THE SUNDAY OREGOJSflAN, POKTIAND, JANUARY- 7, 1900. Entered at the Fcstcfflce .at Porllarfl, Oregon, ai cecoai-class -matter. ' TELEPHONES. Editorial Eeoms...-i061 Business Office 6S3 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. By Mall postage prepaid), la Advance Sally, with Sunday, per month. ......... ....$0 SS Salty. Sunday excepted, per year.......... T 50 Dally, wlrn Sunday, per year. .......... . 3 00 Sunday, per year ......................... 2 CO The Weekly, per jear...... ........ ...-.. 1 B0 The "Weekly, 3 months ... -..-. 50 To City Subscribers Bally, per week, denvered, Scndays exeepted.I5c Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays included.20e News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonian bould be addressed Invariably "Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of nny Individual, letters relating to advertising, subscriptions or to any bnslness matter .should be addreesed simply "ffhe Oregonjan." The Oregonian does not buy poems or starlea Jrom individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it -without solicita tion. No stamps ehould bolnclosed for this pur pose. Paget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 855. Tacoma postomce. Eastern Business Office The Tribune building. New York city; "The" Rookery." Chicago; the S C Beckwith special agency, TCew Tork. For cole in San -Francisco by X K Cooper. 746 Market street; near the Palace hotel, and at Goldsmith Bros,, 23G Butter .street. Per sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. TODAY'S "WEATHER. Occasional rain: winds changing to southeast, becoming frpsflr to brisk. PORTLAJTD, SUNDAY, JAN. 7, MOODY AND BEECHER. At a recent meeting of Plymouth church, Dr, Lyman Abbott, who was present for the first time since his re tirement from the pastorate, said that Mr. Moody was the greatest evangelist of his time, and that he did more than any other man to make people study and stand by the Bible. Dr. Hillis, the present pastor, announced that the fif tieth anniversary of the beginning of Henry "Ward Beecher's pastorate would be the first Sunday in January, and a committee at his suggestion was ap pointed to arrange for its celebration. Today, therefore, Plymouth church, which honors the memory of Moody, win hold formal services in memory of Henry "Ward Beecher, who stood for something that Moody was not, viz., a very able and eloquent pulpit orator, but not a great evangelist. The difference between Moody and Beecher was not chiefly one of educa tion and training. It was a spiritual, if not a moral difference; for Beecher never rose even to the high level of that highly educated preacher, Ph illips Brooks, as a true evangelist In spite of his very great and versatile talents, Beecher was a comparative failure, measured by the rare quality of such men as "Wesley, Channing, Parker, Moody and Phillips Brooks, because his soul was never absolutely sunk in his spiritual and ethical work. He could construct a very powerful, impressive and popular sermon, but that is some thing that may involve purely intellec tual, not spiritual energy- His rest lessness under his pastoral burdens showed this. He was willing to play, in fact loved to play, the part of a dramatic pulpit orator, but it "was re pulsive to him to be a pastor. "No man whose soul Is in his holy calling, If his bodily health is not seri ously broken, consents to separate the preacher from the pastor. If Beecher1 had been a man of true evangelical moral genius, like Wesley, Channing, Parker and PhilHps Brooks; if he had been a man with not only an intellec tual, but a spiritual, title to stand in the pulpit, he would have deemed the pastoral work of his calling as noble and worthy employment for his per sonal influence and moral energies as heating irons for every popular politi cal or social watchfire from Maine to Oregon. He was not a man with a spiritual message in his mouth. His nature was not, spiritually, as abso lutely pure and unselfish as that of Parker, Brooks or Moody, and there fore those who speak in his praise to day cannot truthfully claim Beecher ever to have risen to their lofty level of evangelical work and influence. Beecher, to do him justice, was a stronger thinker, a greater orator, an abler theological controversialist, than any of these men, but he was not so great an evangelist. He would have enjoyed the field of politics as heartily as he did that of the pulpit, but the evangelists we have named would have behaved like fish out of water in any other work than that oFthe self-denying pastor and evangelist It seems to us that this memorial cel ebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of Beecher's pastorate "will only serve to obtain from the pub lic press a reiteration of the judgment pronounced upon Beecher's remarkable career when it was closed by death in 1B87, viz., that he had lost the spiritual confidence of the leading clergymen of his own -denomination and of the fair minded public slowly but steadily after his famous trial in 1875 ended in dis agreement of the jury. After that event Beecher never recovered the con fidence of that portion of the public who do not go to church for amuse ment; who do not regard a church as a sort of sanctified theater or opera house; who do not go to church to be dazzled by a display- of pujjpit dramat ics, but who go there-'for -humble and devout worship, for spiritual illumina tion and refreshsaent. The Rev. Dr. torrs, the BV. Dr. "William M. Tay lor and the Rev. Dr. Budington were sincerely persuaded, of Beecher's moral unfitness to stand in a Christian pulpit, and they refused fellowship with him from the