THE MORNING OEEGONIAN, FEIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1903. .10 Entered at the Poto31ce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br matt (poitace prepaid In advance) IaHy. -wrlth Sunday, per month ; CallT. Eunday excepted, per year DaUy, with Sunday, per year .w Sunday, per year frx The Wteklr. per year jS The Wekly. 3 months r, ;5 D&Ur, per wk. delivered. Sunday excepted..l5c 2sl.yl per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded..20c POSTAGE RATES. Vnlted States. Canada and Mexico 30 to 14-page paper IS to ao-p&s paper y 22 to 44-pace paper so Tertlrn rates double. New ror discussion Intended for publication in The Orerosl&n fhould be addressed lnvarl-ah- Edltar The Oregonlan." not tothe name of any individual, liettcrs relating to adver Uttnc. subscription, or to any business matter, ahou.d be addressed simply. "The Oregonlan." Eastcra Business ODce, 43. 44. 45. 47, 46. 49 Tribune Bulldlnr. New Tork City; 610-11-12 Tribune Building. Chicago; the S. C. 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Kind. 114 25th street, V. C AWen. Postofilce cigar store; F. H Gxlrra &4 C H. Myers. F.r sale Slt Lake by the Salt Lake News C 77 "Weet Secoad South street. "r ah' J WasWngton. D. C.. by the Eb bett Houe sews stand, and Ed. Brtnkman, Fjunr m PaelAc avenue. N. TV. F t tie u. Colorado Springs by C A. Bruner. F r sale ta Dener. Colo., by Hamilton & Iverdrwk. iw-812 17th street: Louthan & Ja fn Book & Stationery Co., 15th and Laurence streets. J. S. Lowe, 1020 17th street, Slx.2 Jultttf Blaek. Z I'AT-S -WEATHER Occasional rain; K a'herij wtadf . YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tern rerature. 8v leg . minimum temperature, 45 dtg precipitation, .11 Inch. i rOKTLANn, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1903 GOOD WORK, GOOD LUCK. GOOD CAUSE Perhaps the Impulse of thankfulness most prevalent among- the people of Oregon yesterday was In connection with the Lewis and Clark Centennial and the extremely encouraging show ing that Is being made for It in Con gress, where Senator Mitchell's bill car rying J2,126,W Is already pending. The vers general and apparently enthusi astic interest expressed by -influential members of both houses is cause for the utmost rejoicing. The battle' seems almost as good as won. It Is fitting at this time to recall that the effective labors now making In Con gress are only a. cap sheaf, as it were, to years of hard work here at home. Many men of great private Interests, responsibilities and cares have given freely of their time and money to get the Centennial enterprise in the shape where aid from Congress could be asked upon reasonable and prepossess ing grounds. Indeed, it is not too much to say that the opposition now neces sary to overcome In Congress is no greater than the opposition that had to be met and allayed at home here in Portland among conservative business men and taxpayers, at Salem before the Oregon legislature, and at other "West ern capitals before other Legislatures and state officials. For the brilliant success of Senator Mitchell's banquet the way had been paved by the efforts of Oregon men in Interesting the public men of other states and In securing in the Far West from California to British Columbia and from Montana to Utah and Colo rado promises of help and expressions of Interest which indirectly had reached many members of Congress. It is prob able that the humblest effort to Interest Eastern visitors In our Fair, whether Senators, traveling men or passenger agents, has not been lost, but In -the end will have its own due share of glory and reward. And after all the appeal to Congress lies vers much- in the Justice of the cause It is noticeable that the mem ber of Congress who declares himself in our favor is very likely to say that he Is for the appropriation because of the Nations interest In celebrating the great work of Lewis and Clark. Their entrprlse was. Indeed, eminently de serving of Governmental recognition, for few events In our National history have been more epoch-making. ThenJ there is the incidental opportunity for th Government to draw attention to the greatness of its development here on the Pacific Coast and its purpose to participate largely in the future of the Pacific Ocean and the commerce of the Orient. All these things appeal to the mind of true statesmanship. Another element of strength in the Lew is and Clark celebration is the rela tions borne by many of our states to the achievements of that early time. It is Impressive, Indeed, how many Elates were closely bound by many ties to Old Oregon. From New England rxzne Captain Gray, discoverer of tho Colombia, and many of the early set tlers of Oregon. From New York came Astor and the beginnings of our fur Irade. Front Missouri came many of our pioneer missionaries and settlers; thither went Clark himself, and Mis souri statesmen like Benton and. Linn were prominent In advocacy of Ore gon's welfare. Kentucky is Interested through Captain Clark's connection w.th his famous brother, George Rog ers Clark. The other day the Governor of Virginia sent word out here that there would be no trouble about sup port from Virginia's delegation in Con gress, which is not strange in view of the fact that Virginia was the home of President Jefferson and Captain Lewis. It Is a comfort to reflect that at bottom the good luck of our celebration is largely based upon the merits of the cause. right of access. As the interests of commerce greatly concern the present ministry, it has been decided to pene-( trate the trade barriers north of India' and make an opening for