THE SUmAY 0REG02aAN, PORTLAND, fAPElC 17, 1901. ffifj (Bngmmn Entered a, tho Postofllce at Portland, Or., a3 second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, with Sunday excepted, per year.. 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0.00 Sunday, per year -. 2.00 The Weekly, per year - 1.50 The Weekly. 3 months ;80 Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday exceoted.lCc Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday included.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper ""1 10 to 30-pace paper ................ -"--c 22 to 44-page paper 3 Foreign rates double. The Oregonian does not buy poems or ttorles from individuate, and cannot undertake to return any manuscript ent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed Xor this purpose. EASTKKN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beck with Special Agency) New Tork: Rooms 43-49, Trlhune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-012 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium annex; Postofllce Jfews Co.. 217 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend rick, 900-012 Seventeenth st. Kansas City Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth end Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner. 250 South Spring, and Harry Drapkin. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Shlrd; L. Regelsbuger, 317 First Avenue South, New York City L. Jones &. Co., Astor House. Ogden W. C. Alden, Postofllce Cigar Store; P. R. Godard; W. G. Kind. 114 25th St. Omaha Baikalow Bros.. 1012 Farnom; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South Street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 746 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Sutter; L. B. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market: Frank Scott, 80 Ellis; N. Wheat ley, 83 Stevenson; Hotel Francis Newa Stand. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. TESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, C2 deg.; minimum, 43. Precipitation, .10 inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, with possibly showers; winds mostly westerly. i i PORTLAND, SUNDAY, ATRIL 17, 1904. t 1 3 SEPARATE CITY ELECTIONS. An agitation has begun in the City of fit. Paul for transferring municipal elec tions from the separate time they are mow held to a time uniform with gen eral elections. It has been found that the cost of the separate city election amounts to something like $35,000 and It Is doubted whether the alleged gain of separate elections offsets this ex pense. This agitation is of interest in Portland just now, inasmuch as our new charter proposes to Institute sep arate municipal elections on the first Monday in June, 1905, and biennially thereafter. There is little doubt, how ever, that amendments to the charter will be proposed at this "Winter's Legis lative session, and the probability Is that the result will be to open up the whole question of separate elections. "We shall assume that when the time comes, the reigning political forces here will be found in opposition to the separate elections. Political machines generally are so opposed, and - the en actment of our present charter is the first time that this alleged reform has ever been able to prevail over the de termined stand of the politicians against it. It will be remembered, however, that The Oregonian has never acqui esced in the claims of the "reformers" for the separate election, believing it one of those specious but empty de vices by which law is Invoked to make oitizens good and officials efficient. The basis of the separate election fad is the theory that the voter is so helplessly ignorant that if he hopes for a good Republican Governor he cannot help voting alpo for a bad Republican nomi nee for Mayor. The average voter is quite capable of this strain on his In telligence, as the split tickets so often elected bear witness. The Legislature will undoubtedly be asked to rectify certain clerical errors in the charter pointed out by Auditor Devlin and to amend the present vexa tious regime for street assessments; but if there were no other reason for anticipating charter legislation it would be found in the almost certain adop tion of the direct primary and the ne cessity for conforming the charter to that law. It is even open to serious doubt whether the charter is sufficiently explicit concerning the election laws already in force. Perusal of It shows that the obvious purpose of its framers was to make it conform to all election laws past or yet to be enacted, or rather to make all that class of legislation con form to the new charter. For example, we have directions to the County Clerk about opening and closing the registry books; to the County Court about the expense account of the city election. The Auditor, however, is to receive the nominations, Instead of the County Clerk, and the City Council is to dis charge the functions of the County Court. All these deviations from th'e election laws are doubtless legal; that is, they can be made legal by proper enact ment; but it is exceedingly doubtful If some of the provisions of the charter limiting and diverting the election laws could stand the test of inquiry under our constitutional provision and decis ions under it requiring the complete re hearsal of every amended statute in its altered form. There is a cheerful and glittering generality, for example, in the assertion (chap. II, art. 1, section 21), that "the dates fixed in said elec tion laws are hereby changed as far as they relate to said city elections, and the dates prescribed In this charter shall be substituted for -and take the place of the dates set forth in said elec tion laws." These provisions may be