6 THE MOBKIXG OBEGD2TIA3T, WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 18, 1903, flfUrt mMrtAAitAit excellent health. The mother of a nu. ViLV VyvvyVUlWtW I merous famllr, she was energetic, capa ble ana apparently tireless in tne ais- t, .v. i - janfl. Ortron cnarge or ner auues. one was, more- as scond-elas cutter. I over, practiced in tne requirements 01 BEvieFn BtinscRiPTiojf rates. I social Jire, having Been in a manner Br Mm (Miuti sRMia. in advance) I bred to them, ana went to u ashington uuir. witn Buaeay. vr noBw.... ... i tvell equipped by experience ana a Daily! laLV7?'r:7.::::::::: S ready tact tor her duties. Notwlth- r. per year - 7 rr standing this. However, her neaitn is The Weskiv s months!!!!!!!.! M suffering from the strain and now, by it city subscribers order of her physician, she has canceled Daily! rir week" delivered. sundarineiuaed.20o ell of her social engagements, her con- postage rates. I dltlon being such ao to demand cora- Vntua Ptt. Canada aid Mexico: I piete rest. There is this difference in ?! i il"1 p,pr "" iS I uch a case, between the novice in so- I to 38-page paper.. ....... I ' x crtlfn rates double. I uoi ue uiiu uie vtuu a iu wr 410.1.. News or discussion Intended for publication I bom: The former does not know how tn The Dregonlan should be addresied tnvarla-I . nroteet herself from the suddenly blr '"Editor The- Orfronlsn." not to the cam - ,- of arr individual. Letters relating t Jt- Imposed strain, and. feeling that she tirtcir. ruhMriDtioH or ta nr bulls eu matter cannot give up. as was the case witn Mould be addressed amply The Oreronian. 1 jirs. Harrison, goes beyond tne limit uregopian aoeanot tar i0" "'"i before she will consent to rest, while from individuals, and cannot undertake ta rs- I . v.rnn. ih. in mv m.n.Jrfr... .... . it without uiid. the latter yields the point before the tatlon. No stamps should be inclosed for this limit Is reached, and more readily re- pur- I cuperatea. Mrs. Roosevelt belongs to ?'!nJ??.tJ.nnl ?Jaet-JKuth. iZ!iM the latter class, and will no doubt soon Itlbune butldlnr. Chlc.ro: the S. a BeckwUh be again in her place at the head of Special Agency. Eastern representative. I the social life of "Washington. For sale In San Francisco by 1 E. Lee. Pal- e Hole! nw ifinit! naUrtnltli Brea. S3S Sutter street: F. W. Pitta. 1008 Market street; I LOW STANDARDS IX POLITICS. t'.?", M"k" The moral awakening of the Nation. stand: Frank Bcott. SO Ellis street, and N. 1 to Whlcn l'resiaent ttouseveii woeatley. sis Mission street. slon, example and addressee have power- For sals In Los- Angeles by B. T. Gardner. fuj,. contributed, is reflected -In the bouts Spring street, ana ouvsr iii t,n1,t,nlnir of St. LoulR M5 South Spring street. o ... ' " For sale in Kansas City. Mo by Rlcksecker 1 .aimneapuua, oriiinc a cirar Co.. Ninth and tvalnut streets. I and also in the general condemnation For sale In Chlcaco by the P. O. News Co.. I . vfied upon the operations of TJ3eborn lmU "4 Cb"" nja' Addicks In Delaware. It Is not that For"S, in omana br Barkalo 8r. IU corruption of this sort Is anything new: Farnam street: Mereath Stationery Co, 1303 I for It has always existed: but tbe Jiote- rarnam street worthy thing Is in the public attention For sale In Bait lke ty the Salt Ik J.ews 1 ji,iit It la wvlv1nir. There Is Co.. 7T West Second South street. , ,.., r inrtlf. For tale In SVathincton: D. C by the Ebbett Jio '" House news stand. ferer.ce. Tbere is always nope ext-cm For rale In Denver. Colo by Hamilton 4 I f0r seared conscience. Kendrlck. B0-912 Seventeenth street; touthan I Dn Lyman Abbott, Who5 name Is a r.;T" r 7w;.v smonym for Christian scholarship and Curtis tit. I exalted ciuzensnip. naa uoce uuiiutu, his long career of more practical benen- cence than to direct his weekly maga zine. The Outlook, to an expose of the Tammany and the Addicks operations. Alfred Hodder writes of Xew York, and George Kennan, the author and lec turer, of Delaware. The service of Mr. Kennan Is worthy his talents and his honorable record in Investigation of moral obliquity- His narrative in the Outlook is the most amazing relation of cynical corruption ever made In the United States. The story of Senator Clark's corruption of Montana may be as bad; but that has not been told so plainly. Addicks seems to have con fined his operations to the two more populous counties of Kent and Sussex, and there is testimony that his cam paign expenses amounted to $400,000 in election years. Much of this seems to have gone directly to individual voters. most of it in new J5 and $10 bills. These appeared suddenly a few days before election, where no ouch bills had been seen before since the last election. Af ter election they appeared in the banks by thousands. Addicks was divorced from his wire at her instance upon statutory grounds. and then took up with the woman at whose house he had been a frequent visitor and In whose favor he had once induced his wife to deed a house and lot owned by herself. His public career seems to have been on a par with his private standards. On the Thursday after the state election of 1894 a dinner was given at the house of Charles L. Moore, In Georgetown, Del., to fourteen prominent Republicans from tne souin ern part of the state. At that dinner Mr. Addicks made a speech, in whicn. among other things, he said: well, boys, we've won. . . . I've bought it; I've paid for It; and I'm going to nave it! It has cost me one houndred and forty thousand dollars!" It la unfortunately too true that tne office of United States Senator has been sought and gained elsewhere than In Delaware by methods on the Addicks plane; by rich corruptlontsts on the one hand, and by poor and purcnasable cor- ruptlonlsts on the other hand; by men who seek the place for the mere vulgar display of wealth and enjoyment or power; by men who have no higher idea of the place than to utilize it as a mill for the dispensation of