British goods in that direction. Russia has been cul tivating the Lama' at Lhasa, and this circumstance perhaps quickens the In dian government's interest in Thibet, which is the only state north of India which has not been tacitly or expressly allotted to one of the great powers. The 40tpedltion now in progress con sists of a couple of regiments, with sev eral companies of sappers. It is to traverse an exceedingly difficult moun tain region, leading to the "Roof of the World." The. military obstacles will probably be slight, as the Thibetans are a poor militia. As Lhasa contains many treasures of Buddhist literature, the capture of the hidden city will be awaited with Interest by Oriental schol ars. PUBLIC HONORS TO CHINESE. A week ago four members of the Chi nese Empire Reform Club, of New Tork City, gave a banquet at a Chinese res taurant in Pell street to representative Jews of the East Side. The guests made the banquet the occasion for present ing to their Chinese hosts gold medals as tokens of the esteem in which the Jews of New York City regard them for the assistance they gave in raising the fund for the relief of the victims of the Kishinef massacre. A benefit en tertainment was given In one of the Chinese theaters, and the Chinese Em pire Reform Club also contributed lib erally to the fund. The medals pre sented by the Jews to these philan-' throplc Chinamen are of gold, almost eight Inches long, and are embossed with the Chinese and American flags set with diamonds. The banquet was the largest and most elaborate ever held In Chinatown. Among the guests of honor were Justice Foster, of the Gen eral Court of Sessions; Judge McKean, Representative Goldfogle, General James R. O'Belrne, William C. Beecher, a son of Henry Ward Beecher; Emer son McMillan, Philip Berolzhelmer, president of the Eagle Pencil Company; Samuel Dorf, grand master of the B'nal B'rlth. Miss Florence Celtland, the Jew ish actress, delivered a toast in Chinese. Congressman Goldfogle, in his speech of presentation, said he would welcome the day when this Government would recognize a Chinaman as a citizen with full rights of suffrage, and closed by saying that the action of the Chinese in promptly offering a helping hand to the sufferers by the Kishinef massacre had made the Jews realize more than ever before that one touch of nature makes- the whole world kin. The story of this banquet end the po litical views expressed will read strangely to the people of the Pacific Coast, but early In the history of San Francisco the Chinese were made wel come on their first arrival by a public banquet at which the Mayor presided and General H. W. Halleck delivered an eloquent speech. Chinese cheap la bor was Indispensable then, and the ar rival of shiploads of Chinese immi grants "filled a long-felt want." Proba bly if San Francisco had remained to this day as completely isolated from the rest of the United States as she was in the first years following the discov ery of gold, Chinese cheap labor would not have lost Its popularity, but the building of transcontinental railways and the establishment of swift lines of steamers from 'New York connect ing with the Panama Railway settled California up so rapidly that California no longer clamored for Chinese immi gration. The banquet of welcome to the Chinese 'with General Halleck as speechmaker, more than fifty years ago, has a queer sound today, and yet in New York CJity the Chinese Empire Reform Club is able to s.ecure the at tendance at Its banquet of men of dis tinction of both political parties, men who in religion are Jews, Protestants and Roman Catholics. croft, then a student In a German uni versity, and he accepted civilities from American naval officers. The poet Shelley doubtless shared Byron's sympathy lor our republican Institutions. Sydney Smith, while he felt deeply the loss of hjs Investment in Pennsylvania bonds, on the whole wrote respectfully and sometimes admiringly of our country and its people. John Bright was always our warm friend, and in the most eloquent speech of his life predicted that the time would come when the Government of the United States would be extended from the Arc tic Ocean to Patagonia. Green, in his "History of the English People," pays a splendid tribute to Washington and to the American people, and says in substance that the highest hopes of civilization for the future rest in the hands of Great Britain and that f'greater England beyond the seas," and Tennyson, in some of the noblest verses he ever wrote, most eloquently apostro phizes America as the "strong daugh ter" of the mother land, but Macaulay anticipated Green and Tennyson. He read Dickens "American Notes" with deep disgust, and expressed great re gret and disappointment that so bright a man should stoop to write a book which was at once "frivolous and dull." Writing as early as 1830, Macaulay denounces without stint certain con spicuous Tories whose pitiful affecta tion of contempt for America "has done more than wars or tariffs can do to excite mutual enmity between two countries formed for mutual friendship, who look without pleasure or national pride on the vigorous and splendid youth of a, great people whose veins are filled with our blood, whose minds are nourished with our literature, and on whom is entailed the rich inheritance of our civilization, our freedom and our glory." Macaulay, as heir to the Whig -principles of Fox, Burke and Lord Shelburne, did not need to visit Amer ica to appreciate our people, but hide bound Tories by hereditary prejudice and political training badly need a visit to our 6ountry to clear their vision, and