THE ;MOT?yryq nireopNTAN. MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1001. frjegomos Catered tt the Postoffiee at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms 1G6 1 Business Office.. .087 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). 1n Advance Daily, with Sunday, per month $ S5 Dally, Sunday excepted, ner jear......... 7 M Dally, -with Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 50 The Weekly, 8 months ........ 60 To city Subscribers Dally, per-week, delivered. Sundays excepted.ISc Dally, per week, delivered, Sundaja included-iOc POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 30 to 16-page paper..... .....................lc 10 to 22-pare paper.. ........................2c foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended tor 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 Te addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories Srom Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this Purpose. Puget Sound Bureau -Captain A. Thompson, nice at llil Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box 055. Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office 7. 4S. 49 and 59 Tribune tulldlng. .New Tork City; 4C9 "The Rookery' Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For aale In San Pranclaco by J.'K. Cooper. 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros.. 236 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market street; Foster It. Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 So Spring street. For sale 3n -Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha hy H. C. Shears. 105 N. Sixteenth street, and Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake Tjy th Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. On file In Washington, D. C, -with A. W. Dunn, COO 14th 2C. W. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton i. JCendrlck. 900-912 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, -with probably light frosts in early morning; warmer during afternoon; northerly winds. PORTLAND, MOXDAT, APRIL 15. THE ANTI IN ETHNOLOGY. What the anti is he doubtless cannot help. Who n change his tempera ment? The man that is for silver when the world is running after the gold standard, the man whom social ism irresistibly draws in aa age whose individualism forms its proudest boast this man, be sure, will mistrust the progress and outreaching of his race and country. He will grieve at the bad effects of its institutions at home, and at the same time tremble lest ex pansion may destroy those same Insti tutions with all their mischief. When he looks about him he will see how unfit our standards are to make a great and good people, but when he contem plates '"empire" he fears lest those standards may be changed. To such a man and Professor Ross, of Nebraska, and late of Stanford, is his typical representative political and social science becomes a mere tool to work with. Its truth Is not an end to covet, but its phenomena afford him mere testimony to be twisted to a predetermined plan. The end sought in this case, as Professor Ross distinct ly shows in his Philadelphia address, is the discredit of Anglo-Saxon expan sion, and he seeks that discredit in two ways climatic and economic. Os- tenslblv rtrnlnrln'r -"fho oancoo nt A superiority." Sir. Ross is in reality try- ing to show that we shall fall In the Philippines. This is the key to his labyrinth of apparently ingenuous in quiry, this is the goal to which all his wanderings tend. - We shall fall in the Philippines, he wishes to convey, because we cannot live in the tropics except as we make slaves of their native populations. This, of course, is mere Bryanism, em bellished with academic trimmings. It is the old cry about throttling liberty and making subjects of the Filipinos. It is sufficient to -say, perhaps, that our rule Is undergoing establishment in the archipelago without any slave system, and that our people seem able to live and get along there as well as the Dutch do in the East Indies or the British in India and Egypt. The other reason upon which Mr. Ross seems to rely for discredit of Pa cific expansion is that in the acquisi tive capacity we are at a disadvan tage with the Jew and the Chinaman. He reasons that we shall be worsted by them in the tropics because they have been in trade longer than we have. The extremity of his position is discovered in his desperate recourse to the Jew to support the obviously -weak menace of the .Chinese. How clever the Jew isiin driving a bargain makes very little difference in the expansion situation, unless Mr. Ross can show that the French or German Jew is su perior to the American Jew, which he will hardly attempt, and certainly not successfully. As for his indorsement of the igno Tant superstition of the "yellow peril," it is a humiliating thing to come out of American university life. The polit ical economists of our sand lots and sil ver mines have offered the country, In the name of the Pacific Coast, no more senseless doctrine than this fear of Chi nese and Japanese conquest of our in dustries. It is almost ten years now since Japan began her manufacturing activity which was to undersell and displace our factories. She buys more of us today than she sells us, and is even now willing and anxious to buy more than she can pay for. Nothing is more absurd than the idea that a race of serVile imitators can ever dis tance the race from which it derives its models and its methods. Chinese conquest of Western Indus try Is as baseless a dream as Chinese military conquest of Europe. As a popular superstition it would long ago have died out, except for two agencies the temperamental anti, to whom everything that is is wrong, and the bold buccaneer of politics, who Is con tinually girding on his sword to pro tect American labor. An impression prevails somewhat widely in political circles of Europe that the Kaiser's health is falling through the