THE MhiranWl OTCEGOTST.O, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 190t). h$ rJegomoit at the Postofficc t Portland, Oregon. a econd-chm matter. TELEPHONES. lltortal Rooms.... 1 GO I Business Omce... .667. lc 2c REVISED SUBSCRIPTION 'RATES. 3y Mau trxtage prepaid), in Advance illy, -with Sunday, per month '2 5 .y, sunaay excepted, per ytar.. ........ y with Sunday, per year ? 5r ,x .. .. 2 uu 3 Weekiy, pr year..., ......... j" weeuy a months fo City Subscribers iiy, per -etc. delivered, sunoaya exwpie.j lly, per week.' Sell vered, sundayi mciuocu.w POSTAGE RATES. Tn'ted States. Canada, and Mexico to 10-pagc paper va m page pppor .............. Blgn rates double. ewa cr di?usion Intended for publication In nroennlan Kbeuld be addreajei Invariant Editor The Oreronian." not te thf nam of it tnlv'Jual. Lettrra relating to adrertUWE. Lbscrtptlons or to any business matter jhcuid addressed simply "The Oregpnlan. iThe Oreeinlan does not buy pocme or atorles J Irdlxlduals. and cannot undertake to re- krn any maruscrlpts ent to It -without oollolta- No stamps ebould be Inclosed for mi jrpose. jPuget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson. Ice at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacema. Box 1M. jecoma postofllcc. 3astern Business Office The Tribune mma- Ncw Tork City: "The Rookery;" Chicago; be S. C Beekwlth special agency. New Tork. For sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. Market street, near he Palace hotel, ana : Gcldsmlth Bros.. 230 Sutter surest. . For eale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street. STODAY'S WEATHER. Fair and continued northerly winds. selves with the 'reflection that the party's attitude cannot therefore be misunderstood. So with tariff reform, which no one at Kansas City seems to have thought of. This Is queer logic The Democrats specifically readQpted silver and 16 to 1, for the reason that a mere reaffirmation would be con strued a? abandonment o the Iesuc; and they decline, or fall, to mention in come tax or tariff reform, and say that the omission is not to be regarded as abandonment. These were simply for gotten. Then they cannot be very Im portant. But to regard them as unim portant is to commit mental treason against the great Chicago declaration of independence, which is Immortal. Silver was a vital principle in lBSfS, therefore it must be in 1900, is the Bry- anesque reasoning. Tariff reform and income tax were vital issues in 1896, and they are not In 1900, is also Bryan osque reasoning. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JULY 10. A little while ago the whole argu- lent of the Democratic antl-lmperial- 3ts was directed toward proof that the Filipinos are as capable of self-govern- lent as the Cubans. The intelligence, le patriotism and the lofty aspiration for liberty that inspired the struggling Cagals and other natives were touch- igly and eloquently exploited, and the ?publican President and a Republican ingress were anathematized for their Ilegd purpose to refuse freedom to a seople who ought of right to be free. ?he Democratic platform Is a cold- jlooded abandonment of those virtuous srofesslons. Now the Filipinos must be pet adrift because they "endanger our blvillzatlon." "We cannot make them subjects "without imperiling our form government." Because "we are not rilling to surrender our civilization or o convert the Republic Into an empire," 7e must get rid of them. And we must shake loose from our perilous relation in our own account, and not on theirs; secause of the great danger to our selves, and not to them. What has be- :ome of the noble concern of the De- :ocracy for the Inalienable right of the Filipino to protect life, preserve liberty md pursue happiness in his own way? It melts away before our superior self- sh right to the pursuit of life, liberty md happiness in our own way, and not be bothered about them. There is, to be sure, in the Kansas Hty platform an assertion that we lust give to the Filipinos (1) a stable government; (T ndependence; and (3) "protection frcu outside interference such as has been given for nearly a ;entury to the republics of Central and South America." But these guarantees ire to be offered distinctly and solely because they are to our advantage. The slanders are to have stable government lof their own, and independence and protection, not because they deserve Ithem, but because they are unfit to be- Ecome American citizens. By the exer- Iclse of our 'National power, and the j j abjuration of our National authority, we can and will give them National in dependence and Individual liberty; but we cannot retain National independence and individual liberty for ourselves if we permit these people to remain under the American flag, and insist that our authority shall be equal to our respon sibility. What pitiful shuffling, what sniveling hypocrisy! THE PROBLEM OP CHINA. The people of China, hardened and even petrified In anolent custom, are less willing to make changes in their wuys of life than are the people of any other land. Resistance to reform, which they regard as mere Innovation, is the grpund of the present outbreak against foreigners, who are regarded as the chief movers in the changes which are so odious to the ancient con servatism. All foreigners are alike distrusted, and if the missionaries are hated more than others, It is simply be cause they have been more active than others in the endeavor to Introduce new ideas. The Emperor was overthrown because he had placed himself at the head of the new movement for regeneration of China. His edicts of reform would have turned out of profitable sinecures thou sands of politicians, commissioners and various dignitaries quartered for cen turies on the public, and would have supplanted the rubbish which has been the "learning" of China for thousands of years with scientific knowledge col lected from the experience of civilized and enlightened men. It might have been supposed that the war with Japan would have taught China the necessity of study and adop tion of the -ways of the modern world. It was a terrible defeat of a great na tion by a small one; yet