"4C-;rv' F- V ?' " ,- - I, 'PORTLAiny, APRIL 1, 1900. he (Dresomcm. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, a second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms... .106 I Business Ofice....06? REVISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dsllr. with Sunday, per month $0 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per Tear........ T SO Dally, with Sunday, per rear 9 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 CO Tb Weekly. 3 month. .... ....... CO To City Subscribers Solly, per week, delivered. Ecndaya exceptecUSe Xielly. per week, delivered. Sundays lndudeiLSDa The Oregcnlan does not buy poems or stories from Individual!, and cannot undertake to rs turn any manuscripts sent to It without solicita tion. No stamps should be inclosed tor this purpose. Pugtt Sound Dureau Captain A. Thompson. office at 1111 Paclflo avenue, Tacoma. Box 9S3, .Tacoma postofflce. Eastern Business Office The Tribune build ng. New York city; 'The Rookery." Chicago; the 6. C. Beckwith speelrj agency. New York. For sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. 46 Market street, near the Palace hotel, and at Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street. For sale In Chicago by the P. a News Co, 817 Dearborn street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Increasing cloud! Hess, followed by showers and cooler weather Curing the afternoon; winds shifting to ooutK rly. gORTLAMI, SUNDAY, ATOIL 1, lOOO. PATRIOTISM AS A RELIGION. Through the gallantry and patriotism exhibited by the colonial forces In the Bouth African war, talk Is revived In England of closer union between Great Britain and the colonies. Even the Conservative London Standard says: "The war has brought us a long step towards such a consummation. For It has shown us that the colonies have won the strongest claims to gaining the privileges of empire by volunteering to assume its burden. And in the fight ing of the past few weeks nobly have the colonists vindicated their title to chare in the common heritage of the race." Some talk of Imperial Federation; Dut what does It mean, and how could It be brought about? It Is conceivable that It could take In Canada and Aus tralia, but how could It Include India? The area and population of India are bo great that, in its Federal aspect, as the state or canton of India, It would hold a mighty preponderance in the ImperiaT Federation, and might even govrn all the rest. "Where would Great Britain, Canada, Australia or South Africa, or all of them together, be alongside of such a yoke-fellow? The Imperial Federation cduld hardly In clude India; and yet It is the one part of the Queen's dominions where she tears the title of Empress, and It would be strange If, In forming the Queen's dominions Into an Imperial Federation, her one Imperial possession should be the only part of her dominions to be left out. Though a ruling state is not likely to stoop to the level of Its own dependen cies, yet many a ruling state has found It wise to Incorporate its dependencies in its own body. The growth of the P.omar. Empire, by gradually admit ting one class of its dependencies after another to the full Roman franchise, is the great example of all. But this process Is not federation. It is quite another case when a great power, an ancient power, a ruling power, is asked to come down from Its place, to rank for the future simply as one member alongside of Its own dependencies, even though most of Its dependencies are its 'wa children. InVriew of the difficulties It Is not possible to see how Federation of the British Empire can be accomplished. Yet it Is certain that through Joint ef fort in the present war the parts of the Empire have been drawn closer to gether. There has been an exhibit of b. common patriotism never before wit nessed among them. Adoration of the state, worship of national power, such as the world witnesses In France and Germany, begins also to be In the Brit ish Empire a sort of national religion. The cult indeed has been silently grow ing a long time. This Is the first gen eral exhibit of it throughout the dis tant parts of the Empire. The Jewish people knew patriotism sjnder the form of a national God, Iden tified with the nation, victorious with It, vanquished with it, its double, the personified genius, the spirit of the na "tion, in the sense which primitive peo ples attribute to the word spirit. Greece was a confederation of cities over which soared an idea that of the superiority of the race and Its predes tination. At Rome there was an em blem, a sort of flag, the symbol of Ro man might, of that power exercised first by a handful of citizens over a small region, then over a collection of countries, and at last over a whole sec tion of the known universe. France -was long time "finding herself." In the Hiddle Ages she began to be something precise, at least in the hearts of her children: but it was the Revolution and her later reverses that have trans formed France. Patriotism, as now understood In France, Is a sort of dogma; France imposes it; she regards It as a sort of crime not to believe In It. 