-STjfWSJSfcT-.,-- '-; - '4.fr9-"'r- - '-. f c THE IfDRNKfG 0HEGXIAlTrugeiicfAT "133fte. Its rsouton, Catered at the Poetcfflce at Portland, Oregon. vs second-claes matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms.... l C(5 1 Business OSes... .007 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION HATES. By Mall tptaffe prepaid). In Advance Dally, ulthbunday. per month........... .JO S3 .Dally, Sunder excepted, per year..., . 7 60 Dally, with Sunday, per year 00 Sunday, per year . ...... 3 00 The Weekly, per year .........-. 1 SO Tbe Weekly. 3 months.... ............. 60 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.l5e Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded-COa Newo or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonian should be addressed Invariably "Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of any Individual. letters relating to advertising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonian." The Orepcnlan does not buy poem or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without excita tion. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain Ai Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacomk. Box 863, Tacoma poetofflce. Eastern Buslmm Office Te Tribune build ing. New Tork city; "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C. Rackwlth special agency. New York. For sale In San I Tanclsco by J. K. Cooper. 7C Market street, near the Palace hotel, and at Goldsmith Bros.. 236 Sutter street. For sale in Chicago by ths P.'O. News Cc. 21 Dearborn street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Increasing ness and threatoningr; variable winds. cloudl- PORTLAXD, TUESDAY, MAY 14. Thomas A. Jordan was Chief of the Portland paid fire department from January. 18S3, to July, 1SS4; Sheriff of Multnomah County from July, 18S4, to July, 18S8; Inspector of .Customs from July, 1892, to June, 1893; superintendent Of Stark-Street ferry In the Summer of 1893; Deputy Sheriff from 1S9C to April 10, 1900. Mr. Jordan's long and arduous labors In the public service entitle him to the dignity and repose of private life. Dr. Daly's platform demands: that the volume of circulating medium be speedilj Increased to an amount sufficient to meet the demands of the business population of this courtry. and to restore the Just level of prices of labor and production. It becomes a serious question how far currency Inflation should proceed in the direction of raisins prices. Prices may be too low to afford Just return to the producer. They may also be so high as to lay Insupportable burdens on consumers. If we compare present prices with those prevailing the day Mr. Bryan was nominated for President In July, 1896, we shall see: . 1600. 1900. "Wheat SO 49 $0 50 $0 E2 j$0 525 Salmon 1 00 1 50 Rice 3 50 4 00 OOVi "IV'jol. Valley .. OS 0 10 12 13 Hops 02 03 02 OS Hides 01y) 10 15 13H Hogs 3 00 J 3 25 5 00 Veal 04 04& OGlfcf OTlfc Mutton 3 00 3 50 & 3 75 Reef 3 00 325 4000450 How much more does Dr. Daly want us to pay for meat and provisions? Mr. Armstrong's retirement from the race for the County Superintendency of Schools closes ,for the present the offi cial career of an able, efficient and conse'entious public servant, and sets an example that might be followed by several other "Independent" candidates with credit to themselves. In a New Tork paper of high standing and great influence we encounter this paragraph: Mr J J. Kill Is reported to have reached the conclusion that vilth an unlimited amount of Igirtwr to bring East from "Washington ho can carry freight to and from Asia at rates that have not yet been approached, and which he believes the California lines cannot ap proach because tney cannot earn anything like as much en fruits shipped Eastward. The project attributed to Mr. Hill Involves carry ing the freight to Puget Sound at a little lwss than rot. the proflt being derived from tho returning shipments of lumber. From Pugot Sound to Asiatic ports goods will be carried In extremely large and rather slow steamers, redu-irg the .cost to a minimum, and by this combination the charges from Buffalo to China can be reduced below the present charges from St Paul to the Pacific Coast. The trade of this country can be Increased to a remark able degree If such a reduction of freight charges can be effected, and Eurojic will learn another painful ieeson of the great difficulty of competing "ft 1th the United States. The information and comment would be cf much greater interest to Orego nlans if the Union Pacific's namo were substituted for Mr. Hill's, and the transportation arrangement applied to the Columbia River Instead of Puget Scund. The support this section gives to the Union Pacific through the O. R. & N. entitles it to some such pro gramme. Will not Mr. Daniels provide an announcement of this sort as a se quel to als recent visit? The Gold Democrats who hope to support Bryan on a straddling platform must reckon without Mr. J. Sterling Morton, at any rate, who finds the anti imperialist blanket too short to cover the nakedness of financial dishonor. The New York "World asked him where be stands politically in 1900, and learns that he stands where he stood in 1896. "Bryan." he said, "Is 16 to 1; silver at 16 to 1 is Bryanlsm. A majority at Kansas City for either is an indorse ment of both." The ex-Secretary of Agriculture insists that there can be no reunited Democracy with either, and he declares of the Gold Democrats that "not one of them in all the Republic Is prepared to renounce honest money and accept Bryan and his vagaries in stead." Mr. Morton is probably wrong If he thinks the Gold Democrats will not join, man of them, in renominat ing Bryan and ratifying the Chicago platform. In this way they will reha bilitate themselves as Democrats. But he may be entirely correct in his view that they will vote for McKlnley on election day. That is a horse of a dif ferent color. