THE SUNDAY OKEGOtflAN, PORTLAND,. JU&E 2, 1901. ke rggomott. Entered at the Posiofflce at Portland. Oregon, ok second-class matter. A zy TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms ICO Business Office.. .CC7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Daily, with Sundaj. per month $ 85 Dally, Sundaj. xccpled, per year 7 CO Dally, with Sundaj. per jear 0 00 Sunday, perjj-ear 2 00 The Weekly, per jcar 1 60 The 'Weekly, 2 months 80 To City Subscribers Dally, per week. dellvcrcJ. Sundays exccpted.lOc Dally, per week. delUcred, Sundays lncluded.l'Oc POSTAGE RATES. United State. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 16-page paper lc 1C to 32-page,"iiaper "c Foreign rates, double.. , News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor "The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adcrtis lng, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply-"The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories frcm individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget SouhdJ Bureau Contain A. Thompson, omce at lllliPaciflc avenue. 'Tacoma. Box 055, Tacoma Postcfflce. Eastern Business Office 17. '48. 49 and 53 Tribune building. New York. City; 4C0 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwith special agency. Eastern representative. Tor sale lnan Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 740 Market ktreet, near the Palace Hotel; Gold emlth Bros.," J23G Sutter Street: F. W. "Pitts. 1008 Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring1 street, and Oliver & Haines, 106 Eo Spring atreet. For sale ln-Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dcarborn-3nrcet. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street. ' For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For. sale In -OgJen by W. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street- On ale at .Buffalo, N. T in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale in "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House newstand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 008912 Seventh street. TODAY'S GATHER. Probably fair, -with northwesterly .winds. rORTLAVD, SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1O01. IGXORANGE AS A 3IOTIVJ3 POWER. If the men who rushed to arms on either sldeof the great struggle of 1S61 65 had known more, they might not lave rushed so eagerly to the fray. In the South they did not know that they "were being played upon by skillful con spirators, or that free labor was bet ter for them than slave, or that some day they were yet to rejoice in the preservation of the Union. Numbers of Northern men, moreover, were re strained from radical action because study and reading had led them into grave doubt of the constitutional power of the Federal Government either to coerce the South into the Union or t& interfere with slavery. We have the thirteenth, fourteenth and fif teenth amendments now, but the amendments were not there in 1S61. If every man In the North had thor oughly apprehended the constitutional arguments of Calhoun, our armies would not have been so numerous, per haps, and It is certain they would not have been so religiously zealous. The brave fellows on each side saw only one side of the shield therefore they were unhesitating as well as unreasoning in their devotion. Patriotism. , Itself is largely com posed of elements that tend to dissipate before the rising sun of scientific study -end. social cultivation. In practice we are familiar enough with the phenom enon, and there is-sound basis for it in reason. One of the elements of patri otism is race prejudice. Science teaches us that all men are brothers; that they are what they are as the result of heredity and environment working upon them. Science teaches us why, if we are a Northman, we like strong drink, and why, If we are a Southron, "we prefer the milder wines. Science teaches us why some of us are fair and others dark, why some of our throats open in warm air to soft sounds and why others will barely open for harsh consonants and gutturals. Science teaches us how our languages and cus toms have grown up, from the peculiar coll whence we sprang, oceans that aved about us and airs that blew upon tis violent or soft. At length we see that all those racial distinctions that were wont to fan us into rage against the alien are not his 'fault that we should have at him with the handiest weapon, but his inexorable necessity, morally the equal of our own peculiari ties, and deserving of our friendly in terest If not even sympathy. How social cultivation tends to soften the stern qualities of patriotism is a lamlllar story. What becomes of the patriot when he has Imbibed the poetry of all lands, sat at table with all na tionalities, studied all the philosophies, end familiarized himself with the dress, manners and ideals of his coun try's rivals? Hie .admiration, once ifervently fixed upon- his native land, is spread out over all that is good in every land. Loyalty merges into cos mopolitanism. The fine frenzy that once set Rome against Carthage would jbe Impossible for a Jewell to feel against England, a Bayard Taylor against Germany, a Washington Irving against Spain. Our naval officers are splendid fighting machines when the decks are cleared for action, but the glorious ire that hurled barbarians and liGreeks against each other in the old pays they cannot feel, since in the ports of every power they have told stories, drank, toasts and made love by the mu sic of the ballroom. The contemplative let. ike cosmopolitan artist, the gentle philosopher are the very antithesis of the warrior nursing nis wrath against his country's enemies,- and out of their ranks the peace society constantly re cruits its members. It would be a pleasant thing to con- ! elude that much learning tends only to mitigate