that small na tion had been reclaimed but yesterday from Its Isolation and barbarism. How unprepared China, is to meet the forces of the modern world should have been taught by this encounter. Europe has Indeed sold large quantities of arms to China, which doubtless will be used with considerable effect for a time; but the spirit to organize and support war, and the means of doing it, cannot exist to any great extent In such a nation. It may be regarded as possible, even probable, that China, as a result of these disturbances, will split into a number of states. The empire is not homogeneous, and there are local dif ferences and race hatreds. Neither the United States nor Great Britain can desire to participate in any scramble for Chinese territory, and it should he, as doubtless It will be, their policy to insist that the Independence of the Chi neseEmplre,or of the several states into which it may be broken up, shall be re spected by the nations. This will be the only assurance of avoiding diffi culties over commercial problems. Peace only can be kept among the other nations by avoidance of every scheme or suggestion of dismemberment of China and parceling out the empire among them. 4nd Watervllle; N. X. The total num ber of crematories in. Europe' is 34,009, but this large number is accounted for by the fact that the cremation of the unclaimed hospital dead Is made com pulsory by the City of Paris to relieve the crowded metropolitan cemeteries. Cremation is recognized as a Christian mode of burial by ministers of many Protestant denominations, including Bishop Potter, Dr. Ralnsf ord. Dr. Hunt ington and Bishop Iayvrence, . of the Episcopal Church. Doctrlnally, the Catholic Church does not oppose cre mation, and practically it admits of it in cases of necessity, such as those of war or pestilence, when a large num ber of decaying bodies may become a danger to the public health unless they are destroyed. More women have ex pressed In life the desire to be cremated after death since the incineration of the late Frances E. Willard than ever before. The nationality showing the greatest preference for cremation In New Tork Is the German, who, In pro portion to their number, outrank all others four to one. and this ratio Is much the same in other American orematorles. CREMATION. Observe that an essential feature of the Democratic anti-expansion policy la to afford to the Filipinos the same protection that we have given Central and South America, That Is to say, we are to extend the Monroe Doctrine to Via Oi-lont "Rn Tpn flnrt tVint tVio "Rf- publlcan party is roundly denounced 'because it opposes the spirit of the Mon roe Doctrine in its avowed policy to hold sovereignty over territory and large numbers of people in the Eastern ! hemisphere. There is a contradiction ! here that no amount of effort to draw j a distinction between "sovereignty" and "protection" can explain away. If the assumption of sovereignty over the Islands is in opposition to the spirit of the Monroe Doctrine, protection from outside Interference is violative both of its spirit and Its very letter, which is to preserve the American status quo lor the entire American continent, and "Which serves to Isolate America from the rest of the world in the sense that it keeps all European nations out. This Is the Democratic Interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine, found In the very platform which proposes to do for the Philippine Islands, what Is now being done for South and Central America. We protect the American continent from European aggression because It is the American continent; we refuse to protect European or Asiatic countries because they are not on the American continent. We scan the Kansas City plat form in vain for a single sympa-J thetlc word for the Filipinos. Nothing is said about Agulnaldo being the Asiatic George Washington. There is simply a contemptuous denial of the Filipino right and fitness to be Amer ican citizens. The Declaration of In dependence is bounded on the north by the aurora borealis; on the south by the Monroe Doctrine; on the east by the Gulf stream; and on the west by the first breakers of the Pacific. It has no latitude; hut It is confined within very dpfinite limits of longitude. It Is Intended, in brief, to cover the United States alone, with a quasi extension to the north and south poles; but It must not cross the Atlantic nor the Pacific. The Democratic theory Is that we have no National duty except our duty to ourselves; no International obligation to do anything for anybody but ourselves. The Quigging of the Democratic plat firm is exoitmg some comment, and some chagrin among those most concerned. The income-tax plank, shaped under the master hand of Bryan himself, is said by several mem bers of the platform committee to have been proposed, agreed upon and or dered to be inserted; but it was lost somewhere in the shuffle between the full committee and the subcommittee named to prepare the draft of the docu ment The comprehensive Chicago p'atform, which includes income tax, -was luckily reaffirmed, and the Demo cratic leaders aro comforting them A recently published communication from Rev. Dr. Eliot called public at tention to the subject of cremation. The most recent statistics show that the rapid reduction of the dead tp ashes by means of fire is taken to more kindly by Americans than any other people. More voluntary orders from families are received In New York City to cre mate their dead than In any other city in the world. The explanation of this fact is found in the superior practical ity of our people. Our common sense teaches us that from a purely sanitary point of view the weight of argument Is all with the advocates of cremation. The sentimental, superstitious plea for earth burial was completely disposed of' by Lord Shaftesbury when he said: "If these so-called religious objections to cremation are sound, what becomes of your blessed saints and martyrs?" There is, of course, no answer to this. If the ashes of the blessed saints and martyrs of both the Protestant and Catholic churches, who were burned be cause of their faith, or because of