jptS r rtrsf''i v w wr' ps?irer -"ffw fyws ' "?F"V '" THE SUNDAY OEEGONIAN, PORTLAND, JANUARY 19, 1902. frg rjeeoracm. Entered at the Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month .....$ SS Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 7 CO Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday, per year - 00 The Weekly, per year 1 60 The "Weekly. 3 months 00 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays exceptedJ&c Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-pagc paper ..;...lc 14 to 2S-page paper 2c 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 adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed 'simply "Tho Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or etorles from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for thla purpose. Eastern Business Office, 43. 44. 45, 47, 4S. 49 Tribune building. New Tork City; 409 "Tho Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1003 Markot street; J. K. Cooper Co., 740 Market street, near the Palac Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news standi . For sal in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 Bo. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 6o. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn etroet. For sale In Omaha by Earkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For Fale In Ogdcn by TV. O. Kind. 204 Twen-ty-Ofth street, and C. H. Myers. On file at Charleston. S. C, In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 900-012 Seventeenth street. TODAY'S "WEATHER Cloudy, with occa sional rain; winds mostly southerly. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 42; minimum temperature, 38; pre cipitation, 0.09 Inch. rORTLAA'D, SUNDAY, JAS. 10, 1002. THE PRESIDENTIAL "DISPOSITION." In the President's attitude In the mat ter of the United, States Marshalship for "Washington, as set forth In a spe cial dispatch printed yesterday, there is manifest not only his native independ ence and manliness of mind, but an ef fect of his experience in the Civil Serv ice Commission. By temperament and conviction, Mr. Hoosevelt Is just the re verse of the political spoilsman. In his own heart he has no patience "with the practice which parcels out the offices In every state among personal adher ents of one or another Senator, or one or another faction. True, he Is In a way accepting the inevitable; he Is not attempting impossible things; but his mind persistently reverts to the natural, proper and legitimate course in connec tion with executive appointments. He barkens to "what our political practice calls "reason" that is, he takes council with those who by their representative character are entitled to be heard but he insists In every case upon satisfac tory answers to a few simple and di rect questions. Is the man competent? Is his character clean? Does he com mand public and private respect? Sim ple as they are, these queries search deep, and they are calculated to estab lish new conditions and standards In connection with the nomination of pub lic officials. The case of the Collectorship at Sitka Illustrates another phase of the same general disposition. This office has long been a mere political favor, given out to somebody who some Senator has wished to reward for personal or polit ical service. The local conditions have rendered it not only a sinecure, but an obstacle rather than an aid In the gen eral administration of Alaska. When In the usual order the time came round a few weeks back for the appointment of a new Collector, the usual personal and political demands were made, but Mr. Roosevelt passed by the politicians to look into the situation from an ad ministrative point of view, and his con clusion was that, under the conditions of the country, the Collector ought to represent not merely the revenue-collecting branch of the Government, but Its general administrative purpose as ,welL He concluded, furthermore, that the Collector ought to be in a position to move about the country a thing which no man can do in Alaska who has not a steamship at his disposal. And the final determination was to take the Sitka Collectorship away from the politicians and give it to .the active head of the revenue marine service on the Alaska Coast. Lieutenant D. H. Jarvls was therefore made Collector, and will attend to the duties of that office in connection with his former duty of commanding the revenue cutter stationed in Alaskan waters. It is In evitable that many advantages will re sult from this arrangement, which pro ceeds from Mr. Roosevelt's downright propensity for doing the right thing, even though, as inhls case. It may break a personal slate or damage the picking of the political plum tree. In the case of the United States Mar shalship for Washington there .is a wrangle among the Washington poli ticians over the appointment of a successor to Mr. Ide. Those who, as Washington's representatives, are entitled to be heard find it hard to agree or to stay agreed upon a man for the place. "The President Is be coming vexed," says a special dispatch to The Oregonlan, and intimates that If the Senators cannot come to an un derstanding, and In very short order, he will resolve the contention by reap pointing Mr. Ide, who has distinguished himself by efficiency In-his past term of service. The thing implied here Is In direct accord with what the Presi dent has done elsewhere, namely, to give the official representatives of a state opportunity to recommend a man competent and suitable, and, upon their failure to do this in reasonable time, to take the .matter out of their hands and to proceed upon his own initiative and upon the basis of private inquiry. In the case of the Washington Marshal ship, there is a special motive in the fact of Mr. Ide's high personal record and In the President's disposition to re ward good official service by extension of tenure. Here is a