THJS SUJNUAY OKiiHiUfllAitt, FOKTLAKD, JUKE 26, 1904. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Or, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid la advance) Dolly. 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 60 Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday ex cepted 15c cam-, per "week, delivered. Sunday In cluded .................. 20c POSTAGE RATES. United States. rvnnrta ami Mfrlra 30 to 14-page paper ............. .......Ic 10 to S0-naze nantr 2e B2 to 44-page paper ....................3c foreign rates double. EASTERN BCSIXESS OFFICES. (The S, C. Beck with Special Agency) JCew Tork; rooms 43-50, Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune Building. The Oregon I an does not buy poems or etorfes from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to it without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. KEPT ON SAT.TI. Chicago Auditorium annex; PostolSce Jfews Co.. ITS Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend tfck, UOG-912 Seventeenth street. Kansas City Rlckseckcr Cigar Co., Ninth and "Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 250 South Spring, and Harry Drapkin. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; L. Regelsbuger, 217 First Avenue South. New Tork City I. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden T. B, Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1812 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; 21egeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 Welt Second South street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co.. Louisi ana News Co.; Joseph Copeland; Louisiana Purchase News Stand and Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th st. Geo. L. Ackermann. news boy. Eighth and Olive sts., and J. J. Purcell. 28 South Third st. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co, 748 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Sut ter: L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News Starid; P. W. Pitts, 1008 Market; Frank Scott. SO Ellis; N. Wheatley, 83 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C Ed Brlnkman. Fourth nnd Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 84 deg.; minimum, 55. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, fol lowed by threatening weather; cooler. Winds mostly northerly. 3POBTLAND, SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 1904. A STORY OF EXPANSION. Mere territory, however great, can not constitute a nation, but the spirit of a people; and If the spirit be great, then the nation has need of great room to bustle in. Of modern nations Eng land has overcome her narrow limits by command of the sea and by exten sion of colonial power. Russia has found immense contiguous territory for expansion, swallowing nations upon her march. Twice in her modern history France has lost vast colonial posses sions, and is now doing, what she can, but with indifferent success, to estab lish colonies once more. Germany, since she came to act as a practical unit, is trying to found a colonial empire, with what success the future must deter mine. Nearly the whole of the vast conti nent of North America Mexico and the Centra American States being the ex ceptionshas come under the control of the expansionists of the original Eng lish colonies. Omitting British Amer ica, let us trace briefly the steps of the expansion of the United States, from the date of the Revolution. In 1776 the territorial claims of the thirteen colonies extended from nearly the present northern boundary of the State of Maine to the southern bound ary of the present State of Georgia, and westward to the Mississippi. In the re gion of the Northern Mississippi River and of the Great Lakes the line cut nearly through the middle, east and west, of the present States of Michigan and Wisconsin. North of this line con siderable portions of these states, to gether with a part of Minnesota, were still British territory outside the thir teen colonies: but by the peace treaty of 17S3 this district was ceded to the XTnlted States. But the divisions of the territory from the Allegheny Mountains to the Missis sippi River, between the various colo niesor rather the boundaries claimed by them wear a singular look upon maps or diagrams made for illustration of the history. Certain areas, especial ly in the Ohio Valley, were claimed by more than one of the colonies. Bound aries intersected and overlapped each other, and there was much trouble to adjust them. Virginia claimed the territory from the western boundary of Pennsylvania to the Mississippi River, embracing the present Virginias and Kentucky, and the southern one-half of the present States of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The north half of the three states last named was territory claimed by Con necticut. Massachusetts claimed the southern half of the territory occupied by the present States of Michigan and "Wisconsin. The western part of North Carolina included territory out of which the present State of Tennessee was formed: to which, however, was added Uo Tennessee) a strip on the south, claimed by South Carolina. Georgia claimed westward to the Mississippi; and out of her territory was made the greater part of the present States of Mississippi and Alabama. The south ern portion of these two states was, however, formed of a strip extending from the west line of Georgia to the Mississippi, ceded by Great Britain to the United States, at the close of the Revolution, and of another strip ac quired later, from the Spanish domain of Florida, which then also extended westward to the Mississippi. How the adjustments to the present boundaries of all these states were made would be too long to tell here. West of the