"yv e THE MOBNDfG OBECxOSflAK, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1900. -r -s&krr-i t he rsfiottiem Entered at the Postcfllce at Portland. Oregon. a second-class, matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms.... 106 Business Offls....CC7 ' REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (poet ape prepaid), In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month.... $0 85 Bally, Sunday excepted, per year T SO Daily, with Sunday, per year.... .....4.,. 9 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 M The Weekly. 8 months. 0 To City Subscribers Sally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.lBo Daily, per -week, delivered. Sundays lDCluded.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 tjB-12-pege paper lc to Z4-page paper .......so to SC-nace naier So Foreign rates doubled. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregdnlan should be addressed Invariably "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating; to advertising subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlon." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from lrdlviduals. and cannot -undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It -without uollclta tloo. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Paget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 33, JTaeoma poatofflce. Eastern Business OfflcTbe Tribune build ing. New Tork city; "The Rookery." Chicago; the 8. C Beckwith special agency. New Tork. For sale in Ban Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 70 Market street, near ie Palace hotel, and ct Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter etrcrt. For eale In Chicago hy the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. T0DAT8 WEATHER, Fair and warmer; winas mostly northerly. PORTLAND, THURSDAT, JULY 5, lOOO After all, what difference whether the Democratic party make a new declara tion for free coinage of silver, at 16 to 1, or reaffirm the old one? Reaffirma tion of the platform of 1896 la approval again of '76 to L" which was the lead ing feature of that platform. "We de mand the free and unlimited coinage of Doth silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting ror tne aid of -consent of any other na tion," was the -declaration of that plat form, where Is the "conservatism" In "simple reaffirmation"? It Is the same old thing, and Just as far from "con- ! servatlsm" as If written anew. The Salt Lake Tribune, which ar dently supported Bryan four years ago. and was the most earnest and ef fective advocate of the free coinage of silver amontr the newsDaners of the TTnitpd SfntPfi nnw atva fVinf airam have carried the "silver question" far and away beyond discussion, and that the interest formerly taken In It nnnnnt now be revived. "No one," It says, "is discussing silver in Utah now. The silver miners even are not concerned about it Not $13 could be raised to try to reawaken interest in the subject. Men know that it is as useless now as It would be to try to dam the Missis sippi in a Spring flood." The Tribune holds that the time to "do something for silver" has passed, perhaps forever. Good judges are of the opinion that it will be very hard for Bryan to carry Utah or Idaho. Croker is now in the steady eomnnnv !of Bryan. He was at great cams last year to show that the Tammany tub stood upon its own bottom, and gave la mighty banauet in New York, at J which Bryan was not present, but ex- justice van Wyck was, with his anti trust speech. But Croker has made a discovery, and it is that he is very Bmall potatoes as a National boss. As he can do nothing against Bryan, he is for him. Croker's attitude toward Na tional affairs is exactly what it is toward state matters, and it is always an inquiry as to what there is in it for Croker. There is a certain drollery In bis cool turning down of Hill as a mem ber of the platform committee because he is against the silver plank. A year ago Croker was against Bryan, against silver, and for expansion. But he changed his mind with ereat alacrity when he found out that he could not hold Ud in the Democratic nartv against Bryan. "We are to infer from the controversy (between Hill and Croker, and advance- Sment of van Wyck as member of the platform committee, that the New Tork Democracy is for silver. But when did I Van Wyck become a silver man? De spite his notorious connection with the Ice trust, "Van Wyck is at Kansas City as the especial promoter of the fight on trusts. He has a ten-plank platform devoted almost wholly to discussion of economic questions and declaring among other things for "the equitable restraint of mammoth trusts which destroy competition, restricting the fields of employment and individual effort making is a Nation of servants." , This covers a most laudable purpose land all good citizens ought to join in fany honest endeavor to bring about the preform. But reform ought to begin at Ihome. Why do not Croker and "Van iWyck first go after the ice trust? The tumultuous demonstration for ill in the convention was not so much for Hill as it was a protest against broker. The New Tork boss is a .sore Bpot In the side of the Democracy: the ice trust is as salt to its hurts. Tet the )emocratlc party tolerates Croker and Is "Van Wycks, and gets alone with them as best it may, for the sufficient reason that it cannot get along without lem. In, two messages President McKInley urged the necessity of a trans- Pacific cable, and especially of a cable the Hawaiian Islands. The Senate showed a willingness to make a begin- ing, by passing a measure making foOOO.OOO available for a cable to Hono lulu; but In the House the bill was olocked by order of Speaker Hender son, and referred to the committee on interstate and foreign commerce, which id already reported favorably a bill providing for the- payment of a large subBidy to a private company for renty years. There are those who, if ley can