constitutional troubles that at times have been plainly appar ent throughout his life, and that he Is breaking down mentally. His mood since the late attack upon his life has been altogether strange. Sis latest de vice for protection against any missile that may be hurled at him by imbe ciles or anarchists is to strengthen the imperial coach by sheet armor on the inside, concealed by upholstery. His bodyguard is warned to double dili gence, and is under orders to run any person through who is found loitering susplciously near the imperial carriage. He has made it plainly understood that he has confidence no longer in the com mon people, and that he looks entirely to the military for protection. Nicho las of Russia could scarcely be in. a worse strait than this, but, being a very different kind of man, he conceals his fears and his resentment from the public, and trusts to his bodyguard for protection without railing against his people because such protection 13 neces sary. Both monarchs are, i we are to trust to reports, on the verge of ner vous collapse, and whispers of a re gency are heard in both realms. There Is, of course, much of unverified rumor In all of these reports. There is suffi cient truth in them, however, to justify the probability that neither Nicholas nor William will die in his bod from natural causes, and that neither will have a. long reign. The very essence of anarchistic folly is In the murderous purpose that shadows these rulers, since each upon his death will be instantly succeeded by his heir and the policy of the government will be unchanged. except as the necessity of putting rtuwn anarchy and forestalling revolution may render it more rigorous. ANOTHER BLOW AT THE SAILER. The doom of the sailing vessel has been predicted so often in this age of steam that we are gradually becoming accustomed to the withdrawal of the white-winged argosies of trade from the ocean routes where they once held full sway. The ugly, snub-nosed tramp steamer is driving the symmetrical clipper out of existence, and much of the romance of the sea is going out with it. There is a possibility, of course, of a Renaissance of the sailer at some remote period in the future, when the coal mines are worked out and we go back to first principles, but now its glory is waning. Even the mighty Lloyd's, an institution whose connection with ships and the sea goes back to a period when the navigator "shaped the course before him by the wake he threw behind," are "off with the old love and on with the new." For generations their snrvovnrs In various parts of the. world havebeen shipmasters whose practical training in the service gave them perfect knowl edge of the construction of a ship and what was needed In the way of repairs when she came Into port They were not machinists, but were sailors and navigators. The ocean tramp, how ever, has at last churned his way into favor with the owners, until the great er portion of Lloyd's business comes from the steamers. Last week Lloyd's appointed as surveyor at Puget Sound an engineer who has had charge of the engine-room on one of the Oriental liners running out of Puget Sound ports. Engineers, as a rule, take but little Interest in the navigating end of a ship, and the new appointee of Lloyd's might make a mess of handling a sail ing ship. The fact that "Lloyd's have appointed him to look after their busi ness on .fuget Sound Is a guarantee, however, that he is familiar with the business which the changed conditions of ocean shipping now give that cor poration. He may never have had the pleasure of hanging on to the skysall yard by his eyelids while the scuppers are boiling below, but there are no skysall yards on the modern steamer, and knowledge regarding them would be Iarelv superfluous, except in rare cases, Iron and steel are the successors of wood and canvas in the construction of ocean carriers, and it is more necessary that a Lloyd's surveyor should know all about engines, hollers, etc., than about masts, sails and yards. The cost of a steamer is about three times as great as the cost of a sailer, and nearly all or the expensive disasters to steamers come from trouble In the engine-room. The British engineers are all first class machinists, and they not only know how to repair their engines, but their knowledge of steel and Iron en ables them to determine just how many bolts are needed in a certain plate, angle or beam to secure the greatest strength. They are thus equipped to supervise repairs on the hull as well as the machinery of a steamer. The coalpasser, fireman and deckhand have long ago supplanted the "sailor of the sail," and the action of Lloyd's In substituting engineers for navigators as resident surveyors is the latest and perhaps the greatest tribute that has yet been paid to steam's as cendency on the ocean wave. THE VICE OP SELF-INDULGENCE. The murderer, James G. Green, who, after the aimless manner of the drunken man, wandered to. the place where his victim was spending a pleas ant social evening in company that had rejected association with him, shot through a window and killed E. "V. Benjamin, revealed at his trial the er ratic mind by which his actions were governed. Unable to bear the sight of the grief of the woman who was made a widow by his deed, he suddenly de clared his guilt and his willingness to be hanged without further delay. Re penting this impulse after judicial ac tion had been taken in accordance therewith and he had been convicted of murder in the first degree, he urged his counsel to secure for him, if pos sible, a new trial. Now sullen and silent, and again lachrymose and pro testing; now professing "himself ready for death, and again 'clinging fran tlcally to life, he presents to the pub lic a spectacle at once pathetic and contemptible of the wreck of a human being in the treacherous,shalIowd of self-indulgence. At one moment a ro hust criminal, with nerve to commit a most heinous crime