Mis sissippi, to the Rocky Mountains, was first French, then Spanish, ahd a little later -French territory again. Acquisi tion of this territory was the first after the treaty of peace with Great Britain in 17S3. More familiar, because more recent, and especially more familiar to the In habitants of the Pacific States, was the acquisition of the Oregon Country, fol lowed by the annexation of Texas and the conquest and purchase of Califor nia. This has been written so orten in recent times that it may be passed over now. In 1804 the Territory of Orleans was created out of the southern part of the Louisiana Purchase. It extended to the northern boundary of the present State of Louisiana. The remainder of the vast territory (west of the Mississippi), extending north to the British line and' west to the Rocky Mountains, was des ignated as the Louisiana District At that time the region between the State of Ohio and the Mississippi River. reaching north to the British line, was called the Territory of Indiana, out of which states were successrvely formed. About 1810 the name of the Louisiana District was changed to the Territory of Missouri, and in IS 12 Louisiana be-i came a state. Indiana followed in 1816; Mississippi in 1817; Illinois in 1818; Ala bama In 1819; Maine Jn 1S20; Missouri In 182L The next state was Arkansas, in 1836; then Michigan, in 1S37: Florida and Texas in 1845; Iowa in 1846, and Wiscon sin in 1848. At this time the movement to the Far West had actively begun, and the Ter ritory of Oregon was organized. At this time also the vast Mexican cession was added, extending from the north ern boundary, of Mexico of today to the southern boundary of Oregon, and from the summit of the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. When the early set tlers of Oregon were crossing the plains they passed through' the Territory of Nebraska, which extended from , the southern boundary of the state of that name northward to the British posses sions, and was bounded on the west by the Territory of Oregon. The Gadsden Purchase of 1S53 was the next acquisition, after California. This was not Important, as it was most ly arid territory, having an area of but 36,000 square miles. It is divided be tween the Territories of Arizona and New Mexico. Acquisition of Alaska in 1867 was the next step in expansion. This vast territory, destined to a de velopment that could not be foreseen at the time of the purchase, added to our National domain an area nearly as large as that claimed by the thirteen colonies or states at the close of the Revolution. Of the later acquisitions, Hawaii. Porto Rico and the Philippines, mention only will be made here. They introduce new'problems Jn our National life, to which some of our people say we are unequal; though we are in fact meeting them very well. From an area of about 700,000 square miles, at the time our National Inde pendence began, expansion has carried our domain to an area of 3,771,000 square miles. There have been twelve additions to the original territory of the Union, and the whole population In cluding that, of the insular posses.slons, approximates ninety millions. APPORTIONMENT IS WRONG. The late United States Senator Quay did not leave behind him a record of beneficent public achievement. But his name has nevertheless been coupled with a plan to promote equitable appor tionment in Republican National Con ventions by reducing to a correct basis the overwhelming prominence of the delegations from the Southern States overwhelming In view of their Import ance, or want of importance, to the party in National elections. At the Philadelphia convention in 1900 there was a definite movement on the part of many delegations" from Republican states to resolve the representation from the Democratic South into some thing like fairness. It found expression in a resolution introduced by Senator Quay, and it was received with no little sympathy among the Republicans who provide the votes at National elections and whose activity Is not confined chiefly to pestering the President and hounding his Cabinet and department heads for Federal jobs. Senator Hanna Is held responsible for the death of the Quay resolution, for it never saw the light of day. But it ought to have been adopted. The present arrangement is a most inexcusable injustice to states which furnish the bulk of the Repub lican votes and elect Republican Presi dents. Let us examine some of the figures: At the recent Chicago convention there were 862 delegates, exclusive of terri tories. The basis of apportionment is two delegates for every member of Con gress. That is to say, no matter what the Republican vote in a state, the rep resentation to a party convention is based on population, and not on the party vote. Here is a direct violation of the rule that obtains In every other party convention whatever state, county, pity. Suppose, for example, that the Oregon Republican State Con vention were to have Its apportionment made up on the figures of the last cen sus report. The Democratic County of Baker would very probably have a greater representation than the Repub lican County of Lane a manifest wrong. As It Is, there are six Southern States that have each more delegates at Chicago than the State of Oregon, and each cast fewer votes for McKlnley in 1900. Here is Just how the matter stands, the following table showing the vote for McKlnley in 1900 and the rep resentation in the Chicago convention: Dole- Rep. Vote rates. IfXtt Alabama 22 55,034 Arkansas 18 44.SO0 Florida 10 7.419 Georgia 26 3.V035 Louisiana 18 14,233 Mississippi 20 5.753 North Carolina 24 133.0S1 South Carolina 18 3.570 Tennessee 24 121,134 Texas 36 130.641 Virginia - 24 115.865 Totals 240 667.234 Oregon 8' 46,526 Analysis