sailed from Tacoma Thursday, came very near to cutting the Agures on the Moru cargo in two, for according to the freight list printed in the Tacoma papers there was less than 2C0 tons of freight on board, and the steamer was obliged to take aboard several hundred tons of coal for ballast. The value of the Victoria's cargo was but 525,000. and It was made, up of two typewriters, 00 bales of sheetings, seven crates of window blinds, 30 tons of dried fish and 24.000 feet of lumber and U75 bar rels of flour. The freight paid on this cargo was less than ?1000, and the ex penses of the ship for the Voyage to Hong Kong will run well up toward $10, 000. Tacoma and Seattle, as well as Portt land, are fortunate In having their lines in the hands of companies sufficiently strong to meet a drain of this kind with out interrupting the service. THE JAPAN SEAL CATCH. Victoria Schooners Meeting: With Succcs Across the Pacific. The high prices quoted for sealskins this season, together with fair catches, promise quite a profitable season for the Victoria schooners which have crossed the Pacific The Colonist of June 26 has the following regarding the catch to date: "Another of the fleet of five schooners hunting oft the Japan coast has been re ported, the Florence M. Smith having ar rived at Hakodate with 650 pelts. This news was given in a cablegram received by the Victoria Sealing Company yester day morning. This makes a total of 2675 skins taken by the four schooners report ed to date, and the Dora Steward has not yet been heard from. The Geneva Is the top-liner to date, she 'having taken S40 skins, the Director 620 and the Triumph 465. Five in all are hunting off the Japan coast, and seven others are hunting off the Copper Islands. The Japan fleet will go to the Copper Island grounds after leaving the Japanese waters. "The schooner George W. Prescott, which was refused a license on the ground thit United States citizens who are de barred from sealing were alleged to be interested In her ownership, has- received her license. Yesterday morning Collector of Customs A. R. Milne received instruc tions from Ottawa to grant a license to the schooner. This action was' taken as a result of the representations of the schooner's owners and agent, to show that none other than Canadians were in terested in the vessel. The Prescott is now lying at her wharf In the upper har bor, and will bo made ready for her cruise to the Behrlng Sea. She will be the 22d schooner of the Behrlng Sea fleet. Three others are still to sail, alL waiting for crews. YCKOX STEAMBOATS. Number of Stern-wheelers Plying Be tween Dawson and White Horse. Advices from the North brought down by the last steamer from Skagway report the following movements of the Yukon River fleet above Dawson: The steamer Canadian arrived at White Horse from Dawson on the 17th, with the banner passenger list of the season. She sailed on the return trip next morning. The cattle steamer Bonanza King arrived at White Horse on the 18th, and the Mary Graff the day afterwards. The steamers Dawson, Columbian and Mary Graff left White Horse for Dawson last Saturday. The Dawson and Columbian are passenger steamers and the Mary Graff .carried freight only. The Colum bian Is also a cold-storage boat The Bailey sailed for Big Salmon on the 20th, on the first trip of the season. The Vic torian passed Five Fingers on themorn ing of the 19th, coming up-stream. The Sybil passed Upper LaBarge going down stream the same day. The Bonanza King left White Horse on the 19th for Daw son. The river stood at 22 inches above low water at White Horse on the. 20th. The Selkirk, Nora and Casca arrived at White Horse on the 15th from Dawson. The Selkirk, the last in, had 45 passen gers. 