6 THE MOUSING OREGONIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1901. fre regomcm Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Sdltorlal Rooms ICO I Business Office. ..OCT. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance . Dally, -with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year.. ....... Dally, with Sunday, per year 8 00 Sunday, per year - 00 The Weekly, per year..... 1 50 The Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays excepted.ISc Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 10-page paper 16 to 32-page paper c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories trom Individuals, and cannot undertake to re issrn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 PaclCc avenue, Tacoma. -Box DM. Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office 17. 48. 40 and 59 Tribune building. New York City; 4C0 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth. special agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 740 .Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold emlth Bros., 230 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1003 Market street; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand. For sale In Loa Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 100 Bo. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. C17 Dearborn street For sale In Omaha by H. Shears, 105 N. -Sixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros., 1C12 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 7T W. Second South street. For aale In New Orleans by Ernest & Co., 115 Royal street. On file In Washington, D. C. with A. "W. JJunn, 500 14th N. W. For aale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrick. 000-012 Seventh street. - TODAY'S WEATHER. Occasional rain and cooler, with southerly winds. . I PORTLAND, FRIDAY, MARCH 1. Suppose the United States were at war with Great Britain in the Carib bean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico what sort of a figure in affairs would be cut by this Cuban constitutional provision that the Island shall not be the basis of military operations "for the United States or any other country"? Ja maica is one of the factors in control of those waters, Cuba is the other. To contemplate that we should use our own ports only while Great Britain had the use of Jamaica is to make a proposal most foolish and unlikely. Not only that, but who is going to enforce such a provision? Cuba cannot do It alone, so her only dependence for re pelling foreign attack rests with the United States. It is little short of pre posterous, therefore, for the Cubans to nact that when the United States is at war with a European state it has no more privileges there than are equally open to our foe. Yet all these things are protoably getting far more attention and airj of importance than they de serve. "iVhat relations Cuba sustains to the United States and the United States ti i Cuba are not for the constitu tes there or swelling Senators here to determine In advance. They will be determined by events. How worse than bootless it is to attempt to control the future by joint resolutions Is seen In the Spanish War and the declarations that preceded It, just as the Civil War long before had also abundantly demonstrated. If Congress Is governed by common sense, it will make annexation so desirable that Cuba shall hurry into the Union of Its own accord. It will be the part of childish folly to grant Independent Cuba the trade privileges she will be entitled to expect after annexation. This Is the way to settle the Cuban problem. Do not imagine, because the opposi tion In the Senate is allowed to discuss the Spooner amendment without reply, that there is no reply to make. These panegyrics to liberty and eulogies at the tomb of the Constitution are of fered with a very definite object In view, and that object is to deny the Administration authority to act in the Philippines. The hope is to delay and defeat the bill. It Is a cruel fate for the Republican Senators to have to sit still and repress the tomes of oratory on tap for their side of the question, but It Is the necessary price of passage of the amendment. There was a real danger In the Spooner amendment in its original form, because it lacked the very proper reservation to Congress of disposal of the public lands in the Phil ippines; but the danger has been elim inated through adoption of the Hoar amendment supplying that lack. The object of the Spooner measure is to authorize the President to inaugurate civil government In the Islands. With out such authorization, he is merely in military occupation there under the treaty of Paris. But why should the artis hesitate to grant such author its? Partly because they cherish a vague but vain hope that somehow evacuation may yet set the seal of ap proval upon their scuttle policy; but principally they hesitate because with the enactment of the Spooner measure there will pass away the last shred of their pretense that the'President Is act ing in the Philippines without authority of Congress. So long as he hasn't au thority they can denounce him. Once it is granted, their complaint falls. Here is the meaning of the long battle and spirited addresses of Wednesday. It Is a discreditable move in a lost game. Much baseless legend is doubtless in corporated in the popular Idea that the electoral college was created as a body of picked men to select a President Upon deliberation. This conception has recently been opposed by Chief Justice Nott, of the United States Court of Claims, who points out that if It had been intended to make the electoral college a deliberative body It would -naturally have been allowed to meet in a single place. Instead, the Constitu tion provides that the members shall meet in their several states. The con vention voted down a