THE SUNDAY OBEGONLOT, PORTLAND, JULY 8, 1900. B t&hs xzgomixn fcntered at tho Fostofflee at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONED Editorial P.ooms....l0ai Business Office.... 687 REVISED SUBSCRD2210N RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Daily, with Sunday, per month 2 5 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year W Daily, with Sunday, per year 9 J Sunday, per year 3 JW ahe Weekly, per year.. ...... .......... 1 jo the Weekly. 8 months -. To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday excepted.I3c Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncludedOc POSTAGE BATES. TJnlted States. Canada and Mexico: ' 10 to 12-page paper ......1C 16 to 24-page paper e ES to JSG-page paper 3c Foreign rates doubled. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregontan should be addressed invariably "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adt'ertistng, subscriptions' or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregontan." The Oregontan does not buy poems cr stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solicita tion. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose, Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, tefflet at 1111 PaclQc avenue. Tacoma. Box 053, ffacoma poetofflce. Eastern Business Office The Tribune build ing; New Tork city; "The itoofcery," Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special agency. New Tork. Per sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. Y40 Market street, near he Palace hotel, aad fet Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter etrett. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 137 Dearborn street. TODAY'S WBATHER Fair and eontinuea Jparaj winds mostly northerly. U , . tPOELTZiAJTD, SUKXJAY, JULY 8, 1000. 5i'Ki3 JEFFERSO?nAjr PRECEDENT. In snaking Constitutional difficulties bver the acquisition and government of ftha Islands we have received from Spain the Bryan Democrats are merely threshing over old straw, long since Ithoroughly threshed out by the pollti jcal parties of the country, including &he!r own. It was the decision of ZThomas Jefferson and his party, in PL803-4, that territory not only could he teOQUired without Constitutional war rant, but governed "outside the Consti tution' in any way Congress might see fit. Under Jefferson's leadership both these things were actually done. Jefferson's first thought was a Con stitutional amendment for authoriza tion of the acquisition of the Louls jiana territory. To this end he drew up Ian amendment and presented it to his KSablnet. "The province of Louisiana is incorporated into the TJnlted States and tenade a part thereof," began this curi ous paper; "the rights of occupancy In the soil and of self-government are 'confirmed to the Inhabitants." But the suggestion found little favor with the leading men of his party. Jefferson was merely making a play for preser vation of his consistency as a strict constructionist of the Constitution. Gallatin maintained that "the TJnlted States as a Nation have an Inherent right to acquire territory," and Madl scn, Nicholas, Breckinridge and many more took the same ground. Eager to acquire Louisiana, Jefferson gave up the contention, though the principle of strict construction was the breath of his political life. It was this action In regard to Louisiana that gave strict construction Its fatal wound, and Jef fersonian theories never again received general support. After this, no Presi dent could have been more Federalist than Jefferson himself. The purchase of Louisiana consum mated, the next question was as to leg islation for the new territory. What were the powers of Congress over It? Here now, In relation to Porto Rico and the Philippine Islands, the Demo cratic party is taking a position di rectly the opposite of that taken on leg islation for Louisiana, by the Jefferson Administration, with the sanction and support of Congress. The position was assumed and main tained that the Constitutional limita tions imposed on Congress in relation to the states were not applicable to the newly acquired territory. Madison In deed admitted that the Constitution had not provided for such a case as this, hut said broadly that the action pro posed must be estimated by the mag nitude of the object, and that those who had undertaken it must rely upon the candor of the country for their jus tification. A bill was reported for the government of the territory, which emanated from Jefferson himself. What this bill was is thus described by Ben son in his examination of the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Dred Scott: It was a startling bill continuing the exist fine Spanish Government; putting tho President in tho place of the King of Spain; putting all the territorial officers In the place of the icing's officers, and placing the appointment of Ell these officers In the President alone with out reference to the Senate. Nothing could be jnoro Incompatible with our Constitution than teucb. a Government a mere emanation of Spanish despotism. In which all powers, civil nd military, legislative, executive and Judi cial, were In the lntendant general, represent ing the IClng; and where the people, far from possessing political rights, were punishable ar bitrarily for presuming to meddle with polit ical subjects. pretation and put it into practice. We make one more extract from the His tory of Henry Adams: By an act of sovereignty as despotic as tho corresponding acts of Franco aad Spain. Jef ferson and his party had annexed to the Union a foreign people and a, vast territory, which profoundly altered the relations of the states and tho character of their nationality. By