their lack of faith, can be reassembled and rematerialized on the resurrection morn, why cannot the ashes of those cremated after death, who may have been saints In life or may have been sinners, be also reassembled and re materialized at the sound of the last trumpet calling the quick and the dead for the last judgment? The answer of Lord Shaftesbury is conclusive, whether we believe or dis believe in the resurrection of the body. If we do believe in it, we cannot fairly assume that the Christian saints and martyrs lose their chance of resurrec tion through their heroic sacrifice for the faith; and if we do not believe In It, we certainly need not object to cre mation. All the great nations of an tlaultv resorted to cremation save Egypt, Judaea and China, and In times of the plague the Jews burned their dead. In days when means of transpor tation were comparatively slow and la borious, when wars were frequent and the slaughter very great, the quickest and most effective way to protect the public health against the Infection of a multitude of decaying bodies was to burn them, and this explains the faot that in ancient times cremation was the rule among the highest civilizations, like those of Greece and Rome. The lit toral law of Italy for many years has doomed the bodies of persons who have perished at sea and been cast up by the waves upon the shore to cremation, and It was under this law that the body of the poet Shelley, drowned in the Bay of Spezzla in 1822, was cre mated by his friends, Lord Byron, Leigh Hunt and Trelawney. In 1876 only twenty-five bodies were voluntarily offered for cremation In this country, but last year 1700 bodies were reduced to ashes" by fire In the United States. Since the incineration of the first dead body in this country, over 10,000 have been slmllarlj disposed of. At the crematory at Fresh Pond, N. T., 3208 bodies have been voluntarily offered for cremation since 1885, when it was built. There are twenty-five crematories today In the United States, disposed of among the following cities: Washington, Pa.; New York, San Franolsco, Boston, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Buf falo, Los Angeles, Detroit, Lancaster, Q. Pittsburg, Baltimore, Troy,' Daven- port, la.; Swinburne Island, Chicago, THE FUTPRE OP HOPS. The Oregon Hopgrowera' Association Is considering another proposition for elevating prices beyond the limits reg ulated by the natural law of supply and demand. The association met with a fair measure of success at this business last season, but, unfortunately, before they could unload many of their hops at the Increased prices caused by the withdrawal of 30,000 to 40,000 bales from the world's supply, the growers of Cal ifornia, Washington and New York, had forestalled them. The latter growers sold their hops when they were ready for market, and supplied the demand at prices slightly higher than they would have received, had It not been for the withdrawal of the Oregon hops from the market. In this respect the Oregon association may be said to have met with success, even though the "other fellow" reaped the benefits thereof. As to the Oregon growers, pome of them kept out of the pool, and sold early at fair prices, while a large number who stayed In shaved the outer covering of mold from their unsold stock tpward the end of the season and sold at prices ranging from 3 and 4 cents per pound down to $1 a bale, a commission of one half cent per pound being deducted to defray the expenses of the assoclatlpn. The latest proposition set before the grower, and said to have the Indorse ment of the practically defunct associ ation, is from a San Franolsco Arm which Is anxious to finance the coming crop. This firm desires the co-operation of 75 per cent of the growers of Oregon, Washington and California, and. If the latter will agree to reduce their yards 25 per cent, and plcK only the strictly flrst-olass hops from the re mainder. It will enter into a contract to pay them 15 cents a pound for the product. The courts have held that any agreement having for ItB object a restriction of the production of a com modity for the avowed purpose of im proving the price cannot be enforced. Taking this view of the proposition, it seems to be a "heads-I-vrin, talls-you-lGse" scheme. It has only been a year or two since oholce hops sold as high as 20 cents per pound In Oregon,' and there Is no good reason why such a condition of affairs should not prevail again. If the price should go up to old-time figures, the San Francisco Arm can be depended on to make good Its agreement. If it de clines to 10 oents per pound, there is apparently nothing to Drevent the "re striction of trade" decision making the oontract null and void. There are other reasons where the Oregon hopgrower Is taking decidedly the worst of a long chance. The hop crop is a tender one to handle, and a few days of rainy weather at picking time can practically wipe it out of existence. Should an ex tended area in England, or the big hop districts of New York, be thus affected at picking time this season, the Oregon hopgrower would see prices soar up to big figures; but by the terms of his con tract he would be prevented from pick ing one-fourth of his crop, or any of It that was npt strictly first-class. ThQ New Yorkers reaped a handsome profit on their hops last year on account of the removal from market of the Oregon crop, and with last year's experience for guidance, they will probably in crease their acreage this year suffi ciently to make up for any reduction that may be made In the Oregon crop. The business of hopgrowlng In Oregon has not been very profitable In recent years, but it Is a business whereju the profits cannot be Inoreased by the cre ation of unnatural trade conditions. If a grower cannot produce hops at a profit except by the creation of these artlfiolal conditions, he should use his land for the production of a crop In which the element of chance is less pro-nounqed. of faot, the contest has developed Into a kind of guerrilla warfare, engineered by able and experienced campaigners who have the Immense advantage over the British Generals of being thorough