THE SUNDAY OEEGONIAN, PORTLAND. NOVEMBER 18, 1900. Wixz r0o?tttm J&tered at the PoetcSee at Portland. Oregon, as seeend-elass matter. TELEPHONES. Rrtltortsl Hooais....l6 Business Office. ...GOT REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br HU (postage prepaid). In Advance- Dully, with Soaday, per moath $0 S3 Ially. Sunday excepted, per year 7 69 Sally, with Sunday, per year . 0 00 Sunday, tier Tear : 2 00 ! The Weekly, per year 1 50 Aiio weeiuy, 3 moaths To City Subscribers 1 2)aUy. per week, delivered. Sundars excepted. 15c XaUy, per week, delivered. Sundays lacluded.ZOo POSTAGE ItATESr United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 16-page paper lc 18 to 32-pa.ge paper 2c Foreign rates double. 5ew or discussion Intended far publication !s The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." net to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertis ing; subscriptions or to any business matter should bo addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson. oSlce at 1111 Pacific avenue, Toooma. Box 955, Tacom. PostoSlce. Eastern Business Ofllce The Tribune build ing, New Tork City; "The Rookery." Chicago; the 8. C Beckwith special agency. New Tork. For said In San Franclsoo by J. K. Cooper, YC Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros.. 23G Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1003 Market street; Foster &. Orear, Ferry News stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 859 So. Spring btrect. and Oliver & Haines. 108 So. Spring street. For sale in Omaha by H. a Shears. 105 N. Sixteenth street, and Barkalaw Bros., 1012 3Tarnam street. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. TT W. Second South street. For sals In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On file In Washington. D. C.. with A. W. Xucn. 509 Hth N. W. For sale In Denver, Cote., by Hamilton & Xendrick. 906-812 Seventh street. . . TODAY'S WEATHER. Occasional rain; con tinued cool; brisk southwesterly winds. PORTLAXD, Sl"DAY, NOVEMBER 18. Historical research has so fully ex amined and rejected the traditions of ancient migration to America that scholarship will only be able to receive the interesting? story from Sonora with Incredulity. One of the most impres sive spectacles in human annals la that of the New "World, working out its des tiny remote from and unconnected with the broader stream of humanity in the greater hemisphere. Older geologically, the Njw World lagged behind the Old In development When the Spaniards came here American civilization as rep resented in the peoples of Mexico, Yu catan and Peru had reached a stags equivalent to that reached in Mesopot amia in the time of Abraham and on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea in the time of Agamemnon. The New "World, except for the Eskimo, was peo pled with one race, and the struggle for life among plants and animals never attained the severity and the consequent rapid upward development that the Old World enjoyed. The theo ries that the Indians were originally Kamtchatkans, Chinamen or remnants of the lost ten tribes of Israel have teen one by one set aside. In the face of evidence that all the Inhabitants of America, from Hudson's Bay to Cape Horn, belong to one race, and to a race different from Asiatics and Europeans. Man was living here 16J.00D to 300000 years ago, and If he had prior to that t'me drifted from Asia or elsewhere, before the continents had assumed their present form, the fact would have no possible bearing on this story that temples in Sonora are believed to have been built by Chinese "discoverers" 1500 years ago. Primitive man's devices of war, hor ticulture or worship so remarkably re semble each other in isolated fields of development that discoverers are in variably inclined to regard them ns borrowed from some other people. The theory that stone tablets found in Mex ico are the work of Chinese, because they were "partly deciphered by a learned Chinaman," Is the exact paral lel of fancied resemblance between Yu catan and Egyptian inscriptions and real correspondence between customs of Old "World and New World barbarism. "Whether In Asia, Africa or America, man has moved upward from savagery upon the same lines. His stone age is substantially the same everywhere, his tribal development, his religious sacri fices, his beginnings of astronomy and arithmetic. Fifteen centuries ago the Chinese were, as they are today, not discoverers, but home bodies. In the time of Virgil, Western civilization was clad in their silks, but no European Jiad ever seen them away from their native haunts. It is doubtful whether the stories of ancient skirtings of the African coast are founded on fact, and Jt is certain that if they are, the means of mwlgation 1500 years ago were hardly adequate to those Journeys with land constantly within reach, to say nothing of their being equal to voyages across the Pacific The Chinese colo nies of Mexico will probably share the fate of the fanciful narratives of Pres cott, the bulk of whose American ro mances have long been consigned to the department of imaginative legend. The Inconsistency of Missouri in giv ing 40, w0 majority for National policies that will hamper alt business and Na tional development and set the seal of dlsappro al on National expansion, the while it projects and invites the world to its Louisiana Purchase celebration, has been referred to in these columns with such plain speaking that numerous Bryan organs hereabout Is have taken rreat offense. They profess to think that Bryan men are Just about as good as McKlnley men, and entitled to equal respect for their opinions; and they abhor that a xotc for Bryan should be Interpreted as other than an effort In the direction of wisdom and