similar acts they governed both. BOTH A QUACK AND A CRANK. The extracts from the private letter of Mr. Bryan to the managing editor of the New York World, published a few days since, are interesting as casting some light upon the question whether the "Boy Orator of the Platitudes" is a political quack or sincere political crank. The devoted partisans of Bryan hold that he is an unselfish champion of the people, a sincere political re former. The advocates of the gold standard generally believe that Bryan is an arrant demagogue, consciously dishonest in his advocacy of doctrines which seek to establish socialism and invite ultimate anarchy. William Allen White describes Bryan as a man who sees in his creed the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth; a man who is sincerely persuaded that he "is a statesman of destiny"; a man of superficial education, utterly unread in standard authors in sociology and economics, Mr White holds that Bryan Is not a demagogue, but an honest, sincere, brave man with an extraordi nary voice, a self-confident, self-de luded man, an orator for whose elec tion "there Is really no more reason than for electing a fiddler. Both tal ents rouse the emotions. Bryan is a voice, an earnest, honest, gallant, lo quacious young man with a hypnotic voice." The true view of Bryan is that he is not altogether a political quack, nor that he is altogether an honest po litical crank of vast ignorance and boundless misinformation. He appears to be a cross between a political quack and a social crank. Prom the days of Mohammed to the present date there has been no lack of successful impostors and charlatans with a strain of self-delusion in their composition. Bryan is an agitator ut terly deficient in statesmanlike views. He is clearly a political quack in his methods, and yet he may be credited with a sincere belief in free silver at 16 to 1, and in his gospel of state social ism. He believes in them beca-use he doesn't know any better. His early reading was inadequate to equip him for sound discussion of Buch subjects, and the applause that his first oratori cal advocacy of false finance obtained was fatal to any subsequent correction of his views. He found out that hl3 cornstalk fiddle with its silver string produced a kind of popular "ragtime" music which a great many people loved to hear and keep step with; so Bryan, who is a voice, has sincerely fallen in love with the sound of the only instru ment of which he is master. The per sonal -egotism of the man is as large and as ill-founded as that of an Indian or an African chief. He believes In tensely in Bryan, and believes that the superficial apprehensions and guesses of Bryan at sound finance and govern mental reform are superior to the accu mulated experience and deep reflections of the world's philosophers and states men. Many popular agitators have been of the type of which Robespierre is an extreme Illustration; men "whose minds were too much disordered for liberty and not enough disordered for bedlam." There is no more difficulty in believing that Bryan is half politi cal quack and half sincere, self-deluded crank, than there is in believing that the strain of charlatanism in Robes pierre, who, originally an opponent of capital punishment, became the pitiless advocate of the "reign of terror' rest ed on a foundation of intense intellec tual egotism. Knowledge of and respect for the les sons of past history made it Impossible for men of genius, like Mirabeau or Na poleon, to attempt to govern like Robes pierre; but Robespierre was utterly without genius or talent. He was a superficial, prating pretender, a man of "ambitious and unquiet mediocrity," and yet he was something more than a low, cunning demagogue. He was a man of intense egotism, a narrow minded political crank, who believed in himself so completely that he became one of those arch fools who venture recklessly where angels fear to tread. Bryan Is, outside of his voice, a man of "ambitious and unquiet mediocrity," a political quack, an artful demagogue, and yet something more. He Is a man of Intense, self-deluding intellectual egotism. He is not without faith In his own folly. His mental limitations, his large misinformation, his barbarian contempt for what he does not know, make it not difficult to believe that he is at once a quack in his methods and his ambition, and yet a sincere crank in his absurd convictions. Napoleon was styled "the eagle-eyed man of des tiny," and General Walker, the fili buster, was called "the gray-eyed man of destiny," and Bryan, from the ob liquity of his financial and political views, deserves to be called "the cock eyed man of destiny." If he is right, there never ought to be an end of sectionalism, growing out of the Civil War. A good many years ago a Republican Congress voted to rehabilitate politi cally the ex-Confederates who complied with the conditions of political recon struction. After this was done, of course, neither party could fairly re fuse to place the ex-Confederate Mexi can War veterans on the Mexican War pension roll, and they have all been en titled to pensions under that pension act since its enactment under Cleve land's first Administration. Longstreet is over SO years of age. He has kept his oath and complied with all the con ditions legally required for complete po litical rehabilitation since he surren dered at Appomattox, in 1865. His right to a pension as a Mexican War veteran, and his right to an increase of pension, is as clear under the law as that of any -other United SCats pen sioner. The Oregontan thinks the G. A. R. commander-in-chief is old enough to keep step with music of the pres ent, and to speak like a statesman, and not