8 THE . MORNING OKEGOmAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1903. Entered at the Postof3ce at Portland, Oregon am second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In advance) Tally, -with Sunday, per month 5 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year.. 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year.... 1 BO The Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers . . Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted.loo Dally, rerweek. delivered. Sunday lncluded.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper. . . . .......... -1c 14 to 2S-page paper.. ........................2o Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonian should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonian," not to the name of ary individual. Letters relating to adver tising, cubscrlptlon or to any business matter should, be addressed simply 'The Oregonian." The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from individuals, and, cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 47. 4S. 49 Tribune building. New Tork City: 510-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago: the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by X. E. Lee. Tri te Hotel news stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street; 3. X. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand; Frank Scott, SO Ellis street, and N. rwheatley. 813 Mission street. For E&le In Los AngeVrs by B. F. Gardner. 59 South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 1803 South Spring street. For sale in Kansas City. Mo., by RIcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDcnald. B3 Washington street. For tale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1812 Farnam street: Megeath Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnam street. For eale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lako News Co.. 77 West Second South street. For sale In Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Sendrlck. 000-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackeon Book and Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence streets; A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Light rain or snow; continued cool; southerly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 40; minimum temperature, 35; pre cipitation. O.0S inch. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JAS.. 20. THE ALASKAN FROSTIER. The reason why the United States will not consent to arbitration of the ques tion raised by Great Britain as to the Alaskan boundary is simple and clear. It Is held that the boundary between our possessions and those of Great Brit ain in Northwestern America was fixed definitely and with unmistakable prc clelon by treaty between Great Britain and Russia, formulated and signed at St. Petersburg In the year 1825. When we acquired Alaska we succeeded to the territorial rights of Russia, in that re gion. Our treaty with Russia of 1867 through which wo acquired Alaska, de scribes the eastern limits of the cession to the United States, by incorporating the definition given in the treaty of 1825 between Russia 'and Great Britain. The United States therefore declines to sub mit to arbitration a subject already de fined In a treaty to which Great Brit ain was a leading party. It Is obvious that any change from the treaty. reached through arbitration, would be a gain to Great Britain and a loss to the United States. Nor is it conceded that there is reason for providing an Interna tional commission to review the subject and interpret the treaty of 1825. Any ! new interpretation would set aside the old one If it made any change. His torically, England, Canada and Russia have, by their respective actions, sus tained hitherto what Is held by the United States to be a legitimate con struction of this frontier line; and the I United States will not consent that a controversy be now opened on a subject not in dispute till after the discovery of gold In the Klondike. It may be conceded that there was wanting exact knowledge of the phys ical conditions of that region,' when the line of demarcation was laid down in 1825, between Great Britain and Russia, Tet for that reason the terms of the treaty cannot, be departed from, since such action would leave the parties practically without any rule or guide ! toward settlement. What we know Is that both: the English and Canadian I maps of the Northwest, based upon sur veys made by the respective govern ments, have, until recent years,, de fined the Alaskan frontier line prac iicauy in me same piace wnere we claim it should be drawn. Since the discovery of a rich gold region in a dis trict in the far Northwest that could be more easily reached by water than by land the Canadians have wished to pos sess themselves of a port on the Alas kan coast, and this has led them to claim a construction of the old Russo- Engllsh treaty, in the matter of frontier delimitation, quite different from that I which they accepted in former years. However, their hardship Is not great, elnce they are permitted to pass .goods in bond through our territory into their own. It may be received as certain this Congress will "hold up" any negotiation which may have been undertaken by the State Department looking to .a new interpretation of the terms of the treaty of 1825 as to the boundary line. AS OLD TOWJj AND ITS LESSON. La Payette's apprehension of unfavor able action toward it by the Southern Pacific seems to be exaggerated, Tet the possibility of such a fate recalls the time away back in the early days when Yamhill was the most noted lisection of the state and La Fayette its political and trade center. It was left out by Ben Holladay from the first West Side railroad scheme, and St. Joe, a mile and a half to the westward, was located as the terminus, McMinnville being at that time a straggling little village without political aspirations or commercial pretensions. The