ly familiar with the country In which they are operating, Dewet, south of the Orange River, and Botha, to the north, have thus far successfully eluded with their commands the utmost ef forts of General Roberts, so to Invest them as to leave them no rational al ternative except surrender. Of this type of warfare we haye had and are still having experience In the Philippines, for which we have paid dearly, the end of the liquidation being not yet in sight. For like experience the Spaniards paid heavily In blood and treasure through many years In Cuba, and no one can tell how Jong this "fight and hide" policy will continue In the mountain fastnesses of South Af rica. Neither Steyn nor Kruger con templates unconditional surrender as a possible ending of the struggle. Stub born sons of generations of stubborn aires, they see but one result of the gon fllct and that, the one to their liking. This determlnatlpn to hold out to the last extremity has not, we may well believe, been weakened by the news which has, of course, reached them of the Chinese cataclysm. Hence, though British supremacy, Including the extin guishment of the South African Repub lics, Is Inevitable, the end cannot be said to be yet In sight, During the first half of the present year, according to the Railroad Gazette (New York), the railway mileage built in the United States was spmethlpg over 2000 miles. During the last half of the year the mileage is always greater. The estimate for the entire year is be tween 6000 and 6000 miles. In the' new building for the six months of this year, Texas leads with 164 miles. Then fol low Iowa, with 150 miles; Mississippi, 119; Georgia, 117; California, 104; Penn sylvania, 103; South Carolina, 102; Okla homa, 7S; Minnesota, 77, and Arkansas, 62 mles, A statement Is presented from Edwardi Atkinson, the well-known stat istician, in which t Js estimated that not less than 100,000 miles; of railway tcHI be built In the Urrfted States dur ing the next fifteen years,, a heavy fac tor in the total qelnr in the South and Southwest He further ndds that, as every mile of line requires about 100 tons of iron and steel, this would mean 10,000,000 tons for new railroad lines alone. Renewals, repairs, architectural work, etc., are not included In these figures. This means something very Important in the development of the country, as well as to the Iron and steel Interests. It would make a yearly av erage of more than 6000 miles, not un reasonable when It is remembered that there have been years when double that amount was ' built hol& on the people than scerneit IJkoly when he made his entrance Into National politics four years ago"; and, while hold ing that "the balance of probability tends to the election of McKlnley and Roose velt" It frankly admits that "It will be A CAMPAIGN nn Anrv victorv. and tho battle this year .iti Vi nn tf th nTpjiteat ever known I Eastern in the history of the country." Such con cessions of the opposition strength In the section where the contest is to be de cided must npt be disregarded, THE KANSAS CTTY CHOICE. Jnt Hovr JO to 1 Weakens Bryon'i Chance of Elect! OHi Chicago Times-Herald. Since Bryan, with the aid of Croker and Van Wyck, has succeeded In making New York one of the "Impossible states" for the Democracy In November, It will puzzle the most leather-lunged ehouter for 16 to 1 to locate the 224 electoral votes necessary to elec$ him President. Giving him every vote counted for him In 1833, with tho eight each from Kansas and Maryland, he would only have 102 votes, or 33 short of the promised land. But Bryan Is not going to hold all the Western States he carried In 1S0S. He will not get tho accidental singleton in Cali fornia. Tho four votes of Washington are as good as lost to him already. The sam Is true of South Dakota's four and Wyoming's three. Bryan carried Kansas by 12,289. W. J. Bailey, Republican, was elected Con-gressman-at-large from Kansas In No vember, 189S, by 16.S29 plurality over Botkln. Fuslonlst, and a clear majority of 14,239 over all, and the Republicans elected six out of seven district Congress men by majorities running as high as 7715. only one falling short of a majority. So wjth sunshine pouring prosperity Into Kansas by the crlbful and patriotism ex uding from every pore, there is not much more chance of Bryan's carrying the state this' year than Cleveland had In 18S8, when Harrison had a plurality of 0,159. And what of sun-kissed, wind-swept Nebraska? State pride and" discontent gave it to Bryan in 1S9C But Nebraska has elected a Republican legislature since then. Today state. pride will have to battle with state patriotism, and the sun of prosperity hap put the clouds of discontent to flight Bryan will have to fight for Nebraska. Tho same opportunity whien tne .De mocracy had to court success in New York has been thrown away Jn Maryland by the sneclnc declaration for silver. Summed up in tabular form the result of the Demogratlc convention in Kansas City may be approximated in the fol lowing table of electoral votes: Republican EHectors- Gallfornla SINew York ........ 36 Connecticut 6 North Dakota .... 3 Delaware ,... 81 Ohio ,..,.,..' 23 owners. ' Probably the champions of democracy against plutocracy do not In tend, to attack civilization, -but' some of them are In very queer company. OF DECEPTION. Aannred That NOTE AND COMMENT. Croker' has beat his tomahawk Info an ice pick and his wigwam into a refrigerator. Illinois SS Indiana 15 Iowa .,,..., ,i 13 Kansas "Maine .., Maryland Massachusetts .. Michigan J Minnesota ...., rvew Hampshire isew Jersey OreR-on 4 Pennsylvania .... 32 Rhode Island ..... 4 South Dakota .... 4 Vermont Washington ,,,... 4 Went Vlrsrinla ... 