disposition not wholly new in the White House, but more ag gressively manifest than In recent times; and It is a disposition calculated largely and wholesomely to Influence the public service. When every ap plication for an appointment is certain to be met by questions which expose the truth about the candidate's quali fications and character, and certain to be "turned down" If a fair bill of moral health cannot be given, there is likely to be more care in the matter of Sena torial recommendation than there has been in times past. And when it is I1 generally understood that if the dele gation of a state cannot promptly make up its mind about official nominations the President will proceed on his own. motion, and upon the basis of the merit system, there isllkely to be developed a more expeditious if not a better habit of harmony. A TEXDEXCV IX JOURNALISM. Mr. Kohlsaat's retirement from the Chicago Record-Herald Is an event of considerable significance. It comports With a tendency away from individual toward colorless journalism that Is manifestly hardening. The man behind this- change is Vic tor F. Lawson, of the old Record and the News. He Is a signally successful and an Immensely rich newspaper pro prietor, who puts dependence wholly upon the news columns of his papers, and seeks to make the editorial page, as far as possible. Interesting and un objectionable to readers of every school of thought. In 1896 it was Impossible to tell whether the Lawson papers were for Bryan or McKlnley, so studiously did they gain and keep the narrow way of neutrality. Mr. Lawson covers the universe with his cdrrespondents and special writers. He wants to have every thing in his paper that everybody or anybody needs to know, and as for opinions, let the reader have his own. xIn the field of comment, nothing must be said to offend the general reader. Let him be entertained, interested, even Instructed, but let him not be aroused. On the contrary; Mr. Kohlsaat- News Is something else to him ihan items by the river's brim and nothing more. Every occurrence Is a lesson, every in cident a text. He looks upon the world of readers, and he covets not merely to give them Information, but to form them in correct views. He would not stop at telling what Is going on in af fairs, he would be himself a force In them through his editorial page. It concerns him to find out what things are doing, but equally, and perhaps more, to do things. He wishes to bring to pass what seems to him best for his city, his state, his Nation, and man kind. He will help what he thinks true and helpful, and strike what he thinks erroneous and harmful. It Is impossible not to feel a tinge of regret at the passing of the old type of journalism Greeley's, Dana's, Watter son's and the enthronement of the new that of Lawson, Ochs, Noyea One was a profession, the other is a trade. One was a study, the other Is a counting-room. The worst of it is that this change is an inevitable one, and Involves not only the crossing from the intellectual and emotional activities of the 19th century to the economic as cendence of the 20th, but it also in volves a phase of our universal devel opment up from the independence and belligerence of more primitive social or ders to the urbanity, polish, self-Te-stralnt, moderation, equipoise, of high cultivation. The editor descends from hortatory address to the dead level of conversation among equals. He loses something In sincerity and force, but he gains Infinitely In politeness and amia bility. The fighting newspaper Is going the way of the duello and the pugilist. PRINCE HENRY'S VISIT. Those who are Imagining that back of the visit of Prince Henry of Prussia to this country there lies a deep polit ical significance exhibit n. very pro found knowledge of the ways of the modem world. There was indeed a time when the comings and goings of Princes, their interchanges of courte sies, their fallings-out and their mak-Ings-up, were matters of political ac count, but that Is a time long past. The personal equation or, to be more pre cise, the princely equation has ceased to hav& any great value In anything excepting the "society" game. The mo tives of the world's politics now rest upon another and very different basis, and they have in the strictly modern countries about as little regard for the divinities and the dignities of Princes as have the rains that fall or the winds that blow. The coming of Prince Henry to Amer ica is unquestionably intended by his brother, the Emperor, as an interna tional compliment, and It will, properly, be so accepted. And we shall by the courtesy of our greeting and entertain ment of the royal visitor illustrate our good feeling towards his country, our hospitable habit and our sense of posi tion In the political and social organ ization of the world. And that is the whole of it. In the strictly political sense. It will signify nothing at all. There is not the slightest reason to be lieve that It will In any way alter the motives of imperial Germany as related to South America or the world's trade; and nothing Is more certain that that it will not affect the integrity of the Monroe Doctrine, nor weaken the spirit of this country in its enforcement. Nor will this visit, or anything grow ing out of it, seriously affect the rela tionship of the United States and the German Empire. We are en good terms with Germany we are in sympathy with many aspects of her social life. But politically speaking, between the two countries there Is a great gulf fixed. Government In the United States Is a popular thing. Here, as In England, government is by opinion operating through a representative system. In the Kaiser's realm government is a thing of force, supported by military organization. Here are oil and water which will not mix. Social and kindly feeling there may be, and there is, be tween the American and the German peoples, with, mutual appreciation