effort to make a town at St Joe failed, however. and McMinnville came into notice, and after a successful contest for the county eat and the extension of the Oregon Central, now a branch of the Southern Pacific, through the town and on up the "Valley, it quickly became the business &s well as the social, educational and political center of Yamhill County. La Fayette, on the other hand, went, quietly to sleep, and, though a cozy, nomelike dreamy place, occupying a- beautiful site on the bank of the Yamhill River at the Government locks, the days of its activity are in the past. The decadence of this town and the substantial growth but six miles to the west of it of McMinnville conveys a les son in community enterprise and the lack of it. The early citizens of La Fayette were in a sense loyal to the place, but it was good enough for them as it was. and growth was a matter about which they did not trouble them eelves. They had the county seat and in due time a big brick Courthouse, number of comfortable homes, a good ncboolhouee, a town "hall and several church buildings. They enjoyed them selves and each other. Their commer cial needs were supplied by a trl-weekly steamboat that piled the tortuous little river in high-water season, and by freight teams that kept them in touch with Portland when the roads were passable. This sufficed for the time, but It was not growth; on the contrary, it was stagnation, and In the listless mood begotten in such an atmosphere the first railroad that pushed out of Portland on the West Side was allowed to slip by, after first halting and creat ing Its temporary terminus a -few miles away. The rest followed In due course of events, and now the old pioneer town that had a fair start In the early settle ment of the Willamette Valley is little more than a post town, while its rival 19 aggressive, growing and prosperous. The fact that nothing remains sta tionary in the world is illustrated by this little bit of local history. Every thing moves if not forward, then backward. In obedience to this law the old pioneer town of Yamhill County is practically deserted. The beauty of Its site still remains to it; it Is en deared by old associations to those who knew It In Its days of prominence and promise. It is a cheap place to Mve be cause rents are low, fuel is still plenti ful, every house has Its dooryard well. and modern Improvements of any kind do not lay tribute upon the household er's purse. It is, In brief, a quiet, com fortable, restful village that has not In the half of a busy century been touched by the wand of progress a village fore doomed with all of Its early opportuni ties to stagnate and fall Into decay. In dustrially and commercially speaking, through lack of enterprise in Its self- satisfied citizens. DISTINCTION FOR NEW YORK. Two days have passed by without any Intimation In the Senate proceedings of what action, if any, was taken on a most important resolution presented on Monday by Senator Piatt, of New York, and under the rules carried over for one day. Senator Piatt has just been tri- mphantly re-elected by the Legislature of the great State of New York, and when he presents to the Senate a reso lution embodying the views and reflect ing the desires of that Imperial com monwealth, It is incumbent on the Sen ate, one would suppose, to give some weight to the product of his acute and resourceful brain. The eminence of Senator Piatt as a patriot and thinker Is known of all men, and Is abundantly attested not only by the practical unanimity with which New York chooses him for Its representative In the highest deliberat ive body in the world, but also by his elevation in the Senate to the important chairmanship and committee places which he holds. The legislation of the Senate and practically that of Congress as a whole Is In the hands of the Sen ate committees; and it Is In these com mittees that the great State of New York reaps the reward of Its political action; for while Vermont has the chairmanship on Agriculture, and Ap propriations ges to Iowa, and Com merce to Maine, and Finance to Rhode Island, and Foreign Relations to Illi nois, and Interstate Commerce to West Virginia, and Judiciary to Massachu setts, and Military Affairs to Connecti cut, and Naval Affairs to Maine, and Pensions to New Hampshire, and Privi leges and Elections to Michigan, and Public Buildings to Indiana, and Public Lands to North Dakota, and Railroads to Wyoming, and Rules to Wisconsin, and Interoceanlc Canals to Alabama while all thesa places are filled as we have indicated, the great Senator from the great State of New York, aided somewhat by Mr. Piatt's eminence In affairs and in Senatorial service, passes them by to grasp with firm hand the serene and inaccessible peak of the com mlttee on Printing. It is from the committee on Printing, therefore, that New York, from time to time, edifies the Senate and startles the world with Its contributions to legisla tion, when Mr. Piatt can spare the time from his arduous labors on behalf of the Census Committee or the Important en terprises, so dear to his heart, of Civil Service and Retrenchment. This was the case on Monday, when the Senator presented a report from the committee on printing and asked for its considera tion. It Is not to bo doubted that the desired" consideration would have been accorded, but for the opposition of an other profound statesman. Senator Quayv of the great State of Pennsyl vania, whose anxiety for the public wel fare, as manifested through the New Mexico ambition for statehood, comes Into collision with Senator Piatt's de sire for the public welfare, as expressed through his report In favor of having some of the Senate's precious documents sent to the printer to be set up, printed and possibly even bound. The superior lty of Piatt is attested in the remark of Senator Hale that "Quay was mistaken if he thought the majority of the Sen ate was with him In objecting to proposition such as