day that the testi mony of the great trial was given to the public Behind these clergymen stood a tremendous force of public opinion. Beecher -resisted his fate with a courage, an art and an energy that extorted admiration even from those who believed him guilty, or at least were doubtful of his innocence. As a great actor who thrills a theater, as a great orator "Who extorts applause, Beecher was an 'unquestionable force to the end of his days, but he missed the support of those who had once valued him in the confidential and delicate re lation of a great pastor and spiritual guide. After the trial of 1874-75, he was nothing but a great ship wrestling with a great storm; he fired his guns; he sent up his rockets to the skies; he displayed stout and skillful seaman ship, but in spite of all his efforts his church drifted nearer the breakers and his strong hand was not able to make her successfully ride the seas. While his intellect was as efficient, his energy as remarkable as ever, his influence dwindled down to comparatively small proportions. He "was kinsr only in the local Lilliput of Plymouth church, where once He had been -amongth?e, most conspicuous of the nation's moral and spiritual leaders. A POSSIBLE SOLUTION. The impressive thing about the Gametree engagement, as with other recent episodes, Is the withering, dev astating, annihilating fire of the Boers. Esprit du corps is comparatively profit less when a brief display of it results only in a massacre so frightful that hostilities are suspended to facilitate the labors of Bed Cross forces, while friend and foe gather over the heaps of lacerated corpses and still breathing forms, to recriminate over the charac ter of weapons and missiles used. The possibility of speedy repetition of this sort of thing is very distinct. If the British forces are to persist in press ing forward to Dadysmith, Kimberley and Mafeking, they can only win after just such decimating assaults as these latest ones, indecisive where they have not been worse. The Boers have the three-fold to six-fold advantage of the entrencheti defense. Their lines are so widely fortified, and their mobility is so great, that the approved device of flanking seems to have lost any mean ing it once bore. In order to have ul timate victory, there must be more Gametrees, more Modder Rivers, more Tugela fords. Nobody doubts that the British em pire is abundantly able to keep up this sort of thing; but contemplation of the fearful price that must be paid for any considerable forward movement will certainly set public sentiment in Eng land to thinking whether after all there is not some-better way to Pretoria than wading knee-deep in British blood. Cessation of hostilities and mediation would be one way, but it is obviously not to be thought of, not because of what the Transvaal is, but because of what the empire is. A long delay, with slow advance at length of overwhelm ing numbers with superior artillery would do, but not for this either is British sentiment in any mood. There is a way easy and decisive, and that is through occupation and use of Delagoa bay. This would almost end the war; for it would afford an easy march into the heart of the enemy's country and it would draw the Bpers away from their present fortified positions. The wonder is that the coup has not already been tried. The relations between Great Britain and Portugal are of the closest. The latest treaty between the two powers has never been officially promulgated, but it is known to bind Britain to re establish Portugal financially, as she has already done with Egypt and Slam, and to this end to administer certain of Portugal's outlying estates, Delagoa bay being one of them. It is even be lieved in diplomatic circles that stip ulations of the unratified treaty of 1879 were enacted, giving to England the right to embark and disembark troops, stores and munitions of war at Lorenzo Marquez, an eitheirto keep fhemjthere Gr else to convey them across Portu guese territory to any point desired. It is not difficult to believe that German assent to and co-operation with this treaty has been secured with Emperor William, at recent conferences, inas much as the Delagoa railroad line to Pretoria is an altogether German en terprise, and King Carlos of Portugal is a'scion of theGerman sovereign house of Coburg and comprises among his titles the German one of Duke of Sax ony. If these understandings of treaty and German friendship are correct, the most feasible way to end the Boer "War is to occupy Delagoa bay in trust for Portugal, and take the straight road for Pretoria, Why, then, hesitate? The most prob able explanation is that the move would precipitate hostile action else where on the part of France and Rus sia, for which England is not yet .fully prepared. Lord Salisbury said last spring that within eighteen months the British public would be as familiar with the geography of the Persian gulf as with that of the English channel. The Persian gulf is where Russia craves a harbor, and toward which her Afghanistan movements and plans are directed. As to France, she will strike wherever opportunity offers, when the time comes, chiefly with a view to re couping herself through Morocco for losses in Egypt and the Soudan. Great Britain went to war with the Boers un prepared, but she will be ready before she throws down the gauntlet to France and Russia, Of the result there need be no doubt. Continental coali tions against England are easily formed, but at the final banquet they occupy, not the chairs at table, but the platters on the board. THE LIGHT CUBE. The world always lends attentive ear to the discoveries of