-? .PVBTsjjg I-, THE SUNDAY OEEGONIAN, PORTLAND, MAY 22, 1904. Entered at the Tostofflee at PorttMsfl. Or.. as Mcond-elass matter. BEV1HED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid la advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month ......(0.85 Dally, -with Sunday excepted, per year T.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0.00 Sunday, per year ., 2.00 The "Weekly, per yar 1.50 The Weekly, 3 month BO Dally, per -week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted . 15c Dally, per -creek, delivered, Sunday In cluded ... . 20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 30 to 14-page paper ................... lc 10 to 30-page . paper -2c 82 to 44-page paper ,8c Foreign rates double. Tho Oregonhm does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be In closed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The fi. C. Beckwlth Special AgeBey) New Tork: Rooms 43-49, Tribune Building; Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune Building. 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Fourth and Pacific Ave.. N. W.; Ebbitt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 80 dec; minimum, 52. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHBR-Falr and warmer; northerly winds. PORTLAND, SUNDAY. MAY 22, 1904. JUST A PEW REMARKS. "Violent attack is made on President Roosevelt by the Deschutes Echo. Ore gon, it alleges, has been most unjustly and vilely treated by him. His admin istration has made too rigid inquiries Into the character of Federal officials. Into land entries, pension matters, and1 the like; and has made it appear that everybody In Oregon Is dishonest. Take a considerable extract: The reports caused Oregon to be looked upon as a corrupt state by the whole Na tion. When we wanted rocnej for a great National celebration in honor of the Lewis and Clark acquisition of territory, a contri bution waa given us abotft sufficient to 6tart a small World's Fair sideshow, and even that amount was not Intrusted to us for use, but was placed in the hands of others than the Fair's managers. We were not to be trusted, we were eo dishonest. Even appropriations for the Celllo canal and Tor Federal Irriga tion must be contingent upon the state's bearing a part of the burden, eo that we will not try to graft the National fund. In spite of all these things we are to give Roosevelt an expression of confidence. We are to pay that personification o wisdom the tribute which vice Is continually paying to virtue. We are to how the Nation that it Is really Impossible to Insult us. Here is a new kind of criticism. The usual attack upon an Administration Is that it Is not vigilant enough In pro tection of the public interests, that it doesn't hold officials to strict and rigid account, and that it allows the public resources to be wasted. But here Is a complaint of the opposite kind. It would have been an amusing thing to have had it read In Congress last Win ter, when the opponents of the Admin istration were making the rafters of both Houses ring with the accusation that President Roosevelt was allowing a the public treasury and the depart ments to be plundered In all directions, and was protecting the thieves. The Oregonlan believes that Secre tary Hitchcock's administration of the Land Office has been in many cases un just to citizens entitled to the benefit of the land laws. To cure certain undoubted evils he has taken an arbi trary course that has borne heavily on persons who have had lawful right to enter lands. These things will all bo corrected In a little time. But Presi dent Roosevelt could not remove Sec retary Hitchcock without calling down upon his own head the most denuncia tory criticism. It would have been asserted that the Land Office had been thrown open to the plunderers at last. But It Is not supposed that this Sec retary will continue in office beyond the present term, and It may be taken for granted that he will not. He was not Roosevelt's selection, but McKInley's. He has an unfortunate Infirmity of temper, and Is too suspicious In his nature to have good balance of judg ment. In these land matters In Oregon he has been borne with, to an extent, when wrong, because that, for the time, was the best way. The time will soon be when these things can be righted; and they will be righted. The public lands must be and will be protected from plunderers; hut Hitchcock's unfor tunate assumption that every man and every woman who attempts to enter land under the law Is a thief, must be and will be righted, too. As to the Lewis and Clark appropria tion. From the first President Roose velt declared himself for It He asked in his message of December last for recognition of this important historical event in the expansion of the United States. He favored the appropriation that the men of Oregon asked for. At their request he sent for the leaders of the House and Senate and urged them to grant it. At first there was universal opposition to It, but through President Rooseveltrand through him alone, recognition of it was won. All that was asked was not granted, for Congress would not do that: but enough waa granted to make a fine Govern ment exhibit, which will double the attraction and value of the Fair. Yet It was through the President alone that this was brought about. Had he taken no interest in It the proposal never would have got further than a cold and formal hearing In the committee rooms. He It was, and he alone, who enlisted the Interest of the Republican' leaders In lC Till he had done so nobody was for it, neither Democrats nor Republi cans; and at the crucial test, at last, but a single Democrat (Maynard, of the Jamestown, Ya District) voted for It. These are