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer de moted several columns in a recent issue Jo large-typed blovlatlon of itself as the greatest Pacific Coast newspaper. The quantity of advertising matter and number of pages Issued were the test. But there are other tests: the volume. quality and timeliness of news, edltor- l? ana miscellaneous matter, for ex ample. The Oregonian prints every day ten to twelve columns more read ing matter than any other paper In the Northwest, as It always has, and It thinks that in importance and value it is all up to standard, it pays two or three times as much for its special tele graphic and news features as any of Its competitors, and It does very little blowing about it. Still, the Post-In-tclligencer is a very good newspaper, considc-rlng its obvious limitations. It managed to publish an imperfect syn opsis cf the important Alaska code within two weeks after The Oregonian printed an exhaustive summary of it, which was quite a notable achievement, in view of the loud claims of Seattle newspapers that Alaska is their special field and its interests are always promptlyand zealously fostered. "Withal The Oregonian is pleased that Its Se attle contemporary is printing more columns of advertising than it did a year ago; and Jt is likewise pleased to observe that It is printing nearly as much news matter of nearly as good quality. TnE INESCAPABLE RESPOXSIBILITY Every ballot cast in Oregon June 4 Is a vote for or against the development of the Pacific Coast. It Is a responsi bility one might well wish to evade, but there is no help for it. A sweeping Republican victory will declare for re tention of the Philippines and Pacific expansion. A Fusion victory or a re duced Republican majority will declare against expansion and for abandon ment of our foothold In Asia. The Oregonian has obtained opinions from three men whose judgment on the matter cannot be impeached. Senator "Lodge, who is to be the permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention, and who is now chairman of the Senate committee on the Phil ippines, asked what the effect would be in the Philippines should Oregon go Democratic this time, says: It -would encooragc tlie opposition to the American Army in those islands. The Filipinos -would accept It as the first frnn of victory in the United States for them, and it -wonltl le liailed everywhere as nn indica tion that the ttentlmcnt of this conn try Ik atrainst th policy wc have been pursuing in the Philippines. It would simply enconrage the insur rection -which liau almost been stamped out. Senator Carter, of Montana, who was once chairman of the Republican Na tional Committee, speaking of this phase of the question, says: A repnhllean reverse in Oregon on .the platforms adopted -would fan the flames of rebellion In the Phil ippines, cxHt the live of many more hrnve soldiers and -wonld no douht necessitate n large increase of the Arinythere at a still jrreater expense than before. The Tnsals -would hail a Democratic victory anywhere as an Indorsement of their opposition and resistance to tbe United States. Senator Spooner, of Wisconsin, one of the most conservative and ablest men in the Senate, a man who opposed the Spanish "War until the country was In It, and then supported it with all the strength he had, but a man who has not yet fully arrived at the conclusion that permanent retention of the Phil ippines is best for the American people, says: Democratic success in Oregon means encouragement to the Fili jilnos. And that is something great ly to he deplored. The United States cannot enter upon any scheme to organize and form a stable govern ment in the Philippine Islands until the insurrection has been pat down and peace prevails. Even the Dem ocrats in the Senate recognize this, and ire all know that Democratic success anywhere in a. Republican state -will he used in the Philippine Islands to encourage the Filipinos to further acts of Insurrection. The State of Oregon must elect a Re publican Legislature. The First Con gressional District must re-elect Rep resentative Tongue, and the Second District must re-elect Representative Moody. Multnomah County must elect a Republican Sheriff, and Portland must elect a Republican Mayor. EVERY VOTE FOR A FISIOX, "CITIZENS" OK "INDEPENDENT' CANDIDATE IS A VOTE TO SHUT AMERICA TRADE OUT OF ASIA AND STIFLE THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PACIFIC COAST. THE LIVESTOCK BUSINESS. Thp livestock business has attained enormous proportions in the great cen ters of this trade In the Middle West. That at the Chicago stockyards, whence the markets of many Eastern cities Is supplied, was never larger than at pres ent. The Tribune's report of the indus try for April showed a total of -JG7,6S2 head of cattle received at the four lead ing Western markets during the month an increase of 55.3G0 over the number received for the corresponding month of last year. Of this Increase, Chicago Is credited with nearly 40,000. To realize something of the enormous movement of livestock from "Western ranges to the stockyards of the Middle West and thence to Eastern markets in refrigerator cars and packing cases is difficult, even when the figures are given. Its magnitude is expressed in figures showing that receipts for the first four months of the current year were 1,770,424 a net increase of 137,278 over the same period of 1899. Of this increase, Chicago claims nearly one half. Within the same period a total of 5,420,000 hogs were received at the stockyards of Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis and Omaha, being the largest re ceipts on record as compared with the first four months of any previous year. Two-thirds of these were received at Chicago. The receipt of calves and sheep were correspondingly large in their totals, showing a marked degree of prosperity In the meat-packing In dustry, as well as In that of raising livestock for the market. In