prevent It, will never permit jy public work to be executed with out some scheme in connection with it for enrichment of private persons through subsidies out of the public Creasury. Joseph Nimmo. Jr.. has Issued an- sther lot of pamphlets against the Nic- ragua CanaL If Mr. Nimmo would lake the plain and simple statement aat the transcontinental railroads in rhose employment he is, do not want le canal built, he would save him self the trouble of all this Invention of Jctitlous reasons against it The Philadelphia Press. Adm'lnlstra- lon organ. Is still complalninsr bitterly ibout the Qulgging of the platform. It leclares that a "confidence game of this ind can be played but once," and that "the candidate who has to stand on that platform should he consulted In Its make-up." But a candidate does not -have to stand on any platform. If he does not like it, let -him get off. It is the business of a party to declare principles that suit Itself. When it tries to- suit somebody else, It Is likely to get Into trouble, as it did at Phila delphia. - "THE FIGHT AGAINST WEALTH." Mr. Bryan, in his letter to the New Tork World, says: "I do not care to hold office unless It would enable me to do something for these people (those who made the Chicago platform) in their fight against wealth." Tet there are those who consider wealth prop erty a good thing, a legitimate thing. There are those, too, who think prop erty entitled to influence and considera tion in government. One of the ends of government , has always been thought to be the protection and con servation of property, and every person who knows anything knows that with out property wealth there could be no organized society nnd no civilization. Maugre all Mr. Bryan's efforts in his "fight against wealth," the people of Oregon would like to Bee increase of wealth In their state; and those of Mr. Bryan's state are contending for the same thing. Even Mr. Bryan Is not insensible to the advantages of wealth, and he is known to be raking together a good deal of it The right to own, control and protect property has In all ages been regarded as equal and often superior to the right to defend one's life. This has been rec ognized In the written and unwritten laws of all nations and tribes, In every stage of human history. The notion that government can be divorced from property is preposterous; and whenever there Is attempt to put it In practice, it becomes monstrous. The love of property and the desire to accumulate and control it is, next to the love of life, the strongest of all motives which sway the great mass of mankind; and Mr. Bryan himself does not appear to be superior to It Applying these principles to the mat ter now specially under discussion. It may be said that men havo a right to object to being stripped of their prop erty by debasement of the measure of value and medium of exchange, by de struction wrought by mobs and riot ers, and by confiscatory taxation all of which is encouraged or threatened by Bran politics. There are things better than wealth; but wealth is Indispensable to every thing else. Not that a man is made better by possession of wealthy but the community is made better by it, and no civilization can exist without It There are the rich, it is true; people who can not decline the responsibility which that title Involves. There are the poor, It is also true, and perhaps more true. But between the two extremes how many degrees! How many thousands, how many millions, of persons would you have to range in these two bands, according as the boundary line would find its place below or above them! How many circumstances, besides, would have to be taken Into account, irrespective of pecuniary calculations! The robust workman is rich in compari son with the weak and sickly one. The same man will be twenty times rich and poor in the same day in compari son with others, or as he shall have successively had to do with persons richer or poorer than himself; he will have had to experience by turns, unless morally raised above such feelings, both the gnawings of envy and the pleasing consciousness of an admitted superiority. What is observable is the fact that It is usually or always from this Intermediate class that the eignal for murmurs proceeds. The Door, the truly poor, are- infinitely les uisposed to look above their heads than the greater number of those who, to say the least, are rich in comparison of them. For one man whom people see or think they see placed above them on this sliding scale they forget that there are hundreds below; or if they remem ber it, it is only that they may league themselves with them, taking care, however, not to share with them. Declamation against luxury is com mon, and display of worldly vanities ever has been a theme of moral satire; but to condemn luxury in general is to condemn those who live by It, (o augment the numbers of the poor, and to cause them to receive as alms what they might have received as wages. The demands of luxury ought not to make men and women forgetful of those who are needy; but the best and most moral of almB is work. Have you wherewithal to employ in useful labor any portion of the working hands of the country? Then do. that; but you will always do better, far better, by employing these hands to supply luxuries than by feed ing them while half employed or doing nothing at all. It has been said, and still It Is some times said, that it is absurd and cruel to wear jewels, diamonds, a single one of which would feed ten families a whole year. But it is not the diamond itself would feed these families; It Is the proceeds got by selling it Thus there would, always need to be a pur chaser; there must ever be some one subject to the reproach of wearing on his finger as much bread as would feed fifty of his brethren. If nobody chooses to incur the guilt of such cruelty, why then the diamond becomes a mere peb ble, equal! useless to the poor and to the rich. See