patriotism as the Bryan voter understands it. Therefore, they argue, it is wrong to say that as Missouri is for the silver basis its exposition should be put off with plugged dollars; as it is against expansion, the exposition should put on sackcloth and ashes for the occupation of Missouri without "oonsent of the governed", as it is opposed to "gov ernment by injunction." that is, to sup pression of riotous mobs, it ought to have riot to its heart's content. In all this the Bryan organs see "intolerance" anl "dictation." ho be it. Intolerant toward free sil ver and free riot and Aguinaldlsm we entrrat to be regarded; but a word parenthetically, as to the Missouri and the Southern cotton men's inconsist ency. Tammany chieftains doubtless bad th right to buy. lee-trust stock; It was only when they joined in denun ciation of trusts that their political honesty became a byword and a re proach. Doubtless South Carolina has the right to protect itself against negro domination; but when it invoked high heaven on behalf of the disfranchised Porto RIcan and Filipino, it forfeited all standing in the court of candid opin ion. Doubtless Missouri is within the law and the gospel when it projected Its Louisiana Purchase Exposition; but when it declares for panic in the form of free silver and riot in the form of no protection for property against strikers, and brands expansion as "criminal ag gression," it puts itself where its trans parent inconsistency can only appeal to the sense of humor, or the indignation of the fair-minded. The South has done everything it could to prevent Sec retary Hay from securing "the open door" in China, and now its cotton man ufacturers appeal to him to continue his efforts in their behalf. This is what The Oregonlan objects to In these several cases, and it has seen no perti nent defense of the absurdity. But to return to Intolerance and dic tation. We are asked to give the man credit for honesty and sincerity who denounces the gold standard and advo cates the silver basis. We shall do nothing of the kind. We are asked to jjive a man credit for patriotism who espouses the cause of armed enemies of the United States, who are even now engaged in firing on its flag and tor turing its soldiers. And we shall do nothing of this kind. Is a man entitled to respect, for his opinion? Well, that depends on what his opinion is. He may profess an opinion so clearly and diametrically opposed to all experience and to the actual facts standing plainly before all eyes, that he forfeits the re spect of all thinking men. He may ad vocate policies so disastrous to all In dustry and business that society will make common cause against him as an enemy of Its welfare. He may indulge sympathy and aid for the armed foes of his country to such an extent that he becomes an object of execration to all the patriotic. There is no justification In reason for free coinage. There is no juslflcation In civic virtue for an Amer ican's opposition to his country's cause. But we are told that this Involves the doctrine that "every citizen must shape his politics to conform with the policy of the party In power or be de nied any of the benefits of citizenship." Not at all. We always have differences of opinion as to the policies of the party in power. McKinley's policies are nearly all subject to grave criticism, and properly so. But there are certain fundamental thiqgs that we must not oppose. If the Democrats were In favor of an honest dollar, but had different proposals from the Republi cans in maintaining it, we could con sider their plans with equanimity. But their demand for a dishonest dollar strikes at all business and Industry. If they were for the ascendency of the flag, but offered a different way of ad vancing it, that would be endurable. But when they asperse the Army and hope for Its defeat, they forfeit patience and respect. No one can accuse The Oregonlan of slavish adherence to the Republican party, or of intolerance to Democratic opinion on historic policies of the Nation. But It will not condone dishonest money or disloyalty to the flag, whether advocated by Republi cans, Democrats, Populists or Prohibi tionists. It will accord to free sllverites and Agulnaldlsts the same respect for private opinion it accorded in 1860-5 to the Northern men who thought the Union should be broken up and slavery perpetuated. THE COLORADO BARBECUE. Colorado is consistent; her people mobbed Roosevelt, voted . for Bryan, and now a Colorado mob, with the tacit approval of a Populist Governor and Sheriff, has burned a negro murderer to death at the stake. The ordinary Sheriff appears to be a sheep or a scoundrel, a coward or a complaisant knave, in collusion with the lynchers when they arrive. No man Is obliged to be Sheriff, but when he accepts the office he accepts It with all the dangers that its grave responsibility implies, and no Sheriff who is a man of honor will suffer any mob to murder his pris oner, however guilty and friendless his prisoner may appear. The Colorado Sheriff had ample warning that the mob Intended to murder his prisoner, but he took no Bteps to protect his charge. He made no appeal to the Gov ernor. He Intended to play into the hands of the mob. It is true that capital punishment is legally prohibited in Colorado, but so It is in Maine. In Maine a few days ago a man was found guilty of the murder of three persons in one family, one of them a woman, and was sen tenced to prison for life. No mob Inter fered with the trial or the execution of the sentence. The people of Maine are quite as brave and high-spirited as the people of Colorado, but they respect their laws, and when they disapprove them they appeal to the Legislature to ohange them. They do not allow the mob to murder a prisoner