like a narrow-minded, sentimental sectionalism In this matter of the re turn of the Confederate flags. There Is a survival of provincial narrowness in evitably among some passionate women and feminine-tempered men, both South and North, but the public example of the commander of the G. A. R. ought' to have been exhibited on the side of statesmanship rather than shallow sectionalism. never mentioned but aa idle, frtvelous men, fond of desultory reading and- negligent of the studies of the place. In conclusion, Macaulay said: The bad effects of our university system may be traced to the very last In many eminent and respectable men. ... They may play at bo-peep with truth; but they never' get a full view of it In all its proportions. The cause we believe Is that they have passed those years durlnr which the mind, frequently ac quires the character which It ever after re tains, In studies, which when exclusively pur sued have no tendency to strengthen or ex pand It. Macaulay uttered these views nearly seventy-five years ago. He was nearly fifty years ahead of English scholastic culture, but Herbert Spencer In the next generation powerfully advocated the same view of "what knowledge Is worth the most" in the Westminster Review; and the views of Spencer were supported by Professor Huxley, the great scientist, and by John Stuart Blackie, the famous Greek professor of Glasgow university. Some twenty years ago Charles Francis Adams ad vocated the same views before Harvard College, and the increasing pressure for opportunities to obtain a practical, technical, scientific rather than a pure ly academic education has achieved something In the matter of educational reform along the lines so early Indi cated by Macaulay, whose vast schol arship never clouded his eye as a prac tical thinker. Some of the Federalists objected that this bill was unconstitutional. The Ad ministration party replied that the Con stitution was made for states, not for territories. This was followed by an other bill, which deliberately set the new territory apart as a peculiar es tate, to be governed by a power Implied in the right to acquire it In support of this legislation it was asserted by the leaders of the Jefferson party that "Congress has a power in the territories which it cannot exercise In the states, and, that the limitations of power found in the Constitution are applicable to the states alone." To the protest against the exercise of despotic power by Congress, it was answered that "the principles of civil liberty cannot sud denly be engrafted on a people accus tomed to a regimen of directly oppo site hue." Henry Adams, in his "His tory of the United States During the First Administration of Thomas Jeffer son," says: "Thus, Louisiana received & government in which its people who cad been solemnly promised all the rights of American citizens were set epart, not as citizens, but as subjects lower in the political scale than the meanest tribes of Indians, whose right to self-government was never ques tioned." The Federalists, with all their con ception of large National powers, thought some of these measures went very far; but on the whole they acqui esced in the interpretation of the pow ers, while questioning many of them the policy of so extensive territorial ac quisition. But the doctrine that terri tories could be ruled "outside the Con etitution" was acquiesced in by both political parties in Jefferson's day, and it was Jefferson himself, and his party leaders with him, who forced this inter- HETURN OP CONFEDERATE FLAGS. The "Veteran Volunteer," whose let ter is published in another column, seems to be in a state of sincere mental obfuscation. He remembers nothlngthat is pertinent to the controversy, and for gets nothing that is in public wisdom worthy of oblivion. To him it is noth ing that a very heroic Union soldier, President R. B. Hayes, invited an ex Confederate soldier to sit in his Cabi net. It is nothing that another very gallant Union sbldler, President Har rison, placed an ex-Confederate soldier upon the United States Supreme Court To him it is an outrage that Longstreet should be on the pension roll. If this old soldier will think the matter over, he will see that if he is right, then no Confederate soldier ought ever to have been rehabilitated and restored to his political rights; that all his property should have been confiscated; the right to the exercise of suffrage and holding of Federal office should never have been restored to him; he should have been made a political Pariah and held in the condition of a political outcast today. If our veteran correspondent is right, all the external earmarks of the Civil War should be perpetuated as long as possible on both sides. If he Is right, because there are still lrreconcllables of both sexes in considerable numbers at the South, there should be encour agement extended to the perpetuation of Identical irreconcilability at the North. If he is right opposition to ex travagant and loose pension laws, which need revision rather than enlargement and multiplication, affords just ground for denunciation of The Oregonlan as unpatriotic and anxious to rob "the men who draw a pittance as a pension." COLLEGES AlfD CLASSICS. The season of college commencement exercises is over, and the usual discus sion arises as to comparative value of a college education and the necessity of some reform, in its old-time academio curriculum to meet the increasing mod ern pressure for purely practical or technical education. It Is an interesting fact that as early as 1826 the value and the defects of a university training were vigorously discussed by that great scholar and lit erary genius, Macaulay, In an article