then to what end this "fight against wealth" leads. The price of a fine carriage Is divided among three hundred different workmen. Is not wealth engaged in good and pa triotic work when It employs them? Wealth has Its moral obligations, and it Isthe universal testimony of those writers who have given time and tal ents to a survey of the moral and in tellectual progress of the world In re cent times, that a growing sense of this responsibility, as compared with conditions formerly. Is very generally apparent. Politicians have no moral right to make a "fight against wealth," for it Is a good thing In the world; and really they are not sincere. They are appealing to low motives and base pas sions, for political advantage. Democratic platform-makers should note the statement of the Director of the Mint, which from conclusive data points out that the world's gold pro duction for the calendar year of J889 can hardly fall short of $400,000,000. In 1896, when Mr. Bryan, with the 16-to-l cry upqn his lips, ran for the Presi dency, the world's gold yield was $202, 000,000. It has since increased more than 50 per cent, and, if Director Rob erts is correct In his estimate, it will soon reach 100 per cent The chief basis cf he demand for the unlimited coinage of silver was the theory that the gold supply was inadequate to af- ford a solid or sufficient foundation for our currency. This was a far cry at the time. Since then It has been re futed, not by argument alone, though this has been sufficiently conclusive, but by events. It is no wonder that in telligent Democrats In all the great centers of trade and industry are be seechingthelr party leaders to drop 16 to 1 as a hopelessly outdated Issue, or that a powerful contingent holding to this view was among the Urst on the ground at Kansas City. LA PAYETTE. Testerday, in Paris, the statue tif La Fayette, the gift of the- school chil dren of America, was presented to the French Nation In presence of President Loubet and the United States Ambas sador. General Horace Pqrtr. The French press speak with surprise that America has thus honored the cnemory of La Fayette. Tne people of the United States remember that La Fay ette, refused permlss'onby his King to join the cause of the struggling colo nies, chartered a vessel with his own money and reached this country before France became our ally He spent his great wealth in. our cause. He was wounded at Brandywlne. He was the devoted and trusted friend of Washing ton. ' He was a very gal ant soldier, about equal to the command of a bri gade. He was a very henesb, truthful man, entirely devoted to liberty as we understand It; but he was not enough of a soldier nor a statesman to ride successfully and rule the storm of the French Revolution; and7 to save his head from the Jacobins, he was obliged to flee from the camp of his own army and take refuge in that of the AUstrl ans, who held him a prisoner .in the fortress of Olmutz for several years, until the victory of the French arms under Napoleon released him. As a republican. La Fayette refused to accept a command under Napoleon, and remained in retirement until after Waterloo and the return of the Bour bons. He visited this country in 1S2. and remained until 1825, making a tour of the Union as far as Burlington, "Vt, where he laid the corner-stone of the University of Vermont, whose park to day includes a fine statue or La Fay ette. He was Influential after the rev olution of 1830 in persuading the French people to choose his old companion In arms, Louis Philippe, King in place of the fugitive Charles X. La Fayette lived to be a very old man. He had the frame and stature of a big grena dier. He was a good man, an unselfish and lifelong friend of human freedom; but the best work of his life was his youthful service in the American Army under Washington. The rest of his po litical and military career was so gen erally a failure that Carlyle, in his "French Revolution," contemptuously calls him a "Sir Charles Grandlsort Cromwell," meaning that he was pos sessed of more superficial dignity of manner than military or political ca pacity. ' "THE YELLOW PKUIL." Some years ago a cartoonist, who, It seems, wielded his pencil with wider purpose than to catch the whim of the hour and portray it in exaggerated pose, pictured the nations of Europe upon elevation, fully armad and gazing anxiously, while they withheld their fire, at a dark cloud gathering In the East and slowly overspreading the land. This cartoon he called '"The Tel low Peril." If caught the public eye for a brief moment, and was dlsmlseed from the public thought as an exag geration. Events, however, seem to in dicate a reality in this peril, since be fore it civilization Is held In check at the gates of the "Forbidden City" while the nations of the world, including our own, are preparing to force these gates and rescue each its own from the dead ly clutch of aggressive superstition and Ignorance. In other words, civilization Is arming under compulsion against the bigotry and prejudice that control an empire vast In extent and whose in habitants may well be likened unto the sand of the seashore. The end Is not In sight The begin ning, indeed, though foretold by events, was so sudden In its onset that such meager forces as civilization had at hand with which to meet It were quickly beaten back, or lire still held In check, while around them the "yel low peril" surges with dally Increas ing volume. It may safely be predicted that civilization will win In the end, so far at least as to protect her agents In pushing 'trade and commerce into the ports and eventually into the in terior of the Chinese Empire. With this end in view, the prows of the world's great navies are turned toward Chinese waters, and soldiers are being sent or will be sent to reinforce the marines that have already been launched against this "yellow peril," only to be enveloped in its shadows. Trade is the b'reath