the meantime, the natural Increase in sheep has been, so far as reported, 100 per cent upon the ranges, while that of cattle has been satisfactory to an unusual degree. There Is great wast age In the business, as shown through the very large number of calves sent to the slaughter pens, the high price of veal tempting stockmen to sell closely. It is thought, however, that prudence will put a timely check upon this feat ure of the livestock trade, and enable the ranges not only to keep up the sup ply, but to respond to the growing de mand from year to year. Tho Industry has In It many details that shock the humanities, but one feature of cruelty has been eliminated from it by the certain profits which make It paj to gather the herds and flocks in off of the bleak ranges In the Fall and feed and shelter them during the Winter." The sufferings of the creatures In former years, from neg lect during the rigorous weather that prevails upon the great ranges In Win ter, .were pitiful In the extreme, but the demand for meat products being no longer limited, and good prices being assured, this great source of suffering and wastage has practically ceased to exist. . The announcement that General Bul ler started to attack the Boer position at Biggarsberg, in Natal, on the 3d Inst., the day that Lord Roberts crossed the Zand River, shows that Lord Rob erts' success has again opened the way for Buller to victory, as it did when Lord Roberts' turning movement in March forced the Boers to let go of Ladysmlth. The retirement of the" Boers from before Glencoe and Dun dee means the evacuation of Natal by the enemy, and the speedy retreat of i Uie whole Boer army to their defenses before Pretoria. Evacuation of Natal will place all Its railways soon In pos session of General Buller, who at Glencoe will be only seventy miles from Lalng's Nek, where the railway crosses the Drakensberg range into the Trans vaal. From Ladysmlth General Buller is but sixty miles distant by rail from Harrismith, in the Orange Free State, and when "Van Reenan's Pass Js cleared General Buller and Lord Rob erts can establish railway communica tion as far as Bethlehem, in the Orange Free State. But the natural line of advance for General Buller will be along the line cf the railway from Glen coe to Lalng's Nek tunnel, for Lord Roberts next forward movement with his main army will be along tho rail way from KroonEtad to Elandsfonteln, where it joins the railway from Lalng's Nek. Marching along the railway from Kroonstad, Roberts will soon give the hand to Buller moving along the rail way from Lalng's Nek, which will, of course, be untenable by the Boers be fore the advance of Roberts Into the Transvaal.. It is clear from these facts that Lord 'Roberts' movement of 12S miles from Bloemfontein to Kroonstad, measured by its fruits. Is even a more splendid success than that which cap tured Cronje and occupied Bloemfon tein, for it has really left nothing for the Boers to do but to fall back to Pre toria as their last ditch. The same blow which has practically cleared the Orange Free State has cleared Natal, too. Lord Roberts shakes the tree while Buller picks up fruit. APPItOVE THE SERMON, BUT JfOT THE STATUTE. BigProhibitlonlst meetings are report ed throughout the state, but no matter how large these meetings may be, the prohibition vote will not be increased, because while the great body of the people approve of sermons exhorting men to temperance, they do not believe In prohibitory liquor laws. The figures In all the states for the last twenty years show that while there Is far less Intemperance than there was twenty years ago, prohibition Is a slowly dying cause. There are between 73,000,000 and 75, 000,000 of people in the United States; there are about 25,000,000 of church members. There were nearly 14,000,000 of votes cast at tie Presidential elec tion of 1E96. Of these votes, there were cast 145.97C for the National Prohibition tickets. In 1892 there were cast for the Prohibition ticket 2G4.133 votes. In 1SS8 the National Prohibition vote was 249,907. If it be said that the falling off in the Prohibition vote in 1S96 was due to the peculiar stress of the cam paign, it will not be unfair to Judge Prohibition by its vote in the state elec tions of 1S9S. In Connecticut there were 1460 Prohibition votes out of a total vote of nearly 150,000. In Illinois In a total vote of 87S.5S7 there were cast 11,753 votes for the Pro hibition ticket. In Indiana, out of a total vote of 573,311, there were 99C1 Prohibition votes. In Iowa, In 1899, in a total vote of 433.439, the Prohibition vote was 7650. In Massachusetts In 1899 ;in a total vote of 299.1G6 there were 7402 votes cast for the Prohibition ticket. In Michigan in 1898 there were cast vbut 7006 Prohibition votes out of a total vote of 421,164. In Minnesota in 1S9S the total Prohibition vote was 5299 out of a total vote of 252,562. In New York In 189S there were 18,383 votes cast for Prohibition out of a total vote of 1,349, 974. In Ohio In 1899 there were 5825 Prohibition votes out of a total of 920, 872. In Pennsylvania in 1699 the Pro hibition vote was 18,072 out of a total vote of 790.4SS. In Rhode Island In 1899 there were but 1200 Prohibition votes in a total vote of 74,024. In Wisconsin in 189S the Prohibition vote was 8078 out of a total vote of 329,429. In 1S92 the Prohibition vote in New York State was 3S.OO0. This was the highest vote ever obtained by that party In the Empire State. Since that date the Pro hibition vote has declined more than one-half in New York, to 16,052 in 1896, 19,553 in 1897, and 18.3S3 in 1898. This is the record of Prohibition dur ing the more than fifty years of life since its first enactment In Maine. Dur ing that time Prohibition has been given a fair and thorough trial by the great and enlightened State of Massa chusetts at the East, and by Iowa at the West, and has been abandoned. In Massachusetts It was assaulted