the horrors of war, but the ; debilitating effect of enlightenment is j shown in an entirely opposite direction. This Is in the sphere of religion itself. In proportion as a .church gains in cul tivation it loses In aggressive evangel ism. With the Unitarians and Congre gationalists, for example, what prose lyting and missionary zeal can be Jound at all to compare with that of the Catholics and Methodists, whose strength has always been among the masses? Religious conviction, in fact, frequently, if not as a rule, obtains in inverse ratio to advance in knowledge. There are no difficulties in the way of unlettered faith. The father of doubt Is fresh Information. See how study of fossils and of embryos has discred ited the ancient theology which nerved the fathers to put unbelievers to death with torture in Its most revolting formB. Bee how inquiry into Confucius and Buddha has imperiled the old convic- ion that all religions outside Chris- tianlty are inventions of the devil and altogether wicked. See how education has set aside the traditional revivalist with his thousands of yearly converts, and the temperance apostle with his pledges by the carload. The more a man knows the less he knows what he knows. The less the light that has streamed in upon his ignorance the firmer his convictions, the greater his enthusiasm, the more unflinching his purpose. When every man has become an Emerson or a Shakespeare, where shall we go for our Generals and ex-horters? PRICELESS TREASURES OP LITER ATURE. No department of the modern world of books bears a more impressive as pect than does that of selected readings and literary studies for the use of schools. The various series submitted, for example, by publishers, for inspec tion of the State Text-Book Board dis close a wonderful wealth of material, In the form both of original discussion, explanation and criticism, and of choice readings from the best authors. One naturally feels a sentiment of loyalty to the old books in which persons of the present adult generation were formed, but in point of use and attractiveness there is simply no comparison between the barren compendiums of a former day and these tasteful and illuminative publications. Within the lids of any one of many small volumes on English literature may.be found ready garnered and threshed for the student's inquir ing mind a harvest of knowledge and understanding that has taken the ma ture man of today years of diligent search and hard labor. The work done In this field is, in short, exactly of a plane with that brought into the indus trial world through improved labor saving machinery. It is thus possible for the High School or academy gradu ate of today, if he has been properly guided in his reading, to know more about the best thought of the world than the ordinary man of good educa tion knows, who has had to go over the ground painstakingly by himself in the old way. The new method is thoroughly sci entific, because it reduces to a mini mum the element of chance in putting the student in touch with the literature best suited to furnish his mind. The average man knows a good deal about one or two authors, whom chance threw in their way, but knows nothing about the rest of literature. Perhaps he has read Scott and Dickens, but not Thackeray and Lytton. Maybe he knows Longfel low and Whlttler well, but practically nothing of Emerson, Lowell and Holmes. In the new system this one sldedness is impossible. The student is introduced to all the eminent names in English literature, and the thing that best suits his mental constitution is certain to arrest his attention. There is a mountain mentioned in one of Poe's fascinating tales, that "trembled only to the touch of the flower called aspho del." Every mind has its asphodel the note of poetry, history or philoso phy that is exactly suited to set in harmonious vibration all the chords of its finer nature. In many a one that note Is never Btruck, that finer nature Is never aroused because it has never happened to be brought to its own. If Keats had never come across Chap man's Homer; if the Rubalyat had never found Fitzgerald, if Shakespeare had preceded instead of followed the craze of translation of Italian master pieces into English, if chance had never led Macaulay to the golden mine of Athenian literature, how different would this world have been today how darker, how inexpressibly sadder! And what limitless capacity for fine impulse and gracious benediction re sides in these cleverly devised prompt ings to a higher plane of thinking! What single agency for good can at all compare with the acquisition of wise and beautiful thoughts from all the ages? For him into whose nature has entered and found lodgment the melody of Shakespeare, the majesty of Milton, the contemplative melancholy of Job and Jeremiah, the grace of Dante and "Virgil, the high thoughts of Burke and Macaulay, the appealing cry of Tennyson, the prayer of Whittier for him life can never be so dreary or pur poseless a thing as before it was thus touched with living fire from the altar oft literary genius. Their maxims in vigorate for toil, their faith sustains in the day of disaster, their musings solace In the hour of gloom. Their friendship never fails, nor aspect changes. And it is mostly in youth that these treasures must be laid by, for only then is the heart susceptible to their tenderest impressions. Before the man is 25 he has formed the germ of his intellectual make-up, which later years can do little more than' expand. The songs that live are those that touch the soul of youth, when its windows are open to every passing air, before the days when it can truly say it has no pleasure in them, before the cares of the world and the deceltfulness of riches have choked the passion and the aspiration, before the radiance about our early years has faded to