provision to allow them to assemble In Washington so that in case of a failure to elect they might ballot until an election was se cured. Justice Nott argues that this action showed that the electors were expected merely to register the will of the people. If we eliminate this aspect of the electoral college from consid eration as unwarranted, we are Inevi tably thrown brack upon, the simple fact that the device was nothing more or less than a concession of practical poll- tics, made necessary as a condition of the Constitution's acceptance by the smaller states. In the Constitutional convention Madison favored an elec tion by the people, but he believed the smaller states would not consent. How carefully their Interests were safe guarded Is evident In the fact that to day Illinois, with eighty-five times as many people as Nevada, casts only eight times as many electoral votes. This is not to say that the electoral college has not worked well, or that It can or should be superseded by any other device. It simply shows that the lofty ideals of the Fathers were re fracted through some very cracked and twisted prisms of conflicting interests. Conger was never anything but a fidgety politician of the wasp type, and when he was transferred from Brazil to China pursuant to some trade in which the Brazilian mission was in volved, the Administration was warned that It might expect trouble from him if matters of grave import should arise. The Pekin horror and the stress of subsequent negotiations have silenced criticisms and caused the country to maintain an attitude of dignified for bearance and waiting towards all the actors in the melancholy affair. Noth ing is left us now, however, but the conclusion that Conger's offenses have not rieen all of the nature of blood thirstiness, and that little in his Pekin career will become him like the leav ing pf It. There has been, we cannot doubt, ugly feelbng between our diplo mats in China and the military. Accu sations have been bandied back and forth, and throughout the whole the brave, humane and dignified bearing of Chaffee will pretty surely be found to have stood out In bold relief against Conger's desire for "recognition" and cries for blood. It Is remarkable, on the whole, considering the exigencies of our yellow journalism, that the Pe kin bickerings have been so well screened by correspondents from the American public. Conger's recall will not only set the seal of official dis trust upon his course, but also release the true story of his exploits for pub lication. The moral, of course, will be the mischief of selecting diplomats for political services rather than for fit ness. A correspondent inquires whether The Oregonlan, in its recent editorial on Washington, Is correct In saying: "Washington was born higher than Patrick Henry, who belonged to the poor white class, but lower than the Randolphs and the Lees." The Orego nlan is correct In the sense that Patrick Henry, while he came of intelligent and Intellectual stock, did not belong to the well-to-do, landholding gentry of "Vir ginia. Among the very wealthy land holding gentry of "Virginia were the Lees and the Randolphs. Washington did not belong to this class, but to the minor gentry, men who had a very con siderable landed estate, but were not in the first rank of colonial wealth. Pat rick Henry's father was a Scotch immi grant from Aberdeen, who was scholar enough to keep a grammar school and was a surveyor. Patrick was one of nine children. He kept a country store with his brother for a time, tried farm ing, was not successful, and at 24 be came a lawyer. His father was a poor man in distinction from a rich, land holding Virginian, and Patrick did not socially stand as high as Washington, whose father was a large landholder and a man of sufficient property so that Washington's patrimony would have supported him. Measured by his edu cation, Patrick Henry probably was better equipped than Washington, if he learned all his father could have taught him. But the evidence Is strong that In boyhood he was an Idle scholar, and Jefferson, as recorded In Daniel Web ster's autobiography, says that while Henry was a man of astonishing genius as an orator, he had no taste for books, returning to him "Hume's Essays" un read, saying that "he could not under stand such books." Henry confessed this with embarrassment, saying that in his boyhood he had been hunting when he should have been at his books. DRINKING IX EUROPE. The popular notion that the "saloon" is peculiarly an American Institution is a mistake. The drlnklng-places in England and Scotland are called "pub lic houses," "boozing kens," "ale houses." efc In Germany there are "beer halls" and "wine shops," ahd Paris is full of drinking shops of all sorts, as anybody who ever read" Zola's novel of "Drink" can testify. And in all these countries the consumption of alcohol In various forms is greater than In America. France consumes annu ally 925,000,000 gallons of wine, or 24.25 gallons per head of the population. Germans' comes next with 76,000,000 gal lons, or 1.5 gallons per head. In the United States 21,500,000 gallons of wine are consumed annually, or only three tenths of a gallon to each Inhabitant. The annual consumption of wine In the United Kingdom was four-tenths of a gallon per head, or 16,000,000 gallons. Germany consumes 1,382,000,000 gallons of beer annually, or 26 gallons to each inhabitant The United Kingdom con sumes 31.S gallons per head of popula tion, or 1,250,000,000 gallons. The United States consumes 920,000,000 gallons a year, or 12.6 gallons per head of pop ulation. France consumes 205,000,000 gallons, or 5.3 gallons per head. The total consumption of ardent spirits In France reaches 74,000,000 gallons, or 1.94 gallons per head of population. Ger many consumes 100,000,000 gallons of spirits per year, or 