by a great statesman, a philanthropist, and a most accomplished Jurist, John A. Andrew, the great War Governor of that state. Since 1S74 Massachusetts has had local option. It is but a few years since the lead ing clergyman of Portland, Me., con fessed in a public speech that Prohibi tion was a costly farce in Bangor, Port land, Lewlston, and all the large towns of the state. The United States licenses for retail liquor dealers are quite equal In number, measured by population, to those taken out in the non-Prohibition states. The Portland (Me.) Press re ports that ""Prohibition In Maine does not prohibit, and that the people "are boglnnlng to get very tired of paying the bills of the farcical process known as suppressing the liquor traffic" The Auburn (Me.) correspondent of the Boston Herald, writing under date of May 2, says that In Auburn and Lew lston and elsewhere In Androscoggin County the business of liquor-selling is not restricted; the number of places where liquor is sold has not dimin ished, but Increased the past year; that liquor-selling is done openly, and bars with their glasses and bottles may be seen from the street; that there are fifty liquor-sellers In Lewl3ton; that, "local officers, after making raids and securing in some cases large quantities of liquor, have found the grand jury under some circumstances unwilling to grant an indictment; and the case, af ter passing through the Municipal Court, has been dropped and the liquors returned." Men of influence in the county, politically, socially, and relig iously, are opposed to the law. On the other hand, the present liquor tax law has diminished the number of saloons and decreased drinking in New York State. The number of liquor sa loons In New York State of all kinds eight years ago was 40,259, but on Oc tober 1. 1S&9, the number of saloons was 27.739, a reduction of 13,000, or nearly one-third of the whole number, in eight years, although the population of the state has been Increased stead ily and Is now estimated as 600,000 greater than it was at that time. The comparison between results in Maine, the cradle of Prohibition, and New York, where the law really decreases the number of saloons, is Instructive New York does not attempt what is im practicable, and does through regula tion something abate -the drink evil, while Prohibition has slowly but stead ily fallen into discredit during the last twenty years. There cannot be too much temperance, but there is always a choice, of methods when you resort to legal remedies for social evils. We have refrained from reply to a recent complaint of the Eugene Guard, in order that we might do so advised ly. Incensed at The Oregonlan's rec ognition of Abdul Hamid as. the "Prince of Populists" because "he pays in promises to pay,' the Guard remon strates: The editor of The Oregonian well knows there Is no other mode by -which National debts can be paid than by "promises to pay." ... And yet The Oregonian sneers at Populists as deal ing In promises to pay. It is only another cample of Oregonian spite and malignity. If Populists are in favor of paying in anything besides promises to pay. The Oregonian has failed to observe It. Fortunately, the National conventions of the Populists have Just been held, and we are enabled to speak by the card. The Sioux Falls convention, being a Bryan sideshow, was under some obligation to treat sliver cau tiously, though silver, having some value in Itself, is only a little less des picable In the Populist regard than gold, which is worth its full face value. But even this Bryan convention de nounces the Republicans for making bonds payable in gold, and for "strik ing down the greenbacks." The desire for greenbacks as the sole money is very thinly veiled under the necessary show of friendship for silver. The Cin cinnati convention was subject to no such embarrassment. Thither we must look, therefore, for Populism the genu ine article, and If there is anything In this utterance leaning to payment of debts in anything but promises to pay. The Oregonian must admlWthat its "spite and malignity" prevent it from finding it: Fourth A scientific and absolute paper money, based upon the entire -wealth and popu lation of the Nation, not redeemable In any specific commodity, but made a full legal ten der for all debts and receivable for all taxes and public dues, and Issued by the Government only, -without the Intervention of banks, and in sufllelent quantity to meet tlje demands of commerce. Is the best currency that can be devised. Upon the heels of the criticism of the British Navy for its lack of modern guns In its equipment comes an article in Engineering from the pen of a Brit ish writer, D. B. Morrison, which says the navy Is so short of competent en gineers that It would be almost useless In the event of a war that brought It into conflict with another navy of even the strength of the United States. It has less commissioned engineer officers today, with its great number of steel armored vessels, than it had for Its wooden vessels forty years ago. It supplies the place of skilled engineers by using "engine-room artificers," who are merely enlisted mechanics, and has so few of this poor substitute that stok ers are also utilized. The passenger steamer Lucania has twenty-two en gineers, while the great battle-ship Terrible has but seven. Here certainly Is a great weakness In that navy, which appears so powerful on paper. The Im portance of the engineer is shown by the comparative efficiency of maneu vering of the vessels and condition of the engines in the American and Span ish fleets, both at Manila and Santi ago. If the British Navy is so sadly deficient In this respect, and if many of the vessels are of an antiquated type, slow, and armed with old and much Inferior guns, its efficiency in actual war would certainly fall far below the paper rating given It, based upon the number of vessels and guns. The Span ish War