the light of common day. They have done well who "have gleaned in many fields for these winsome compendiums of literary truth and beauty. They have brought to the rising generation a precious gift of treasures no moth or rust can cor rupt nor thieves break through and steal. ' Our civil conflict, says Spenser Wil kinson, the famous British war critic, "had its origin in conditions of long and gradual growth, rendering an ul timate explosion inevitable." On the other hand, Professor Macy, in his "Political Parties In the United States," condemns the view that whatever has happened is in the nature of the case inevitable. He regards our Civil War as by no means Inevitable, and says: "It Is an undeniable truth that the Civil War occurred as the result of a series of political crimes and blunders." Professor Macy holds that Webster and Clay committed a fatal blunder In their compromise measures of 1850, which contained the seed of all the evil legis lation that followed in 1854-56. The Whig party, Professor Macy holds, had only to stand fast In 1850, instead of framing the compromise measures, and they would have been the conservative anti-slavery party of the country, a party that in its simple opposition to the further extension of slavery would have retained a very large following at the South among the old-time South ern Whigs. Professor Macy holds that the compromise measures of 1850 in volved a fatal concession which estranged from the Whig party all the conservative anti-slavery forces of the country so completely that at the next Presidential election it was absolutely routed beyond rally and became ex tinct. Had Webster and Clay simply stood fast and refused to ruin the Whig party by adopting the compromise measures of 1850, there would have been no Republican party, for there would have been no need for it, no room for it. But Webster and Clay signed the death-warrant of the Whig party, which -up to this time. had retained the sympathy and confidence of the con servative anti-slavery forces of the country. THE SMALL COLLEGE. Herbert W. Horwlll, in the current number of the Atlantic Monthly, makes a forcible and thoughtfu.1 plea in be half of the small college, as clearly dis tinguished from a university, like Johns Hopkins, which alms not so much at general culture as the production of specialists, and seeks directly to pro mote investigation and research. Of course, the small college, however In flated, does not pretend to compete with a university. Nor does It seek to compete with the technical school, which Is organized for the training of a man for the definite breadwlnnlng occupation of his life. Theological sem inaries, normal colleges, dental Insti tutes, medical colleges, schools of en gineering, schools for the training of electricians and law schools, all have, of course, a high educational value, but culture is not the primary aim of the curriculum of the technical school, whose- purpose is not the training of the man, but of the clergyman, the physician and the engineer. President Stryker defines the difference between the function of college education and that of technical training and post graduate research at a university: "The one process should make Iron Into steel and the other makes steel Into tools. Specialization which is not based upqn liberal culture attempts to put an edge on pot iron." Liberal culture which en riches the life of man and multiplies Its sources of the highest pleasure has been given best In a small college, and will continue to be because the small college approximates more nearly than the large to the true type of a place of liberal culture. In the small college the personality of the teachers has a much greater opportunity for wholesome influence. Every professor may become directly acquainted with each student. The small college allows and directly in vites friendly Intercourse between tu tors and undergraduates. In a large college the undergraduates split up Into cliques or create artificial associations, while the small college itself is the true fraternity. The list of distinguished men who have been produced by the small colleges of the country Is a re markable one. From Dartmouth came Daniel Webster, Salmon P. Chase, Ru fus Choate; from Bowdoln, Hawthorne, Longfellow, John A. Andrew, President Franklin Pierce, Jonathan CHley and William Pitt Fessenden; from the Uni versity of Vermont came Jacob Colla mer, Henry J. Raymond, Frederick Billings, Rev. Dr. Calvin Pease, John A. Kasson, Bishop Blssell, of the Epis copal Church, Rev. Dr. W. G. T. Shedd, the famous theologian, John Gregory Smith, Judge Charles L. Benedict, of the United States District Court; the late E. D. Shattuck, of Portland, Or., and Sidney H. Marsh, the first presi dent of Forest Grove College. William H. Seward was a graduate of Union College; Ellhu Root and United States Senator Hawley, of Hamilton College. James A. Garfield, of Williams College, and James Buchanan of Dickinson Col lege; Rutherford B. Hayes of Kenyon College; Chester A. Arthur of Union College; Benjamin Harrison of Miami University. When John Adams and John Qulncy Adams graduated at Har vard It was a very small college; so was Princeton, where Madison gradu ated, and so was William and Mary, which includes Presidents Jefferson, Monroe and Tyler among its alumni. The first President Harrison was ' a graduate of Hampden;Sydney, and President Polk was educated at the University of North Carolina. Edwin M. Stanton, James G. Blaine and Cush man Davis were all graduates of the small college, and so were all the Southern statesmen of college training, for Yale College In John C. Calhoun's day was a very small affair. E. J. Phelps, Minister to England in 1S85 89, was graduated at MIddlebury (Vt.) College, and so was the late Colonel Aldace Walker, of the Atchison, ToReka & Santa Fe Railway