THE -STraDAY -OKEGOIJIA, TGBnXjAmS, 'AV,&UBT "12, 1900. te rijomasu Sotered at th PostoOc at Portland, Oresoex, a ecceid-clt8a matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Roomg....lC6 1 Butiawi Office .eT REVISED SUBSCRIS210N BATES. Br Mail (postage prepaid). In AdTanee Sally, with Sunday, per month...... .?0 85 Sally. Sunday excepted, per year...... T 50 Daily, with Sunday, per year,..... .... 0 Sunday, per year ................-..... 2 00 The Weekly, per year.... ... .- 1 J The Weekly, a months.... ... W To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday excpted.l5a Dally, -per week, delivered, Sundays lncluoetLSOo POSTAGE KATES. United States, Canada, and Mexico: 20 to 16-page paper .........................1 IS to 22-page paper ............... ......So Foreign rates double. Xewo or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonlan should be addressed Invariably ""Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertising. subscriptions or to any business natter should t addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan doeo not buy poema or stories' gram Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscript sent to it without llclta tlon. So stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Puget Bound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, eOce at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 853, Tacoma postoffflee. Xastem Business Offlce The Tribune build ing, New York City; "The Rookery," Chicago: the B. C. Beckwlth special agency. Kew York. For sale In San Francisco by J. X. Cooper. T46 Market etreet. near the Palace hotel, and t Goldsmith Bros., 226 Sutter strert. For a!e In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Deerbora street. TODAY'S winds. "WEATHER Fair; northwest POR.TLA.ro, SUXDAY, AUGUST 12. "WHY CUDTA HATES FOREIGNERS. How Indefensible soever the course which the Chinese are pursuing' may be. In the treatment of the diplomatic representatives and foreigners in gen eral, now in their country, it must be admitted that China has much provo cation and a real grievance. This mat ter is set out in an article In the August number of the North American Review, by the president of the Anglo-Chinese College at Foo Chow, on "The Causes of the Anti-Foreign Feeling' in China." The writer places the blame alike on the present reigning dynasty and on the foreigners themselves; and it must be admitted that the latter are entitled to no small share of It. China has, in fact, been subjected to indignities such as no nation should be expected to brook. But her method of redress can have no justification. Still, when it is remembered that China is not all pene trated with the ideas that prevail in Europe and America, her action, though inconsiderate and outrageous, cannot be regarded as surprising. This writer does not spare "the wretched and cruel Empress"; yet he lays a full share of the blame at the doors of European governments, whose encroachments upon China have known scarcely an Intermission, during many years. Latterly they have been more irritating than ever. In 1884 France made an assault on China, upon the shallowest pretext, and without decla ration of war destroyed the Chinese fleet in the Mln River, killing 3000 per sons. Again, only two years ago, a force of French marines killed many Chinese at Shanghai, because the latter had opposed the seizure of a "rest house for the dead" which the French Consul wanted for extension of the French settlement. But perhaps the outrage that stirred the Chinese most was Germany's action at Shan Tung, less than three years ago! A riot had occurred there, in which two German missionaries were killed. The Germans had long desired a foothold on Chinese territory, and they made these Isolated murders a pretext for territorial ag gression. Troops were landed and the Chinese Government was forced to cede the country around Kiao Chou to Ger many. During the past two or three years there has been continual talk, on the part of the powers of Conti nental Europe, of making Inroads upon China and partitioning her territory among them. Hostility to all Christian missionaries naturally has arisen from these proceedings, but the missionaries themselves have not always been dis creet "In religious matters the Chi nese are the most tolerant of men," this writer says; but, he adds, "zeal alone -will not do" In carrying- Chris tianity to them. When It is remarked further that "the missionary should have in addition the great virtue of in tellectual sympathy, the power of ap preciating another's position, the abil ity to see the truth where it exists, and tact which is unfailing," we gather what evidently he deems the leading points on which missionary work has been at fault; and this writer is one whose life has been spent in missionary and educational 'labor among the Chi nese. The news that the Russian Govern ment has given authority to its Ambas sador to leave Pekin under escort nat urally excites suspicion that Russia means to act independently of the other powers. It is not probable, however, that this fact would alter the determi nation of the American, British and German forces to proceed to Pekin as rapidly as possible. Nor would the 6afe delivery of the Russian Ambassa dor help the case of China with the other powers. For if the Pekin Gov ernment is able to deliver the Russian Ambassador safely, it is perfectly well able to protect him and all the other resident Ministers In all their rights at Pekin. and the safe delivery of the Le gations under escort would only confirm the present judgment that the whole anti-foreign movement was born and bred in the