the facts about that appro priation. It Is wonderful. Indeed, that anything was obtained; and nothing would have been obtained had not the President taken hold of it It ought to be understood that the-Representatives in Congress of the great Eastern and I Southern states by no means place so high valuation on us or on our states of small population and political power as we place on ourselves; and It would do our simple and self-important folk some good to mix and mingle there, and learn It. In this matter Theodore Roose velt was Oregon's one efficient friend. But for his earnest action there would have been no recognition by the United States of the Lewis and Clark Exposi tion. The managers of the Exposition at Portland were not hurt because the money was not turned over to them. They wanted no money, nor glory, nor celebrity, nor notoriety; they simply wanted the result; and they got It got it only through the earnest good will and personal effort of the President. They would have got more, could he have Induced Congress to grant it. As to the Celllo CanaL That, too, Is in the hands of Congress. It is a work to be executed through a department of the public service which Is conducted on a general scheme. The demands of no one part of the country are con sidered alone. Here again dwellers in a particular district, whos.e vis ion does not extend beyond their own horizon, are tempted nevertheless to think their own locality the whole thing. But the country at large Is somewhat larger than their own vision. There is but a small appropriation available for the Celllo Canal. Congress at this time could not be induced to make another. So the engineers stated that if Oregon would secure the right of way It would help greatly. The little fund on hand could be used by the engineers to clear the lower approaches to 'the proposed canal. The work would be advanced by some years. If the State of Oregon would secure the right of way. Upon this Invitation the State of Oregon proceeded to do It Yet it Is not an easy matter though the state In such an undertaking can move much faster than the General Government However, the result, as anticipated, will simply be that years will be saved in the construction of the canaL For the Government's engineers to wait for an appropriation, and after It was had to wait further till the right of way could be obtained, might postpone the canal beyond the lifetime of any one yet born; so it was a great matter to have the state proceed with obtainment of the right of way. As to Irrigation under direction of the Federal Government, the state Is not asked nor expected to bear part of the burden. There has been some clash be tween those who claimed rights through the state, under the Carey act, and the agents of the Government, who have been formulating plans for irrigation, but these difficulties are In process of solution, and there are now in view In Oregon the greatest schemes of Irri gation known in the United States. It Is so easy to criticise, so easy to grumble, when one doesn't know what he Is talking about, and Is perhaps too careless or too stupid to learn! GERMAN LIBERALS NOT PRO-RUSSIAN. Whatever may be the personal senti ments, of Emperor William, the recent declaration of Herr Bebel, the eloquent leader of the Socialist party in Ger many, who protested in the Reichstag that the sympathies of most of his fellow-countrymen were enlisted on the side of Japan, makes It certain that the Berlin government will not dare violate Its professed intention to observe strict neutrality during the Far Eastern war. This declaration of Kerr Bebel was drawn forth in denial of the statement of Count von Bulow that the Emperor's telegram to the Czar that "Russia's mourning was Germany's mourning" reflected the sentiment of the majority of the German people. The Socialist vote really represents the popular masses of Germany, who love free Institutions. They are not fairly represented accord ing to population, but there can be no doubt that the Socialist party of Ger many represents the public opinion of the majority of the German people In its desire to see Russia beaten. Germany Is today a constitutional government, and Germany has not for gotten that in the great uprising of 1848 in Prussia and South Germany the In fluence sl the St Petersburg govern ment was powerfully exerted In favor of the perpetuation of absolutism. The Czar Nicholas I, after the French Revo lution of 1830, which sent Charles X into English exile, long refused to ac knowledge the validity of Louis Phil ippe's claim to call himself King of the French, and In 1849 this same Czar of Russia sent an army Into Hungary to put down the Magyar uprising for inde pendence, which under Kossuth had been successful. The victorious Hun garian General, Gorgey, was compelled to submit to the overpowering Russian army of invasion. Twice during the last century Russia, In the language of Rufus Choate, "stamped with her Iron heel upon the radiant forehead of Poland," and it is of recent occurrence that Russia violated the guaranteed au tonomy of Poland and replaced It with her despotic alien rule. There Is not, an intelligent lover of free Institutions in Europe that does not agree with Herr Bebel In his belief that the cause of constitutional free dom would be served by the defeat of Russia, for "the more Russia is weak ened by the struggle with Japan the less likely It becomes that she will meddle, directly or Indirectly, with the affairs of Western Europe." Emperor William is allowed a good deal of li cense, with his tongue, by the German people, but in face of the anti-Russian opinions of the great Socialist party, he dare not, directly or Indirectly, inter fere in behalf of