proved that actual condition, and not theoretical rating, is what counts in battle. The St, Louis proposal to annul the street-car franchises because of failure of the companies to run cars Is dell clously cool. The stoppage of traffic is due to tho failure of the city to sup press mob violence. It Is the duty of the city to prevent disorder and protect the companies In their right to operate their lines, or any other corporation or citizen In the exercise of his legitimate business. It Is one of the best-known legal maxims that no one can take ad vantage of his own wrong. The city, being at fault for not preserving order and protecting the men operating the lines, is in no posItionto forfeit the franchises. On the contrary. It is more likely to be In a position to pay a bill of damages for property destroyed. The equal suffragists make an appeal to voters in the earnest hope that the Constitutional amendment to be voted on at the Juno election will not be overlooked. A full and fair expression on the question is all anybody can aslc General understanding of a similar amendment and Its merits led to its defeat in Washington a year ago last November by something like 10,000 votes. The Democracy of Washington has split wide open. It, had not been sus pected that there was enough of it left to split, but then the late Fusionlsts of our northern neighbor are artists. They can make two blades of trouble grow where one grew before. Captain Dreyfus, late of Devil's Island, is again in Paris. The Captain has unequaled drawing powers as a show attraction, but he ought to retire and give the exposition a chance. President Steyn's capital will be in his hat till further notice. Evidently he fears that the English will have use for -the hat. One Independent candidate is out ot the race; and the others are not in it. Register today, row. You cannot tomor- Reglster. McCarty's Statistician. The Statistician and Economist stands alone among books of reference. It con tains all of the past that must be pre served for dally use, together with more of the present than all other year-books and almanacs combined. Within its cov ers are thousands of curious and valu able facts never before chronicled in abid ing form under a systematic classification. It contains oyer 400 new and corrected pages, included In which will be found the result of elections in every state and territory; acts of the 53th Congress; dif ferent kinds of internal revenue; special taxpayers; cigars and cigarettes manu factured; manufacturers statistics; sal mon fisheries; liquors and liquor-dealers; wool production; corn, cotton, hay. oats, wheat, potatoes, fruit, produced both for the United States and the world; domes tic animals of all countries; products of the dairy; aomestlc fowl and eggs; min erals and mineral substances; distances between cities of the United States; occu pations by sex in the United States; pat ents, how obtained; copyright law; colo nies, dependencies and protectorates of the world and colonies of tho Ulnted States; shipping owned by each nation; forest reservations and military posts; customs duties and war tax of the United States; Imports, exports, revenue, expendi ture and public debt of every country; statistics of production, banking and money circulation; population of foreign countries and cities, corrected to date; domestlo and foreign chronology and necrology; commerce and population of every principal port In the world; relig ions, armies, navies, crime and sporting intelligence, and corrected tables of every thing produced, manufactured, bought and sold, and a thousand other subjects too numerous to mention. Louis P. Mc carty, of San Francisco, is publisher" and proprietor of this admirable work. THE "PER CAPITA." Four Years Have Shown Up the Error of Populist Notions. New York Evening Post. Time was when the adequacy or Inade quacy of the Nation's "per capita" money circulation appeared as a burning ques tion in politics. When the Populist party In 1S92 made Its entry Into the arena of Presidential politics. Its Omaha conven tion platform demanded that the circulat ing medium "be speedily increased to not less than 80 per capita." The Treasury's estimate of the money then In circulation, on which the figures of the Populist de mand were doubtless based, reckoned t2i 47 as the average per citizen. The Populist plank obviously contemplated, therefore, the doubling of our circulating medium a proposition made more invit ing by the "per capita" phraseology, be cause tho average Populist constituent Inferred at once that the money in his pocket was to be promptly doubled. The Populist platform of 1SS6 modified Its pro posals to some extent, demanding only that money circulation "be epeedily in creased to an amount sufficient to meet the demands of business and population, and to restore the Just level of prices of labor and production." These platforms are somewhat interesting to recall now, In view of the very rapid Increase which has actually occurred, both In absolute and "per capita" circulation, and espe cially in view of the fact that gold ex ports, often a sign that a currency is In excess of present needs, have begun again. In July, IKK", the Treasury estimated the "per capita" circulation at a trifle over $2L Tho monthly report Just is sued, as of May 1, 1SC0, places the figure at $25 58. This Is not very near to the $50 per head demanded at Omaha in 1S92. but the gain Is material. In fact, the actual addition to the currency, outside the Treasury's reserve, during the last four years, foots up $450,000,000. This gain will probably be admitted, in any quarter ) of trade, to have been "sufllelent to meet the demands of business and population." At all events, money rates have declined In the face of a $3,000,000 export gold en gagement. This being true. It is some what Interesting to observe that, of the $450,000,000 Increase in circulation since July, 1ESS. $315,000,000 came in the shape of gold, and that of the Increase in gold $200. 