THE MORNING OREG'GNIAN, . THURSDAY. JULY . 3, 1902. entered' at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Malt tpostagc prepaid. In Advance) Sally, with Sunday, per month.. .1 $ 55 Uaily, Sunday excepted, per year " W Dall. with Sunday, per year WJ Sunday, per year 2 OO The "Weekly, per year 1 5 The Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers Xally. per week, delivered, Sunday excepted.ISe 2ally. per week, delivered. Sundays included.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: JO to 14-page paper... ............ ......-Jo 14 to 2S-page paper... .............. c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for jmbllcatlon In The Oregonian should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Progonlan." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonian." Eastern Business Omce, 43. 44. 45. 47. 4S. 40 Tribune building. New York City; 510-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwith Special Agency. Eastern representative. For eaie in San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Pal aeo Hotel news stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street; F. "IV. Pitts. 100S Market street: 2. K. Cooaer Co. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel, Fobtcr & Orear. Ferry news ttand. Frank Scott." 81 Ellis Ktrect. and N. Wheatlcy. S13 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 253 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 303 0 Tpring street. For sale in Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 420 K. street. Sacramento. Cal. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. C3 V.ashlngton street. For nale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 10L. Farnam street; Megeath Statloncrj' Co., 1303 Farnam street. For eale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For aale in Ogden by C H. Myers. For sale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co.. 24 Third street South For 6ale in Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House newa stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-912 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 Clearing, with rising temperature 1 YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 58; minimum temperature, 49; pre cipitation, 1.01 inches. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JULY 3. DEFINITE .EXPECTATIONS. The personnel of police and Are com missions Is a minor affair, except so far a9 it bears upon the results that are desired in those as in all other aspects of municipal life. Honest and effective administration must be had at all haz ards, and a Mayor always has at his disposal a large number of men who can be made effective agents to that end. The people are not greatly concerned to know or be consulted about this class of appointments; but they are greatly concerned to know that fires are intelli gently fought and that the laws con cerning liquor-selling, gambling and prostitution are enforced. The members of the Police Commis sion that will last until the new char ter becomes effective, probably ten or eleven months hence, owe their appoint ment to various political agencies; but their official duty is to none of those agencies, and their oaths of office put upon them fealty not to parties or cliques or persons, but to the public wel fare. As they have families to bring up, reputations to maintain, and prop erty Interests as taxpayers to conserve, they should realize that no political con sideration whatever absolves them from the duty of giving to Portland the most orderly and creditable police adminis tration possible. Mayor "Williams has done the commu nity a great public' service in the ap pointment of Mr. W. M. Ladd to the Police Commission. Mr. Ladd Is a man of such honest purposes anU loyalty to law as insure his hostility to wrong doing. At the same time he is a man of the world, with such broad acquaint ance with business and affairs as insure In him justice and fairness. But there is nothing in all this that the city has not an equal right to expect from George W. Bates. A. L. Maxwell and Chief of Police McLauchlan. As a tax payer, as a citizen, an honest man, each one of this commission owes It to the community and to himself to give Port land a decent and honest police admin istration. They are sure of every en couragement and assistance from Mayor "Williams. Certain very definite things are ex pected of the new commission; and the principal one is the cessation of black mall upon saloons, brothels and gam bling devices of every sort. Every In telligent man knows that the practice of gambling and the pursuit of Illicit sexual Indulgence cannot be eradicated by a police force.. But every Intelli gent man also knows that indecent, outward manifestation of these offenses against statutes and morality can be prevented, and especially that the busi ness of collecting blood, money from the criminal and vicious classes, for the enjoyment of officials elected and sworn to enforce the law, can be stopped altogether. Offenders can be located. If they cannot be convicted and impris oned, they can at least be discharged. The Police Commission can. enforce the laws if It will. The community will recognize a9 satisfactory no arrange ment but absolute reform of the pres ent liiscreditable and immoral regime. No pretense of enforcing the law has been made for a long time, and the be lief lri a wholesale system of blackmail Is universal. The commission will be expected to do at once what Is right and necessary. If it can accomplish this through the present Chief of Police, well and good. If not, he should be replaced by some one else. The city's good name and the character of its fu ture citizens are paramount to any con siderations whatever of personal or fac tional politics. THE SENATORIAL SINLESSNESS. "What the Senate should have done with Mr. Bailey, of Texas, was to pass a resolution censuring him for conduct