printing matters for the convenience of the Senate." One is moved to felicitate the State of New York upon the fact that while other states set the names of their great men upon tariffs and monetary laws, upon treaties and canal bills, upon acts in regulation of commerce, railroads coast defenses, battle-ships, public lands Indian affairs, and the new dependen clea, New York ever and anon rises from her seat to inform the world that 100 copies of the report of the Agrlcul tural Department on the best manure for variegated petunias have been placed at the disposal of each Senator. It is no wonder that men of ordinary intelligence have long ago despaired of contesting Piatt's seat In the Senate. Bankfull throughout its entire length and swelling as It pushes onward to the sea from tribute rendered by numerous streams that have their sources in the foothillB which the warm rains of last week denuded of enow, the Willamette River Is sending down a torrent that menaces fences, fields, hopyards, build lags everything, In fact, that lies within the sweep"of Its waters. It has been a number of years since a damag ing Winter freshet has prevailed in -this region, and farmers have, perhaps. grown reckless In planting orchards and hopyards and making other improve ments upon land subject to overflow In one of these exceptional seasons. To the extent that this is true there will be los9 In damaged orchards and fields and in fences and farm buildings car ried away. The current ih. a freshet of this kind Is practically resistless, and the driftwood lodged and the silt depos lted on "bottom lands prove discouraging obstacles to agriculture. Much loss of this kind resulted from the flood which prevailed during the latter days of Jan uary and February, 1890, the date of our last heavy Winter freshet. In the thir teen years that have Intervened farmers have Included In their cultivated area many acres that were overflowed at that time. Much of this area, with the improvements that were placed upon It, is now again under water, and the loss will no doubt be both considerable and discouraging. However, 'the thrifty farmer will not fail In taking an in ventory of his losses due to lowland in undation to reckon the value of the crops that has accrued in the interim between freshets and find therein jus tification of his enterprise in putting these lands under cultivation. INTOLERANCE FOR LIBERTY. How narrow Is the space between lib erality and intolerance appears from this brief passage from ' the Sllverton Torch of Reason: As citizens and Liberals, wc decidedly object to any officers of any theocracy being- made legislators or officers of our republic In any way- or on any terms, whether by the "Repub lican" or any other party. Let them first withdraw in rood faith from the opposition kingdom" and "church" and become natural ized in this world, and in the United .States Republic Uncle Sam should not be made to warm serpents in his bosom. If not a danger. is a disgusting farce. The proposal Is to bar Smoot out of the Senate because he Is a Mormon. The objection is not to his Immorality, but to his religious belief. No member of a "theocracy" should be admitted "to office. And this is urced in the name of liberality" and tolerance! It is not tolerance, it Is persecution. Yet precisely such has been the usual course of "liberalism" e very wbere They who fled from European persecution .to Massachusetts Bay to enjoy their wor ship freely didn't want any one else to have that freedom. All were free to worship, provided they worshiped along the lines of the Puritan theocracy. Oth erwisethere were Roger Williams and the hapless Quakera In the name of liberty the know-nothings pursued their persecutions. They who have suffered most from religious Intolerance are often most Intolerant toward other sects. Antagonism to Mr. Smoot on purely religious grounds can- only result in aid ing him to Influence In the Senate, where his acceptance is a foregone con clusion. 'His character as a citizen and business man is accounted proof against every attack. His truthfulness seems to be unquestioned; and when he de clares emphatically that his first alIegI- ance Is to the United States, he puts the burden of proof upon his accusers. Polygamy must be stamped out in the United States; but Immorality Is not confined to Salt Lake among our cities. The religious prejudice directed at the Catholics and the Jews diversifies our politics sufficiently without adding to it proscription of the Mormons merely as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. One church Is as good as another in the eyes of Uncle Sam; and when It comes to morality, that Is a matter for evidence. Roberts would never have been thrown out of the House If he had not paraded his harem before the country and espe cially at Washington. Utah is a state. If no Mormons are to sit In Congress, it should not have been admitted to the Union. THE MONROE DOCTRINE. The "Oratorical Essays of B. J. Phelps," which have just been pub lished by Harpers. Include a careful study) of the Monroe Doctrine. Mr. Phelps waa American Minister at the court of St James In the first Cleveland Administration, and under the appoint ment of President Harrison he subse quently served as senior counsel for the United States Government before the Behring Sea court of arbitration at Paris. Mr. Phelps supported- that In terpretatlon of the Monroe Doctrine which binds us to oppose the ac quisltlon of any new territory in the Western Hemisphere by Europe, which is the view reaffirmed in' President Roosevelt's message, but Mr. Phelps disapproved of Mr. Cleveland's Interpo dtionIn the Venezuela boundary dis pute, holding that we had no more right to Intervene in that controversy than Mexico would have a right to interfere in the dispute as to the boundary be tween Alaska and British Columbia. Mr. Phelps also disapproved our inter position in behalf of Cuba, because he believed that Cuba would ultimately