of this table will disclose some astonishing Inconsistencies. Thus eleven Southern States that-never since the days of the carpet-bag and the ku- kluxi cast a single electoral vote for any candidate for President have near ly 30 per cent of the entire convention, and more often than not hold the bal ance of power in naming a Republican candidate for President. Out of an ag gregate of 7,219,101 votes for McKlnley, these eleven Democratic states contrib uted 667.234, or less than one-tenth. The great Republican States of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, with a total popular Republican vote of 2.414, 638, have 222 delegates at Chicago, or eighteen less than the solid South; and yet these four have fourfold more Re publican votes than the eleven. Take the case of Florida, with 10 dele gates and 7419 McKlnley votes about 16 per cent of the Oregon vote. It has the same representation as Washington with 57,456 for McKInle5 It exceeds Delaware, Idaho, Montana, Nevada. New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhodelsland, South Dakota, Utah, Ver mont and Wyoming. Look at Mississippi, with 20 delegates and 5753 votes. It holds equal voting power at Chicago with California, with 164,755, and Kansas the great and im portant Republican State of Kansas with 185,955. It exceeds Connecticut, Maine. Maryland, Nebraska and West Virginia- Virginia, always in the Democratic ranks in Presidential years, equals New Jersey and exceeds Minnesota. And Texas has more than any Repub lican state-except New York, Pennsyl vania. Ohio and Illinois. The question did not come forward prominently at Chicago, because there were no Issues among the delegates euner as to candwates or platform. But it "will press Itself on the attention of Republicans at some future time. Ore gon has a pitifully small voice in the National Convention, considering its value to the party at large; and it ought to have more to say than some Southern politicians who can "benefit the Republican partly only by getting out of it. NORTH PACIFIC EXPORT TRADE. The Seattle Post-InteUlgencer criti cises the Oregon delegation to the Na tional Convention for opposing the plat form declaration for subsidizing Amer ican ships. It attempts to explain the Oregon opposition to the subsidy scheme on the grounds that Oregon has no American -shipping and is content to let foreigners do our business. The Se attle paper presents some unexplained figures which tend to show that the American-tonnage" from .Puget Sound Is greater than that of New York and Boston combined. The explanation of the Seattle -paper concludes with the following: Puget Sound Is a great American nort. the Reading port of the United States In the pro portionate volume of Its trade carried In American ships. Portland has no ships, never expects to have any. and takes Its cue In such matters from the only shipping' Interests with which It Is In touch, the agents of the foreign vessels which carry its trade. Washington Is heartily Interested in the subject from the American point of view. Oregon Is stolidly opposed, from .the -viewpoint of the foreign settlement which controls the shipping from its port. . Ignorance, not only of the shipping of Portland, but of Puget Sound as well, Is the only excuse that can be offered for such misleading statements as the above. With no desire to enlarge fur ther on the iniquities of the subsidy scheme at this time, The Oregonlan will merely present some unadorned facts for the consideration of the Seattle pa per and of the public. The foreign trade out of Portland and Puget Sound consists of the export of. lumber, grain and flour. These are the three great commodities which practically fill all of the ships that leave our shores for for eign ports. Shipping men classify them as follows: The grain fleet, the lumber fleet, and the Oriental fleet, the latter handling nearly all of the export flour business out of t'te ports. Now as to the "foreign settlement which controls the shipping" of Portland. Taking the fleets in the order named, by official records we find that since January 1 Portland has dispatched fif teen grain vessels and Puget Sound has dispatched eight. The vessels all sailed under foreign flags, and of the Port land fleet Kerr, Gifford & Co. dis patched five vessels; Balfour, Guthrie & Co., fivs; Portland Flouring Mills Company and Portland Grain Company two each, and the Northwestern Ware house Company one. From Puget Sound Balfour, Guthrie &. Co. dispatched three vessels; Kerr, Gifford & Co., two; Northwestern Warehouse Company two, and the Portland Flouring Mills Company one. It is thus evident that the "foreign settlement," whatever that term may mean, controls Puget Sound grain tra-de as well as that of Portland. The foreign lumber fleet since Janu ary 1 has been much larger than the grain fleet, and the ten big ports on Puget Sound dispatched 76 cargoes, while Portland alone dispatched 22. This foreign fleet from Puget Sound in cluded 2S American and 49 foreign ships, while Portland's fleet was made up of 15 American and 7 foreign vessels. Ta coma, Seattle and Blakeley combined dispatched but 13 American ships with lumber, or two less than were cleared foreign from Portland. American ship ping, instead of being scarce, was so plentiful that five out of the sixteen vessels which loaded at Vancouver, Chenamus and Victoria, B. C, since January 1, were under the American flag. In the flour trade twenty-five steam ers have been dispatched from Puget Sound since January 1, and eight from Portland. Of the Puget Sound fleet fourteen flew the American flag and eleven were foreigners. The Portland fleet were all foreign ships. The fore going figures, which can be verified at Seattle, Port