unbecoming a Senator and a gentleman, and requiring him to appear before the bar of the Senate for a reprimand from the presiding officer. Instead of this, a number of the most potent, grave and reverend made a point of friendly con versation with him after he had en tered the Senate chamber, and while business was in course of transaction. The Tillman-McLaurln episode, how ever, leaches us that no such action can be expected Xrom the Senate, It would, in order to discipline its mem bers, cheerfully do anything that can't vbe done. That is, it would expel Till man but for the fact that South Caro lina as a sovereign state would send him back. It could require Bailey to apologize, but for the fapt that he wouldn't do It. and thus the Senate It self would be humiliated. If it could find out what Bailey would like, It might be. Induced to do that, tjust as It sternly called- upon Tillman and Mc Laurin to deliver the self-exculpatory harangues they had already prepared. The trouble with the Senate Is easy of diagnosis. It Is too enamored of courtesy to rebuke ungentlemanly con duct It deeply resents aotions discred itable to Its decorum, but it is too polite to offend the sensibilities of a ruffian like Tillman or a bully like Bailey. The dignity of the Senate would be asserted In unmistakable terms were it not that the assertion Is headed off at the very threshold, as It were, by the dignity of the individual Senator. The infallibility of the pope Is a geometrical axiom, com pared with the full dimensions of this Senatorial dignity, which lo so tran scendant, so potent, so pervasive that it renders each constituent element in the Senatorial entity incapable of an-un-Senatorlal or ungentlemanly act. Bailey is a Senator therefore, what ever he seems to have done, or how ever objectionable the act might appear per se or In a mere Individual not a Senator, has no quality or attainder of lapse or error. To fly In a passion at another man's throat because he has spoken certain parliamentary and unpalatable truths may be Indecorous in the ordinary mor tal, but a Senator Is absolved from blame by the very law of his being. If he were not a Senator, he" would be fallible. Being a Senator, whatever he does only entitles him to be shaker hands with, and bowed politely to, and treated in all respects with more spe cial affability and attention than if nothing had happened. It is a pity Ma caulay died before this beautiful and uplifting Senatorial doctrine furnished him the basis of an essay that only he could write. WHAT IS POPULAR STRENGTH t Some of the leading journals of the North Atlantic States are disposed to laugh gently at the "boyish" enthusi asm and zeal with which President Roosevelt quoted the careers of his po litical friends, Secretary Root, Gover nor "Wood and Judge Taft, as lllustra- tlons of the best public men who had been children of colleges. The Presi dent also had a loyal word to offer of praise for Long, Moody, Hay and Lodge. Of course, this speech of an Impulsive man of spontaneous nature like Presi dent Roosevelt forms an easy text for criticism. It is easy to say that "Wash ington. John Marshall, Calhoun, John Quincy Adams, Grover Cleveland, Ben jamin Harrison, or even "William Mc Klnley, would not have indulged in ef fusive public praise of political friends, but, nevertheless, 'this impulsive, spon taneous quality in President Roosevelt Is probably his greatest source of pop ular strength. President Roosevelt Is not popular with the professional poli ticians of his party, and largely because of his effusive speech, his propensity to blurt out frankly his honest thoughts. Nevertheless, It Is this intensely human side that has been the greatest strength of many of our public men with the people. "Washington's military services named him for President, and Washing ton's influence named Adams for his successor, but it was Jefferson's per sonal urbanity and address, contrasted with the gross vanity and petulant, crit ical temper of Adams, that carried the day for Jefferson: Jefferson was able to name Madison for successor, and Madison was able to nominate Monroe. But with this passing away of can didates who dated back to the "War of Independence for their first certificate of patriotic service the personal quality of candidates began to assert itself. In the popular contest of 1S24 Jackson ob tained a plurality of votes over John Quincy Adams, Crawford and Clay, not because of his reputation for pure ln " tellectual strength, for he was nothing but a brilliantly successful Indian fighter, who had beaten the British more through their own supreme military recklessness than his own military skill. Jackson was the popular candidate from the start. In 1824, first because he was a brave soldier, and secondly because he was a man of effusive, outspoken, spontaneous speech. The people of the South and "West of that day felt that Jackson, whatever his faults of man ner, temper and culture might be, was one of themselves; he was "a man and a brother." They knew he had been always a brave, honorable man, and they believed that he would be as hon est and courageous and upright In the "White House as he had been outside or it. This popular enthusiasm gave Jack son the plurality In 1824, elected him In 1828, and re-elected him In 1832. Tested by a severely rational and Intellectual standard, Jackson was not seldom guilty of acts of maladministration and of Impolitic behavior, but he was suc cessful from first to last because his seeming weakness with astute politi cians was really his positive strength with the people. It was to no purpose that Jackson was denounced by the opposition as a profane, passionate, arbitrary old sol dier, who endeavored to enact his own civic ignorance when he could, and strove to trample the law under foot when It defeated the execution of his will. The people were for Jackson, right or wrong, and they justified their decision upon