'Worship of the state becomes a re ligion, yet without the old Jewish idea of a God exclusively devoted to the na tion. This conception is perhaps no permanent thing, for patriotism, like religion, will change Its nature again. Germany, through her victories, brings hack the idea of a national God; and since the last great war the ruling powers of Germany have been talking of the God of the Fatherland, as If their country held some proprietary Tight in the Deity, or was the object of his special favors, against others. The great British nation probably will not advance patriotism to the rank of a religious dogma; and yet we see In the British national mind the same move ment elsewhere so often witnessed. It Is not new In England, indeed, for It has been at work there for centuries; hut in the colonies there Is a growth or development of patriotism to which the parent country Instantly responds, as If she recognized it as identical with that spirit which is a sort of national religion. A national peril Is always the touch stone of this spirit; and the exhibit certainly has been remarkable through out the British Empire. The Oregonlan, speaking of Colonel Bryan's tour of the Northwest States, said yesterday: "He Is making many speeches, but Is getting small atten tion." It would perhaps have been more accurate to say that he Is get ting small consideration. No doubt he has large crowds at many places; but he Is not heard with the same Interest and applause as formerly. People go to see and hear him merely as they would any free show. Very few are of the opinion that he has anything of value to offer. Glib as an orator, he is no thinker, and he suggests nothing that can be of use towards the solu tion of any important problem before the country. He is serious, after his manner, but he touches the depths of no problem or subject. He skims only the surface, and deals merely with the superficialities of words, to which he gives no precise meaning and which therefore carry no weight. Mr. Bryan never utters a sentence of phrase that is quotable. But one of his expressions ever caught attention his "crown of thorns and cross of gold" and that was ridiculous and never would bear repe tition. THE CLOVEN HOOF. The Imperfect vision, the unreason ing obstinacy and the unpatriotic spirit of the true "antl" are stamped on every page of Henry Loomls Nelson's article in the April Atlantic. Its dlslngenu ousness, moreover, stands out more clearly by reason of the dispassionate tone adopted by the essayist in his In troductory paper In the March num ber. That Is to say, here and now Is discovered the Nelsonlan strategy. Let me In this first paper, reflects the essay ist, propitiate and disarm my patriotic reader, by laying aside every appear ance of weapon and armor; with the bland smile and the unruffled front of the ideal Judge, I shall Tender him an easy prey to the dagger of "antl-Im- perialism," which, at the proper Junc ture, I shall draw from Its unobserved hiding-place. In the April number he preserves the aspect of the critic so far as consistent with his purpose, yet Is forced to reveal that critic he Is not, but only a very bitter and unscrupulous assailant of the National spirit. Dispassionately judicial he is to a fault, regarding everything else but his object of assault. As to the tariff, for example, some think one thing and some another; doubtless they will pur sue the course that suits them best. As to the money question, there are sli ver men, "stirred to the very depths of their being," and sincere In their an tagonism to the Money Power; and on the other hand there are the gold men. for whom Mr. Nelson can find in his heart no warmer word than the descrip tion "sound-money men." Some pro fessed to believe that free silver In volved a degree of danger to our finance and Industry, but whether they were correct or not he really has no sort of Idea. Fair-minded to the point of Imbecil ity on the money question, our essay ist adopts toward the problems and' legacies of the war with Spain stead fast unfairness that would put a cor poration lawyer to the blush. A few of his expressions will Illustrate his train of thought. He says "It Is an In teresting fact that most of the Demo crats who announce that they are Im perialists belong to that faction of their party which has hitherto pre vented It from keeping Its pledge to reduce tariff taxation, though it Is also the fact that among the leading Repub lican anti-Imperialists are men who have labored strenuously in the cause of protection." This is not a fact at all. but an untruth that reflects credit upon Mr. Nelson's powers of ' invention. Brlce was one of the chief betrayers of the "Wilson bill, and he is dead. The others were Gorman and Jones. They are both antls today. It would be hard to mention any prominent high-tariff Republican, except Hoar, who Is against expansion now, and Hoar has never done much with the tariff. The men who have made our tariffs. In both House and Senate, are expansionists. Space forbids more than a few exam ples of the cant phrases of anti-Imperi-allsm which" Mr. Nelson Introduces, an- parently oblivious of the annihilating uiow they strike at his mask of fair ness thus: "They believe in th soundness of the assertions of our Dec laration of Independence that govern ments 'derive their Just powers from the consent of the governed';" "Imper ialism and colonialism are necessarily hostile to the spirit of modern democ racy;" "the theory that the Govern ment of the United States possesses any political power or Jurisdiction whatever, except the power and Juris, diction bestowed upon It by the Con stitution, Is repugnant to every in structed Democratic mind, and to many Republican lawyers;" "Senator Bever idge is believed to havestated the pol icy of his party in respect of the Phil ippinesthat is, that It is purely com mercial," etc These and 'many more are chimeras, long dispelled by such men as Schurman and Lindsay. "Wheth er the consent of the governed obtains depends upon what the governed wont. If they want Blavery, or anarchy, or polygamy. Government will proceed without reference to their consent. How hostile colonialism is to the spirit of modern democracy depends on Its spirit If its purposes are beneficent, they are In accord with it. If they are oppressive, as the Puerto Rican tariff proposals are. they are hostile to it. The Government of the United States has all the inherent and