Townsend, Portland or any other seaport on the Pacific Coast, prove conclusively that the export grain trade of Puget Sound Is handled by ex actly the same class of "vessels and by the same men as that of Portland. They also show that in the lumber trade, which uses more deep-water ton nage than is required for any other traffic in the Northwest, Portland is clearing a larger percentage of Amer ican shipping than Is cleared .by any other port on the Pacific Coast. In the Oriental trade as In the grain trade our flour shipments go forward by the ves sels that will carry them at the lowest rates, thus enhancing the value of the cargo. The invincible objection to ship sub sidy is that it proposes to tax the pro ducers of the country for further en richment of those who are already rich r at least rich enough to own ships and operate them; thus taking away by taxation money from the greater num ber, always poor, to support the de mands of those who are already rich, or who would have the Government make them rich by taxation of the general industry of the country to put money in their own pockets. The object Is to use the law to make a wealthy class at the expense of the general Industry of the country. The ocean Is an open field. on which there Is world-wide competi tion. Why make a law to aggrandize greedy American capitalists, on the highway of mankind? The people of the United States never will do it. "FOURTH OF JULY TETANUS" AND NOISE. The Journal, published by the Amer ican Medical Association, has a tlmelv article on the "Prophylaxis and Treat ment of .Fourth of July Tetanus," to which it is proper to call special atten tion. The writer proceeds unon the as sumption that toy pistols and other dangerous Instruments of noise will be placed in the hands of reckless bovs on the coming anniversary, as has been aone in the past, notwithstanding the efforts that have been made bv munici pal authorities in many cities, Including our own, to place these death-dealing, nerve-racking abominations of sound and smoke under official ban. This as sumption seems here at least tn hp justified, since The Oregonlan Is in- rormeu Dy a leading physician of this city that a few days ago he noticed in passing a show window of a well- known Japanese store that it was fllfod with toy pistols exposed for sale at at tractive prices. He warned the propri etor that sales of these pistols would be in violation of the law, and was in formed by him that he had a license to sell fireworks from the city, and had not oeen notified of any exception to the sale of any of his ordinary stock in trade. He may be informed later but there is no means of knowing how many of these pistols have already found their way Into juvenile hands. It may reasonably be supposed, how ever, that more than one case of tet anus will he developed through the agency of these miniature infernal ma chines, hence it may. be assumed that the Medical Journal's presentment of the pathology and treatment of this dis ease will be of Interest. In the beginning a table is given from which It is found that 405 deaths from tetanus were caused by Fourth of July fireworks In 1903, while but seven recov eries from this disease. Induced by the same cause, were recorded. Other fig ures are given showing an appalling number of injuries, more or less seri ous but nonfatal, which resulted from the senseless, indiscriminate placing of dangerous explosives in the hands of boys and other irresponsible persons. Other figures are given bearing upon the subject, but these are sufficient to show that the demand for the suppres sion of the toy pistol and for properly restricting the sale of Fourth of July explosives is a legitimate one. An exhaustive presentment of the subject shows clearly the nature of the disease known to .medical science as tetanus and to the public as "lockjaw." The bacillus of this dreaded disease is traced from its presence in street dirt, its introduction Into deep wounds by means of the dirty wad of the toy pis tol or the cartridge that is exploded in the street to its fatal occupation of the motor fibers of the spinal cord, and on to the final result. .While all of this is Interesting, and a heedless public needs the Information that it conveys, for its simple enlighten ment upon a matter that has become one of vital Importance, it is not prac ticable to go into details more fully here. Rather let us say with the au thority quoted that the most desirable way to put an end to all of this source of mortality is to prevent the wounds that begin the trouble. Abolition of blank cartridges and giant crackers from the carnival of dirt and noise, fright and foul odors would have- re duced the number of deaths due to the Fourth of July epidemic last year to less than twenty. If there is any rea son why an intelligent community should not arise in the simple might of common sense and prevent the sale of these twin abominations, that reason has not been given. They could be abolished and still the children small or of larger growth could find plenty of instruments of distracting sound to voice the peculiar type of patriotism which they boast. Display fireworks, such as Roman candles and. rockets, are relatively harmless. So far as could be learned, and the Inquiry was a searching one, no tetanus affections resulted from paper caps and the small firecrackers. Surely these harmless forms of explosives ought to be sufficient for the entertain ment of children and for "instilling patriotism" or at least equal value with the toy pistol and the cannon cracker. NOT ALTOGETHER SANE. Charles Lamb Is one of the most lova ble men in literature. In his lifetime he was on terms of affectionate friendship with men totally unlike in temper Hazlltt. Wordsworth, Southey, Coler