000,000 is directly attributable to the ex cess of gold imports over exports in the period, the rest coming directly from new gold production In this .country, which has reached, in the three past years, to nearly $200,000,000. Not only, in short, were our mines exceptionally active, but as soon as our Internal and foreign trade, which was dull for numerous very ob vious reasons prior to lS&J. started up Into -vigorous activity, our circulating medium responded automatically to the call, as it always will if left unhampered. It is true today, as the Populist of 1S92 Imagined, that money in the pocket of the average citizen has increased rather mpre rapidly In fact, than the net Increase would have been if the silver-purchase law had never been revoked. But tho reason why his pocket money has increased is perfectly plain. In the bounty of nature, he has bad more than before to offer in exchango for it. It may be doubted whether, under tho circumstances, much use will be made of the "per capita" argument in this year's political campaign. Unexpected .Results. Baltimore American. "Say," said the man with the worried look, "do you remember giving me a lot of advice on how to conduct my love af fairs about two months ago?" 'Yes," replied the man with tho wise expression. "Told mo If I wanted to win the girl, I should make love to her mother!" "Uh huh." "Said If I could get the old lady on my sido all I had to do was to toddle around with a ring and say. 'When?' to the girl." The wise man nodded. "Said for me to compliment the mother on her youthful appearance," continued the worried man, "and give her a jolly about how sad It was that the young ladies of the present were not to be compared with those of the past?" "Yes. Yes. You won the girl, I sup poscT' 'Yes, I did not. The old lady has sued her husband for dtverce, and me for breach of promise." One Secret of Leadership. Chicago Tribune. One of Governor Tanner's greatest faults was that he could not let bygones be bygones. The men who had fought, him In convention he persisted in looking on and treating as enemies. As a conse quence, tho number of his enemies in creased, while that of his friends was strictly limited. Wiser politicians; who take broader views of life, are not vindic tive. They cherish no grudges. Men like Flatt or McKlnley when once put in command of the party In state or nation do not ask about a man, whether he supported them for the nomination, but whether he worked loyally for their elec tion after the nomination was made. To the broad-gauge politician all members of his own party look alike who have con tributed to his election. He makes it his business to forget all unpleasantnesses which preceded the nomination. Preferred Speech. Youth's Companion. The spirit of love and kindliness to all. which pervaded every word and deed of Phillips Brooke, did not hinder his keen appreciation of others' failings and short comings, or his own. "Why In the world doesn't Brown write his autobiography, and have It published?" said one of the Bishop's friends, referring to an incessant talker and most egotistical man, who had been wasting an hour of the Bishop's most precious time by a rehearsal of some unimportant happenings. "Why, he'd rather tell It, of course," said the Bishop; and then like a flash came regret for the quickly spoken truth, and he turned on his friend with a half humorous, half-distressed face. "What do you mean by asking me such a question as that when I'm off my guard?" he demanded, reproachfully. m THE IiAST CHANCE. No -roter can resrisitcr after today. Under the laxr, the hooks In the County Clerlt'n office clone t 5 P. 31. 3Iay 1C, until the next biennial elec tion, and he has no option but to obey it plain provision. There fore any voter whose name Is not on the rolls niunt forfeit his right to cast n. "ballot June 4 and November G, unless he jroes to the GIIEAT liA BOR AND TROUBLE of procuring SIX FREEHOLDERS to help him swear In his vote. A freeholder is a citi zen who holds real estate in fee simple and It can he seen that the tank of securinjr such a body to ac company a derelict voter to the polls is a formidable one. IT IS EASIER AXD SI3IPLER TO REGISTER. It avoids annoyance hereafter and it puts the voter in the way of discharging his clear duty, both in Jane and. November. The books arc closed today for two years. ASPECTS OF THE CAPE NOME RUSH One thousand argonauts will take ship at Portland before June 1 to hunt the "golden fleece" at Cape Nome. They aro a minor fraction of the mighty tide of humanity that will sweep northward with tbe breaking up of the Ice fields and tho opening of navlgatioa in Bearing Sea. 'It is Impossible to estimate accurately tho numbers of persons who will Join the great rush, but that they will be many thousands perhaps 25,000 or 30,000 Js cer tain. Tbe destination of all Is Nome City or some adjacent spot on the Seward Peninsula. They face the 'certainty that every available inch of gold-bearing land within 60 miles of the Arctic mining camp has been pre-empted, except the beach ana the all but unaccesslble sands under Bearing Sea. What Is taking this eager throng away from a land of plenty and comparative prosperity, with abund ant opportunities for the Industrious and thrifty, to an unknown realm under the Arctic circle, with a. Inhospitable cli mate, with frozen soil and with all condi tions of life rigorous and uncomfortable, not to say hazardous, in the extreme? It is the eager lust for gold. A multitude has taken a chance in the great lottery, with the certainty that for a portion of them perhaps" the majority the drawing pwill bo a blank or worse. They know it. but the spirit of adventure and the ex citements of speculation control the thoughts and actions of men in all other respects normal-minded. Of course, there Is gold at Cape Nome much gold. The