If Lord Salisbury had made as long a visit to this country as did James Bryce, he. would have corrected his statesman ship toward this country at an earlier date than 1895. Colonel Younghusband's expedition to Thibet has for Its alleged purpose the enforcement of certain commercial treaty rights which, the spiritual poten tate at Lhasa has been Ignoring, and which the representative of China, the suzerain power, is unable or unwilling to get observed. The policy of the gov ernment of Thibet has been to exclude all foreigners, but the government of India says that this policy is not im partially applied. Hindoo and British goods are, excluded, while other goods are admitted, and British merchants -are expelled, with cruelties, from local ities to which treaties give them the OUK ENGLISH CRITICS. All the sketches of the late Lord Salis bury describe him as a man who by social and political prejudice was for many years bitterly hostile to the United States. He viewed without re gret the threatened disruption of the American Union, and was open in his expression of sympathy for the Confed erate cause. He saw nothing beneficent In the abolition of slavery and the res toration of our Union. For many years after the Civil War he regarded our In stitutions with aversion, and during the debate over the enactment of the sec ond reform bill he cited the United States as a sinister example of the dan gers of democracy. He was a bitter Tory, but he had too large a brain to remain Impervious to evidence, and be cause he had a mind open to conviction he was able at 65 years of age to rise above his Tory prejudices and perceive that it would be an act of madness for England to quarrel with America over the Venezuela boundary affair. Not only did he accept arbitration, but he publicly expressed regret for his first peremptory refusal to arbitrate. He did not seek afterward to retaliate upon us In 189S by giving Austria and France a free hand to help Spain, but reversed the English foreign policy of 1873 because he was satisfied that Eng land could not afford to perpetuate the distrust and aversion with which the American people had come to regard the British gO'Rerning class after the Civil War. The trouble with Lord Salisbury, in our Judgment, until his strong brains converted his Tory heart, was that he had never visited America, and this was the trouble with Gladstone, too, in his hasty Judgment of America. Men of strong brains and honest Intellects are always taught by travel. Carlyle hated us most cordially; he never vis ited our shoreB, but Lord Ashburton, Thackeray, Cobden, Herbert Spencer, Goldwln Smith, James Bryce, Lord Coleridge, Thomas Hughes, Chief Jus tice Russell, Huxley, Tyndall, Froude.J Justin McCarthy, Lord Kelvin and the Duke of Argyll did not hate us, because they visited us and had too much brains not to be Instructed and Illuminated by actual acquaintance with our country and its people. The seeming exceptions have been persons like Mrs. Trollope, Captain Marryatt, Captain Basil Hall and Dickens, who were bookmakers, and when they returned to England knew that it would be necessary to "make game" of our country and Its people in order to make the book sell rapidly with the untraveled and unin formed British public. English Radi cals and English Whigs, however, from an early day had always resented this flippant estimate of America. Byron had written noble lines In praise of Washington, of Boone and of our pio neers, and always went out of his way in Italy to seek the acquaintance of American tourists, like Georco Ban- Tins JEWS IN GREAT BRITAIN. The fifth volume of the Jewish Ency clopedia includes a very Interesting ar ticle on "The Jews of England," by Mr. Joseph Jacobs, formerly president of the Jewish Historical Society of England. There were no Jews residing in England before the Norman con quest, but William the Conqueror brought some from Rouen to England. They were protected and fairly well treated up to "the close of the reign of Henry II. They lived on good terms with their neighbors. Including the clergy; entered churches freely, dwelt In palatial houses built of stone, and helped to build a large number of ab beys and monasteries. The Jews ex iled from France by Philip Augustus found a refuge in England under Rich ard I. There were anti-Jewish mobs led by nobles who were deeply In debt to the Jews, but on the whole down to the close of the twelfth century the Jew had a fair measure of protection from the English Kings, who received 10 per cent of all sums recovered by the Jews with the aid of the royal courts. But in 1205 Pope Innocent HI laid down the principle that the Jews were doomed to perpetual servitude because they had crucified Jesus, and from that time forward the Jews began-to suffer In England the persecution of the church. The charge of ritual murder was brought against a number of chief Jews at Lincoln In August, 1255, and eighteen of the ninety-one arrested and imprisoned were executed. Edward I, who had already expelled the Jews from Gascony, forced all Jews to quit England to the number of 16,000 in 1290, after having lived there for 220 years. Some of these exiles went to Flanders, some to Paris. Between 1290, the date of the expulsion, and their formal re turn In 1655, there Is no official trace of Jews as such on English soil. Occa sionally, however, foreigners believed oath, with covered head, substituting "So help me Jehovah" for the ordinary formula, and took his seat as the first Jewish member of the House of Com mons. In 1870 legislation removed all difficulties in the way of a Jew's becom ing a scholar