idge, Leigh Hunt, De Qulncey. Words worth, a great egotist not much given to praising anybody but himself, said: "If there be a good man, Charles Lamb Is one." Lamb's lovable nature so shines between the lines of. everything he wrote that in 1848 Thackeray, a man not given to gush, ejaculated "Saint Charles!" after reading a letter written in 1824 'to the little daughter of his Quaker friend, Bernard Barton. Thack eray had never met Lamb in life; Thackeray, while a whole-hearted man, was in no sense a sentimental man, and yet Lamb's nature shining through his private letters, or his books served to touch Thackeray's tender spot. The Irish poet Lionel Johnson caught -up this phrase of Thackeray into a poem, which includes the lines: Saint Charles! for Thackeray called thee so: Saint, at whose name our fond hearts glow; See now, this age of tedious woe. That snaps and snarls! Thine was a life of tragic shade; A life of care and sorrow made: But naught could make thine heart afraid,. Gentle Saint Charles! Of' course there must have been a fine personality In this man Lamb, to win the praise of both the eminent men who met him In life and those who, like. Thackeray, felt the touch of his van ished hand and the sound of his voice when it had been forever stilled. And yet there Is another side to the picture of Lamb, a side that has been most powerfully and repuslvely painted by that great literary artist, Thomas Car Iyle, who. when he first came to Lon don, met Lamb and his sister frequent ly. Here is Carlyle's terrible picture of Lamb in his fading years; he died In his 59th year: Insuperable proclivity to gin. in poor, old Lamb. His talk contemptibly small. Indicat ing wondrous ignorance and shallowness . . . in fact, more like "diluted insanity" (as I defined It) than anything of real Jocosity, "humor." or geniality. ... He waa the leanest of mankind, tiny black breeches but toned to the kneecap, and no further, sur mounting spindle legs, also in black, face and head flnelsh, black, bony, lean and of a Jew type rather: In the eves a kind of smnw brightness, or confused sharpness; spoke with. a siuiier; in walking tottered and shuffled: emblem of Imbecility bodily and spiritual (something of real Insanity. I have under- Stood), and yet something, too, of humane. In genious, pathetic, sportfully much-enduring. .roor uamo: He waa infinitely astonished at my Wife: and her ouiet rapmintfr nt hh tnn ghastly London wit by cheerful naUve ditto. Auieu, poor umo: And this Is the latest picture of the man who had commanded the friend ship of men of genius all his days; who was not only a delightful humorist, who will be read when Addison is neglected; a man of the type of Montaigne and Sir Thomas Browne. This is all that Car lyle could see In Lamb just before his fading lamp of life was extinguished forever. It Is easy to say that Carlyle was a sour-mlnaed, cynical Scotchman, but Carlyle was In his prime then, un der 40 years of age; it was when he wrote his beautiful essay on Burns and had much of the spirit of manhood's prime in him; It was when Carlyle was one of the pilgrims to Highgate to hear the last eloquent visionary deliverances of Coleridge. There must be some truth in this dreadful picture of Lamb's de- 1 cay. A man of more humanity of spirit ! might have hesitated to set down this ! estimate of Lamb, but in the main It Is probably painted In the colors of truth, i although the brush Is clearly not wielded by a friendly hand. It will be observed that Carlyle here suggests that Lamb had perhaps Jewish blood In his veins: he savs that rhvro. urao ,. dence of chronic alcoholism; a sugges- t tlon not only of imbecility, but of real insanity. It is quite possible that Carlyle was right, for- there was Insanity In the family. Lamb was confined In a hos pital for the Insane for several weeks of his 21st year, ami "'be periodica In sanity of his sister, Mary Lamb, who killed her mother in one of her parox ysms, is well known fo all persons of intelligent reading. An admirable critic in the New York Evening Post deli cately intimates that there are certain signs in his (Lamb's) literary work as well as in his personal life that suggest that his genius was not without a taint of Insanity. He was a frail, little man, but he was fond of the exhilarating cup; he was not like that King of the Sandwich Islands whom Mark Twain said "never got drunk because he did not hold enough"; he could not take more than a glass of wine without showing it, but he Invariably took It, and he took enough to make him dlsre gardful' of social good" manners; he shook Wordsworth gravely by the nose after gravely shaking hands' with the rest of the company. When a bishop asked him how he learned to smoke such pipes he replied: "Sir, I toiled for it as some men toil for virtue." His invitations to his card parties read: Cards & cold mutton In Russell St. on Fri day at 8 & nine. Gin and Jokes from H past that time to 12? He could jest in an essay over his drunkenness; hanging and the stocks .were to him a subject of laughter; love, sickness, death, friendship, were a sub ject of jest. The critic of the Post cites in rebuke of all this trifling on serious subjects the famous text from the Ko ran: The heavens -and the earth, and all that Is between them, think ye we have created them In Jest? And yet this man, who impressed Carlyle as nothing but an aged and de cayed punster, a senile tippler, had known the tragic and sorrowful side of life to lb fullest extent When his sister in a fit. of insanity killed her mother she was given her freedom from lifelong restraint on Lamb's pledge to be personally responsible" for her be havior. To execute this pledge he gave up his cherished thoughts of marriage and