G THE MORNING OREGjONIAN, FRIDAY. JUNE 7, lUl. Entered at lhePostofflce at Portland, Oregon, & second-class matter. ", TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms ICG Business Office.. .CC? REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month b5 Dally, Sunday, excepted, per jear....t... 7 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year.... 8 00 Sunday, per yar , ., .. Ou The "Weekly, per year 1 CO The Weekly. 3 months 60 To City Subscribers Dally, per -ReekaJellvered. Sundays cxcepted.lOc Dally, per -week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20s POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 16-page paper lc 16 to 32-page papjr e Porelen 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, subscription or to any business matter should be Addressed simply "The, Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No Btamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. t Fuget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box 055, Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office J7. 48, 49 and 50 Tribune building. New Tork City; 400 "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco hy J. K. Cooper, 76 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold emlth Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market street; Foster & Orear, Ferry sews stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 106 Bo. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1G12 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by W. C Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street. On file at Buffalo, N. Y., In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In Washington. D. C, by the Ebbett House newstand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrlck. S0pr012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER-Falr and warmer; northwesterly Trtndg. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, JVSE 7, lOOl. THINGS IX CONTRAST. This statement from Eugene, the seat df the TJnlv-erstty.tpf Oregon, appeared In The Oregonian.-yesterday: John A.jYah Gross? a student of the gradu ate school of the University of Oregon, has been awarded a scholarship at Tale University for 3001-02. Mr Tan Gross is a graduate of the State Agricultural College, and has done special work In the University of California. His ma jor subject"" lsSmathematics. He entered the University of Oregon last September, and his many friends here are jubilant oer his suc cess. Thla makes the second University of Oregon etudent who has received an Eastern scholarship this year, 'the other being Claude R. Fountain. '01, who goes to Columbia Uni versity In the Fall. "We have here a statement which ap pears to The Oregonlan to afford proper opportunity for a remark. We shall say therefore that we think this excellence surpasses achievement in athletics, whether In rowing or at foot ball; and, moreover, that It surpasses achievement in the mimicry of oratory, studied with pains and acted with the atrical starts, practiced at the glass. Tet the tendency at our academies and colleges long lias been to give an excess of time, attentiqn and labpr to these superficialities. "We confess we like the old fashion better. Students in former times went to college to seek the solid'fparts of' learning, not to de velop skill-In athletic exercises,, or to learn how to open the floodgates of cheap and "Blatant oratory upon their suffering country. In her earnest scholarship, like that which gets recog nition at Columbia and Tale, there is promise for Oregon. These men will be doing good and solid work when the oarsmen and orators of today shall no more, be remembered. Good scholar ship Is the test of, a school, and the test of the young people of a tate. We shall have pugilism and oratorical wind enough; "rifl fear of any -dearthr even If these cults find no shrines at our Echo'ols We should be glad to say, if possl blt,a fruitful word against the tendency to "over-education" in athletics and oratory, at our colleges. By many who ought never to go to college at all these exercises, or "studies," are regarded as the main parts of learning. With cheap oratory the land is sorely af flicted already; In spite of the warning of Job against filling the belly with the East wind. He, moreover, was a wise man. as well as a great satirist, who. In a speech delivered as part of the performance at a variety show, ex claimed, "We are carrying education too far! Abolish your colleges! We Lave oarsmen enough!" ' It is admitted, however, that the "study" of athletics "is. likely to be less harmful than the pursuit of oratory. It is not merely that the country is plagued by too much speaking. The country will be thought entitled to lit tle consideration or mercy. The main evil arises from the faot that your ora tor is usually a failure. He doesn't work, he d6esn't study his subject; he relies on his voice and on his tropes; he puts forth his strength on phrases and attitud.es: Tils superficiality cannot contend in the long run with his plain, practical, solid and hard-working oppo nent. There