and sympathy in matters intellectual and moral. But their political systems rest upon different and upon .antagonistic principles. The two peoples may live side by side; amity and courtesy, let it be hoped, will always mark their rela tions. But there can be no fixed and permanent affiliation between their gov ernments. Government by opinion, gov ernment by bayonet these are forces which cannot .march together. There is no more curious whimsy among our several National illusions than that which popularly assumes a traditional friendship between the United States and the military countries of Prussia and Russia, and, on the other hand, a traditional and necessary enmity between the United States and England. Recent events have glossed over the deep-seated Anglophobia which has always prevailed here, but they have not done away with It. That It exists as a profound and almost a Na tional sentiment Is undeniable; and It is most pronounced among those who are ne.ver weary of discussing an imaginary "traditional friendship" between us and the Continental military natlona It takes just now the form of an angry display of sympathy with the Boers. It resents the slightest reflection of English taste in social manners and customs; and it may easily be feared that it would fall Into paroxysms were the preparation now making to receive Prince Henry designed Iristead for some sprig of British royalty. Nothing could be more Irrational than this anti-British feeling. We have a thousand mo tives of political sympathy with Eng landnot to mention the sentiment of family relationship and we have none at all as related either to Prussia or Russia. The English system rests ap proximately upon the same basis as our t)wn. The two countries call similar things by different names, to be sure, and England has the aristocratic tradi tion. whlcbwe have not; but In Eng land as here the popular will opinion Is the foundation of authority and the essential force in government. Those who fail to see that, consciously or oth erwise, we must stand in general co-operation with a -country thus governed, are blind Indeed. And equally blind are those who fancy that there are affini ties, traditional or other, between our Government and those governments which rest upon the divinity of Princes and the might of the sword. HOW WE CONTROL Til ESI. Such control of the tropics as finds favor with the majority of American statesmen was never thought of by a certain philosopher whose views on the topic have afforded him much copy, fame and revenue. Mr. Kldd conceived the equatorial regions of the globe as susceptible of stupendous development and enrichment both for tlremselves and for the temperate belt which must con trol them, but he proceeded entirely upon the hypothesis that the tropics were to be administered for their good. Such consideration as his first small vol ume and subsequent expanded studies devoted to the methods of Spain, for example, was Indulged rather for ex pressing his disapproval of their dras tic and disastrous operations than for any less invidious design. At diametric variance with the benev olent purposes contemplated by Mr. Kldd are the theories which the Ameri can Congress Is preparing to put In effect. In our eyes the tropics we con trol do not exist for development, but for exploitation; not for progress, but for stagnation; not for prosperity, but for spoil. It was Mr. KIdd's idea that the tropics should be cultivated and made to bring forth their teeming treas ures for the enjoyment of the temperate zone. It Is our statesmanship's Idea that they should be humiliated and taxed, lest perchance they should fur nish something that might find a mar ket here. The products of Cuba and the Philip pines, hemp for our grain, tobacco for our solace, sugar for our tables, silks and dyes, spices and, rare woods, are not sustenance and embellishments that we should desire, but calamities that should be averted If they cannot be de stroyed. Not a man In White House or Cabinet, not a man In either house of Congress, has dared to breathe a sylla ble to indicate that in all the countless helpful and comforting products of our tropic possessions there Is a single arti cle that for our selfish wants we should desire, to say nothing. of the responsi bility we cannot evade among the na tions of wisely administering the lands and people that have come into our care. Let us get away from our panic over tropic competition a moment and try to think how history will look upon these desperate struggles to keep "Cuba and the -tPhillppInes from prospering. History will dwell with pride upon our exploits in the war with Spain, upon the generous diplomacy of the Paris settlement, and upon the promises of good will and friendly aid extended to the islands by President McKlnley and his advisers in Cabinet, on Commissions and In the Army. But when it comes to the fulfillment of those rosy prom ises, It will have to record that suppli ant Cuba and the helpless Philippines, pleading for rrarkets, were met at the door of Congress with a frowning face and thrust back into the same state of .unhappy despoilment from which we valnglorlously wrested them. History will have to say that as a Na tion, 75,000000 strong and the wonder of the ages lnwealth, Inventive genius and productive capacity-, we shook in terror at the rivalry of these backward and unhappy islands, asking for nothing but a chance to sell us their tropical products in exchange for our flour and manufactures. We have our tropics, and we shall control them. We could, If we were wise enough, bind them to us with hooks of steel, not through gen erosity, but through simple justice. Yet we elect to bind upon them burdens grievous to be borne, the while we look for praise, like the Pharisee In the tem ple, and thank God we are not like Spain and Germany. GOVERNMENT IN KALEIDOSCOPE. He who should have looked with mis