Imperial palace, which has all along- been able to control the storm it evoked. Under these circumstances the independent action of Russia and' the safe delivery of her Ambassador would not halt the march of the other powers on Pekin. The Emperor of Ger many is in no mood of leniency. He will march his troops to Pekin and there obtain full justice if Count Wal dersee conducts nobody but Germans thither. But it is morally certain that the Japanese. English and American forces will "march with him and make a final settlement -with the Pekin Gov ernment face to face. No other mode of settlement would be of any value for the future. It is not likely "that Russia would bold back, for it would be stupid diplomacy to breed distrust and jeal ousy through refusal to join a move ment that she cannot prevent. Russia is la ao situation on the Pacific Coast of Asia to dictate to England and ! Japan ualted. even if she were backed by Germany, and she will hardly at tempt it against the will of Germany. For these reasons, nothing--that Russia 1 does or may do is likely to halt the march of the allies on Pekin. When peace Is made It will be made at Pekin, and there -will be no jCffectlve negotia tions until the allies occupy Pekin and find out -who is responsible for the trouble. ARISTOTLE OJT AJtTI-IMFEIUALISar. The fundamental difficulty of the cul tivated anti-imperialist lies inv the purely ideal nature of his political thinking. "With the visionary in free trade, civil service, currency reform, we are already familiar. To him there is no shade of difference between the ideal and the practical. He takes ac count ef principles, but he takes no ac count of human nature's Imperfect character and the circumscribing en vironment of untoward and adamant conditions. Is free trade the ideal ex pression of the accumulative faculty? Then it is superfluous to inquire whether, anything In the mental consti tution of the people in question or In peculiar physical circumstances of "-their habitat renders the complete applica tion of that principje undesirable. Has authoritative discussion of money and credit laid- down the elements of an ideal currency? Then we shall proceed safely without Inquiry into the habits prejudices or industrial peculiarities of the country specifically in hand. So with polity. Grant that self-government through representative Legisla tures and elective executives is the ideal form, and logic insists upon the instant application of that system to all peoples of whatever history and sta tion. Now it is tho crowning glory of phil osophy that it almost universally re jects the process of reasoning with' which these and other like conclusions are reached. It seeks out abstract prin ciples, but with equal application it explores human nature. Perhaps our greatest political philosopher. Is Ed mund Burke; and If Burke stands for anything, he stands for a protest against the dogmatism of logic in poli tics. He insists upon studied adapta tion of political principles to specific circumstances. He goes so far as to say that as to fixed political principles there are none whatever. Burke, it may be surmised, got this truth from Aristotle. Perhaps Aristotle got it from Plato. At any rate, It is luminously set out in the pages of Aristotle, an excellent summary of whose "Politics" is given, by Professor W. A. Dunning in the Political Science Quarterly (Co lumbia University). What, asks Aristotle, Is the best state? No categorioal answer can be given. We must consider not only what form is the best absolutely, but what is the best attainable by the particular men -we have under treatment, and under the given specified conditions. Fitness must determine. The best must rule. Under certain supposable combi nations of rich and poor, wise and Ig norant, different forms of government can be assigned with certainty as the best In the various cases. Circum stances, Aristotle holds, may make any form the best Thus, democracy is best where the poor greatly exceed the rich in numbers; oligarchy where the su periority of the rich In resources and power more than compensates for their inferiority in numbers. Where the mid dle class is clearly superior to all the rest, the best system is "a diffusion of functions among various organs, -with, assignment of offices by a combination of lot and election" that is, a republic something like thatnf- the United States, or a mixed aristocracy, like Great Britain. It ought to be clear without further argument how far outside the pale of Aristotle's thinking falls the dictum of the Aunties that the Filipino's welfare requires us to establish a republic there and sail away, just as we might give him the self-binder that took the prize at the World's Fair, because in it he would find the acme of harvesting facil ities. Let us leave the matter, then,' for a digression of greater Interest if of less present need. Aristotle, It Is impressive to recall, answers the ques tion as to the means through which the Ideal character is to be developed in the citizens of the state, by designating scientific education as that means. It is but a short time since Mr. Herbert Spencer gave to the world his latest volume, in which for the menace of so cialism he assigns the same remedy. We may detect here one of those mar velous anticipations of modern thought with whichi Greek philosophy abounds. No onecan smile today at the omnium gatherum of ills for which modern thinkers prescribe the training of the mind and the discovery of nature's se crets. How much more than in Aris totle's day are we compelled to rely upon scientific experiments to Inculcate character and repress disorder! The old