'There were about 120 to arrive on the three boats. The Nora sailed for Daw son on the 17th. THE FORERIC'S CHARTER. Big Freighter 'Will Enter the Canadian-Australian Service. The steamship Forerlc, one of Andrew Weir's liners, which recently loaded lum ber at Portland for the Orient, has been chartered by the Canadian Pacific as an extra steamer for their Canadian-Australian line. She is on a time charter and will probably make several trips as a freight boat to accommodate the increas ing business of the line. In commenting pn the charter of the vessel the Van couver Province says: "The Forerlc will arrive here about the middle of next month, and will sail early in August, cr possibly prior to then, with a general cargo for Australia, Including heavy shipments of flour, of which large quantities are being Imported into Aus tralia as a result of the extended drouth In the interior and northern wheat-growing districts of Australia. "On her return voyage from Sydney, the Forerlc will call at Suva and load raw FIJI sugar for the British Columbia Sugar Refinery. Outward bound from this port again she will take flour and general car go. Bookings for space on the steamer are rapidly filling up. It is altogether probable that the Forerlc will make sev eral trips on the Canadian-Australian route" SHIPS STILL MISSING. No Tidings From the Portland, Jeanie or Thetis. SEATTLE. June 27. The steamship Roa. noke. Captain H. P. Weaver, arrived from Nome at 10:15 this morning. The Roanoke left Nome the afternon of June IS. At that time no tidings had been received of the steamer Portland or the Jeanle, and both vessels are now believed to be Ioft. At Nome it Is generally accepted that the Portland has been swept lar into the Arc tic Sea. Captain Weaver also reporte that noth inK had been, heard from the revenue cut- 1 ter ThetU when be left Nome. That vea- sel had at that time been two weeks in pursuit of the Portland. The vessels in port when the Roanoke left were: Val encia, Indiana, Centennial, Garonne, Ell in Thompson, Newsboy and the Oregon. The steamship Senator was still in quar antine. The steamer Dora, of the North ern Commercial Company, which had been sent North In the effort to succor the Portland, returned to Nome June 17, hav ing given" up all hope of finding the un fortunate vessel. The Roanoke brought down 5100,000 In goldduet, and reports a pleasant voyage. POOL IS UNSATISFACTORY. Ontslde Ports Will Not Submit to Kerr Yoyk Domination. NEW YORK. June 27. A decided dif ference of opinion that promises to de velop Into warfare may be said to exist between steamship Interests at New York and those at the out ports. In regard to the working of the recent modification of the foreign rate pool, cays the Jour nal of Commerce. This modification pro vided for charging a higher rate at thn out ports than at New York, a rate suffi cient to counteract the lower railroad rates from the Interior enjoyed by the out ports. A rumor Is current that a substantial increase In ocean freight rates Is In process of negotiation, but whether the present arrangement will hold the ground until a new one Is promulgated Is a matter on which considerable doubt is expressed In local freight circles. The chief trouble seems to be what may be termed the complete absence of faith entertained by the lines of any port in regard to the honest observance of the terms of agreement by lines of all other ports. NO "WORD FROM PORTLAND. Fears Norr Entertained for Boat Looking for Icc-Boand Craft. PORT TOWNSEND. Wash., June 27. Two steamers arrived today from Nome, the Roanoke this