of life to nations. It cannot be restricted by arbitrary decree nor cut off, except temporarily, by violence. The last year of the cen tury sees the world armed and in bat tle array the yellow men against the white in the bootless endeavor to throttle It Suddenly as this question seemed to be sprung, it has yet been long in gath ering force and volume In China. The same spirit now In revolt, backed by, myriads of yellow men In and around Pekin, has made Itself manifest num berless times. It is easily recalled that In 1895 a 'serious revolt against the missionaries by the Vegetarians result ed in the massacre of a large number of overzealous men and women. en gaged in the work of trying to Chris tianize Chinamen against their will. J. Courtney Hlxon, now First Lieuten ant of the Thirty-second Infantry, United States Volunteers, stationed, -at. Manila, was at that tims Consul at Fuchan, under the Cleveland Adminis tration. He worked with a will to bring to justice the leaders of this mas sacre, among whom were professing native Christians and Mandarins al ways hostile to missionary effort He was so successful that three months after the massacre was reported he had them beheaded. Lieutenant Hlxon is one who realizes the constant menace of the "yellow peril." He believes, and so expressed himself at that time five years ago that a formidable element in this peril was the attempt to preach to the Chinese a religion other than-that which has been theirs for ages. He predicted that, unless our lnls?lonarIes were recalled and forbidden by our Government to enter China, the result would be a war which would entail great loss of life and heavy moneyed expense to the United States. He backed this opinion by the fact as dis closed by his Intercourse with the Chi nese, that no religionists on earth are more devoted to their creed than they, and that any amount of labor with a vlew to their conversion is lost In the expressive language of his report now on file. In the State Department he says: One hundred thousand missionaries sent to China would amount to nothing, and thesa missionaries might as well preach to the rock of Mount Lebanon cr establish grist mills and export to grind out converted Chinese. To eliminate this clement from the "yellow peril' -will not be easy, but if It becomes necessary in order to protect Dur trade interests from frequent in terruption, our citizens in Chjna from the ferocious onslaught of fanatics in arms in defense of their creed, and ur Government from a vast responsibil ity and needless embarrassment. It will be done. Thorough research and careful esti mates enable the Boston Herald to conclude that, at the present rate ot consumption, the lumber supply of the United States Is likely to bo exhausted In twenty-five years. The amount of lumber now used per year Is 5,000,000; 000 cubic feet for making paper while three times that amount Is burned In stoves, fireplaces and furnaces, and the I use or wooa ror fencing and for rail road ties Is increasing. The forest products annually consumed In the United States are estimated to he worth $1,000,000,000 nearjy twice the value of the butput of alt. the mines,' quarries, petroleum w.ells and other mineral products of the Country, except coal. The estimate, based on the year 1895, was that, while- timber was being cut in Europe at the rate of 20,000,000 feet a month, it was being cut in the. United States at two and one-half times as great a rate. In Europe reforesta tion is carried on more thoroughly and on a more scientific basis than an this continent, - The Tacoma accident is a dreadful affair. No similar casualty in the Pa cific Northwest ever cost so many lives, except the tnimcar disaster on Point Ellice bridge, Victoria, on May 25, 1896. Sixty persons were then drowned or crushed to death. At Tacoma the death roll may reach fifty. "Portland has suffered two shocking street 'railway "accidents, one at Madison-street bridge and the other On East Morrison street; hut the fatalities both times were less than ten. At Victoria a rotten bridge was the cause of the disaster; In Port land an open bridge draw on a foggy morning, in the one instance, and In the other a broken axle, causing the. car to leave the track at a Jog Jn the road, and to be. precipitated from a bridge into the water. In Tacoma a steep grade, a sharp turn in the road leading over a high bridge, and Idas" of control of the car, were responsible for the tragedy. In an Interview given to the St Louis Globe-Democrat Justice Brewer, of the United States Supreme Court, said: I do not understand that wo have any treaty rights to Bend troops to China, but -vre have. a Constitutional right to protect our citizens. AU nations have a right to protect their own citizens -within the limits of a foreign nation and to do everything necessary to procure that protection. At international law every natlon'lias a Tight to have Its Interests protected and Its Just claims enforced. The United States Is justified not only In employing military force to protect Its subjects in China, but It may demand indemnity and enforce its payment Ex-Mayor Hewitt, of New Tork. a Gold Democrat, has announced his un compromising rejection of William J. Bryan, with' or without 16 to 1, for the reason that he "utterly falls to com prehend the nature of this Govern ment" Charles S. Schwab, President Cleveland's Secretary of the Treasury; Gustav H. Schwab and Spencer Trask have been Interviewed by the Evening Post, and they.take substantially the same ground. It would' appear that the Bryan howl of antl-lmperlaflsm had not yet stampeded the Gold Democrats. In China there are three times as many Roman Catholic Christians as there are of all Protestant denomina tions taken together. The Catholics have 1,000,000 adherents, and thirty bishoprics, while no one estimates the. number of Protestant adherents -at over 200,000. But the Roman Catholic Church began its work In China