their conviction that so brave and honest a man, In spite of his occasional errors of judgment and pol icy, was a far eaer and more trust worthy President than a man of infinite ly more civic and legal learning, who was always ambitious for his own cor rupt political advantage. Jackson Is not the last American statesman who has owed his elevation to eminence to his superficial traits and endowments rather than his peculiar personal Intel lectual strength. Henry Clay was Ideal ized by the people for more than twenty years as "The Mill Boy of the Slashes." Lincoln's strongest card when he was the rival of Douglas lor the United States Senate in 1858 was the fact that he had split rails in his youth. And this was urged at a time when Lincoln had already served a term In Congress, in 1847-48, and proved his capacity as a great debater, both in logic and liter ary art, in a speech against the Mexican "War policy of President Polk. Nevertheless, the fact that Lincoln had split rails In his youth won him more votes than the far more Important and convincing fact that he did not split rails an hour longer than he could find any more important work for his brains and hands to do. The people supported Jackson, supported Lincoln, for superficial reasons of sentimental quality that commanded little or no respect from the Intellectual class of party politicians, and the people will support Roosevelt because they believe In him as a man and love him as a brother. The people have not forgot ten that Roosevelt charged like a reck less trooper at San Juan Hill; they have not forgotten that he was a man among men in his "Western life, and it Is be cause they recognize in him a gallant American soldier and conscientious statesman, that the President must look to the people, and not to the professional politicians, for both nomination and election In 1904. COMPETITION FOR IMMIGRATION. The trouble over the routing of "West ern Immigrant business from New York pertains to the relations of the various railroads with each other rather than to any particular sectlon'of the country; that Is, the Pacific Northwest will prob ably receive Its full share of the Immi gration, regardless of whether there shall or shall not be a contest over the routing from New York. But If, for example, the Harriman lines should not see fit to operate through or In con nection with the Immigrant Bureau, they might be obliged to establish In dependent agencies In Europe and do a lot of Independent advertising. This would probably Inure to the advantage of the Pacific Northwest because the Harriman lines are just now bending their energies particularly to the settle ment of this part of the country, and whatever they should do would be In ad dition to the work of the regular Immi grant Bureau. And the competition between the two forces would attract more attention to this country than either would by acting alone. The Immigrant Bureau Is composed of a number of railroads Interested In the development of the "West, and It was organized to supersede a condition of affairs that had grown to be intolera ble. Under that system Immigration from Europe was consigned to what were known as first ward agents In New York, who practically put the business up at auction and sold It to the highest railroad bidder. "When compe tition was brisk, commissions as high, as $25 per passenger were paid for transcontinental business. That was fat picking for the first ward agents, who thus made more money than the regular up-town railroad agents. Their arrogant methods drove the railroads to organize the Immigrant Bureau, which operated In connection with the Atlantic steamship lines and ticketed Immigrants through to destinations and thus cut the first ward agents out of any participation In the profits of the immigrant business. This drove all those agents out except Peter McDon nell. He managed to retain enough of the business to stay in the field, and the railroads In the bureau suspected that the steamships secretly kept him In the trade as a means of forcing the bureau to continue the contract for these trans Atlantic passengers. Under the operation of the bureau the traffic was apportioned among the members by a central agent. No line could command Its own business. This frequently led to dissatisfaction. The Southern Pacific was never a member of the bureau, believing that its Interests would be better served by Independent action. Late reports Indicate that this belief is now shared by all the Harri man lines. Thus it may turn out that the Harriman lines, in connection with the first ward agent who has been so carefully nourished In opposition to the bureau, may lead the bureau a very merry chase. And the element of com petition Introduced in this manner will prevent many of the abuses that ob tained under the regime of ante-bureau times. Lines outside the bureau will make their own arrangements for immigrant business. 'They will solicit In Europe and ticket through to destination oVer their own roads, and will In all respects command their own traffic They will then be able to concentrate efforts on any given field, and In all ways to man age the traffic so that It will yield the greatest results." Extensive systems like the Harriman lines can do this to advantage because they can afford to organize and maintain Independent work. The smaller lines must stick to the bureau, and some of the larger ones may do so. The contest that is prom ised, though it pertains chiefly to Inter railroad relations, will be beneficial to the extent that competition will be In troduced In a field where there has been practically none. The self Interest of the railroads may be relied upon for a guaranty of the good character of the Immigration. The present railroad pol icy Is not merely to grab for the Immi grant fares, but rather to settle unoc cupied country with people who will make it productive and thus add to the permanent prosperity