medical science, especially those that promise to eradi cate all the ills to which human flesh Is heir by new, cheap and heretofore untried means. The blue-glass cure, the red-room cure and the barefoot cure, may be cited as recent and famil iar examples of this fact. It is true that all of these and many more so called cures have had their day as fads, to be abandoned even by the most cred ulous, but the world still hopes for the genuine panacea for all human ills, and if not actually seeking, is ready to find. The latest claimant to this eagerly sought boon 4s Dr. Finsen, of Copenha gen, who proposes to cure all manner of diseases by the scientific use of light natural and artificial. In proof of his ablltiy to apply this "offspring of heaven, first-born," to the eradication of disease, he cites a multitude of cases wherein he has applied it suc cessfully. If we had nothing but the doctor's word for it, supplemented by testimoni als from those who profess to have been "cured," we might pass the mat ter by as illustrating the vagaries of another crank and his dupes. But Mr. LauritisS. Swenson, United States min ister to Denmark, takes pains to vouch for the respectability of Dr. Finsen, and confirms the report of remarkable cures effected by him, adding that emi nent physicians in Copenhagen Indorse the new discovery. The cure is based upon the alleged wonderful medical properties of light. By concentrating the light rays upon the parts of the body affected, it Is found that certain changes are produced, and experiment has led the Copenhagen doctor to be lieve that he can fit the light in a curative degree to every form of dis ease. Some ailments require the white light of the sun; others yield to the scorching properties of electric light; others are conquered by the color rays, and so on. The discoverer claims to have successfully treated smallpox by the red light. More than 350 cases of lupus vulgaris, he. says, have been cured by the white and violet rays, while there are other formula for treat ing erysipelas, scarlet fever, etc., etc. Many physicians believe in the- power of light over disease, but the -recorded cases of cures through its agency are neither numerous nor startling. The blue-glass craze of some years ago is well remembered, butv as far as the records show, no sick person was- ever really cured by it. The memory of that sensation, and of many similar experi ences, will make the general public skeptical of the light cure, though pro claimed from and indorsed in high places. The truth in regard to all of these cures, when the truth has been reached, seems to be that the persons "cured" were of the large class of" im aginary invalids whose relief was ac complished by the simple process of giving them something to think about besides themselves. In other words, there was nothing the matter with them, and nothing, attractively named; accomplished their "cure." TRADE OF TWO HARBORS. The government printing offiee at Washington has just turned out a neat little brochure entitled "Annual Report of the Supervising Special Agent of the Treasury Department for the Fiscal Tear Ended June 30, 1899." This publi cation contains some very interesting facts and figures, touching on the rela tive Importance of Portland and Puget sound as importing points. By sub tracting the net results shown by these official figures from the Tacoma har bormaster's "official report," it becomes an easy matter to ascertain how large a proportion of wind and padding is contained in the figures which the city on Commencement bay has been send ing out to the world. The aggregate receipts of the Puget sound district, which includes Seattle, Tacoma, Port Townsend and half a dozen other smaller ports, for the fiscal year end ing June 3&, 1839, were $330,655 23. The cost of collection of this sum was 28.8 cents per dollar. The aggregate re ceipts for the district of the Willam ette, which consists of the port of Portland, for the year mentioned, were $403,513 93, and the cost of collection was 14.2 cents per dollar less than one half the expense attached to collecting a much smaller amount on Puget sound. These figures are a true index of the commerce of the ports men tioned, for they represent actual im portations by the merchants of the cities on Puget sound and at Portland, and not the "in transit" shipments, which have no further bearing on Pa cific coast commerce than the few dol lars disbursed to laborers who truck the freight from steamer to car. While the figures for the last fiscal year show Portland well in the lead of all Puget sound ports combined, even these highly satisfactory figures will be ex celled by those for the current fiscal year, as the importations to date are far ahead of those for a corresponding date last year. The exports from Puget sound ports make a worse showing proportionately than the imports. As no export duty is paid on anything shipped foreign from the Pacific Northwest, this mat ter is not taken up in the special agent's report mentioned. Some light Is thrown on this matter, however, by the West Coast Trade, a weekly com mercial paper printed at Tacoma. In its issue of December 28 this paper printed on the first page, In big, black type, a list of six steamers which had sailed from Tacoma during November and December. These steamers and the value of the cargo accredited to each were as follows: St. Irene, $327, 434; City of Dublin, $210,670; Brecon shire, $200,887; Energia, $203,938; Ta coma, $118,898; Glenogle, $218,817; total, $1,280,644. The same issue of the paper contains copies of the manifests of the Tacoma and Glenogle, in detail, but not of the other steamers. The