adequate, but It Is not likely the friends of the charter will forego the opportu nity the Winter session affords of mak ing assurance doubly sure. The separate city election of June, 1905, would occur at a time shortly after the opening of the Lewis and Clark Fair, and it is a serious question whether the distraction would not justify a postponement of the election until the succeeding June, when the general elec tion occurs, with a continuance of the present city officials in office. The mat tor is one that should be decided wholly on its public merits; but unfortunately there is little reason to hope that it can be divested of political significance. If the present Republican organization should oppose the change. It would doubtless rest under the charge that it hoped to get a Mayor more pliable than Judge "Williams to its will. And if It should favor the postponement Its mo tives would be assailed by those who would have hastened to abolish sep arate elections if the power had been put in their hands. The Oregonian does Tiot believe in ignoring or suppressing matters of this nature which are In everybody's mind; and it hopes to see the subject fully and freely discussed on Its merits, regardless alike of the de sires of the "-organization" to perpetu ate itself, and of the rosy hopes of oth er ambitious statesmen to avail them selves of the coming municipal election to found a new and possibly more ex clusive dynasty. ARCHITECT OF HIS OWNjEMINENCE. The recent great Life of Gladstone by John Morley has been followed by the publication of a very Interesting biog raphy of Gladstone's graai rival, Dis raeli, by "Wilfrid Meynell. It is a very Interesting book, because Disraeli not only was a statesman, who played quite as Important a part "in the politics of England as Gladstone, measured by the permanent mark he made in his time, but because Disraeli was a far more versatile and brilliant man in his per sonal gifts than Gladstone. He was not so powerful an orator, but he was a man of astonishing wit and humor, qual ities which Gladstone lacked, and he was a man of genius in the matter of original literary expression, which cer tainly cannot be said of Gladstone. Dis raeli's novels, written in his youth, are a mine of fine political epigrams, to which more than one public man of our day has been indebted for the finest brilliants of his speech. His conversa tional powers were so great that he at tracted universal attention in London social circles before he even won a seat In Parliament, and his manners were so polished and attractive that Queen Victoria, who had been obliged to meet in official intercourse the Duke of Wellington, Lord' Melbourne, Sir Robert Peel, Lord Derby, Lord Palmer ston and Mr. Gladstone, always said Disraeli had the most delightful man ners of them all. He made her feel that he was not only her loyal subject but her devoted personal friend. Our Amer ican poet, N. P. Willis, who met Dis raeli in his days of youthful literary fame, describes him as a most powerful and impressive talker on any subject under discussion; he -talked "like a racehorse approaching the winning post." The force of Disraeli's genius is shown by the fact that he is the only English Prime Minister since the days of Will lam IH who rose to be Premier without being a child of one of the great Eng lish Universities or being allied by fam ily connection with the aristocracy or rich English gentry. Godolphln and Walpole were both university-bred men. The elder Pitt was a university graduate and allied by family ties to the Temples and the Grenvllles. The Earl of Bute, the Marquis of Rocking ham, Lord North belonged, to the aris tocracy. The younger ITt was a bril liant graduate of the university and had large family Influence. Fox was a university graduate, and the brilliant son of the wealthy Lord Holland. George Canning was a brilliant univer sity graduate, who was a devoted par tisan of the younger Pitt and at once pushed by him into Parliament. Lord Liverpool and Lord Melbourne belonged to the aristocracy; Sir Robert Peel was a brilliant university graduate, the son of a wealthy cotton manufacturer who had been made a Baronet by royal fa vor. Lord Palmerston belonged to the aristocratic family of Temple; Lord John Russell represented the great ducal house of Bedford, while Lord Derby represented the ancient and no ble family of Stanley. Gladstone was a brilliant university graduate, the son of Sir John Gladstone, a rich Liverpool merchant, who had been knighted by royal favor. In the history of all these famous English statesmen we find that from the start they were planted In Parliament by family Influence or per sonal aristocratic patronage, even as Macaulay in his youth was pushed Into Parliament by the support of Lord Lansdowne. But Disraeli, while not a Jew In faith, was a man of Jew blood, and he was not the child of any English univer sity, nor was she allied by marriage to any powerful aristocratic family. His ancestors had abandoned Judaism in the reign of George II, because the re scinding of the act extinguishing the civil and political disabilities of the Jews had made them feel that there was no public, career before their children if they remained Jews in faith Disraeli, born in 1804, was educated from 1817 to 1820, at the school of the Rev. Dr. Co gan, a retired Unitarian Minister. Here he was taught the classics, and with French literature he was familiar to the end of his days. His further educa tion was that obtained very much as Byron obtained his, viz., by omniv orous reading. The popular notion that Disraeli was at the start a political adventurer is without foundation. He was far less of an opportunist than his great antagonist, Gladstone, who en tered