giving upon 'the outcome of the Im passe In the Pan-American Congress would have grievously -erred through Ignorance of the bottomless resources of the Latin-American mind. Chile had a plan of arbitration that must be adopted or her delegates would with draw. Peru had an antagonistic plan of arbitration which must be adopted or the Peruvian delegates would with draw. It looked like a conflict of the irresistible with the immovable, when, lo! a way was opened. Each plan was adopted, the. contending powers were satisfied, felicitations were exchanged and all was serene again until the next session. Equally noteworthy Is the news from Venezuela. General Mafos, the revolu tionary leader, is "master at sea," be cause the government forces do. not dare to attack him. On the other hand, his operations are nullified because the government prevents the landing of arms and ammunition. Matos is in vincible, but he can't operate. The rev olution cannot progress, but the gov ernment can't squelch It Without arms and ammunition, the rebel lead ers are nevertheless defiant and un touched. Meanwhile Colombia is not idle. A bloody and decisive "battle was fought at Dibullo last week. The government forces divided so as to approach the rebel army from two opposite sides. The movement was admirably executed and the outflanking forces closed in on their victims. After a desperate battle of four hours. In which neither side appeared to have gained any. advan tage, notwithstanding the loss of 18 killed and 63 wounded, the command ing General discovered that the two wings of his army were fighting with each other, the enemy having made its escape betimes before the action be gan. This exploit has not been sur passed for interest and diversion since one of the political 'parties in Cuba withdrew early in the Presidential race and positively refused to play. It is a great country to the south of us, and inhabited by a wonderful peo ple. Colombia seems to be the. banner state for rapidity of action and diversl- ueu government. Perhaps that Is why some of our statesmen think It is the only proper place to invest 5200,000,000 in an isthmian canal. HISTORY BY KNACTMENT. Hard upon the heela of the Southern women who demand suppression of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by statute, tread the Kentucky Legislature and a portion of the Maryland Legislature, declar ing that Schley Is the hero of Santiago and that the court of Inquiry was wrong. No one has ever questioned, we believe, that the pronunciation of Ar kansas as Arkansaw, established by the legislative decree ta that state, was. thus fixed beyond appeal, but the en trance of legislative enactment upon the field of historical authority Is another matter. Orthoepy Is at best an affair of usage and opinion, but history, pre sumably, at least, is entitled to some of the consideration we tender to the exact sciences. Whether an event happened or not, at least outside the sphere of eccleslastlclsm, should be referred to evidence rather than emotion. If Legislatures are to settle the facts of history, what shall become of the historian's "calling and occupation"? Thither we shall have to repair to as certain, not only the facts about Schley and slavery, but about Tyler's Inde pendence nnd Jackson's democracy, the merits of McCIellan and Fitz John Por- ter, the historical stature of Lee and the quality of Mr.Austln's verse. There we shall have to learn the Identity of the Man With the Iron Mask, the author ship of Junius and the real discoverer of America. "Be It enacted" must set tle once and for all the part that Russia played In our Civil War and the facts as to British attitude in our war with Spain. Contingencies such as these are calculated to renew Representative Watson's Inquiry where we are at and Mr. Slenklewlcz' query whither we are tending. It Is well enough to remember, how ever, that the historian Is a human being after all, with human nature's frailties of prejudice and affection. No one, from the very nature of his author itative" position, needs occasional jogs to his sense of justice more than the historian needs them. How Gibbon hated the miraculous and Froude the Irish and Burke the regicides and Pres cott the Spanish, Is as plain as Irving's love for England and Fiske's passion for evolution. Nowhere else, moreover. Is the historian so likely to find and respect these jogs to his sense of justice as in these technically Irrelevant but potentially effective protests from vari ous social organizations. Legislatures cannot make history, but they can make It very uncomfortable for those who would pervert history- Women's clubs and school boards cannot write text books, heaven be praised, but they can effectually arrest the attention of pub lishers and through them that of au thors, by agitation and an approach to the discredited boycott. Nobody Is going to print school books that can't be sold, or histories that are forbidden half tmj libraries in the coun try. Popular protests of this sort, there fore, need to be apprehended as one of the true sources of modern history. They are not to be lightly esteemed, for pub lic opinion, sifted and corrected through discussion, will have Its will in ttilVfleld as in others. The duties of court cshsor are not neglected with us, as we are apt to think. The difference is that they are discharged by the people them selves. The historian no more than the lawmaker Is independent of the popu lar will. TRADITIONS OP THE STAGE. Actors, as a rule, play the characters of Shakespeare according to the tra ditions of the sta"ge, which not seldom violate the text of the play. Hamlet, according to the text, is "fat and scant of breath"; he is a Dane, and presum ably fair-haired, but on the stage Ham let Is dark, spare and atrabilious. Ac cording to the text of the play, Macbeth is naturally a gallant, generous, loyal servant of his King, whose ambltlcn