watched over his sister; between her periodical attacks she was a per fectly sensible and efficient woman of superior practical and literary ability. Lamb gave up his life to her; she sur vived him and was given his pension. And yet this man, who all his days car ried this heavy cross of domestic sor row, Wrote with haif-oonsclous irony that the plays of the Restoration were clear to him because they carried him into a region "Beyond the diocese, of the strict conscience," into the vision of that "pageant where we should sit as unconcerned at the issues, for life or death, as at a battle of tho frogs and mice." And this same paradoxical man wrote the lovely stanzas to "Hester": My sprltely neighbor, gone before To that unknown, and silent ehore. Shall we not meet, as heretofore. Some Summer morning. When from thy cheerful eyes a ray Hath struck a bliss upon the day, A bliss that would not go away, A4 sweet fore-warning? UNPROFITABLE EXPERIMENTS. The proposition to establish a colony of Jews in South Africa, which has been recently discussed in the British House of Commons, .has proved very unpopular. Both from a political and economic standpoint the question is considered impractical, and to urge it forward would be merely to launch an other unprofitable venture upon the sea of human experiment. The people whom it is proposed to colonize are not in any sense of the word farmers. With the labor and the methods and the thrift necessary to make an agricultural colony successful they are wholly unacquainted. Philan thropists are guilty of the grossest of blunders when they try to give people what they do not want, and what, when forced upon them, they do notxappreci ate and will not use. The history of social, political and economic effort is big wfth the record of failures in this line, and upon no other point has a score been made so often with results more uniformly discouraging. The negro question has been ap proached from this standpoint, often with results that have been scheduled as dismal failures, if not actual disas ters. Jewish colonization also has failed in this country to the extent that it has not met the expectations or jus tified the expenditure of the money em ployed. The cause is not far to seek. The intended beneficiaries of a large and impractical scheme have not risen to .meet the, desires and purposes of their proposed benefactors. Homesick ness and discontent and unthrift have formed a combination powerful enough to defeat the earnest purposes of those who have pledged money and influence and given .personal effort without stint to the support of a cause which did not appeal to those whom It proposed to as sist as at all worth while. Our In dian problem contains many factors of this kind factors that cannot by any degreeof cunning be used in Its solu tion. We. have, for example, tried to make Indians plow, who preferred to hunt or to fish; to make them sit upon chairs when they preferred to loll at full length or squat upon the ground; to induce them to use knives and forks In feeding themselves when they pre ferred to convey food to their mouths with their fingers; to sleep on beds when they wanted to He Upon the ground; to live In houses when the tepee was dear to them, and to eat wheaten loaves baked in ovens when succulent roots, braized in a primitive mortar and roasted in the ashes, formed in their estimation bread much more palatable. We have failed In these attempts, of course. We have also, and' for similar reasons, failed to Imbue the Russian Jew with the belief that the American way of living, of labor and of home building was superior to the methods of life and Its ordering that are his heri tage from the generations of antiquity. He would rather be let alone, in squalor and abject subjection In his native land than to be transported free to "the United States, given lands and Imple ments of husbandry, taught how to use them and be Instructed In the ways and given the privileges of American citi zenship. There Is no reason to suppose that the attempt to colonize the English Jew of the type that appeals to the philan thropist as a fit subject for this effort in South Africa will . be success ful. It is not what he wants. Land and stock and thrift do not appeal to him. The people who by this process would become his neighbors look with suspicion upon him. Wel come does not await him, and he Is foredoomed to discontent and the un speakable misery that springs from be ing utterly out of touch and harmony with his surroundings. Colonization as a dream of establish ing a helpless, thriftless, alien people In a strange land with peace, plenty and contentment as their portion, has had many a rude awakening. It la. still Jn 4ttlse& Uunoments when practical cqjjv. mon sense is off guard, but it is dealt with in the main as the unreality that It is, and refused the Indorsement of legislative bodies to which it?