constable, ecclesiastical authority, Is losing his powers every day, and the police force of civilization is more and more recrulted'from the demonstrations in physical law. .That Is the tendency. Who knows where; it will stop? : GOD AND THE "COXSTITUTIOX. Repeated efforts have been made since the adoption of our Federal Con stitution to theologize it by inserting a recognition of God Into the preamble. These Constitution tinkers have recent ly broken loose again In the press of the East, and advocate the .insertion of the following words: We, the people of the United StatM. (nr. know ledlng Almighty God as the source of all power and authority In cull government, tho Lord Jesus Christ as the ruler of nation, and His revealed will as of supreme authority In civil affairs), etc A constitutional adoption of these words would have precisely the effect of the- recognition of the creeds of the Christian church, for those who claim to be the authorized interpreters of "his revealed will" are and always have been the makers of creeds, whether Protestant or Catholic, and the statements of dogmatic theology con tained in the "Westminster Confession" or. In the creed of the Catholic Church would become the standard by which to Judge the civil affairs of our coun try. We should have union of church and state with a vengeance. The fathers of the Constitution re frained from dolns .this very thing; be cause It was their deliberate purpose to separate our institutions from- all ecclesiastical-entanglements. These fath ers and framers were by a very large majority men who recognized the church and were ardent avowers of their faith in God. ' Even. Franklin, who is historically rated as a Deist of the "Voltaire school, arose in "the first Congress and moved that a nroner in vocation" be made to the "Great Father of Lights." The great majority of the fathers of the Constitution , were not merely Deists like Franklin, but trinl tarians of the most approved orthodox type. They were Presbyterians, Episco palians, - Roman Catholics or Congre gatlonallsts of the sternest -quality. Nevertheless, they deliberately set church and state) apart,-and provided carefully for- the enduring- separation of the two in the first amendment to the Constitution. ' Today, to Incorporate theism into the Constitution would be nothing but an empty form; a mere profession. It would not make the Nation a whit -more religious, more patriotic, more devout or more thelstlc. It would not make the Ten Commandments nor the Ser mon on the Mount any more respected In practical statesmanship than they are today. It would help to solve no problem, touch no portion of the public conscience. Without Any Incorporation of theism In the Constitution we are In no sense "a godless" people today. The principle of religious freedom Is -more completely exemplified In the United States than In anycountry In the world; fpr even Great Britain has a state church whlch has higher privi leges than any other under the law. It Is the privilege of any man In America to worship God In any way he pleases, or not to worship at all. Any man who cannot find a fellowship or denom ination whose tenets accord with his convictions can establish one to suit himself without danger of disturbance, unless the practice of his faith Is a vio lation of the public law. ' Under our Federal Constitution,' from Which theology is utterly absent, ; more than a hundred different denominations of Christians enjoy absolute religious freedom. It rests entirely "with the in dividual whether he will join a church, when he will leave it and when he will organize one of his own. If he chooses to join the Catholic Church, he submits to Its authority by his own Individual volition, just' as when he voluntarily accepts the , limitations which come with membership of certain orthodox Protestant denominations. In any event, under our Government we do not Inflict any pains and penalties upon heretics or heathen, whether they are rebels to the authority of the Protes tant or Catholic Church. We do not Interfere wlth any church unless the church attempts' to suppress the public law. 'The "heathen Chinee" can wor ship his wooden joss and bury his dead with absurd pagan rites and ceremo nies, but a Mormon may not practice polygamy, because under our public law we have decided that polygamy Is contrary to sound public policy, despite the fact that the Mormon pleads In Its defense the example of the Hebrew, theocracyfrom the Old Testament. The fact that without a bit of theology In our Constitution there are over a hun dred Christian sects in America proves that we are nevertheless a very relig ious people with a keen relish for the ology. In essentials nearly all,, these different sects are Christian, and In non-essentials the difference between them is slight. The great leaders among them are in practical agreement upon the fundamentals of religion; they all hold to the great truths. Jesus taught; they all treat him with rever ence as the supreme moral teacher, hero and martyr. ' ' The recognition of God in the pream ble to the Constitution is not among the dreary wants of the time, and while Congress was strongly urged by a Massachusetts Congressman but a few years ago to submit, to the several states a theological amendment to the Constitution, his , proposal hardly ob tained a respectful hearing. The truth Is that the orthodox clergy, who were members of the conventions that framed the Constitutions under which the thirteen states formed the original Union were the ablest and most earnest advocates of non-theological govern ment. The question was vigorously debated in the Massachusetts