gets the better of him; that Is, he Is a good man naturally, who goes wrong, even as Bollngbroke does when he con spires against Richard II. Lady Mac beth, who as a wife thoroughly knew her husband, says of him: Glamls thou art. and Cawdor; and shalt be What thou art promised: yet do I fear thy nature; It Is too full o' the milk of human kindness To catch the nearest way: thou wouldst be great; Art not without ambition, but without The Illness should attend it: what thou wouldst highly. That wouldst thou bollly; wouldst not play false. And yet wouldst wrongly win. This Is clearly a picture of an ambi tious man, but not naturally cruel, heartless or false. Nevertheless, Sir Henry Irving insists on violating the plain suggestion of the text and con ceives Macbeth not to have been natu rally a good man who goes wrong, but a bloody-minded, dissembling devil, like Iago, from the start a man born for treachery and murder at the first op portunity. Another stupid tradition of the stage in making Hamlet, who is the first gentleman of his court, a scholar and a soldier, stalk to and fro upon the stage with the old conventional stride that was laughed at by the Roman satirists. No Prince ever stalked about like an Indian warrior, and yet Mr. Booth always played Hamlet with the stage stride. Fechter showed Booth how a Prince should enter a room by walking like a cultivated man of the world. Booth, when he played Romeo, went over the balcony to reach Juliet with all the care and precision that an amateur athlete would exhibit at a gymnastic exhibition. Actors are not born Shakespearean critics any more than great dramatic critics, like Lamb and Hazlltt, are born actors. A man may be a fine actor and a very dull critic, even as a fine critic might make a dull actor. An actor is sel dom a severe student of the text of a great play. He Is content to play the char acter according to the traditions of the stage, which may be In gross violation of the clear letter of the text. An actor finds out that he can do better business by playing the character at variance with natural reading of the text, and if he Is a brilliantly successful actor he fixes the tradition of the stage for that character. So great was Garrlck's abil ity and influence that he played Hamlet with the gravediggers left out and the character of Osrlc omitted. The ques tion of Hamlet's madness and Lear's In sanity presents no difficulty to an at tentive reader of the text of the play, but on the stage great actors have rested their methods of playing Ham let upon the question as to whether he was really ever Insane, or only feign ing Insanity all the time. For their own purposes, or to gratify their vanity. great actors In the past have from time to time added to their so-called tradi tions of the stage. As bits of genuine Shakespearean criticism, these tradi tions are worthless, for very few emi nent actors have been careful students of the text of Shakespeare. The elder Booth, John Kerable, Macready, Daven port, Forrest, were careful students of the text, and so In our day are Richard Mansfield and Sir Henry Irving, but none of these actors would have hesi tated to extort an unwarrantable con ception of the character from the text if they could make a point with trfe audience, even as Sir Henry Irving has done in his presentation of Macbeth. Fechter played Hamlet differently from Booth, and dressed the character differently. No two great actors ever play Shylock alike, and generally both of them will violate Shakespeare's con ception of the part as interpreted by Hazlltt, Lamb and other famous critics. There Is no objection to these traditions of the stage, provided they are not ac cepted by the audience as true readings of Shakespeare's thought and concep tion. A great actor must not be accept ed as an Inspired Interpreter of Shakespeare's text. He Is generally nothing but the volcer of the stage tra dition of how the part should be played, or he Is an Ingenious or Impudent innovator. SENTI3IEXT UNDER SIEGE. Whoever, if any, has accused the German mind of dull or heavy faculty In diplomacy will be undeceived by re flection on the operations now directed upon our National good will. A force Is to be enlisted for mutual concessions more powerful than armies or tariff bills; and no one need be surprised If it drives into oblivion all complaints over sugar bounties and American food stuffs. Prince Henry, brother to the Kaiser, Is coming over with a royal train. He brings a German band, loaded with Sousa as well as Strauss, and in his own hands a present for Miss Alice Roosevelt, daughter of our President, whose name has been signally honored by Imperial decree. At the launching of the Emperor's yacht, built by Amer icans, In American waters, our high officials will participate and give a naval welcome. Americans In gala dress and beaming faces will swarm on the Imperial yacht Hohenzollern, and Kronprlnz Wllhelm and the new Meteor. The West Thlrty-fourth-Street pier, in New York harbor, has been put at the disposal of the guests. The German Society will give the Prince a dinner, which President Roose velt will attend. The royal band will give concerts ashore, the German and American sailors will jubilate with aquatic sports, and when Prince Henry gives his banquet on the Hohenzollern the occasion will be graced with nearly a- thousand pieces of silver heirlooms from the Emperor's own priceless col lection, one of the richest In all the world. Only rashness would scout the effect of these amenities upon the course of history. Who shall say how much American sympathy In the hour of Vic toria's death furthered British willing ness to withdraw from Joint control of the Nicaragua Canal, or how hostile Senators were by mourning signs in England last September brought to ac cept a treaty once rejected with scorn? The relations of great powers are formedafter all, by mere men,, with human