board. United States Senator George " F. Hoar was graduated at Harvard in 1846, when it was a small college, and all the shin ing names on Harvard's roll, Emerson, Holmes, Parkman, WInthrop, Joslah Qulncy. O. B. Frothlngham, Lowell, General Devens, Edward Everett, Sum ner, Wendell Phillips, Edward E. Hale, E. R. Hoar, Thoreau, were all gradu ated in the years when Harvard was a small college that devoted itself solely to purely academical training and gen eral culture as distinguished from tech nical training and natural sciences. When Webster made his famous ar gument In the Dartmouth College case before Judge Marshall, ho Bald: "Dart mouth is but a small college, sir, but there are those who love It." Nearly all the eminent men in old England who received any kind or degree of aca demic culture received it in small col leges. When Jowett went up to Balllol, that college had only eighty undergrad uates on its books, but they included such men as Dean Stanley, Lord North cote, Archbishop Temple, Lord Coler idge and Arthur Hugh Clough. These men are some of the fruit of the in tense culture of the small colleges. Goldwin Smith, a distinguished gradu ate of Oxford, wrote several years ago: My acquaintance with universities wh'ich have no colleges has confirmed my sense of the value of these little communities, not only as places for social training and for formation of friendships (no unimportant ob ject, and one which a college serves far bet ter than a students' club), but as affording to students personal superintendence and aid, which they miss under a purely professorial system. A striking illustration of the truth of this view Is found in the fact that the great naturalist, Darwin, was res cued from a life of intellectual indo lence and social dissipation by his pro fessor, who In dally walks with him perceived that Darwin, who had been born with a silver spoon in his mouth, was wasting in social recreation great natural powers of observation and in ductive reasoning which were meant for mankind. The personal appeal of this professor persuaded young Darwin to abandon his life of dinner parties and social recreation for severe study, and to accept an appointment procured for him on a government vessel whose mis sion was to make scientific exploration of the .islands of the Pacific Ocean. Darwin was gone two years, and his study of the flora and fauna of the world, from Patagonia to Australia and Borneo, had converted him into a pas sionate devotee of science. The close contact of that student of genius with his keen-eyed professor would only have been possible in a small college, and Darwin might otherwise have lived and died a meredabbler in literature, music and art. The business of the small college is to Increase its power by compression, not to dissipate and attenuate it by idle efforts at Inflation and competition with the so-called great colleges. The small college should devote Itself almost exclusively to teaching In languages, literature, his tory and philosophy, which are ample for the cultivation of the scientific habit of mlrtd; the habit of attention; of thor oughness and accuracy, the knowledge how to read and. think. This is what the small college can do better than the . large college, both In scholastic training and social culture. ORATORY. George F. Hoar, In the current num ber of Scribner's Magazine, argues that the gift of eloquence Is the single gift most to be coveted by men. With the exception of Patrick Henry, Fisher Ames and Daniel Webster, Mr. Hoar holds that the number of American orators who will live In history as ora tors can be counted on the fingers of one hand. Mr. Hoar does not name them, but he would be compelled to Include among them Henry Clay, Ed Ward Everett, Rufus Choate and Wen dell Phillips. Mr. Hoar seems to think the great orator must' be a man of ab solute sincerity, and then quotes Sheri dan's great peroration in the impeach ment of Warren Hastings as an exam ple of the finest oratory, so fine that It reads well today. And yet Sheridan had not any sincerity about him; he was a great artist and a 'great actor, a master of the art of elocution, but a man utterly without moral sense. Burke, who made a speech of masterly eloquence on the same occasion, was a man of absolute sincerity, a man of moral earnestness in thought and ac tion; and yet Burke was not a great artist nor a great actor, like Sheridan; he had not a fine presence, a noble countenance, a charming voice, so that he frequently spoke to empty benches, despite the fact that his thoughts were so noble and their expression so elo quent that everybody eagerly read the next day the speech they had refused to listen to the day before. Lord Chatham, outside of his remark able spoken eloquence, which was of the theatric, declamatory sort, was In ferior to Burke in imagination and moral earnestness, and. yet Chatham could rule the House -of Commons by his voice, eye, gesture, as Burke never ruled it. The secret of Chatham's power was that he had the impas sioned dramatic temperament, while Burke was a profound political philoso pher with the imagination of a poet. Fox, who has been called the English Demosthenes, was a truthful, honorable man, but his private morals were very bad; he was both a rake and a gambler. He had nothing of the artist or actor in his oratory; he was rather a great debater than a great orator, In the sense that Chatham, Sheridan, Patrick Henry, Mirabeau or Kossuth were great orators. He was a powerful reasoner; not a man of Imaginative quality or dramatic temperament.. He did not join to his powerful understanding the historic imagination of either Burke or Webster, and he could not have been a great orator outside of a great Parlia mentary debate, for he dealt solely with the reason of his audience. Mr. Hoar's diptum that a great orator "must be a man