Jn the hands of the officers of the law. But it was not the fact that under the laws of Col orado the negro murderer could not suffer capital punishment which prompted the mob to interfere. It would have Interfered Just as promptly if the murderer had been liable to capi tal punishment. It was because the mob desired to burn the negro to death. Cruel and unusual punishment is pro hibited by the Constitution of the United States and by the organic fun damental law of every state in the Union, lnoluding Colorado. The dread ful thing about all this awful business Is not merely the torture of the negro miscreant who was so horribly done to death, but the terrible stupidity which prompts such frightful acts of venge ance. The provocation to popular rage was great, but as an object-lesson of vengeance, an exceptionally cruel punishment, this Colorado horror Is ab solutely worthless as a deterrent Influ ence, while as a demoralizing lesson in sickening, insane barbarity it will bear bitter fruit. The wisdom of Christen dom has not in every free country for bidden the infliction of legal torture for crime simply because It was deeply concerned about the mere individual sufferings of the condemned, but the Christian wisdom that rules free civili zation has learned by experience that excessive legal severity defeats Its pur pose and demoralizes Its public Our statutes are not framed In accordance with the Mongolian theory of punish ment by slow torture before death, be cause the public spectacle of legal or Illegal torture hardens the heart and brutalizes the spirit p the people. Crimes of violence and unusual atrocity multiply where the legal or illegal code of vengeance is colored by the mad ness of merciless, unusual barbarity. Under the Chinese code, legal torture is Inflicted, but legal torture in the sense of cruel or unusual punishment for crime ended in England when Cromwell succeeded Charles I; legal torture ended In France with the French Revolution of 1789-94; legal tor ture does not exist today in Europe outside of Russia. Suppose a brutal soldier of the army of the allies had ravished and mur dered a Chinese woman on the march to Pekin, and had been captured by the Boxers and slowly sliced to death under the Chinese code; what an outcry there would have been over Chinese barbarity! The mob is not the people, and if the leaders of a mob can put one maa to death for one reason, they can put another man to death for another reason, or rob a third. If free govern ment is not a failure, then lynch law Is not necessary or excusable, and it cannot be resorted to as necessary without conceding the unfitness of the people for free government. GREAT IJTDUSTR.Y THE PRICE OF SUPREME EXCELLENCE. A bill will be introduced at the next meeting of the New Hampshire Legis lature for the purchase by the state of the birthplace of Daniel Webster, at Franklin. Interest imthe boyhood and early manhood has been revived by Professor John B. McMaster, in the cur rent number of the Century Magazine. In college, Webster disliked and shunned Greek and mathematics, read widely in English literature and his tory, and while in no sense a student or a scholar, became the best-informed man In college. He was distinguished, however. In college, as was Wendell Phlljips, for his eloquence. At 18 he de livered the Fourth of July oration at Hanover. His early style, like the first public speeches of Lincoln, was disfig ured by a tendency to bombast, but within the first ten years of his legal practice he had reformed his style alto gether and replaced It by one unsur passed in modern oratory for simplic ity and earnestness. He was not nat urally fond of the legal profession, which he described as a calling where "my feelings will be constantly har rowed by objects of dlsnonesty or mis fortune, and my moral principle con stantly at hazard." His natural prefer ence was for a life where he could fish and shoot, contemplate nature, read the masterpieces of English literature, study history and government, or deliver an oration on some historic day. So strong was his preference for such a life that nothing but the earnest remonstrance of his legal preceptor, Christopher Gore, of Boston, persuaded him to refuse the appointment of Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of his native county in New Hampshire. It Is a curious fact that while he was always In demand as an orator for his toric occasions, Webster had passed his 30th year without holding any political office. The peroration of the address he delivered at Fryeburg, Me., in 1802. is found in the last notable speech of his life, delivered in the United States Senate in July, 1850. The power and patriotic spirit of a speech made at Brentwood, N. H., in 1812 obtained him the nomination and election' to Con gress, Professor McMaster .fairly calls the career of Webster up to this time thirty years of preparation. The twelve years between 1800 and 1812 stand for the hardest work of Webster's life. In this time he had earned a high reputa tion as a lawyer, but It was his com manding genius as an orator and his fervent patriotism that secured his first election to Congress. During these twelve years he utterly reformed his style, replaced a rough and overbearing manner with stately and dignified cour tesy, and In power of thought, felicity and force of expression was as well equipped a man the day he entered Congress, without any previous legis lative experience, as any man be found In that body, although It Included both Clay and Calhoun. Webster never had to outdo the enormous industry and ap plication of his first ten years of pro fessional life. It is doubtful if he ever had to equal It in downright drudgery of unbroken mental labor. The fact that he did