Parliament a most bigoted Tory, finally became a "Peellte" and ulti mately became the most radical leader that the English Liberal party ever called chief. As early as 1830 Disraeli made an Eastern tour. In which he learned to smoke and during the first year of his Parliamentary life he said: "I ascribe my popularity In the House to the hours I spend in the smoking room." Doubtless he was right; the smoking room was just the place for a man of brilliant powers of conversation to fre quent If he desired to diffuse rapidly his reputation for unique powers of mind and expression. Disraeli had a wonderful command of language, an unsurpassed gift of sarcasm, a readi ness of wit, a quickness of perception and a grasp of mind that enabled him to seize on all points of any subject un der discussion; a man of such gifts would be sure to command an audience In the freedom of the smoking-room that would make itself felt on the floor of the House. The first speech of Dis raeli In Parliament was a failure only In the sense that a rude, boorish oppo sition can squelch the speech of the orator just as a vulgar, brutal, pro slavery mob more than once made some of Wendell Phillips' finest speeches "failures" in the sense that by noise, hooting, cat-calls, groans, etc., they made It Impossible for him to proceed. Only in this sense was Disraeli's first speech a "failure." The matter of that speech, which filled five and one-half columns of Hansard's Debates, was ad mirable, but Disraeli had made an enemy of Daniel O'Connell, and his first speech was ceaselessly Interrupted by volleys from the Irish Brigade. In such a contest of course victory lay with the strong lungs of the opposition, and Dis raeli, finding it Impossible to go on, finally sat down, saying, "Though I sit down now, the time will come when you will hear me." Nevertheless, this first speech of Dis raeli commanded the warm praise of Sir Robert Peel and of the famous Irish orator, Richard tLalor Shell, who praised the speech as one that was filled with" the spirit of oratory and predicted that "nothing can prevent that man from becoming one of the first speakers In the House of Commons." Disraeli mar ried the widow of his colleague In the representation of Maidstone, Wyndham Lewis, through whose good offices he had been sent to Parliament. The widow inherited a life interest in her husband's property, a house In London and some four thousand pounds a year. But she was 50 and Disraeli was not 35 when they were married In 1839. Des pite this disparity of years this hand some, brilliant man appears to have been devotedly attached to his wife. What began In gratitude soon ripened Into love, for his wife was a woman of very lively mind and affectionate dispo sition. Disraeli near the close of his married life said to Lord Ronald Gow er, "We have been married 30 years, and she" has never given me a dull mo ment." His wife was not only devoted to her husband but she knew how to amuse him. Disraeli once said of her: "I do owe to that lady all I think I have ever accomplished, because she has supported me by her counsels and con soled me by the sweetness of her dis position." In a tribute paid by Sir William Harcourt to Lady Beaconsfleld In the Times the day after her death In December, 1872, he says: "She loved him with, her whole heart and soul; she believed In him above all men, and he appreciated at Its real worth that single-minded, self-sacrificing devotion." Whether as a man or a statesman Dis raeli was at least the peer of his great rival, Gladstone. TRAFFIC IN YOUNG GIRLS. "We cannot help thinking that there Is some feverish exaggeration In these re ports of systematized traffic In girls for Immoral purposes, whether at St. Louis, Portland or Spokane. The re former Is never disposed to err on the. side of underestimates when he is out lining the dread situation he is about to correct. High School boys are not likely to maintain harems of High School girls In the North End for any length of time, and such young women as are permitted to make the Journey to St. Louis alone In search of work cannot be blessed with parental vigi lance and sense sufficient to protect them long against mischief if they stay at home. But making every allowance for ex aggeration, the residuum of truth Is awful enough to startle the commu nity and waken to serious effort every right-minded man and woman. We have laws upon this subject, but we seldom hear of their enforcement. It Is high time that striking examples were made of some of the procurers of both sexes who have come, through long Indifference on part of public and officials, to ply their nefarious trade with Impunity. Somebody must be ar rested and not released through social, business or political "pull." Somebody must.be brought into open court, where the tale of Infamy can be unfolded to universal knowledge and the condign punishment that follows conviction will strike terror to others. It Is never amiss to emphasize the towering Importance of Individual re sponsibility in these matters, and there is one phase of parental neglect that needs special emphasis in these days of working girls and working women. It is that girls under 21 years of age, or at least under 18, are quite as much In need of parental oversight as those of much tenderer years. The home pro cess of careful rearing must extend be yond the irresponsible period of young girlhood that can hardly be said to end with the sixteenth year. It has been said by those who have taken pains to investigate the matter that boys who re,ach the age of 20 years without hav ing learned to smoke very seldom con tract the smoking habit, and are almost certainly Immune from cigarette smok ing. It is also said triat girls who pass to the age