hundreds of years before the Protestajnis began theirs long, lrfdeed, before the Protes tant movement known as the Reforma tion. France has 14.05 soldiers per 1000 of population, Germany 11.05, Italy 7.01, Turkey 7.0L Austria-Hungary 6.07, Rus sia 6.0L Great Britain 5,06, and the United States 0.S6. We have 65,000 men in service. Our increase over 25,000 ia only temporary, and the la-fl authoriz ing it will expire July -1, 1901. The danger from a great standing army ia only a bugaboo after all. A new mortgage of 13,000,000 on the City & Suburban Railway property is for the purpose of replacing $1,250,000 of 6 per cent bonds with 30-year -4 per cent bonds. These will readily be taken at par. The remaining bonds, aggregating $1,760,000, will be held for future development of the City & Sub urban system. In view of Boodler Clark's recent offer to give $1,000,000 to the Democratic campaign fund, the Kansas City con vention was too polite to question the entire regularity of his delegation's cre dentials. The Democracy warns the country against entangling alliances with any other nation. Who is there to warn tha Democracy against entangling alli ances with any other political party. It may be hoped that Emperor Will iam's purposes to subdue the Chinese uprising may not end, as usual, in a large amount of warlike talk 'and a small amount of warlike action. Jim Ham Lewis has at least been "mentioned" for VIoe-Presldent; but mainly by Lewis. Platfprms and Candidates. New Tork Post It was partly because the Republicans were holding their sides with laughter at the anguished perplexity of Democrats over tho Kansas City platform, that they fell unawares into their own platform pickle at Philadelphia. Talk about Bryan having to stand on a platform he does not Ukel Why, McKInley is going to do the samo thing. Here is the Phila delphia Press, which speaks by tho (post al) . card, declaring that the platform which the committee so ruthlessly emas culated and rewrote had been "closely scanned by the President and given his approval." "It was the pjatform Mc KInley wanted to stand on." But it waa incontinently Jerked from under him "by the platform committee. This perform ance was a "confidence game," is the ex ceeding bitter cry of Postmaster-General Smith. As he himself was the proud au thor of the perious which the Philadel phia censors clipped, there may be Just a. suspicion here of the spretoo injuria formae. Tet there can be no doubt that he and Grosvenor tell the truth when they say that the "candidate was con sulted in the make-up" of the platform on which he was to "stand;" and that then this "make-up" was cruelly washed off in the Republican green-room. The remedy which the Press and other out raged Republican newspapers promise for this platform outrage Is rather mora comic than the original calamity ot hav ing McKInley overruled. He, is to over rule the convention. "President McKIn ley," sternly announces his Postmaster General, "will embody the real, platform in his letter of acceptance." GOLD am? AND MR. BRYAN. ADram S. Hewitt Would Sot Corapro silxc With Him.,, New Tork Post The attitude of uncompromising rejec tion of William J. Bryan, "with or with out 16 to V expressed yesterday In his newspaper by ex-Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton, is also tho attitude of one of the eminent Eastern Gpld Dem ocrats. Abram S. Hewitt Mr. Hewitt Is opposed to Mr. Bryan for the reason that the latter utterly faliea to comprehend the nature of this Government A man who denounced as "government by Injunction" tho performance by the judiciary of theduty Imposed upon It by the Constitutional law of the land; who denounced the Supremo Court, the bul wark of liberty, and order; who sought to overthrow the judiciary of the country, was a man too limited in understanding and too violent in impulse to bo Intrusted with the great office of President The American conception of government had been liberty regulated by law; tho Bryan notion was, despotism regulated by anarchy. As to Mr. Bryan's acceptability on the score of his -hostility to imperialism, Mr. Hewitt was of the opinion that in reality there was no issue in this country be tween imperialism and anti-Imperialism. To this effect he had Just been writing to a friend in England. It was simply a case of "having tho wolf by the ear and not being able to let go." He would .like some one to show us how to let go. He would gladly see such a solution. But it appeared entirely impracticable, if not impossible. He did not believe that the Adminis tration had desired the Philippines, or had conscientiously entered upon a course of empire, but that It Had been gradually forced Into its present situation by cur rents of events which could neither be foreseen nor resisted. In similar fash ion, without desire or purpose, we wero sustaining part In an armed conflict In China, tho outcome of which no mortal could foresee. Only, It was clear that the powers must establish there a stable government and It was quite within the probabilities that tho United States would be compelled to bear an active share In its maintenance. Without in voking imperialism, the United States, however, reluctantly, might bo drawn Into It by world movements, which ev.er pro duced most unexpected results, for none could keep this country within hard and fast linos. As to Bryan's anti-trust platform, the trust too, was a necessary combination and development the remedy for whose evils he had In 1S90 pointed out In the following words: "Publicity, inspection and discussion are the great safeguards which the public can apply In order to correct abuses and avoid conflicts and disastrous losses." Joseph C. Hendrix, president of the Na tional Bank of Commerce, and J. Edward Simmons, president ot the Fourth Nat ional Bank, both of whom were promi nent in tho Gold Democracy movement of four years ago, declined to express any opinions In advance of the action of the Democratic convention. A Perfervld Orrttor. Bourke Cockran Is a born orator, an involuntary exile from Tammany Hall, not a great lawyer, not a statesman, by heredity an Anglophobe, and at present a- darling of the, "anti-lmporlollsts." His eloquent tongue Is hung very loosely, and sometimes wags very foolishly. His talk at Tale, the other day, about the probable or at any rate possible annexa tion of Canada, Mexico and South America earns him a sharp rebuke from the New Tork Times.