enormous work with com parative ease in his subsequent career earned him a reputation for natural In dolence that he did not deserve. With all his genius, Webster Is no ex ception to the rule that great and noble things are difficult; that Indomitable In dustry and severe toll are the price of supreme excellence in all great men, with the exception of great poets, who rule in the ethereal empire of the Imag ination rather than in that of cold rea son and understanding. Webster, by his unflagging youthful Industry, paid the price of ultimate supreme excel lence, even as did Napoleon, Macaulay and Lincoln. The novelist Dickens, a very hard worker, Insisted that the only genius he possessed was a superior ca pacity for taking an infinite deal of pains with his work. The literary and historical accumulations he had ob tained and the severe self-discipline enforced by Webster during the first twelve years of his professional life ex plain much of the astonishing ability he exhibited during his first term in Congress. The fact that his mature Judgment in 1850 so approved of the style and thought of his oration of 1802 shows the maturity and power of his mind at 21, compared with its exuber ance at 18. Webster in personal con versation always repelled the sugges tion that his great achievements were due to the Inspiration of his gen ius rather than to serious reflection and hard work. He conceded that flashes of Imagination that set the table In a roar may come in this way, but de clared that no matter how spontaneous great utterances may be made by ora torical art to appear, they always stand for many hours of hard labor and pa tient thought. In his youth and early manhood Webster Hired wisdom with each studious year. In meditation dwelt, with learning wrought. And shaped his weapon with an edge severe. This Is the true explanation of Web ster's ability at $0 years of age to step into Congress without previous experi ence and at once take his place at the head of the table as an orator of sur passing power and grandeur. As an orator, Webster was a man of genius of the first order of eminence; but as a statesman and great leader of men he was not the peer of Henry Clay. Web ster was a far greater man, measured by pure Intellectual strength, than Clay, but Clay was a far more ivld and charming personality In life and a far tenderer and more lasting persona memory after death, than Webster; for Clay was" always a man of deep sensi bility, and sympathetic quality among men, while Webster dwelt apart. Web ster lives and will always live In the literature of his country; but Clay, whose literary remains are of compara tively small permanent value, still lives in the hearts of his countrymen as a man who, if not a great thinker or a great jurist, was a great leader of his fellow-men from youth to old age. It Is true that Calhoun's brains shotted the Confederate cannon, while Web ster's clarion voice was heard in the inspiring shout of the mighty armies that rose like magic when Lincoln stood in the Capitol and sounded a blast upon his war bugle whose every note was worth ten thousand men. Webster's logic of 1830-32 was In 1861 the unan swered and unanswerable argument of the fight we fought for- the flag, and because of this, and chiefly because of this, His name a nation's heart shall keep Till morning's latest sunlight fades On the blue tablet of the deep. The difficulty of dealing with a relig ious or semi-religious proposition through the judiciary confronts the public whenever and wherever an at tempt is made to bring religious char latanry to book. The result of the trial at Oregon City of one A. Hertzka, un der whose alleged "treatments" the death of a woman at Gladstone oc curred some months ago, the said Hertzka being m a Christian Science "healer," Is in line with experience in such matters. The jury was unable to agree, being manifestly undecided as to where the religious privileges of the de fendant ceased and the legal rights of his accusers began. Christian Scien tists, it is said, have their blood up though they themselves deny that they have blood and intend to fight this case to the finish, hoping thereby to establish their legal standing as heal ers and their methods of treating the sick as in accord with the "science of being." Unless a case Is very flagrant, resulting unmistakably in the death, through neglect, of the patient, It Is manifestly almost impossible to do any thing with these people as regards their rellglo-physlcal practices. In this in stance, as shown by the testimony, the patient was hopelessly ill of Brlght's disease, and It Is not at all likely that the harmless Incantations of the "healer" hastened the end (unless, in deed, they were accompanied by long readings from "The Book," as Mrs. Eddy's screed is known to the faithful, In which case heart failure may have been prematurely superinduced through exhaustion), or that medical attendance could have greatly delayed it. The prosecution therefore manifestly had a weak case. Had the patient been ill of a malady that ordinarily yields to en lightened treatment, medical or surgi cal, and had she died without any at tempt of a material nature involving skill and medicine, having been made for her relief, it is barely possible that a carefully chosen jury might have found the . alleged "healer" guilty, though even this may be considered doubtful) so loth Is the average Ameri can citizen to Interfere with the relig ious beliefs and practices of any sect. The only results In this instance pres ent or prospective are a bill of expense to the county, and a good deal of free advertising for a doctrine that affects scorn of all material things. General Miles Is a strong advocate of National irrigation, having become converted