fabulous stories that camo out from the remote north last year had a substantial basis In fact. Some of the creek claims were demonstrated to be enormously rich, while along other streams no colors at all were found. The value of the tundra claims extending from the beach back to the foothills is problematical. It appears to bo a fact that the yellow stuff ia found at the grass roots, but It Is also a fact that no easy and profitable process of work ing these claims has yet been discov ered. They offer email Inducement for the individual miner and prospector of ordinary means. Their development will bo on a large scale by large capital, and to that end water will have to be brought from the distant foothills. On tho beach are the "poor man's diggings." There is the public highway, and there the ordi nary miner had and has just as perfect a right as the millionaire. Last season the whole beach was free to work, and hundreds and even thousands of broken and stranded miners made strikes that put them "on- velvet" for the Winter, and enabled many of them to come back to civilization and comfortable living with more than they had when they went in. This was the exception to the rule of Alaska experience. The majority of those who started for the Klondike, full of high hopes and golden Imaginings, had as their reward bitter hardships and empty pock ets. It Is difficult to tell just what these hyperborean beach-combers averaged to tho man, but it was observable that, In the large numbers who last Fall filled tho returning vesoels, all seemed to have something. There was a notable absence of hard-luck stories. Undoubtedly they exaggerated the extent of their good for tune, but they had bags of dust to back them up, at least In part. The probabil ities aro that tho larger portion of these graduate "cheehawkers" had a few hun dred dollars, and that those .who stacked their ounces by the thousands of dollars were Infrequent. Tho proposed new Alaska code limits the field of free mining. The kernel to this whole much-discussed feature of the Alaska act is that it cuts the .beach in two nearly equal parts, one of which shall be and remain public domain and the other be subject to location under tne present United States laws. In other words, mean high tide is made the divid ing line. Now, mean high tide Is not much more than half way up the beach to the tundra. The poor man's diggings are be low this line; the tundra claims, already pretty fully located, are extended down over the upper part of the beach thereto. Tho area of profitable beach mining, how ever, seems yet to remain below the high tide line, and the low Summer tides will not Interfere with the continuous working of the claims to the extent that might be anticipated. An undoubted advantage of tho proposed new requirement Is that it definitely and fully pl.ces In tho hands of the miners themselves the power to regulato the exploration and develop ment of tho beach sands and of the contiguous bottom of the sea out to the three-mile limit. In view of the probable value of tho seabed and the proposed extensive Installation of elaborate dredg ing machinery, this may be a concession of the highest value and importance. It is to be remembered, however, that tho Alaska bill is not yet a law, and prob ably will not be for some weeks. The early birds In the northward migration may therefore arrive at Nome in time for the exercise of their sovereign squatters" rights op the sea beach, which Is at pres ent public domain. It may be remarked here parenthetically that no hardship would have been Imposed on the miners if Congrees had let the beach strictly alone and not attempted to define its status. Miner's equity settled all disputes last year without serious conflict ot any kind, except early In the season with the sol diers; and that trouble originated with the Government officers and not with the citizens, who were and are law-abiding. Tho curse of Alaska placer mining Is tho inexcusable discriminative provision In tho present law permitting claims to be located by power of attorney. There is abundant testimony that the major part of the. Cape Nome region has been taken up In the names of people who were never there, and furthermore are not likely ever to go, or to develop their properties. Hon est and deserving prospectors have been excluded by the hundreds and thousands In the Interest of persons who have lo cated claim after claim by proxy for some corporation or Its officers. This colossal game of grab was engineered by corpora tions operating in the North, and It was done originally If tho testimony of many persons Is to be believed through a lot of Laplanders, who were not citizens of the United States and with whom declara tion to become such was an after-thought. Citizenship with them was merely a con venience for the purpose of possessing rich properties, .which they either worked themselves or professed to sell to others It Is to be hoped that some way will be devised of having the validity of these claims tested In the new Alaska cour's. The proapept is. indeed, that it will be, and that persons who In good faith go. to eeek and develop the mineral lands of the Government may be given full opportunity to do all the law contemplated that they should be allowed to do. Experience Is the only teacher most people will take lessons of. and good ad vice Is generally wasted. If you are going to Cape Nome, the wisest advice is Punch's Don't! But If you do. Godspeed and good luck! K0TE AND COMMENT. Register today, or you're out ot It. The candidate and his money ere soon parted. J. J. Kelly Is not a candidate for Vle?. President. There are men now living who will sea the end of the Boer war. Agulnaldo Is alive, 'and, it is reported is again busy writing ultimati. Hobson is coming home now; but it' all right. Tho kissing-bug is extinct. The sick man of Europe has got th right idea about how to heel himself. Prohibitionists