come under our Government and that its negrlne population was a most un desirable element, hopeless of orderly or enterprising life. The view of Mr. Phelps concerning the original Monroe Doctrine emitted by President Monroe In 1823 Is that it con tained nothing essentially new; that it was based on "a fundamental principle of International law, the right of na tional self-preservation and defense in every case and under all circumstances that call .for Its exercise." This Mr, Phelps accepts as the first and "para mount duty of every Independent na tion, and holds that the principle ap plies as fully' to the acquisition of terri tory by another power, when it serious ly endangers the safety or ImportariETin terests of a country, as to any other agv gression. This fundamental principle of International law Is what Mr. Phelps quotes as Webster's definition of the term "Monroe, Doctrine." The applica tion of the right of National defense to the injurious acquisitions by other na tions of new territory has long been es tablished and enforced by Europe in the maintenance of trie balance of power. Germany, says Mr. Phelps, could not have undertaken to annex the whole of France by conquest In 1871 without en countering the armed protest of the rest of Europe. The absorption of Turkey by Russia has more than once been pre vented by Great Britain, Austria, France and Germany. Europe did not interfere with the annexation of Alsace and Lorraine because no European power would suffer by the return of these old German conquests to the Fatherland. When the United States purchased Alaska from .Russia Great Britain made no protest because she suffered no Injury and because the United States-was sure to be a far more intelligent and profitable and enterpris ing neighbor than Russia to Great Brit ain, as the result has clearly proved. If Russia owned Alaska today, the Brit Ish goldbearlng Arotlc region would probably have remained In an unprofit able condition. Our Government resisted the attempt of France to establish, a monarchy In Mexico under its fundamental right of National self-preservation and defense, and we should under the same right re sist on effort by a European power "to obtain control of Nicaragua, which our future commercial and political inter ests require should be under our con trol or its neutrality and freedom com pletely guaranteed." Mr. Phelps would have held that under our fundamental right of National preservation and de fense we should oppose the acqut sition by Germany of a foothold In' I Venezuela, or Colombia, or Central America, because such acquisition would place a great European military and naval power In dangerous proxim ity to the trans-Isthmian canal. The English Professor Leech, in the Fortnightly for November, agrees with Mr. Phelps in denouncing the Vene zuela message of President Cleveland, and condemns Lord Salisbury's consent to arbitration. Professor Leech says that while Great Britain has established a precedent against herself, this prece dent is not binding on other nations, and believes that when anv matter worth fighting about comes up this pre cedent extorted under a threat of war by President Cleveland" will be disre garded. He thinks that within fifty ears many subjects of European na tions will settle In South America, and thatwhen friction arises between them and the Latin-American common wealths the story of the Ultlanders will be repeated. Sir Frederick Pollock, In the Nineteenth Century, holds that Great Britain, by her refusal to support or permit an Interposition by Conti nental powers on the side of Spain in the war between that country and the United States, practically accepted the principles embodied in the Monroe Doc trine, and draws the inference that if In the future any like enterprise should bo attempted by a European coalition. If necessary, not only the moral but the physical power of the British Empire will be' exercised on the side of the United States. The emancipation from slavery to coal has begun, but it goes on wjth the slow and measured tread of a great reform. Some months ago the Swedish govern ment decided to operate by electricity the 2200 miles of railway that it owns. The electricity will be generated by water power, which in that mountain ous country abounds. Some time ago Italy began to use Its waterfalls' for generating electricity, and an industrial revolution in that country is expected in consequence of cheap power for manu facturing purposes. Oil is being largely used as fuel on ocean-going. craft, ex periments in its substitution for coal awakening wide interest These are lit tle more than encroachments, however, on the border of coal's world-wide king dom, but they serve to show that hu man energy and enterprise will In time find means to emancipate industry, at least partially, from a bondage to coal that has long been absolute. The last of the gun crew, nine all told, who were Injured by the explosion of a powder charge of an eight-inch gun on the battle-ship Massachusetts on the 17th Inst, Is dead. Five of the number were killed outright, and the remaining four succumbed one by one to their terrible Injuries In the military hospital at San Juan, Porto -Rico. The cause of the explosion is given as the accidental discharge of a percussion primer while the breach of the gun was open. In other words; momentary lapse of vigilance, or perhaps the taking of a chance, awoke the latent energy of the explosive, and death and destruction followed. The story with the miner's lamp incautiously left open as a text has been often voiced by tremendous explosions in coal mines. Its recital brings into prominence as often as it Is heard the one element that cannot be engendered by law or Insured by official vigilance, the human mind always standing at "attention." The attitude of the labor leaders and Socialists to a referendum on the Lewis and Clark Fair Is to be unreservedly praised and commended to the attention of all