to that idea, it 'is said, through the observation of conditions in the semi-arid regions of the great plateau during his Indian campaigns. He will present his views before the irrigation congress that will convene in Chicago Tuesday and Wednesday of this woek. The friends of the propo sition count upon him as a valuable auxiliary to their contention, since he has a straightforward manner of deal ing with practical questions that ap peals at once to the common sense and self-interest of the people. Others who will speak upon this occasion from the general text, "Save the Forests and Store the Floods," are Secretary Wil son, of the Department of Agriculture, and Senators Carter, of Montana; Fos ter, of Washington, and Perkins, of California. Government experts on for estry and irrigation will present the technical side of the proposition, while some of Chicago's most prominent busi ness men will take it up from a busi ness standpoint. Altogether, the sub ject will be exhaustively treated, and the people, or that portion who live and have faith in the vast area west of the Missouri River, will doubtless follow the discussion with interest. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs, William A. Jones, tells the Government in his annual report that "large money payments to the Indians are demoral izing In the extreme," adding: "They degrade the Indians and corrupt the whites, induce pauperism, scandal and crime, and nullify all the good effects of labor." The truth of this statement cannot be doubted; the reasons that support It are obvious. When It Is re membered In this connection that there stands to the credit of the Indian tribes in the National Treasury $33,815,955, It may readily be conceded that the ulti mate disposal of these moneys Is a sub ject for most serious Congressional con sideration. In the death of Marcus Daly all polit ical differences are forgotten, and Mon tana mourns him as an enterprising, worthy citizen whose energies will long leave the Impress of their power upon the industries and prosperity of , the state. If W. A. Clark would now pass on, Montana politics might cease to be a synonym of boodle and corruption. The" discovery would, moreover, be made that -he, too, had been a power ful factor in the development of the natural resources of the state. This is as it should be. He is a paltfoon indeed who would pursue, or seek to pursue, an enemy beyond the grave. An irrigation canal about twenty miles long, twenty-two feet wide at the bottom, and carrying four feet of water, has just been completed In Te ton County, Montana, by which 100,000 acres will be added next year to the cultivable area of that state. This is" a manner of presenting the Irrigation question which, inasmuch as it carries solution with it, Is by no means to be despised. Bryan lost every state in which he delivered campaign speeches except Missouri. This statement represents such a volume of wasted breath, such a weary lot of tramping up and down, so many sleepless nights and perspiring days, that it should prove an object lesson to Presidential candidates who are possessed of the fatal "gift of gab' for all time. WAS VILURD A BENEFACTOR? No general history of Oregon can be complete without a recital of such rail road development of the state as was di rected by Henry Villard, who died Novem ber 12. Look back 20 years and take a view of the conditions in the Columbia River basin before the era of railroads, when that vast empire, except a limited wheat producing area around Walla. Walla, and a few mining camps, was a cattle range. Contrast this with the present, when that region raises 35,000,000 bushels of wheat annually, and is served by 2000 miles of railroad to haul it to market promptly; where the output of precious metals is about $10,000,000 a year; where the cattle Industry, driven further into the interior, yields richer returns than it did late In the '70s; where there are a score of pros perous, well-governed, enterprising cities that each year become more important local trade centers; where the cultivation of fruit adds largely to the community wealth; where the population In two dec ades has increased five-fold, and where achievements of the past only foreshadow what the future contains. Grant that Villard's enterprise paved the way for this great change, and then let it be asked. Was he a benefactor of the Pa cific Northwest, and particularly of Port land? It will be admitted that his inslght'Mnto the future of the Columbia River basin waa keener than those who established and controlled Its then limited transpor tation facilities. At the time Villard bought the" Oregon Steam Navigation Company he saw and prepared for that which Ladd, Alnsworth, Reed and Thomp son had not seen and prepared for name ly, the conversion of vast bunchgrass ranges, into rich and fertile wheat fields, and the consequent creation of traffic that no line of steamboats, under old condi tions, could have handled expeditiously. His plan for a main line down the Co lumbia River scarcely antedated wider plans for branch rail lines ramifying every arable section of Eastern Oregon and Washington, and of Northern Idaho. At this late day it is Idle to speculate upon the unwisdom of the Oregon Steam- Navigation owners in letting go of their property. Viewed in the light of history, It seems that they did not see, or, if they saw, they neglected their great opportu nity. The O. S. N. could have built Out of Its profits, slowly, it Is true, etery mile of road constituting tho present O. R. & N. system. There would have been no quanderlng of money, due to excessive haste, that marked construction work un der Villard. If they had so wished, the Oregon men could have bonded the road and drawn down the dividends. It