morning and the Valen cia at 8 o'clock this evening. Both boats report that no word had been received at Nome of the steamers Portland and Jeanle, and grave fears are entertained that they have met with mishap. The United States revenue cutter Thetis, which went to search for the Portland, had not returned to Nome when the Valencia sailed, and rumors for her safety were be ginning to be circulated. Deccan for South Africa. The British ship Deccan, which Involved a couple of prominent members of the shipping fraternity in this city In a scan dal of pretty big proportions two years ago, has just finished loading a cargo of wheat and flour at Tacoma for South Africa. She was dispatched by the Port land Flouring Mills Company for East London direct, and carries 19,250 barrels of flour and 55,462 bushels of wheat. The Deccan still has the deck which was con demned and ordered out of the ship when she was In Portland two years ago, and Captain Barrett says It will last 10 years longer If the owners use good judgment In selecting agents or charterers for the vessel. The Durbrldge, another old-timer well known in Portland, has just com pleted a cargo at Tacoma for Cape Town. She takes a full cargo of bluestem for Kerr, Glfford & Co., of this city. Captain McLaughlin Is still In command' of the vessel, and on his Inward voyage broke the record between Shanghai and Royal Roads. Raising the Gray Eagle. OREGON CITY, Or., June 27. The work of raising the steamer Gray Eagle, which ran on a rock above Clackamas Rapids W.ednesday night, has been temporarily abandoned. The aid of the steamer N. R. Lang was enlisted today, but without avail. The pumps that have been used are too small to accomplish anything. There Is a large hole In the bottom of the boat. The Oregon City Transportation Company sent to Portland today for a large force pump, and upon Its arrival tomorrow work will be resumed- With the pumps that have been used the boat would settle as fast as a little water was pumped out. The Albany Is on the Portland-Oregon City run today. To Be Posted as Overdue. SAN FRANCISCO, June 27. The steamer Portland, which is being carried into the Arctic by ice floes, is to be posted as overdue by Lloyds with heavy reinsurance. - Marine Notes. The steamship Columbia made an early start on her voyage for San Francisco, crossing out from Astoria at 5 o'clock yesterday rnornlng. The Elder did not do so well, and was two hours late In leav ing San Francisco. The French bark Jacobsen has not yet commenced loading wheat, and will not get away before the middle of next week. She will accordingly pioneer the new sea son fleet, and- another Frenchman, the Asle, will be second on the list. The lighthouse tender Manzanlta got away on her Alaskan trip yesterday af ternoon. The Columbine Is at Seattle, be-' lng equipped with new boilers, and while she is out of service the Manzanlta Is kept rustling to keep up with the work. Domestic and Foreign Ports. ASTORIA. June 27. Sailed at 5 A. M. Steamer Columbia, for San Francisco. Arrived Steamer Elmore, from Tillamook. Condition of the bar at 4 P. M., smooth; wind north west; weather clear. Ean Francisco. June 27. Sailed at 11:45 A. M. Steamer Geo. W. Elder, for Portland. New York, June 27. Arrived Columbia, from Hamburg. Tacoma, June 27. Arrived British steamer Selkirk, from Ladysmltb. Havre, Juno 27. Arrived La Touralne. from New York. Auckland, N. Z June 27. Sailed Ventura, for Pango-Pango and San Francisco. Lizard. June 27. Passed Southwark, from New York for Antwerp. Queenetown. June 27. Arrived Campania, from New York for Liverpool, and proceeded. Plymouth, June 27. Arrived Patricia, from New