organizations In sympathy with the state's welfare. The referendum Is not to be abused by Incessant resort to it but employed only In the extrem ity of necessity to thwart plainly Inlqul tous legislation. Its chief function is that of insurance In the way of warning to the Legislature. It Is like the canal at the cascades of the Columbia, which lowers freight rates though It does not carry the traffic. This fact seems to be understood by the very forces that were behind the movement for the referen dum. There Is no occasion for its mis understanding or misuse In other quar ters. Justice Brewer is needlessly perturbed at the Supreme Court's apparent re versal.o'f itself. That Is something that Is going on constantly. Jurisprudence Is not an exact science. If It were. It would be dead. It Is a living and breathing human institution, and that Is why it must adapt itself to the chang ing necessities of the time. Land-grant railroads are not in favor with the courts to the extent they yonce were, and neither is Marshall's leaning toward monopoly. The Supreme Court has reversed itself wisely on public lands, just as It did In Its attitude toward flat currencny and Government banking. The commutation of the death sen tence passed upon Colonel Arthur Lynch, who was recently found guilty of high treason, to penal servitude for life, will probably be followed within ten years by a pardon. The British government, of course, cannot afford to make a farce of the trial, and some ex emplary punishment was necessary in this case. Penal servitude -to a man of education .and intelligence Is a very se vere punishment, even If It does not last more than five or ten years; and Colonel Arthur Lynch is likely to pay dearly for his service In the Boer army against the English flag. After Great Britain, Germany and Italy have been satisfied with Venezu ela's payments and promises, some ap prehension is expected over5 the faclll ties that will be available for similar enjoyment on the part of France, Den mark, Holland, Belgium, Spain, the United States, Norway and Sweden The other creditors have doubtless been overlooked in the hurry of the moment Venezuela must be a strenuous bor rower. It takes the Seattle Times a column more or less, to explain the diabolical plot of the Colorado Republicans to send a contestant for Teller's seat to Washington and to fulminate suitably against the enormity all of which Jooks unnecessary and somewhat painful In view of the prompt acquiescence of all concerned in Teller's election. The paper that was run by Tillman's victim, Gonzales, is said to be looking for an editor. Its success is likely to de pend somewhat upon the treatment that Is accorded his slayer. Another thing largely dependent on the same thing Is free speech In South Carolina, The peaceful blockade Is such as to make poor Venezuela wonder what a warlike one would look llke ABOUT COEDUCATION. Washington Post In the December number of the Popu lar Science Monthly Is a clear and com prehensive discussion of the higher edu cation of women, by David Starr Jordan. Certainly no better defense If defense it can be called, of coeducation has ever been made. President Jordan handles his subject In a broad and liberal manner. He does not contend that what is good for one sex Is "good, for the other. His argument Is that the bringing of young men and women together In colleges re sults In the Intellectual betterment or both. His reasoning on this point Is par ticularly forceful. He says: "In woman's education, as planned for women alone, the tendency Is toward tho study of beauty and order. Literature and language take precedence over sci ence. Expression Is valued more hlghly than action. In earning this to an ex treme the necessary relation of thought to action becomes obscured. The scholar ship developed Is not effective, because It Is not related to success. The educated woman Is likely to master technique, rather than art; method rather than sub stance. She may know a good deal, but she can do nothing. Often her views of life must undergo painful changes before she can find her place In the world. In schools for men alone, the reverse condition often obtains. The sense of real ity obscures the elements of beauty and fitness. It Is of great advantage to both men and women to meet on a plane of equality In education. Women are brought into contact with men who can do things men In whom tho sense of reality Is strong, and who have definite views of life. This influenco affects them for good. It turns them awny from sentimentalisra. It gives tone to their religious thoughts ana Impulses. Above all, it tends to encourage action as governed by Ideals, as opposed to that resting on caprice. It gives them better standards of what Is possible and impossible when the respon sibility for action is thrown upon them." In this we find the keynote of coeduca tion, the suggestion of its true value. It has done more than bring better oppor tunities to women. In a measure it has led to the improvement of tho curriculum for Institutions having only male students. It has blazed the way for the training of tno individual Jay tho elaboration of tho elective system. The college course of even a quarter of a century ago met with the approval of no one. It was a Procrustean bed whose dimensions, every student was forced to meet, often to his mental detriment. It was a "series of compromises" hallowed by dogmatic and purblind tradition, In no way suited to the needs of a progress ive age. Coeducation stimulated the search for studies to fit feminine requirements, and in tnis way led to the expansion of the elective system. Today the dull-witted boy with no tastes for the beauties of the language is not forced to wade inrougn tne endless coniucations of Greek verbs. The professor susreests. and the student chooses, and the flexibility of the curriculum offers ample opportunity for wise selection. To be sure, there are certain dansrers from