total value of the two cargoes mentioned is $337,715; but, of this amount, the value of Wash ington or Oregon products or manufac tured goods is but $55,019, or 16 per cent of the total value of the cargoes. The remaining four vessels, whose mani fests are not available, probably show the same proportion, so that the actual value of the exports manufactured or produced in the Northwest, as shipped from. Tacoma on six steamers during the two months, was but $204,903 04. Portland was hampered in securing freight space on the steamers during November and December, and the total value of the cargbes of the three steam ers, Monmouthshire, Thyra and Aber geldie, sailing from this port during that period, was but $405,106. In strange contrast to the shipments on the Puget sound line, however, the ex ports of commodities produced in Ore gon or Washington were valued at $286,391 76, or more than 70 per cent of the total value of everything shipped on the steamers. In other words, but 16 per cent of the value of the exports by way of Puget -sound ports is drawn through the channels of trade in the territory tributary to Tacoma, while 70 per cent of the value of the Portland exports arises from Oregon and Wash ington, making its influence felt in every, branch of business. Of course, the 25 or 30 cents per ton paid for load ing on board the steamers the cotton and iron from the East is felt to a cer tain extent in a small place like Ta coma, but it is insignificant when com pared with the amount of money put in circulation by the actual business of supplying cargoes for ships, as well as loading them aboard. FROM THE BRIDE'S PARENTS, A COW. An industrious young rancher of Sur prise valley, in Lake county, was re cently wedded to a yqung woman of Modoc county, California. The list of gifts to the couple appears in the Lake view Examiner, and is headed with "a fine cow, presented by the parents of the bride." This may appear a trifle grotesque to young people of aimless life, who have never earned a dollar nor, engaged in a productive calling; but to a couple just setting up foe themselves, out on the frontier, where work muBt be the pdrtion of both, the gift of a good cow is better than jewels or plate. ( It is a reminder, too, of the condi tions in the Willamette valley fifty years ago, when honest men and noble women started in their married life un der circumstances similar to those which circumscribe the distant cabin in Surprise valley. From those early pioneer homes have come the influences which have made the state of Oregon its reputation for probity and stability. Their hardy children, reared under rude conditions which made them in dustrious and frugal, have entered, all the walks of life and. are effective fac tors in the state's development. To their callings they have brought re spect ,for- the. dignity of work and re gard for the obligations ot professional life, which is likely to be unsurpassed by men and women who have never known the stimulus of want nor felt the spus ot poverty. From its- humbler homes the nation has drawn its ablest presidents, great est generals, profoundest statesmen. The future will likely duplicate the past. The highest places are still to be conquered by energy and capacity. The child of Surprise valley still has the chance to rank the child of Gotham. May happiness abide with the young couple who courageously take up the burdens of life on the frontier; may theyrealize that there is no limit to tho. station which children of America may reach through ambition and endeavor; may unselfish love make bright their primitive home; and may they enjoy to the full the common-sense gifts of practical friends, who fitly aid them with donations adapted to the needs of a new country and industrious people. RAILROADS AND TEMPERANCE RE FORM. Temperance effort of the aggressive, persistenttype, to which the mind com monly reverts when reference is made to the temperance movement, is wont to credit itself with whatever change for the "better is noted in the charac ter for sobriety of men holding respon sible places in the great world of work. Without .detracting or seeking to de tract from the results in this field of endeavor of the painstaking, often self sacrificing, labor that has been per formed by self-styled, widely adver tised temperance advocates, and the movements that they have Inaugurated and carried forward, thoughtful, ob servant persons cannot fail to note the practical value of educational work, unadvertised as such, but broadly salu tary that has followed along regular business lines. Take, for example, the educative work that has, unconsciously, in connection with the specific duty with which, they have charged them selves, been done by the railroads in the cause of temperance during the past quarter or third of a century. It is recalled by persons whose mem ories go back to the railroad era in its beginnings, that the first service on the railroads was not seldom, performed by conductors and brakemenand even by engineers, more or less under the in fluence' of intoxicants. The public safety was, however, in the balance, and the financial interests of the rail road companies demanded the service Of careful men, which means, first of all, habitually sober men. About 1865, or soon thereafter, the railroads began to exact rules that no employe, front highest to lowest, should use intoxi cants. Hundreds of men, whose hab its were fixed, were forced into retire ment, and the men' stepping into the vacant plaees knew upon what rule of conduct their tenure of employment de upended. The rule has been generally enforced, so that now every road of any importance