Inevitable at tributes of sovereignty, whether they are expressed In the ConstltuUon or implied. And as for Senator Beveridge. the cheap misrepresentation of his speech, in which Mr. Nelson Joins, ill becomes the pages of the Atlantic Monthly. His speech expressed the high ideals of the American people re garding our mission and duty In the Philippines. He did. it Is true, answer the protest that the Islands are worth less by enumerating their material pos sibilities, but the assertion that he de clared our purposes there to be purely commercial Is a slander nowhere matched in recent history, perhaps, out side the desperate and sullen ranks of anti-Imperial lsnu Perhaps the greatest mistake into which -Mr. Nelson falls Is one In con nection with an entirely different topic. The excess of fairness he affects on other subjects in order the more effect ually to fall upon the patriotic Instinct leads him into error regarding protec tion. His view Is that all our evils are forms of socialism a view he Ingen iously extends to the expansion prob lem (are we not expansionists because it Is the Government's duty to provide us with markets, and Is it not for this that our boys laid down their lives In Luzon?). He sees little difference, therefore, between the socialism that asks the Government to hold the home market for the home manufacturer and the socialism that wishes to destroy the privileges already enjoyed by the ex ceptional, so that those who have not may have. But there Is a great differ ence. The protection school of social Ism appeals to Government for aid of the few that they may become rich; the collectivism school of socialism wants the accumulations of the rich dl' none either rici of proportion would hWeMHWied Nelson to visit upon tho protection so cialist some 'of the vials of wrath he reserved for those who repudiate the gospel of Isolation and surrender. MOST ISIPOTEXT, CRAVE ASD AD-DLB-PATED STIFFS. "Whatever of a humorous character Senator Pettus may have Introduced Into his speech, we are not permitted to know; for the exhaustive report of It brought by the press dispatches pre sents a desert of most depressing and painful aridity. Tet under the influence of Its delivery the Senators are depicted as doubling up In an ecstasy of excru ciating enjoyment and shaking their sides at the sallies of this mlrth-pro-voklng son of Momus. "Why, then, did the Senate laugh? The answer Is that the Senators were constrained by the law of their being to laugh over any attempt at faccttotis ness at the expense of Senator Bever idge. Pettus was the Sir Benjamin Backbite of the hour, and they roared at his jokes, on religious conviction. To "the atrocious crime of being a young man," Mr. Beveridge had added the unpardonable offense of having something to say. He had accurate in formation, having been In the Philip pines, and In the Senate accurate in formation Is an unprecedented and un speakable crime." He left the mild and ruts of Senatorial dullness and Insipid ity, and in doing so he outraged all the most sacred traditions of the Senate. He spoke In eloquent sentences that fired the imagination of his hearers and stirred the blood, and forthwith th Mugwump world, but now bewailing the decline of oratory, was moved to derision, and the dry bones of the Sen ate were mortally offended. In a word. Senator Beveridge, a young man and 2 new Senator, had the temerity to assert himself, to be original, forceful, coher ent, pertinent, and to step at once into fame as an orator. For this he must suffer. A man can win the respect and even admiration of the Senators, but he must go about It in the ordained way. If he will empty his head of what per ceptive and retentive faculties It pos sesses; If he will worship dullness and Inanity as an idol to whose similitude he may haply be changed through be holding as in a mirror; if he will show more and more deference to the more and greater Imbecility and the more damnable a project is treat It with the more tenderness and forbearance; If he will look wise as an owl when he knows nothing, and wear grizzly hairs on his face two feet long, he will be known of the Senate as a great man and Idol ized as a statesman. Otherwise, he has no hope. Other wise, these high and mighty duffers, priding themselves on their dignity and courtesy, will walk out of the chamber like a pack of Ill-bred hoodlums, when he talks, as they walked out on Bever idge Thursday. FIRST COUNTR.V FLOWERS. Dora Read Goodale, In an article on "First Country Flowers," contributed to the New Tork Evening Post, con fesses that In New England there are no wild flowers until April, and the flowers of April are not many In num ber.' They include the hepatlca, a beautiful little plant of the anemone family, whose blossoms, white and blue, with an occasional pink one, span gle the earth before the coming of New England's favorite blossom, the trailing -arbutus, a plant of the heath family, not seldom termed ground laurel. This trailing arbutus is found from the pine woods of South Carolina to those of Canada, and from those of Maine to thbse of the Pacific Coast, for it has been found In certain favored spots of the State of "Washington and British Columbia. The other wild flow ers named by Miss Goodale among the April blooms of New England are the bloodroot. a beautiful plant that Is not included among the flora of Oregon or "Washington; but we have New Eng land's dlcentra cucullaria, and another variety, unknown in New England, the dlcentra formosa, which resembles New England's dlcentra canadensis, save that its heart-like pendants are purple Instead of white. New England has two varieties of Claytonla (Spring Beauty), while more than a dozen va rieties are found in Oregon. April brings New England the ad der's tongue (erythronlum), sometimes called In New England dog's tooth vio let. In Oregon there are three varie ties of this plant. Two of them resem ble strongly the New England plant, but the lilac-colored adder's tongue of Southern Oregon Is unknown In New England, and, we believe. Is not found east of the Mississippi. The New Eng land trilllum grandlflora and the trll llum plctum (painted trilllum), are handsomer plants than the compara tively small white trilllum of Oregon. New England's spring wild flowers In clude an eccentric plant, called Jack-In-the-pulplt, or Indian turnip. The Houstonla. called bluets, or "Quaker Ladles." Is a beautiful little plant not found In Oregon. Add to this list the yellow violet and the skunk cabbage and we have all the wild blossoms that Miss Goodale claims among the April flowers of New England. It should fur ther be said that few of these plants are found In bloom before the middle of April, and the majority of them are not often seen before the first of May. These facts are worth reciting, as they illustrate the marked difference between the climate of Oregon and that of Massachusetts, where Miss Goodale has her home. Portland Is In about the same latitude as Montreal, which Is some 400 miles north of New Tork City, and yet Spring flowers begin to unfold In Oregon in February, and all of the April plants of New England, common to both sections, are In bloom before the middle of March. In Febru ary the synthyris, a little purple flower whose tints remind one of the hello trope, never falls to put In an appear ance, and by the first week of March the yellow violet, the Claytonla, the red flowering currant, the white trilllum, the Oregon grape (Mahonia), are gen erally In bloom. This year by the mid dle of March, In favored localities about Oregon City, the wild iris and adder's tongue were in bloom, and so was the calypso borealls, an orchid that never blooms In New England before the middle of May. Of course, our skunk cabbage was In evidence by the middle of March. It Is a far handsomer plant than the New England variety, and less malodorous, owing possibly to Its superior environment. There have been seasons where the Spring opened earlier than this year. but we do not remember any season. when wild vegetation went forward faster than it has since the first week Several wild plants that ere found in bloom by the middle of March this year seldom put in an ap pearance before the last week of April. The warm "spell" in February doubt less explains this early appearance of the iris and adder's tongue. The slight snow that followed the warm days of February did not set back the waking flowers into a "Winter's sleep, and a few days of sunshine In March forced them Into quick florescence. WHAT SHALL "WE EAT' Vegetarians are beginning to disagree. The new school of vegetarians believes only in what are termed "top" vege tables. Here Is the argument for the new school, taken from the Hartford Times, attributed to a "woman physi cian": Never yet have I known a man or woman whose diet showed a preference for potatoes and other underground starch products, who didn't likewise show a heaviness of mind and body. He steps weightily, he thinks slowly, his speech Is halting. If not most of the time punctuated by a full stop. I know of no Intel lectual handicap like potatoes. On the other hand, I can always spot him who lives chiefly upon the succulent above-ground plants. Llka them, he Is light, airy, quick in all his mo tions, ready with his tongue and never found wanting in his thoughts. A complete answer to this argument Is found. in the Irish peasantry, who, when they lived more exclusively upon the potato than any people in Europe, as they certainly did sixty years ago, were a most athletic race and of re markable longevity. A more vivacious man, "light, airy and quick in all his motions, ready with his tongue and never found wanting with his thoughts," wai seldom found than the average potato-consuming Irish peas ant sixty years ago. The sons and grandsons of the Irish peasantry, who emigrated to America after the famine of 1845-16, have become far more of a meat-eating people than their fore fathers, but it cannot be said that they surpass them In native powers of body or mind! and they certainly do not equal them In longevity, for phthisis and lung diseases generally claim more victims among the American-born Irish than they did among their grand fathers in Ireland. So that the "argu ment" of the new school of vegetarians does not seem to be well founded, so far as the potato Is concerned. There Is a good deal of nonsense In the so-called arguments of inflexible anti-flesh evangelists of both the old and new schools. A writer In the New Century Review, an English periodical, argues that a vegetarian diet Is a "cure" for alcoholism. The Irish peas ants were famous for their high aver age of physical strength and agility when their diet was chiefly the potato; were famous also from the time of Queen Elizabeth, as Shakespeare notes, for their fondness for whisky. They ate very little animal food compared with the beef-consuming Englishman, but they were not less prone to the free use of alcohol. Not many years ago the leading di etary cranks of the country announced that while meat diet makes men irrita ble, brutal and ferocious, fish diet Is excellent, because it is "brain food." As a matter of fact, the fish-eating In dians of Oregon and "Washington were found by the white settlers to be far Inferior In mind and body to the meat eating Indians of the plains, like the Sioux or the Cheyennes. The flsh-eat-Ing Indians of Puget Sound weretphys lcally, mentally and morally far In ferior to the Nez Perces, who were, like the Sioux, meat eaters rather than fish eaters. There is no reason to believe that