of IS in modest, womanly en vironment seldom, relatively speaking, even under the most trying conditions, fall Into social sin. In other words. It Is only boys and girls who have been safely piloted through what in plain language Is termed the "fool age" that may be trusted to take care of themselves. It Is during the third period of seven years Into which human life has been poet ically and perhaps rationally divided that the seeds of social ruin and moral death are most plentifully sown. Men and women old In wickedness are found all along the highways and byways of life, but In very many Instances they are but reaping the pernicious harvest of evil whose seeds were planted dur ing these fateful, fruitful seven years, when they thought they were old enough to take care of themselves, and In this Idea were encouraged by the indulgence or indifference or neglect of parents. An enthusiastic believer In the far reaching power of early training has said: "Give me a child for the first seven years of his life and I care not who has charge of him thereafter." This Is an assumption at once egotis tical and at variance with human ex perience. The first seven years should be properly guarded, of course, but equally careful training Is necessary during the second seven lest the seeds of good counsel, "having no depth of earth," wither away. Still more faith fully and vigilantly should the third period of seven years be guarded lest careless handling destroy the promise of the early sowing. v THE VENOM OF AGITATION. John Klrby. Jr., president of the Em ployers' Association of Dayton, O., in a recent debate before the Aldine Club of New Tork, declared the record of labor unions to be "black with shame, injustice, crime and defiance of law." Professor John K. Commons defended labor unions, and while he admitted that some mistakes had been made by their leaders, he added: "The wonder Is, under the conditions, that the union forces are as law-abiding as they are." These are extreme statements, charac teristic of debates. There is no con flict in which right and Justice remain wholly upon one side. The very nature of a contest forbids this. It Is but hu man to seize upon and press an advan tage to the utmost when war is on between two contending forces. Take, for example, the. strike in the Cripple Creek district as It has been waged for weeks between defiant miners and de termined state officials. Each element has marshaled, all the power that It could bring to bear against the other. Both have been dogmatic, arbitrary. The state authorities hold the strongest hand, but It has not yet aroved a win ning one. And when It does, If It does, the victory will be barren of all that entitles It to the name, since It will be permeated through and through with the venom of bitterness and hatred which only the slow process of the years can eliminate. If on the other hand the exaggerated demands-of the Miners' Union prevail, free labor In the T ( common acceptance of that term will have been practically driven out or that great and wonderful mining dis trict for years to come, or until another conflict ensues. Bishop Spauldlng, of Peoria, has de clared that "a strike Is hell," meaning not alone the strike in its active state, but the aftermath of hatred and bit terness that results. And this good and conservative man Is a true friend of the working man and would save him. If possible, from the poison engendered by the Inflamed passions of human nature. In view of tho dire consequences that follow. the wholesale distillation of this poison and Its dissemination through out the Industrial body, It would be well for representative men on either side of this great question to take couns.el of moderation before speaking and to eschew "debates" the tendency of which Is to arouse antagonism and settle nothing. The strike is an evil; the ex actions that lead up to it are evils, and they who blow a coal between these forces with the heated breath of exag geration are the enemies of Industry and of the state. AN ARTFUL ENEMY. By far the most dangerous because the most artful nemy of the election of President Roosevelt Is the New Tork Sun. The New Tork Evening Post Is an able but It Is an open. Ingenuous critic of the administration of Presi dent Roosevelt; and so are the New Tork Times, the Brooklyn Eagle, the Springfield Republican and the Boston Herald; but the Sun always attacks Roosevelt with the weapons 'used by Gibbon against the claim of miraculous origin for Christianity. Byron describes Gibbon as . Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer. The lord of irony; that master spell. This Is the Sun's method of insidious attack upon President Roosevelt. Un der the cover of pretending to be an "independent" paper, the Sun is today by far the ablest because the most art ful enemy of Roosevelt's election as President in 1904. Its artfulness is il lustrated by a recent article entitled "Democrats Defining Their Objections to Mr. Roosevelt." In this article the Sun carefully sums up the reasons given by the leading Democratic mem bers of Congress why "Roosevelt must be defeated." Representative Williams, of Illinois, charges the President with retaining In office Cabinet Ministers "who are responsible- for the malfeas ance known to exist In the Postofllce Department, the General Land Office and the Indian Bureau." Mr. Williams further added that Attorney-General-Knox recently Issued a statement which signified that the trusts had nothing to fear so long as they "stood pat" for the election of the present President to a second term. United States Senator Gorman Is quoted as denouncing Presi dent Roosevelt as having usurped func tions as an executive never Intrusted to him by the Constitution. Senator