- That paper re marks: His -words, translated, as they surely will be, for use in tho newspapers of Spanish Amer ica, cannot but increase tho distrust with which the United States and Its assumed am bitions are regarded by too many of their readers. Of course, the distrust is absurdly unwarranted, and Mr. Cockran knows as well as anybody elea that Mexico is as tala from American aggression as England or Germany, but the feeling is as real as it Is absurd, and It Is a very serious drawback to the exten sion ot American commerce to, and the preser vation of friendly relations with, the countries where It exists. That unscrupulous and self seeking politicians in those countries should be always warning their followers against our plots is natural enough, but it is a- different matter that Mr. Cockran, with no other ob vious purpose than to embarrass the defenders of Inevitable and legitimate expansion, should refer to the annexation of Canada and the rest of the two Americas in tha way he did. The "MentlonlnB" of Croker. New Tork Times. The Tammany Boss showed, when he first came ashore, how hugely ho was pleased by being "men tioned" for the committee on resolutions of the Democratic Convention. Na -wonder. Because the mention betokens, on the part of the mentloner, an assumption that the mentioned can read and write, not merely to tha extent of painfully signing his name with his tongue out, which" it is belie,ved almost any member of the general committee Is up to, but Just sitting down and dashing off on pa per what he has to say. This latter ac complishment 1b not so common In the organization, and is viewed there with a certain suspicion, and even deemed In consistent with leadership. "Scivit scri bere, non potult dictare," as Sylla Is said to have said and as Croker might say, or, as Dclmour might translate It into language understanded of the Boys: "He's a good scollard, but he ain't no Boss." To be "mentioned" for a mem ber of the committee on resolutions at a National Convention is tho Tammany equivalent of the degree of LL, D. No wonder the Boss was pleased. We are all of us pleased by receiving distinctions- Irrelevant to our faculties. Men's I,asy Paatlmes In China. New Tork Tribune. Outdoor amusements for men in China are few and not popular. They fly kites, carry birds on perches" and throw seeds high in the air for them to catch, or row boats in a lazy fashion on the lagoons or rivers. They pitch coppers, fight crickets or quail, juggle balls and play games with jackstrawB and snapstlcks.' Aotive, man ly sports are not in keeping with the no tions of dignity of the' Chinese, and If they wore they could not be indulged in because of the inconvenience of dress. Instead of rowing, ball, tennis or golf, young men prove their muscle by lifting beams with heavy stones at each end, like huge dumb-bells, or play shuttlecock, us ing the thick soles of their shoes as the battledore. There are few bearded men in China. Mon who have grandchildren may wear a mustache, and many take advantage of the privilege, and are called "old hair men." The foreigners with mustaches, when they came to China, excited much curiosity, and the- unusual sight justified them in asking the ages of the bearded men. Not a "Temperance" Platform. Hartford Courant Men capable of applauding such a brew of silly falsehood and slang whanging vituperation may bo total ab stainers from "rum," but tho virtue of temperance Is not In them. The apos tolic injunction, "Be sober-minded," has no place in their thoughts and no influ ence upon what they call their politics. They do sot even know what it means. CHINESE VIEWS OP FOREIGNERS. Taeir Minds Inflamed by Continued MIsreprenentatlon. It is the testimony ot all travelers that the Chinese are not only profoundly ignor ant of the world beyond China, but this Ignorance is cultivated by the educated, class for the distinct purpose of preserv ing their isolation from that world, and making it Impossible for foreigners to' overrun the ancient empire. The labors of the missionaries are par ticularly obnoxious to the Chinese, and unfortunately these labors are not always carried on with tact or discretion. Natur ally it is consldeed especlarlly desirable to make the Christian religion distaste ful to the mass of the people; and this seems to be the chief aim of a book which has been circulated widely In China, and of which a translation has been recently published by the missionaries at Tung Chow. Its contents are sufficiently de scribed by Dr. Henry Llddell in the cur rent issue- of the Independent They are "scurrilous and Indecent" but their truth Is not questioned by the Chinese. Tet this book, of whjch 800,000 copies have been taken by one person alone for gratuitous distribution, is, in the opinion of the translators, "a remarkably truthful repre sentation of the animus of the ruling and literary classes of China toward foreign ers." This gives it no small measure of Importance. "Wo believe, also," they add, "that It has been largely Instrumental In giving rise to tho vile and slanderous stories concerning foreign residents and native Christians which have recently spread throughout China; and that it sheds important light on the means by which the. massacre at Tien Tsin was brought about No mere description, however full, could possibly convey any adequate Idea of Its vlleness and deadly animosity." The writers of this precious volume class all Christian peoples