Russia. The recent report that the German government has secretly agreed to permit Russian war ships to make Kiao Chou Bay a base of supplies and operations is incredible, for such action would at once bring Great Britain to the side ot Japan. If Russia's Baltic fleet embracing eleven Ironclads and seventeen cruisers, can reach the scene of war before the Rus sians lose Port Arthur and Vladivostok, Japan will have to fight for the reten tion of her present supremacy at sea; but Germany will never dare furnish Russia with a harbor of refuge and re pair, for the whole British naval power would come to the rescue af Japan. If Russia were seriously defeated in her fight with Japan, it would be the beginning of the end of absolutism in Europe. The Russian peasant is an Ig norant, Illiterate, superstitious, stupid creature, but the military and naval failure of his government against Japan might renew the national unrest conse quent upon the glaring Inefficiency and undeniable collapse of the corrupt St. Petersburg bureaucracy during the Cri mean War. The humiliation of Czar Nicholas I was so great that he died of a. broken heart; indeed, his death, like that of his brother. Emperor Alexander I, was attributed by some respectable authorities to suicide. Russia did not lose confidence in her government In her struggle with Napoleon, because that supreme military genius defeated all Europe, but the Crimean reverse was a-far more serious shock, and fail ure against Japan would repeat it Czar Alexander H was moved by the shock of the Crimean reverse to abol ish serfdom and to inaugurate a scheme of reform that might have ended in the institution of a Parliament Because of this emancipation of the serfs and be cause of his predilections for a consti tutional government, it has been as serted that he was not murdered by nihilists, but at' the 'instigation of an enraged, corrupt aristocratic bureau cracy and despotic administrative circle of governmental control. After the fall of Napoleon followed constitutional royalty, to which suc ceeded ultimately a republic The over throw of the Prussian absolute mon archy at Jena by Napoleon forced it to buy its further lease of hereditary life by the concession of radical agrarian, social and political reforms; and the revolution of 1843 forced a further en largement of these concessions to the people. On the heels of the great defeat of Sadowa, in 1857 the Emperor of Aus tria granted Hungary the boon of home rule, for which the Magyar in 1849 had battled In vain because of the Interven tion of Russia. If Russia's transconti nental railroad should prove inadequate to the demands of her military trans portation problem, she will be beaten, and In that event a constitutional gov ernment might supplant Czardom at St Petersburg. BEFORE THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE. The majority of intelligent men know American history of recent date, but comparatively few know the history of "the diplomatic contest for the Missis sippi "Valley," which preceded the Lou isiana Purchase, which Is justly de scribed as "the turning point In events that fixed our position as the arbiter of the New World." At the close of the War -for Independence the United States held the Atlantic Coast In the negotiation of the treaty of Paris of 1783 Franklin sought to obtain the ces sion of Canada to the United States and the Bermuda Islands, but, while Lord Shelburne, who represented Great Brit ain, was willing to concede this, France and Spain, in their selfishness, refused, fearing that the United States would grow rapidly to a formidable power. France and Spain reasoned that with Canada remaining in possession of Great Britain it would be possible with the valley of the Mississippi remaining under their joint control to so crib, cabin and confine the expansion of the United States that it would never be come formidable and might decline and decay of Inanition. The thought of France was directed to the formation of an Interior depend ency In the Mississippi Valley whose sea power should control the Gulf of Mexico and thus absorb ultimately the senile government of Spain in the New World. At the close of the War of the Revolution the United States had a few thinly peopled settlements In Kentucky and Tennessee. Great Britain held a military post at Detroit, and at other strategic points along the Great Lakes, which she retained In spite of the treaty of 1783, on the pretense that the United States had failed to carry out certain provisions of that treaty, and expect ing confidently the early dissolution of our feeble confederation. At this time Spain held the mouth of the Mississippi at New Orleans, and from Mobile, Pen sacola and St Mark's furnished the powerful Creek Confederacy of South ern Indians with arms and ammunition. Spain avoided a treaty with the United States at the close of the Revolution, and, refusing to be bound by England's cession to the United States, she set up the claim that her victories over Great Britain in the Revolution had given her the right to Florida. Spain also claimed that the eastern bank of the Mississippi was hers at least as far north as the mouth of the Ohio. Spain further asserted the exclusive control of the navigation of the Mississippi, which England had promised us by treaty. The American settlers on the Ohio, the Tennessee and the Cumberland could only find a 'market for their crops through New Orleans. Spain tried to detach the West from the Union by promising free navigation in return for the acceptance of Spanish sovereignty by our Kentucky, Tennes see and Cumberland settlements. When the old confederation was breaking up, In 1788-89, these Western settlements were so disaffected