of absolute sincerity" will hardly hold good; he may or may not be; he needg only to be a great artist and a great actor. A bad and mean life is behind many a great ora tor. Demosthenes was a coward, was corrupt and was of bad morals; Cicero was a synonym for Insincerity, vanity and moral cowardice. Mirabeau, the greatest 'orator of the French Revolution, was venal and sen sual to the, last degree. Kossuth, be hind his splendid eloquence, had no no bility of private character, no states manship; and Castelar was a kind of Spanish Kossuth in standing for no statesmanship; he, was, like Vergnlaud, the great orator of the Girondists, an eloquent voice and naught beside. Dan ton was the only man of the great French Revolution, save Mirabeau, who joined powerful eloquence to executive and administrative vigor and courage in "action. John Bright, rather than Gladstone, was England's greatest ora tor of the last half-century, but he lacked Gladstone's talent for finance and business. Canning was an admira ble speaker; he had the logical faculty joined to extraordinary powers of wit and humor, and Disraeli In his methods perpetuated the tradition of Canning rather than that of Peel. Webster, our greatest orator, was weak on the moral side, and was doubt less a man of less sincerity than Clay. On the whole, It would be as difficult to hold that a man to be a great orator "must be a man of-absolute sincerity" as It .Would be to hold that a great poet must be a man of absolute sincer ity, whereas great poets, like Goethe, have been distinguished for nothing so much as complete moral insincerity of character. The 'great orator needs a fine personal presence, a speaking eye, a thrilling, sympathetic voice; he needs to be a great artist and a great actor, but he does not need to be a man of absolute sincerity, any more than Na poleon needed to be when he wrote one of. his eloquent proclamations to the army of Italy, at which he probably laughed privately when he wrote it. REDUCTION OP ROYALTY OX YUKON GOLD. The Dominion Government, as re ported by John L. Bittinger,, Consul General at Montreal, has decided to reduce the royalty on gold mined in the Yukon district from 10 to 5 per cent, thus abating at least half the grievance that American miners have had against the exactions of Canadian authorities in recent years. This 10 per cent royalty was Imposed during the first outburst of excitement over the discovery of gold in the Klondike re gion, while yet the government, as well as the people, were ignorant of the great difficulties attendant upon pros pecting, mining and treating ore In that far northern' latitude. The general Im pression, as stated by Consul Bittinger, wa3 that the 'gold was In "pockets" as easily opened as a silo on a farm. When, however, the labors, rlsk3 and prlvatlonB of miners Incident to secur ing gold in the Klondike became fully known, It was acknowledged that a 10 per 'cent royalty was so onerous an Impost on gold secured under such con ditions that it tended to discourage mining operations. Self-interest there fore clearly demanded a reduction of the royalty, and at length an order to this effect has been made. In the opin ion of Consul Bittinger, the reduced royalty should be regarded as an equi- table tax upon Yukon gold. The gov ernment has, he says, been to great ex pense In opening up the district, and the cost of administering the laws of the Dominion in this region is neces sarily large. The government is there fore commended for the reduction,- as well as for its efforts to establish law, maintain order and facilitate transpor tation in the Klondike region. That American miners have had just cause for complaint that, Indeed, they have been most grievously taxed In the Yukon district, Is a matter of com mon knowledge. The devices of the Dominion Government for the exac tion of tribute upon American endeavor have equaled In ingenuity and execu tion those against which our fathers rebelled In colonial days. The first pur pose was to levy tax upon American enterprise; the second was to collect it, and between the two an American could not strike a pick into the frozen earth without answering to the tax gatherer for his temerity. Nor could he engage In any otheV vocation inci dent to mining operations, or to the growth of a mining town, without giv ing an account of his endeavor in good American coin or Its equivalent In vir gin gold. There was protest, of course, but when did individual protest ever avail against the levy or collection of taxes? So matters stood until, through the slow methods that -characterize auch movements, the Government at Washington spoke to the government at Montreal on the matter, and the latter, taking Its time, as becomes a grave, deliberative body with a repu tation for keeping, taxes up and ex penses down to maintain, has finally re duced the royalty on gold mined in the Yukon district one-half; taking credit to itself therefor, for wide-minded gen erosity. And now, if Citizens of the United States still regard this impost upon gold taken out in Canadian terri tory as too heavy, they 'have a rem edy. Let them confine their mining operations to Alaskan American terri tory, the vastness of which is but dimly comprehended and the richness of which is practically unguess'ed. The, Naval board of experts- has un der serious consideration designs for the largest and most powerful battle ship ever attempted In this country, and oyer 1000 tons heavier than the greatest war vessel 'ever v constructed anywhere. As a result of these delib erations, It is probable that plans will be submitted to Congress next .Winter for at least one 16,000-ton battle-ship mounting a battery not equaled by any vessel ever built. Such battery would far surpass the combined batteries of almost any two armored cruisers, and with a speed of 21 knots would min