in the country will prompt ly discharge an employe who indulges in drinking. Railroad service requires dependable men; the drinking man is like the mildly or periodically insane man, in that it is impossible to tell when he will become irresponsible for 'his conduct. His elimination, there of orer from, the .working forqe of a busi ness that holds such possibilities of dis- aster to life and property became nec essary. The educative force of this demand upon American labor was of vast im portance. It was temperance education of the most radical and practical kind, though it did not take up the cudgels in the 'name of prohibition, or even of temperance. The fact is conceded that liquor-drinking disqualifies a man for a position, however competent he is in all other respects for the discharge of its duties, in which his behavior con cerns the public safety. Moreover, it is an ecpnomic law, the force of which is universally recognized, that a great business corporation cannot afford to employ even, moderate drinkers. It fol lows that, if great enterprises are thus compelled to safeguard their interests, the lesser must do so; hence the elim ination, practically speaking, of the drunkard and the drinking man from responsible, industrial life. Temper ance effort in direct lines cannot do more than this to reform, or, better still, to form, the habits of a large and growing class of American workmen. Whether they have gone as far in this direction is a matter of opinion which since statistics do not bear upon the subject it is unprofitable to discuss. "LETTING OUT THE BELT. mi. i- I- i j iitw,lrtJie "bimetalism" of Windy William The Rev. Mr. Ackerman say tflgWqir , lM allwM. mmnmu "the liberal church is one of the small est in the country today." In the technical sense that the Unitarian or the Universalist church is not large in numbers, Mr. Ackerman is right, but in the sense that the old time orthodox churches have been obliged to "let out their belts ' a num ber of holes, lie is altogether wrong. Sixty years' ago a literal hell was uni versally preached with all the fervor if not with the eloquence of Jonathan Edwards. The damnation of unbap tized infants was preached from the rustic pulpits of New England. Sixty years ago there was no toleration of such heretics as Professor McGiffert, upon whose clement treatment the Rev. Dr. Henry J. Van Dyke congratulates himself. Sixty years ago did the Protestant Episcopal church tolerate the presence of such heretics as Heber Newton, Rev. Dr. Rylance, and. other prominent clergymen of- New York city? Were there any "professors" tolerated in Methodist or Baptist pulpits or theo logical schools who were directly or in directly evangelists of the "higher bib lical criticism"? The truth Is that the pulpit' of the Congregational church from Chicago to Boston, from Buffalo to Baltimore, is more "liberal" in its teachings than the Unitarian church was when Dr. Channing was at the height of his fame, from 1825 to 1840. Fifty years ago it was a common thing in the Congregational pulpit in New England to hear solemn sermons, long drawn out, against dancing; sermons which their authors laugh at today. The growth of the "liberal faith" is found in the vast liberalization of the old-time hidebound orthodox churches. They have been obliged to choose be tween death or letting out their doc trinal and disciplinary belts a number of holes. It was a choice between larger religious liberty or denomina tional death. The article of The Ore gonian is: described by Mr. Ackerman as a statement without argument; the statement is true, and to that extent is an impregnable argument. The so-called orthodox: church lives only because it has been sagacious enough to let out its belt, and thus, re tain its clientage. It was compelled to breathe with more freedom or burst. Is not the Congregational pulpit of to day, which includes Lyman Abbott, nearer Channing and even Theodore Parker than it is to Jonathan Ed wards, or even Lyman Beecher? THE RECORD OF DIVIDENDS. How the East draws its wealth from the whole country, and very largely from the West, is shown by publication of the January dividends, in Eastern papers. Here, for example, is the Hart ford Courant. It presents this sum mary of disbursements for January dividends by corporations of Hartford: Railroads S 167,500 00 Banks . 245.700 00 Fire Insurance companies CO7.5O0 00 Life insurance companies- 178,500' 00 Manufacturing' companies 205,408 74. Miscellaneous 00,760 00 Total , $1,044,308 74 Hartford, be it observed, is but a small city, and the dividends paid there are but trifling compared with those paid at Boston and New York, Smaller cities, like Fall River, Worcester, Prov idence and Newark; large cities like Philadelphia and Baltimore, report div idends whose totals are astonishing. But, astonishing as they are, "they are much smaller," says the Boston Her ald, "than the actual payments on this account." For, as the Herald explains, there are a great many close corpora tions whose disbursements on account of dividends are not given out, and which, consequently, do not figure in the published exhibits. Those January payments of which we have a record represent the earnings of the railways, the banking Institu tions, the manufacturing and commer cial establishments, and the great ma jority of the corporations that . have shared in the phenomenal prosperity that has attended all the prudently managed departments of business dur ing the year Just closed. These pay ments are the best possible evidence of the soundness of the business situation throughout the country. At the same time they give an intimation of the