and audacity to confess "it; at another a cringing cow ard, shrinking alike from witnessing the grief that he has caused and from just penalty, this man shows what a libel upon responsible humanity a man may become through falling in the virtue of self-control. The youth and young manhood of this country have seldom had a more strik ing object-lesson In the necessity of cultivating this virtue than that given by this passionate, impulsive, unlet tered woodsman, who, possessing the elements of a sturdy, honorable man hood, industry, -natural kindness of heart, capacity for affection, con stancy, laid all upon the altar of self indulgence and through the unholy sacrifice became that shunned and de spised creature, a man given to ex cess in drinking and "ugly in his cups," and from thence by an easy step a murderer. In dealing with such a man after he has come to this point In his career there is no choice of methods. Tho law. the exponent of public opinion, has pre scribed the penalty, and, though hu mane people may and do regard the victim of self-indulgence with compas sion, they da not -question its justice. Nay, for humanity's sake they are constrained to indorse this stern ac counting, since the safety of the com munity, already fatally infringed upon, demands it. SOCIALISM DEFINED. Mr. R. A. Raver writes us from Prai rie City: Of late I see considerable said about social Ism and socialists. As a constant reader of The Morning Oregonlan, I would like to have you explain, through the morning paper., what socialism Is, and what socialists are trying to accomplish. No definition of socialism will satisfy both Its friends and Its foes, and among Its adherents it is very differently un derstood and applied. There Is prob ably no better general definition of so cialism than that of Professor Ely: Socialism is. that contemplated system of In dustrial society which proposes the abolition of private property in the great material In struments of production, and the substitution tnereror of collective property; and advocates collective management of production, together with the distribution of social Income by so ciety, and private property In tho larger pro portion of this social Income. Yet every writer on socialism has his own definition of socialism. A promi nent encyclopedia, for example, calls the present competitive system, which so cialism aims to overthrow, "anarch ical, a term which only socialists would allow. Many socialists would doubtless repudiate the last clause in Professor Ely's definition, which con templates private property in the in comes received by individuals from the Government. Socialism, as a practical proposal, of course, also varies within wide limits. Some go no further than general opposition to private ownership of land and productive plants. Some go so far as the platform of the Social Democratic party In 1900, which de mands public ownership, not onlv of rairoads, telegraphs, telephones, water works, gas and electric plants and public utilities generally, but also of all mnes, oil and gas wells. Some go so far as to advocate community of own ership of all desirable things, including women. The Adamites, for example carrying socialism to an extremity of logic, went naked and indulged pro miscuous Intercourse, thus escaping nfdre effectually than any of their rival sects the trammels of classes and private ownership. The Oregonian's use of the term "so cialism" In the articles to which Mr. Raver alludes is probably peculiar to Its columns, and should be explained. What The Oregonlan usually has In mind In its references to socialism Is not a system of theory or a code of practice, but a tendency of the time, a growing, disposition to substitute communism for Individualism, an in creasing desire to use the state as a vehicle for support of the thriftless by levying upon the accumulation of the thrifty, an Increasing antagonism to the man who through patience, energy and self-denial accumulates, and an In creasing encouragement to the Incom petent to rely upon society as a whole for sustenance, and even entertainment. Perhaps It is as well to reiterate that to- all these manifestations of the so cialistic tendency The Oregonlan Is Im placably and unreservedly opposed. The order of Nature Is survival of the fittest, rule to the strong, possession. In proportion to efrort.' Under that order progress appears, but with that order superseded hy an artificial sys tem which denies to effort its adequate reward, incentive to exertion disap pears and progress' becomes impossible. This Is the history of socialistic ven tures, which have been scattered through all places and times. The rise of the socialistic spirit is the most dis couraging phenomena of modern so ciety. PROGRESS OF THE GREAT WEST. Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote in the American Magazine of Useful and En tertaining Knowledge in 1838: The farmer who has left a good homestead in New England to migrate to the Mississippi Valley or anywhere else, on this side of heaven; the fresh-cheeked youth who has gone to find his grae in New Orleans; the Yankees who have enlisted for Texas . wflat are these, but a motley group of Aprli fools? The great West was a blank to New England In 1838. Oregon was still joint ly occupied by Great Britain and the United States, and there were many north and south of the Mason and 'Dixon line who did not consider It worth saving for this country. Cali fornia and Texas had not been won from Mexico. The Mississippi Valley was practically a wilderness. Illinois made Its first appearance in census fig ures of growth in 1820, with an increase of 349.1 per cent in population in the decade. Missouri returned an increase of 219.3 per cent, and Louisiana of 99.8 per cent. In 1820-30 Illinois Increased 18514; per cent, and In 1830-40 202.4 per cent. Missouri gained 111 per cent in 1820-30, and 173.2 In 1830-40. Louisiana added 41.1 per cent In 1820-30, and 