coeducation, most Important of which Is the lowering of the standard to meet feminine capacity In certain branches. But forewarned-Is forearmed, and the wisdom of our creat educators should be sufficient to cope with the emer gency. Judpre Day for the- Supreme Bench. Philadelphia Inquirer. While it Is not pleasant news that -with the retirement of Justice Shlras, Penn sylvania will loso representation on tho Supremo Bench of the United States, It is a partial compensation that the honor is to be bestowed upon so worthv a re ciplent as Judge Day, now of the Cir cuit Court Few men have had such a remarkable career. Six years ago he was a lawyer in Canton, almost unknown out side of his own neighborhood. Political exigencies demanded the placing of Sen ator wanna in tne Senate, and this was accomplished by making John Sherman, tnen in nis dotage. Secretary of Stato much against his will. The aged financier succumbed to the arts of flattery and secured a post for which he was In no wlso fitted. It was evident that he would bo a fig ure-head, and much 'surprise was mani fested when William R. Day, a compara tively young and unknown man, was se lected for the post There being, how ever, little prospect at the time that there would be other than routine duties, the mater was not considered important when It developed that we were becom lng embroiled with Spain and that a war was likely, much alarm was manifested. even by well-Informed persons, because It was assumed that we were practically without a head of the State Department. That alarm did not last long. It soon appeared that Mr. Day was a man of great wisdom and force of character. Fol lowing the lead of President McKinley, he did his best to smooth matters over and avoid war. The most important dis patches were sent without the knowledge of Secretary Sherman, who soon found that ho was only expected to be a figure head, a position he had never before as sumed and which Irritated him greatly. How well Mr. Day conducted affaire as Assistant Secretary and finally as titular as well as actual head of the Department of State, Is well known. Jfo Independent Operator. New York World. Tho very term "Independent operators" Is a fraud. There are none. The so-called "Independent operators" are, and always have been, since tho anthracite coal road combine was formed, completely at the mercy of the latter. The combine charges them whatever rates It pleases to carry their coal. It can deny them cars. It did deny the "Independents" cars until they agreed to allow the combine a commission of 65 per cent of the tidewater prlc& for carrying and selling their output There Is abundant proof the Interstate Com merce Commission has It on file that the combine of coal roads fixes differential freight rates on coal to please Itself; and there Is no power anywhere at present to prevent It. The power arbitrarily to fix coal freights Is tho power to destroy "Inde pendent operators." For Baer efr at to pretend, therefore, that thoy are at the mercy of the Independents 13 a pretenso so utterly at varlanco with the notorious facts that Its Impudence Is amazing. The Bills. Madison State Journal. Hear the reading of tho bills. Countless bills! What a world of wisdom they present, with all their frills! How the Legislators hustle All day lone and half tho night How they scratch their heads and tussle. How they rustle, how they bustle! Till they are exhausted, quite; And they swear, swear, swear That with worry, grief and care They'll be driven to dyspepsia and to little liver pills. By the bills,' bills, bills, bills. Bills, bills, bills, By the multitude of senseless, useless bills! Hear the stack of freakish bills, Tacky bills! To transform hills Into valleys, and the valleys Into hilts, To prohibit baccarat , And the same called one-old-cat; Heaps of bills To protect our fish and game, And a bill (ain't It a shame 7) To' discourage matrimony Just because the path Is stony. Oh. the bills! Curse the authors, brainless chaps! They are neither man nor woman, They are neither brute nor Human, They are yaps! "Who will perish soon, perhaps, And be hurled into a climate where the trick ling brimstone rills Will consume them and their. 'bills, All their bills, bills, bills, bills, -Bills, 'bills, bills, ,' JAll their ldlctlc, Inconsistent bills! THE PROSECUTION OF MAJOR GLENN The Manila Times. December 3. We do not know the merits of the par ticular case for which Major Glenn Is to be brought to trial before a court com posed of his brother officers, but speaking generally on the matter, we are Inclined to question the judgment of the War De partment In bringing him to trial. It will nrobably be found Impossible to convince any court tnat Jdajor uienn is gumy oi an act of wanton cruelty, for he Is an officer of proved efficiency and excellent stand ing, and we will only be put through the stirring up process again to no definite end. The Samar campaign was unquestion ably a severe one. but the Army was coping with serious conditions and drastic measures were- Imperative. Major Glenn was there under orders performing an un pleasant duty, and if he erred, his mis take was unquestionably one of judgment He and h!e comrades were fighting a cruel foe and there as elsewhere In the Islands the moderation and restraint of the Ameri can soldiers in the face of barbarities upon their comrades was remarkable. Our enemies have honored us with that tribute and the fact Is beyond dispute. We are not dropping Into the false logic of justi fying one wrong by another, but merely recalling an extenuating circumstance which human nature universally may plead. In this particular connection attention might be called to the fact that while we have granted general amnesty to the enemy, we are following the Spartan-like policy of punishing our own men who transgressed the laws of civilized warfare as we now write them. Naturally, wo ex pect a little more from American soldiers than from tho men who