ex tent to which the industry of the whole country, and especially of the West and South, pays tribute to the capital of the East, whose vast accumulations control and direct the business of the. continent. It is this vast mass of capi tal, established in business, with profits assured from connections with all parts of the country, that renders it practi cally impossible to start manufactur ing enterprises, or industrial and com mercial undertakings that 'require capi tal, in the states where everything is yet new, where there is but little ac cumulation of capital, where population is sparse and where knowledge of the conditions necessary to success is. wanting,, and can only be had. by ex perience gained through tentative ef fort, which will always mean waste and loss before results can be gained. NEVER WEARY OF BREATH. It is still a cry of "Scissors! scissors! scissors!" with Windy "William. Still he shouts for "bimetalism" at "16 to 1." But each of these terms excludes the other. It would be as rational to cry for "hot Ice." A colored pie-vender on the street was crying his wares "hot pies!" A customer bought one and found it frozen. "You rascal!" he exclaimed, "you said this was a hot pie." ''Dat's all right, boss," was the answer, "dat's de name ob de pie." So Windy William gives his 16-to-l pie the name of bimetalism. Once more it may be well to say that when- the advocates of free and unlim ited coinage of silver at 16 to 1, or any other arbitrary ratio fixed by law, can point to a single instance In history where gold and silver ever kept com pany with each other, except on the in flexible rule of equality of commercial value, it may be time to ask the people of the United States to discard the les son learned from the -experience of all mankind, and accept their financial theories. . And once more it may be well to ex plain what "free coinage at 16 to 1" really means. It means that every one who has a lump of silver that cost him $16 In gold and Is worth that sum and no more in the markets of the world, shall have the right to take it to the mint, get it made into thirty-four silver dollars for his own benefit, and be au thorized by law to "shove" these dol lars in payment of whatever debts he may have outstanding, and to cheat his creditor out of more than one-half the value. As the coinage of silver would be free to all and the "shove" general, money would fall to the silver lpasis, saver oniy woum De cornea, ana would be silver monometalism Of course, Windy William knows this. It is beyond possibility that he should not know it. With men of his stamp it is no longer necessary to have the least patience, or to treat their utter ances with even a frigid show of re spect. For crucifixion of mankind on a cross of gold, read crucifixion of Windy William and his ilk on the cross of public indignation with shameless in sincerity. At a recent meeting of the school di rectors of a Pennsylvania town, the necessity of teachers keeping in touch with current events by reading news papers and magazines was earnestly discussed. These publications are the history of the hour, and at the rapid rate at which history is being made at the present time the trend of events must be closely followed, if one would be well informed. Governments are changing, geographical bounds are shifting, science and invention axe working marvels, and the text-books are no longer complete mediums of in formation upon the matters treated. In the very nature of things they can not be. Those who instruct others must, if they do their full duty, keep themselves fully informed on events of present moment. The matter of the study of contemporaneous history ought to be generally agitated. While there are some teachers in our own public schools who make it a matter of duty to instruct their pupils in re gard to current events or Incidents of recent history, there is reason to believe that relatively few take time to Inform themselves and impart instruction upon these topics. A few minutes given each day in the higher grades to the presentment of the more import ant happenings in the political, geo graphical, industrial or scientific world would be time well spent As before stated, some of our teachers give at tention to this matter, and the eager ness with which girls and boys inquire concerning the morning's news, in the hurried hour between breakfast and school-time, in order that they may an- swer questions which the teacher "will be sure to ask," is Indirect evidence of the interest which intelligent pupils, in spired by energetic teachera, take in "what is going on in the world." "Down with fusion!" is,, the cry that comes from the populists of Texas. After an all-day session of the state executive committee, held December 30, announcement was made to the press that the meeting was unanimously against fusion of any kind for this year's campaign, and that there was. not one friend of William J. Bryan in the meeting. They even barred out Hon. Barnett Gibbs, of Dallas, who was the populist nominee for governor of Texas in 1898, because he declared his intention of voting for Bryan next No vember. They regarded Bryan very unfavorably, because, while training with fusion In Nebraska, he worked with Tammany in New York and Goe bel in Kentucky. The entire day was devoted, to consideration of plans for the coming, campaign, and it was de cided to demand that the national com mittee call the national convention at least one month earlier than either the democratic or republican convention. Finally It was determined to place middle-of-the-road tickets in the field in Texas this year for state, congres sional, legislative