Tork for Cherbourg and Hamburg, and proceeded. Seattle, June 27. Sailed Steamer Excelsior, from Valdes (not as before reported). Arrived Steamer Roanoke, from Rome; steamer Eu reka, from San Francisco. San Francisco. June 27. Arrived Schooner Western Home, from Cooa Bay; schooner Ber wick, from Coqullle Blver. Sailed Schooner Onward, for Coqullle River. Brisbane. June 27. Arrived prior to June 20 MIowera. from Vancouver. Movllle. June 27. Sailed Anchoria, for New York. Hcqulam, Wash.. June 24. Arrived Schooner Wawona, schooner C R. Wilson, schooner Hal cyon, from Saa Francisco for Aberdeen. Ar rived June 25 Schooner Jennie Stella, from San Francisco for Aberdeen. Arrived June 28 Steamer Cheholls, steamer San Pedro, schoon er Letltia. from Ean Francisco for Aberdeen. Sailed Schooner C A. Thayer, from Honiara for Saa Francisco. Saa Francisco, June 27. Arrived Steamer China, from Hong Kong, Yokohama and Hon olulu; steamer Arequlpa, from Valparaiso. MORE CHEAP RATES TO COAST. The O. R. & N. Co. has arranged for a special Fourth of July rate to all Long Beach points. The usual Saturday rate of 52 50 will be available Thursday, Fri day and Saturday, July 3. 4 and 5; good for return leaving the beach Sunday even ing, the 5th. Get tickets and berths at O. R. & N. office. Third and Washington. VERY LOW RATES. On June 2S and July 1 and 3 the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company will otfer extraordinarily low round-trip rates to St. Paul. Minneapolis, Omaha, Kansas City, Chicago and all points East. Get details at O. R. & N. office. Third and Washington. RATES EAST GREATLY REDUCED. Call at O. R. & N. ticket oulce. Third and Washington, for quotations on round trio tickets to the East, which will be offered for sale on June 30 and July L E. W. Grove. This name must appear on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Qulnlne Tablets, the remedr that cures a cold In on day. 25 cents. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR Ill Is D Q ) If ullm yCtfiyiu BIEMFA8T The FINEST COCOA in the World , Costs Less than One Cent a Cup I Thirty-Eight Highest Awards inj nurope ana America. .Walter Bakers Go, " i EsiablLshed 1780 flnrnhoctor Mace I -W.W..WW.WI, .UM,f FALLING HAIR and BALDNESS I Km the Germ that is Destroying H the Hair Root : NEWBRO'S I HERPICIDE IS THE SCIENTIFIC REMEDY I THAT KILLS THESE PARASITIC GERMS. For Sale by Druggist. Prict$1.00. f mm iNi.-d'UiMr.nt-frjjjjjjjuwvai'H.'g'ra TSC7SS3M $50 FOR $1 Is a low estimate of the amount ERUSA Pays anyone " suffering with piles. E-RU-SA cures or J50 forfeited. Only up-to-date and reliable druggists. Portland. Or.. June 5. 1902. Dr. Ij. Grif fin: Your E-RU-SA Pile Cure has our UNQUALIFIED Indorsement. J. A. CLEMENSON. 2d and Yamhill. WOODARD. CLARKE & CO., 4th and Wash. ALBERT BERNI, 2d and Washington. EYSSELL'S PHARMACY. 227 Morrison. O. P. S. PLUMMER, 3d and Madison. S. Q. SKIDMORE & CO.. 151 3d. W. S. LOVE. Grand ave. and Burnstde. MODEL DRUG STORE, 05 Grand ave. R. A. WILSON. 133 Grand ave. H. A. VIETS. 431 Washington. ROWE &. MARTIN. 6th and Washington. LAUE-DAVIS DRUG CO.. 3d and Yamhill. GRADON & KOEHLER, 1st and Main. A. ALLEN. lGth and Savler. B. F. JONES & CO.. 801 Front. COTTEL DRUG CO.. 1st and Grant. BOLTON & ROTH. 2SO Russell. HAWTHORNE PHARMACY. 280 Grand ave. BROOKLYN PHARMACY. 