vthat General Wilk inson, of Kentucky, and Judge Sebas tian went so far as to accept pensions from Spain as the price of supporting her designs. The famous General George Rogers Clark offered to become a Spanish subject and transfer a nu merous colony, if he could receive a grant of land west of the Mississippi River. The famous John Sevier, of Tennessee, also entered into corre spondence with the Spanish authorities. James Madison apprehended that the failure of the United States to open the Mississippi would throw the West into the arms of England. Lord Dorchester, the Governor of Canada, reported to his government in 1788 that the American settlers In Kentucky favored declaring Independence, seizing New Orleans and looking to England for assistance. In 1789 Dorchester reported that it would be for England's interest to pre vent Vermont and Kentucky from en tering the Union, and to induce them to form treaties of commerce and friendship with Great Britain. Ver mont, which did not enter the Union until 1791, came near accepting the pro posals of Great Britain rather than be- come merged In the statehood of New York. Spain and England at this time were doing their best to disintegrate the United States by bidding for the seces sion of all settlements, North or South, that had not yet become states of the American Union. In 1790, when there was prospect of war between Spain and England, the correspondence of Wash ington's Cabinet reveals the fact that England would have met no forcible re sistance had she sent an army from the Great Lakes down the Mississippi to take possession of New Orleans. Had England ever carried out her pur pose, a liberal policy on her part would have obtained for her the allegiance of the American settlers of .the Mississippi Valley. In April, 1793. General George Rogers Clark wrote the French Minister. Genet, from Louis ville, Ky., that he could raise 1500 men, and that he could take all of Louisiana for France, beginning t St Louis, and, with the assistance of two or three frig ates at the month of the Mississippi, he would engage to subdue New Orleans and the rest of Louisiana. When Jefferson learned in 1802 that Louisiana had been ceded to Napoleon, he said that "from the moment that France takes' possession of New Orleans we must marry ourselves to the British fleet and nation." The enforcement of Washington's policy of neutrality saved the nation in 1794 from war under French leadership and from the loss of the Mississippi, Valley. The Jay treaty with England secured the British evac uation of the important post3 of the Northwest Territory, and Wayne's vic tories forced the Indians to surrender the present State of Ohio, and in Octo ber, 1795, Spain conceded our South western boundaries and the freedom of the navigation of the Mississippi. But the victorious French Republic subse quently demanded of Spain the cession of Louisiana. At that time France be lieved that the United States had fallen under English control, but when Napo leon came into supreme power he saw in 1802 that in a war with Great Britain he must choose between sale to the United States or surrender to England, and he sold Louisiana, conscious that he had planted a thorn in the side of his arch enemy. WHERE THE OBLIGATION XESTS. We have heard a good deal for many years of the factional fight in Multno mah County, it is a cry that has served the Republicans of the state whenever In any outlying county there was evi dence of Republican apathy or disaffec tion. It has been the theme of remarks at banquets, and speeches In conven tions ,and countless articles in the Ore gon press. The protest was more" strenuous than was right, perhaps, be cause it seems impossible for outside Republicans to understand the peculiar and sometimes painful politics of Mult nomah County; it was often discredited by quite as bitter factional fights in the counties whence the complaint ema nated; but in the main it was just The factional fight in Multnomah County, when not necessitated by the money question, has been prompted by rival personal ambitions and has brought forth fruits meet for execration. But today Multnomah County Repub licans present a united front to the common enemy. The men temporarily in charge of the state and county com mittees are running the campaign for the whole ticket If they are working harder for one man than another it is because that man needs it more than the other. There is not a candidate on the state, district or county ticket, wherever his previous affiliation may have been, whom the Republican state and county committees are not trying as hard as they can to elect The re sult Is that the workers and speakers who were outvoted at primaries and conventions are contributing to the campaign In a way that no outvoted minority in Multnomah County has done for years. Of this fact last night's meeting at the Marquam affords evi dence; and more will be forthcoming before the campaign Is over. Multno mah County, therefore, offers the Re publicans of the rest of the state an exhibit In harmonious effort. It has the right to look to the rest of the state to follow the example and do likewise. In another column of today's paper there Is a statement from Chairman Baker, of the State Central Commit tee, which deserves attention. He puts the case In an unusual light It is his Idea that the political obligation In this campaign Is not altogether or perhaps, mainly upon the committees or the speakers or the newspapers, but upon the voter himself. And when you come down to it, isn't he about right? Why do we ask the voter to support Presi dent Roosevelt? It Is because It is to the voter's Interest to do o. If he wants prosperity, if he wants Oregon recognized