and county officers, and vigorously to combat all efforts at fusion. This will probably be satisfac tory news to Young, Courtney, Luce, Dr. Hill and other Oregon populists, who labored strenuously two years ago to ave their party from annihilation and absorption, but it may not be very gratifying to the silver-democratic brethren, who have been cherishing-the fond hope of securing the votes of the flatists next June. Apparently the Hill-Luce-Young element will receive much more consideration in the state and county conventions this spring than it was. accorded in 1898. F The Salem, chamber of commerce is endeavoring to secure the co-operation of boards of trade in "Valley towns for the purpose of raising money to send a competent immigration agent through the Middle Western states, to lay be fore the people there the facts about opportunities in the Willamette valley. The expense is placed at about $200 per month, exclusive of railroad fares. Every city or town subscribing is to be asked to prepare a statement of Its needs and advantages, and landowners who desire to sell farms are to be in vited to list their property with the agent. Endeavor will be made to have "Valley towns contribute to the expense in proportion to population, and it is hoped to send the agent on his mission In a few weeks. The effort may have good results, if the agent selected un derstands that quality in Immigration is more desirable than quantity. A score of thrifty, Industrious, self-reliant families will be better for the state than a legion of the roving, shiftless, purposeless class, who wander from place to place In search of competency without steady labor and well-directed effort Money Is not to be had here by loafing in towns or idling on farms; but no state promises surer returns than Oregon for Intelligent investment and good work. Much of the success of this immigration movement will depend upon the character of man who shall have It in hand. The populist central committee of Union county is reported to be divided on fusion, silver and expansion. It is evident that the majority of the com mittee favors a straight ticket and has no desire to give silver the prominence it has had in "reform" campaigns- of the past few years. When the party gets together in the spring, it will not be at all surprising if the Independent and self-asserting attitude of Jackson county populists be taken by their fellow-partisans in Union county. The genuine populist has little more use for silver than for gold as money. What he wants is "scientific money," with only problematical power in ex change. The less value it has, the more nearly it approaches the truly "scientific" idea of intrinsic worthless ness. To him, the difference between a goldbug and a silverloon is but a matter of degree, and he has favored silver only as an entering wedge to split the hard-money vote. His millen nium will not come till he has reached the truly soft basis of flatism.. The populists of Union, like all other mem bers of political parties, should. Insist on a plain and intelligible statement of their desires and purposes. They will cut a sorry figure if they drop to the state of timidity and cowardice which was once a characteristic of the repub lican party's course on the money question. Livestock business is the greatest in dustry of Kansas City. Receipts of livestock at that place during the year 1899 reached the prodigious total of 116,374 carloads on an average thirty trains a day throughout the year. Sales of livestock amounted to $121,000,000, and if resales were added, the total would be vastly increased. There are six great packing-houses In the city, and a seventh will soon be in opera tion. Corn is the basis of this enor mous business corn, the perennial source of wealth to the great Central states. The mines, of Oregon cannot fail to act as a magnet to draw capital and population to the state during the cur rent year. Their extent and richness; their location in or near the centers of civilization; the advantages of a mild climate and easy transportation, must appeal to people who saw in op posite conditions and environment in superable obstacles to the ready devel opment of the gold fields of Alaska. The Beveridge resolution does not find favor with the senators, and that's to be expected. It is short and to the point, grammatical, unstilted, and fails utterly to darken counsel by words without knowledge. This altogether unfits it for senatorial consumption, but that is just why it ought to be passed In its present form. The London Spectator makes this sound protest: "Skirmishes are de scribed as battles, petty defeats as dis asters, ordinary movements as stupen dous efforts, and unavoidable accidents as shocking destructions of human life." Mr. Bryan lays down the principle that "the dollar is all important, and that struggling- humanity deserves no consideration." Was he thinking of his lectures for revenue only, or his. $50,000 in government bonds? PUT" UP THE SWORD. I .have sung of the soldier's glorx As I never shall sins again;; I have gazed on the shambles gory, I have smelted of the slaughter-pen. There to Wood in. the Inkwell clotted. There- are stains on. the laurel, leaf. And. the pages of Fame are blotted. . With, the tears of a needless grief. The bird Is slaughtered for fashion, And the beast Is- killed for sport; And never the -word compassion Is whispered at Moloch's court. For the parent seal In thewater Is slain, and her child must die That some sister or wife or daughter Her beauty may- beautify. And the merciful thought -we smother For such is the way of man As we murder the useless mother For the "unborn