or fellow In an English university. In 18S5 Sir Nathaniel de Rothschild entered the House of Lords as Lord Rothschild, and within a few years was followed to the upper house by Baron Henry de Worms as Lord Pirbrlght and Mr. Sydney Stern as Lord Wandsworth. It had taken nearly thirty years of debate after the eman cipation of the Catholics to obtain emancipation for the Jews. Indeed, it was full forty yeara after Macaulay's eloquent plea of 1831 before a Jew was free to enter Oxford or Cambridge with out taking the oath "on the faith of a true Christian." The story Is Interest ing and instructive as showing the tenacity of race jfrejudice and religious superstition. ( The recent bank failures in Baltimore do not seem to have Impaired at all the financial strength of that rich and con servative old city. We learn from the Baltimore Sun that in the last ten years the city's banking institutions have greatly Increased their capacity and the extent of their business. A comparison of 1903 with 1893 shows great progress. In the year last mentioned the total of the capital, surplus, undivided prof Its and deposits in Baltimore's National and state banks and trust companies was $56,690,564, against $127,919,541 in 1903, an Increase of over 125 per cent. The capital of these institutions has grown in the ten years by $12,905,14S, or over 74.5 per cent, while undivided profits and surplus have grown by $21, 412,455, or over 283 per cent. If to the resources thus indicated be added the large capital and business of the pri vate banks, It will be perceived that the city's role in the financial operations of that section and the South is very considerable. The savings banks help largely in the accumulation of the capi tal available for profitable enterprise. The total of deposits In Baltimore's sav ings banks is now $66,928,028, against $41,877,622 in 1S93, a gain of 59.8 per cent The Sun thinks that if these deposits be added to the banking and trust resources enumerated above it will be found that Baltimore's financial strength of this character aggregates at present some $200,000,000. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS Tribute to Kindness and Fidelity. Deschutes Echo. Tho editorial writers of The Oregonlan ought to wear skirts and crimped grand mother caps so that their garb would gibe with their opinions. , Morgan a Safe Copper. Salem Statesman. Senator Morgan predicts that Senator Gorman will be tho next President of the United States. But canals and Presiden cies do not always go Senator Morgan's way. The Incubation of Panama. Tillamook Herald. Having killed the goose that was about to lay the golden egg, our Colombian friends may now sit on the fence and see the new Republic of Panama carry off the coin. Pearl Before Swine. Whatcom Reveille. Sam White, an Oregon Democrat, ad vises his party that It needs less senti ment and more horse-sense; that it needs no more "issues" of the fault-finding kind. Mr. White delivered his party some excel lent advice that it will neither appreci ate nor heed. Its Unerring Erroneousness. Olympla Olympian. In taking a stand against a canal treaty with Panama, and Joining in the Morgan demand for a canal that won't do, the Democracy again Indicates its determina tion to be the tall of the procession until the last bitter pill Is swallowed 'and a new box opened. Shouldn't Be So Critical. Albany Democrat. W. D. Fenton, the well-known Southern Pacific lawyer, of" Portland, whose road has so many Sunday excursions during tho Summer, is first vice-president of the Northwest Sabbath Association, an or ganization established to secure better Sabbath observance and to prevent the desecration of the day. Tom Horn, the cowboy who went to the gallows at Cheyenne a week ago, scorning sympathy and defying death, had, after all. It appears, the divine spark that is said to exist in every human heart. His mother, 85 years old, lives in Missouri. Though called the worst man In the history of the West, Horn- always held his mother in rever ent affection. In all the years of his absence from home he wrote a long letter to her every month, keeping up the practice during his Imprisonment, but without letting her know of his situation. He left ten Tetters to be sent to her at intervals of a month to keep up, possibly while she lives, the fiction that he is still alive. His brother and sister Joined him in the pious decep tion, and will try to keep It up, to the end that the aged mother may go to her grave in the belief that her oldest boy Is one of the most dutiful of sons and one of the best citizens of Wyoming. While in the name of Justice and in the interest of public safety all good citi zens may be glad that Tom Horn met the penalty due his crime, the opinion that he was utterly depraved must be revised in accordance with this scrap of evidence. Mr. Galloway's Iridescent Dream. McMinnville Telephone Register. Representative Galloway is to be com mended on the position he has taken in regard to the extra session. If, as he sug gests in his letter to The Oregonlan, the members should meet at their own ex pense, there would be no occasion to mako the pledge required by the Governor be fore calling the special session. ' A Loss to Caricature. Pendleton Tribune. Homer Davenport has given up $10,000 a year to take the platform. He first showed the world that he could draw cartoons well, and now what he talks about will be taken as law and gospel. A bad feature of the change Is that wo shall seo very few of his sketches until he tires of the public plaudits. NO OCCASION FOR ALARM. Chicago Tribune. Representative Fordney, of Michigan, Is