- appeals for sanction and. funds. It is therefore not a matter of sur prise that the scheme for colonizing Jews in South Africa has failed to re ceive the sanction of the British Com mons. The desire to give a consider able number of peqple something in the name of philanthropy that they do not want isan American rather than an English characteristic. As often a3 this desire Is transformed into an attempt it becomes wasted effort. Voluntary im migration that undertakes to better Its own conditions, selects its own, route and proceeds to jts chosen destination is one thing; directed Immigration that Is set In motion by philanthropy and goes In droves to a designated location Is quite another. The one is the free movement of responsible Individuals; the other the blind movement of an unprepared mass, set in motion by a purpose which is neither understood nor appreciated, and which, in "the very na ture of things. Is devoid of personal responsibility. The one represents what Its subjects want and want to do; the other what they do not want, but ac cept merely because it is offered to them. The position of honor at Willamette University, which was for many years accorded to the late Father J. L. Par rlsh, has been assigned to General W. S. Odell, who has resigned the officeof president of the board of trustees. In recognition of his long and faithful ser vice, especially during the years when Willamette's survival was in doubt, he has been elected honorary president, while the active work will be conducted by younger hands. No page In the his tory of that Institution will be read with greater interest in future years than that which tells the story of the perseverance and loyalty of the stead fast friends who could be counted upon for willing service 'at all times and In all places. " Governor Black's nominating speech will make splendid campaign material, and the voters should not be permitted to forget the eloquent words of his faithful characterizatlonIn that speech and those which followed it were summed up the arguments upon which this campaign will be fought, and' every Republican who Intends to do effective work for his party should become fa miliar with those clearly expressed rea sons why Theodore Roosevelt should be elected. The addresses were not shal low impromptu talks. They were stud ied productions from the minds of America's greatest public men, and every one of them Is worthy of more than a temporary place In the records of American oratory. That charming Moroccan business man, Raisuli whose name, by the way, is Uli, "Rals" being an honorific prefix equivalent to "boss" has now success fully completed his greatest undertak ing. If he can only manage to hold on to his gains among the turbulent fac tions of his native land, Raisuli will be a true captain of industry, and In view of the present tendencies of the maga zines we may expect Ida Tarbell, Lin coln Steffins or Thomas W. Lawson to be assigned on his case. It would make a story at least as interesting as that of Standard Oil or Amalgamated. Mr. F. A Seufert, Mayor-elect of The Dalles, Is a man of modesty and of bright - visions. In a letter recently published, addressed to the citizens of The Dalles, he says: "I want to con gratulate you on the splendid result of our people at the polls In the city election." Pass the crudeness of the expression and of the, grammar. Again: "I hope our peopje will learn from our city election results, in the future, how to vote." Pass this to the account of the modesty of Mr. Seufert. Unhappy Mr. Tyner! Aged, feeble and burning with indignation, ' he threatens to bring a libel suit against the -President on account of the pub lished Indorsement by the latter of the charges of criminality for which he was recently tried- and acquitted in the courts of the District of Columbia. The counsels of prudence will probably dis pel this intent, especially if they come to him with the whisper that the pres ent occasion is not the first in which he has been called upon to "explain" his official conduct. Charles W. Fairbanks Is the son of a farmer, and, though born in Ohio, sprang from old Vermont stock. The thrift that lies behind his large ac cumulations may be accounted lot- In his ancestry, which runs back in New England to 1636, only a few years after the Mayflower came over. This is worthy of record only because of the characteristics that have sprung out of it, which make the man and have made for him a place in -the political and financial world. A Philadelphia man proposed twenty times by letter to a girl in Sweden. She refused him each time. Then he went over to Sweden and proposed person ally. The girl accepted him right away. Cleveland has written many letters dashing the hopes of Democracy. Per haps if he convention should make a personal matter of it he might act like the Swedish girl. Chairman Cortelyou has been charged by some newspapers with having been a Democrat. But he wasn't, so all ic serene In political circles.- We know here In .Oregon how difficult it is for some Republicans to forgive a Demo crat for helping to elect McKlnley In 1896 and trying to identify themselves thereafter with the Republican party. Governor La Follette has reached the unexpected determination to roll up in Wisconsin the largest majority for Roosevelt any Presidential candidate ever had. The La Follette slogan ap pears to be coals of fire for Roosevelt and a knife for Spooner. Salem people seem to be a little afraid that some of the proposed electric lines will be constructed chiefly of hot air. Perhaps as long as there Is nothing more material in evidence "they will as sist the enterprises with hot"-air subsi dies. Now that Perdicarls Is safely restored to his family, and Secretary Hay has vindicated the axiom that an American is safe anywhere (If he is worth a fat ransom), all will be forgiven if he keeps off the lecture platform. Juror Simmons made a great deal more noise in the Circuit Court than Candidate Simmons ever made in the late Congressional campaign. Appar entlr. he has atvJast found, hi yocaJJou NOTrS AND Q0MMENT, - . - In a Port ArtfiuriBarbcr Shop. -Heavy firing this morning, sir." "Umph." "Thjnk the Jap3 will attack today?" "Umph." "How long do you think we can hold out? "S razor hurt, sir? Close shave? No; all right." "Ow-w-w-ch!" "D-n this razor, sir? No, sir that was a piece from a shell, sir." Generals Kuroki and Oku sound O. K. How would the Old World exist without American' ransoms? s- . The Clatsop County Jair is haunted. Ghosts are evidently careless about the company they keep. These short-sleeved