have one big advantage They don't have to spend any money ha treating. Where are Senators Hoar and PettigreW, that they have not Introduced, resolution of sympathy with Turkey? Now doth the street girt graduate. Rope In her .fond adorer. To turn bis fondness to account, And -write aa essay for her. Perhaps tho reason penxes are so fre; quent in Spring Is that the worklngmen got driven to desperation by the house cleaning at home. Colonel Thomas Wentworth HIgglnson has given the Boston public library a col lection of 207 valuable letters relating to John Brown, written between 1S3S and 1SC0 by Brown, Colonel Hlgglnson, Frank B. Sanborn, Wendell Phillips, Theodore Par ker and others. Stephen Crane, the novelist, -was never remarkable for his attention to text-books and lectures at Lafayette College. On the contrary, the Center Square of Easton was his favorite post. He would stand there for hours alone and idle, except for the continuous smoking of cigarettes. A packing-case which contained a Peru vian mummy, intended for a museum la Ghent, was-xecently opened by mistake at an English railway station, thereby caus ing a great deal of trouble. Murder was at first suspected, but the Coroner's Jury disposed of the case by bringing in this unique verdict: "That the woman was found dead In the railway station, and did die on some date unknown, in some for eign country, probably South America, from some cause unknown. No proofs of a violent death are found, and the body has been dried and buried in some foreign manner, and the jurors are satisfied that tho body does not show any recent crime In this country, and that the deceased was unknown and about 25 years of age." We doubt if any other mummy ever got such an indorsement. The Democrats of Florida are to hold their state convention in the City of Jack sonville on June 19. for the nomination of candidates for sundry state offices, the term of which offices is four years, wittt tho exception of the Attorney-General ot the state, who serves for two years only. The Governor of Florida receives a salary of $3500, and the Lieutenant-Governor re ceives X00. but one advantage which Democratic candidates for public office in Florida enjoy Is the fact that a nomi nation is equivalent to an election. At the last contest In the Peninsular state the Democratic vote was 20,000 and the Re publican vote 4000. In the Presidential election of 1S96 Bryan not only carried the state by a plurality nearly twice as great as McKlnley's vote, but he had a plurality in every one of the counties of Florida as well, notwithstanding the sup port of the McKlnley ticket by many Florida Democrats. "Notes on the Bacon-Shaakespeare Question" Is the descriptive title of abook soon to be added to the voluminous bib liography of the controversy over the au thorship of the English master dramas. It is by -the Hon. Charles Allen, late of the Massachusetts Supreme Bench. Af ter collecting a formidable array of evi dence from every available source, the author has given the case a review in the most impartial manner. The decision is for Shakespeare, and is based upon a study of every important Shakespearean student, commentator and editor, and upon a minute study of the legal terms used by Shakespeare a study which has led to the decision that Shakespeare was too poor a lawyer to be confounded with the great Jurist. Bacon. One of the 16 chapters composing the book treats of Shakespeare's early life, and then deals with his probable companions, while a third gathers up the expressed opinions of his contemporaries concerning him. PLEASAXTRIES op PARAGRAPHERS In Sulu Society. "Is ho a bachelor?" "Com paratrtely. He has only 12 wives." Life. In the Bakery. Jaggs Did you ever see a cakewalk? "Waggs No; but I've seen a crack er box. Chicago News. An Imitative Dog. "B&byJaidog 'Is a great Imitator. He can stand' on his hind legs and drink from a bottle." "I suppose he has often seen his master do that." Cleveland Plata Dealer. The Downward Path. "Brethren." said the repentant man at the revival meeting, "mine Is a sad story. I was born In Brooklyn, but soon went from bad to worse." "How long did you stay In New York?" asked the long whiskered man near the organ. Baltimore American. But It Hadn't. "Here's the clockmaker come to fix our sitting-room clock," said the funny man's wife; "won't you go up and get It for him?" "Why, It Isn't upstairs. Is It?" replied he, lazily. "Of course It Is. Where did you think It was?" "Oh! I thought It had run down." Philadelphia Press. Simply Hadn't Learned Yet. The Rev. Dr. Queen, observing the Janitor wabbling about uncertainly on his new wheel In the street In front of the church, called out: "George, do you ever take a header?" "No, Doctah Queen," replied George, with visible Indigna tion, "I neveh take nothln" strongah. 'n caw feel" Chicago Tribune. Doubtful. "These Boers are an agricultural people," said the man who wears knickerbock ers and smokes a short pipe. "Yes," answered Mr. Corntossel. "I don't purtend to know much about International politics, but I must say I begin to feel kind o' skittish about them fellers' chances as soon as I found out they was a farmers alliance." Washington Star. Borrowing- the Baby. Josh Wink. In Baltimore American. "Good mornln. My ma sent ma To ast you how you was. An' hope you're well you know 'at te. Th way she alius does. j: My ma she sez, you're strangers, But then she kind o" thought M Sh.e'd like to bony th' baby At you folkses 'as got. .' "My ma sets by th winder An watches you .an' him. An kind o smiles an cries to wanst, Cause he's like baby Jim. ' ""' Who's Jim? He was our baby We named him after pa. Say, c'n we borry your baby A little while fer ma? "My ma she sez she wouldn't Mind If your baby cried. She sez t d be like music Since little Jim has died. She sez she'll be good to him. An' she'd like a whole lot. If we can borry the baby 'At you folkses 'as got. - r