of railroad prop erty. IMPORTANT AND OPPORTUNE. The discovery of Noah's ark In petri fied form upon a mountain of Alaska Is vouched for by no less an authority than the secretary of the Skagway Y. M. C. A., and, however this revolu-' tionary geographical proposal appears, it must be acepted as a fixed point from which to correct certain popular misconceptions of primeval annals. Fortunately, this discovery does not stand alone, for the "Valley of the Co lumbia has been recognized as the site of the Garden of Eden, and the propin quity of the Noachlan craft. need occa sion no surprise. The author of that noteworthy work, "History of America Before Columbus" (J. B. LIpplncott & Co.: Philadelphia and London, 1900), Rev. P. De Roo, long a student in the Vatican archives and now a Portland clergyman, mentions the location of the Garden of Eden in the Columbia Val ley by "Morgan," whom we suppose to be none other than the American anti quary and philologist, whose general accuracy excited the admiration of Pro fessor John Flske, the historian. .Mor gan was not apt to be wrong, and if he said that Eden was here,, his judgment is not likely to be set aside. It will only be necessary, therefore, until Secretary Reld ratifies the details of his Porcu pine River find, to identify certain other geographical data set out in Genesis, and find among them such confirma tion of the discovery as offers Itself to the open mind. Geology has long been aware of the priority of North America, In point of time, to the Old "World, falsely so called. Why our country lagged behind In Its subsequent development Is vari ously accounted for, in some respects confilctlngly so; but of Its great ago there is no doubt. Some point between Hudson's Bay and the present State of New York was probably the first por tion of the globe's Archaean founda tion to lift its red-brown crest above the dismal waters of the primeval ocean. Additions to It, north, south and west, went on apace, geologically speaking, and where the Columbia broke through the Cascades was a familiar landmark in terrestrial annals long before West ern Oregon was dreamed of. Here in North America, accordingly, we may logically look for the cradle of the race. Here, we may assume, roamed the ele phants, lions and other tropic creatures whose remains are found today embed ded in the Arctic solitudes. Here, In the classic shades of Klickitat or aloijg the ever green banks of Hood River, roamed our first parents, and from Wind Mountain, or Castle Rock, per haps, the Noachlan aggregation em barked, upon the first maritime adven ture of the ages. Once leave these comparatively safe confines of attested fact, however, and venture upon the swampy grounds of speculation, and all is uncertain. A sig nificant bit of evidence Is afforded In .the undeniable fact that In Klamath County is the most highly civilized and' populous snake colony in the world. The myriads of reptiles that bask In thick profusion In the .dry Klamath lakes the Summer through possibly trace their ancestry back to the original serpent of the Garden, who must have been driven southward at the time of the general exodus from Eden. Ob serve, also, that when Cain married, he took hl3 wife from the Land of Nod, a very thinly disguised reference to the traditional sleepiness of the Willam ette Valley. The four rivers Into which the water supply of Eden divided Itself are readily recognizable as the Colum bia Itself, with the Willamette. Snake and Cowlitz. These sanguinary feuds of Eastern Oregon ranchers are clearly prefigured In the lamented tragic en counter between Cain and Abel, and the clothing material supposed by the sa cred writer to have been the fig leaves of Asia may be safely set down as the Incomparable Berberls Aqulfollum, or Oregon grape, whose foliage, if it falls short of the fig's In size and mobility, leaves little to be desired as a penal vestment for erring gardeners. The Porcupine River discovery Is most timely. We call upon Secretary Reed, of the Lewis and Clark Centen nial, to apply at once for such portions of the ark as will lend themselves most effectively to display and can be moved readily, for exhibit at the Exposition of 1905. Few attractions could surpass it In interest and merit, and every de scendant of Shem, Ham and Japhet, In cluding even the anti-imperialists, should be Invited and Urged to attend In honor of the heirloom. The seven teenth day of the month NIsan, that Is April 27, our reckoning, being the anni versary of the ark's resting on Ararat that lo to say, upon Porcupine Creek should be set apart by the exposition management for a reunion and informal banquet of the entire family. The prior ity of this claim for recognition in the programme will be recognized, we should say, by even the Native Sons and the Colonial Dames. If any one should think It strange that a man of Mr. William Ladd's cul tivation, great wealth and exacting business cares should accept the onerous artd thankless duties of Police Commis sioner, he would be very wide of the mark. There Is no post the man of wealth can render the community In which he lives a greater service than In execution of Its laws against evil doers. No costly structures he can raise, charitable, artistic or educational Institutions he can endow, or lofty mon uments erect, can equal the good he can do if thrpugh firm and conscien tious direction of the city's police pow ers he leaves the Impress of decency and righteousness upon the present and the growing generation. Miles of pave ments and prosperous assessment rolls make a sorry covering for a community that Is morally cancerous and festering at the heart with the poison of lawless ness and licentiousness. The corrup tion of our great cities lies largely a the door of men of great ability, great wisdom and great wealth, who leave these posts of responsibility and labor to be filled by the unworthy who seek them eagerly for