imize the value of the heaviest shore batteries. It would seem that the limit in size, speed and power in the con struction of warships would speedily be reached at this rate. A floating fort 450 feet long, moving at the rate of 21 knots an hour and belching forth solid shot from the muzzles of twelve, eight and three-Inch guns at every turn, ought to fix the limit of daring in naval architecture and power In battle-ships without further attempts in this line. The cost of operating this tremendous machine "and the labor and skill re quired to take care of It will make war "a game which nations will hesitate to call. In Its capacity of "peace per suader," therefore, this monster of the sea will be worth all it costs, and more. Number 5 of the quarterly of. the. Ore gon Historical Society, just issued, is notable for the excellence of its con tents. The leading article is the paper prepared by the Hon. George H. Will iams and read before the Legislature when It celebrated the fortieth anniver sary of statehood, two years ago last Winter, reciting the political history of Oregon from 1853 to 1865. This is a most valuable record. It covers an Im portant era in Oregon history, and puts in accessible form data not easily found elsewhere, and It Is written by a man who was an active participant In the political events of that time and whose scholarship and judgment pe culiarly qualify him for the narrative. Under the caption, "Flotsam and Jet sam of the Pacific," Mrs. Frances Ful ler "Victor sketches the story of those early trading ships, the Owyhee, the Sultana and the May Dacre. Joseph Schafer gives a survey of public edu cation in Eugene, and H. S. Lyman tells the story of the Aurora commu nity, the historical accuracy of which Is vouched for by Emanuel Kell, son of Dr. William Kell, who organized the colony. All these papers are prepared with great care, and they make an unusually Interesting and valuable number of the quarterly, which should be widely read in Oregon. The great City of G.lasgow, with a population of at least 650,000, is trying to bring Its saloons under better regula tion. A private corporation, a public house trust, seeks to control all the saloons, and promises In return to see that saloon surroundings are respecta ble, to supply other attractions than those of liquor, to limit its profits to 4 per cent, and to turn over the excess for the development of the social side of the saloon, or for other civic purpose. The manager of each saloon makes his personal profits solely from the sale of food"an& non-lntoxlcatlng drinks, and has no Interest In encouraging the sale of alcoholic liquors. The Glasgow plan differs from the Gothenburg plan in this respect, that while the Swedish system regulates only the sale of dis tilled liquors, the Scottish plan makes no distinction between distilled and fermented. The licensed victualling houses in Sweden have the sole right to sell ardent spirits; any one may sell beer and wine. The practlcalresult of this policy has been to reduce largely the consumption of spirits, but not to reduce drunkenness in any satisfactory degree. And now certain captious persons are finding fault with Mrs. Eddy's Chris tian Science because it ooldly declares that "If the science of life were under stood, the human limb could be re placed as readily as the lobster's claw." The objection perhaps comes from un reasonable jealousy of the lobster be cause he got first at the root of the science and goes calmly on working the trick while benighted human beings continue to hobble about on crutches or sport empty sleeves In evidence of their stupidity, after having had to pay roundly for surgical attention- The bishops of the Anglican Church do not want the death penalty abolished and have all replied in the negative to Dr. Joslah Oldfleld, who wrote all the bishops, asking their opinion as to whether they thought the time had not come when this barbarous penalty could not at any rate, experimentally J be suspended. POISONOUS PLANTS OF OREGON. V. IC Chesnut. of the United States De partment of Agriculture, who spent the month of April among Oregon farmers studying the stock-poisoning plants of this state, has just issued a report dealing with the poisonous plants of Montana. This embodies a good deal of informa tion that will in all probability be Incorpo rated Into the forthcoming report on Ore gon. For although Montana differs ma terially from Oregon in climatic condi tions, It nevertheless contains some of our most troublesome plants, such as the death camas, the larkspur, loco weeds, lupines, and water hemlock. One of the most fatal of, these In Its effects Is undoubtedly the death camas. Zygadenus venenosus, which is found in Oregon meadows and in wet ground gen erally over the state, though apparently not In such abundance as In Montana. It Is a near relative to the well-known food plant of the Indians, which, while harm less enough, possesses rather remarkable qualities, judging from the naive descrip tion found in the journal of Lewis and Clark. "Some of these roots (camas) seem to possess very active properties, for after supping on them this evening we were swelled to such a degree as to be scarcely able to breathe for several hours." The death camas is a smooth, simple stemmed plant with grass-like leaves, yellow-green flowers, and a coated bulb, similar to an onion. Both the leaves and bulbs are poisonous; the latter particu larly so. The greatest danger exists Im mediately after a heavy rain storm, when the soil Is softened, and the bulb Is easily pulled up and eaten with the leaves. It is found in moderately moist places where grass starts earliest In the Spring, and as its leaves closely resemble grass, even the oldest and wisest ewe is apt to be deceived by it. During the season of 1000 over 3000 sheep In Montana were reported as poisoned