followed Malvar, Lucban, Guevara, Rufino and the others; but have wo not exacted It already? While we formerly did contend for the trial of Major Glenn and of any other officer who was accused of inhumanity, yet we do not believe anything can be ac complished for either the Armv nr the Filipino people by now resurrecting the past We'are not sure that It will not do both harm. The Army has unquestion ably suffered a loss of spirit, but we would not go so far as to eay that it could not be completely relied upon In any crlsi3 hero or eteewhere that called for valorous service. As to the Flllninos. it is rrn In that the disorderly section of them have taken advantasce of the innetivitv nr th Army, and that the punishment of Ameri can officers will tend to further encourage "' ve ave testimony on the latter proposition from natives of high standing who strongly urge that the war chapter in the history of these Islands be quickly written. OREGON'S 1905 EXPOSITION. San Francisco Chronicle. It Is timely to suggest to the Stato Leg islature that in the preparation of a bill appropriating money for a fitting repre sentation of the products of California at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis next year, provision should be In corporated In It for a similar exhibit at the Lewis and Clark Exposition, to be held ai x-oruanu. ur., tne year following. The two expositions are to be held eo near to one another as to time that the exhibit sent to St Louis can be shipped direct to Portland as soon as the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition closes. We cannot afford to overlook the Lewis and Clark Fair. Our relations with Ore gon are so Intimate that what helps.lt In directly aids this state. Our interests are sufficiently alike to be affected favorably or unfavorably by similar causes and events, ana yet they are sufficiently different not to interfere with one another. Wo are, therefore, Interested In the success or failure of the Port iana exposition. Our welfare will be best subserved by doing everything- that Is reasonable to assure the complete suc cess of our neighbor's enterprise. Doubt less the Legislature will act favorably on the suggestion here made. "Jnlce" Goudy Out of Line. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Our Consul-General at Paris, Mr. Goudy, writes to the American Chamber of Commerce there: "I am glad to say that the exports from Paris to the United States for the year 1902 show a large Increase over those of 1001." "Glad" to note ah Increasing Importation of cheap labor goods Into the United States? He should bo brought nome and Instructed anew regarding the principles and objects of the American protective policy as championed by the party to which he be longs, and which gave him his present office The Agreement Was Violated. Peoria Journal. It Is to be presumed that Senator Dolll ver knew what he was talking about when he said that tho duties In the Ding ley tariff bill were purposely made high that they might be reduced In further ance of reciprocity. But if Dolllver la telling the truth, why waa not the agree mentfor there must have been one car ried out? Did the extremely high protec tionists bunko the ones who are moderate protectionists, and after getting these du ties so high then proceed to hog the wholo thing? It really looks that way.t No RellKion.s Testa Can Obtain. Milwaukee Free Press. If it was the intention of the good peo ple of the United Statos to keep Mormons out of Congress they should have refused Utah admission as a state, but having admitted It the state is as much entitled to select Its representative citizen to Congress as any other state, and Con gress has no more to do with the religious belief of the gentleman from Utah than It has with those from any other state, or than It has to require that a member of Congress shall entertain some religious views. Ground for Snxpiclon. Pittsburg Dispatch. The report that the 300 Americans domi ciled in the Isle of Pines are threatening to resort to force In resisting the efforts of the Cuban government to collect taxes there which are expended In Cuba Is to be received with more or less hesitation. The well-known anxiety of those resi dents to force the annexation of the Isle In order that their speculative Invest ments, based upon such an eventnallty, may be made good Is sufficient to arouse suspicion. Encli In HI Own Tonsruc. William Herbert Carruth. A lire mist, and a planet, A, crystal and a cell; A JeHyflsh and a saurian. And caves where the cavemen dwell; Then a sense of law and beauty. And a face turned from the clod Some call it evolution. And others calls It God. A haze on the far horizon, "The Infinite tender sky; The ripe, rich tints of tho cornfields. And the wild geese sailing high; And all over upland and lowland The charm of the goldenrod Some of ua call It Autumn, And others call it God. Like the tide on a crescent sea beach. When the moon Is new and thin. Into our hearts high yearnings Come welling and surging In come from the mystic ocean Whose rim no foot has trod Some of us call It longing, And others call it God. " A picket frozen on duty, A mother starved for her brood, Socrates drinking the hemlock, And Jesus on tho rood; The million who, humble and nameless. The straight, hard pathway trod Some call it consecration. And others call It God. NOTE AND COMMENT. Tomorrow the Chinese turn over a new leaf. "Whoo-oo-p-ee! Ketchum jlag all same 'lite man!" Will some one please tell us what has become of Mr. Bailey, of Texas? It Is now Doblin's turn to deny what Lessler denied he did not say that Doblln said ho said. The one candidate who loses no sleep over the Senatorial situation as It gradu ally unfolds is Mr. Wood. In return for that complimentary vote Mr. Baker will undoubtedly Issue some few compllmentarles on his own account Did you happen to notice that this column's weather predlctldn of yesterday morning turned out to be exactly correct? If