contributed to the pages of the Edin burgh Review. A distinguished grad uate of the great English University of Cambridge, a profound classical scholar, who to the end of his days could read at sight in the original not only all the famous Greek and Latin classics, but all the lesser lights of both literatures, Macaulay approached the subject fully armed with both learning and culture, and certainly without the prejudices of a purely utilitarian phil osopher and thinker. Macaulay se verely criticised the great English uni versities for lavishing such enormous bounties on particular acquirements, so that In consequence "there is among our youth a glut of Greek, Latin and mathematics, and a lamentable scarc ity of everything else. We every day see clever men of four and five and twenty loaded with academical honors and rewards enter Into life with their education still to begin, unacquainted with the history, the literature, we might almost say the language, of their country; unacquainted with the first principles of the laws under which they live, unacquainted with the very rudi ments of moral and political science." Macaulay vigorously combats the no tion that the mere speculative knowl edge of mathematical truth makes men good reasoners. As a matter of fact he says, no people reason so ill as mere mathematicians. "On questions of re ligion, policy or common life, we per petually see these boasted demonstra tors either extravagantly credulous or extravagantly skeptical." On the sub ject of the classics, Macaulay says that, when our ancestors first began to con sider the study of the classics as the principal part of education, little or nothing worth recalling was found in any modern language. Circumstances have confessedly changed. He grants that a man who knows Latin is likely to know English better than a man who does not but points out that this advantage Is not peculiar to the study of Latin. Every language throws light on every otler. There Is not a single foreign tongue which will not suggest to a man of sense some new consider ations respecting his own; but he con temptuously says that "a man who thinks the knowledge of Latin essential to the purity of English diction either has never conversed with an accom plished woman, or does not deserve to have conversed with her." Macaulay pays an eloquent tribute to the Greek language, and grants that great advan tages may be derived from its study; but thinks that they may be purchased at too high a price; that seven or eight years of tho life of a man who Is to enter Into active life at two or three and twenty Is too much. He admits that the Greek language is a more val uable language than the French, the Italian or the Spanish, but does not be lieve that It is more valuable than all three together, since all three, may be acquired in less than half the time in which it is possible to become thorough ly acquainted with Greek. He thinks that not only the modern languages of the Continent receive less attention than they deserve, but that our own lit erature, second to none that ever ex isted, Is unpardonably neglected. He quotes Instances of Greek scholars grossly Ignorant of the hiBtory of the great statesmen of the English revolu tion of 1641. Macaulay's argument is that few men Intended for professional or commercial life can find time for all the studies that belong to a complete and liberal education. Some of them must be given up. He would provide for the mind first necessaries, then conveniences; lastly, luxuries; and under luxuries he classes the Greek and Latin languages, since of all scholastic pursuits they re quire for decent remunerative mas tery the greatest sacrifice of time. If a man Is able to continue his studies till his SSth or 30th year, by all means let him learn Latin and Greek. If he must terminate them at one and twenty, we should la general advise him to be satisfied with the modern languages. If ho Is forced to enter active life at 15 or 10, wo should think it best that he should confine himself almost entirely to his naUvo tongue, and thoroughly Imbue his mind with the spirit of Its best writers. Instead of many lads with a smatter ing of Latin and Greek, from which they derive no pleasure and hasten to forget, there would be many more who had treasured up useful and agreeable information. Macaulay treats the Eng lish universities as contemptuously as Wendell Phillips did Harvard College, for he charges them with taking it for granted that England la Indebted to them for all tho talent they have not been able to dee troy, as If great men had net appeared under every system of edu cation from the schools of the ancient Greek sophists and tho Arabian astrologers down to the School Divinity men and the Jesuits. There would still be groat men If nothing was taught but tho fooleries of Spunhelm and Sweden borg. ... Many of the men, who since they have risen, to eminence- are perpetually cited as proofs of the beneficial tendency of English university education, were at college WHY SO HOT! The personal abuse of the President in the National platform of the Prohi bitionists surpasses anything In viru lence that has appeared of recent years in the utterances of political parties. Washington, Jefferson, John Qulncy Adorns and Andrew Jackson were made subjects of most vulgar personal abuse dnrlng their Presidential service, and in later days Lincoln's personal ap pearance was made the target of brutal jest by the "copperhead" Democracy. President Cleveland did not entirely escape outrageous attack, but since his day nothing has equaled the Intemper ate denunciation and untruthful de scription of President McKlnleys hab its expressed In the platform of the Prohibition