together. To them Russians and Americans, Germans and Englishmen, are one. The book Is full of exaggerations and obscenities, all having the practical aim of associating the foreigner with all that is lowest and most repulsive. Those who read the book, the translators say, will believe it In thl3 fact lies its power for mischief. Several extracts are given in the Independent. Christians, it is gravely asserted, "make use of occult and devilish arts and be witch the Ignorant by magical arts and incantations, so they joyfully enter the sect . . . When a person enters this re ligion the teacher gives him four ounces of silver and a pUL WHen ho has taken this pill his whole mind Is confused and darkened, so that ho destroys his an cestral tablets and only worships an Im age of a naked child which points one finger toward heaven and another to ward earth." And again: They constantly practice, killing men to sac rifice to Jesus, in praying for happiness. . . . When a principal man dies, the7 offer 1000 men as a sacrifice. To procure victims, they catch foreigners and traders coming into their borders, and if these aro not sufficient they seize travelers, so that no one dares to go to market alone, for fear of being carried oft. It is considered honorable to have many wives. The principal man Is allowed 3000. In England, they have the art of cutting out paper men and horses, and by burning charms and repeating incantations transforming them into real men and horses. They may, how ever, be dissolved by beating a gong, or by discharging large guns at them. They may also be dissolved by spouting Arater over them. These extracts are enough to Indi cate tho character of the book. It3 Im portance, as has been said, lies In the fact that It has been circulated every where through China, and Implicitly ac cepted as the truth. Thus the Chinese are inflamed against foreigners, not only be cause they prefer Isolation, but also be because they believe that degradation will follow Intercourse with them. Thoy also believe that the missionaries are Influ enced by selfish motives, and that their religion is but a cloak for designs against the Integrity of the empire. It Is unfor tunate that circumstances should occa sionally seem to justify this suspicion. The present crisis is the natural result of the feeling which such a book must arouse: and Its gravity can hardly be overestimated. Chinese Citlea. Tien Tsin is the most important city of northern China, being located at the head of the Gulf of Pe Chi LI and but SO miles from- Pekin, with which It is con nected by water and a railway line. Another completed railway line runs northeasterly to Shan Hal Kwan, and a railway Is projected southward from this point to connect Tien Tsin with Shang hai. Its population Is about 1,000.000. and its imports were In 1897 more than 53, 000,000 haikwan taels, having nearly dou bled In the last decade. During 1893 American drills, American sheeting, and American kerosene especially Increased In the Imports of Tien Tsin. Tien Tsin ranks in commercial importance with Shanghai and Canton, and by Its geo graphical position Is the point of accu mulation and distribution of all mer chandise destined for the United States or intended for consumption in tho north ern provinces of China. Che Foo is an important treaty port located on the Gulf of Pe Chi LI nearer to the British port of We Hal Wei than to Tien Tsin. There is a constant and growing demand for American goods at that point New Chwang, a city of but 60,000, Is of special Importance to the United States as a treaty port because of the demand for American cottons, oil and American man ufactures generally with tho Province of Shlngklng, of which New Chwang at the extreme north of the Gulf of Pe Chi LI Is the treaty port The proposed Russian railway lino, which is projected through Manchuria and the Province of Shlngklng to Port Arthur, passes near New Ohwang and I3 to be connected by a short line. Another, a British line, will connect New Chwang with Shan Hal Kwan, which 13 already In railway con nection with Pekin. The importation of American kerosene at this port was 528, 000 gallons in 1S06, and in 1S98 it rose to 2,011,000 gallons. MEN AVtJi WOMEJT. Edwin Conger, American Minister to China, knows the Oriental character as thoroughly as any diplomat In ths Bast. and. unlike most, he speaks several Chinese dialects. Dr. Henri Dunaat who did so much to hu manize war. Is living almost penniless In the Hosplco of Heidcn, in Appenzell, Switzerland. He was instrumental in founding tho Red Cross Society. Major-Gencral French is a short, thick-sot man, who always stands with his feet and legs well apart, and sits hunched upon his saddle. A vlsw of his back suggests General Grant. Like Grant, too, h shows no concern for ex ternals. Tho sons of the Infanta Eulalle and her recreant husband, Don Antonio d' Orleans, re spectively 12 and 14 years of ago, will con tinue to live In England till their educations are completed and they are old enough to enter the military college at Madrid. Charlotte Bronte'n husband, the Rev. Arthur Bell Nlcholls, now an octogenarian, lives the quietest ot country lives at Banagher, County Kings, Ireland. Ho Issa strongly built ro bust old gentleman, who is wonderfully acUvo for his years, and locally very popular. His second wife Is a most estimable lady, who re veres the memory of tho novelist Jus,t as fondly as her husband. The Board of Regents of the University ot Kansas broke away from precedent the other day, and elected Miss Eugenie Galloo to the chair of French, made vacant by tho resigna tion of Professor A. G. Canfleld. Miss Galloo Is ths first woman to occupy & full professor ship at the Institution since preparatory work was abolished. Miss Alma D. Delande Xieduc, of Chicago University, a New Orleans girl, was elected to succeed Miss Galloo as assist-ant H The burnt child fears the firecracker. AbdulHamld's cough doesn't