would be Immensely to the advan tage of Oregon if ownership of the O. R. & N. system were in Oregon. Local in terests would be better served without af fecting in tho least transcontinental in terests. For that matter, the development of the Columbia River basin was depend ent only In slight degree on Eastern con nection. Its principal market Is at tide water on the Pacific Coast. Furthermore, the local traffic alone Is large enough to make the system profitable. This Is Villard's service to the Pacific Northwest: The building of railroads by means of which farms and homes were made for more than 250,000 people who are living In prosperity; furnishing transpor tation facilities for a region capable of sustaining in comfort a population of 1,000,000; constructing the Pacific Coast connection of two transcontinental rail ways; extending the Oregon & California from Roseburg to the top of the Siskiyou Mountains, and connecting Southern Ore gon by rail with the outside world. Henry Villard looked Into the future farther than most of the men with whom he was associated. In some respects he was so far in advance that they regarded him as a visionary, impractical man. This is what led to his first failure in the Northern Pacific. He obtained large sums of money from German capitalists with which to complete the railroad. A number of these capitalists were among the guests who came out to witness the driving of the last spike In 1883. Their hearts failed them when they saw what an enterprise they had been backing and they hastened to unload and thereby brought disaster upon Villard. It would have been all right if they had con tinued to tako Villard's representations of the situation, but when they came to see for themselves, to exercise their own Judgment, they could not look far enough Into the future. Their shortsightedness was what brought the trouble. The foreigners "who had been told of the magnificent country through which the Northern Pacific ran were scared half to death when they came to see It The Iron track stretched across a thousand miles of what appeared to them to be a wilderness incapable of development. They had been accustomed to tho condi tions of Europe. Their knowledge of the United States was confined to the thickly settled states bordering on the Atlantic seaboard. When th'ey came to ride for days through a region that scarcely bore a trace of civilization, that seemed to them to be half desert and to give no promise of sustaining an active popula tion, they could not believe that it would ever justify so extensive a transportation project. It la said that the celebration at the driving of the last spike was scarcely over before messages were sent back Instructing agents to unload North ern Pacific The market went to pieces, Villard lost his fortune and control of tho railroad property. Financial failure came because the financiers and capitalists could not see, could not believe in the future that Villard saw clearly. Events have justified his judgment. The wilder ness has blossomed and Is pouring an ever-Increasing bounty into the coffers of the Northern Pacific, into the lap of the world. He mode mistakes and more than one failure. But he was impatient, ambitious and overconfident and he attempted too much even for a man who felt that un limited money would come to his service at his bidding. He was an optimist and he did not always show respect for 'arithnfetlc nor reason between cause and effect. While he saw the probable fu ture of his railroad enterprises, he was not so clear-sighted with regard to col lateral concerns. He attempted too much. The "paternal" idea was too strong in him, else he would not have undertaken t6 'do things locally which cities should do for themselves. He started the Port land Hotel, which citizens of Portland afterwards finished, and he began a dry dock which Portland has not finished. He founded steel works which were to make the rails for his and other companies and structural iron for the entire region west of the Rockies. He had visions and hopes of a roll line from ocean to ocean and of steamships to the Orient, part of which have been realized by men who fol lowed him into practically the same field. Ho had capacity for the largest things in railroading but had no taste for the es sentials of detail. The world concedes that he who causes two blades of grass to grow where one grew before, is' a benefactor. Viewed thus, Villard waa a benefactor of the Pa cific Northwest and particularly of Port land. ' zr j, levinson; OREGON AND THE GR0DT BILL It Is often asserted with a light, laugh and a careless shrug of the shoulders that we Americans, who are essentially a cheerful-mannered people, rather like to be humbugged when it is done with adroitness and art. A clever swindle. If no real tragedy follows in Its wake. Is apt to provoke a ripple of amusement and secret admiration. We leave it to the Man who is Hurt to get angry. ""That is his duty, not ours. But on December 6 a question as to this privilege of humbug comes up for vote at Washington, before the peoplo of the United States, In which Oregon is clearly in the position of the Man who is Hurt. Shall we remain inert and submissive In the face of a fraud that has unblushlngly swindled our farmers out of the legiti mate fruits of their toll, or shall we de mand a policy of stout-hearted resistance from our Senators and Representatives? The Grout bill, which Imposes a tax of 10 cents a pound on colored oleomargar ine, is a protest against the yellow mix ture of tallow, lard and cottonseed oil that Is being palmed off upon an unsus pecting public as pure butter. To the average housewife there is no way of detecting the imposture, She asks her grocer for butter, and is given