and helped forward, then the obligation of June 6 is upon him and he cannot shoulder it off on any com mittee or newspaper or other agency. The topic before the mind of Oregon to day Is what the individual voter ought to do. It is what the Republicans of Multnomah County ought to do, and It is what the voters of the rest of the state ought to do. Every Republican In Oregon owes It to his own self-interest as well as to his sense of justice to come out on elec tion day, at whatever sacrifice, and perform his public and private duty by honoring the man who has honored us, and by rebuking the emanations of slanderers against honest and efficient servants. The obligation is with the Republican voter In every nook and corner of the state. How will he dis charge it? IS OUR LITERATURE BOURGEOISE? Gertrude Atherton Inquires In the current number of the North American Review, "Why is American literature bourgeolse?" Mrs. Atherton, who was born and educated in California, finds only two figures of original genius and literary, quality in our history Mark Twain and Bret Harte and both of them first rose to distinction in Cali fornia. She holds that even Hawthorne and Poe and Washington Irving "might never have breathed the free air of a young republic. Cooper was American in nothing but choice of a subject But when Mark Twain and Bret Harte ap peared, then indeed we, produced two authors who could have been born and nourished nowhere else on the planet" Then Mrs. Atherton proceeds to de nounce American literature as, with the exceptions named, "the most timid, the most bloodless, the most bourgeolse that any country has ever known." She calls our literature "the product of a great village censored by a village gos sip." Mrs. Atherton expresses her dis gust and surprise that a country that has produced such men as "Roosevelt, Plerpont Morgan, Cleveland, or even Richard Croker," should have failed to 'produce any men of original literary force save Bret Harte and Mark Twain. Mrs. Atherton evidently means by her description of "American literature as "bourgeolse" that it utterly lacks dis tinction in language and thought, Is, in fact, Instinct with the manners and sentiments of the "shabby genteel" classes of society. Her criticism Is not new and It is not true. It Is not true that American literature Included no native, original force until Mark Twain and Bret Harte obtained their first fame In California. As a memorable, unique, powerful, original literary force Hawthorne and Poe stand as surely for the permanent In our literature as Mark Twain and Bret Harte stand for the transient. Mark Twain is not pri marily a great humorist in the sense that Lamb and Thackeray were great humorists. He Is a satirist and not sel dom a brutal, vulgar cynic, and fifty years from today his readers will be comparatively few because he is a cari caturist and satirist of the transient type, and when his fleeting types of color, speech and manners have disap peared Mark Twain will be flat read ing. His "originaljty" is much of it mere efforts at oddity and the gro tesque; "one-half of him genius, the other sheer fudge." Bret Harte was a far finer artist, -a deeper humorist, than Mark Twain. He T had none df Twain's bnitaL low-bred, cynical spirit In talking of his fellow inen. Bret Harte, however, reflects the Influence of Dickens, even as Dickens did that of Smollett and Thackeray that of Fielding. Bret Harte deserved his fame and will be read when Mark Twain will be forgotten, but it can not truthfully be said of Bret Harte that he was as original a force in Amer ican literature as either Hawthorne or Foe," or even. Fenimore Cooper, for Cooper's "Prairie" is a -great bookand Thackeray held Cooper's character of "Leather Stocking" as"an original crea tion worthy to rank with the best of Scott's men. Thackeray says: "La Longue Carabine is one of the great prize men of Action. He ranks with your Uncle Toby, Sir Roger de Cover ley, Falstaff heroic figures all, Ameri can or British, and the artist deserved well of his country who devised them." Beginning the history of American lit erature with the publication of Irving's "Knickerbocker History of New York," we have not had aXull century of liter ary productivity. We cannot fairly be said to have, had any legitimate Ameri can literature before Cooper did his best work, about 1825, and Bryant" rose to fame as a man of superior poetic pow ers about 1835. Following 1835 came the famous Boston group of literary men. Our American literature can hardly be said to have had a life of more than seventy years. In this life of our liter ature Mrs. Atherton, who is one of the "new woman" sure-thing thinkers, or rather talkers, would have us believe that we have had only two figures of original literary force, Mark Twain and Bret Harte. Why does Mrs. Atherton leave out Walt Whitman? He does not hesitate to "deal with the great pas sions"; he has plenty of audacity; he is certainly not anaemic, is not conven tional, has not been "censored by the village gossip." Walt is seldom clad In anything but his nudity; why was he omitted from the roll of original forces In American literature? The literature of England and France and Spain and Italy had Its beginning in the four teenth century. The great names of Shakespeare, Cervantes, Rabelais and Montaigne belong to the sixteenth cen tury. The seventeenth century gave Milton to England, Moliere to France; the eighteenth century in England in cluded Pope, Swift, Addison, Burns, Goldsmith, Gray, Cowper and Fielding, while Rousseau and Voltaire were the great moving, original forces In French literature. The nineteenth century in England included Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, Scott, Coleridge, Lamb, Keats, Hazlltt, De