the rapidly falling waters and the swiftly rising tax rate could strike a com promise, Portland would have very little to wish for. Germany should not get metaphors mixed, says the Baltimore American. The way to make Castro shell out Is not to try to shell him out. W. J. Stone Is In training for the Demo cratic nomination for President In 1S0S, but It is not clear how this is going to help the 1204 situation any. If our Oriental neighbors who are now engaged In a four-day- celebration really want to do honor to antiquity they might attend tho coming performances of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The Empress of China did go a long ways to the rear and sit down, but we will bo surprised If this Indemnity business hasn't already started the old lady edging her way back to the front China is just 4025 years old. and it has at least one thing to be thankful for. There are no oldest inhabitants who re member having shaken hands with Con fucius. The deserved compliment which we paid to the Oregon TImberman the other day went because of a typographical error, to tho Oregon Fisherman, well and favorably known as a person but not as a publi cation. Tho simple statement from Reed Smoot that he Is ashamed neither of his name nor of his religion will make him friends among a multitude of people who do not believe In Mormonism. Hon. James Hamilton Lewis, tho peau de sole statesman of the "Democracy, makes answer to tho report that he In tends again to seek public office by' saying that he has left politics for good, but he neglects to eay for whose. The New Year greeting of the Chinese Is "chin chin!" Just now, with both branches of Congress, about 40 Legisla tures, tho coal commission and no end of Investigating committees In session. It seems especially appropriate. Thaf'there Is some humor even in diplo matic circles Is shown by a retort from Assistant Secretary of State Adee to As sistant Hill some days ago. "I feel as If I could hardly drag one leg after the other," said Mr. Hill. "You should thank heaven you're not a centipede," responded Mr. Adee. Representative Shattuc, of Ohio, wasT making an earnest and tearful plea for a constituent. "Mr. Speaker," he said, "this man Is totally blind. He la dependent on what the Government gives him for sustenance. His sight is gone, and I recall that one day he came and saw me " Shattuc doesn't know yet why the house laughed. One of the most unique petitions ever laid before the Massachusetts Legislature has been introduced in the House by Dan iel Leonard, of Agawam, who asks that the County of Hampden reimburse him for the loss of $4000 which he asserted he lost through a "bunco" game to Frank L. Smith. Leonard says that after Smith obtained the money from him, April 17, 1300, he reported the facts to the authori ties and Smith was finally arrested, in dicted and balled for $5000. Smith then jumped his bail and the money was paid into the Hampden County treasury. A part of the sum, Leonard believes, should be paid back to him for his efforts in ob taining tho arrest of Smith. This is the way the proceedings continue at that merry-go-round investigation In Washington: Mr. Lessler I met Mr. Roberts, a member of the House naval affairs committee, and said to him, as he was the one moat Interested In that proposition, that I would sign a statement, and Mr. Roberts brought a letter to me ad dressed to tho Holland Company. Mr. Wheeler Have you it? Mr. Lessler No, sir. I said I would not sign It when I saw It was addressed to the Holland Torpedo-Boat Company. Mr. Wheeler Did you read It? Mr. Lessler No. v Mr. NIcolI Was that statement to Mr. Rob erts voluntary on your part? Mr. Lessler Entirely. Mr. Roberts I think certain members of the committee drew the wrong Inference from the actual condition of affairs that existed. Now, I want to say that I have no wish to make any statement voluntarily that will reflect on any member of the committee, but If any member thinks there was anything Improper on my part during that Interview I am per fectly willing to answer all questions. Harry Schreler, an uncle of Lessler, was then called. Of course he was. The handiest thing in the neighborhood just then was an uncle. PLEASANTRIES OP PAItAGRAPHEHS Kenneth Tom looked at me quite severely. Bently Naturally. Tom Is awfully cros3-eyed. Boston Transcript. "How do you like your new servant?" "That Isn't the question at all," answered young Mrs. Torklns. "We are trying to find out how she likes us." Washington Star. A By-Product. Buffer What do you do with the jokes that none of the comic papers will take? Guyer Work 'em Into dialect stories for the magazines. Judge. "How Is your 'Don't Worry Club getting along, Miss Smlfklns?" "Not so well. Each member is worrying herself thin for fear she won't get an office In the coming election." Baltimore Herald. Mr. Newstuff I must buy a lot of these pic tures for our private gallery. Mrs. Newstuff What! Buy ready-made pictures? Nonsense! Let's have some painted to order.-i-Chlcago Dally News. Father I wonder what's the matter with Nellie this mornlns. She acts like one pos sessed. Mother She probably is. I noticed a new ring on her finger when she came down stairs. Philadelphia Bulletin. "Forchen-Hunt is busy these days trying to think up a scheme to eradicate certain weeds." "You don't mean he's gone In for gardening V "Oh. no. he's trying to Induce the Widow Got rox to marry him." Philadelphia Press. Tou say that your son at college has taken up literary work as a profession?" "Not at all. I merely said that he was writing for money." "Well. I thought " "So he is; he's writing for money to ma by every mail." Baltimore Herald. "Our pastor," remarked Mrs. Jenner Lee On dego, "pleases us very much. Ho hardly ever preaches more than 20 minutes." "Goodness!" exclaimed Mrs. Seldom-Holme, "ours interests us so much that we never notice how long he preaches." "Well. I must bo going. Good afternoon." Chicago Tribune.