tallow; yet so daintily is it prepared, with such mar velous craft Is it disguised to deceive palate and eye alike, with such cunning skill does its color accommodate Itself to the change of seasons lighter In Sum mer, darker In Winter so perfectly does it imitate local peculiarities of butter due to difference of feed or pasture In tho various country districts, that it is impossible for any one except the expert to distinguish the spurious article from the real. But even If we grant that many per sons may be found who are willing to eat tallow in place of butter, the ques tion arises as to whether It is right and proper to force a great, legitimate in dustry to the wall in support of a fraud; to impoverish the dairymen of America at the profits of tho powerful oleomar garine trust, which, with millions In its hands, Is working secretly, persistently, night and day, to buy the votes of United States Senators. Oregon dairy Interests havo suffered much because of this giant fraud that is being perpetrated. Two years ago our markets were so flooded with cheap oleo margarlno that our own butier could 'not be Bold, except at a loss. Happily now a rigid enforcement of our tate pure-food law has driven oleomargarine out of the home market. But, outside the state, the old condition rules. Our ex ported Oregon butter Is obliged to com pete with oleomargarine manufactured at the low cost of 6 cents a pound. No less than S3,O0O,O0O pounds of oleomarga rine wo3 made during the year 1899 in the United States, and 90 per cent of It was sold as butter. As everyone knows, Oregon and Washington are peculiarly rich in all natural advantages that favor the growth of a great dairy Industry. Probably no other part of America offers so many encouragements to the dairyman. This Is a land of grasses In what other state can such a plentiful supply of green feed be guaranteed the whole year V round? Our equablo climate meets the require ments of butter and cheese-making. Our dairy stock are unsurpassed by any state of tho Union: and Oregon milk averages the year round one pound of butter to every 22 pounds of milk. Whereas, two years ago, we were not making enough butter even to supply the home market, we will during the year 1900 ship out of the Willamette Valley 1,000,000 pounds, In addition to the amount required for home consumption. This i3 tho direct result of the enforcement of our state pure food law. It Is probably no exaggeration to say that this butter cannot be excelled In quality elsewhere In tho world. Is It not worth while to encourage the growth of this great Oregon Industry by supporting tho Grout bill? There is now less than three weeks left before the question comes before the House. By the end of this month the men to whom tho people of Oregon have Intrusted the grave responsibility of rep resenting them before the Nation will be speeding toward Washington. Which way will they vote on this important issue? Protection of the dairymen is import ant to this section of the Pacific Coast, and to all the states of the Middle West The greater part of the opposition comes from the South, which furnishes the cot tonseed oil that is so essential an ingre dient of oleomargarine. Bitter will bo the fight. It is believed that the bill will pass the House successfully, but the Senate Is still in doubt. The advocates of the Grout bill are the farmers; and one of Its warmest sup porters Is Secretary of Agriculture Wil son, who says: "There never was a time in our history when the legislators were so much dis posed In favor of legislation to protect the farming interest. There has been a grand awakening of the farmers to their own interest. You may set me down as heartily in favor of the passage of tho Grout bill. The farmers have a right to expect legislation sufficient to give them protection against unfair competition by fraudulent imitation of pure butter." At present oleomargarine can be sold at a lower price than pure butter, with tho result that there is little or no profit to the honest dairyman. But if the Grout bill is passed, it will make the sole of the colored oleomargarine so unprofitable that it can no longer compete success fully with pure butter. The result will be that colored oleomargarine will give place to the uncolored, which Is as white as lard. The puzzled housewife will then no longer be the dupe of the oleomarga rine trust; for it will be an easy matter to distinguish between the real and the false. This is all the Grout bill alms to do protect the dairyman by removing the mask from oleomargarine. Uncle , Sam should not tolerate a counterfeit roll of butter any more than a counterfeit sil ver dollar. GERTRUDE METCALFE. An Incident at Pelcln. Harper's Weekly. A curious incident noticed by few hap pened. The Russian band had been play ing full lung3 the "Marseillaise," the re publican march of France, but a forbid den air In the monarchic neighboring country of Italy. As the French were meagerly repre sented, the Italians came Immediately be hind them, just as the "Marseillaise" that was In full swing was being played. The Russian General discovered at once the faux pas, and tried in vain to signal the bandmaster to stop. They were going at it their hardest when the General Ald-de-Camp was dispatched across the line to tho musicians. Just in time. In a hurry-scurry fashion the republican march ceased abruptly, and the "Inno Rea!e" of Italy was struck, much to the reassurance and relief of the Italians, who seemed perplexed to march 'under an air foreign and ungrateful to their ears. J MASTERPIECES OF LlTERATURE-39. .1 ' Songs of Ancient Israel. A Sons of Trust. - In tho Lord put I my trust How say ye to my soul. Flee as a bird to yeur mountain For lo. the wicked bend the bow, Thy make