alarmed and angry. He calls the bill to carry out the reciprocity treaty with Cuba an "Infernal bill" and says It will wipe out the beet-sugar industry in his state. The existing duty on sugar gives the Michigan producers of that article abundant protection- If It were wholly removed they doubtless would Buffer. That will not bo done. There will merely be a reduction of 20 per cent In the duty on Cuban sugar. If Cuba supplied all the Imported sugar the Michigan beet-sugar men would lose one-fifth of their protection, but out of tho 4,100,000,000 pounds of sugar Imported last year Cuba supplied only 2,395.000,000 pounds. While Cuba furnishes. less than 60 per cent of the sugar Imported there will be no ma terial decline In the price of sugar none which will harm the beet-sugar manufac turers. The effect of the 20 per cent reduc tion will be that the Cubans will get moro for their sugar and will spend most of the Increased sums they receive in buying American agricultural and manufactured products. The customs revenues of the United States will be diminished by the concession made to Cuba, and hence tho Treasury will be the only loser by reel proclty. No doubt the production of sugar in Cuba will be stimulated by the reciproc ity treaty, but no gain In production can do more than keep pace with the Increas ing consumption In this country. As Cuba will not be able to supply all the sugar it needs the beet-sugar manufacturers will contlnuo to have all the protection their Industry really requires. t Beware of Trusts. Louisville Courier-Journal. Mr. James Creelman, the well-known newspaper man, elves In the New York World, In very succinct form, the follow ing history of the United States Steel Corporation: Mr. Carnegie offered to sell out for $100, 000,000 a year before tho United States Steel Corporation was formed. "RThen that organ ization took over his properties. Mr. Car negie received more than $300,000,000 in gold bonds, which are celling at more than par. Now take 100.000.000 as the real value of Mr. Carnegie's plants, add another $100,000,000 for the subsidiary companies and for ore fields acquired, $100,000,000 for good -will and $50,000,000 for the cash sur plus In hand, and you have $330,000,000 as a fair price of all that the United States Steel Corporation) possesses or controls. On that showing of assets. $1,322,583,200 nt ntnoltii and bonds were Issued. At tho. prices which were touched In the markot yesterday, the selling value of all these se curities had shrunk to $650,004,244. De duct $350,000,000 from that sum and you will seo that the water whloh remains In the steel stocks and bonds amounts to $300, 004.244. These are to some extent merely approximate figures, but they represent tho actual situation so far as stock speculation goes. The value of this Information consists in tho fact that it illustrates the process by which all the great combinations known as trusts have been organized, nd also shows about the rates of value of the holdings of the best of them to the nominal capitalization. If the Kentucky Democrats In the Legislature enact laws Imposing a stringent educational qualification for the suffrage, It will make that state Democratic without question, for the illiterate white vote of Kentucky is largely Republican and is confined to the eastern or mountain section of the state, which has been Republican since the Civil War. About 16 per cent of the white populatlonof Kentucky over 10 years of age Is illiterate, while over one-half of the negro population Is un lettered. Where one white Democrat in Kentucky would be disfranchised by a to be Jews found refuge in EnglandJ literacy test, probably two Republicans Would They, Really? Roseburg Plaindcaler. The Portland newspapers. Democratic and Republican, if they are Republican, are now hard at work extricating or at tempting to extricate the Governor out of tho labyrinth of political perfidy, bun comb, ignorance and demagogy. Oregon would have a better opinion of George Chamberlain if ho came out openly and acknowledged that he only wanted to pull the wool over the taxpayers eyes or that he wanted to flop and Jbray. has WJiat the Canal Will Do. Spokane Spokesman-Review. What water competition may do been recently shown In the shipment of a quantity of whisky from the Atlantic coast to Spokane at a saving of 25 per cent on the cost of rail transportation. If this saving may be effected by ship ping by water around the Horn, It Is easy to see how the cost of shipping goods from the East will be reduced when the isthmian canal is constructed. With the long trip around the continent of South America eliminated the water mileage will be cut down more than one-half and the time of transit shortened correspond ingly. This should result In a notable re duction In transportation over the water route. NOTE AND COMMENT. Woo i rig Canada. Representative Thomas of North Car olina has introduced a bill looking to a reciprocal tariff arrangement with Can ada, whereby that country will remove her duty of 2 cents a pound on strawber ries. Canada, dear Canada, "- Forget about Alaska, And make merry Athabasca, "With the Carolina berry. We will lift some customs bar, 12 You'liust amend the tariff Such Is the attractive promise Made by Lerlslator Thomas. In Halifax, Regina, Vancouver and Quebec, Fruit from Carolina Shall slither down, your neck; Display no hesitation O'er so charming annexation. Abandon all ferocity, Canada, dear Canada, Give play to reciprocity. And forget your animosity; We'll be lenient with you, very, If you buy our Southern berry; We may even enter free All Canadian-planted