patronage. Such articles as Mr. Kennan's should have wide attention, and should result In a higher standard In the popular mind as to the qualities to be desired in high public station, In the present Oregon Legislature re storing the compulsory grand Jury, but it received scant attention. It was re garded as a device In the Interest of lawyers rather than the people. No body points to Injustice as a result of the present method; the most that Is urged against It Is that It holds possi bilities of harm If prosecuting officers should see fit to abuse their powers or shirk their duUes. But grand Juries almost Invariably are guided by the ad vice of the District Attorney as to the finding of Indictments, anyway. There is general satisfaction with the opera tion of the present law In Oregon, and Minnesota will doubtless be glad If she adopts a similar method of getting Into court persons charged with crime. the Krag-J orgensen rifle, with which the Army is equipped. TODAY'S TVBATHER-Generallr fair; winds rnoetly easterly. TESTERDATK WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 51: minimum temperature. 27: pre cipitation, none. PORTLAND, TVniJXESDAY, FEB. 18. A NECESSARY AMENDMENT. Our state, acting through its Legis lature, Joins others in a call on Congrea for submission of an amendment of the Constitution of the United States, so as to change the mode of electing Senators. If thirty states two-thirds of the whole make this call. Congress must submit the proposition to the states for their action. The Senate has steadily refused to take the Initial step necessary to change of the obsolete method estab lished by the Constitution obsolete be cause the spirit and purpose that caused the adoption of It when the Constitution was formulated have been utterly lost. The promise Is now fair that two thirds of the states may Join in the calL There could be no doubt of Its ratification; for the country Is heartily tired of the present method. It has been absurdly objected that such change in the" method of electing Senators would be followed by a radical revolution In the distribution of repre sentatlon In the Senate. In other words the equality of the states In the Senate would be endangered by a demand for proportional representation In that body. The objection Is chimerical, since such demand could proceed only from the most populous states, and they are but a small minority. Besides, the prin ciple would remain fixed In the Con Etltutlon that no state, without Its con , sent, can be deprived of equal suffrage in the Senate. The method now Invoked for amend meat of the Constitution Is really the safe and conservative one. The alter native Is a convention for proposing amendments, which must be called on the application of two-thirds of the states. Should such convention be called, who is to guarantee at what point It may draw the line of its ac tivities? Here lies the probable way to a very great change In the structure. There Is an exceedingly strong and very gen eral feeling that the method of electing Senators should be changed, from elec tion by the Legislatures to direct elec tion by the people. Again and again the House of Representatives has placed Itself on record In favor tjf such amend ment, but the Senate has always re fused to concur. Now, If this thing goes on rmich longer, and the sentiment In favor of the change continues to grow, Is there not a probability that a conven tlon will be demanded? And If we get the convention, what a babel of voices there will be! If there be any danger it lies In the persistent denial by the Senate of a simple amendment demand ed and desired by a preponderant public sentiment, not touching any vital point in the Constitution. PASS THE CRIMP DILI.. Where have they gone these agitated friends of poor Jack Tar. who have been wont to make the welkin ring with cries for abolishment of seamen's abuses? Is their love a plant, to flour ish only when no Legislature Is In ses sion and then to wither on the stalk as soon as a bill In repression of crimping Is offered at Salem and members are engaged In a fight for Its passage? Several days have passed since the antl-crlmplng bill was Introduced In the House, where It has since been passed and sent over to the Senate, where Its progress stays. How Is It we hear nothing In Its advocacy from those who have been fulminating against Portland as the worst port on earth, and called upon press and officials to cast out the evil from among us? Have they gone on a Journey, or Is It that they prefer to keep the Issue on Ice for future use? Is the reformer so Jealous of his calling that he fears to remove the basis of his perennial wall? As to the Infamy of crimping In Its worst phases, the charges against It have never been and can never be de nied. The difficulty with It has always been the absence of ways and means. Mere outbursts of accusation accom plish nothing, and the wise observer of the problem has learned by experience that they may easily do more harm than good when Indulged at a time when the essential elements of effective action are wanting. These elements consist principally of a willingness on the part of local shippers to co-operate with reform agencies along some prac tical line. If this condition Is present. something can be done. If It is not. outcries and defamation of the port are worse than useless. At length the opportune moment has arrived. The bill at Salem meets the views of the commercial and marine in terests of the port. It offers a practi cal solution of the problem, by licensing the vocation of sailors' boarding-house keepers and empowering a commission to take away the licenses upon evidence of seamen's abuses. It also sets a maximum charge for the services of the runners and In every way guards the business against violence and fraud. If advantage la now taken of the favoring situation, this troublesome problem may be settled for a long term of