their opportunities of dishonest gain. Mr. La'dd's acceptance of the Police Commlsslonershlp is of a piece with Judge Williams' acceptance of the Mayoralty. The need of every clty and every state and every country where humanity Is found Is of men In high places and low who despise' the strife and self-seeking of local politics and practice as well as preach the doc trine that "public office Is a public trust." Since the discovery of gold In Mon tana, less than forty years ago, that state has produced precious metals to the value of over $1,000,000,000. Copper leads In this valuation, the output In value of this. metal since 1882 being $361,110,718; sliver follows with $350,796, 364; gold Is third, the output since 1862, the date of Its first discovers, being $277,139,739. Lead makes up the balance of the grand total with an output since 1883 aggregating in value $12,735,356. To Improved methods of milling ores a're due the constantly increasing value of the gold output of this wonderful Rocky Mountain section. No new or great dis covery of gold has been made there in relatively recent years, yet. through these methods, gold-bearing rock that It did not pay in former years to work is now made to yield up its treasure and the supply of low-grade ores seems to be practically exhaustless. Montana Is no longer a silver state; neither Is It a copper or a gold state, but a mining state, the mineral wealth of which, not withstanding Its billion-dollar contribu tion to the wealth of the world. In the past forty years. Is yet scarcely en croached upon. The trouble In the case of King Ed ward that called for the service of the surgeon would probably not, In a younger man, have caused any special apprehension of fatal results; perhaps, Indeed, In a less prominent man, little would have been made of the operation, which seems to have resulted In evacu ating a pus cavity In the usual way and establishing drainage of the wound. If the King's rapid progress toward recovery Is maintained, -the tendency will be to minimize the danger to his life and, with the unthinking, Increase the disappointment that resulted from the postponement or abrogation of the coronation. There Is, however, a gen erous undercurrent of thankfulness that, the case was no worse, and that the King, though uncrowned. Is spared to the nation. Sir Joseph Lister, who performed the operation upon King Edward last week, has given inestimable service to the world through his system of antiseptic surgery. He has attained a place In medical science beyond which he can not be exalted though monarchs are his patients and valuable lives may con tinue to be saved by his skill. Diligent", resourceful, strong In his calling, his name Inspires confidence as his skill In spires admiration the world over. It Is to be feared that the Alaska In dians are not quite abreast of modern exegesis and hermeneutlca Their zeal, however, lo entitled to all praise. They listened to the story of Noah's ark and J went straightway jout -and found it. LOCAL WATER INTERESTS. To many citizens cf Portland there was matter of surprise in figures printed yes terday showing that the average dally consumption of water In this city almost equals the maximum capacity of the Bull Run conduit, and thet at special times It exceeds It. The common notion has been that the ability of the system to bring In water Is practically unlimited; and this notion no doubt has had a good deal to do In fostering the wasteful habit un der which our per capita consumption has run up to the unreasonable standard of SCO gallons per day. We say this is unreasonable because it is far in excess of tha per capita average of any other city in the world. In London, which Is more liberally supplied with water than any other city In Europe, the per capita average Is 35 gallons. In most Conti nental cities the per capita average falls below 20 gallons, and In some places in Italy It falls as low as five gallons. In American cities, where the bathtub Is universal, and wheTe water Is more freely used for every purpose, the average runs much higher, but it rarely exceeds 100 gallons. Economists have fixed upon "S gallons as a maximum where under mod ern conditions every convenient and wholesome purpose may be provided for. Of course It Is the merest prodigality that runs the consumption in Portland up to such enormous figures. There was no such waste of water in the old days, when the supply was in private hands, and there would not be now but for the universal Idea that the supply 'Is with out limit and the further fact that there is no relationship between the monthly charge and the quantity of water con sumed or allowed to run to waste. There being no way under the present arrange ment by which penalties may be enforced for extravagant and useless draughts up on the water system, the water depart ment is helpless; and there Is serious dan ger that it may be forced into large and costly additions to tne system on this account. One of two things Is Imperative, namely, the consumption of water must be brought within reasonable limits or a new conduit must soon be laid between the source of supply In Bull Run River and the re ceiving reservoirs In the city. It Is cer tain that the former can be accomplished by means of meters, for It has been found universally that waste of water ceases to" a large extent when water wasted has to be paid for. But the meter system is not free from objections. It would, it Is estimated, cost a quarter of a million dol lars to equip the whole city with meters, and something, of course, would be added to the fixed charge for administration for the work of inspection, repairs, etc. Furthermore, the meter system Is never a popular one, and its introduction could not fall to limit to some extent the satis faction and pride universally felt by the people of Portland In their Incomparable water system. But the alternative Is even more serious, since