6 14Wlsconsin 12 Wyoming ..,.t 4 ,.HS1 101 Total Democratic Eloctors Alabama ,...,..., 11 Montana .,...,,..., 3 Owing to the reckless and primitive way In which the trees that furnish the gutta-percha of commerce have been treated in Sumatra and Borneo, from whence the principal output has come, the supply Is almost exhausted. A book ha? just been published In Ger many calling attention to this matter, and citing that these trees flourish In but a few places. These statements are recited by Consul Hughes, of Coburg, who points especially to the fact that gutta-percha may be produced profit ably and cheaply .in the Philippines, When once the war cjouds have cleared away from our Insular possessions In the farther Pacific, we shall begin, to find out their true. vaue. In the mean time, this statement, with its sugges tions of vast profit in the commercial world, may well set sundry enterpris ing American citizens to thinking, as it will In all probability later set them to planting caoutchouc trees In Luzon. Secretary Root, In event of a Chinese war of large dimensions, could not send more troops from Luzon, for General MacArthur says that he cannot spare them. About half of our 64,000 troops In the Philippines must be brought back to this country and mustered, out by July 1, 1901. To withdraw them and replace them with regulars will take some six months. The withdrawal must begin In November. When Con gress assembles It ought to Increase the regular Army to Ipp.OOO men and abolish the volunteer system, which, as It ex ists at present, Is both expensive and cumbrous. The enlargement of the reg ular Army Is the least expensive way of solving the question of how to make 55,000 men do the work of 100,000. Ten thousand American soldiers are few enough to protect American sub jects from murder and rapine by many million Chinese; but they are probably great enough to excite renewed alarm In the neighborhood of Lincoln, Neb., about "militarism." The "militarism" that sends our soldiers thousands of miles qut of our country to save the U,fes of our citizens cannot be very dangerous to our domestlp tranquillity. Nevada 3 North Carolina .. 11 South Carolina .. 9 Tennessee 12 Texas .... ,....,.. 15 Virginia 12 Arkansas 8 Colorado 4 Florida 4 Georgia 13 Kentucky ..., 13 Louisiana 8 MtaKtasinnl 9 Aiispoun .,...,;, ii Total ioi Doubtful Electors Idaho 3JNebraska 8 Utah 3 Total 14 Total votes In Electoral College., 447 Necessary to a chpice , , ,..,..224 Thus It will bo perceived the Demo cratic party by flaunting Us banner of re pudiation with Its frantic device of "16 to 1" In the face of sound money Dem ocrats, sound money antl-lmperlallsts, sound money mugwumps, sound money reformers, sound money Germans, sound money Scandinavians and sound money Americans of every race, creed and com plexion, has abandoned every hope of electing Bryan. When the permanent honor of the coun try Is attacked at home the American people arfe not to be distracted by a popgun Are upon Us temporary policy abroad. They will settle with the scotch ed snake of free silver first and then they will shake whatever there may be of peril or Imperialism out of the island policy of the United States. Democrats "Silver Is Dead." New York Tribune. Certain things havo to bo noticed and kept well In mind during the whole of the singular campaign which is begin ning. The attitude and purpose of the Democratic party on the whole financial Issue are meant to deceive. It has, In deed, declared once for all what It in tends in its lfi-to-1 plank, and in the em phatic declaration of Mr. Bryan that In every relation or bearing to the monetary problem the party stands Just where it did in 1SS6. Now, the very object of mak ing this declaration thus flatly and once for all at the start Is that there is afford ed a better ohance to deceive the public mind on that subject If the party now proceeds to Ignore such a declaration en tirely, after It has first made answer that it Js compelled to adhere, to Its position In 1S6, and then goes on to pick up men In this state or that who will dp all they can for Bryan, although on the money question thoy profess to be Gold Demo crats or the soundest of sound-money men. the countenance and favor of such citizens will cheat great multitudes into the belief that the silver question is real ly dead and that on live and practical questions sound-money men have nothing to fear. It must be remembered from the start that this systematic deception will win for free silver a great many voters who do not belong to that side. Every day men of standing and Influence, who pre sumably do not want to cheat their neigh bors, aro found saying that "the silver Issue Is dead" as a sufficient reason for giving to Bryan a countenance they would otherwise refuse. Yet these men must be perfectly aware that the support of the Democratic Presidential ticket car ries forward toward success Congres sional and Senatorial candidates In va rious states who are for free-silver coin age; that the election of a majority on that side is possible In either or both houses, and that it is the more likely be cause many sound-money men feel a de sire to treat the issue as no longer alive. With such a majority, Mr. Bryan would pot let a single day pass that could be caved In putting through and sanctioning bv his siimature a free-coinage act With this sustained effort to derraua voters about foreign matters there is a third issue which Mr. Bryan uses with tho characteristic recklessness of the demagogue eager to patch votes by It if he can, and indifferent to the incalculable harm which may result from weakening the sovereignty of law. Mr. Bryan has been making it clear that his appeal this year to the anarchist element Is In every respect a? reckless and ddngerous as It was in 1S96. One might then nave sup posed that the whirl and excitement of a convention which Mr. Bryan captured by a man-el of oratorical effectiveness did pot leave Bryan himself and his best as sociates cool enough to realize the full Import of declarations about government by Injunction and by the courts. Long before that campaign ended he came to understand the matter thoroughly, how ever, and has put the same desperate and rfeadlv atmeal Into his plan for this year, with deliberate Intent to use It to the ut most for the free-silver Interest. If he can only excite a few thousand men to set themselves against the law in some states, no matter on what pretext, and then can command their votes against the President, who cannot fall to execute the laws, that might turn tho scale and bring monetary revolution, even