years, If the opportunity la allowed to slip by, we can expect nothing but the pres ent carnival of extortion and crime. Humanity and business sense alike call for this reform. The port Is brought Into disfavor with masters and owners by the Inordinate cost of securing sea men. while the use of bludgeon, pol soned liquor, abduction and even mur der has often established a degree of terrorism among seamen In port, com' pared with which slavery would be paradise. Every humane agency In the state should be brought to bear for the passage of this bill; and the support of country members should be forthcom ing, because every dollar added to the expense of ships In Portland harbor must eventually come out of the price the farmer receives for his crops. From official reports made to the Sec retary of War It appears that there were In the United States on February 1, 1901, the day- before the passage of the anti-canteen law, 1555 saloons within one mile of the limits of ninety-eight posts; since then 341 new saloons have been established within those limits, a total increase of more than 21 per cent. Eighty-one posts reported increased drunkenness; fifty-four reported In creased desertion; absence without leave Increased at seventy-four posts; courts- martial Increased In number at sixty nine posts: morality and discipline were reported as lowered at fifty-six posts. while the health of the men wa.s worse at forty-seven posts. In the Philippines there was an Increase In the number of saloons of 371, or a total Increase of 1G per cent- Sixty-nine posts reported In creased drunkenness, fifty-eight an In crease In courts-martial, and a lower ing of discipline and morality, while seventy-two posts reported a poorer condition of health. Dr. Seaman, In the January Issue of the North American Review, has this to say of the effect of.the anti-canteen law In Pekln: The V.. a T. U. would have no fault to find with the post here. The men to outside and pet drunk on sam-shul In town, and so to sleep In back yards or other worse places; but the sancUty of the Government, reserva tion Is maintained. The Germans have & bier halle on the wall at Tlartroan sate; the Japat.: ese have their canteen; the British have one In their grounds, and bring their beer to thelt tables. The French soldier has his little bottle of wine at dinner. We alons are virtuous. We are the advocates of reform. We are the great hypocritical hippodrome none like us. The zeal of the llfesavlng crews at theytnouth of the Columbia and on the Washington Coast has. it is said, aided sailors to desert stranded vessels when the danger did not Justify them In so doing, and the condition of the vessels was not hopeless. This Is a serious charge, but It Is preferable to one of cowardice or Inefficiency resulting in the loss of human life. Men are natur ally very anxious to leave a ship when she Is on the rocks or on the sands as sailed by breakers. Thn llfesavlng crew Is naturally anxious to rescue them from a position that. If not Immediately perilous, may become so In an hour. The anxiety thus developed may have caused the premature abandonment of vessels thus situated, but It Is evident that the lifesavers erred on the side of humanity. In this connection It may be well to refer to the record of the life saving service of the United States for the last fiscal year. This record shows that the scope of operations of the ser vice was the largest, with two excep tions, since the service was established, yet the loss of life was exceptionally small. Only nineteen lives were lost from documented vessels, which Include those of five tons' burden and over, and six were lost from smaller craft. The number of disasters to vessels of the first class was 3SS; the whole amount of property Imperiled was about $14,000.- 000. of which $12,000,000 was saved Some mistakes of Judgment can be ex cused In the face of a record of this kind. In the view of Dr. Mlnot J. Savage the race problem threatens the future of the Republic. This Is a statement alto gether too strong. Events have a way of working out problems that affect the stability of governments and the happi ness of the human race, and they will control this problem and eventually work It out without serious disaster to the Republic Senator Tillman's fear that the colored people will mix witn. mongrellze and degrade the entire peo- nle Is In Itself degrading. Tne wnue man Is not "centuries, millenniums of natural development. to quote Dr. Savage. In advance of the black man to be overtaken and "mongrellzed" at this stage In the process of evolution. P0BLICITY AND THE TRUSTS. Chicago Tribune. The Nelson amondment to the Depart ment of Commerce bill, which needs only the President's signature to become a law, makes provision for a bureau of corpora tions, the commissioner at the head of which Is empowered to Investigate the or ganization, conduct and management of any corporation or corporate combination excepting common carriers engaged In Interstate commerce or commerce with foreign nations. To enable the commis sioner to do this he is given the same powers that the Interstate Commerce Com mission has as regards railroads. Tne commission has authority to require the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of all books, papers, tariffs, contracts, agreements and docu ments relating to any matter It may de sire to Investigate. If a person sub penaed by the commission refuses to ap pear. It certifies the fact to the proper Circuit Court, which Issues an order re quiring the Individual who has been sub penaed to appear and answer. It will be a novel experience for corpor ations such as the Standard Oil Company and the sugar trust, which have been one man concerns, and whose affairs arc un familiar to stockholders even, to receive from a Government official an Imperative order demanding Information as "to the management and the conduct of their business. There are