1.02 gallons per head. The United States consumes 63, 000,000 gallons of liquor, which is equal to eighty-six one-hundredths of a gal lon per inhabitant. These figures show that Americans are decidedly the most abstemious, whether -the alcoholic bev erage be wine, beer or spirits. The United Kingdom stands next, and yet Scotland, celebrated for the industry. the thrift and intelligence of her people, is a very drunken country. The offi cial report on the judicial statistics of Scotland for the year 1899 says: The saloon Is with us. It remains terribly clear that we are farther than ever from get ting rid of the huge volume of drunkenness and disorder which mark Scottish statistics so unfavorably, as compared with those of other countries. Last year the number of persons so charged rose to 112,083, another record figure. The Dundee Advertiser says: "In the matter of sheer, besotted, overmaster ing drunkenness we stand without riv als in shameful isolation." There is lit tle or no intemperance in Spain, Italy, or Southern Europe generally. There is little intemperance in Southern Ger many, where beer and wine are manu factured, but It is not for lack of "saloons"; that is, "beer halls" and wine shops. In the cold climate of Northern Germany, where the drink is cheap alcohol made from' potatoes, there Is much drunkenness. There is much intemperance in Norway and Sweden and Northern Russia. In a broad sense hard drinking in Europe seems to be largely a matter of climate. The countries that produce beer and wine easily are temperate, while the countries whose climate Is too cold for winegrowing consume great quantities of cheap spirits, the consumption of which has greatly Increased In France since the ravages of the phylloxera made wine dearer than vile spirits. In the United States drunkenness has de creased In proportion to the population since we became less given to the ex clusive use of ardent spirits and have enlarged our area of wlnemaklng and the consumption of beer. Regulation of the liquor traffic in New Tork State under, the Raines law shows some excellent results. Since the law went Into operation In the Spring of 189G, there has been collected under It for the privilege of selling liquor In. the Empire State more than 561,250,000. Despite the large- Increase In the popu lation of New York State within the four years, the number of places where liquor Is sold has decreased from the last year of the old excise law to the first year of the new law by over 6000; while in this period the arrests for drunkenness have decreased from twelve In 1000 to nine In 1000. The Raines law puts the liquor business, like any other business, under the do main of law, which fully protects as well as vigorously punishes; and so far as it Is an evil it Is not peculiar to the poor and the conditions of pov erty, for relatively there Is as much drinking- among the well-to-do as among the poor. CHINA'S OMINOUS OUTLOOK. The heads of two Chinese dignitaries, who were conspicuous abettors of the Boxer assault upon the Legations, have fallen by the hand of the public execu tioner at Pekin; two others are soon to be executed at Sinan Fu. What then? What is the probable outlook for China? It is not probable that Count von Waldersee seriously Intends to send an expedition to Slnan Fu. Such an expedition would require long prepara tion, a. strong force and water trans portation on a large scale. It could doubtless reach Slnan Fu, but its suc cess would mean the first step toward the dismemberment of China, which Is not the purpose of the allies. If It were necessary to exert military' pres sure on China, it would be done by a naval force on the Yangtse Klang, which could cut off the southern half of the empire from Slnan Fu, while light-draught gunboats on the Hoang Ho would close another avenue of com munication with the new capital. Such Important steps Involve the united action of the powers, and would not be approved by Russia, the United States or France. In her substantial domination In Manchuria, Russia has obtained all that she cares at present to secure, and the United States, not only as a matter of justice to China, but of fidelity to our commercial Inter ests, desires a return to peaceful con ditions at the earliest moment. Our cotton mills at the South are on half time because the Chinese market Is cut j off. The reduction of $5,000,000 in out cotton exports to China is a serious loss, while our prospect of supplying China with American rails and rolling stock for her projected railroads has vanished. It is in China that the great est of our markets for iron and steel is ultimately to be secured, for when peace comes railway equipment, ma chinery, tools, electric supplies, bridges, structural Iron work of all kinds, will be In large demand there. It Is reported that China Is anxious to negotiate her Indemnity loan to the United States rather than to Europe, because all China already knows that from the taking of the Taku forts to the present date the United States has been conspicuous for the moderation of its demands and the humanity of its action. At a recent banquet at Hankow, at which an American Naval officer was present, the speech of the leading Chinese dignitary referred to the fact that alone of all powers the United States refused to fire on the Taku forts. When peace does come with China, and she Is once more the seat of a valuable trade, there is every reason to believe that the United States will be able to restore her com merce to Its old volume and probably increase it. Nevertheless, peace will not be fully restored In a day, for the hostility of China to the foreigner has been increased and intensified by the recent outbreak. The chief cause of permanent irritation arises from the extra-territoriallty which Is the central Idea of all the treaties with foreign