astrakhan. But a season ot rest comes never For the rarest sport of all; "Will His patience endure forever. Who- noteth a sparrow'a fall? ' "When the volleys of hell are sweeping The sea and the battle plain. Do you think that our God la eleeplny. And never to wake again.? "When hunser and ravenous fever Are slaying the wasted frame. Shall we worship the red. deceiver. The devil that men call Fame? "We may swing the censer to- cover The odor of blood in. vain; God asks us. over and. over, ""Where 13 thy brother. Cain?" James Jeffrey Roche,, in Century. SERVICE. There are no "ups" in life, there are no "downs," For "high" and. "low" are words of Ilka degree: He who is light of heart when fortune frowns. He Is a king though nameless ia the towns. All things are good; all things Incur a, debt, And all must pay the same, as soon or late. The sun will rise betimes, but he must set; 'And man must seek the laws he would forget. There are no mockeries in the universe. No false accounts, n& errors -hat -will thrive The worktwe do, the good things we rehearse Are boons, of nature basely named a curse. "Give us our dally bread!" the children pray. And mothers plead, for them while thus they speak. But "Give us work. O Godl" we men. should. say. That we may gala our bread from, day to day. 'TIs not alone the crown that makes tho king; "lis service done, 'tis duty to his kind. The lark who soars so high is quick to sing. And proud to yield- allegiance to the spring-. And we who serve ourselves, whate'er befall. Athwart the dangers of the day's, behests: Oh, let'3 not shirk, at Joy or sorrow's call. The service due to Cod who serves us alii Eric Mackay. TO A VIOLIN. "What wondrous power from heaven upon. the wrought? "What prisoned Ariel within thee broods? Marvel of human skill and. numan. thought,. Light as a dry leaf in. the -winter woods! Thou mystic thing, all beautiful! What mind Conceived thee, what Intelligence began. And out of chaos thy rare shape designed. Thau delicate and perfect work of man? Across my hands thou Uest mute and still; Thou wilt not breathe to me thy secret line; Thy matchless tones the eager air shall thrill To no entreaty or command, of mine; But comes thy master, lot thou yteldest all; Passion and pathos, rapture and despair; To the soul's need thy searching voice doth, call In language exquisite beyond compare, Till Into speech articulate at last Thou eeem'st to break, and. thy charmed listener hears Thee waking echoes of the vanished past. Touching the sources ot gladness and. of tears; And with bowed!, head fie lets the sweetTwave . roll Across him, swayed by that weird power of thine. And. reverence and: wonder fill his soul That man's creation should be-so divine. Cella, Thaxter. CAMPS OF GREEN. Lo the camps of the tents of green, "Which the day3 of peace keep fllllng. and the days of war keep fllllng. J With a mystic army (Is It too order' d forward? Is It too only halting awhile. Till night and sleep pass over?) Now In these camps of green, In their tents dotting the world, In the parents, children, husbands, wives. In them. In the old and young. Sleeping under the sunlight, sleeping under the moonlight, content silent there at last. Behold the mighty vlbouac field,, and. waiting camp of all, Of the corps and generals all, ... And of each of us, O soldiers, and of each and all in the ranks we. fought. (There without hatred we all, all meet). For presently, O soldiers, we too camp In our place In the bivouac-camps of green. But we need not provide for outposts, nor word , for the countersign. Nor drummer to beat the morning drum. Walt Whitman. THEt OLI FLAG. Oft with your hat as the flag goes by. And let the heart have its say; You're man enough for a tear la your eye That you will not wipe away. Xou're man enough for a thrill that goes To your very finger tips Ayl the lump Just then In. your throat that rose Spoke more than your parted lips. Lift up the boy on your shoulder, high. And show him the faded shred Those stripes would be red as the sunset 3ky If death could have dyed thenx red. Off with your hat as the flag goes byt Uncover the youngster's head I Teach him to hold it holy and high For the sake of its sacred dead. H. C. Bunner. OUTSIDE THE TOYSHOP. Beside the door they stand anear the pane Tricked with toy-wares. It Is a dapple-gray In smooth round wafers dlght and lifts alway One prancing foot from grass-green board up- ta'en. An urchin he, oft met down alley and lane. Half lost In his wide old rags; agrin today, Because he still with fearful Joy dares lay A stroking finger on. that furry mane. He tastes his perilous pleasure like a bird Of quick, small feet and wary eye, that comes To peck strewu fragments, flown at breath scarce heard. Tou smile among the hedgerows. In the slums Tou think; "When flits this child-glee, lightly stirred. Shall manhood's craving miss even these poor crumbs? -Tane Barlow. In The Academy. AVE! Bells upon the city are ringing In the night t High above the gardens are the houses full of light; On the heathy Pentlands is the curlew flying free; And the broom Is blowing bonnle la the north countrle. We canna break the bonds that God decreed to bind. Still we'll be the children of the heather and the wind; Far away from, home, 0 It's still for you. and me; And the broom. Is blowing bonnle in. the north countrle. Robert Loui3 Stevenson. THROUGH THE STREETS. Through, the dim London morning The soldiers rode away; The crowd,. In. sable, round them; The sky above, them gray. Two strains of music played them One mournful and one glad. It was the- mournful music That sounded the least sad. BUa. Fuller Mainland la Thg Spectator.