corporations engaged In Interstate commerce which have no oc casion to fear the publicity contemplated by the Department of Commerce bill. There are other corporations which object to It vehemently, and have made desper ate efforts to defeat It- They have sought to overawe Congress or to persuade it to substitute for the Nelson amendment a feeble. Ineffective provision, which would practically leave it to them to decide what Information. If any. they should give to the commissioner of the bureau of corporations. The constitutionality or tne requirement that corporations engaged In Interstate commerce shall obey demands for Infor mation Is not seriously questioned. If the Standard Oil Company deemed the re quirement unlawful. It would not have been so determined to defeat legislation on the subject. It has no doubt as to the nower of Congress, and does not wish to sec the power exercised. It wishes Its af fairs to remain veiled in darKncss. The Information and data collected ty the commissioner are Intended primarily for the Information of the President, to enable him to make recommendations to Congress for the regulation of Interstate commerce. Without data intelligent, leg islation hardly Is possible. When law makers are shooting In the dark, they' are tlkplv to miss the target. President Roosevelt has Insisted from the beginning on "knowledce of the facts publicity That needful knowledge cannot be had Kntll the ceneral Government shall oe em powered to Inspect anj examine the work ings of the great corporations engageu 111 Interstate business. If the anti-trust legislation or mis con gress shall go no further than the asser tion of the right of the National Govern ment to Investigate the condfict and man agement of the business of the Standard Oil Company, and of other great trusts, of whose Inner workings little or nothing Is known, definite and gratifying progress will have been made In the settlement of the trust question. It will be possible to take the next steps more easuy anu surely. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS The AVlse Editor. Walla Walla Union. A party of North Dakota editors Is traveling In this state. It Is a wise Idea, gentlemen, to come West In blizzard time. Just a rosiblltlr. Whatcom Reveille. If Portland will not he good and Mult nomah County will not get In line the Geer men and Fulton men could even up matters by sending back to the United States Senate as Senator from Oreson the Hon. Joe Simon, of Portland. Suffering of the Innocent. Salem Statesman. The most fearful thing about the cow ardly deed of. Elliott Lyons in Lane Coun ty Is the mortification felt by his relatives, who are good people. What a heartless fool a man Is who will bring such sorrow upon his family, the members of which have always conducted themselves as good and law-abiding citizens! Oregon's Fitness for the Fair. Canyon City News. Many of the Legislatures of the West ern States are passing appropriation bills to place exhibits at the Lewis and Clark Fair. They recognize that no other state than Oregon cou'd fittingly organize and hold an exposition In' honor of thopo great explorers. They also generously acknowl edge that Oregon can and should do so. and that they nre ready and willing to help. An appropriation secured will repre sent a good stroke of constructive states manship, as they cannot fall to benefit by exhibiting their resources and by the thousands of prospective settlers passing across their borders. A BnstnensIIke Session. Elgin Recorder. The present Legislative session doesn't appear to be Inclined to allow the Sena torial election to interfere with the trans action of other business. In this respect It la a decided Improvement on a num ber of Its predecessors. The selection of a United States Senator usually overshad ows all legislation" of a local nature, but our present session appears to regard the selection of a successor to Mr. Simon as a matter of secondary importance, and devotes but little time to It. In fact, the present pension appears to be one of the most businesslike ones In the history of the state but. It all tho proposed appro priation bills become laws the taxpay ers of the state will be appalled at the bills they will have to pay. NOTE AND COMMENT. Gezundhelt! How's your co'd thlz bordlg? "What Is so rare as a day In June?" Any one of Oregon's midsummerlike Feb ruary days. The Senatorial wheel of fortune at Salem Is still spinning. There Is yet time to make your bets. The ceremony attending the opening of Parliament resembles somewhat an old maid hunting under her bed for a burglar. Richard Croker will not return to New York until ISOi for fear of harming Tam many. Some one ought to shanghai him and bring him back at once. Some one said that a fool Is born every minute. Judging from these turf com panies' success, there must be at least ten suckers born In the same interval of time. It is seldom that the partial burning of a building leaves so much regret In Its wake as did the latest Occidental Hotel fire. Usually somebody Is glad for what Is left, at least. Many of Portland's women are like pea cocks. They will appear on the streets ar rayed In costumes costing small fortunes and with footgear that seems never to have come In contact with shoe polish. During the tulip mania in Holland In 1636 and 1C37. a single bulb of a tulip named the viceroy was sold for four tons of wheat, eight tons of rye, four fat oxen, eight pigs, twelve sheep, two hogsheads of wine, four barrels of beer, two barrels of butter. 