by this one plant alone, most jot these between May 5 and May 20. But death camas. In Oregon, Is probably not responsible for so much loss to our stackralsers as the larkspur, owing to the greater abundance of the latter In this state. Of the poisonous species common in Montana, the tall larkspur, from four to seven feet high, with pale blue flowers (Delphinium glaucum), does not appear to give us much trouble. It Is never eaten by sheep, owing to Its rank coarseness of growth. Horses also refuse It, but It may cause more deaths among cattle than has hitherto been realized. The purple larkspur (D. blcolor) In Montana is apt to be' found growing in the same localities with the death camas; here, according to Thomas Howell's "Flo ra of Northwest America," It is found in dry ground on the mountains of Eastern Oregon. The poisonous properties of the plant are not entirely understood as yet, but it causes more trouble among sheep and calves than among cattle and horses, particularly In its early stages of growth, before flowering. This must not be con fused with our common blue larkspur (D. trollifollum). which is brighter in color, and In this state is particularly abund ant, probably producing more deaths among cattle and sheep than any other of our poisonous plants. It is not mentioned in the Montana report, but will no doubt be described in the forthcoming pamphlet upon Oregon. Considerable trouble Is caused to stock raisers by the water hemlock (Clcuta oc cidentalls), otherwise known as wild pars nip or cow bane, which Is apt to be fataji In its effect. According to the Montana report 76 per cent of the sheep and 83 per cent of cattle that had eaten it died; and during the year 1900, four out of five human beings. This grows In wet places throughout Oregon; the root, which contains a virulent poison, has a char acteristic musky odor; the flowers are very small, of a dull, greenish-white color, loosely clustered. Our Western species seems to be quite as dangerous as that of the Eastern States. In some cases of cattle poisoned by this plant the vic tim died within 15 minutes after the first signs of poisoning appeared. Death has been found to occur In SO per cent of the cases. Remedies seem to be of little avail, and the only hope lies In extermination of the plant. This is not so difficult as it seems, if only the herders can be trained to recognize the plant In Its various stages of growth, an end that is slowly being reached through the descriptions and illustrations contained In the agri cultural reports sent out broadcast over the land each, year by our United States Government. The loco weeds (astragalus), that are the source of so much 103s to the farmers of the Pacific Coast, are as yet but Im perfectly understood, as they offer many difficulties to the Investigator. The Mon tana report apparently does not throw any light upon our own species ot astra galus, which number 30 or 40, and doubt less include some that are poisonous. No doubt valuable data concerning these will be given In the report on Oregon. The genus Is one of the largest known to botanists, no fewer than 150 species being found In America: most of these grow west of the Mississippi River. A careful study of them Is therefore of the utmost Importance to "Western agriculturists. As everyone knows, a horse that Is lo coed 1b, in a sense, crazed; he jumps at Imaginary obstacles, Is unable to walk straight, and sees and hears but Imper fectly. No specific remedy has ever been discovered for the loco disease. It seems, curiously enough, to be a depraved ap petite for the weed on the part of horses, sheep, and more rarely cattle, and In this respect Is comparable to various In jurious habits of men, such as drunk enness and the morphine habit. "For chronic cases it seems hardly reasonable to expect that any remedy will be de vised." says this report. "Their treat ment must apparently proceed on the same principles as the treatment of vic ious habits of long standing in man." In certain parts of Montana the habit became so widespread among horses, through Imitation, that the raising of them was abandoned until the locoed animals were disposed of, and other horses which had not the oco habit had been Imported. It has been found that sheep more fre quently form the habit of eating the loco plant when not regularly supplied with salt than when abundantly furnished with this substance. The vicious craving, therefore, can to some extent be prevent ed by supplying sheep with a sufficient quantity of salt. The poisonous lupines (wild pea) de scribed In the report on Montana are found also in Oregon. We have altogether some 30 species of lupine, their showy racemes of bluo flowers and beautiful leaves being a conspicuous feature of an Oregon landscape. Many of them are valuable forage plants, growing on both the Coast and Cascade Ranges. Dairymen living .near the mountains prize this fod der very highly In the production of choice butter and cheese. In the earlier stages of growth, lupines are harmless; but ac cording to the Investigations made In Montana, where lupine hay Is extensively used, death has been traced to eating the ripened seeds: many thousands of bheep have been lost by this means, 1900 out of one flock of 3CO0 within a period of three days. Montana, in tho value of its sheep hold ings, leads every state In the Union. Or egon falls behind it several paces: but that, we thank God, Is because she can raise other things besides sheep. Yet when one remembers that today this state has over 55,000,000 worth of sheep graz ing on Its mountain pastures. It will be seen that our farmers can 111 afford to neglect a study of the weeds upon which these helpless creatures must thrive or die. SLINGS AND ARROWS. Farewell to Sprlngr- When the Gentle vernal showers have been drunk by thirsting flowers. And the Shady