tea. ; So New Brunswick and Ontario, Scova Notla and Quebec, Deem not Thomas a Lothario, . Buy his berries by the peck. Who knows but. our two nations May forget their past vexations " And for one another root. Sweetened by the luscious fruit, Berry that perhaps was sent To unify a continent. Fort Clatsop at St. Louis. O sage down-Easter, when you leave The webs that Midway spielers weave, And wish to educate your mind Concerning- others of your kind. Be sure to seek the sturdy fort "Where sturdy Oregonlans sport. Look for the Clatsop fort of logs. Brought from a land of rain and fogs. And learn how life goes on today In Clatsop County far away. The people there all live In forts. Built of big logs of various sorts; It Is not safe to wander there, So savage Is the grizzly bear; And Indians roam the river shore. Thirsting to drink the paleface gore. Down-Easter, this will be your view. So other eights and scenes eschew; And with delighted horror thrill. Seeing of Clatsop fort your fill. Lee-Metfords and Krags Don't Count. The red triangle on the Bass's ale label used to be called the "enterinc wedge of civiliza tion," but today the baseball bat Is civiliza tion's club to smash barbarism. Mall and Ex press. Happy days- In Colorado. Pneumonia is stronger than Imagina tion. ; Portland appears to be a crackerjack place for crackers. Rodrlgo Lopez, physician to Queen Elizabeth, isisaid to have been the orig inal of Shylock. Certain secret Jews in London gave Cromwell important in formation concerning the plans of Charles Stuart in Holland and of the plots of Spain. The commercial policy which had led to the famous navigation act of 1651 made Cromwell desirous of attracting the rich Jews from Amsterdam to Lon don; so, treating the opposition 'of clergy and merchants with indifference, the great protector gave permission to Jews to dwell and trade in England on condition that they did not obtrude their worship on public notice. Under this permission land for a Jewish cem etery was purchased in 1657, and a lead ing Jew of Amsterdam was admitted to the Royal Exchange as a duly licensed broker, without taking the usual oaths involving a profession of faith in Chris tianity. Charles II refused to act on the petition of the merchants of Lon don saklng him to revoke Cromwell's concession, for he was grateful for as sistance given him in his exile by Jews of royalist sympathies. William III also refused a petition to expel the Jews, for he, too, had been assisted with a loan of money by rich Israel ites of Holland. Under Queen Anne, Marlborough's Influence protected the Jews, from whom he received an an nual subvention. As early as 1723 a special act of Par liament was passed which permitted Jews to hold land on condition of their taking the oath of allegiance, omitting the words "upon the faith of a Chris tian," and in 1753 a bill became a law allowing Jews to become naturalized by application to Parliament. This bill was repealed In 1754, and the effect of its repeal was to persuade the leading Jew families to bring up their children as Christians, allowing their children to grow up either without any religion or In the established church, which opened to them a career in any profession. In 1829, when the Roman Catholics of Eng land were freed from their disabilities, the hopes of the Jews rose high that they would obtain equal rights with other Englishmen. Macaulay cham pioned their cause most eloquently on the floor of the House of Commons, and In the pages of the Edinburgh Review in 1831, but bill after bill In their be half was defeated, and it was not until 1S46 that a number of minor disabilities were removed which had affected Jews and other dissenters from the estab lished church. In 1858 Parliament reached a compro mise by which either House might ad mit Jews by resolution allowing them to omit the words "on the true faith of a Christian," In July of that year Baron Lionel de Rothschild took the would be deprived of the ballot, and of course the disfranchisement of the illiterate negro would tell even more heavily against the Republican vote. Under such a law Kentucky would be come a reliably Democratic state. The Supreme Court of Nebraska on the 20th Inst. Issued a writ of manda mus commanding the discontinuance of the reading of the'BIble In the schools of District 21, Gage County. It was a test case. The court said that there Is nothing in the law, Constitution or his tory of the people upon which to ground the claim that it is the duty of the Government to teach religion. It is immaterial whether the objections of a parent are unreasonable." The right to be unreasonable Is guaranteed by the Constitution. The trustees affected say that they will refuse to obey the man date, and will subject themselves to contempt of -court and Its penalties be fore discontinuing the reading of the Bible. A Vision of Greatness. Lewlston Teller. With the.ppen river to the sea Lewlston will have terminal rates and be placed on an equality with Portland and the Sound cities as a commercial center. The whole territory tributary to Lewioton will be served from here. The wholesale busi ness of the whole Inland Empire will be held at the command of the business men of Lewlston. This will be the Jobbing center for all Interior points and all points' In Eastern Washington. Eastern Oregon and Northern Idaho will be In terior points for Lewlston's trade when terminal rates are given, as they will be, when the river Is opened to free naviga tion. With the open river Lewlston holds an advantage In the commercial devel opment of the Interior country that no city in the Northwest