10X) pounds of cheese, a bundle ui ciuiucs kdq a. silver pitcner. Here Is a sign that is becoming quite noticeable In the front of Portland grocery stores where the sidewalk Is clear: WE KEEP OUR FRUIT AND : VEGETAULES INSIDE- : TUB SOCIAL STRAIX. The duties of the mistress of the White House are arduous and exact ing. Though the name of the Presi dent's wife has not, with a single excep tion, been mentioned In recent years In connection with political affairs or Inci dents, she Is unmistakably a person of importance In the Administration sec ond only to the President himself. The single exception above referred to was In the case of Mrs. Hayes, who, while mistress of the White House, gave open aid and comfort to prohibitionists through her attitude on the question of total abstinence, and was on this ac count subject to severe criticism. The President, however, upheld his wife in the" position which she assumed, and the incident passed. Into history. Mrs. Harrison was, when she went to the Executive Mansion, a woman of middle age and In excellent health, but bo heav ily did the duties and anxieties of the position to which she had been unex pectedly exalted press upon her that she died before the completion of her husband's term of office, a victim of ner- i-nn rimstratlon and ceneral debllltv. Mrs. Cleveland brought to thV White House youth, a vigorous constitution and a familiarity with social duties that carried her unscathed through her hus band's first term: but increasing family cares added to increased social duties told upon her perceptibly before the close of hl second term, since which time she has withdrawn entirely from social functions. Mrs. McKlnley, as Is well known, had been an invalid for many years before she entered the White House as its mistress; next to nothing was required of her In the social life of the Administration, end she returned to the seclusion of private life overshadowed by calamity but ap parently neither worse nor better phys ically than when, a gentle, irresponsible Invalid, she went to Washington for her husband's first inauguration. Airs. Roosevelt was, when sha took up the Bocial duties of tho President's wife, In GRAND JURY L05ING GROUND Minnesota Is now struggling with the grand Jury problem, a bill being before the Legislature for the abolition of that ancient and unwieldy adjunct of the criminal courts. It Is In the constitu tion of that state, however, and Is not to be gotten rid of except by amend ment of the organic law. The charge brought against the grand Jury is of general useleseness and need less expense. Nobody alleges that It has been an Instrument of oppression or injustice. If the charge were graver it would be .easier to handle the case. but where objections are only general and old It Is difficult to stir the people to apply a remedy. Therefore the grand Jury Is suffered to continue In most of the states where Its uselessness Is generally recognized. Wisconsin, the Eastern neighbor of Minnesota, has gotten along quite as well without the grand Jury as the North Star State has with one, to say nothing of the probability that the criminal administration of the Badger State has been less expensive and Jus tice a little prompter because of the lighter machinery to set in motion against crlmlnala The grand jury is not unknown In Wisconsin, for the laws there yet give It recognition, but It is practically unused because there seems to be no occasion ror caning 11 into ac tion. The information serves every pur- pose of Justice. And If the Prosecuting Attorney declines to rue inrormation there Is provision, for such filing by private complainants under conditions that will prevent the bringing of frivo lous cases. In North Dakota ana mai. ana experience has been similar to that In Wisconsin. Here In Oregon we have had expert ence with both the compulsory and the optional grand Jury. Eight years ago the Oregon statute was so amended that the calling of the grand Jury was made optional and the courts were au thorized to try persons charged with crimes upon the Information of the Dis trict Attorney. Since that time tne grand Jury work In every county has been much lighter, and In some coun ties It has not been deemed desirable to call a grand Jury for several years. Besides this, a favorite practice of crtm Inal lawyers, picking technical flaws in indictments after discharge of the grand Jury has been ended, and there are no unnecessary maintenance costs for prisoners held for successive grand Juries. A bill was prepared for Introduction THE XEW MILITIA LAW. The new militia law Is an attempt to modernize the ancient militia law of 1792. which required that an officer should have a spontoon (a half pike) and "a hanger," a sword, and that an enlisted man should have a musket car rying an ounce balL The new law Is not what Secretary Root desired, for It establishes no new body of reserves; It provides for closer relations between the State and Federal troops, for mak ing the organization, armament and dis cipline of the organized mllltla in each state to conform to those of the Army within five years under penalty of los ing the annual appropriation made by the United States. The President may call the mllltla Into the service of the United States In case of invasion or re bellion for a period of not more than nine months, the mllltla to be subject to the same rules and articles of war as the Army, except that courts-martial of its members must be composed wholly of mllltla officers. The pay of the mill tla on active Federal service will be Army pay. The new law also provides for Joint maneuvers of the state mlll tla and the regular troops when request ed by the Governor of the state. The law establishes a list of compe tent officers residing in the several states and territories, who shall be first called upon and commissioned In a vol unteer army In event of hostilities. The new law secures one great reform In the uniform arming of the mllltla In every state. At the outbreak of the Spanish War our mllltla regiments were worth less at Santiago because they were armed with obsolete Springfield rifles, In which black powder was used. If It had been necessary, we could not possi bly have taken Havana In the Summer and Autumn of 1S98, because our Army, with the exception of 15,000 regulars, was armed with obsolete