feelings and weaknesses. How much we shall give to Germany, or Germany to us, will depend upon the temper of the negotiators, and ultimately upon the temper of the people behind them. Sentiment, rather than self-Interest or any actual service, rests below our friendship for Russia, and the kindness we feel for France grows out of mem ories of Franklin and La Fayette more than out of any deduction from present concessions, which are hard to find. He who reckons without sentiment and prejudice In the conduct of affairs ig nores two of the most profoundly mov ing forces of human nature, and it is with human nature that history chiefly concerns Itself. It has long been known that certain members of the Isthmian Canal Com mission, Mr. George S. Morison. an en gineer of experience and repute espe cially, have favored the Panama route, cost and facility of acquisition being approximately equal. It Is reasonably certain that they have purposely set to work to secure a reduction in its price by the very course that has now' re sulted in the reduced offer. They are largely Influenced by the feeling that the Panama Canal Is more of an engi neering certainty than the one at Nica ragua. It Is the opinion of The Ore gonlan, however, that the commission's report will be considered by Congress as only one of the factors In the prob lem It has to solve, and that the Nica ragua route will finally, be adopted. The canal may cost more,' but It will be of greater ultimate value to us. In the Americanization of a considerable re gion In Central America. The canal has other aspects beside Its function of a mere passage from ocean to ocean. Wade and Dalton deserve the same fate, because both were guilty by con federacy In crime. Both were armed. Of course both would not shoot the victim, because It would create need less alarm. As to who would be se lected to fire the shot, that was purely a matter of accident or temperament. If the victim had carried $500 on his person Instead of 26 cents, Dalton would have claimed half of the spoil. If two men plan to rob a house and one of them keepsj watch while the other col lects the plunder, the law treats each as equally guilty. Dalton knew what was Intended, for he, too, carried a load ed pistol. He consented to the crime, was privy to It. It is a matter of not the slightest consequence "who fired the fatal shot. fIf Wade had missed his aim, probably Dalton would have fired his gun. too. There never will be satisfactory pilot service at the mouth of the Columbia River so long as the service is con trolled at Astoria, ddmlnated by the obstructive spirit that rules there, and Is used as the Instrument of a political clique as a factor in politics. You never suspect that reciprocity Is sincere when you lcok at Its advocates. They never reciprocate except 'for their own gain and at somebody else's loss. Dictionaries vk. Usage. , Boston Herald. It Is something refreshing to find so ac complished a philologist as Professor Ed ward S. Sheldon, of Harvard, warning his phllologic brethren against regarding the dictionary as infallible. Good colloquial usage Is good enough authority for Pro fessor Sheldon, despite dictionaries and school text-books, and It ought to be-good enough for the average person, who, how ever, is as fond of sticking to hl3 dlc- I tionary as If It were Holy Writ. EACH MAX'S A THIEF. Twenty-eight hundred years ago there lived a wl3e man a very wise man. He declared there was nothing new under the sun. Even then, plagiarism was at worlc. Even then there were petty spies, whose object In life was to pick out Intellectual thefts. This Is a steady old world. It does not change much In 2SO0 years, either in ways or wisdom. We have many Hjterary detectives just now. They are mostly a reckless folk, whose chief delight Is that of finding parallelisms and coincidences among authors. Their fault is that they have been so little to school that they cannot distinguish plagiarism which Is a theft from plagiarism which Is a loan. Orig inality of material, which Is Impossible, they confuse with originality of form and method. Ideas and thoughts are common prop erty, open to every person. Method of treatment belongs to the Individual, and passes into the common stock after it Is used. When that stock Is drawn, upon and stamped with an Individuality, the transaction Is a loan. When the stock is used without adaptation it is a theft. A discreet man will be slow In declaring the theft, for otherwise he may make every author a thief or himself a fool. Literary detectives- therefore need to be careful, for it does not profit a wise man to utter vain knowledge or to fill his belly with the east wind. . The latest victim of literary spies is the Rev. Dr. Newell Dwlght. Hlllls. of the Plymouth Church, of Brooklyn. The Rev. P. E. Holp. of Chicago. Is dogging him hard, and has discovered In the latest book of Dr. Hlllls striking similarities with expressions in the works of David Swing and Henry Ward Beecher. Many people are gorging themselves with gossip. The parallelisms are so apparent as to show that Dr. HIUIs has done some free bor rowing. Several are as follows: Hlllls Never wasl Beecher The Bible 13 there a book so be-lthe most bethrnshed thrashed and berub-.book In the world, blshed. Coming to ItjComlng to It through through commentatorsjcommentaries Is much ha3 been like looking like looking at a land out upon the sunjscape through garret through a window ovorlwindowa over which which spiders have generations of unmo spun webs, festooned) lested spiders nave with thick dust. jppun their webs. Hlllls Today, with! Swing A French wri the great -scholar, welter living In the time may well exclalmtiof Louis XIV says: "Calvin and Edwardsr'Bourdaloue In his ser make me fear andjmons astounds me. tremble; Bishop ButlcrlMasslllon frightens me. makes me to be Bossuet makes me Be lieve, Fcnelon makes me to hope and