an exclusive fish diet promotes ac tivlty of brain compared with meat diet, and yet there Is no reason to be lieve that meat diet rather than vegeta ble diet Is essential to the production of vigor of mind or body. The history of the Irish peasantry shows that the potato, together with oatmeal. Is quite equal to meat diet In keeping a people In vigorous health and strength of both body and mind. But because this may be granted Is no reason why people vho find a mixed diet of meat and veg etables more palatable than a purely vegetable diet should spoil their din ner, if it keeps them in good bodily condition, because they have a vege tarian faddist for a family physician, who would probably argue that Byron was a rake because he was a meat eater. But then Shelley, who was a vegetarian, deserted his wife and ran away with another woman, and was an "infidel," or, as we say today, an agnos tic. In spite of his vegetarian diet. TRADE DALAXCES HEAVY. For the fiscal year that ended June 30. 1899. the balance of trade with for eign countries In our favor was, In round numbers, $416,000,000, and this was In addition to a similar balance In our favor In the previous year of $420, 000,000, and to one of 3313,000.000 In the year before, or 31,119,000,000 profit for this country in three years. The re turns of the Government figures for January and February, It Is reported, make It fairly certain that the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900, will show a trade balance In our favor far In ex cess fit any previously recorded. For February our Imports were only about 37,000,000 greater than those of Febru ary. 1899, though In the previous months of the fiscal year this relatlvo Increase of Imports was much greater. On the other hand, our exports for February reached the total of 3120,000,000, well nigh the largest amount of merchan dise ever exported In any month In our history. They represented a total ex cess of exports for the month of nearly SDI.000,000, an increase of $26,000,000 over the same excess of exports in Febru ary. 1899. Exactly one-half, or $13,000, 000, of this Increase of exports for Feb ruary was due to the Increased sales of raw cotton. The English financial newspapers estimate that the needs of Lancashire spinners, as determined by actual contracts, are such as to require purchases of American cotton between March 1 and September 1 of 1,200,000 bales, which means an expenditure of at least $50,000,000 of English money In this country for cotton during the com ing summer. The remaining $13,000,000 excess of ex ports for this February over those of February, 1S99, is made up In sales of manufactures. The foreign demand for Iron and steel and copper, and various manufactures of them, continues un abated In Europe. Owing to the ex haustion of the supplies of coal In for eign countries and the comparative great cost of European coal production In the future. It is predicted that Amer ica will, within two or three years, be the greatest coal exporter In the world. The first eight months of the fiscal year have given us an excess of exports over Imports of $365,000,000, so that if the remaining four months of the year do as well as the first eight, our favor able trade balance for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900, will be more than a half billion of dollars, and If the gain made In January and February is maintained, our trade balance will ex ceed this amount by one hundred mil lions. . TUB FRIARS IX THE PHILIPPINES. i All unbiased observers in the Philip pines agree that the vital problem in the pacification of the Islands Is one of providing the .people with priests whom they will respect and trust. This is largely a matter for ecclesiastical de termination, as It concerns the relations of the Roman Catholic Church to Its communicants. But conditions might arise which would compel the United States Government to Interfere for pro tection of life and property, preserva tion of order and assertion of sover eignty. If a priesthood which has tyrannized and oppressed and robbed for centuries, and against which the Filipinos have revolted in the past and are now in revolt. Is to be restored to Its former parishes and estates, the situation would concern the peace and order of the islands and make action by the Government Imperative. Prior to our war with Spain the mon astic orders were Church and State In the Philippines. In their hands were the property, liberty and even the lives of the people. The Spanish soldiery was always at their command, the friars made full use of their powers. At a word from them a native could be cast Into a dungeon for an indefi nite period, his family scattered and his property confiscated. In one way or another the orders have become possessed " of property of Immense value. Much of it was purchased with funds granted by the Spanish Gov ernment: much. It Is asserted, was ac quired by force and fraud. There are large interests In Manila proper and In the surrounding wards of Tondo, Bln ondo, Santa Cruz, Malate, and In all towns and cities of any note. Besides these, the various orders claim title to much city property and vast tracts throughout the country districts. It 13 the ownership of this property that is the bone of contention. To settle this question and the friar Issue, Archbishop Chapelle, of New Orleans, went to Ma nila some months ago, as Papal Dele gate. He has accomplished nothing tangible. His intimation that the Span ish friars would be restored to their old parishes Is fiercely resisted. The Filipinos have done with the friars, and want them no more. Neither will they listen to suggestions to leave the or ders the property they have. Including that alleged to have been acquired by Illegal means. That question, they In sist, must be