Gorman has denounced the President as a Czar who. If a law of Congress does not suit him, changes It by executive order. Gorman says that "the President by executive order Is ready to give the old soldiers more money; by executive order he Is ready to amend the interstate commerce act; that, while he does not dispute the President's honesty, something more than honesty is needed to qualify for the office of Chief Magistrate." Sena tor Carmack, of Tennessee; Senator Mallory, of Florida, and Senator Sim mons, of North Carolina, have united In an effort to Impeach Mr. Roosevelt's fitness for the post he alms to hold for four years more. These Senators de scribed the President as "a man of spectacular propensities; rash, hothead ed and Impulsive; disqualified by tem perament and character for the exer cise of the vast and elastic powers that may be asserted by a President." These Democratic Senators In derogation of President Roosevelt lay particular stress on the following executive acts: First, his unconstitutional interposition be tween employers and eiriployed in the anthra cite coal strike, an interposition not requested by the Legislature nor by the Governor of Pennsylvania. Secondly, his Inflexible deter mination to promote Dr. Wood to be a Major General !n the Regular Army, with the knowl edge that such promotion would cause Wood at no distant day to become practically the head of the military pystem of the United States. Thirdly, his illrtual exercise of the war-making power by the "fifty miles order," which, say the Democratic Senators, was an application of force by the United States againEt Colombia. Fourthly, tho promulga tion by Executive flat of the rule that here after the age of G2 years shall be accepted as proof, prima facie, that veterans of the Civil War are "disabled" In the meaning of the pension law. The Sun carefully recites this Demo cratic bill of particulars in the general Indictment of President Roosevelt as a man who suffers from a congenital in ability to distinguish the constitutional limitations of a President's powers, and concludes this artful article by saying: "Such are some of the grounds on which leading Democrats are preparing to convince the country that the White House ought to have a new tenant after March 4, 1905." No doubt the Sun has given the Democracy shrewd advice In urging them to make the peculiar, ec centric temperament of President Roosevelt their principal "card" In the next campaign. It is at best a weak card, but It Is about the strongest that Is contained in their dogeared pack. The eccentric temper of President Roosevelt; his occasional extravagance of Imperious speech, may be worked against him to a trifling extent, but In any large, broad sense President Roose velt has nothing to fear on this score. The general spirit of his administration, ts solid political results up to date, will be the test of measurement applied by the plain people. The mass of the American people are not concerned with the eccentric temper, speech and manners of their President. They will measure President Roosevelt just as they did President Andrew Jackson, by the Integrity of his spirit and the sub stantial fruits of his government, and not at all by his personal temper, man ners or speech. Outside of the rank and file of the Democratic regular army and the In tensely antl-lmperlallst faction of the New Tork "independents," there 13 no opposition to the election of Roosevelt save that which Is recruited from "the wealthy criminal classes of both par ties," whose organ, In season and out of season, Is sure to be the New Tork Sun. which wares the Southern Democ racy through an able correspondent that they "may retire to their tents If a platform shall be adopted -and candi dates nominated at St. Louis not sin cerely representing sound constitutional opinions regarding the right of Con gress and the President to interfere with property in the states." The "con stitutional opinions" refer to the gen eral views very recently expressed by Justice White In the Northern Securi ties case, and by Chief Justice Marshall In his Supreme Court opinions, which have become classic, regarding the gen eral relative rights and duties of the Government at Washington- and the several state governments.1 This corre spondent concludes hl3 screed In the Sun as follows: Were, for example, a platform and candi dates to be adopted at St. Louis which looked toward, or tolerated, an ' executive attempt to criminally Indict under the Sherman anti trust law Individuals for doing the things tho defendants did In the Northern Securities case, and to convict them on the theories eet forth by Justice Harlan in his opinion in that case, then Roosevelt will carry New York next No vember, and for the reason that thqusands of Democrats will be disposed to avoid the ballot boxes when It has been revealed to them that a Democratic National Convention has not only refused to vindicate the Constitution, but has allied itself with Its enemies. "wmpriNa a man of straw. Goldwin Smith was recently quoted In The Oregonian as saying In his re view of Sabatiers "Religions of Au thority" that the papacy defies science by its affirmation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. Mr. Smith, In the New Tork Sun, fairly complains that his antagonists have erected a man of straw in their replies to his criticism by pretending that he, said no scientists had been born and bred with in the Catholic Church. He distinctly drew the line between the papacy and the Catholic Church. Many men of great scientific consequence have come out of the Catholic Church, just as good has come out of Nazareth. Goldwin Smith is a scholar, and it Is absurd to pretend that he does not know the