constitu tional convention, and ,the clergy with substantial unanimity protested against any language that would seem even faintly to foreshadow a recognition of church and state. They had a bitter memory of what dissenters had suf fered at the hands of the state church in England and on the Continent of Europe, and they wanted no theology set forth in the preamble of State or Federal Constitution. THE COMIXG AGE OF ALUMINUM. In an article In a recent number of the Century Magazine, entitled "The Problenyot Increasing Human Energy," Nikola Tesla, after eulogizing Iron as the most Important factor thus far in human progress, and noting many ex amples In proof of this statement, de clares that the "coming age will be the age of aluminum." While the Immedi ate future of iron Is assured by its cheapness and its unrivaled mechanical and magnetic qualities, he Is decided in the, view that at a time not very distant iron, in many of its now un contested domains, will have to pass the scepter to another. Though it 'is only seventy years less than three quarters of a century since this metal was discovered by Woehler, the alumi-. num Industry, scarcely forty years old, now commands the attention of the en tire world. Conviction that this new snetal will In a relatively short space of time displace not only Iron, but copper., In the mechanical and industrial world Is based upon the wonderfully rapid advance of this industry, the product of which but a few years ago was'sold at the fanciful price of $40 a pound, but whichtoday can be had In any desired amount for as many cents per pound. Tesla sees, moreover, In new and im proved processes of production the 'time not far distant when the present price will be considered a fanciful one. Most of the metal Is now produced In the electric furnace by a process combining fusion and electrolysis, which, while offering at number of advantageous features, Involves - naturally a great waste of the electrical energy of the current- The ideal solution of this waste of heat energy will, he thinks, be solved through a cold electrolytic process of manufacture, and aluminum be given supremacy over Iron, and cop per as well, through the medium 'of cheapness In production. The annihil ation of the copper industry through advance in the production of the newer metal Is regarded as certain. The two Industries cannot he thinks, exist and prosper together. Even now it Is cheaper to convey an electric current through aluminum than through-copper wires; aluminum castings cost less, and in many domestic and other uses copper has no chance of competing suc cessfully with its light, white rival in, "the mineral world. While, however, a further material reduction In the' price of aluminum cannot but be in .the long run fatal to copper, the progress of the former will, be checked and hindered, the larger Industry absorbing for a time, as Is usual' In such cases, the smaller; the giant copper Interests will control the. Infant aluminum. Interests; slow-pacing capper will constrain lively-moving, aluminum to Its gait, and. delay but not avert the downfall of King Copper. And this is not all. In a few years at most Tesla sees aluminum, having? reduced copper to& subordinate place in the world of mecharilcalj energy and progress, engaged in" deadly but more doubtful strife with iron. The issue of this contest will largely depend (all things being- subject ito the require ments of applied electricity) upon whether iron shall be .found Indispensa ble In electrical machinery. This future scientific and mechanical experiments alone can determine. It is regarded as highly improbable "that a cheaper ma terial will be discovered that will equal or surpass iron in its magnetic qual ity. This feature, as exhibited In Iron, is an isolated phenomenon in nature. Unless a radical departure shall be made In the character of the electric currents employed,. Iron will be indis pensable. To dispense with Iron seem ingly insuperable difficulties in the line of producing greater magnetic forces than those with which -that metal has been endowed by nature must be over come. Once overcome, says Tesla, "iron will be done away with and all electrical machinery will be manufac tured of aluminum,, at prices In all probability ridiculously, low." This, while a severe, would not necessarily be a fatal blow to iron. But in many other industrial lines', wherever light ness of structure ". combined with strength Is preferable to -heaviness "with a similar combination, the progress of aluminum will be much more rapid. Briefly, for all purposes lor which It Is suitable, the new metal will sooner or later supersede the old. The qualities that make aluminum, other things being, equal, preferable to Iron In mechanics are' thus summed up: First ,of all, there Is thirty times as much aluminum as Iron in proportion ate bulk available for the uses of man; the former is much more easily worked, which adds to Its value; in many of its properties it partakes of the character of a precious me'tal, which gives it additional worth; its electric conductiv ity, for a given weight', Is greater than that of any other "metal, while its ex treme lightness simplifies the problem of transportation of objects manufac tured from It But Professor Tesla, an enthusiast, as becomes a student of na ture and her tremendous reserve forces, believes that "the greatest civilizing potency of aluminum will be In aerial travel," which Is sure to be brought about by means of it." The time has passed when the conpluslons of the ex perimenter, who makes the subtle forces of nature his companions first, and then the creatures of 'his