seem to, be loosening any. Too election will prove that the term. SSUyJS&f t Is, - Plunder. . WafiwHH'vtnan with money to bet that 1Vo(hey7Wiil carry Kentucky. TUift "Riifers iff not HtatMrnm rvr ttirnr woubOTftKing with alarm. end ot last night's Bhow big chunk of the cheese. The ww correspondents are now emi grating from St Louis and heading for China. David B. Hill says he is a Democrat He is still careless of his reputation for veracity. It 13 not surprising that the Chinese have a mental slant They see things with that kind of eyes. Conventions all are past and gone. With all their hopes and fears. And many thousand candidates Must wait for four more years. A good many hard things have been said about Queen Elizabeth; but she was really a diamond In the ruff. Mark Twain and Dewey, as well as e few thousand Vice-Presidential candi dates, still remain unnomlnated. Down by the sounding sea. Where the Summer maiden fares. Is not tho place for you and me, Unless we're millionaires. Toung men who heard the Chinese bands last night are not likely to enlist in the army to fight the Boxers. We can't all go to the Paris exposition, but the seaside hotel-keepers are prepared to reduce our capital almost a3 speedily. The Kentucky Legislature Is going to amend the Goebel election law. It IS pretty raw as It stands, but not sufficient ly so for enlightened Kentucky. Boston has already opened Its free pub lic baths, and will keep them open until after Labor day. The bath trustees asked the city authorities for 5106,000 for the proper maintenance of the baths, and got only $70,000. They decided that Sum mer bathing Is the greater public neces sity, and will spend most of the money for that making no attempt to keep open the Winter baths. It was a Judge In New Jersey a few months ago, who declared that tho life of a child, killed by a trolley car, was not worth more than a dollar. In contrast with that estimate a Jury In the New Tork Supreme Court the other day award ed $20,000 damages to a 6-year-old boy $vho was partly paralyzed as a conse quence of being run over by a brewery wagon. Children seem to be worth more In New Tork than In New Jersey, at least in the courts. The Pan-African Congress, to be held in London in July, will assemble dele gates not only from all the civilized dis tricts of Africa, but from both Americas, the West Indies and perhaps a represent ative or two from the sparse and scat tered negro population of Australasia. It will, in fact, take in negro representation all around the globe, and give the black man a new notion of his Importance and of his social and industrial progress wherever hi3 surrounding circumstances are favorable, " "" Wo ain't a-cartn" how tho scrap in China winds up now, We kind o' think we'll pull out whole wa mcatly do, somehow. We're satisfied to take our chanco along with all the rest, A-trustln that the whole blame thing" 11 pan out fur the best. We're happy now as we can be slnco them press fellers wroto The news that our old battle-ship, the Oregon'a afloat. We've watched her since she left the ways be cause we liked her name. We've felt a-burnin' Int'rest in her subse quentlal fame; . An when she traveled 'round the Horn and got In at tho fight. "We said, "Wo knowed it all the time, tho Oregon's all right." An now we know sho won't be lost, our best an' biggest boat. We're Just a-thankln' heaven 'cause the Ore gon's aflcat. When wa first heard she'd struck that rock you might a bought the stato So low that it would been worth while fur them that speckalate; Our Jaws was hangln at half-mast; our hearts was In our boots; Tho devil an old Neptune seemed agin us In cahoots. An' If you think we've got too gay. Just kind o' mako a note That wo have got a good excuse the Oregon'a afloat. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Not Restricted. "That gentleman who Is being Introduced to Miss Btnks Is a free think er." "Which Is he. a bachelor or a wldowert" Brooklyn Life. At tho Summer Resort. May Dull, Isn't ltT Belle Awfully! Wo haven't a thing to do ex cept to explain to one another why we are not In Paris. 'Puck. "What did Freddy say when you caught him coming out of tho pantrj' with his Hand3 stained red?" "He told the truth by saying that he had Jammed his fingers." Philadel phia Evening Bulletin. Mrs. D'Avnoo (at front window) Officer! Policemen Tes, ma'am. What's wrong, ma' am? Mrs. D'Avnoo Nothing's wrong; but I wish you'd step into the kitchen and tell the cook not to burn the meat, as she did last night. I'm afraid to. New York Weekly. Corroborative. "I am Inclined to think there is some foundation for the rumor that the X.. T. &. Z. Railway Is about to b consoli dated with the A., B. & C." "Has anything turned up to confirm ltT" "Tes. The presi dents of both roads say there Is absolutely nothing In the story." Chicago Tribune. A Life of Excitement, City Cousin But don't you find It dreadfully dull? Country Cousin Dull? The Idea! Why, there's the Ep worth League one evening; and class meeting, another; and prayer meeting always on Wednesdays; and tho Dorcas meeting, and the other means of grace. There's almost al ways something exciting going on after sup per. Brooklyn Life. A Southern Salute. Atlanta Constitution. Teddy, Teddy, Are you ready v For tho hop! hep! hep! Will you keep tho soldiers steady Aa they step! step! step! t Will you tell 'em what the war In tha Philippines was for? Mako tho campaign, cannon roar In the morning! Teddy, Teddy, Are you ready? Tell the Captains all to shout! Keep the campaign barrel steady " As the soldiers face about Tell 'em how you rode it rough " O'er the Spanish wild and tough; Give 'em Spanish war enough ' In the morning. Teddy, Teddy! Answer "Ready!" We're depending on you strong; Ton must koop tha old ship steady As the billows roll along; 'Spite of license and of law Glvo 'em beef and tullets raw; You're tho card that's goln to draw la tho morales! NOTE AND COMMENT.