party. Of the personal purity and sobriety of President Mc Klnley's life there Is no doubt among Intelligent Americans, and the wanton language of the Prohibition platform is a fresh illustration of the fact it is diffi cult for a fanatic and a bigot to speak the truth-Jof those whom he considers the enemies of his cause. But why are these Prohibitionists so hot about the question of the Presi dent's abstemiousness? It is a virtue in any man to set a worthy example of domestic purity and temperance, but it Is not the only virtue nor the great est virtue that adorns human charac ter. Many men, whose domestic lives have been pure and temperate, have been very bad men, like Charles I and Marlborough. Of Charles I, Milton says: "His private virtues are beside the question. If he be insatiable in plun der and revenge, shall we pass It by be cause in meat and drink he is tem perate?" A man may be temperate at table and regular at chapel, and yet be so selfish, cruel and deceitful In all the Important relations of life as to be justly regarded as a very bad man. The untruthfulness and recklessness of the Prohibition indictment of Presi dent McKlnley is a striking illustration of how much easier it is for Prohibi tionists to abstain religiously from all forms of alcohol than it la to refrain from Intemperance in the use of lan guage. Temperance Is good. Perhaps total abstinence Is the highest Ideal for all, but surely total abstinence is not more Important than the habit of speaking the truth concerning your fellow-men. The evil Influence of culti vating an lptolerant habit of mind concerning the opinions and practice of a very large portion of decent and en lightened mankind is illustrated by the fact that these peculiar partisans of the cause of temperance find it easier to abstain from alcohol than they do to tell the truth without perverting or inverting It cusslon when relief parties take the field. It is only when a new expedition is fitted out, carrying a number of hu man lives into deadly peril and sub jecting human beings to hardships for which, in spite of all that has been suf fered in Arctic wilds, no substantial returns in knowledge have been re ceived, that protest against Arctic ex ploration as folly is heard. Through all the years that have passed since the rescue of the remnant of the Greely party from starvation or- worse on an Inhospitable coast the feeling of revul sion caused by the publication of that chapter in Arctic exploration endures and is called up at the mention, in whatever capacity, of the name of its leader. No expedition ever left the shores of the United States accompa nied by a more fervent Godspeed than that which went to the rescue of the Greely party, and it is sickening even yet to reflect that a few days of delay in starting or in transit would have sealed in a horrible manner the fate of every survivor of the expedition. The record of finding the bodies of De Long and his companions In their frigid biv ouac on the Siberian coast Is one of the most pathetic chapters in the history of American adventure, while the name of Sir John Franklin still serves - to recall a tale of suffering and disaster, of struggle and death, which was com mitted to the silence of the Ice and for years was wrapped In the dumb snows of the far North. Of the many Polar expeditions fitted out for the relief of lost explorers, all have been cordially seconded In their endeavor by popular sympathy. So In regard to the Andree search parties, now in the field or soon to embark. The Indorsement and God speed of humanity go with them. Here are some preliminary figures as to the populations of Portland and Se attle. The school census, under the direction of the state, has just been completed in each city, showing the following children of school age: Port land, 20,489; Seattle, 14.507. In this city children between the years of 4 and 20 are enumerated; In Seattle, -between 5 and 21; so that the comparison is in all respects fair and accurate. A few other figures will prove instructive. Port land held on election June 4, Seattle March 6. The following votes were cast: Portland, 13,952 (registration 16, 300); Seattle. 8851 (registration 10,940). At the Presidential election of 1895 there were cast in Portland for the Mc Klnley and Bryan electors 15,663 votes; in Seattle, S4S7. If the election figures indicate anything, It Is that Seattle has now about 65 per cent of Portland's population. But the comparison by this year's vote Is hardly just to the Washington city, Inasmuch as its elec tion this year was for city officers alone. and probably not as full a proportion of the voters turned out as in Port land. But school children are always an accurate index of population. Se attle has now 70 per cent as many as Portland. Assuming that the census .will show Portland to have from 90,000 to 95,000 people, the returns from Seat tle should be from 63,000 to 66,600. SLINGS AND ARROWS. A Kevr Job. ?ou are Nominated. Bryan; You have Won out In a "Walk. There need Be no more restrictions On Tour easy flow of Talk. But the Many complications That Are likely to Arlso Will give you things To think About This Summer, we Surmise. So don't Bo too discouraged If Ton find the Job at Hand Somewhat over largo To tackle with The means at Tour command. This Chinese Imbroglio, Maybe, Will get mixed up In the game; And, although You're not Up in It. you'll Start talking Just The same. Which la where you'll Get off wrong Again, If onco yoa Get a Show To tell the shouting Multitude The things You do not Know. So for heaven's sake Let others Talk away to Beat tho band. But Don't spiel away oa Subjects that You do not Understand. It It's Possible, dear Willi. Let