upon the most reasonable estimates it would cost no less than $1,250,000 to make another pipe line between Bull Run River and the City, with of course an annual addition to the fixed charges of the system for mainte nance. It Is, of course, greatly to be desired that creation of a second pipe line be postponed as long as possible, and there Is, in fact, no real need for It for ten years to come if consumers would voluntarily limit themselves to reasonable uses of water. But experience Is discouraging, for no appeal which the water depart ment has made thus far has had the slightest effect to limit the draughts upon the system. The probable outcome due wholly to a foolish and reckless WaSte-Hlc fulness Is a second pipe line and an In definite postponement of further reduc tion In water rates. There Is another abuse In connection with the water system of Portland whose correction rests wholly with public senti ment, due to the fact that the municipal ity .does not pay its water bill of some thing like $35,000 or $40,000 per year. The theory upon which this charge Is made, or sought to be made, against the city. Is that It should pay for the water facility which protects the business district against fire. The business district of Portland, as of every city, contributes next to nothing to maintenance of the water system In the ordinary way that is, its consumption of water Is small. A great wholesale building worth $250,000, and enjoying through the water system a protection against fire worth many thou sands of dollars per year, usually pays to the water department only a few dol lars per month. It pays simply consum ers' rates for the little water It uses, and nothing at all for fire protection. Tho water system from which It enjoys such advantages Is maintained from rates charged general consumers. In other words, the cost of maintaining a great and valuable fire protection for the business district falls chiefly upon the general body of water-rate payers. There Is no easy and precise way of equalizing this charge of making the business dis trict pay its due share but It may be done approximately by exacting a considerable annual charge for water service from the municipality to which the business dis trict is of course the largest contributor In the form of taxes. This plan is very generally employed In American cities and while It Is not exempt from criticism. It works, on the whole, fairly well. The lato Mr. Henry Falling made this matter the subject of special study, and the practice of charging up to the municipality a spe cific proportion of the annual cost of the water system a practice which continues In spite of the fact that the money is never paid was Inaugurated by him. There can be no doubt about the gen eral justice of this charge against the municipality; and the principle Is not altered by the fact that the municipality chooses to ignore Its responsibility. It is unjust and discreditable to the last degree that the solid and wealthy busi ness district of Portland evades its legiti mate obligation in the matter of fire pro tection just because It has the brute power to do It and leaves a burden which belongs to Itself and which It could easily bear, upon the water-rate payers who for the most part are people In very moderate circumstances. The surprise Is that the water-rate payers continue to carry this burden from year to year almost without protest. The Poem Can Wait. Indianapolis News. It Is a pity that so much excellent coro nation poetry goes to waste at least for tho time being on account of the King's illness. Bliss Carmen's ode contains a striking verse: Stand up. sir. In your honor! they come from near and far, ' Rajah and Chief and Councillor and Prince and Rascldar. From Canada and Ind And the lands behind the wind. Whose purpose none may Question nor their decree rescind. To name you Kins of England for the gentle man you are. Unfortunately, the King cannot comply with the "Stand up, sir;"' Just now, but perhaps the poem can wait. WARM INTERVIEW WITH OXNARD New York Times. "Mr. Oxnard denies that he had a bad quarter of an hour with the President Tuesday- morning. The story ran that President Roosevelt told Oxnird with much plainness of speech that he In tended to negotiate a commercial treaty with Cuba, and 'that the treaty would certainly be ratified at the next session of Congress, with the aid of Democratic votes, if, need be. Mr. Oxnard's deniil as to Tuesday may be accepted. There is a theory that the story now current is a belated account of an Interview that did take place while the Spooner bill was on Its way to death and defeat at the hands of Oxnard. The powerful beet-sugar lobbyist Is said to have been deeply humiliated by the plain language of the President to him In the presence of other persons. No guarantee goes 'with the story. But we do not see how It would be possible for President Roosevelt to let Oxnard get away from the White House, If he ever came there, without giving him a piece of the Executive mlr.d. The President J Is vigorous in speech. Oxnird Is offen sive a cunuuci. j.ne .rresiaent ia ex ceedingly straightforward In his dealings with men, quite incapable of a pretence of liking when he feels dislike, and by no means so meek and long suffering as. say, Franklin Pierce or James Monroe. On the whole, vec think it probable that the President did give Oxnard a. sound wigging, and. If so, he made the punish ment fit the crime. We doubt If the President swore. He Is not given to that form of emphasis, and profanity would be unseemly In a President of the United States. He may have pounded his big desk, but that is a stout piece of furniture. which, as It withstood the fist of Grover Cleveland, would be little likely to collapse under the declamatory efforts of Theodore Roosevelt. The language was the main thing, however, and It Is a grievous mis fortune that the stenographer's art was not permitted to