can hope to obtain. Increase of Bills In Congress. Walter H. French, file clerk of tho House of Representatives, has compiled an In teresting table to show how enormously the business of his office has grown. It shows tho number of bills Introduced in each of the last 22 Congresses, as follows: House Senate. Thlrty-sl.xth 560 Thirty-seventh 577 Thirty-eighth 4S5 Thirty-ninth 634 Fortieth SS0 Forty-first 1,375 Forty-second 1,652 Forty-third 1.361 Forty-fourth 1,293 Forty-fifth 1,865 Forty-sixth 2.224 Forty-seventh 2.503 Forty-eighth 2.671 Forty-ninth 3.358 Fiftieth 4,000 Fifty-first - 5.130 Fifty-second 3,"SS5 1-i.ty-third 2.SC0 Fifty-fourth 3.736 Kirty-ntth o.kh Fifty-sixth 6.070 Fifty-seventh 7,445 This compilation, moreover, takes no ac count of Joint and concurrent resolutions or single resolutions, of which there aroA oavaral VmnrAf? In n cf5fnn- I of Reps. 1,020 793 813 1.234 2.023 3.091 4.073 4.S91 4.70? 6.54S 7,257 7.635 8.290 11.260 12,664. 14,033 10.623 8,987 10.378 12.223 14.327 17,560 The outflow of cotton Is the cause of the increase of our exports in October to $160,370,005, against $144,327,428 in Oc tober, 1902. Cotton to the value of $60, 283,412 was exported, against $42,133,141 in October of last year. The present high price accounts in part for the larger figures. Breadstuff fell oft nearly $3,000,000. Imports, instead of expanding, show a decrease to $81,931, 005, against $87,424,070 in October, 1902. The decrease Is due in part, it is be lieved, to the diminished importation of materials used In industries which have restricted their operations and in part to the Impaired ability of many con sumers to buy imported luxuries. That Kansas is a prosperous agricul tural state is shown from the records at the University of Kansas. Of 856 stu dents who gave the occupation of par ents, 280 came from the farm and 162 'are the children of merchants In the smaller towns. Then In order follow: Real estate and Insurance agents, 52; lawyers, 47; physicians, 43; clerks, 43; carpenters, 36; bankers, 34; commercial travelers, 29; manufacturers, 20; rail road employes. 19; public officers, 18; laborers, 17; teachers, 17; ministers, H; editors, 7; teamster, 7; blacksmiths, 4; mechanics, 3; .barbers, 3; undertakers, 2; laundrymen, 1; artist, 1; photogra pher, L The British monarchy seems to be on a pretty sound basis. The Boy Orator of the Platte is over there, but appar ently does not shake It. Yet why should he, making happy, cheek by Jowl, with a lot of goldbugs? It is a sad world, and the bravest and the best fall by the way. v Newspaper Influence Not Lost. Whatcom Reveille. In the main, The Oregonlan Is right in the position as regards the decline of Jour nalistic influence. It is true that the press Is not able to bulldoze the public into any certain views. The wise Jour nalist, who can read the signs of the times, makes no effort to influence his readers in that way. His aim is to show his readers to give them facts and fig uresto reason with them; and those whom he cannot reach In this way he should make no effort to reaclu The press Itself has been the most powerful factor In emancipating the people from subserviency from yielding to tho "bull- dozor." If the people have been educated to a point where they can be reached only bv a rasonable presentation of fact where prejudice and baser motives can avail but little the credit Is In great part duo to, the enlightening Influence, of the newspaper and tho magazine; to the uni versity and the pulpit in some degree, but far more so to the press. It Is hard to repress the Impulse to state In this con nection that The Oregonlan Itself has been one of the very greatest Influences in the country for the enlightenment of the people. The Oregonlan, with its abje. scholarly editorial page, has certainly not lost Its Influence. True, it Is not a "bull dozing" Influence not a driving, but it Is a leading toward the truth an educa tion of the popular mind. The Oregonlan's position against tho dicta and dogmatic Instruction Is what wo would expect from so enlightened a Journal. a In High Finance. ' Chicago Tribune. In high flnanco Rockefeller Is the rising and Morgan the setting sun. The "deadly" parallel tells why: Rockefeller Morgan companies. companies. Capital stock ...$ C58.542.300 $2,153,001,600 Market value... 1.041.521,582 - 1,020.110.812 "Water None. 1,132,841,788 T The Flight of Youth. Richard Henry Stoddard. There are gains for all our losees. There are balms for all our pain; But when youth, the dream, departs. It takes something from our hearts. And It never comes again. We are stronger, and are better. Under manhood's sterner reign. Still we feel that something sweet Followed youth, with flying feet. And will never come, again. Something beautiful Is vanished. And we sigh for It In vain; We behold It everywhere. On the earth, and In the ti(r, But It never comes again. A Composite Work. Smart Set. "I would like," said the youth, "to write a great book. How shall I go about it?" "Don't, I beg of you," said the novelist, "Write one that pays, as I do, or else study law." "I do not care to write a book for the sake of the pay," said the youth. Ho was very young, and must be forgiven for this. "Perhaps, after all, I had better be a lawyer." So ho became a lawyer. But the old am bition to write a great book came over him again. "Anything but that," said a friend to whom he told his wish. "If you don't like the law, be a doctor." So he studied medicine. In time, however, this palled upon him. Ho still thought of that book. Ho felt that he had a mission. "You could do much more in tha pulpit," said