love." amazed; Llddon and Beecher make me be lieve: but Jesus Christ makes mo hope and love." Hlllls In our school days, the historian as tonished us by the story of the hired Per Swing Behind the mercenary Persian troops went the driver with his whip, a man with a whip behind each squad, and the victory came not from love of country, but sian troops who went Into battle rollowed by officers with whips. The mercenaries con auercd. not througn from fear of the scourge. The words love of a noble cause. but through fear of a, spoken Indeed to Chris- cruel scourge. Thusftlans do nevertheless, all columns of -socletylonnounce to all man are Journeying upwardkind the ruling passion not because they areiof the g09pcl. Its great fleeing away from the! spectacle Is not a Sinai thunder of Sinai. butbut a Mount Zlon. not becauso they are al-a flend devouring men lured upward by the j but a Savior ana is beauty of Calvary. iHeavenly Father reaching out the arms iof Infinite love to gath jer In us children. Of course, the sensation-mongers are waxing fat. Jiut to a fair-minded court the above quotations do not prove plag iarism. Dr. Hlllls has done nothing more criminal than any author has done from Homer to Tennyson. The spies themselves are creatures of plagiarism. If Dr. HUUs Is not original he has put more originality into the above passages than his detrac tors have put Into their criticism. Lit erary buzzards are so old that their very .name speaks plagiarism, of themsSlves. Tn a certain sense there Is no such crime as plagiarism. All knowledge Is common property, and no two persons can use It In the same way, even if they de sire. Therefore, It is more dangerous to charge than to commit the offense. The world Is so full of people that one of our greatest mysteries Is not the similarity of characters, but the variation. Therefore, no matter how closely a person may bor row. It Is doubtful whether ho can com mit a literary crime- The charge Is very llkcly to show a nature without charity and common sense. , Common sense tells that all things under the sun are old, and original according to the new form in which they are put. And without char ity, though we speak with tongues of men and of angels, wc are become as sounding brass or as a tinkling cymbal. Even nature Is not new. Can we be more perfect than nature? She reproduces the same rose year after year. If repeti tion Is a crime, only the first creatures on earth wore free of sin, and history Is a long tale of wickedness, theft and plag iarism. Is the bee sinful because it rob3 flowers? Is tho apple tree a plagiarist that produces Its fruits from the nourish ment of the sun and soil? Is the rain bow, that steals Its colors from the sun? Is the sun, that robs the vast sea? If you have encountered the same literary expression before, sa has your eye often met the sight of Mount Hood. Are you less original because you write your thoughts with pencil and on. paper that others have made, or because you do not cook your own food or make your own shoes? Are you less original because you do not contrive your own alphabet? The test of merit Is not originality, but power of adaptation. The person who uses what materials he finds and merely gives them the stamp of his Individuality is no plagiarist. The tree of life Is rooted In what has gone before. It blossoms out of what has been, and Its roots take nour ishment from the loose detritus of ages. Our mouths feed upon the bones of an cestors, and our minds upon their wis dom. Our speech Is the best of what they have said. Law, morals, wisdom, science are the treasures of ages of accumulation. There never was absolute Initiation. Edi son and Marconi had predecessors. Their individuality has given old Ideas a new application, the results of which are pub lic property. The man who would be original must Insulate himself from the world, forgetting what time has given him. He must be as dumb as the Sphynx. He must close his eyes, his nose and his ears. The mummy of Rameses has been Isolated for ages. It Is a type of as perfect originality as there can be. The best thoughts are but the faded thoughts of others recolored. Gonlus is always a borrower. Homer, Virgil, Dante, Shakespeare and Milton were plunderers. Shakespeare took so much that Greene declared him an "upstart crow bedecked with peacock feathers." Gray, Shelley, Cowper, Pope, Byron, Bacon, Scott, Arn old and Webster stole ideas, figures and even words. Morse caught his secret from Volta, Galvanl and Priestly. The mechan ical force of steam was observed 20CO years before Watt. Movable types were sug gested by brick stamps of the Egyptians. "Every man's mind Is modified by all the objects of nature," says Shelley; "by every word and every suggestion which he ever admitted to act on his consciousness." Vol taire ridiculed absolute originality. Heine denied the possibility of literary theft. Goethe held originality Impossible. The crime plagiarism Is committed when an author falls to turn his material iu the lathe of his own Individuality. Dr. Hlllls has not taken the materials of Beecher bodily. He may not have Im proved his model, but he has adapted what he borrowed. Dr. Hlllls does not de serve the bastinado, of public criticism. When we Judge a writer's merit we look to the merit of his method. The same materials will make all kinds of houses, the same colors all kinds of paintings. A hut or a palace, a signboard or a Ma donna, differ not so much In their mate rials as In the way they are formed. SLIXGS AND ARROWS. - Yc Advisors of Ye Presse. Sing hey! for ye good Editor. & eke his hap pye Lotte. Although he llttel seems to knowe ye Snappe yt he has gotte. Te Lawyer & ye Doctor, & ye Plumber, as Is known, Must each his Busyness conduct, unaided & alone. Ye Carpenter must saw & plane, ye Husband man must plow. Sans any klndlye Companye of Folk to tell them howe. But luckye Is ye Editor, for doth