nations. Under .these treaties the for eign merchant is In a privileged posl Jion and Is withdrawn from Chinese jurisdiction. The missionary Is simi larly beyond the reach of Chinese law. The only efficient remedy for this long standing cause of Irritation' and hostil ity consists, according to Jjjir Robert Hart, in treating China as any other civilized nation is treated. If the West ern nations would only agree to give up extra-terrltorlallty In all their treaties, there would be friendly relations at once with China; trade would be per mitted everywhere; the Investment of foreign capital would be Invited and protected, and the development of In ternal resources energetically encour aged. Without this friendliness ob tained by submission to Chinese juris diction, there will be small material progress In the near future. The Chinese statesmen, are not fools. In the English and French war with China in 1860 Prince Kung, the brother of the reigning Emperor, said: "Take away your opium and your missionaries and all will be well"; and later a Chi nese Prime Minister, Wen Hslang, said: "Cancel your extra-terrltorlallty clause and merchants and missionaries may go everywhere." Russia may restore to China her sovereign rights in these respects, but there Is small hope that the other Western powers would make this concession. And yet without it there can be no real peace or-satlsfac-tory traffic with China for any Jong term of years to come. The partition of China could doubtless be accom plished, but It would not endure any longer than the time necessary for the Chinese to learn all Europe can teach them about the modern art of war and military transport, and then the Chi nese would rise up and expel the for eigner, for then it would be the Insur rection of eighteen great provinces of 400,000,000 of people instead of two or three provinces with a population of 50,000,000. The partition of China is, of course. possible, but Its life would be main tained at a cost of men and treasure that Europe could not afford. Such a scheme Russia, France and the United States would not support. Permanent peace and resumption of trade must come through some modification of the old-time methods of the foreigners in dealing with China. The reformation of China is only possible through the reformation of the bitterly offensive foreign methods which kindled resent ment and fostered It until it broke Into open violence In the Pekin Prov ince. The allies have used the most sacred temples of the Chinese religion In Pekin as the feeding-places for the horses of their cavalry. The British turned the old South Church In Boston Into a stable for their cavalry, and yet they did not conquer America. THE RULE FOR NEUTRALS. Richard Harding Davis ought to know hetter. than to denounce the pur chase of mules and horses by British agents In this country as a violation of the obligation of neutrals. Horses and mules captured on the high seas by the cruisers of either belligerent flag would be held contraband of war If there was evidence they were intended for the service of either belligerent, but the sale of contraband of war to either belligerent Is not a violation of the obligation of neutrals. Great Brit ain has the same right to buy horses here as the Boers had to buy munitions of war. The sale of all war material, except ships equipped for war or built so as to be equipped. Is not a violation of our obligation as a neutral power. Our neutrality laws forbid the use of our territory as a base for military organ ization. Troops cannot be enlisted and organized, but Individuals can go as In dividuals to any war. English officers and German officers and French officers served on both sides during our Civil War, but they Joined as individuals. Men went from this country to join the Boers, but they could not go as sol diers. Horses can be bought and sent, but they must not be organized Into cavalry companies on our soil. A pri vate firm can sell naval guns, but cannot furnish an armed cruiser. Am munition may be bought, but It cannot be put In the magazines of a ship of war In our harbors. Agents may buy munitions of war, but they must be bought and shipped like any other mer chandise. We enforce today dgalnst Great Brit ain and the Boers the same policy we did against France and Great Britain in the Napbleonlc Avars. In our Civil War the subjects of Great Britain sold contraband of war without restraint to the Confederates, but when the English shipbuilders began to fit out Confeder ate armed cruisers from their yards the British Government on the peremptory demand of our Government was obliged to Interfere, for this was as clear a breach of neutral obligations as it would have been to have raised and organized on British soil a Confederate brigade. Sir John Crampton, British Minister at Washington, was recalled on demand of our Government, which charged him with attempting to enlist soldiers In this country for the Crimean War of 1854-56. The Pennsylvania Legislature has unanimously passed, and the Governor has signed, resolutions addressed to Congress under article 5 of the Consti tution. The scandal of Quay's re-election has drawn the attention of the country to the defects of the present system. The Addlcks deadlock In Del aware has already given rise to charges of bribery; the deadlock In Nebraska threatens to leave the state wholly un represented In the next Congress, and the deadlock In Montana Is another sig nificant fact. A State Senator of Mas sachusetts who has served some years In one of the worst of our boss-ridden states writes the Springfield Republi can as follows: My experiences of the last threo years con vince me that unles something Is done to pre vent the enormous expenditures of money In order to control state Legislatures In favor of certain aspirants for membership In the United States