Quincey, Thackeray, Tenny son, Carlyle, Macaulay, George Eliot and Matthew Arnold. Here we have from, the dawn of great literature In Italy in the fourteenth century with Dante to the culmination of the great literature of the nineteenth century in the Victorian age a period of over 500 years. French literature began with Francis Villon in, the fifteenth century and Its culmination In the nineteenth century was reached In Balzac and Hugo about 1850, a period of over 400 years. Before great literature began In modern Eu rope there had been a growth of great art Now, counting the civilization of England for a thousand years of life. Is it anything remarkable that Europe, the inheritor of the art and literature of antiquity, should stand today for an excellence In art and literature that America, In her struggle with a new wilderness and strange politicaMnstltu tions, could not possibly hope to attain? Europe stands for the accumulating fragrance and color of centuries in her art and literature, while America is a little more than a century old and in active literary life and effort Is not seventy years old. Measure "the su perior literary product of France and Great Britain for the last half century by our own, and we suspect Mrs. Ather ton will not find any great original lit erary forces at work. Outside of sci ence, biography, criticism, political his tory and books of travel, not much of permanent value has been added to lit erature in Europe or America; but if Mark Twain and. Bret Harte are the only two writers of original force in American history, why, then, a good many of us have greatly overestimated the quality of Hawthorne, Irving, Cooper, Poe and Lowell's "Yankee Dia lect" poetry. Charles H. Frye, of Seattle, who placed several hundred head of cattle and sheep on Kodlak Island, off the coast 'of Alaska, some months ago, while not entirely satisfied with; his venture, is, It is said, convinced that these animals can be raised there for the markets of Alaska. It is found necessary ,and difficult to protect the stock from wild animals, sheep espe cially falling an easy prey to the fierce and hungry creatures of the wilds. But as to the cold, if the creatures are housed and fed, there is no reason why they will not come out in the Spring without serious loss in numbers. If it were possible to stock this and other islands of the Alaskan Coast with the hardy breed of cattle that live and thrive throughout the long Winters In Norway, there would be np question as to the success of an attempt to fur nish the mining regions of the far North with beef and dairy products from these Islands. It Is probable that It will take some years of careful breeding and close attention to the business in hand to puroduce from American cattle a breed that will thrive with ordinary care on the Aleutian Islands. The attempt, however, Is one that deserves to succeed, and If it suc ceeds, will in time prove profitable. The resources of Alaska will invite enter prise and development for many years to come. Its markets are not of the fitful mining camp order busy one year and abandoned the next but of a growing type the beginning of which has been barely witnessed. Excellent reasons are given for the removal, which has been decided upon, of the Indian School located at Carlisle, Pa., to Helena, Mont. In the first place, the school will thus be brought to the Indians instead of the Indians be ing taken to the school a change so clearly In the interest of economy that its wisdom is unquestionable. Scarcely second to this In importance, if indeed it does not take precedence In utility, is the fact that the conditions that govern farm, work in Montana are sim ilar to those that exist in sections where the Indian and reservation lands of the West are located. The Irrigation problem will have to be studied In con nection with agriculture In the seml arid districts from which the pupils of the Indian schools are chiefly drawn. This can obviously be studied to much better advantage in Montana than in Pennsylvania. Agricultural methods and products in the Rocky Mountain region differ in many important re- spects from those of the Atlantic sea- board, while homesickness and con sumption, the scourges of Indians transferred from the West to the East, will, to a considerable extent, be obvi ated by the change in the location of this school. As an indication that the ory has given, or is giving, way to practical methods in the solution of the Indian Industrial problem, the removal of the school from Carlisle to Helena is noted. A number of people in Bitter Root Valley, Montana, are again wrestling with that mysterious scourge common in and confined to that region, known as "spotted fever." Government health officials made an extensive examina tion last year of conditions supposed to govern, or possibly governing, this dis ease, which occurs only at a certain season of the year and in certain lo calities. They reported as the probable cause of the disease the bite of a wood tick that was perniciously active at the time and place in which the scourge made its appearance. Further investi gation is now in progress at the North ern Pacific Hospital in Missoula. Tq aid in the work physicians throughout the state are urged to collect ticks of various kinds and any kind procurable and send them to Dr. Stiles, at the hos pital, that he may, If possible, prove or disprove the tick theory regarding the cause of spotted fever. In the mean time, the situation in Bitter Root Valley Is serious. The people are alarmed in the presence of an unknown and unseen foe, which medical experts are vainly trying to locate. The situation is one of interest to medical