63.4 In 1830-40. No other section of the West figured in the populationrtncreases until 1850, when Wisconsin reported a gain of 886.9 p'er cent, and Iowa one of 345.8 per cent For over fifty years the growth of the West has been tremen dous. The tide of Immigration firct sweptto the states east of the Missis sippi, then over the river to Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and other states, and Is now pushing its way over the moun tains to the Pacific Coast. The opening of the West, with Its vast areas of fertile land available for production on a large scale, ended the career of New England as an agricul tural district. Half of New England Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont saw its greatest increases In population between 1790 and 1840; the other half Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Con necticuthas been at Its best since 1840. Between 1790 and 1800 Maine In creased 57.2 per cent, New Hampshire 29.5, and Vermont 80.8. These are their greatest gains in the history of Ameri can census-taking. Since 1850 they have been almost at a standstill. Maine's largest gain in any one decade was 7.7 per cent in 1850-6Q, New Hamp shire's 9.3 in 1890-1900, and Vermont's 4.9 In 1860-70. Maine and New Hamp shire reported slight losses of popula tion for the decade ended in 1870; and Vermont's gains in 1860, 1880 and 1890 were imperceptible. Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, the manufacturing states of New Eng land, are growing as steadily as such substantial Western commonwealths as Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri and Iowa. The record increases of population since 1850 have been made In the West. In 1860 Minnesota was the banner 3tale with 2730.7 per cent, California second with 310.3 per cent, and Oregon third with 294.7 per cent. In 1870 Nevada took the lead with 519 per cent, Dakota in 1880 with 734.5 per cent, Washington In 1890 with 3G5.1 per cent; Idaho, of the strictly Western States, led in 1900 with 91.7 per cent. In 1840 the center of population in the United States was 16 miles south of Clarksburg, W. Va., and In 1900 4 miles west of Columbus, Ind. Between 1840 and 1900 the center of population moved westward 299 miles. The longest march was 81 miles between 1850 and 1860, and the smallest 15 miles between 1890 and 1900. When the manufacturing Interests of what Is really the West that part of the coun try west of the Mississippi are con ducted on as large a scale as they are on the Atlantic seaboard, the geo graphical distribution of population Will he more even, and the center of population will move to a point near the geographical center of the country. A large number of residents of Wal lowa County have jdified in a petition to the Secretary of the Interior, ask ing that official to confine the Indians of that section of the state to their reservations. Farmers and stockmen who have lived where Indians are per mitted to roam the country at will can readily understand the nuisance of which complaint is made in this peti tion. The reservation lands are ample for all purposes and pursuits In which Indians in close touch with civilized life may lawfully and profitably en gage. That reservation Indians, wan dering about in bands, are "generally obnoxious and burdensome to settlers" Is a statement the truth of which is beyond dispute. The simple fact Is they cannot be otherwise. Their native Instincts of hunting and fishing set fish and game laws, at defiance, while their disposition to drink, carouse and fight render them anything but safe or pleasant visitors. The Government, having undertaken to confine the In dians to certain liberal allotments of land, and to make to a degree respon sible residents out of them, should keep them within the prescribed lim its, If for no other reason than that they may understand that the nomadic lives to Which they have been accus tomed are contrary to the practices of civilization, and are not conformable with Industrial pursuits. Settlers in Wallowa County are entitled to the re lief craved in their petition, and It may be hoped that It will be granted with out needless delay. A suggestion of real benefit to the stockralsers of easterrr sections of the state is the visit now in progress of an ageht of the Department of Agricul ture for the purpose of studying the poisonous plants Indigenous to that re gion. The object Is primarily to lo cate these plants, and then to find, If possible, antidotes to these special poi sons, to the end that stockmen may be able. to minimize their, losses from this cause. Knowledge in this, as in other things, is power, and while from the exigencies of the case owners of stock have found for themselves some remedies for plant-poisoning, they will be grateful for Instruction based upon a wider knowledge of the nature and treatment of plant poisons. A statement derived from the Naval Intelligence Office ranks the 'United States fourth o'n the list ofnaval pow ers on the following tonnage compari son: Ships. Tons. 1,705,410 714,100 500,580 550,070 447,840 250,870 Great Britain .....G4Q France 423 Russia 322 United States 153 Germany 253 Japan ,....138 The statement Is added that these figures Include shlp3 that are in course of construction, as well as those al ready afloat. The newness of the American Navy, which has been con structed in the last seventeen years, gives It an advantage which tabular statements do not emphasize. r Ex-Judge George L. Christian, of Richmond, Va., one of the best-known and ablest men In the city, failed to secure a nomination as delegate to the Constitutional Convention, stand ing eleventh on a ticket of fifteen. This weakness is attributed entirely to the fact that. Judge Christian employs a negro stenographer. This Issue was made on him In all parts of the city. In some sections wagons bearing the placard, "If you want a negro stenog rapher, vote for Qeorge L. Christian," were