Summer shirtwaists prove that all Portland girls are plump, or the thin ones are aestlvatin?. The salmon run is something like the peach crop to be good, it must fail a couple of times every season. London is not "such a bad place, after all. Dowie was chased out, but the Sal vation Army delegates are welcomed. Russians accuse the Japanese soldiers of stimulating their courage with brandy. Why don't they get some of the sama brand? - Seattle is trying to have all the bill boards in the city torn down. As tho city Itself looks like a billboard, this action seems unkind. The worst thing about a picnic is the difficulty of whispering sweet words to a girl and slapping at the mosquitoes sim ultaneously. War correspondents are progressing. They have been received by the Emperor of Corea at Seoul, which is less than 400 miles from the area of war. It's about time the Atlantic Coast came over here, to school. A 17-year-old Cali fornia girl has been showing the National lawn tennis champions how to play. Life in Port Arthur Is not so different from life in Portland. Port Arthur quakes under the fire of heavy guns, and Port land shakes from Morrison-street bridge blasting. Countless editorials are being written to explain "Why the Japanese Win." Boiled down, most of them account for the Jap anese victories by showing that the Rus sians lost. Circumstantial evidence is proverbially dangerous to rely upon, but, all the same, there are lots of people that regard the presence of "wrigglers" in their milk as sufficient to convict the milkman. To the mere man it seems that, if he were a woman, his Summer clothes would be so light he'd have to be looking at him self In a glass all the time to make sure he hadn't forgotten to put them on. Destroying our nice, new blue and white street signs, Indeed! To the deepest dun geon with the boys that would be guilty of such a thing. Goodness knows the signs are wanted badly, and. goodness knows they were long enough In coming. Poor old Russian fleet! It was a bad day for the sailors of the Czar when they succeeded In pushing the cork out of Port Arthur again. Bottled, the ships may float. And, by the way, we note a new adverb in the description of the fight. A picket vessel, we are told, observed the sally and Informed Admiral Togo "wire lessly." Fine word, and one that supplies a short-felt want. Do kings and emperors wink at one an other when they meet? When King Ed ward, arrayed in a German uniform, meets Emperor William, arrayed in a British uniform, do they exchange grins, or do they carry out the whole scene with grave faces? To say nothing of the bother of getting into all the strange clothes, and the tremendous difficulty of having a strange uniform correct in every detail, the whole business seems full of nub-dub. Why not let the monarch of the United Kingdom appear In a British uniform and the German Emperor in a German? The intended compliment would be as well ex pressed. If not, when Mrs. Juggins, who looks a fright in pink, goes to visit Mrs. Buggins, who wears nothing else, she should sacrifice her appearance to cour tesy and wear the detestable color. An order against flirting has been issued by the directors of the Cunard Company. Of course, it applies only to the officers of the liners, for no steamship company, however powerful, could stop flirting on the part of the passengers. Acquaintances are made at sea even more easily than at a Summer hotel, and the waves, clouds, moonlight and zone are so provocative of flirting that no normal girl may resist; that is, if she doesn't suffer from seasick ness, which makes life, and much more, love, seem a thing of no moment. Tho game, however, will lose one of its most agreeable features, If the fair passengers are convinced that no glimpses may be expected of blue-coated and brass-buttoned young sailormen. Even without or ders, the officer of an Atlantic liner has not much time for anything but work. Watch and watch is no joke, especially in such responsible positions. The poor officer can do little more than envy the luckier passengers who have all the time in the world to make friends with the girls, and vow eternal devotion to deities that they will have forgotten ten minutes after the ship has made fast. WEXFORD JONES. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. "Cholly .Brokelelgh tells me his ancestors were early settlers here." "Yes? Well, Chol ly isn't. I'm his tailor." Philadelphia Press. "Bobby, won't you kiss me?" "Naur." "Well. Bobby, may I kiss you?" "Tes. if you kiss me easy on top of my head." Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. Sirs. Wedderly Tes, we've been married live years, andimy husband Is still In love. Miss De Flypp And aren't you jealous of her, dear. Chicago Daily News. "I always pay as I go," remarked the re former. "That's where you're foolteii," said the practical politician. "I always get a pass." Philadelphia Record. Laboring Man I want to renew my lease. Landlord Well, the new scale of rent for your flat will be $1S instead $15 for a month of 25 days Instead of the old number. Judge. "Have you heard about the latest insuranco company?" "No; what is It?" "Why. it's one that promiees to pay alimony to both parties. In caee the marriage proves a failure." De troit Free Press. "Would a newspaper correspondent accom panying a track team date his reports 'With the Fleet'?" "Well, he might, although most people who go to a track meet expect to see a squad run." Harvard Lampoon. "I shall make you love me yet," declared Mr. Stinjay, determinedly. "I shall leave no stone unturned." "Ah! that sounds something like!'" exclaimed the fair girl, "if the stone weighs not less than a carat and is pure white tou nay Interest me." PJHIaflslphia Press.