sjlvan bowers all are gaily blos soming: Then wo Know the time is coming when the bees will be a humming. And the Hobo out a-bummlng steaks or cakes or anything. When the Brlsht-plumed birds are nesting, and fair maids in hammocks resting. Find that Oulda interesting visions of fond love can bring; When mos- Qultos are a-biting and the ice-cream man's inviting You to Banquets most delighting If from heat jou're suffering; When the Dust is thickly flying and there's no use of denying That the Heat Is very trjlng; when the birds no longer sing; When the Air around Is stifling, and the Summer maidens trifling v 1th joung Men their hearts are rifling whllo young: Cupid's arrows sting: When tho Price of ice l rising, at a rate that's most surprising. And tho Housewife'' realizing that It costs like eer thing; When the City's population sets out on a long va cation In a Search for recreation where the billows roll and swing. Then we Sigh a little sadly, for we loved tho sea son madly. And we Cannot very gladly say farewell to balmy Spring. The Echo. Silently the hero stole through the wings and lcross the grass which grew luxuriantly In spots on the stage floor. The villain, engaged In preparations to blow up the aged capitalist with dyna mite, marked him not. At this moment the orchestra cut in with a bunch ot tremulous music composed for the oc casion by one of the stage hands, and the hero (for this vab his cue) observed: "Villain, desist! I hive discovered you!" "Foiled again," muttered the stage vil lain. Then he hissed. The hiss came back from the gallery, with redoubled volume. "Lookahere, Jones," said the villain to the hero when the curtain fell, "there'3 altogether too much of an echo In this shack." For having played "heavies" for 23 years he didn't see where the hisses came In If they were not echoes. Moril: Trust a villain to be chesty. June. The violets look from the dewy grass Like specks of a cloudless sky. And the patches of golden sunlight pass Through tho trees when the wind goes by; Tho pungent smell of tho wilting fern Hangs oer the tinkling rill. Where the green-roofed, mossy pathways tura To follow along the hill, . And bright In the deep, surrounding gloom. Beneath the dark fir tree. Shines forth tho tender, waxen bloom Of the starry anemone. Tho wind and brook, the birds and bees Aro singing the same glad tune; And you hear It whispered among the trees, Tis June, 'tis June, 'tis June! Not Cinnllfled. "I cannot sing the old songs." sighed the man with the red-spotted vest. "Then you don't get a job with my minstrel show," replied the portly gen tleman with the two-ounce diamond shirt stud, and the man with the red-spotted vest went forth Into the black night, on his weary search for a chance to make $250 a week. Yolamln Mnrfrherltn. ROME, June 1. Queen Helena was ac couched of a daughter at 9 o'clock this morning. The Princess will be named Yolanda Margherlta. There Is considerable disappointment in the infant's sex, though the King Is un derstood to have expressed contentment. Salutes are being tired throughout Italy. The infant's nurse will get $2000 with the baby's first tooth, another $2000 when the child Is able to speak, and a similar sum when the little Princess walks unsup ported. Oh! Yolanda Margherlta, even though you're not a boy. You're a dear, delightful baby, and your coun try's pride and joy. You shall havo a golden rattle, and a sllvqr trundle bed. And a silken cap shall cover up your red and hairless head; Noble dames shall hover o'er you, and fronv out a Jeweled cup You shall drink the hottest water when the colic cnarls you up. And jour nurse shall guard you closely, as sho ough to do. forsooth. For she'll get ?20OO when you cut your first small tooth. Oh! Yolanda Margherlta, jou're no common baby; nay. You're a royal little cherub, and may be a Queen some daj But. Yolanda Margherlta. with jjfouBi Princely retinue. Do not grow up in the notion that the world was built for j-ou; For a thousand other babies, just as small and round and red. Came "from heaven when they found you in that silken-curtained bd; Came to learn to laugh and prattle and to play thnir little narts. As th'ey Journey on the pathway to their doting parents hearts. Some abide In dingy shanties, 'mid surround ings dark and drear, But they're just as sweet as you are. Just as darling. Just as deer. And. Yolanda Margherlta. it Is very, very true That there's not a single baby that It s mam ma'd trade for you. So. Yolanda Margherlta, just proceed to cut j-our teeth. And to teach your rojal parents that the first come underneath, Show them that they've never, never known a pleasure half worth -virile Till they bent down o'er your cradle and be held your first wee smile; But rentember. gentle baby, that each small and toothless elf Who came down from heaven with you Is as lovely as j-ourself. Do not think there are no others in the world with you, because Every baby that la born is Just the dearest eVer8' J.J.MONTAGUE. An EnBlHU View of Morgan. London Express. One poor planet will soon scarcely suf fice for the Morgan concerns. By means of his billion dollar trust and a few other trifles, Mr. Morgan Is one of the un crowned kings of the United States; Ni agara Is bis humble servant with the elec tricity It generates: he Is going to spread far down Into South America by means of railways: he has begun to annex the Atlantic; the recovered Galnsboroughs and large holdings In the new loan are only Items of his British programme; and now the canals of Europe are to be In struments of his In the international steel war. Napoleon said that Europe would eventually fjill to Russia or re publicanism; he could not foresee the third possibility, Mr. Plerpont Morgan. Mr, Morgan may yet go down to history as the man who at last made the power of the private purse Intolerable. 1 M A i .i