570 Mllwaukle. J. M. RICEN. First and Clay sts. CURED BY White Ribbon Remedy Can be given in Glass of Water, Tea or Coffee Without 2atlent' Knowledge. "White Ribbon Remedy will cure or destroy the dlieased appetite tor alcoholic stimulants, whether the patient Is a confirmed Inebriate, "a tippler," toclal drinker or drunkard. Im possible or any one to have an appetite for alcoholic liquors alter using White Ribbon Remedy. Mrs. A. M. Townsend, Secretary of the Wom an's Christian Temperance Union, Boston, Mass., writes: "I have tested White Ribbon Remedy on ver obstinate drunkards, and the cures hare been many. In many casea the Remedy was given secretly. I cheerfully rec ommend and indorse White Ribbon Remedy. Members of our Union are delighted to Jind a practical and economical treatment to aid us In our temperance work." For sale by drusgiflts or by mall, $1 per box. Trial package free by writing. MRS. T. C. MOORE CO.. Supt. W. C. T. U.. Ventura, CaL Sold in Portland. Or., by Woodard. Clarke & Co., Fourth and Washington sts. Jcott's Santai-Pepsin Capsules F,OSyTaVE CUBE Por Inflammation or Catarrh of tha Bladder and Diseased Kidney. No euro so pay. Cares quic&ly and Persia neatly the worst cases of Gonorrhoea- tnd Gleet, no matt-rot howlong stand ing. Absolutely harmless. Sold by druggists. Fries 61.09, or by xnoil, postpaid, 81.C0, 3 boxes , (2.75. THE SAKTAL-FEPSIN Co., BELLEFONTAINEj OHIO. LAUE-TJAVIS DRUG CO.. Portland. Or. Biz G is a non-voieonu.. i rml v Inr ftnnnrrhrA 'XJDBEaX jGieet.SDermetorrhcra. Whites, unnatural dis i iniiun. charge, or any luunmma frmeo-j eonueien. tlon of raucous men; THCEtAHSCHEVlCilCO. branM. Non-astringent LOHCtHS'.Tl.o.LJ al51 fey 3roRlst, or sent In plain wrapper by cxpreis, prfipaid, fot l no, or 3 bottles. $3.75. CirccUr cent on iuort flfc iffe f& st r. i P s jj0 jTsV Jul ca I """m,WMIi,nnlnr- iiiiim n jimi!, llU-JJ.il litintr DANDRUFF os THE PALATIAL MEGOHM B0ILBI13 i M gap P3f a-&' Not a dnrlc office In the bnlldlnff VbioIntely flrcproofj electric light and artesian -water; perfect sanita tion and thorough ventilation. Ele vators ran day and nlffht. HoomJ. AINSLIE. DR. GEORGE. Phvslclan 413-U4 ANDERSON. GUSTAV. Attorney-at-Law...012 ASSOCIATED PRESS; E. L. Powell. Mgr..80t AUSTEN, F. C. Manager for Oregon and Washington Bankers Life Association of Des Moines. la.. .. -.502-303 BAKER. G. ERNEST. Attorney-at-Law...80I BANKERS LIFE ASSOCIATION. OF DES MOINES. IA.: F. a Austen, Mgr 302-303 ! BENJAMIN, R. W.. Dentist 3H BERNARD. G.. Cashier Pacific Mercantile Co. 211 BINSWANGER. OTTO S.. Physician and Surgeon;. .4 407-403 BOHN. W. G.. Timber Lands 515 BROCK. WILBUR F.. Circulator Orego- nlan... 501 BROWN. MYRA. M. D 313-314 BRUERE, DR. G. E.. Physician... 412-413-114 CAMPBELL. WM. M.. Medical Referee Equitable Life 700 1 CANNING. M. J 602-003 CARD WELL, DR. J. R.. Dentist 506 CAUKIN. G. E.. District Agent Travelers Insurance Company 718 CHURCHILL, MRS. E. J 710-717 COFFEY, DR. R. C. Surgeon 405-403 COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY C04-G05-60G-C07-C13-C14-613 i CORNELIUS. C W.. Phys. and Surgeon... 20tf COLLIER. P. F., Publisher; S. P. McGulre. Manager 415 COX, RALSTON. Manager American Guar anty Co., of Chicago 302 CROW, a P., Timber and Mines 315 DAY, J. G. & I. N 318 DICKSON. DR. J..F.. Physician 713-714 EDITORIAL ROOMS Eighth Floor EVENING TELEGRAM 325 Alder Street I EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCI ETY; L. Samuel, Manager; G. S. Smith, Cashier 300 FENTON. J. D., Physician and Surgeon.. 500-10 FENTON. DR. HICKS C. Eyo and Ear 511 FENTON. MATTHEW F.. Dentist 509 GALVANI, W. H., Engineer and Draughts man oool GEARY, DR. E. P., Phys. and Surgeon 4001 GIESY, A. J.. Physician and Surgeon.. 700-7101 GILBERT. DR. J. ALLEN. Physician.. 401-402 1 GOLDMAN. WILLIAM, Manager Manhat tan Life Ins. Co., of New York 200-2101 GRANT. FRANK S.. Attorney-at-Law....017l GRISWOLD & PHEGLEY, Tailors 131 Sixth Street 1 HAMMAM BATHS. Turkish and Russian.. 