weapons. while Havana was garrisoned by 100.000 veterans armed with Mausers. The ml lltla of Pennsylvania has recently made a very poor showing In the matter of the strike riots, and the Illinois mllltla was worthless In the Debs riots. The new law provides for the Instruc tion of the mllltla by one or more reg ular officers. Mllltla officers who attend Army -colleges and schools have the pay. the quarters and subsistence of regular officers of .the same rank, and the War Department provides transportation. subsistence and pay for any state troops participating In any maneuvers of the regular Army. Under the new law the President Is given the right to call out the mllltla for nine months to repel In vasion and suppress rebellion- The ml lltla will take the field under their own officers. At the end of nine months they will be relieved by a new army of vol unteers raised In the meantime, and then return to their homes. Secretary Root has already begun preparations for putting the new mllltla act Into ef fect by creating a special bureau In the Adjutant-General's office at Army head- ouartero which will have exclusive choree of mllltla matters. He Is also about to Issue to the National Guard During the fiscal year of 1SS2 Immi grants Into the United States numbered 7SS.992, and the nearest approach to that figure before or plnce has been in tne nast year, when 739,289 Immigrants ar rived. In 1882 Germany contributed the most Immigrants to this country, witn the other countries of Northern Europe following. Today Italy stands first, with Austria-Hungary next and Russia third. Twenty years ago nearly 40 per cent of the arrivals were females: and they constituted over 42 per cent or tne German immigration. Today less than 30 per cent of the total Immigration are females, and less than 20 per cent 01 mo females come from the principal con tributing country, Italy. Governor Chamberlain's reason for his veto of the bill which placed bicycle thieves on a par with norse thieves on the criminal code does credit to his humanity. Bicycle thieves being mostly boys, the Governor would save them from a too severe penalty. Th bor ouce an Inmate of the Peni tentiary, even for a brief term, nas lit tle prospect of honorable manhood be fore him. Perhaps the unpunisnea ju venile thief has little; but a term In the Reform School might improve this pros pect, while a term In the penitentiary would utterly destroy it. The three women so suddenly and shockingly bereft of their husbands by the deadly aim of the convicts, iracy and Merrill, at Salem, last Summer, are entitled to and have received without stint the sympathy of all sympathetic neonle. Whether or not they are enti tied to a money consideration from the state for their loss is a question upon which men honestly differ. A majority of the Legislature Is of the opinion that they- are not, and as long as tnis opin ion holds It rules. SUPPORT THE PRESIDENT. Boise Statesman. In view of the astounding disclosures In Washington concerning the methods re sorted to to prevent, the enactment of anti-trust legislation. It would seem to be the duty of our Legislature Immediately to adopt a memorial giving voice to tho sentiment of this state on the subject. Would It not be well for both houses to adopt such a memorial today, setting forth the desire of this state to have necessarjr leglslatlon parsed to control, or. In ex treme cases, suppress oppressive combi nations, embodying an emphatic Indorse ment of the attitude of the President and pledging him the support of Idaho In his efforts to secure tho enactment of legisla tion of the character desired? Such a memorial, going out today, would show emphatically where Idaho stands. When there la such a reason for prompt ness people do not delay In giving expres sion to their opinions. If one has a friend anywhere needing his support and having a right to expect It, he at once telegraphs assurance of such support. That Is the position of Idaho today In the light of tho news from Washington. We have a friend In the White House who Is contending with powerful Inter ests that seek to retain dangerous prlvll egea and who Is dependent upon tho sup port of the masses of the people to wrench victory from the grasp of those forces, and the Legislature of Idaho, as the representative of the people of this state, should flash back to Washington an expretelon of Indorsement from this people and an assurance that they will stand loyally by the President In the Tltantlc contest In which he Is enlisted In the Interest of the people of the country. Action Will lie Taken. Walla Walla Union. The authorities of Portland should take action without delay In the matter of the sailor crimps and see If It is not possible with the aid of the law to rid that port of these scamps. That city has the repu tation all over the world as being the headquarters for the worst gang of sailor boardlng-houpe grafters known, and yet year after year these fellows ply their trade with little or no opposition. The affair last Wednesday when three men were pounced upon by crimps and beaten and one of them kidnaped should open the eyes of the proper authorities to the act ual state of affairs and the city should be rid of the notorious characters. There Is a limit to the right of men to traffic In tho labor and liberties of their fellows. The law will recognize any legitimate agency, but when this agency takes upon Itself the authority to make men engage In work through Its channels and to beat and nearly murder them In case of refusal it Is time to call a halt- Men In this great United States are free to work for any man they please, and they are not com pelled to pay tribute to any set of cheap grafters for tho privilege. Colonel Goodale. of the Seventeenth United States Infantry, who has Just been promoted to be Brigadier-General, U. S. A., and placed on the retired list of the Army, during the war of the Re- hplllm served