will, may be scouted as the vagaries of 'the dreamer.' Hence, though based to some extent upon untried theories, the views ex pressed by Nikola ;Tesla beget expecta tion father than skepticism in the realm of applied, mechanics,, or, in other words, in the realm bf energy. Rev. Heber Newton complains that, because he says 'v'lmmortal life must be conceived In accordance with the doctrines of evolution, he Is accused of holding peculiar views of- the hereaf ter." Views of the hereafter, enter tained by each and every person who lives on this earth, are "peculiar" that is, unlike the views of others; and so it ever has been. No two alike, and all changing from age to age. Profound change of such views has undoubtedly b?en produced during recent years by tho doctrines of evolution. Change as profound was produced further back by astronomical science and conse quent discovery of the place of the earth, man's habitation, in space and time. There Is nothing so subject to the principle of evolution as theolne-imi science if theology, which la merely a record of human opinion and its changes, can be called a science. The branch known as eschatology Is per haps the most changeful and Indeter minate of all. There are as many vary ing "views of the hereafter" as there are 'Individuals of the human species. Apologies are not due from Dr. Newton. Traffics Manager CamDbell's rpnlv. nn behalf of the O. R. & N., to the North ern Pacific, printed' elsewhere in this paper, makes interesting reading-, it will be seen that Mr. Campbell joins issuo directly with Mr. Mellen over a statement; of fact This part of the controversy, therefore, is a question of veracity, and must be susceptible -of' documentary proof, one way or the other. The O. R. & N.'s offer for the future, however, is a different thing. If It is bona fide, and there Is no rea son to doubt its genuineness, the decis ion of the Northern Pacific to route its Eastern Washington wheat by way of Tacoma must, If adhered to, rest on some other basis than the considera tions Hitherto alleged. It has the privi lege of announcing merely that It pre fers to haul Its wheat over Its own lines. That Is its business, , and that would be a candid declaration. As to the actual effect of the new arrange ment upon the movement of wheat, The Oregorilan will endeavor to follow It In due time, and print the -facts. The Street Fair and Carnival has pro gressed far enough to make it a cer tainty that Portland will be overrun with visitors as it has never been be fore. They are coming- by the trainload from all over the Pacific Northwest, and even from Montana.JJtah and Cali fornia. The moral is, spruce up. Streets and sidewalks, stores .and dwellings, should be neat and presentable. Paint, repair, clean up. Everybody has n duty In this respect. A good impres sion, may bring forth fruit In Invest ment of capital or active business ven tures. Some of our fellow-citizens profess to have a profound dread of militarism. Tet they apparently wish to provoke a war with Great Britain, whose re sources for war exceed those of any other nation of the world. And, they profess to think we are "subservient" to Great Britain because, we do not provoke a war with' her on South Af rica, the Alaskan boundary, the Chi nese question, or what not. These es teemed fellow-citizens are only talking for the purpose of an election in the United States. There is positively no difference be tween the title by .which we took Lou isiana, Florida and California and that by which we took Porto Rico and the Philippines. The inhabitants were not consulted In either case, and there was no more "outrage" In one than in an other. Even the horses of the Willamette "Valley will laugh at Game Warden Quimby's discovery that sportsmen obey the game laws but farmers do not. What are game laws for, the horses would like to know, if not to keep city folks out of the woods so the farmer can get all the came? - SLINGS 'AND ARROWS, ' Tie Tra.naplaa.-ted Csyae. (Oregon cayuses are to bo caught and sold to stockbuyers, who will break them to saddle and find a market for them for riding-ponies In Chicago.) Local news Item. He will shako tb buncagrasa prairies, where he garnered collhood's Joys. For surroundings altogether new and strange. He will swap the bold cow-punchers for the small Chicago boys. And he'll save himself from canning by the change, - - And If you see him cantering along the Lake shore drive. You'll never know him for the nag who ran Around the hills and rlmrocks, looking very much alive. But all the same with one foot In the can. Will he miss the gaunt coyote, whose crescendo evensong Awakened terror. In hla youthful breast. As It rang across the prairie when the pony loped alone To find a sheltered hlljslde nook and rest? Will hs jniss the. fleet Jackrabblt. who would wlustle through the air, A streak of ears and fur and that was all? Will he think of him I wonder, when ha sees the Belgian hare Cooped up in wire netting by bis stallT He will wear a shiny saddle, set with burnished studs of brass. He will champ a bit that gleams with silver plate. He wilt see the horseless carriages and stylish turnouts "pass. And he'll learn to trot a dainty mincing gait. He'll forget the restful Slwa3h""" who could only smoke and grunt Within his tepee on tho canyon side. He'll forget the boys who used to do a lofty tumbling stunt, When they lassooed him and sought to get a ride. But In shiny leather trappings or before a varnished cart. He will be a cayuse pony just the same. They can alter his environment, but never change, his heart. And 'they'll find a. cyclone easier to tame. He's a pretty long-tailed