300-301-3021 HAMMOND. A. B 31o HOLLISTER, DR. O. C, Physician and Surgeon 504-303 IDLEMAN. C. M., Attcrney-at-Law. .410-17-13 JOHNSON. W. C 315-310-317 KADY. MARK T., Supervisor ot Agents, Mutual Reserve Lite Ins. Co 003 LITTLEFIELD. H. R.. Phys. and Sur 200 'MACKAY, DR. A. E.. Phys. and Sur. . .711-712 MANHATTAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF NEW YORK; W. Goldman. Mgr 209-210 MARSH. DR. R. J.. Phys. and Sur 404-40 MARTIN. J. L. & CO.. Timber Lands 003 McCOY. NEWTON. Attorney-at-Law 71: McELROY. DR. J. a.. Phys. & Sur.701-702-70v McFADEN. MISS IDA E-, Stenographer... ZU McGINN, HENRY E., Attorney-at-Law.311-i: McGUIRE. S. P., Manager P. F. Collier, Publisher i McKENZIE. DR. P. L., Phys. and Sur..612-lq METT. HENRY 21-3 MILLER, DR. HERBERT C., Dentist and Oral Surgeon 003-00 MOSSMAN. DR. E. P., Dentist.'. 513-514 MUTUAL RESERVE LIFE INS. CO.; Mark T. Kady, Supervisor of Agents.. 004-6 NICHOLAS. HORACE B.. Attorney-at-Law.71U NILES. 31. L.. Cashier Manhattan Life In surance Company of New York NUMBERS. JAMES R., Physician and Sur- ceon ............ ..40 OLSEN. J. F.. General Manager Pacific Mercantile Co 211-21: OREGON CAMERA CLUB 214-215-210-217 OREGON INFIRMARY OF OSTEOPATHY - 400-41C OREGONIAN BARBER SHOP. Marsch & George, Proprietors 120 Slxtt OREGONLN EDUCATIONAL BUREAU; J. F. Strauhal, Manager ' PACIFIC MERCANTILE CO.; J. F. Olsen. General Manager 211-212 PORTLAND EYE AND EAR INFIR3LRY Ground Floor, 133 Sixth street QUIMBY. L. P. W Game and Forestry Warden 71S REAVIS, DR. J. L.. Dentist COS-6 REED. WALTER, Optician... 133 Sixth streerJ RICKENBACH. DR. J. F.. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 701-702 ROSENDALE, O. M.. Metallurgist and Min ing Engineer Old RYAN. J. B., Attorney-at-Law 5lq SAMUEL. L.. Manager Equitable Life.. ..303 SHERWOOD, J. W ., Deputy supreme Com mander K. O. T. M 511 SMITH, DR. L. B., Osteopath 409-413 SMITH, GEORGE S.. Cashier Equitable Life 30! STUART, DELL, Attorney-at-Law 017-61 STOLTE. DR. CHAH. E.. Dentist .04-71 STOW, F. H., General Manager Columbia Telephone Co SURGEON OF THE S. P. RY. AND N. P. TERMINAL CO SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE THE NORTH PACIFIC PUBLISHING SO CIETY , 44 THRALL, S. A, President Oregon Camera club : THREE IN ONE" QUICK ACCOUNT SYSTEM COMPANY. OF OREGON 51 TUCKER. DR. GEO. F., Dentist 010-0 1 U. S. LIGHTHOUSE ENGINEERS. 13TH DIST.; Captain W. C. Langfltt. Corps of Engineers. U. S. A St U. S. ENGINEER OFFICE RIVER AND HARBOR IMPROVEMENTS; Captain W. C Langfltt. Corps of Engineers, U. S. A..S WILEY. DR. JAMES O C. Phys. & Sur.7C WILSON. DR. EDWARD N.. Phslclan and Surgeon SO 1-3 WILSON. DR. GEO. F., Phys. & Surg..70G-7 WILSON. DR. HOLT C. Phys. & Surg.507-3 WILLAMETTE VALLEY TELE. CO. 0 WOOD. DR. AV. L.. Physician 412-41J-J Olllce may le had by applying the superintendent ot the unildlui room 01. second floor. MEN KO CURE KO PAY fc-r-T-aM THE MODERN APPLIANCE. A posltil n.av ta Derfect manhood. The VACUUl TREATMENT cures jou without medicine nil ncrvQjs or diseases of the generative i sans, such as lost manhood, exhaustive dralr v-nHpopie. lmiiotency. etc. Men are quickly tnrpd tn nerfect health and strength. WrJ for circular. Correspondence canfldentrJ THE HEALTH APPLIANCE CO., room 4. Safe Deposit building. Stattle. Wash. CHICHZSTCR'S ENGLISH Orialnnl nnl Only Genuine. SAKE. A'3m.rtl!bl. Llte.a)cPTOt;l for CUIUUK5T.EKS KNGUS1 1b RED n-t Gold ratIllc boiei mI1 with blur ribbon. Take aa other. ReftU DaTszeroa Substitution and Inltl tlann. osy or jour Draggttt. or ttna mbm Mr i-artlCMimr. .ieMUao'Mi turn Hall. 10.0tOTiUnonlJ. Zrti alt Drnrrtiti. Chlcactr Chemical CJ .. . UmAUmn Koun. FS1U. P.l JaK3ya 1W x iM MUPSSL U -tfcU l