preserve it for the pub lic delight. Oxnard is a perfectly sel fish lobbyist, and perfectly shameless. He has bad the hardihood to put himself and his protected sugar factories right across the path of the President and the leaders of the Republican party. He has defeated a public measure that pecu liarly commended Itself to the approval of the American people, a measure In tended as a fulfillment of our duty, and for tho protection of the Cubans against suffering, loss and ruin. Oxnard has thus shown himself to be a heartless man, and a very mem man. In a popular vote for the meanest man In America his ma jority would, of course, be overwhelm ing. If President Roosevelt, equipped for the encounter by a vocabulary inherited om his many near and remote Dutcn uncles, did talk to Oxnard as Oxnard deserves to be talked to, the Incident will win for hlra nothing but public approval and fresh popularity. Maybe Dewey Is Wrong;. New York Times. Admiral Dewey, by repeating before the Senate committee on the Philippines his declaration that "the native Filipinos are more capable of self-government than the Cubans," gave at last a means of recon ciling that remarkable statement with the general belief In his sanity. Hitherto, while the words were supposed to mean that the Filipinos could rule themselves, and the Cubans could not. It was very hard to do this, and a good many of us, giving up the task as impossible, found consolation in the hope that the Admiral had been misquoted. Considering as a whole, however, the testimony he gave before the committee, one can see that all he intended was to express his utter disbelief In the capacity of the Cubans for self-government, and that in calling the Filipinos better fitted for It than they, he simply Intended to utilize his knowl edge, then and now shared by all who have any Information at all pn the sub ject, that self-government as we under stand it Is Impracticable In the Phlllp- I TiinS. rFrm 1ntrnrti1 Hft ftftmnnrlenn ft Tnnfpoi n Vtnl9 MMfMi1liHAn It Is only an emphatic way of expressing an opinion about the Cubans. Concern ing the latter, of course. Admiral Dewey Is mistaken, but it Is a natural and com prehensive error, shared by many, who, like the Admiral, have seen only the worst side of Cuban character, and who expect too much and the wrong things from a race with which by blood, and especially by training, they are unsympathetic. At least three-fourths of the sailors and sol diers who went to Cuba during the war with Spain would agree with the Admi ral's estimate of the Islanders, but Gen eral Wood would not, and his verdict Is worth that of all the others put together. Free or subjugated, the Cuban Is a Cuban, with his own instincts and ideals, but he Is a white man, and, so far as the rule of the Island Is concerned, he is a white man who can read. When Admiral Dewey holds the Cuban inferior to the brown or black man, he does not quite realize what he says, and certainly he does not mean It. Has No Supporters. Roseburg Plaindealer. Anybody but Geer himself can see that he has not the ghost of a show of being elected to succeed Simon. Geer has no supporters In the coming Legislature. The Republicans say he was not the nominee of their party, but got on the ticket by petition; therefore they are In no way obligated to support him. while a Demo, crat who would vote for Geer would com. mlt political suicide. There Is, candidly, so far as we can see, not a single rea son why Geer should be elected United States Senator, except that he Is unwill ing to let go of the public teat. His skulking out of Salem on the occasion of the grand Republican rally held In that city Just prior to the election, on which occasion he had previously agreed to pre side, and his disloyalty and disinterest manifested In his party and Its success during the late campaign have placed him in general disfavor with the Republicans throughout the state and have relinquished any claim he may have had for further recognition, favors or honors at the hands of his party. The North at Fault, Too. Boston Tranecript. The fact that nobody grows hysterical over the Jefferson Davis monument pro ject seems to Indicate that the time is not far distant when It will be recognized at the North that the Southerners were not alone to blame for the great Civil War. It was the condition of things which mado the war Inevitable. The "Irrepressible conflict had become acute. Of course, the North was In the right In Its antl clavery attitude, but was It not equally blamable with the South In the introduc tion of slav.ery to this country? And Is the North doing anything remarkably different from the South to prevent a prac tical serfdom for blacks succeeding the older form of slavery? How much, for instance, is being done to remove the color line in work and trade among us? 1 The British. Empire, William "Watson. Time, and the ocean, and some fostering star. In high cabal have made us what ve are. Who stretch one hand to Huron's bearded pines. And one os Kashmir's snowy shoulder lay. And round the streaming of whose raiment shines The iris of the Australasian spray. For waters have connived at our designs. And winds have plotted with" us and behold. j Kingdom in kingdom, sway in oversway, Dominion fold in fold: ox O doom of overlordshlps! to decay First at the heart, the eye scarce dimmed at all: Or perish of much cumber and array. The burdening robe of empire, and its pall; Or, voluptuous hours the wanton prey; Die of the poisons that mostly sweetly slay; Or, from Insensate height. With prodigies, with light Of trailing ansers on the monstrous night, Magnificently falL. NOTE AND COMMENT. V Are your skates ready to use? Oh, Winter, wilt thou never go? Play ball, gentlemen, and play it to win. There Is still time to get your house' in sured. Does the weather clerk take us for Filipinos? The Minnesota Republicans seem to have ideas of their own about trusts. Speaking