though not one of the law-resisting voters favored free silver. From beginning to end the Democratic policy this year is one of de ception, and its exposure will require not a little frank and earnest work. The boy who -13 the last to take a bath at home Is the first to run away to go swimming. STIIX STRUGGLING "WITH BOERS. The distractions in China have re cently so completely relegated the struggle in South Africa to the past that It was with the surprise of a, sud den awakening that news of a severe reverse to the British arms at the hands of the Boers under General Botha was received a few days ago; and wjjen this was followed later on by a report that the burghers, 10,000 strong, were mass ing around Pretoria, with evident in tent to recapture that city, the fact that the war In South Africa was practically still a living issue at once became gravely apparent While there Is not and cannot be any doubt as to the final ending of the struggle between Briton and Boer, it Is plain that the forces of the latter have not yet been reduced to submission or even to inactivity. These recent dem onstrations, and especially the success that attended the, sortie of General Bo tha from the mountainous country northeast of the capital, show that the Boers have not yet lost their fighting spirit or become convinced of the fu tility of further resistance. It is not possible to conceive that their leadera aro so devoid of Intelligence as to con tinue this fight upon the basis of strength against strength, or rather of weakness against strength, In the field. It is mpre likely that, fully cognizant of the new anxiety that has engaged the attention of England and threatens to engage her soldiers in a field far distant from the Transvaal, they are holding out against time In the hope that events will intervene to seoure for them favorable terms of settlement General Roberts position Is clearly a most trying one. Enthusiasm that fol lowed his early achievement has died out In England, and the government seems to be waiting In serenity for him to submit a report of the unconditional surrender ofxthe Boer forces, on the hypothesis that with their capitals taken, their ablest General in exile and their presidents In hiding, there Is nothing left for him to do. As a matter By seating the rioters from Shoshone County, the enemies of Governor Steun enberg, of Idaho, have beaten him for renomlnatlon. This so completely Iden tifies the Denio-Popo party of Idaho with anarchy, riot dynamite and mur der, that there can be no such thing as mistaking the general Issue in that state. Of course we shall not carry on the war against the Chinese In a vengeful spirit But "war is war, and to go to war Is to kill. If the Chinese think we are not going to have an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth and a life for a life, our task may be harder. Anyway, the Idaho Fuslonlsts cannot undo what Steunenberg did for law. and order and the good name of Idaho. But they can do much to show that Steunenberg did It as a patriotic Amer ican executive, and not as a Democrat Competition drove the .wall paper trust out of business. But the object of a trust Js to kill off qompetltlon. Which goes to show that even the trust is a mean adversary for economic law. Blectton Not Alreauy Decided. New York Evening Post Republican newspapers In the Middle West do not accept the cheerful view of some organs In this part of the country that the election Is already decided, and Bryan's defeat assured, on the contrary, one finds plenty of warnings that it would be a fatal mistake to act upon tho theory that all Is plain sailing. In In diana, for example, the Indianapolis Jour nal, the chief newspaper of the party, deprecates the suggestion of a Pittsburg journal that tho Bryan ticket is "fore doomed to defeat" and the implication that a strenuous campaign is not neces sary. "An active campaign.'' It says, "is necessary In Indiana before every elec tion. It 1 necessary this year." In Iowa, the Keokuk Gate City, edited by a Re publican member of tho last Congress, admits that the Kansas City ticket Is a strong one; it considers Bryan more to be dreaded now than in 1S96, because he has "lasted longer and kept a stronger BUGBEAR OF THE MOSEY POWER. Difficult to Tell What Will Become of the Trntii. New York Journal of Commerce. It Is stated with great confidence that the pending question before the American people Is that of plutocracy against democracy. The statement sounds Im posing; it Is Impossible to extract from It any meaning that is not at once refuted by the facts of every-day life, which all see, and which the most moderate com prehensions can understand. Some of the cheap-money men mean by It that money has more purchasing power than at Borne former time, and therefore a man who has money has more power. This is comprehensible, but is not true in the sense that a man has .more power over other men: It Is only more power to ac quire material things, And. the same statement about plutocracy and democ racy Is rmdo by men who aro perfectly round on the currency question, who do pot confound money, meaning currency, with money meaning wealth, and who know very well that money does not give Its holder a greater power over other men than formerly. 