your oratory Sink, And, though If s A new employment. Try for all your worth to Think. MASTERPIECES OF LITER&TURE-XXI ARCTIC RELIEF EXPEDITIONS. While to the outside world, that mar veled when Andree, in the Summer of 1897, cut loose his famous balloon from its moorings upon the island of Spits bergen and was lost in the profound silence of the great North, the name of the adventurous explorer and aeronaut has beoome only a remembrance, it seems that to a few it still holds the possibility of a living reality. He took on that wildly experimental journey two companions sturdy Scandinavians like himself, Strindberg and Fraenkel and his equipment was as complete as it was novel. So carefully was the expedition provisioned that, unless ut ter wreck amid the warring aerial cur rents of the Arctic zone overtook his airship, It is believed that Andree and his companions may still be alive. Falling in this. It is not unreasonable to suppose that traces of the wreck, and perhaps records of this most fan tastic and venturesome of all of the expeditions ever fitted out for the dis covery of an open Polar sea, may be discovered. So strong Is this belief and so Insa tiable the desire to know more about Andree and his venture, that no less than three expeditions have been lately fitted out for this service. These will each act independently, and still with reference to the course covered by the other. A Russian expedition, headed by Baron Von Toll, has mapped out a most difficult coursethat of explor ing the Arctic coast of Europe, and Asia, the latter during the Summer of 1901, reaching Behring Sea, if possible, by the frigid line of the Siberian coast The hardship and danger involved in this undertaking are great, yet it is re called that it was accomplished in 1871 to 1873 by Baron Nordenskjold. The Arctic region was then much less fa miliar than now, the gateway of its mysteries and rigors having yielded in some degree to the power of the golden key. Still, the infallible depths of the white silence into which Andree disap peared have never been penetrated, and to sound these depths and, if possi ble, draw forth the records of the An dree expedition, or find some clew to the hardy explorer's fate, is an attempt worthy of valorous men of the race from which he sprang and of the hardy races akin to it With a Swedish and Russian expedi tion operating in Spitzbergen, and three expeditions a Swedish, a Danish and an English on the coast of Green land, together with the Russian expe dition on tho Siberian coast the field will be pretty well covered. Needless to say, the world even the practical world, that views Arctic exploration as wasted effort will await with Interest news from these search parties. The question of the utility of Arctic exploratjoft does not enter into the difr- The Silver Republican platform also indulges in some hifalutln' language about consent of the governed. It is opposed to the "whole theory of Imperi alistic control," and wants the same principle applied to the Philippines that we are "solemnly and publicly pledged to observe in the case of Cuba." This is essentially Democratic doctrine haul down the flag, renounce sovereignty, and get out How do the Silver Re publicans here and In Washington like that? There are a few of them left and they are so anxious not to become fewer that they have heretofore avoided the expansion rock. The Washington Sil ver Republican Convention adopted a platform that was dumb on this great matter because some thought one way, some another. But Kansas City puts on record plainly the attitude of the devoted remnant still remaining with the party. Further, the Democracy in Its platform says this is the paramount issue. Then silver Is not the paramount- issue. It Is about time for the Silver Republicans out this way to find out where they are at, If they are anywhere. A large majority of American mis sionaries in peril In China are, as ap pears from the lists published, women. A few are wives of ministers sent out by the missionary boards, but most of them are unmarried women, who, un der the belief that they were called to the work of evangelizing the heathen, enlisted in the missionary service in China. The pitiful futility of their en deavor is witnessed in the fact that even their alleged converts deserted them in their hour of peril, and that presumably, all have been butchered, with atrocities made familiar to the people of the Pacific Northwest by the frequent recital of the details of the Whitman massacre. It would be in the Interest of humanity, which Is the basic principle of Christianity, if the minis ters of the country would take for a text by preconcerted agreement some Sunday in the near future the words: "EphraJm is joined to his idols; let him alone," and make the applica tion suggested by recent events and the present situation in China with vigor and earnestness. Our ions Coincidence. A young man sends to The Oregonlan tho following lines, and asks for a crit ical estimate of them. He adds by way of a side remark that he can write others like these, if such verae is market able: Full many a gem of purest ray serene The dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear; Pull many a flower is bora to blush unseen And waste Its sweetness ca the desert air. The lines are very pretty, and seem to be all right aa far as feet and rhyme are concerned. The statement of alleged fact they contain is rather bald. The young man who wrote these verses does not explain how he knows that the dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear gems of purest ray serene. If said caves are unfathomed, it is safe to say that he has never been there, and if they are dark he wouldn't