left to the determination of the courts. In our haste to condemn the Filipinos as rebels, we entirely Ignore an aspect of the Insurrection which ought to ap peal to every lover of religious freedom In the land. They are a simple people. to whom the Roman Catholic religion Is everything. Both In what is good and what Is bad, the Church has made them what they are. They rose against the Spanish Government because its au thorities permitted the friars to oppress them In every conceivable manner, and In some ways which. In the light and learning of the nineteenth century, ap pear Inconceivable. One great reasor why they are fighting us is that we have yet given them no assurance that with the change of sovereignty In the Islands Spain and Its laws, customs, bigotry and Inquisition were relegated to the European peninsula. They do not ask this country or the Roman Catholic Cuhrch for the absolute right to elect their own religious Instructors, but that priests who have pillaged them In the past shall not be forced upon them again, and that the courts shall not be closed against the adjust ment of property rights In dispute. They simply seek relief from oppres sions to which not a Catholic nor a Protestant In the United States would submit for a moment. "While It Is hardly to be held that Government would be justified, except under extraordinary conditions, In In. terfering and ordferir.g a definite form of settlement of the trouble between the friars and the people, a course Is open to It which, If adopted, would give the Filipinos a better understanding of what constitutes Americanism. Along this line is the creation of an American court to settle by American law the property question. In the final adjustment of matters, the monastic orders might lose some land, but there would be consolation In the reflection that churches, whatever their denom ination, exist for the salvation of souls and not for the acquirement of riches. Sound Judgment ought to suggest to Archbishop Chapelle that It Is Impolitic to endanger the peace of the Islands by putting the Filipino Catholics under the domination of Spanish tyrants. A paper at The Dalles has published, and other McBride organs have cop led, a statement that The Oregonlan falsified Its report about the "Wasco County Republican primaries. This, It Is hardly necessary to say. Is untrue. The Oregonlan prints the news leav ing falsehood to organs. Its informa tion from The Dalles was that "the McBrldo Influence failed to material ize" In the primaries, and it printed the statement as news. The organs are hysterical about It. But The Oregonlan Is again Informed that the statement was correct. Of course, it is true, or It isn't. The Senatorial succession Is receiving much attention, and Mc Bride's office-holders and relations are openly or covertly at work all over the state. No one believes they neglected "Wasco, with Its dominating power over nine members of the Legislature. Sure ly the county was not allowed to go by default. Does The Dalles Chronicle assert that "the McBride Influence" did "materialize" In the "Wasco primaries? And does It mean to say that the "Wasco delegation, when It comes to the State Convention, will seek to put up McBride men for the nine Joint Senators and Representatives who are to be sent to the Legislature from "Wasco and other counties associated with It by the reapportionment law? If the "WaBco delegation to the conven tion Is for McBride. the State of Ore gon Is Interested In learning it. The delegation Is composed of Messrs. J. S. Schenck, H. L. Kuck, M. T. Nolan, M. P. Isenberg. G. "W. Johnson, A. Stew art, E. L. Smith, H. E. Rooper, F. N. Jones and C. S. Smith. "Will the Chron icle point out those who are under the McBride Influence? The Oregonlan prints the news, and cares not what the organs may say. Further, It edits its news, and does everything In Its power to render Its news Intelligible, accurate and full. The utterances of The Ore gonlan are not controlled by the corre spondents or, others whom It employs. It revises, adds or curtails, as It may And necessary to truth and accuracy. It professes to know how to' be a news paper, and its success during fifty years, where all others have failed, may. It modestly supposes. Justify this confidence. It thinks It possible, too, that these critics might have better success as newspapers if they would work to gather and print the news. In stead of trying to Instruct The Ore gonlan how to be a newspaper. The late General Z. B. Tower died In the place of his birth, Cohasset, Mass., In his 82d year. It Is a noteworthy fact that, after forty yeara of continuous life In the Army, an officer of high rank and professional ability should, on his retirement, return to the place of his birth to spend the remaining years of his life. It Illustrates the dif ference In temperament. General Sher man, pn retirement, preferred to llv In Brooklyn, where he was close to the social life of New Tork City. General McCook lives 'in Paris; General Scho fleld In Chicago; General Howard In Burlington, Vt., and the great majority of retired officers of high rank live lc "Washington, D. C. General Getty lives In a small town In Maryland, and Gen eral Thomas J. "Wood at Dayton, O. After an active official life In "Washing ton, D. C, for many years, few Army officers on retirement would enjoy th?. quiet life passed by General Tower for seventeen year In Cohasset. His sense of local attachment to his birthplace and the friends of his youth must have been very strong. "William M. Evarts. the great lawyer, now In his 33d year. Is living In extreme seclusion In New Tork. One old friend who visited Mr. Evarts recently asked how he accounted for. his longevity. "Tou have always been a hard worker. Tou have been what we call a free