scientists throughout the country, and a report of the find ings of Dr. Stiles and the Montana State Board of Health will be awaited with interest. A unique distinction was conferred upon Julia Ward Howe in Boston re cently, when the Daughters of the Rev olution dedicated a beautiful bronze memorial tablet in the music-room of the public library of that city, to the seven patriotic song-writers of Amer ica. Those who were thus honored were: William Billings, the father of American psalmody; Oliver Holden, the author of "Coronation"; John Howard Payne, who wrote "Home, Sweet Home"; Samuel Francl3 Smith, who wrote "America"; Francis Scott Key, author of "The Star-Spangled Banner"; George Frederick Root, who wrote "The Battle Cry of Freedom," and Julia Ward Howe, author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republc" Mrs. Howe is the only living member of the tuneful seven. There Is a rule forbidding the use of the name of any living person on any memorial erected In the Boston library, but circumstances appear to have sanctioned the suspension of the rule In this case. Mrs. Howe, vener able, gentle, cultured, unobtrusive, awaits In her serene and beautiful age the coming of the final massenger. No tablet bearing the names of our patri otic song-writers would be complete without her name. The sad story of the wiping out of an entire family In a few days by diph theria is now seldom heard. A few years ago It was a not uncommon oc currence. The affliction that lately be fell a family at Athena, in this state, from this cause therefore excites sur prise, as well as sympathy. The only explanation of the fact that an entire family Is allowed to contract this dis ease, one after another, and dying In quick succession, is that the physician called to attend the first case was ig norant of the nature of the disease or of the modern method of treatment by anti-toxin, or that he was unable to procure the necessary means where with to control by preventing the spread of the contagion. The annual reunion of Oregon pio neers will be held a week later than usual this year. It will occur on the 22d of June, the date being advanced in response to the request of numerous educators who have found it impossible to attend the reunion during the June commencement week. Every Indication points to a numerous attendance and an enjoyable reunion the present year. While it is exceedingly difficult tb find a suitable hall In which to hold the re union and spread the annual banquet, the committee in charge will do the best that it can and trust to the unfailing cheerfulness and appreciation of the pioneers to make the occasion a pleas ant one. . Mr. Pulitzer, In an article in the North American Review, in which he explains the scope and purpose of the College of Journalism for which he has provided, disposes of the criticism that journalism cannot be taught outside of a newspaper office. He admits that the newspaper man must be born with cer tain faculties, but he maintains that journalistic talent or instinct can be de veloped by teaching, training and prac tical object-lessons. Indeed, the only profession, so far as Mr. Pulitzer knows, for which a man has all the necessary equipment when he Is born Is that of on Idiot For everything more ambitious there must be training. Governor Chamberlain's offer of re wards for the apprehension of the Lake County murderers and vandals will tend to put a stop to lawlessness, even If it does not bring about the capture and conviction of the outlaws. The re ward Is sufficient to tempt an accom plice to confess, and men will hesitate tb join in murders or wholesale sheep killings with that Inducement offered for evidence against them. At any rate, the offer removes the state from the at titude of standing Idly by and permit ting a few desperadoes to terrorize law abiding citizens who have tried to'bulld homes for themselves and families on the frontier. The meeting of the State Grange at Corvallis during the present week will afford opportunity for the usual greet ings of friends and co-laborers In ag ricultural lines, and an interchange of ideas and experiences that are at once interesting and profitable. The attend ance will doubtless be large. The year's work is well in hand, and the lull be tween planting and haying provides time for this annual gathering which Is wisely used in renewing acquaintance and comparing -notes. May is an Ideal month for such a meeting, and Corval lis Is both an ideal and practical place In which to hold It Like Old Times. Philadelphia Record. Things don't look so bad for the Democ racy in Connecticut The Hartford Times says no such spirited convention has been held in the state since the Tllden days. Then, too. there wa3 an approach to fisti cuffs, with the veteran ex-Governor Tom1' Waller as one of the parties bel ligerent And the state went head-over-heels, with instructions, for Judge Alton Brooks Parker. " NOTE AND;! COMMENT. Don't exspltorate. The Western Union has Port Arthured the poolrooms. Don't the Thibetans recognize a. peace ful mission; when they see it? "Illinois wants Hitt" announces a dis patch. Well, maybe she'll get hit There is one class of people that a World's- Fair invariably attracts, and that's the people that blow Qut the gas. Judge Parker should Jbo nominated and elected If he makes as many friends by keeping his mouth shut as Jack Munroe does. Seattle dentists are now free to adver tise. The physicians are in the same fix as before they may advertise as much as they can without paving for it The Montgomery Advertiser thinks that this season's hats for men would be im proved by being run through a thrash ing machine. Perhaps, but the machine would be ruined. Henry