pony, when he gal lops o'er the plain. But he's meant for ornament and not for use. And they'll teach him city manners and & gentle gait In vain, For he's Just a vicious-tempered brute cayuse. A Flshtlnar Race. Ould Oirland's pllnty lv bccollent flghtln' min. They always come out when there's war In the air. The throuble with Kruger got mighty excitin whin Thtm Boers got the word that ould Roberts was there. And the flrhtin in Chlny, an Oirlshman's ladin' It, Before him the King an' thim Boxer mln cowers, Twas only last night that ould Biddy was radln' It. Tho armies belongs to a moa thot's named Powers. Intercepted Telegrams. Shanghai, Aug. 1. Kwang Hsu, Alleged Emperor, City Jail, Pekin: -"Powers want to know where the Min isters are. Answer. L. H. OHANG. Pekin, Aug. 2. Ii. H. Chanjj, Shanghai: Am not in jail. Fine you 1,000.000 taels for lese-majeste Implied in word "alleged." Keep them guessing. K. HSU. Shanghai, Aug. 3. K. Hsu, Kaiser, "Pekin: Powers will scalp me If I don't tell them where Ministers are. L. H. CHANG. Pekin, Aug. 4. L. H. Chang, Shanghai: Ask them how they'd like to be the Ice man. I am no Kaiser. Don't get funny with your betters. K. HSU. Shanghai, Aug. 5. K. Hsu, Ice-Trust Magnate, Pekin r Porters say they will commandeer my property if you don't fork over thoe Min isters. Are going to march to Pekin. What's" to be did? Rush answer. !. H. CHANG. Pekin, Aug. 6. L. H. Cham?, Shanghai: Tell them to wait a week. Do you think I'm Dick Croker? Fine jou another mill Ion for lese-majeste. Am going to sea side. Don't bother me with any more telegrams. K. HSU. Shanghai, Aug. 7. K. Hsu, Pekin (Forward): Powers on the march. Say they will hamstring me if Ministers are not deliv ered. What shall I do? Rush answer. L. H. CHANS. Ho Tell-by-the-Sea, Auer. 8. Xi.H. Chang, Shanghai: What's the matter with hari-kari? K. HSU. Shanghai, Aug. 9. K. Hsu, Pekin (Forward):' Emperor William has told his troops to boll you In oil. Situation critical. Ru3h answer today. L. H. CHANG. Ho Tell-by-the-Sea, Aug.'lL D. H. Chang," Shanghai: Coghlanlze him. Can't you let me alone? . k. HSU. . .Shanghai. Ant 12N KHsu, Pekin (Forward): Powers have got me up a kopje. How about those Ministers? Answer immedi ately. L. H. CHANG. Ho Tell-by-the-Sea, Aug. 12, 11:59 P. M.' E.;H. Chang, Shanghai: What Ministers? K. HSU. And here, unfortunately, some one cut tne wires, ana ivan Li, the correspondent, was able to" follow the dispatches no fur ther. t After the- Storm. Grass is-growln' greener. And the sky is brighter blue, Flejds. an' woods an' mountains. Has took on a warmer hue. Air Is feelln' "freiher. An" we like to breath It deep, Nights Is sort o chilly. Just the kln'd to make you sleep; Ain't no dust a-floatln' In tho" breeze that rustles by. vAIn't no' smoke a drlftin' Hero an'-sthcre across the sky, Mornin's crisp and bracln. An' the days Is bright an' warm, Nothin' qulto 450 sweetnin' As a Summer thunder storm. J. J. MONTAGUE. The North Carolina Amendment. The Oregonlan, In common with other Hanna organs, protests when the South makes an ed ucational and property qualification for tho voter. In the South thUs strikes at the negro Republican voter. But these papers have noth ing to- say against a similar law In Rhode Island, where it affects the poor white man. With these organs it Is a mere question as to which ticket they vote as to the Justice of any law. A law that" disfranchises the "poor white trash" is -all rlch.t, but It is all wrong when the same law disfranchises the Repub lican negro. There Is a. marked difference In the case when tho Republican ox is being gored. Portland Dispatch. It may be supposed the Dispatch does not know this amendment in North Caro lina was devised, drawn and enacted ex pressly for'the purpose on the one hand of disfranchising the Illiterate black man. and as expressly for the purpose of saving the elective franchise to the illiterate white man, on the other. An educational qualification Is all right. The Oregonlan would say the more severe the better. But why require more of the negro, than of the white man? OREGON FIELDS INSIIDSDUS1ER. TUa being the time of year when the elemental nomadic instinct is most alive .in us, the present ruthless abandonment of urban comforts and home cheer In favor of spray-washed rocks and forest coverts must be viewed as quite In the course of Nature. Probably civilization will never entirely eradicate the native savagery of man that still shows Itself at Intervals in an affinity for what Is wild and unsubudued and tameless. This annual outcropplnyof the race-old noma dic -Instinct the restless Impulse to possess- ourselves- of Nature's unconquered solitudes, If only for a Summer's day Is necessarily strong In the- people of. the Pacific Coast whose largest Inheritance Is a hunger for new dominion that no peril can quench, no calamity daunt; a people who, only a generation ago urged by the stern pioneer spirit that braves new- dangers In order to win a new vantage-ground for the race pushed on. stubborn and resistless, to the boundary line of Anglo-Saxon sovereignty. This, at last. Is the garden of their content; and this, the heyday of the year, when the primal nomadic spirit of unrest returns. Is the time set apart by Nature for exploration and discovery, taking an Inventory of Its wonders. A bold enter prise certainly. Not In one, two, nor yet in half a dozen generations, will the feat be accomplished. A hundred years from now there will still be craggy heights un sealed by man, priceless veins of ore still locked In the silence and darkness of the rocks, lava caves still unopened by spectacled geologist Jeweled arrow heads