he not pos sess An ever-present Stock of wise Advisors of ye Presse? Let him but write a Statement down. & In will forthwith blowe A Contradiction of It from Pro Bono Publico. & Old Subscriber will chirp uppe to sette ye Hatter straight, & eke ye Meaning will Fair Play with Force elucidate. While Constant Reader carefullye ye Subject will review. & Veritas. & Truth. & "X" will touch upon it, too. The sixteen Issues following will every one cxpresse Ye Thoughts of all ye wise and great Advisors of ye Presse. When yt ye Paper enters on a fierce and hotte Campaign. Forth comes ye klnde Communicant to make Its Pathway plalne. If It shall err a single mill about ye Price of Oats, Some Friend to showing Its Mistake a column full devotes. If on Religion It mayhap shall get off slightly wrong, Yo Letter-writing Brethren will turn out an Hundred strong, & Copy by ye Wagon load shall speak for Righteousness. Which subject Is a pette ono with Advisors of the Presse. Full happye Is ye Editor, nor has a Moment's doubt Where he maye get ye Stuffe with which to gette ye Paper out. Nor yet where he may And out what "Ms uppe to hlmc to saye. For barrels of gilt-edged Advice ye Mall brings every daye. Ills only Dutye 13 to kill ye oft encroaching News, Which threatens sometimes to crowde out yo Letter-writers' views, & thus of Care he takes no Thought, and heartily doth bless Those always wlllinlg Helpers, ye Advisors of yo Presse. The Victory of the Local Editor. (From the local page of the Smalltown Gazette, January 2.): Hon. William Snooks, whose thorough bred mare, "Comet," has been on the mar ket for several days, brought the beau tiful animal to the city yesterday, and put her through her paces on Main street. A cleaner limbed, more graceful and promising young equine It has never been our lot to see. The fortunate purchaser will no doubt enter her at the fair next Fall, and we predict that ho will take away a hatful of winnings. She's alt right, Mr. Snooks. (From the editorial page of the Small town Gazette, January 9.): Bill Snooks, of Boomville, brought his weatherbeaten, spavined, rlngboned, wind broken old skate Into town yesterday, and led her limping back and forth on Main street. Instead of coming like a man to the Gazette office and paying up the 57 50 he owes us for back subscriptions. The editor of the Gazette hereby disclaims responsibility for the three-story "puff" Snooks bought of its local editor for a couple of beers and a 5-cent cigar. It was a cute dodge, Bill, but It don't go with us. (From the local page of the Smalltown Gazette, January 16.): Hon. William Snooks; who was rocently In the city with his speedy mare, "Comet," was met in the Bacon House yesterday, and said that he was displeased with a mention he received In this paper last week. We hasten to assure Mr. Snooks that the local editor did not write ttra objectionable article. Mr. Snooks says he has a prospect of selling his great trotter for $75. Wo can well believe It. (From the editorial page of the Small town Gazette, January 23.): For the second time that dead-beat horsetrader from Boomtown., Bill Snooks, a man without honor and without repu tation, has broken Into our local columns with his decayed old plug of a horse, by giving cheap cigars and drinks to the local editor. We write this to Inform Mr. Snooks that there Is a law In the land, and we havo been seriously thinking of Invoking It to collect the long overduo account he owes us. We shall further state that while we are good natured and appreciate hustling ability In a local edi tor as well as any one, we shall not tol erate another offense of this kind, even If the offender turns In a column of new ads every day. Get next, you who need to. (From the local page of the Smalltown Gazette. January SO.): Hon. William Snook reports to us the sale of his famous trotting mare, "Comet," for J2G 50. The mare Is a valuable animal, and wo congratulate her new purchaser. Mr. Snooks Is a gentleman and a scholar, and treats the boys right. From the editorial page of the Bmall town Gazette, February 6.): This Is to Inform the public that George Hatch, late local editor of this paper, has been succeeded by Francis Hender son. Please pay Mr. Hatch no money, either for ads or subscriptions. (From the editorial page of tho Small town Gazette, February 13.): We advise the public that George Hatch has resumed his duties as local editor. George is a good boy, and we think per haps we were too hasty in his case. Fran cis Henderson will be found feeding the press, as formerly, and Mr. Hatch Is au thorized by us to solicit ads and subscrip tions, and collect money for the same. Ivlpllnpr. 'E's a trekkln' through the Transvaal Jus' to see w'at 'e can see, 'E's a studyln' the horflcers an" men; E's a readin' of the people, an a dreary book they be. For to And a flttin subjeck for 'Is pen. But as far as Is reported 'e ain't been inspired yot. An the only thing e s found worth while to tell. Is a list o 'glowln' battles that was won by one Dewet. Which he makes a text to give 'Is country fits. E's a wastin of his patience an' a rlskln of is 'ealth. An 'what's worse 'e ain't projuced a single pome. E'd been farther on tho roadway Jeadln out to fame an wealth. If 'e'd 'untcd Inspiration nearer ome. For thcroaln't no T. Mulvaney splnnln' yarns down Transvaal way. There never lived but only one of Mm, An there ain't no sun a-risln on no road to Mandelay: There ain't nothln' only kopjes,- bleak an grim. There was times, an well we knows 'em. when whatever met Ms heye Was a pome w'en the paper come to band; There was subjecks In a plenty, an 'e found a fresh supply In almost ev'ry foreign town an land. But a wrltln. wrttln', wrltln. always wrltin somethink new Ain't so easy as perhaps you think 'twould be. An' 'e'd done a whole lot better (this Is Just between us two) If 'e'd stuck to 'Indoostan an' Soldiers Three, J J. itONTAOTIia.