dif ference between the papal affirmation of the dogma of the Immaculate Con ception and the Virgin Birth. Plus IX in his famous bull of 1854 defined this dogma as follows: The most Blessed Virgin was, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, by the singular grace and power of Almighty God, from the first moment of her conception In tho womb of her mother, preserved frco from all taint of original sin. Goldwin Smith was at this time a distinguished historical student, and when he graduated from Oxford the Oxford tracts written by Newman, Ke ble and Pusey had surrounded him with an atmosphere that forbids any suppo sition of Ignorance In the matter of the Church of Rome on the part of so able, so learned and so upright a man. Of course, he might reach a wrong con clusion from his knowledge; but it is absurd to assume that so precise a scholar and so able a man could possi bly confuse the dogma of the Immacu late Conception with the Virgin Birth. Goldwin Smith is also historically cor rect in his distinction between the Cath olic Church and the papacy. Dr. Dol llnger, famous for his controversy with the papacy, was a Catholic, but he was not a papist. Pascal, who was a Jan senlst, refused to accept the dogma of the Infallibility of the pope. Galileo was a Catholic and a man of science; but the papacy "disciplined" him be cause of his new and strange doctrine of the motion of the earth. The same papacy in the nineteenth century re buked St. George Mivart, the scientist, because of certain of his views on the subject of evolution. Descartes was a Catholic, but he was so doubtful a papist that the Jesuits placed his works on their list of prohibited books. To publish a list of famous scientists who were born and bred Catholics, as an answer to Goldwin Smith's charge that the papacy by its affirmation of the dogma of the Immaculate Concep tion fifty years ago assumed an attitude of defiance to science, Is absurd. Napo leon was born and bred a Catholic, and yet It will hardly be pretended that he was much of a papist, even If as a mat ter of state policy he established the Concordat. Alexander Pope, the famous English poet, was a Catholic, but he denied that he was a papist. The com municants of the Greek Church are Catholics, but they are not papists. There was a considerable abstention of prelates from the Council of Rome which affirmed the infallibility of the popes. There was at least one American Roman Catholic prelate who did not vote to affirm this dogma. Goldwin Smith Is historically correct when he says In substance that the papacy on the subject of Biblical criticism abso lutely shuts the mouths of Its scholars, for Leo XIII In giving permission for the examination of the Scriptures ex pressly declared that the authority of the church had already determined what was to be believed regarding them and research must be held within the limits laid down. Goldwin Smith In a very able letter to the Sun takes the ground that even If the edifice of dogmatic Christianity, or its dogmatic connection with a supernatural source, is destroyed, "the essence of Christianity as it came from the lips of the author" remains unim paired, for that essence Is "belief In the fatherhood .of God and the brother hood of man." Mr. Smith thinks there Is a manifest tendency on the part of the clergy to glide from the work of the theological pulpit and religious minis tration Into that of philanthropic lead ership and to concern themselves less with the life to come and more with the life that Is. This union of a spir itual pastorate on a rational footing with congenial -leadership In good works is about what Unitarlanism is today in the Judgment of Mr. Smith. Every resident of Portland who ever drove over the White House road will be chagrined to learn that the finest drive In Oregon is likely to be turned Into a dustway this season. Members of the Driving Association, which has taken the initiative and raised the money for the last twenty years to keep tlje road sprinkled, have gone on record with the declaration that they will not sprinkle this year unless the County Commissioners provide a roadway worth sprinkling. There is no reason why sui provision shotld not be made. Few If any taxpayers will protest against the cost. Riverside Drive Is not only a stretch of picturesque park; It Is an avenue of traffic from which Port land derives benefit. It Is the one ap proach by team to our most beautiful cemetery- No one will dispute the proposition that It Is entitled to as much consideration as a road super visor would give to a country lane. This is about all that Is asked of Multnomah County. The Oregonian Is inclined to believe that the Commissioners have been only slow to move and that they are not yet chargeable with positive neglect. There Is ample time to put the roadway Into good shape If a move Is made at once. Let It be done; then In dividual residents of Portland will see that the road shall be maintained In good shape. y Mr. Samuel Gompers lately made a tour of the island of Porto Rico, and returning tells tales of the unclad wretchedness and hunger of the people of that Island that must shock even the dullest sensibilities. ' He testifies that he saw everywhere women and children in rags, and many. Indeed, wholly without clothing. He found that the death roll on the island from starvation alone was from 450 to 500 a month. People who, In a mild and equable climate, where the soil Is fer tile and crops mature quickly and of ten, cannot manage to live by their own efforts and to keep decent covering for their bodies and simple roofs over their heads, are in a sense objects of pity. They are, however, so utterly lacking in energy and thrift that If put upon their feet, industrially