ready their arrow upon the string. That they may shoot in darkness at the upright la heart.' If the fouadattoRs be destroyed, What can the richteous dor The Lord Is In his holy temple. The Lord, his throne Is in heaven; Hie eyes behold, his eyelids try the children of men. The Lord trteth the righteous: But the wicked and him that leveth vio lence his soul hateth. . TJpoa the wleked he shall rain snares; ' , Fire and brimstone and burning wind shall he the portion of their cup. I For the Lord is righteous; He leveth righteousness: The upright shalt behold his face. The Consecrated Life. Lord, who shall sojourn In thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell la thy holy hlUT He that walketh uprightly. And worketh righteousness. And speaketh truth in his hearts He that slandereth not with his tongue, Nor doeth evil to his friend. Nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbor. In whose eyes a reprobate is despised; But he hosoreth them that fear the Lord. He that sweareth to his own hurt, and ohange th, not. He that putteth not out his money to usury, Nor taketh reward against the laaeeent. He that doeth these things shall sever be moved. Under the Protection of Jehovah. The Lord i my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down In green pastures; He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restore th my soul: He guideth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake. Tea, though I walk through the valley of tho shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For thou art with me: Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me In the presence of mine enemies: Thou hast anointed my head with oil; My cup runneth oyer. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; And I will dwell la the house of the Lord forever. Anthems for the Inauguration of Jerusalem. L At the Foot of the Hill. First choir The earth Is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof; The world, and they that dwell therein. For he hath founded It upon the seas. And established it upon the floods. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? And who shall stand la his holy plaee? Second choir ( Ho that hath clean hands, and & pure heart; Who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, And hath not sworn deceitfully. He shall receive a blessing from the Lord, And righteousness from the God of his sal vation. This Is the generation of them that seek after him. That seek thy face, O God of Jacob. A Festal Response, The High Priest - The Lord bless thee. And keep thee; The Lord make his face to shine upon thee. And be gracious unto thee; The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee. And give thee peace I The People God be merciful unto us, and bless us. And cause his face to shine upon us; That thy way may be known upon earth. Thy saving health among all nations. Let the peoples praise thee. O God, Let all the peoples praise thee. O let the nations be glad. And sins for joy: For thou shalt Judge the peoples with equity. And govern the nations upon earth. Let the peoples praise thee, O God, Let all the peoples praise thee. The earth hath yielded her increase: God, even our God, shall bless us. God shall bless us; And all the ends of the earth shall fear him. Let the peoples praise thee, O God. Let all the peoples praise thee. God In Judgment on the Gods. God standeth in the congregation of God; He judgeth among the gods. "How long will ye judge unjustly, "And respect the persons of the wicked? "Judge the poor and fatherless: "Do Justice to the afflicted and destitute. "Rescue the poor and needy: "Deliver them out of the hand of tht wicked." They know not, neither do they understand; They walk to and fro In darkness: All the foundations of the earth are moved. "I said. Ye are gods, "And all of you sens of the Most High. "Nevertheless ye shall die like men. "And fall like one of the prinees." Arise, O God, Judge the earth: For thou shalt inherit all the nations. A Hymn of Victory. Companion Hymn to Psalm LX. The People My heart Is fixed, O God; I will sing, yea, I will sing praises, even with my glory. Awake, psaltery and harp; I myself will awake right early. I will give thanks unto thee, O Lord, among. the peoples; And I will sing praises unto thee among the natloaa. For thy mercy la great above the heavens, And thy truth reacheth unto the skies. Be thou exalted, O God, above the heavens: And thy glory above all the earth. The King That thy beloved may be delivered. Save with thy right hand, aad answer us." God hath spoken In his holiness: "I will exult: "I will divide Sheehem, and mete out the valley of Suocoth. "Gilead Is mine; Manasseh Is mine; "Ephralm also la the defence of mine head; Judah Is ray scepter. "Moab is ray washpot; upon Hdom will I cast my shoe: "Over Phillstla will I shout" Who will brinir me into the fenced cltyT Who hath led me unto Bdem? Hast net thou cast us off. O GodT And thou goeat net forth, O God, with our hosts. Give us help against the adversary: For vain Is the help of roan. The People Through God we shall do valiantly: Fer he it is that shall tread down our adver saries. The Lord Thy Keeper. I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains: From whence shall my help come? My help oometh from the Lord, Which made heaven and earth. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved: He that keepeth thee will net slumber. Behold, he that keepeth Israel Shall neither slumber nor sleep. , The Lord is thy keeper: The Lord is thy shade upon thy right hnnd. The sua shall not smite thee by day. Nor the moea by night. The Lord shall keep thee-rom all evil; He shall keep thy souL The Lord shall keep thy going oat and thy coming In. t From this tlroa forth and f c eresnora.