Watterson thinks that the "pert paragraph" should be driven from the editorial page. It's not so much the pert paragraph as. the impertinent para graph that should be shoo'd Into oblivion. American ships are going anywhere in China they darn well please, is the sub stance of Secretary ' Hay's reply to the Chinese protest What a pity the Chi nese Exclusion Act cannot be made ap plicable to China. "George Umbaugh Is keenly alive to the beauties of Sllets," says an item In the Toledo Reporter. Does this mean that Mr. Umbaugh has an eye for the beauties of Nature unadorned or the beauties that are millinery adorned? London critics roast the "Prince of Pll sen," but the house cheers it, so the man agers have no kick coming. And Ethel Barrymore has made a success. Mr. Chamberlain's protection campaign would evidently be helped if he were to shelter the stage behind a tariff. The breeding of highest type of horses has received a severe blow by the Western Union's action in shutting off racing news from the poolrooms. If you don't believe this, you've never been in the Portland Club's poolroom to see the number of wealthy and devoted breeders that used to sacrifice their business Interests to help along the cause of the thoroughbred. Of course, anyone rash enough to refer to the race suicide topic "at this time de serves the condemnation he is sure to get, but here is a Baltimore dispatch that seems worth the risk of printing: Judge Baer, In the. City Court, decided today that the advent of a brand-new baby in an apartment rented under the provisions of a lease that contained a "no children" clause was a violation of the lease, and that the father and mother may be legally ejected from premises so rented. Now, you husbands and wives, will you be good. A cure for gambling that has been over looked by Portland's reformers is sug gested by a statement made by Sir James Duke, lately sued for libel by "Bob" Sievier, who owned the famous mare Sceptre. On cross-examination, Sir James admitted that he had betted on horses, but to a very small extentsince his mar riage. "What difference does marriage make?" he was asked. "I bet In fivers now, whereas before I betted in fifties." "Does your wife object to betting?" "No; but I've got to keep her." Marry off the gamblers, and give them wives that they've 'got to keep" ones that will let them know about it if they don't pungle up liberally and regularly. A wife of this kind is a sort of sea anchor on the troubled ocean of life. The establishment of Carnegie's hero fund has prompted many papers to com ment upon the American tendency to ex aggeration. The tendency Is easily seen. The word hero, for example, is cheapened by indiscriminate use, as Is the case with many other words. A football success is described in terms that would be too strong for the capture of Port Arthur. Everything that is done Is a world's rec ord. Yesterday the battleship Kentucky was hailed as beating the world's record for battleships from Hong Kong to New York, as if battleships were continually racing over that route. Almost every time a ship goe3 to target practice she i3 said to have made another world's record. If a biscuit company takes a cent off its prices, straightway it is announced that the "first gun has been fired in the crack er war." Pretty soon it will be about as complimentary to be called a "hero" as to be called a "gent." This is the cruel way in which an ob server deals in the New York Press with girls that are living up to their ideas of style: The comical golf girl of the city, with her straight front, elevated Grecian bend. French heels, pompadour hair and marsupial shirt waist. Just now occupies the center of space. She starts out with a glrafflan stride, and rolls her sleeves up to her armpits as she makes for the links. She looks to me as If she la going out to do a day's washing. While entirely ignorant of what an "elevated Grecian bend" may be, like wise a "marsupial shirtwaist," we must J admit that French heels seem somewhat! unsulted for the golf course, although they I may be just the thing for a day's wash ing and probably are, for they seeml to be much affected by that hard-working I class of girls popularly known as hashers. However, it is evident that the writer in the Press, who likens the golf girl's stride to that of a giraffe, has himself been emulating that strange animal In another respect rubbernecking. Herbert Spencer held that no man de sirous of doing great literary or scientific work should marry. His practice, strange to say, was in accord with his precept, and he lived a bachelor's life. What a contrast there is between Spencer play ing a sober game of billiards in his club I with Huxley, as described in this ex tract from John Hawthorne'3 "London lnl the Seventies:" The Huxleys at that time were living far out In St. John s Wood, In a little sober house with a garden behind It, In which were two or three city trees and some gooseberry busheo and an unkempt grass-plot. Inside were a large drawing-room and a dining-room of the same sire. In which, at supper-time, the whole Huxley tribe were wont to congregate. about a dozen of them, with Huxley at one end or the table and Mrs. Huxley at the other. and half a dozen happy guests sandwiched be tween. The children were from 10 to 25 years old. What hospitality, andwhat wit and hu-T mor. and no science at allt The children were as natural and unaffected as so. many love! animais, duc none could be cleverer or more charming. They rode rough-shod over their smiling, famous father, and gentle, consclenJ nous, out UDerai mother, and loved them and and one another with all their hearts. Afte supper, we would go out and play In the gar-j den. WEXFORD JONES.,