Senate, and the purchare of votes after the Legislatures have assembled, the Senate will won be degraded into a stock board In which the price is fixed upon each seat; and I am convinced It would be- Infinitely better tor some states If the United States Senatorshlps were put up at auction and the proceed of the sale of the seat turned Into the public treasury. This would lessen the amount of bribery, and nt the come time would, be add ing a handsome sum every few years to the state treasury- A member of the Montana State Sen ate complimented the "Father of His Country" a few days ago by voting for him upon the daily roll-call for United States Senator. Upon being asked fa cetiously If he did not know that George Washington was dead, he replied: "Cer tainly; but some of your fellows have been voting for men who are polltlcally just as dead for thirty-three days, have you not?" Of course, not being an Ore gon legislator, this honorable Senator could not have had our Hermann In mind, nor yet our senior United States Senator, who but now stidly turned his face eastward to finish up work that he never began. ' The returns of the foreign trade of the United States for January Indicate a vast and constant strengthening of our financial relations with the rest of the world. The first month of the twen tieth century, as shown by the records, has distanced even the stupendous trade of the corresponding month of the preceding year. The value of exports for the month was $136,317,354; that of the imports, ?G9,100,194, or at the rate of $1,600,000,000 for exports, leaving an an nual trade balance of $500,000,000 in our favor. Office-holders under the present Port land regime are asking Governor Geer to veto the new charter. But In a pure Democracy like ours, should there be 'discrimination in favor of one crowd against another? Is not one ring of grafters just as worthy as another? Mrs. Sltton is the first woman candi date for School Director. Voters should take their chivalry with them to the polls. The St Louis Exposition is to be closed on Sunday. How would Oregon barbers like that with our exposition? If it were not for military experts at London, the cause of England In South Africa would be hopeless. ' Mrs. Nation has become an editor for rest, and not to make the pen mightier than the hatchet. ELASTIC CURRENCY THE SAFEST- St. Paul Pioneer Press. While there Is not the slightest prospect that the Senate in the crush of business now upon It could act upon the Lover lng currency bill before the close of the session, the passage of that measure by the House would have an immense educa tional value, and help to prepare the country for a similar measure In the next Congress. It would serve to attract attention to the matter, evoke criticism and furnish a series of texts upon which the principles of sound currency might bo preached. The Loverlng bill, it may not be superfluous to point out again, provides for a bank currency pro portioned to the paid-up capital of the issuing bank, guaranteed by the Treas ury and secured by a safety fund. While It leaves the bond-secured Issue Intact. It initiates a system of elastic currency and provides for the gradual Increase of the Issue. The purpose of the bill is to give a practical illustration of the benefits of an elastic currency, and thus to do away with the groundless prejudice which hs thus far prevented the adop tion of a system that has proved itself In other countries to be Invaluable and freo from defects and dangers of the bond-secured currency, whose distinguish ing feature is that it is so incapable of automatically responding to the needs of business that during the decade when the business of the country and the need of money was most rapidly expanding, the volume of bank notes fell off more than SO per cent, or from $35S.100,000 In 1SS2 to ?1CS,000,000 in 1SD1. Not only over long periods, but over short periods, has this absurd currency shown Itself utterly Irresponsive. The cost of the bonds, the difficulty of securing them and other factors, not only made the tesue of notes comparatively unprofitable to the banks, but made It Impossible for them to use this sort of money to send to the West or the South when there was a sud den local demand. During the depression, when new bond issues and the slowness of the market brought down the price of bonds, there was a partial recovery In the volume of banknotes. But that occurred at the very time when business was Inactive and there was the least de mand for money. It is needless to point out that the want of a practical currency such as all other progressive countries have has Imposed a handicap upon business in the United States, has aggravated disasters and re tarded recovery. But In spite of the pal pable defects of our rigid system of cur rency and the freedom of other countries from the evils to which it gives rise, there remain many prejudices against the in stitution of an elastic currency. One of the most widespread objections to the substitution of notes secured by the as sets of the banks Instead of by United States bonds Is that the security would be Insufficient, and that the holders of notes of a falling bank might suffer loss. As a matter of fact, the provisions of the Loverlng bill, or of any of the numerous bills for the institution of a rational bank currency Introduced or suggested, give ab solute security. They all have proposed a safety fund made up of the proceeds of a tax not exceeding 1 per cent of the circulation of the Issuing banks. The Loverlng bill and other -bills that have been introduced provide also that the Government shall have -either a first or a ratable Hen on the assets of failed banks to indemnify It for the redemption of the notes, and that if the assets are Insuffi cient, to reimburse It, it shall reimburse itself from the safety fund. In other