have seen the gems if he had. Deserts, as every one knows, are arid and barren, and consequently are not likely to be productive of many unwitnessed blushes on the part of full many a flower. As an essay this poem will not do. It bears the stamp of genius, but tho yoit.g man who sends it to The Oregonlaa is not likely ever to achieve fame by being its author. One reason for this Is that Thomas Gray happened to think of the same identical lines several years ago. Tnnn. Tuan One bad. Bad man. Heap mad. Elm kill KwangTsu; Him will Kill too. Maybe, TslAn, If he Think can. Him heap Like fight. Him keep Out sight Novo Box Man come. Take knocks Bltng dlum; Tuan Heap talk. Box man Heap walk; Blmeby Find white. White die All lite. Box man Much mad, Tuan Heap glad. Htm will Like slay An kill All day, Jus so Him will. Heap no He klU; Land had Koman Like bad Tuan. "Prothalamion" Edmund Spenser. Calm was the day, and through tho trembling alr Sweet-breathing Zephyrus did softly play A gentle spirit, that lightly did delay Hot Titan's beams, which then did glister fair; When L (whom sullen care. Through, discontent of my lone frulUes.stay In princes court, and expectation vain Of idle hopes, which still do fly away Llko empty shadows, did afflict my brain) Walk'd forth to ease my pain Along the shore of silver-streaming Thames; Whose rutty bank, the which his river hems. Was painted all with variable flowers. And all the meads adorn'd wlthtdalnty gems Fit to deck maidens' bowers. And crown their paramours Against the bridal day, which is not long: Sweet Thames l run softly, till I end my song. There In a. meadow by the river's side A flock of nymphs I chanced to espy. All lovely daughters of thej flood thereby. With goodly greenish lock3 All loose untied As each had been a bride; And each one had a little wicker basket Made of fine twigs, entralleo! curiously. In which they gathered flowers to All their flasket. And with fine fingers cropt f ullf eateously The tender stalks on high. Of every sort which In that meadow grew They gathered some; the violet, pallid blue. The little daisy that at evening closes. The virgin Illy and the primrose 'true; With store of vermeil roses, To deck their bridegrooms posies Against the bridal day, wliich was not long: Sweet Thames t run softly, till I end my song. With that I saw two swans of goodly hue Come softly swimming down alone the lee; Two fairer birds I yet dld.never see; The snow which doth tho top of Plndus. strow Did nover whiter show. Nor Jove himself, when he a swan would be For love of Leda, whiter did appear; Yet Leda was (they say) as while as he. Yet not so white as these, nor nothing near; So purely white they were That even the gentle stream, the which, them bare, Soem'd foul to them, and bade his billows spare To wet their silken feathers, lest they might Soil their fair plumes with water not so fair, And mar their beauties bright That shone as Heaven's light Against their bridal day, which was not long Sweet Thames! run softly, till Lend my song. Eftsoons the nymphs, which .now had flowers their fill. Ban all In haste to see that silver brood As thoy came floating on the crystal flood; Whom when they saw, they stood amazed still Their wondering cye3 to fill; Then seem'd they never saw a. sight so fair Of fowls, so lovely, that they sure did deem Them heavenly bom, or to be that same pair Which through the sky draw Venus' silver team; For sure they did not seem To be begot of any earthly seed. But rather angels, or of angels' breed; Yet were they bred of summer'siheat, they say. In sweetest season, when each Cower and weed The earth did fresh array; So fresh they seem'd as day. Even as their bridal day, which was not long: Sweet Thames! run softly, till Iend my song. There have been many accounts of the rescue of Lieutenant Gilmore and party In the Philippines, and of the ex periences of rescued and rescuers, but no other so complete as that which ap pears on another page of The Sunday Oregonlan today, written by George P. Dyer, Assistant Surgeon, United States Navy. It Is vivid and accurate, and an excellent piece of literature as well as a reliable narrative of thrilling adven ture. The incidental light on the life and social habits of the Filipinos is in teresting and of great value. Mr. Dyer belongs to the cruiser Princeton, which recently left Luzon for service in Chi nese waters. Answers to Correspondents. J. Hamilton Ia Not with a pink shirt Duelist Krupp cannon, at thirty paces. Wagnerian Student He only wrote one opera in rag time "The Gootterdamme rung." Alfred A There Is no rhyme for gouge. Amateur Cornetist HOOO and 10 years' Imprisonment at hard labor. Chinese Missionary. Not unless you can get an army corps for a convoy. Autograph Collector. Canton, O., and Lincoln. Neb. Tmiihlft-TTunter. St. Louis. Governor T y r Don't go back just yet , . Prospective Beaslder. 