of tho weather but let us change it, together with the subject. A billion-dollar Congress doesn't sound so big in these days of J. P. Morgan. King Edward has always been a good King, and he Is getting better very rap idly. Judging by the returns from Washing ton, the convicts flee only where no man pursueth. Everyman who gees fishing this weath er Is sure to bring back at least a sucker. If he gets back. We shall have an opportunity today of Judging the sufficiency of those explan ations of Manager Vlgneux's. A man that will go fishing these day3 can hope for no salvation. He should go ducking, for there is some chance of his getting It. We are credibly informed that some people went fishing early In the storm. The fool-killer must be very busy with other clients. This kind of weather will dampen .pa triotic ardor, but, as it will also dampen Incipient Arcs, perhaps it Is not such a bad thing, after all. Cannot the fact that Tracy and Merrill washed up at their last stopping placo be taken as an indication that they may be next looked for in church? Cleanliness Is next to godliness. We nate that some of tho local sports men who have been fishing during tho week caught but few of the speckled beauties. ' They should have stayed at home and gone fishing In the streets dur ing the heavy showers of the last two days. In the morning call me early. Call me early, mother dear. For tomorrow will be the gladdest day Of all the glad Kew Tear. You'd better have some arnica And morphine handy by. For tomorrow's the Fourth of July, mother For tomorrow's the Fourth of July. From appearances, we should think that there might be some very good angling in the Portland gutters, as their blocked condition makes them resemble the moun tain torrents that the foolish local fisher men go far to seek. Why not patronize home Industry? Results will be just as good. Colonel Harry Hall, of New York, has just returned from a Western trip. He says that on a journey across the prairies he stopped with a farmer for the night. He asked If he could have a bath, for he was dusty and travel-stained. "Certain," replied the farmer. Then he shouted to his on: "Jim, get the fixin'a for a bath for this yer gent." Jim came back with a towel, a chunk of soap and a. pickax. What s the pickax for?" asked Hall. "Oh," said Jim, "you'll have to dam up the crick I" Recently the Governor of Idaho visited the office of the Surveyor-General. This letter, whlcho Is now in the files of the Civil Service Commission, was sent to tho Governor by the staff In the office: "Dear Governor When your earthly course Is done, and you reach the borders of Styx, still bearing aloft the love torch and the friendly and beneficent banner, the an cient ferryman will, we know, receive you with love and reverence and give you a safe transit with Joy and thanksgiving. Rhadamanthus will hail you with a glad 'Well done, and escort you to the rose embowered gateway of the Fields Elyslan. On golden wings turning, the pearly gates will swing wide open and 'blessed spirits uttering Joy' will bid you thrice welcome. Your countless friends cannot go all the way, dear Governor, with you, as we are not alPso worthy as thou, knight of na ture's nobility, but we will try to Imitate your example, except In what is inimit able, and shall hope to Join you when we shall have had our fill of earth and Its transitory blessings." On rising to speak, Joseph Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary, places his neatly written notes on the brass-bound box be fore him, and having put the edges straight, fires away. Mr. Chamberlain, speaks slowly, and uses scarcely any ges ture. Most dangerous when most polite, his face becomes like a piece of parch ment when roused to anger. In the art of crushing an adversary by an Inconvenient quotation or by some personal thrust, Mr. Chamberlain is unequaled. It Is this gift which make3 him as formidable on the platform as he Is In the House of Com mons. At public meetings he always seems to expect a few of his old Radical friends among the audience. But woe be to the Interrupter! Led on by the orator with a seductive question, his opponent gives Just the reply expected. Back like lightning comes a crushing retort, and henceforth all Is smooth sailing. His perorations are invariably written out in full In his study, and frequently commit ted to memory- His voice is firm and clear, but not very musical; his enuncia tion perfect. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS "The new chief of detectives is a funny man. He calls his staff 'Variety. That so? Why?" "I suppose because they're the spies of life." Philadelphia Record. Qualified. "Are yoU a union man?" asked the foreman of an applicant for employment. "Yes, sir," was the prompt reply; "married week before last." Pittsburg Chronicle. Church What do you think of having smok ing cars on the eleated road? Gotham All right; what I'm kicking about is those smoking engines. Yonkers Statesman. Long-Wlnded. Tcss Mr. Gay ley's stories are rather broad, don't you think? Jess Perhaps, but fortunately they are not as broad as they are long. Philadelphia Pres3. Not Needed. "What makes the baby cry?" asked the little visitor. "Oh," explained Ethel, "our baby doesn't have to have anything- to make It cry." Chicago Evening Post. Making Hay. Fond Mother Our Dolly seems to be improving her time at the seashore. Fa therIs, eh? Fond Mother Yes; she's been there only a week and has been engaged twice. Ohio State Journal. Always a Signal for Trouble. "What started the awful row in that group of politclans?" "I don't know. But I should surmise that one of them had gotten up and suggested a scheme for harmony." Washington Star. They Ought to Be. "A couple were married In St. Louis the other day who couldn't under stand each other's language." said Mrs. Gilley. "And I suppose that they are unspeakably hap py." commented Mr. Gilley. Detroit Freft Press.