words, the Government guarantees the im mediate redemption of the notes of failed banks, thus giving to the noteholders absolute assurance against loss, and re imburses itself from the assets of the failed bank and the safety fund. That the safety fund, composed of the pro ceeds of a 1 per cent tax on circulation, is more than ample to protect the Govern ment against loss as thoroughly as it protects the noteholder Is not only as sured by tho experience of Canada, where the safeguards are much weaker than those of the Loverlng bill, but by tho statistics of failed banks In the United States since the national banking system was established. The Lovering bill pro poses to allow the Issue of notes t,o a maximum of only 40 per cont of the paid up capital, but Representative Broslus, of Pennsylvania, recently pointed out that if we suppose that the banks had been allowed to Issue circulation to 3) per cent of their paid-up capital, and had been re quired to pay 1 per cent thereon for the safety fund, the total amount In 3G years that would have been paid out of that fund to reimburse the Government for Its redemption of tho notes of failed nation al banks would have been $69,211, If tho Government held the prior Hen on the assets. If It haa held a raiame nen xne loss to be paid out of the safety fund would have aggregated only ?3,961,16S. In the first case the amount remaining in the safety fund last October would have been $130,953,457. and In the second case, $124,5SS,201. In the light of these figures, based on actual failures over a period of 26 years, it Is clear that notes necured by such an arrangement as this would be as absolutely certain of redemption, even without the Government guarantee, as they are with United States bonds behind them. Xapoleon'M Evil Eye Goldwin Smith In The Atlantic. Lord Russell, when the present writer, Questioned him about Napoleon's iQok, said, and emphatically repeated, that there was something very evil In hls;'eye. He added that the eye flashed, at an. allu sion to the excitement of war as con trasted with the dullness of Elba. A fea ture In the character which perhaps has hardly been enough noticed waB a sheer lust of war, and especially of battfes. the emotions of which Uapoleon seems to have owned, were agreeable to him. It ap pears not improbable that this had a share, together with his insatiable ambi tion and his political need of glory, In launching him on his mad Invasion of Russia, for which it is difficult to assign any political purpose, as he refused to restore the kingdom of Poland. Another feature not much noticed in Na poleon's character is his classicism. In his early days he had employed his gar rison leisure partly in reading Roman his tory; and instead of being repelled he had been fascinated by the presentation of the Roman Empire in Tacitus. We see the result In his Eagles, his Legion of Honor, his political nomenclature and the general cast of his political institutions. Perhaps the image of the Roman Empire as a model for reproduction floated vaguely be fore his mind as it does before those of our Imperialists at the present day. A grosser anachronism. It Is needless to say, there could not be than an attempt to im pose on the European family of living na tions anything like the yoke Imposed by Rome on a set of conquered provinces in which national spirit was extinct. Twelve Thousand Heroes. Richard Harding Davis. I was told at Washington that the rea son the regimental officers did not re ceive the Medal of Honor, for which they were recommended on account of their braver' at the charge of San Juan Hill, was because the Government argued that If It gave the medal to one man there was no good reason why It should not give It to 12.000. A virtue which is shared by 12.000 men must be a common virtue. As a matter of fact, tho members of the Knickerbocker Club in the Rough Riders Regiment and the negro regulars, who, had they not been soldiers, would have been barbers and servants, reached the top of the hill at exactly the same time. This Is not said In bellttlement of cour age, certainly not of this particular ex hibition of it, which was to me one of the most moving and magnificent spec tacles of a lifetime, but rather to suggest that we have cause for congratulation In the fact that tho proportion of brave men Is so great. One might almost say that all men are brave. THE TARIFF TO THE FRONT. Louisville Courier-Journal. The suggestion made In the financial columns of the New York Sun that if the great steel combination expects to sur vive Its members ought to go before Con gress and announce their willingness to accept a fair tariff law has much more In It than casual readers may think. Tho Sun is a partisan Republican organ, which has always been an advocate of protection, and the expression car. not be regarded as an editorial opinion. Still, the observation made is one that comes so naturally to students of present economic conditions that it is not surprising to find it in any newspaper. The process of consolidation in the steel industry Is a direct Invitation to the reduction of the tariff on iron and steel. The bill offered by Mr. Babcock the other day Is only a forerunner oi wnai Is to come. If any purpose seems to be clearly defined in tho formation of this gigantic syndicate apart from the remov al of domestic competition In steel, It is the capturing of the world's markets. It is Inevitable that China will be opened up to development In the course of a very" few years, and South Africa and Russia are Inviting fields, to say nothing of what is promised in our new colonies and Jn Cuba and South America. It will be Im possible, however, for the foreign trade to be developed In competition with Brit ish and German manufacturers and at the same time keep up the prohibitive duties now imposed upon steel