liver. Tou have never taken care of yourself, and were not born with a strong physique. "Why is It that you have outlived nearly all of your con temporaries?" "I suppose It's because I have never taken any exercise." an swered Mr. Evarts. solemnly. Joseph Chamberlain also makes boast that he never takes any exercise, but he has scarcely passed CO. Mr. Evarts has out lived nearly all his contemporaries, but his complete retirement is due to tho fact that he Is blind, and has been so for some time. The Springfield Republican's com ments upon the fact that the trailing arbutus, or "Mayflower," had been adopted as a state flower, recalls the fact that many years ago Nova Scotia placed this early Spring flower upon one of her coins, with the Inscription, ""We Bloom Amid the Snows." The "pine tree shilling" was among the early coins of New England, but the man who selected the emblem and In scription for the early coinage of Nova Scotia was a remarkably poetic-minded person for his utilitarian environment of lumber, fishing and coal Industries. The Duke of Norfolk, who has re signed his office of Postmaster-General under the Salisbury Ministry in order to serve in the army in South Africa as an officer of the Sussex Yeomanry. Is the premier Duke, being the fifteenth Duke since the creation of the title In 143S. The family name of the Duke of Norfolk is Howard. The present Duke of Somerset Is the fifteenth Duke, but his title goes back only to 154". Seventy years ago there were twenty six distilleries In Penn's Valley. Penn sylvania, and now only one remains. And yet neither Pennsylvania nor any of the neighboring states has had legal prohibition. The growth of tem perance sentiment and practice is due to social and religious Influence in the direction of higher morality and more enlightened civilization. Demonstrating once more the unwis dom of the old saw, March, which came In like a lamb at Portland, went out the most beautiful day of an exceptionally delightful month. Nature was lavish in her blandishments, and he who for any cause was obliged to remain in doors yesterday is entitled to commiser ation. Anti-Expansion Ignored. New York Commercial Advertiser. Some very noteworthy observations up on the political situation in the South are quoted from a Texas Democratic editor in the Times today. He says that all the business men and bankers of his state are opposed to Bryan, but that Bryan "has the politicians, the Populists and the cros3-roaders, who wear but one suspender," and will get the vote of Tex as in the National Democratic Conven tion and in the election. As for the re sult in the country, if Bryan runs ho pro diets that McKinley will get a surprising ly large vote, for the Palmer and Buck ner Democrats and the men who did not vote at all in lS9t5 will vote for McKinley to a man. together with many who voted for Bryan four years ago, for this rea son: "There has been' such a marvellous Increase of business in the South and such general prosperity that the people are more than pleased with existing con ditions, and the latter, with many people, are ascribed to the policy of the McKinley administration." The noticeable thing about this and all other Democratic com ment from the South Is the complete ab sence of all allusion to the antl-imperlal-lsm planks In Bryan's platform. Nobody in the South appears to treat them se riously. In fact, -the only serious treat ment of them comes from the Antl-Im-perlallsL League, which finds them en tirely satisfactory. Verily, this is a queer world, and the "times are wild." The Reciprocity Treaties. "The public prefers to have those reci procity treaties ratined, and It prefers that the protected Interests shall stand aside that this may be" done," says the Minneapolis Journal (Rep.). "All Inter ests which have received the benefits of protection should be able to fee that the era of trade expansion in this country has set In." "The policy of reciprocity Is as much a part of the Republican creed as pro tection." says the St. Paul Pioneer Press (Rep,). "The St. Louis platform binds the party to it. That pledge is 'not ful filled merely by authorizing the President in the Dlngley law to negotiate treaties, nor by the negotiation of the treaties. It will not be fulfilled until the treaties negotiated in good faith have been rati fied." 9 C Xo Pnrt- Could Stand the Strain. "Washington Post. No measure has ever passed both Houses of Congress against such opposition as the Puerto Rican tariff bill has evoked. No party is or ever will be strong enough to bear unharmed the strain of the pas sage of a measure thus opposed. s Worse Than the Stamp Act. Boston Transcript (Rep.) If the American colonies had cause for anger by reason of the Btamp act. how much more has our colony of Puerto Rico the right to complain over the still harsher treatment that we have given and pro poso to give her? MASTERPIECES OF LITERATURI Stanzas From "Adonais" ShcIIey.l I weep for Adonais he la dead! Oh. weep for Adonais! though our tears Thaw not tho frost which binds so de head! And thou, sad Hour, selected from all yean To mourn our loss, rouse thy obscure' compeer And teach them thine own sorrow! Sayr "With me Died Adonais: till the Future dares Forset the Past, his fate and fame ahalMte An echo and a llcht unto eternity!" 1L Where wert thou, mighty Mother, when he lay. When thy Son lay, pierced by the ehaft whlcbl Ales In darknefs? Where was lorn Urania When Adonais died? With yelled eyes. 