drlVen along the streetB, and es pecially near the voting-booths. Ten years ago there were only three railroad companies in the United States, with an outstanding stock capital ex ceeding $100,000,000 the Atchison, the Pennsylvania and the Southern Pacific and their stock issues did not sever ally rise far above that figure. Now a dozen railroad companies can be named whose capital stock amounts to $100,000,000 or more, and three of them go above the $200,000,000 mark the Union Pacific, with $296,000,000; the Pennsylvania, with $251,000,000, and the Atchison, with $216,000,000. They can get up some very ingenious and pretentious arraignments In Porto Rico of American rule; but when there Is danger of. Governor Allen's leaving, panic seizes them and all hands join in earnest protest to Washington. The arraignments apparently are to be un derstood in a sense purely Pickwickian and anti-imperialistic. The Farmers' National Bank of Ver gennes, Vt, has failed through pecu lations and speculations of its trusted cashier. The mischievous results of these Western towns' boom movements deserve, as they will doubtless receive, the able and dispassionate attention of the New England press. , E-Secretary Herbert pronounces the fifteenth amendment and universal suf frage the "19th-century mistakes of the Republic." Emancipation doubtless has its seamy side, but we trust the full text of Mr. Herbert's address rec ognizes slavery as at least a mitigat ing circumstance. Russia requires some $90,000,000 to as suage her grief over Chinese outbreaks in Manchuria. Wonder what the credit entry is for the 3000 coolies drowned ih the Amoor? Massachusetts has more Inhabitants than the other five New England States. The figures for Massachusetts are 2,805,346; for the other five, 2,786,604. We Infer from Mr. D, B. Hill's latest utterance that no billion-dollar corpora tion has as yet engaged him as chief counsel. SOME ALASKA N COMPLAINTS San Francisco Call. Among the memoranda published In connection with the report just issued by the Treasury Department at "Washington upon the salmon fisheries of Alaska there are a number of letters from Alaskan na tives urging reforms. Some of these are sufficiently curious to be of general Inter est, as they throw illuminating side lights upon pertain minor problems of the coun try and its people. Several of the letters urge the Gov- eminent to have the fisheries closed on Sunday, so that they may "lead Chris tian lives and keep the Sabbath day holy." "One of the writers, who says his letter "was written In the public of this community," Informs the Government of ficial: "The first thing I want to say Is this, that all the people whose attention has been called to the fishing business have been working on Sundays since the United .States law was changed. God has done all His work during six days, and on tha seventh day He did rest; and, therefore, we are to follow His Com mandments, as long as he puts us in ex istence. We had an opportunity to do all our work (Is needed to be done) during tha six days, according to the law. You saw. .most of the people fishing on Sun day when you came up in Alaska last Summer. Almost three-thirds of them do not want to be in the same condition, be cause they have tested the law of God and are obeying Him." It will be noted that the letter shows, for an Indian, remarkably good command of English Such deviations from the conventional English of our time as oc cur are quaintness rather than errors. In Its essence that letter, written "in the public of this community" (Saxman, Alaska) Is about as good as could be pre pared at a public meeting at any village In the United States. The subject of complaint is a curious one. for A. D. Harlan, special agent of the Government, to whom i-was addressed, says in his re port: "Wherever I went there were In dians pleading with mo to use my influ ence to have the closed day changed from Saturday to Sunday so that they would not be required to break the fourth com mandment. All the cannery superinten dents, except one, in Southeastern Alaska said that they thought the elosed day should be Sunday, and that they did not know why Saturday was ever made the closed day." Another thing of which the natives com plain is the destruction of fish. One writer says: "We want you 'to mention this In the public that all the fish in Alaska Is getting few year by year by the big canneries are putting up throughout the countries In the state. , All our people would" have nothing to eat after the fish Is gone from each stream In Alaska, as we do not want too many fish boats send .in one stream at a time. . . ,. Animals, fish, fowl, gold and others are getting few here In Alaska on account of big crowd; therefore we -forbid too many per sons to work at a certain place, especially In a public property. As the people do not want If their children starve to death In a couple of years.'" Another writes to complain that the or ders of the Government officials are not obeyed. He says: "I was write you up to Wrangel to tell you all about the dam across the stream. They not taking out yet as will you told them. They cut on top the lob about six Inches deep that was all. I like to hear from you about that case. You not going to do anything tuol? Water hlght now. but the Balmon can't go up the lake. I hoping you do something with It." Surely the Government can heed and respond to complaints made with such simple directness concerning matters which, if trifling to us, are of great Im portance to the Alaskan natives. There Is no reason why the day of closing the canneries should not be fixed for Sunday, as the newly converted Christians desire, nor is there any reason why we should not protect the fisheries and compel obedience to law. THE STEEL COLOSSUS. The Tariff Duties and Their Effect on Prices. New York "World. What is the relation of American tariff duties to the admittedly successful Inva sion of European markets