'Most of the people who use this formula of plutocracy probably have some idea about the potency of money with law, or courts, or social Institutions. There is a llttlo truth and a good deal of error here, and what is true is due to weaknesses of human nature and Is pot In any comprehensive sense amenable to jaw, and nearly all the Implied compari sons between the present and the past are fallacious. Probably every sufferer from the vision of plutocracy would at once rofer to" the so-called trusts If asked to specify some outward manifestation of the evil he dreaded. These combinations are too recent to warrant confident pre dictions about them, to their favor or thoJr disparagement But we know that very few have lasted long, that one of the oldest is about to dissolve, that one of the largest Is a revival of a combination which was formed four or five years ago and did not last two years, that another of great apparent power has Just passed a dividend on Its common stock, and some have paid nothing on their common stock; that the financing of these organl- rations in their formative period, and subsequently to keep them supplied with, working capital, has been growing more difficult and the ability of most of them to go through a period of declining sales and falling prices, when there Is not enough business to go around, Is a matter of considerable doubt The general facts of the present po-'"- are that the compensation of all human labor, from the man with the hoe to the college professor or the practitioner in medicine or law, has Increased decidedly within a generation, while the cost of supplying nearly every want has been de creased, so that the reward of labot, physical and Intellectual, has Increase. At the some time profits and Interest havo declined, and the man or woman who lives on investments is in far less favorable position than 50 years ago. The statute books of the Nation and the states do not look as if capital had got much the better of labor in the shaping of legislation, and the charge that the laws of the country are made by the "money power" is much easier said than substantiated. The political freedom of the Individual citizen may be greatly abridged by the political combinations palled party organizations, but they are not much affected by commercial compe tition. The success of the trusts has been very moderate, both in the suppression of competition and in the control of prices. AH civilization rests in great measure Upon property, the means of accumulat ing it its safety from legislator r- w as from burglars, and Its control by its The- Tratn Abont ainnlla Saloon. Army and Navy Journal, We predicted Just what has come to pass. When the volunteer ohaplaln. Rev. Mr. Wells, on his return, was made re sponsible by the papers for tho statement that one of the results of American occu pation has been an increase of saloons ironi tour to more than 400, we venturea to prophesy that local corroboration would be decidedly lacking. The Manila Freedom of April 21 thus disposes of Chap lain Wells' statement: "We have taken some pains to investigate this charge, and have to say that It Is false in every sense. When the flag was first planted In Manila there were between 4C00 and 50CO grocery shacks, kept by Chinos and Filipino, and every one of them sold liquors, a native product, which did more to All graves than disease and bullets. They were not saloons, but grog-shops, Insidious hell holes, and many soimers Decame vicnm of them. Vino and other native drinks could be purchased for 1 cent a drink, American money, and 10 cents was a suf ficient sum for a common drunk, and a penny or two more a bacchanalian revel. "Governor-General Otis had this prob lem to solve during the early days of oc cupation, and he was happily successful In closing most of the Chlno and native shades. A license system was established and the American saloon took the place of the native saloon. With their estab lishment the death and insane rates have been less, and the greatest good to the greatest number has thus been subserved. Instead of over 40C0 places where liquors wore sold, we now have less than 400, and the quality of tho stuff 13 vastly bet ter and the quantity less. Insidious ef fects of vino and native gin soon alarmed physicians and surgeons, and an order was issued to seize and destroy all of said products found. This practically elimi nated their manufacture, and to get them Is as difficult as it Is to get liquors in the veriest prohibition town of Kansas. Hall the reform!" There is a variety "about the news from China that would make a kaleldescop, green with envy. The little, buzzing-, busy be la worth his weight in sold, It those who keep blm are content To have and not to hold. Cyclone Davis is in Chicago, carrying wind to the Windy City. Davis never did have much tact. Beneath the apple tree the youth Now through tha daytime camps. Bat spends the long: and weary nights All doubled up with cramps. Having not died for several days, it may be taken for granted that the Em press Dowager is regaining her health. The number of ministers of the gospel' who feel called to preach religion to tho benighted Mongolian Is falling rapidly off. Tho climate of Chicago will not be healthful for census takers If the popu lation of that city does not reach the 2,000,000 mark. Mr. Watterson may be a follower and not a leader, but, like the average wild gander, he continues to honk after he drops to the toll of the procession. The way Oom Paul keeps on fighting when England has important business for her. army in other fields shows how ut terly lacking in consideration he is. Prince Ching, who is reported to havo organized resistance to Prince Tuan, tho Boxers, and the disloyal soldiery, and to bo exerting himself to protect the for eign legations and all Europeans in Pekin, Is the uncle of tho Emperor, and was tho head of the Tsung II Yamun until de posed in favor of Prince Tuan. He is a very intelligent and forceful man, who fully comprehonded the consequence to the Integrity and independence of tho empire of the destruction of legations and the .massacre of accredited representa tives, with the women and children of their families. Yung Lm, the former Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial army, who has been reported as co-operating with Prlnco Ching, Is a man of tho same type. A short time ngo a citizen bought a popular novel, and having been much pleased with It. when he had finished it. gave it to a friend, to have and to hold. The recipient read the book and en joyed It so much that ho wished threo of his friends, whose offices were in the same room, to enjoy the same pleasure. Ho therefore loaned them the book to be read in succession. The first read the book and placed it on the desk of the second and it disappeared. After a few days, the book not having been re turned, the second party bought a copy, and tho third party secured it at tho Library, by a fluke. As the second party was going home with the copy he had bought