'Mid listening; Echoes. In her Paradise She sate, while one, with soft en breath. Rekindled all the fadlnsr melodies. With which, like flowers that mock; the i beneatn. He had adorned and hid the comics -hull death. IIL Oh, weep for Adonais he Is dead! "Wake, melancholy Mother, wake and weep Tet. whereforer Quench within their burl bed Thy fiery tears, and let thy loud heart keep! Like his a mute and uncomplaining; sleep; For he la gone where all things wise and fs Descend. Oh. dream not that the amorous j Will yet restore him to the vital air; Death feeds on his mute voice, and laughs a? our despair. VII. To that high Capital, where kingly Death Keeps his pale court In beauty and decay. He came; and bought with price of purest breath. A grave among the eternal. Come away! Haste, while the- vault of blue Italian day la yet his fitting charnel-roof! while still He lies, as If In dewy sleep he lay; Awake him not! surely he takes his fill . Of deep and liquid rest, forgetful of all 11L XV. Lost Echo sits amid the vfilceless mountains. And feeds her grief with his remembered lay. And will no more reply to winds or fountains. Or amorous birds perched on the young green spray. Or herdsman's horn, or bell at closing day; Since she can mimic not his lips, more dear Than those for whose disdain ehe pined away Into a shadow of all sounds: a drear Murmur, between their songs. Is all the wood men hear. XVT. Grief made the young Spring wild, and ehe threw down Her kindling buds, as if she Autumn were. Or they dead leaves; since her delight Is flown. For whom should she hae waked the sullen jear? To Phoebus was not Hyacinth so dear. Xor to himself XarclstAis. as to both Thou. Adonais; wan they stand and sere Amid the faint companions of their youth. With dew all turned to tears; odor, to sigh ing ruth. XVII. Thy sister's spirit, the lorn nightingale. Mourns not her mate with such melodious pain; Xot so the eag!. who Uke thee could scale Heaven, and could nourish in the sun's domain Her mighty youth with mornlnpth complain. Soaring and screaming rounJfciaBty nest. As Albion walls for thee; tb4 Light on his head who plel breast. And scared the angel soul 1 ly guest! XVI IL Ah woe is me! Winter Is I But grief returns with the reJ The airs and streams renew i The acts, the bees, the swallovl Fresh leaves and flowers dei sons" bier; The amorous birds now pain And build tbetr mossy homes J And the green lizard and J Like untmprisoncd flames! awake. xrx. Through wood and stread and ocean. A quickening life from the Eartb3 burst. As It has ever done. with, change and motion. From the great morntng of the world when first God dawned on Chaos; In Its stream Immersed, The lamps of Heaven flash with a softer light; AH baser things pant with life's sacred thirst, Diffu themBelies, amreirend in love's delight The beauty and the oy of their renewed might. XX. The leprous corpse, touched by this spirit tender. Exhales Itself In flowers of gentle breath: Like Incarnations of the stars, when splendor Is changed to fragrance, they Illumine deajh And mock the merry worm that wakes beneath. Xought we know dies. Shall that alone which knows Be as a sword consumed before the sheath By sightless lightning? The Intense atom glows) A moment, then is quenched in -a most cold repose. XXI. Alas! that all we loved of him should be. But for our grief, as If It had not been. And grief Itself be mortal! Woe Is rael Whence are we. and why are weT of what scene The actors or spectators? Great and mean Meet massed In death, who lends what life must borrow. As long as skies are blue and fields are green. Evening must usher night, night urge th morrow. Month follow month with woe. and yeanwaka year to sorrow. XXXIX. Peace, peace! he Is not dead, he doth not hath anakened from the dream cf life "Tls we. who. lost In stormy visions, keep With phantoms an unprofitable strife. And In mad trance strike w 1th our spirit's knlf a Invulnerable nothings. We decay Like corpses In a charnel; fear and grief Convulse us and consume u day by day. And cotd hopes swarm like worms within our living clay. XLVIII. Or go to Rome, which is the sepulchre. Oh. ndt of him. but of our Joy; 'tis nought That ages, empires and religions, there Lie burled In the ravage they have wrought; For such as he can lend, they borrow not Glory from those who made the world their prey; And he Is gathered to the king of thought Who waged contention with their time's decay. And of the past are all that cannot pass away. LH. The One remains, the many change and pass; Heaten's light foreer shines. Earth's shadows fly; Life. like a dome of nany-colored glass. Stairs the white radiance of Eternity. Until Death tramples It to fragments. Die, If thou wouldst be with that which thou dost peek! Follow where all Is Ced! Rome's azure sky. Flowers, ruins, statues, music, words, are weak The glory they transfuso with fitting truth to speak. Lin. Why linger, why turn back, why shrink, my. Heart? Thy hopes are gone before; from all things here They have departed: thou shouldst now depart! A light Is parsed from the revolving year. And man. and woman; and what still Is dear Attracts to crush, repels to make thee wither. The soft sky smiles the low wind whlspersnear; Tls Adonais calls! oh, hasten thither, Xo more let Life divide what Death can Join together. LIV. That Light whose smile kindles the Universe, That Beauty In which all things work and move. That Benediction which the eclipsing Curse Of birth can quench not, that sustaining Love Which through the web of being blindly wove By man and beast and earth and air and sea. Bums bright or dim. as each are mirrors of The fire for which all thirst, now beams on me. Consuming the last clouds of cold mortality. LV. The breatW whose might I have Invoked in sons: Descends en me; my spirit's berk Is driven J Far from the shore, far from the trcmbl throng Whose sails were never to the tempest giv The masr earth and sphered skies are rive I am borne darkly, fearfully, afar: Whilst, burning through the Inmost v4 Heaven. The soul of Adonais. like a star. Beacons from the abode where the 1