by American manufactures of iron and steel? The present tariff laws Impose these specific duties: $4 per ton on imports of foreign pig iron, $7 84 per ton on eteel rails, $13 44 per ton on steel ship-plates. On our entire Imports of Iron and steel manufactures of every kind for the year 1899 the total value whereof was $12,607,340 duties amounting to $5,140,785 were col lected. This gives us an average ad va lorem duty on all foreign-made Iron and steel goods of 43,58 per cent. These duties are nearly prohibitive of Iron and steel imports already, and their tendency Is to' become absolutely so. This is clearly shown by tho fact that within 20 years the United States has complete ly reversed the figures of Its imports and exports of iron and steel. In 1880 our Im ports were valued at $71,266,699, our ex ports at $14,716,524. In 1900 our imports had sunk to $20,476,524, while our exports had risen to $121,858,344. That Is to say, we were Importing, 20 years ago, five times as much iron and steel as we ex ported, and today we are exporting six times as much as we Import. Manufactures of these two metals are now the fourth item In the list of our leading exports. Breadstuffs come flrBt In value, raw cotton second, provision?, meat and dairy products third and iron and steel manufactures fourth. This wonderful growth of our Iron and steel exports Implies another fact-rthat our huge steel trust is underselling the European manufacturers In their own markets. Consul-General Mason, writing from Berlin, reports that, in spite of "a freight of $4 to $4 50 per ton, American iron can be landed at Belgian, Dutch or German seaports for $20 per ton," and that It Is "delivered at Amsterdam some what cheaper than German furnace men charge to customers at their very doors." The Hamburger Fremdenblatt summed up the situation In a recent article by saying: The steel manufacturers of the United States today control tho markets of the world, dic tate cither directly or Indirectly the prices of steel In all countries, and have attained a po sition to not only compete with the older iron and steel-producing countries, but even to profitably export their products to England. .... The United States has begun to drive England and Germany from the world's mar kets, which may he oartly attributed to tha fact that American firms are protected in their own market from foreign competition, and can thus sell their manufactures cheaper abroad than at home. For example, steel rails are sold about $11 per ton cheaper to the English than jlo the American buyer. Mr. Charles Thul lin, a Pennsylvania contractor, recently secured a contract to supply rails for Russia's great Siberian railway. He asked the leading steel trust companies here for bids. They all asked him about $35 per ton, with freight to be added. Mr. Thullln went over to 'England, sublet hl3 contract to an English Arm, and one of the same companies that had asked him $35 plus freight here sold the rails at $24 a ton, delivered in England, to the English subcontractors. HoratlusKnippcr and His Loving Cup Chicago Times-Herald. He carried home the lovlns cup Ills friends had given to him; He heard his loving wife get up A thrill went coursing through him. He eat upon the lowest stair; His darling calledt "Horatlusl" And then beheld him sitting there. And murmured: "Goodness gracious!" He rose, and with his loving cup Held fast began ascending, The steep stairs, as he stumbled up, "With one another blending. She waited at the top for him; Her pose was more than queenly; The light within the hall was dim, Tho babies slept serenely. He reached her with his loving cup; Who knows what thrills flashed through him? Ah, when thoy swept the. pieces ut ' His hair was sticking to them. AMUSEMENTS. "The American Girl," a play crowded full of craven villainy, oppressed virtue, hard luck and the ever-recurring triumph of the right, played to standing room at COrdray's last night, and worked up the gallery to such a pitch of excitement that its safe distance from the stage was an excellent thing for the villain. Incidental ly, the Elleford Company, which present ed it, was warmly welcomed, and could not complain that their audience was lack ing In enthusiasm or Inadequate means of expressing It. The story of the play Is a trifle compli cated but a few words wIU suffice to give an inkling of the persistence with which a cruel fate dogs an unhappy heroine, and the extent to which she is entitled to congratulations for escaping It. Her name is Jasmine, and she is a Vir ginia girl who falls In love with a wan dering second son of a titled English fam ily, who has more education than pros pects. Sampson Craft, a young Ylrglnia man, who Is totally lacking In principle, wants to marry Jasmine, but as she has already secretly wedded to the second son the thing is not practicable. Moreover, Jasmine doesn't .want him. A "busted" theatrical manager and a servant girl with musical propensities are thrown In to complicate the plot and add a spice of comedy. Fate sends thft second son to England to chase down a rather slim clew to an Inheritance, and he becomes lost In the shuffle. Jasmine follows, with her two children. So does the theatrical, man; also the servant girl with the musi cal gift. Presently the villain takes pas sage for the same country. Having land ed them all in England, fate proceeds to "sick" the villain relentlessly on the hero ine, but she escapes him, through the timely assistance of the theatrical man and the servant girl, who once or twice come so near being too late that the situa tion looks serious. Fate also keeps the hero the second son away from his long lost wife, but compensates him by hand ing him a very tidy sum of stage money and putting him next In line for the title of his family. Although kept pretty busy with these occupations, fate endeavors In Its spare hours, to tear the children from their mother, mixes the villain up In a scheme