products. So far sighted a manufacturer ns Mr, Carnegie In 1S72 proposed to have an adjustment of tariff rates justified by the development In steel manufacture, and this develop ment has since been enormous. We are now competing successfully with the Brit ish in their own colonies; selling at ma terial reductions from their prices. The placing of the tariff on a revenue basis must Inevitably follow this general low ering of prices to foreign customers, for with the abolition of high protective du ties there would go tho mecnanism u which such trusts as the American Steel & Wire Company are enabled to ex tort exorbitant profits on commodities sold at home. It can no longer be pleaded that American manufacturers must be protected against the pauper labor of Eu rope when they are able to undersell the products of that labor abroad. St. Louis Exposition Closed ton San-' days. Chicago Tribune. The Senate has passod tho House bill appropriation Jo.OOO.OOO for the exposition at St. Louis to commemorate the cento nary of tho Louisiana purchaso, but It has tacked an amendment to the bill forbid ding the opening of the gates on Sunday. The St. Louis managers are said to be angry because of this restriction. It Is natural that they should wish to settle questions of this kind themselves, but they should not take the matter seriously to heart. Chicago's experience In regard to Sunday attendance at the World's Fair showed that It does not pay to keep tho gates open on that day. It is true that the Sunday opening in Chicago was not complete, as the machinery did not run, but It Is doubtful whether the attendance would have been any larger In any case. If the popular sentiment against Sunday openlng was sufficiently widespread In Chicago to reduce the attendance below the profitable point. It Is probable that It would be still more marked In St. Louis, for the tendency to strict Sabbatarianism Increases as one goes toward the South. The St. Louis fair officials should accept their 45.000,000 with good grace, and should be glad the Sunday question has been settled for them In advance. Still more should they be thankful that their bill escaped the amendment which certain temperance organizations wished to attach to It. forbidding the sale of all alcoholic beverages on the grounds. That would have been a blow which would have af fected their finances much more seriously. The Breton Fensant. Contemporary Review. If there Is a country where tho tra dition of hatred of "tho Englishman" as a hereditary enemy still holds, It Is In Catholic Brittany. In the eyes of the Bre ton peasants and fishermen, the English man Is the enemy with whom they have fought battles and will fight them again. That Is to say, the Englishman stands for the typical sailor of a man-of-war or torpedo-boat, whom they will fight when the time comes for the attack, but no one thinks of him as a man. The enemy Is a unit of war. something outside ordinary life, a being In uniform whom it Is glori ous to kill. He Is "the enemy" some thing which will do, great mischief tb France If one does not take care, some thing which must be much more terrible and dangerous than they can imagine, since all the men of France lose the best years of their youth In learning to kill this eventual adversary. If ever the peasants come clearly to realize that tho only use of war is to kill people like themselves; If ever each soldier becomes capable of Imagining what the shock of two armies la, and by what complicated series of lies and Intrigues people are brought to the point of killing each other, the work of neace congresses will be wonderfulIsrBlm- Dlffled. 9 Mrs. Dublin and the Clubs.l Josh Wink In Baltimore American.' Mrs. Aramlnta Dubbs, President of fifteen clubs, Member of a3 many more, 'Soclate In half a score. "Wrote, And read. And sang. And said. In her clubs from dawn till bed. She was ever on the go "Must not mis my club, you know." Daybreak, Health, and Breakfast clubs Honored Aramlnta Dubbs. Morning club, from 0 to 10, Browning club then on again Luncheon club, and Sisterhood, Eucher club, and Better Food. Ibsen club, and Amateurs, Had for her their clubby lures. Smile And chat Of this And that "Faith," or "How to Trim a Hat," "Latest Searches for the Pole," "What We Know About the Soul." k "Woman's Sphere," and "Help the Men." "How to Treat a Setting Hen." "Ibsen's Mystic Inner Thought." "Whlchneas of the Why and What," "Immortality of Plays," "Is the Walklns Skirt a Craze?" "Wireless Messages to Man," "Chats With Famous Female Stars" To And fro. And on The go- o Mrs. Dubbs was never slow jT lumcu uuu w.vfcc f f 5 ...... .,, Took course In cooking, too. Sorrow came, though, after while. In a very sudden etyle. Mr. Dubbs bocame quite III; But. with martyr's Iron will. Mrs. Aramlnta Dubbs Kept her ceaseless round of clubs. Till one afternoon, when she Was, as sweetly aa could be, Speaking, with much grace and life. On "The Duties of a Wife" To the Maids and Matron's guild. All her eloquence was stilled By A card Which her Speech marred Dubbs" soul had been unbarred. Mrs. Dubbs repressed a elgh. Said, " 'Twas mean of him to die, Just as I'm about to reach Finest part of all ray speech!" But. of course, she had to quit. And that was the end of It. For, when she had burled Dubbs, Sad to tell, all of the clubs Had another on her throne. And she found herself alone. She Who Btubs Her too On clubs Should heed the fata of Mrc Dubbs. NOTE AND COMMENT. Fine July weather, this. The Legislature has adjourned, but the evil that men do lives after them. Conger has been recalled from China. He Is too vengeful for Christian passlve ness and non-resistance. It is said that Mark Hanna Is yet un decided about an extra session of Congress. The prospect ' of government without regular semi-annual revolution Is too dull for the Cuban patriot. Tho Omaha