he called at his grocer's and was told that he had left a book there tho last time ho was In. This proved to b& the missing book which he supposed, some one had taken off his desk. This book he returned to the owner, who un dertook to take It home. He had many places to call at before ho. went home, and In all of them ho laid down the. book and. either his attention was called to It as he was going out, or remem bered to go back for it Finally timo grew short and as he had to rush his calls at several places, he placed the enchanted book In the tall-pocket of his coat preferring to risk an interview with his better half on the subject of torn, pockets to losing the book. He had vis ited threo places, when he noticed that he no longer had the book. He rushed, back over his trail, and at each of those places was assured that he had no book when he called there. He knew that ho had had a book, but could not remember where he had left It and started to hark back on his trail still further, but as he was crossing the street he had to spring aside to escape being run over by a car and something banged against his leg and recalled to his alleged mind the fact that he had put the book in his pocket. "Crokcr'd Flop." Brooklyn Eagle. "I believe in expansion," said Mr.' Cro ker at the beginning of last year. "Are not our people as powerful. Intelligent and as patriotic as those of England?" he asked. "Why not give our young men a chance to develop our new possessions?" he also asked. The number of young men In this country has not diminished since that time, nor has there been any falling off In Intelligence and patriotism. How ever, Croker convictions are notoriously subject to change. Some of them would ppeet the equanimity of the most placid chameleon on tho continent MEX AND WOMEX. Queen Victoria, has purchased for $125 a. man uscript over 300 years old, which gtvea a. his tory of Windsor Castle and the neighborhood. The Emperor of Germany confided to a friend recently tho fact that he was becoming weak jn his sword practice, and that he had decided to take dally lessons In. fencing. Rev. C. .A- Bartol. who has heen pastor ot the old West. Church, Boston, for over CO years, celebrated his 87th birthday a Bhort while ago. He Is the oldest living aJumnus of the Harvard Divinity School. Jerry Simpson saved the most of his. salary whlla he was serving In Congress, Invested It In land and cattle, and lias becdme wealthy.' When he went to Congress he had not a dollar Jn his pocket. He had to borrow the money he , paid for his ticket to Washington. .Now he Is rated at $40.000 one of the richest men In Barber County. Plerro Lorlllard's houseboat Caiman, which was burned In Florida waters a. short time ago, was the most elaborate boat of the sort Jn this country, and the less Is estimated at nearly $100,000. Mr. Irfjrillard's boat was equipped with Its own motive power, and so arranged that It could tow. a floating stable and carriage-house, thereby permitting the owner to uso his own horses when he wished to land. In England the Ascot rate meeting, ended In a blaze of triumph for the Amerloan Jockeys. The total value of the 17 events seoured by tho flvo American 'jockeys during the week Is $ 119, 700. while the IS races landed by the English Jockeys were worth enjy SG5.40O. Tod Sloan had 18 mounts, and won sU, He was second la tour, third in four and unplaced la four. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPIIERS A Time-Saver. Parke Tour wife tells me you have Just bought her a new wheel. Iane Yes. She can now run home from the soil links "and see tho children occasionally. De troit Free Press. The VIew-Polnt.-Flrst Rabbit That town boy has been around here nearly a week and 'never once tried to kill us. Second Rabbit Te: he seems to be devoid of all human at tributes. Indianapolis Press. One of Them. "A Chicago man has gained th power of speech by trying to commit sul oldV remarked Mrs. Beeohwo-a. "That must be one of the klll-or-curo remedies," added Mr Beechwood. Pittsburg Chronicle - Tele graph. An Excuse. "She has been divorced three times," said the Boardwalk sosslp. "But," remonstrated the Chicago lady who had not caught the drift of the ' conversation, "per haps she did not marry until lata la lite." Philadelphia North American. Rare, Indeed. Art Dealer Here's something fine. It's "Tho Battle of Waterloo." by Van Dyke. Markley Is It. really? I thought Van Dyke died before th battle ocurred. Art Deal erBrsc he did. But er you see. this Is one of his posthumous paintings. Philadelphia Press. Ah Artistic Debt "The theater owe3 a great deal to the Shakespearean drama," said tha girl with the dark glasses and tho pensive ex pression. "Yes," answered the young man with wide ears; "some of the best burlesques I ever saw were on 'Hamlet' and 'Romeo and Juliet.' "Washington Star. The trembling Boxer knelt before Id Hung Chang and strove to explain matters. "I must have lost my head. I see no other reason why I engaged In the uprising. O Son of the Blue Sky," he walled. "You are a trifle off In your grammar," Interposed LI. "You should cay. ! will have lost my head.' " And the ex. cautioner stepped forward at the proper signal. Baltimore American. EVOLUTION. "I Am Great and Vou Are Small" or, the Survival of the Fittest. A sparrow swinging on a branch Once caught a passing fly. "Oh. let me live!" the Insect prayed. With trembling, pietous cry. "No," said the sparrow, "you must fall. For I am great and yeu are small." The bird had scarce begun his feast Before a hawk came by. 5- " The game was caught. "Pray let me llvel -Was now the sparrow's cry. "No," said the captor, "you must fall, For I am great and you are small." An eagle saw the rogue and swooped Upon him from on high. , "Pray let me live! Why would you kill So small a bird as I?" "Oh," said the eagle, "you must fall. For I am great and you are small." But while he ate the hunter came;. He let his arrow fly. "Tyrant," tho eagle, shrieked, "you hava No right to make me die!" "Ah," said the hunter, "you must fall, Fr I am great and you are small." Translated frem tho German in Fresby terian Standard, Charlotte, N. C.