and Indian amulets still unsought In the sand3 of the river-bed, tender mys teries of bird-life and fiower-Uf e still un solved by puzzled botanist and ornitholo gist No doubt the best way Is to begin humbly with the beauties that He near est one the flowers, whose thousand and one elusive charms of color dull-witted man has not been able yet even to find names for, though he has tried It In three languages, Greek, Latin, and the vernac ular. A few weeks ago as we looked abroad oyer the fields, the whole world seemed to have a whimsical attack of the blues. Heaven Itself must have been surprised. Had earth received a special commission to be its understudy? No two blossoms in the field exactly tallied in hue. Each one apparently had a differ ent conception of what blue ought to be; the lupine made 20 different shifts at It In a single flower; the iris started out bravely, but grew discouraged and faded Into a melancholy lilac; the wild hyacinth and lilac were a bit too timid; but the larkspur and the corn-flowers showed tbe full courage of their convictions in a blue that was deeper than the sky itself at Midsummer. That mood passed, however, for Mother Earth is as variable a creature as any of her children; and now the woods and fields are aglow with yellow splendor; the year grows bolder as she grows older, and mixes her dyes with freer hand. Tbe vulgar tar-weed that flooded the meadows with sunlight a week ago. Is giving way to more pretentious beauties. Ealt of the Cascades, where the air Is drier than here, countless thousands of sunflowers are holding high carnival. Gaudy, flaunt ing things, you say, these sunflowers; Nature was In sportive mood when she made them, and plainly intended them f ot caricatures. If so, old Sol Is not the only one on whom the laugh was turned by Mother Earth when she modeled the sunflower. Hand a microscope to a grumbltng so cialist who believes that the world la made up of two classes. Idlers and work ers. He will 3how you that every sun flower Is a picture of the -world In minia ture. It Is not a single flower after all, but a whole colony of flowers. Each one ot the yellow false petals that encircle the heart and give the plant Its brilliant color, .is. in fact a 'distinct flower. They are the Idlers, living only for show, who take no part in the work of the colony, bearing no seed. All the real workers are huddled out of sight into a compact group In the center, for they are too small to be seen by the naked eye, yet It Is they who attend to the big duty of propagat ing the species. Every sunflower, there fore, Is a colony of some hundred or more Individual flowers, each with Us separate mission,' whether ot ornament or of use ful -work, governed no doubt by laws of supply and demand, quite like the great world around It The golden-rod, which Is Just now in Its perfection, and may be found In al most any shady thicket around Portland, is even more complex. It furnishes an interesting study of co-operation, for the work of the' plant is much more evenly divided than in the sunflower, all the mi croscopic flowerets bravely bearing their share In the division, of labor. This ia es sentially a democratic community, each flowercstalk being composed of a dozen or so groups of tiny commonwealths, ao that the whole is a republic very much lllce the one In which we live. These "composite Cowers" the sun flower, golden-rod and a multitude of others are the most complex and perfect type yet evolved in flower-life, and at the' same time the most abundant, for they are found on every hillside. August and September are above all other months of the year the most favorable for study ing them. Many ot the composltae still contain unsolved mysteries. No doubt It would sound fantastic and absurd to ad vise -our philosophers and statesmen to throw aside all their old tenets and hum bly go to these common wayside flowers for wisdom yet who will say that If they did so they might not find systems of government that would startle the world no less than .did Plato's "Republic" or More's -"Utopia" in centuries past? GERTRUDE METCALFE. Along: the "Way. Ripley T. Saunders In St. Louis Republic A little love, a little cheerfulness. AJlttle sense ot home along the way, A little heartening In the battle's stress, A little singing at the close of day And oht this life is not all cold and gray. But sweet with comfort and with sunshine bright. If that we keep, each helping as he may, Theso little things in sight. A little hope, a little faith serene. A little word of strength for those "who fall. A llitle smiling, tho' the tears come between, A little charity If need should call And O! not paltry Is our life, nor small. But big and fine and filled with sweet do. light. If that we keep, each for the sake of all. These little things in sight. America Setx tne Styles. Washington Times. Among other things the Parisians are learning from the grea.t crowd of Ameri can women who are attending the Paris Exposition Is how to dress properly. It it noticeable everywhere In France that the ladles from this country who are visiting the big- cities of that country as a part of their attendance at the expo sition are dressed in better taste than ever a Parisian dreamed of. The Western Continent before very long will take away the palm of setting the fashion from the dressmakers and milliners on the other side of the Atlantic MASTERPIECES OF LITERATURE -XX VI. Aphorisms of Jesus. Let the dead, bury their dead. Judge not. that y be not Judged. Tho kingdom ot God is within you. Blessed are the pure In heart: for they shall see God. The spirit Indeed is willing, but tho flesh Is weak. Blesied are the meek: for they shall Inherit tho earth. It the blind lead the blind, both shall fall Into the ditch. Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves. If a. house be divided against Itself that house cannot stand. If any man will do His -will, ho shall know of the doctrine. The sabbath was made for man, and fnot man for the sabbath. I am not come to call the righteous, but" sinners .to repentance. The life Is more than meat, and the body Is more than raiment. The disciple Is not above his master, nor the servant above his lord. Te are tho light of the world. A city that Is set on a hill cannot bo hid. Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you. do ye even so to them. For wheresoever tho carcass la. there will the eagles be gathered together. When thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth. God Is a spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in Bplrlt and in truth. Te shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes-of thorns, or figs of thistles? Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: X came not to send peace, but a sword. No man. having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for tho kingdom of God. Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's. Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. Whosoever therefore shall humble him self as this little child, the same Is great est In the kingdom of heaven. If they hear not Moses and the proph ets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you. It Is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter Into the kingdom of God. Whosoever shall do the will of nr Father which Is In heaven, the same Is my brother, and si3ter, and mother. Not that which goeth Into the mouth deflleth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this deflleth a man. He that Is faithful In that which Is least Is faithful also In much: and he that Is unjust In the least Is unjust also In much. Take heed, and beware of covetous ness; for a man's life consisteth not In the abundance of tho things which, he possesseth. Make to yourself friends of the mam mon of unrighteousness; that when ye fall, they may receive you Into everlaat lng habitations. For what Is a man profited If hoc shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give In ex change for his soul? He that loveth father or mother more than me Is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me Is not worthy of mo. Not even one that salth unto me. Lend, Lord, shall enter Into tho kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth thn will of my Father which Is in heaven. For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not; shall be takes away even that which he hath. Give not that which is .holy unto tha dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you. And If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out; it Is better for thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye. than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire. X say unto you, that likewise Joy ahull be in heaven over one sinner that ?e penteth, more than over ninety and nisa Just persons, which need no repentance. If ye then, being e-rtL know how to jrrwa good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father, which Is hs heaven, give good things to them that ask him? And whosoever shall give Xcf drink unto one of theso little, ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall In no wise lose his reward. Consider the 'lliiea'of "the" field, how they grow; they toil not neither do they spin: and yet I say unto you,, that even Solomon In all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. The hour cometh, when ye shall neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father. But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers rnoXX worship the Father In spirit and in truth. Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you. and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly In heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke Is easy, and ray burden la light Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all they mind. This la the first and great commandment And the second Is like unto It, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two commandments hang all the law and tne prophets. Let not your heart be troubled: ye be- llve In God. believe also m me. In my Father's house are many man sions: if It were not so, X would havo told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And If I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. No man putteth a piece ot new cloth unto an old garment; for that which la put In to All It up taketh from the gar ment, and the rent Is made worse. Nei ther do men put new wine into old bot tles: else the bottles break, and the wine runneth out, and the bottles perish: but i they put new wine Into new bottles, and J both are preserved. Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: ror ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go In. Woe unto you. scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites I , for ye devour widows houses, and for a pretense make long prayers; therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation. Woa i unto you. scribes and Pharisees, hypo-j crites! for ye compass sea and land to j r.ake one proselyte; and when he Is mae. ; ye make him twofold more the child j of hell than yourselves. Woe unto you,j icrbes and Pharisees, hypocrites' for yej ftr- like unto whlted sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but -are t within fulof dead men's bones, and of au uncieanness.