100 a week and a pocketful of. engagement rings. David Bennett H. Don't worry, he won't be elected. Poet Because you failed to enclose a stamp. Graduate. There 13 a good demand for railroad laborers. Nicholas of R a. Tea, tho powers probably aro next to you. Twenty-six members of the Demo cratic resolutions committee, reprer sentlng less than 200 out of 930 votes, put the Democratic convention on rec ord for 16 to 1. This is quite an achievement in a convention where, for example, the interests of the minority are so completely safeguarded that it takes two-thirds to nominate a candi date. But Bryan was something more than two-thirds. He was the whole thing. The Anaconda Standard records that the mention of Bryan's name aroused a "frenzy of enthusiasm" at Kansas City. But the seating of the Clark delega tion seems not to have aroused any particular frenzy of enthusiasm, with Mr. Daly's Standard. Of course Stevenson accepts. He Is both surprised and gratified to find that he still lives. An Unfailing Sign. There's a sort o' Summer feeta" floatin' through the outolde air, CcmhV driftin' through the window, penetratin, everywhere, The thermometer is dlmtmY to the nineties mighty fast. An the chill of early mornia' kind of never ecems to lost. But we've had these very symptoms through. the season once or twice. And I only know it's Summer, 'cause the butcher's takln' ice. Though the sprinklln' carta Is rumblln on the hot aad dusty street. An the asphalt pavement's cavln' like 'twas tar beneath our feet Though the bees at noon o trunrcnin' an' the house Is full of flies. An" a. feller can't quit sweathY In his collar If he tries, Thoush they're rvnY Ice cream endy to cH them as has the price. Still we ne-er know It's Summer tiU the butch- er takln' ice. When we see the sky-blue wagon standln at the butcher's door. An the man with the tongo ls.naulln great big chunks across the floor. When we see the kWs a-chasm fur to gather up the scraps. Never mindln If the Ice man gives them ugly cuffs and slaps. We dort need no weather prophets, fur we know It will euffloe As a certain sign o Summer that the butcher's taklnr Ice. J. J. MOKTAGUK. Then forth they all out of their baskets drew Groat storo of flowers, the honour of the field. That to the sense did fragrant odours yield. All which upon those goodly birds they threw And all the waves did strew. That llko old Peneus waters they did seem When down along by pleasant Tempers shore Scatter'd with flowers, through Theasaly they stream. That they appear, through lilies' plenteous store. Like a bride's chamber-floor. Two of those nymphs meanwhile two garlands bound Of freshest flowers which In that mead they found. The which presenting all in trim array. Their snowy foreheads therewithal they crown' d; Whilst one did. sing this lay Prepared against that day. Against their bridal day, which was not long; Sweet Thames! run softly, till X end my song. Ye gentle blrdil the world's fair ornament And Heaven's glory, whom this happy hour Doth lead unto your lovers' blissful bower, Joy may you have, and gentle hearts content Of your lovo's complement; And let fair Venus, that Is queen of love, With her heart-quelling son upon you smile. Whoso smile, they say. hath virtue to remove All love's dislike, and friendship's faulty guUe For ever to as soil. Let endless peace your steadfast hearts accord, And blessed plenty wait upon your board; And let your bed with pleasures chaste abound. That fruitful issue may to you afford Which may your foes confound. And mako your Joys redound Upon your bridal day, which Is not long: Sweet Thames I run softly, till I end my Bong. So ended she: and all the Tost around To her redoubled that her undersong. Which said their bridal day should not be long: And gentle Echo from the neighbour ground Their accents did resound. Bo forth those Joyous birds did pass along Adown the lee that to them mutmurM low, As he would speak but that he lackd a tongue, Yet did by signs his glad affection show. Making his stream run slow. And all the fowl which In his flood did dwell Gan flock about these twain, that did excel The rest, so far as Cynthia, doth shend The lesser stars. So they, enranged weU, Did on those two attend. And their best servlco lend Against their wedding day. which was -not long: Sweet Thames! run softly, till I end my song. At length they all to merry London came. To msrry London, my most kindly nurse. That to me gave this life's first natlvo source. Though from another place I take my cams, An house of ancient fame: There when they came whereas thoee briciy towers The which on Thames broad aged back do ride. Where now the studious lawyers have their bowers. There whllomo wont the Templar-knights to bide, Till they decay'd through pride; Next whereunto thero stands a stately place, Whero oft I gained gifts and goodly grace Of that great lord, which therein wont to dwell. Whose want too well now feels my friendless case; But ah! here fits not weU Old woes, but Joys to tell Against the bridal day, which was not long: Sweet Thames! run softly, till I end my song. Yet thorein now doth ledge a noble peer. Great England's glory and the world'B wide wonder. Whose dreadful name late thro all Spain CIO. thunder. And Hercules two pillars standing near Did make to quake and fear: Fair branch of honour, flower of chivalry! That flllest England with thy triumphs' fam Joy have thou of thy noble victory. And endless happiness of thine own name That promlseth the same; That through thy prowess and victorious arms Thy country may be freed from foreign harms. And great Eliza's glorious name may ring Through all the world, flll'd with thy wld alarms Which some bravo Muse may sing To ages following. Upon the bridal day, which Is not long: Sweet Thames! run softly, till I end my song. From those high towers this noble lord Issuing Llko radiant Hesper, when his golden hair In th ocean billows he hath bathed fair. Descended to the river's open viewing With a great train ensuing. f Above the rest were goodly to be seen Two gentle knights of lovely face and feature. Beseeming well the bower of any queen. With gifts of wit and ornaments of nature Fit for so goodly stature. That llko the twins of Jove they seem'd In sight Whtch deck the baldric of the Heavens bright; They two, forth pacing to the river's side, Received thoso two fair brides, their love's de light; Which, at th' appointed tide. Each one did make his bride Against their bridal day, which was cot-long: Sweet Thames! run softly, till I end my eonj