speaking, they could not stand. Paupers by nature, sluggards by instinct, they are content with little and that little they have not the Industry to compass for themselves. Gauged by the civilized Idea of living they are wretched and destitute; gauged by their own idea they would be happy If their hunger were relieved today. But such as they are, these peo ple appeal through .their helplessness to the Government that has assumed charge of them for a policy that in the course of time will make human beings out of them instead of the creeping, helpless, thoughtless creatures that they are. The Architectural Record for April thinks twenty-five stories Is likely to be the average of the skyscraper here after. So far as the writer in the Rec ord has been able to discover, "there Is absolutely no engineering or economic limit of height below about eighty sto ries, provided the area of the lot be sufficient. Taking into consideration, however, the ethical or sentimental aide of human nature, it Is the writer's be lief that, while many buildings will ex ceed 25 stories, many mote, sufficient at least to establish a general practice, will be kept down to 16 or 20 stories, if left free from municipal Interference. On the other hand, the writer belleVes that the Interests of the municlpallty would be best served by establishing height limits In certain districts, so that the population by day In such areas will not be too large for easy transpor tation and wholesome living." A V form open to the 'south will become, Jt Is thought, thQ typical plan. There Is, however, a limit not mentioned by the Record, namely, the limit of time hi which a tenant In the top story can get down to the street In case a fire breaks out on the first floor. Baltimore's ex perience is said to be that while the steel construction saves the owner in case of fire from 25 to 50 per cent of- the cost of his building, the tenant's.be longings are thoroughly destroyed and he cannot afford to loiter long after the fire gets started. The outbreak of plague In Johannes burg causes the British Medical Jour nal to recall the fact that "plague has existed In Cape Colony for some four years, and although In no town or dis trict except, perhaps, Port Elizabeth, has plague assumed any considerable proportions, yet the continued presence of the disease in both men and rats in several towns of Cape Colony and Dur ban, Natal, rendered the possibility of a serious outbreak, either within the Infected area or in adjacent towns or districts, an ever-present cause of anx iety. The last plague patient was dis charged from the hospital at East Lon don on February 25. Rats, however, are still reported as being Infected by plague at Port Elizabeth and East Lon don; so that although no case of plague In human beings actually exists forthe moment, the probability of recurrence in one or other of these towns has to be contemplated. Within the year 1S03 the total number of deaths from plague In Cape Colony' amounted to 135." The Transvaal has hitherto labored with success, says South Africa, to keep the disease from crossing the border. The plague there, the journal adds, "Is of the pneumonic and not of the bubonic form; and It Is much easier to cope with It on the Rand than elsewhere, on account of the existence there of the much-abused compound and location system." Andrew Carnegie, In setting aside $5,000,000 for dependent survivors of he roes who lose their lives trying to save others, has created a new avenue for charity. This gift does credit to his heart, but It is worth while to Inquire whether heroism will be thus stimulat ed. Brave deeds are spontaneous; they are not inspired by hope of reward. Will self-respecting widows accept this charity? A pension comes with honor; the Nation simply pays its debt. But making application to a board of direc tors composed of strangers who are managing a fiduciary trust In a busi nesslike way doesn't this savor of going before a Board of County Com missioners? Will Andrew Carnegie's money be sweeter than money raised by taxation for the poor? Will the in come from this fund find its way to the worthy, the deserving, the modest, shrinking widow and children of him who ndbly surrendered his life? Will Carnegie's trustees be able to carry out In letter and in spirit the intent of the giver? Their management of the trust and the manner of Its reception by pro posed beneficiaries will be watched with interest. The Sunset Magazine for April de votes several pages to the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition, to the beauty of Portland and her environ ment, and to the commerce of the sec ond Pacific Coast city. These topics are handsomely treated in text as well as in illustration. Because the Sunset Is widely read by our neighbors all the way from San Diego to Sitka, the arti cle can not fail to be of material bene fit to Portland and to the Fair. That Mr. Frank C. Baker, during his absence on a sick bed, was selected as chairman of the Republican State Cen tral Committee Is not only a tribute to his qualifications and efficiency, but an unusual testimonial of confidence on the part of the committee members. Mr. Baker's political talents and wide acquaintance fit him admirably for a position of this kind, and we predict for him the successful discharge of his im portant duties. The cool weather came just In time to check the threatened floods in the riv ers of Eastern Oregon, Washington and Idaho that feed the Columbia with their melting snows. For every ton of snow that went off during the first days of the present week the settlers on bot tom lands are duly thankful, since by this much is the danger of disaster from an early Summer lessened. Erskine Nicol, an