In the Army or tne Po tomac and was a participant In the Peninsula campaign of 1862 under Mc ciellan. and fought at the battle or Gettysburg. Colonel Goodale served as an enlisted man in the Sixth Maine In fantrv In the Sixth Corps of the Army of the Potomac from May, 1861. to Jan uary. 1S64. Carrie Nation declares that Los An treles Is the most Immoral city she ever visited. The Council, thus spurred to action, Immediately adopted a resolu tion of confidence In the ability and In tegrity of the Chief of Police. That set tles It. Mrs. Nation talks too much. J. P. Morgan's visit to the White House with Aldrich and Hanna Indi cates his superiority over Rockefeller. "Never write letters," sold an old poli tician, "send a man." Better yet. go yourself, as Morgan does. "Votlnir Cattle." Baltimore Sun. But It may be said that In tho 30 years which have passed since tho reconstruc tion period ended the negro has Become better qualified for self-government and the use of the ballot. Unfortunately there Is no evidence of this. In casting his vote tho negro Is no more controlled by principle today than he was 30 yeirs ago. He Is iroverned exclusively by race prej udice and votes solidly In a mass. Negroes In tho South are still what Tnaaaeus Stevens designated them "voting cattle." It Is necessary for the Southern States to disfranchise them In order to preserve their property from plunder and their civilization from destruction. And as some of the property In tho South is owned by Northerners, there Is a strong sentiment In that section also In f vor of "grandfather" clauses. And whatever may be said of disfranchisement of ne groes by such constitutional devices It Is far more decent and honest than the dis franchisement of white people In Penn sylvania by ballot-box stuffing and per jury. The Remedy. Cleveland Leader. The white Democrats of the South have succeeded In eliminating the- negro from politics, but the denial of the right of suf. frage to black citizens of native birth shbuld carry with it a punishment. That punishment, as provided In the constitu tion. Is a reduction of the representation of those Southern States in the House of Representatives and la the Electoral Col lege. There Is no possible Justification for permitting a white voter in aouin Caro lina, or Mississippi, or iouisiana, to exer cise four times the power In a Presidential or Congressional election that a white voter In tho North has. Secretary Root siys truly that this Is one of the prob lems which must bo met and solved, and It must be solved In the right way. ITaa Xo Soul for the Birds. North Yamhill Record. A mob Legislator has Introduced a measure In the Oregon House making It a misdemeanor punishable by fine or Im prisonment for any one to kill or Injure any wild bird or birds, other than crows or hawks, except game birds. And the pe. cullar thing In connection with the bill Is that It has passed the House favor ably. Should this bill become a law. which It Is sincerely hoped It will not. It Is not to be supposed for a moment that It will be respected or obeyed. It must not be believed that fruitgrowers will fold their arms In deference to this silly measure and sit on their verandas and quietly observe the destruction of their cherry crop by a few varieties of mischievous birds which are supposed to be protected by the law. It must not be presumed that sheep breeders will submit to the destruction of the lambs of their flocks by eagles and ravens, because a law proposed by a silly extrem ist forbids their being molested. It seems ridiculous and. Indeed, reflects upon the common sense of the people of whole counties In some Instances that persons who appear to be lacking In com mon "horse sense" are permitted to work their way into the law-making body. Good for the Knrraen. The Dalles Times-Mountaineer. No act of the Oregon Legislature in many years has been of greater- im portance or will result In more general benefit than the appropriation of $165,000 for the construction or a portage roaa De tween The Dalles and CeUIo. It Is In deed a vast amount of money to expend upon a single Improvement, but It is an expenditure that will bear results. It is the one move mat win uncoris me ihs"-n-iif -arhleh nature has provided for carry- Inr the products of tho gTcat Inland Em- nt to the markets of the world. For when a portage road Is In operation the Influence that has been used to prevent tho construction or canal ana iocks wiu h romnved. No longer will It be or Bene fit to the railroads to maintain loooies In Washington to prevent the National rinverament taking hold or tne improve ment- Following the action of the State nf nrpron In determining to act for Itself and relieve the people from the monopoly that has for years collected exorDitant trlhutes from them, we may expect Con gress favorably to consider the Improve ment of the coiumma Kiver ana pass a liberal appropriation therefor. The thanks of all Eastern Oregon Is due to the pres ent Legislature for this one act or jus tice. Why They Want It. Spokane Chronicle. A fine tribute to the value of the Asso ciated Press reports Is being given Just now at Oregon's capital. A vigorous ef fort Is being made to destroy the value cf the Associated Press franchises by pass ing a law compelling Its managers to furnish their telegraphic report to any newspaper that will pay ror It- It's a line compliment. When the proprietors of outside papers will resort to such desperate measures In the hope of capturing this report they must feel keenly the superiority of the Associated Press to any of its would-be rivals. But It is pretty safe to guess that their little scheme will fall. The Lee Statne. That the Congress which passed the act under which the Statuary Hall at the Capitol receives Its contributions never for a moment contemplated the presence therein of statutes of tho leaders of the Confederacy Is evidenced by the mere date of enactment- Thlt act was approved by President Lincoln on July 2. 