to land the title for himself. and finally seeing the hopelessness of cop ing with patience and long suffering, gets ashamed of himself, restores the husband to his wife, gives the former his title, and makes the villain feel sick. The situa tions in the play are strong, and they crop up at very frequent intervals, to the obvious delight of the house. The company was able to take care of them all right, however, and, judging from the applause, made a decided hit. Miss Jes sie Norton, as Twister tha servant girl and musician, contributed some good com edy, and sang a couple of songs which won for her two recalls. A. J. Watson, as Ross Bolter, the theatrical man, caused endless amusement by the humorous por tion of his duties, and was loudly cheered every time he turned up at the right time and saved the day. Miss Adelaide Laird made a handsome- Jasmine, and Frank Wyman a very wicked villain-, while Carl Berch as Devon, the second son. got con siderable out of a small part. During the evening two children, designated on the programme as Evelyn and Baby Lil lian, proved themselves to be very clever youngsters by playing the part of Jas mine's offspring with real Intelligence, and doing a pretty song and dance to gether. "An American Girl" will be the at traction until Thursday night, when "Mrs. Partington and Her Son Ike" will be put on, with Mr. Elleford, who has not yet appeared, as Mrs. 'Partington. , "Peaceful Valley." Sol Smith Russell's "Peaceful Valley" was the bill presented by the Cooley Company at the Metropolitan last night, with Frank Cooley In the t?rt of Hosea Howe, made famous by Mr. Russell. One cannot help admiring the courage of an actor of Mr. Cooley's experience In under taking such a part, and It Is unfortunate for him that courage Is not the only requisite for success In his profession. However, he know . his lines, and read them distinctly, and while he was not mis taken for Russell by such of the audf ence as were unacquainted with the com pany, he succeeded in causing consider able laughter, and exciting some ap plause which was apparently genuine. Miss Gladys Kingsbury, as Virginia Rand, the New York young woman who falls 'in love with Hoaea and removes the barriers which have kept him blushing unseen In the- little world of Peaceful Valley, Infused considerable spirit into "he scenes In which she participated. M Rose Graves made a serious, earnest Mrs. Howe, Ward Andrews appeared to be sufficiently rascally as portrayed by Hamilton Armour, and the rest of the cast were all on hand and ready to enter when the clarion voices of those on the stage gave them their cues. Same bill all the week. Mr. Nelll Glad He Came. James Nelll, who with his company will open an engagement at the Marquam to night, arrived In Portland with his com pany yesterday, and spent the day enjoy ing the magnificent weather April keeps in stock for especially favored visitors. Mr. Neilf says he Is glad to get to Port land, as ho feels he Is among friends here, and he likes to play to Marquam audiences. The plays he has this season he believes to be the strongest he has yet presented, and he hopes that Portland playgoers will support his Judgment. Broke Sunday Performance Law. NEW YORK. April 14. Dan Daly, De Wolf Hopper and William A. Brady were arrested in this city, charged with vlo. latlon of the penal code In connection with giving theatrical performances on Sunday. The men are charged with hav ing produced a burlesque on "Uncle Tom's Cabin," at a vaudeville performance at the Academy of Music. All three were released on bail. A Flower PIcUer. Ex-Secretary Morton's Conservative. General Funston, who has just plucked Agulnaldo from the cluster of Philippine leaders, was commissioned in 1S93 a spe cial agent of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture to Investigate the flora and fauna of Alaska, and made up a very beautiful herbarium from the flow ers of that far-away territory. He now adds to the collection of botanical curios the blooming Agulnaldo. The Secretary of Agriculture who appointed Funston had no idea that he would gather speci mens with sword and gun. Doing BnNlncas at Heavy Loss. Washington Poat. The Government will never get rich by engaging In the ship brokerage business. At tho beginning of the war with Spain it paid $1,292,000 for five vessels which were offered by private patriots. Since then it has been able to sell these same ehips for the sum of $710,900. A simple arithmetical process shows Uncle Sam to be loser to the extent of $582,000. It may be that the gentlemen who did the pur chasing for the Government were alto gether too anxious and overestimated our danger. To a Bookworm. John H. Flnley in the Century. O gentle worm, most wise,, though oft de nounced a pest. Who didst the pagc3 of the ancients' books In fest. Their contents chew upon and Inwardly di gest, I envy thee when o'er thy course I look. For 'twlxt the vellum walls of some sweet classic tome, 'Mid leaves Ink-scented, thou didst have thy cloistered home. All margined round with virgin fields In which to roam Whene'er thou caredst to .leave thy lettered nook, And when thou'dst riddled thy lost line, O Ptnldus, What happy destiny was thine, denied to us. To lay thy sapient bones n such sarcophagus, And be forever burled in a book I NOTE AND COMMENT. Any agreement made by the twine trust will of course be binding. McKinley hasn't time to visit Astoria and her natural advantages will have to blush unseen awhile longer. The legend that a clear Easter will be followed by seven similar Sundays seems to be in process of verification. Agulnaldo should be severely punished. In fact, Mary Johnston ought to make him the hero of a historical novnl. They are beginning to And out who Is to blame for the late bonfire at Leaven worth. Mrs. Nation can prove an alibi. President McKinley cannot hold hl3 Job as long as Emperor William, but ha doesn't lose as much time dodging scrap