another. So he preached until tho hollowness of It came over him. And he left the pulpit. One day he woke up and found that the great book was written. And he laughed at the thought. "It was not I it wa3 tho lawyer, the doctor, the clergyman and the other man who did it." MIssourlans Smoke Up. New York Sun. The Missouri Society of the City of New York held its fourth annual meet ing and smoker at Delmonlco's Monday night. These officers were elected: President, Joseph C. Hendrlx; vice-president, the Rev. Dr. R. P. Johnston, of tho Fifth-Avenue Baptist Church; secre tary. Samuel H.'Ragland, of Smart Set; treasurer, Maurice J. Downer; directors, 1 Henry Wollman, John W. Harrington, M. D. Hunton and William A. Edwards. As soon as a man was elected he was escorted from the small round table at which he had been sitting to the head of tho table. The Rev. Dr. Johnston had no sooner left his table than two waiters appeared from behind a portiere with two quarts of whisky for the five table com panions with whom the clergyman had been drinking water. ' A Calendar Thanksgiving. Aloysius Coll In the Ladles' "World. 1402. Thanks to the Master Mariner of Fate. For men of wander-wish and purpose brave To man tho shallops of discovery. And chart a waiting world beyond the wave. 1020. Thanks to the Staff of Heaven's Pilgrimage For these that land, of stern and sturdy 8tocb , ,. ,. To plant their scallop-shells on hallowed sand. And found a proud dominion on the rock. 1775. Thanks to tho Mighty Arbiter of War For hosts to battle, cannon to defend. Armies to strike and dauntless blood to shed. A cause to fight and Freedom In the end. 1SG5. Thanks to the God of Morcy and of Love For hands that close the great divide of Hate, In friendship leal, and union olive-twined, Forgiving and forgetting, state for state. 100a. For groves of pine and. barn3 that bulge with grain. Contentment of a people glad; and free, For every good of hand and heart and soul Thanks to the Father of Prosperity. Cubans are already apportioning tha patronage consequent on their admission to the Union. De Wolf Hopper says he aspires to be come a tragedian, probably in a Pick wickian sense. Strange that the theatrical star whom Frohman is to marry should give up her name of Light. Since his marriage Senator Piatt Is so subdued that he Is ready to hitch with Governor Odell. The "original sideshow" man is reported to have died in Ohio. Possibly the first sideshows were original; there are none of that kind now. Dice decided which of two young men should run for Councilman In Sumpter. So If things go wrong chance can bev blamed Instead of the voters. Do Witt Is now famous. His kick that won the game for Princeton against Yale has been used as the text of a sermon by Dr. Burrell at the theological seminary. Even In old Hungary graft is becoming an agitating question. It seems strange a country so long experienced In govern mental Institutions should not long ago hav.e recognized the fact that graft Is Inevitable and necessary to the existence of the machine. Bryan must have sympathized with hi3 fellow silver-tongue. Lord Rosebery, in his "viewing with alarm" the course of the government. If the peer had never been successful In leading his party to victorj', with what understanding, could. Bryan clasp his hand. A Sound paper takes Solomon to tsk (although he has been dead a long time) for being so foolish as to have had 600 wives. Solomon, at that, was no chump. He knew 600 women could never act unani mously, and it would only be necessary for one crowd to knock him to have tho rest as his warm defenders. The good old game of football, played by America's youth for the love of the sport! Manager Nathan of the Nevada team says: I shall recommend all football managers whom I meet to steer clear of the University of Washington, even If they have an absolute guarantee by which they can clear $500 a game. Money would be appreciated, but Mr. Nathon loves honor, or something, more. Parisians were so universally affected by the walking craze that even the poet3 held a contest. They had to walk ten kilo meters, and before reaching the winning post compose a poem on a subject to bo announced at the start. On this occasion the subject given was "The Inconvenience of Having Corns on the Feet," the Judge humorously declaring that it might be treated either In a serious or In a Jocular way. Unfortunately for the world tho winner's flight of imagination, possibly helped out by sad experience, has not been published. The newly married are apparently fair game for all their acquaintances. The old and tame delights of pelting them Iwith rice and old shoes hav.e fallen Into disuse, for even a bombardment of rice and old shoes did not cause the bride and bridegroom the annoyance desired by their friends. For one thing It did not last long enough. So some people In Cin cinnati thought up a new plan. As their doomed friend was on his way to the train for Cleveland they rushed up and hand cuffed him to his wife, a wrist of each In the "darbies." Then they told the victims the key had been sent to Cleveland by mail,' and that it would be found at the hotel. The craze for "associations" and "so cieties" and "clubs," especially among women, is becoming fierce. The latest in this line is the "Society of Ship Spon sors," membership therein being limited to women that have christened United States men-of-war. Next will be the "Nieces of Men That Are Not Sons of Any Revolution" and "Aunties of the Panama Republic", "A Society of Women That Have Kept House" would be a good thing, or a "Club of Non-Club-Belonging Spinsters." WEX. J.