kidnaping has furnished more inspiration to writers of fiction than the War of the Revolution. Once upon a time there was no coal in Oregon. Now there Is so much that everybody is wary of mining i't. Henrik Ibsen is suffering from, an illness which his physicians can not understand. One of his plays must have struck In. It is said that cold food prevents peo ple from becoming fat. This will supply the Summer girl with another argument. Dave Hill is yet a Democrat in spite of all the rcent thicks and thins. In this fact, at least, Is virtue worthy a reward. There seems to be some difference of opinion as to the merits of the Port of Portland bill passed by the' Legislature. There was a free fight yesterday on the floor of the Austrian Relchrath. Congress is, by comparison, rather a peaceable body. Now that Democrats from Multnomah ran the Senatorial business, is the rest of the state still impatient of Multnomah dictation? It is said that McBride Is entitled to re ward for his getting out of the way of Mitchell. But did he get out of the way voluntarily, or was he put out of the way? There is a rebellion against the Sultan of Wandal. It's an 111 wind that blows nobody good. Tho rebellion gives thq Sultan a long looked for opportunity to be heard of. Tho Almond Branch has gone, thank fortune. We are always glad to have deep sea vessels in port, but, on the whole. It Is just as well not to have them as a permanent exhibit. The cities of Puget Sound are anxiously hoping for another railroad to Portland. Both Seattle and Tacoma arc capable of becoming very flourishing suburbs, with better transportation facilities. Superintendent HoweU, of tho Scran ton. Pa., schools, has proposed a plan for Instructing the pupils as to the manner In which a President of the United States is elected. The demonstration Is to be a practical one. Each school is to consti tute a convention, and each pupil Is to write an essay giving the history of a Presidential campaign from the begin ning to the Inauguration. After these are completed, a platform committee will be appointed In each school to prepare reso lutions or declarations of party princi ples, after which tho election will be held, each pupil voting for his candidate- for President. The election is expected to take place in March. Many advantages are to bo had from practice of this kind, and there is no reason why it should be confined to Presidential elections. The "poetess in "Huckleberry Finn" was always right on hand with her trib utes to the dear departed, a quality in which she is imitated by the yellow newspaper. So anxious are many of these Journals to furnish their readers with llfa llke pictures of the Ill-fated Rio do Jan eiro that they pressen into secvlce all kinds of craft for models. In many papers she Is a fine Atlantic liner, with three smokestacks. In others she wears a full three-masted rig, whllo in still others she Is about tho size and appearance of the average tug. There Is nothing like being prompt in such a time. The slight probability that the Rio will be raised made it safe to print any old thing as a picture of her, and many a noble "beat" was landed by papers which had stock cuts of steamboats like which the Rio ought in reason to look. While disliking. Mr. Weather Clerk, to seem to Interfere With other people's business, still It strikes U3 It Is clear That you've sidetracked February and have let the months slip by. Till we wake and find we've landed In the mid dle of July. We are slow to tell a, fellow how his business should be run. But It's plain you've made a blunder, and that something should be done. Hero It h In February, Just the month of all the year When outdoors should be an eager and a nip ping atmosphere. When the Btars should shine and twinkle with with a radiant arctic light. And the frost should paint the sMewalks and the roofs and fencc3 white; f And Instead of that the butter melts dejectedly awav And the flies come forth in legions at the dawning of the day. We admit by education and experience that you Should be fitted for the duties that are given you to do. But unto a rank outsider it would very much appear As If you'd let your heat machine get sadly out of gear. Tou'd better don your overhauls and go to work tonight. And try to see It you can't get the thing to running right. . . PLEASANTRIES OP rARAGRAFUERS Uncle Well, Johnny, are you at the head of your class Johnny No: but I can lick the fellow that Is. Tlt-Blts. As to the Prima Donna. "I think she's los ing her voice." "Possibly; but I'm afraid It will Inst through this opera!" Puck. Selfishness Is the meanest thing In the world unless something can be made by It, says the modern Solomon. Boston Transcript. Anxious to Live. "Poor Emma! She has so much to live for." "Tea; they say her hus band's life Is Insured for 530,000." Harlem Life. "I wish you to pose for a centaur, one of those creatures half horse and half man, you know." "Yes. sor; which half do I pose fort" Brooklyn Life. Over-Anxious. He Who knows but when I come back from the Philippines you may bo ensaged to some other man? She Nonsense! As If you were coming back without sending me word! Harper's Bazar. "The late editor's wife la something of a hu morlit." "Indeed?" "Yes; took a line from. his original salutatory and placed It on his tombstone." "What was It?" "We are here to stay." Atlanta Constitution. Mrs. Dove My husband always kisses me when he leaves the house In tho morning. Miss Splter Funny how good-natured some men are when they are getting away from home for a whole day. Boston Transcript. "Aren't you afraid of that man who keeps making incendiary speeches?" Inquired the cloze friend. "Not a bit," answered Senator Sorghum. "The only kind of Incendiary who stands a show of making an impression In my bailiwick Is a man who has money to burn." Washington Star.