iron. With Oom Paul and Agulnaldo both due In this country,, the Pan-AmerIcan Expo sition will not lack for Midway attrac tions The guide who attempted to lead an American party Into a Filipino ambush had evidently been reading about General' Fuuston. Dr. Parkhurst calls the voters In New York "sheep." This Is probably beoauao the voters say "bah" when they think of Dr. Parkhurst. A few thousand dollars' worth of dyna mite destroyed the reHult of Hobsonfs ex ploit. Would that we could get off as cheap with the result of Funston's. Richmond P. Hobson, the naval con structor who sank the Merrimac in tho entrance of Santiago harbor and gave os culation a stimulus for awhile, is now a Captain Instead of a Lieutenant, but ho doe3 not draw a Naval Captain's pay, which Is $1500. Mr. Hobson receives J320O. and under the rules of the Construction Bureau his pay will be increased $200 a year every Ave years he remains in active service. When he came to Washington from his Alabama home soma days ago he traveled with Judge Griggs, a Georgia Congressman. "All during the trip," said Mr. Griggs, "people, knowing I was Just a common Congressman, dame to me and begged me to Introduce them to the hero." The Egyptian Gazette of March 11 con tains an account of a meeting of Brlttaht and American citizens held at Cairo for the purpose of raising a fund to astab Hsh an Anglo-American hospital In that city. Judge J. S. Long, who represents the United States In Cairo, presided at the meeting, and the address was made by Lord Cromer, who, after alluding to tho growing friendship between the citizens of the two nations, made a strong appeal for united action looking to the establishment of a hospital where afflicted sons of eith er land may be cared for. About 10,000 is required to start the hospital, of which over 7500 has been subscribed conditionally, and it is expected that tho remainder will be made up by subscription In England and America. Augustus Hare tells an amusing story of one of his visits to Rome. He had con voyed his little fiock, which Included at least one live Princet through the patace of the Caesars and had gathered them near the Forum, when he observed a stranger who had attached himself to tho party "looking more and more angry every minute." At length this Interloper could stand Mr. Hare no longer. He burst forth In denunciations. "All that this person ha5 been telling, you," he informed the party In a loud voice, "about the palace of the Caesars. he has had the effrontery to relate to you as If it were his own. You will be as tonished, gentlemen and ladles to hear that It s taken word for word word for word, without the slightest acknowledg mentfrom Mr. Hare's 'Walks In Rome.' " "All I said," says Mr. Hare, wast 'Oh, I am so much obliged to you. I did not know there was anybody In the world who would defend by interests so kindly. I am Augustus Hare." It was a magnificent moment. The death of Rev. John Samuel Slde botham, the distinguished English church man, which occurred recently, has awak ened a flood of recollections- of hl3 ca reer, relates a London correspondents His work as editor of Crockf ord made him a power in church circles, In which his influence was well and wisely wielded. His Ironic exhortations to those clergy who were sinful enough to Ignore his application for information always pro vided entertaining reading; Indeed, the genial editor himself must have enjoyed writing those wonderful prefaces year'iby year. Sidebotham's physical bulk once led to a rather funny incident. When he was the guest of a well-known cathedral dig nitary in the south the sons and daugh ters of the host were JbrougKt, finely one Into the drawing-room to be presented to the visitor. Last of all came the youngest, a little fellow of an Inquisitive turn. Evi dently impressed with the vast propor tions of the visitor the terrible infant turned to his mother and Inquired: "When the gentleman sits down does he use two chairs?" None present enjoyed the Joke more keenly than the editor of Crockfords him self. A WebMter Centenary. The 100th anniversary of Daniel Web ster's graduation from Dartmouth College Is to be celebrated in that Institution on September 21 and 23 next. The exercises will Include speech-making on Webster's college life and his character notably an address by Representative S. W. McCall, of Massachusetts a torchlight parade of the students and the laying of the cor ner stono of Webster hall. The alumni of Dartmouth will participate In the cele bration. t i PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERSJ His Advice. Artist Is there any advice you could give me? EdHor Well, If I were you I should try to work It oft on somebody else. Puck. Mrs. Snobbtngton We had meant to aall lng before- this, really, but with the host inten tions, somehow, wa always kept putting off the evil day. TIt-BKs. He Used Ice. First milk dealer Do you put water in your milk? Second milk dealer Sir. you Insult mot I use Ice not to dilute the milk, but to make It cold. Ohio State Journal. "Have you been through calculus?" inquired the college professor. "Not Unless I passed through at night on my way here," replied! the new student. "I'm from Kansas, you know." Philadelphia Record. A Peril Gone By. "Thank goodness, Baster Is over!" "Why so grateful?" "Oh, Harry and I always go to church cross Easter morn ing; he never likes my hat. and I never Ilka his necktie." Brooklyn Life. Miss Prye I can't abide Cousin Fanny j she's so suspicious, you know." Aunt Hannah Suspicious? Miss Prye Tes, a girt who will cover up the keyhole of the parlor door when she has company must be a terribly suspicious person. Boston Transcript. Cheoring. "You are sure you can support my daushtar In the style to which sha has been accustomed?" asked the Heavy Father. "Sure," answered Our Hero. With thou assur ance of youth. "Well, I'm glad to hoar It. It's more than I can afford any longer." tn dlunapolls Journal.