1SG4. at the time when General i.ee was raamnj his fiercest struggle- against General Grant, who had brought up against the Petersburg lines', and when Sherman was rineBedlv pushimr his wsy northward throueh tho Confederacy. The act In vited each of the states to present f.tatues. "not more than two In number. of deceased persons who had rendered such military or civic services as entitled them to commemoration as National fig ures In Statuary Hill, In the National PanltoL" Will It be contended that when Lincoln signed the act he for a moment even dreamed that Robert E. Lee would ever be thought of as coming within Its provisions, as having in his day rendered "such military or civic services" as en titled him to commemoration in Statuary Hall In the Capitol? CInrkson's Dad Advice. Philadelphia Record. That Secretary Root has spoken on this mhlcet suggests that the President has been aroused to an appreciation of tho harm he may do If he should continue to approve the suggestions of Surveyor Clarkson, of the port of New York, the Administration s manager or negro poli tics in the South. This pleases President McCusker, of the Civic Improvement Association, and also people who eat fruit and vegetables. For unblushing Impudence and monu mental gall, witness the following from the notorious "Gas" Addicks: No man who refuswl to vote for J. Edward Addicks In the Legislature will ever be allowed to hold any office In Delaware, nor will any bolter sympathizers bs permitted to come to the front. If the men of Delaware will stand this sort of thing. It Is time, high, time, for the women to take control. The New England Historical Genealog ical Society has appointed a committee to ascertain, if possible, the exact place of rendezvous of the Boston tea party when It assembled. December 16, 1773. pre liminary to throwing the tea Into Boston harbor. The stories of the place handed down by tradition have been conflicting. nnd many or the members of the society think the effort will be In vain. That old worlds perish dally In volcanic disaster, and that new ones are continu ally formed from tbelr dust and fragments Is eminently probable. This Idea Is only a generalization from those of the two great Englishmen Lord Kelvin and Sir Norman Lockyer whose genlus has been aroused by the Innumerable celestial col lisions of which we are mute witnesses and of tho volcanic explosions that seem to Indicate how the earth Is to come to an end In some far-off day. A popular book of statistics places Portland's population at the end of 1902 at 110,000, with births for the year at 1136, deaths 1172. Tho same work credits Se attle with 123.000 population. 919 births and 876 deaths. Owing to superior water, Portland's death rata, Is probably lower, but the proportion of births .should bo about the same. This would give Seattle about 87.000. assuming tho correctness of the Portland estimate. Seattle should either fake all statistics as she does her bank clearings or else tell more of tho truth. A little maiden who resides In South Portland has for her neighbor and best friend a German gentlewoman, whom she visits many times dally to share most of her Joys and sorrows, and from whom she receives much useful Instruction about plants and flowers and birds and draw ing and music The other day this friend told the little girl about some deaf mutes and some blind people. The child was much Impressed with their unfortunate lot- Not to be able to hear any person speak, to hear her mamma or papa, or to talk to them or to any one else never never oh. It was awful! And then tha poor things that could never see the funny pictures In the papers, nor the flowers, nor the sky, nor the birds; that could never sew doll clothes, nor draw pictures, nor play face tag, nor find the sugar bowl or apple tiln! If possible, this thought was awfuller than that of being a deaf mute. 'What would you do. dear, if you were deaf and dumb or blind?" asked the Ger man friend. I'd be awful, awful sorry," the Httla one responded, with all tha solemnity of one In the very presence of Impending calamity. Then, after a moment's reflec tion. In which the gravity of tha matter grew upon the child, she added from tho very bottom of her frank little soul: Why, Mrs. Blank, I b'lleve I'd almost rather be Dutch!" PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGnAPIIERS Violet Do you think & lady would smoke a clcarettet Daisy Not if It's the only one a man has. Harvard Lampoon. Tenelope Ferdy says Ethel Is an angel. Jack Well, he must be a harp. then. She s playing him lor all she's worth. Judge. Brady The grocer Is going to tack a "Fresh Eez" slcn over his door. I suppose that will be "another He nailed." Chicago Dally News. Auntie You know you ought not to be play ing shops on Sunday. Slarjorle But. you see. auntie dear, wo were lust pretending It's Monday! Punch. "Yes, I believe that even Inanimate objects have Intelligence of a sort." "For Instance:" "Well, for Instance, the policeman at the street crossing." Baltimore News. "There's a man who's out of work." "Poor fellowl" "Oh. It's not so bad." "Why notf "Ills salary goes oa lust the same. He's on the city pay-roll." Chicago Evening Post. "Charley, dear." said young Mrs. Torklna. you know you said we ought to put some thing by tor a. rainy day." "Yes." "Well, don't you think this bargain raincoat Is per fecUy lovelyr' Washington Star. Mrs. Frankfort Aunt Clara, says Uncle Jchn never tried to deceive her. Mr. Frankfort I guess that's so. all right. Uncle John says there are some persons you can make believe anything you want to without trying. Boston Transcript. The Aunt (telling the story of the Sleeping Beauty) What do you think did the Prince give the King's daflghter to wake her! Well, how does your mamma, wake you upT What does she give you In the morning? Elsie A spoonful ot codllvsr oil, auntie. Brooklyn Lira.