excellent Scottish artist, has died in his SOth year. His pictures of Irish life and character are his best works. Scores of them have been engraved, and in that shape were fa miliar in America. "Donnybrook Fair," "Paying the Rent" and "News From the Crimea" are perhaps best known of these. NOTE AND COMMENT. In Training. The Rer. Arthur Allen Is getting ready to attack sin in Independence. Independence En terprise. Note and Comment's weather forecast (copyright, 1904): Sunday mixed. Our naval gunners seem to suffer from nothing worse than an excess of zeal. Be careful which bill of faro you get In those "fashionable North-End res taurants " St. Louis people won't let the Igorrotes eat dog. This is an unworthy slam at the sausage-makers. t Portland has a Chinese firm called tho Bow Wow Company. Are we going to the "demnltion bow-wows?" The war correspondent using wireless telegraphy will be treated as a spy. Better be shot than scooped. Water that has Are In it has been discov ered In Texas. Ontarj Argus. It's an old story in Kentucky. "Lamming the Lama" seems no less popular with the newspaper paragraphers than with the British themselves. If tho Vladivostok squadron doesn't make Its address known pretty soon, It won't get in this year's directory. The Corean Emperor Is afraid of spirits. With such a failing ho wouldn't even be a bootblack In Kentucky. Spokane papers didn't think they wore carrying coals to Newcastle when they put up a Job on the employment offices. Rather than surrender four bills he had stolen, a Seattle thug chewed them up and swallowed them. Quite a nice little stake. t Togo Is not well up in the details of naval warfare. He has so far faired to say, "You can fire when you're ready, Gridlikura." A man went to Salem to buy a piano. Instead he bought a jag and was robbed. Perhaps his neighbors considered des perate measures justifiable. A Victoria tailoring firm advertises that its trousers are poems In cloth. Noth ing Is said, however, about selling them at market price for poems. The Kaiser lunched on board the Vanderbllts' yacht, the North Star. Some New Torkers will hereafter look, at the Star with Increased respect. After a long chase a California Sher iff succeeded in running down a danger ous criminal. The Sheriff used an auto mobile. Hitherto no one but an Inno cent pedestrian has been run down by an automobile. In a few years we shall read epitaphs like this: Here Lies JOHN PITTSBURG SKIBO SMITH Who Was Born In a CARNEGIE TOWN. Educated in a CARNEGIE INSTITUTE. Studied In a CARNEGIE LIBARAY. At the Age of 30 He Became a CARNEGIE HERO. And Ha3 Now Gone to Ba With CARNEGIE. This baseball story from the Scattle Argus might have been told about a Port land fan. A "fan" dropped Into Lou Cohen's rope walk Monday to discuss the baseball situa tion. The average fan likes to sy things to Lou when tho team loses. "Well." said Cohen with a sickly grin, "the team batted well, anyhow." "When yesterday?" asked tho fan In as tonishment. Lou studied tho report and error column carefully. "No." said he soberly. "I guess It must havo been last night." The Victoria Colonist notes with satis faction that fow persons attended tho wrestling contest betweon two women, held in the principal theater of the city. Such a spectacle seems more appropriate for a red-light saloon than for the stage of a respectable theater, but if the pub lic had evinced sufficient curiosity to at tend. Victoria would undoubtedly have had a series of wrestling matches between women. As it is, the game has been killed by neglect, which is the great lethal weapon against objectionable per formances. "Ignorance, sir. ignorance," said Dr. Johnson when asked why he made a cer tain mistake, and the same thing caused a mistake recently in this column, Paul being mentioned as having had a chat with the eunuch that was treasurer to Candace, queen of the Ethiopians. It was, of course, Philip who had the honor of baptising that official of the Ethiopian court, a court which has remained Chris tian to this day. Paul, at the time of tho Interview, was still known as Saul, and was "breathing" out threatening and slaughter against the disciples of tho Lord," so that tho blunder is all the more astonishing. We owe Philip an apology. If there is one popular man on tho stage It is the liar, and the bigger liar he is the more the people like him. A critic in Now Tork calls attention to th3 coincidence that In the two latest plays produced there the heroes are both liars of unusual ablliy in their vocation. "Tho Dictator" Isan American play produced by William Collier, and "Saucy Sally" Is an English play produced by Hawtrey, so that an American and an English actor are vying In lying. Probably the explanation of our admiration for the stage liar is caused by his skill in wrig gling out of the consequences that we In real Ufa are unable to dodge. "Spring poetry." says the Toronto World, "ought not to be scanned with a coldly critical eye (most of it cannot bo scanned at all), nor should the poet bo held to a pedantic adherence to the reg ular methods of versification. The writ ing of Spring poetry Is not a mere literary performance, but a process of Nature." And the World goes on to say that writ ing Spring poetry purifies the blood, anl that the poet needs no sulphur or sarsa parillato clean his system. Thi3 Is a new view of tho matter, and one that would cause the average newspaper man to tremble, were it not that the World deprecates the publication of poetry pro duced by Nature's process. We have every desire to encourage the poet who feels that his blood would bo benefited by the production of an ode, or desires to shake off his lassitude with a sonnet, pro vided he burns the completed poem. WEXFORD JONES.