are examples everywhere. Every reader can supply them. We like this news, therefore, that young men of Oregon have achieved such a record in study as to be found worthy of admission to scholarships in Yale and, Columbia, against the very severest competition the country could afford. In bur humble opinion it beats rowing, boxing, football and flatulent oratory. '-" A STRONG INDICT3IENT. EdmumI Clarence Stedman delivered an address -recently before a society of New York. .teachers. In which he sup ports the very general complaint of business men In the larger cities in re gard to the failure of the public schools to teach boys how to write and speak correctly. As a business man, the Wall street broker and poet has employed many boys fresh .from the common schools, and It Is from his experience with these that he" speaks. He says that, though sorqe t)f these boys are now successful, men In charge of many employes, nearly all of them were, when they first came out of the schools, defi cient in spelling, writing and the use of language deficiencies that drew heavily upon the patience and time of their employers. It ,Js, of course, im possible to say how many, having run the limit of the patience of busy men, were dismissed from service as Incom petent, and, with discouragement added to Ignorance, were forced out Into the world seeking work which they could do. Mr. Stedman had found; most of the boys to be fairly quick at figures end reasonably apt&n calculation, but scarcely one had a clearly, formed handwriting, few were even tolerable spellers, and nearly all had an extra ordinary proficiency In wrong pronun ciation, bad grammar and command of slang. He found upon Inquiry that many of them had "spent' a good deal of time upon side fads, and had a few vague ideas about arts, ologies and so called studies that might serve as elect Ives In a seminary or collegiate course." They had wasted their time upon these fancy studies, and had ended their school days without knowing how to speak or write the ordinary words of the English language correctly. How far this criticism applies to the work of the public schools of Portland It Is im possible to say, though no doubt our business men could furnish data that would throw some light upon the sub ject. It Is not reasonable to suppose that our educational methods are su perior to those of New York or Chi cago, in both of which cities the same or similar complaints are made. Busi ness men who employ stenographers and typewriters, most of whom have, before taking up the study of this pro fession, passed at least the grammar grades of our public schools, have found great difficulty in finding those who could spell, punctuate and capitalize properly. They have not infrequently been forced to dismiss worthy young persons from their service for this rea son. This Is a matter of common knowledge, and one that reflects dis credit upon the schools In which these young people were instructed. Mr. Stedman says if he had the di recting of the public school curriculum he would pay extreme respect to the three R's, and would add to them an "S," which would signify correct spelling and the practice of correct speaking. The importance of thorough drill in these lines cannot be overesti mated, since the boy who goes out into the world without having mastered them during the only years in which he can do so successfully is handi capped for the rest of his life. The English language Is the chief instru ment with which the American boy must win his livelihood. If he, cannot spell correctly or talk grammatically, these defects will harass him in his en deavor to rise, and to a greater or' less degree keep him back. The smattering of fancy branches gained at the ex pense of the practical, for instruction in which the public schools were insti tuted, Is vague, and, being unused, soon falls from the mind. The result is that in the end the pupil Is left without knowledge of either the useful or the ornamental. As regards the fads that have become attached to the public school curriculum, Mr. Stedman's In dictment Is unanswerable, while the suggestions that accompany it are worthy of the careful consideration of educators, who as a class conscien tiously desire to equip the boys and girls of the public schools with practical weapons wherewith the battle of life may successfully be fought. UNTRUE AS UNCALLED FOR. The elaborate and malignant attack of the New York Commercial on the Co lumbia River Is now reflected in the editorial columns of the Chicago Trib une, which is either misinformed as to the journalistic habit of the Commer cial or else has lent itself to aid of the same selfish Interests that have en listed the Commercial in their behoof. Perhaps Innocently taking its cue from the New York sheet, and perhaps In re sponse to solicitation from enemies of the Columbia River, the Tribune says: There are only three natural outlets to the sea along our Northwestern seaboard San Francisco Bay, the Columbia River and Puget Sound, Of these the Columbia River alone hat failed to get Its share of traffic. The for eign commerce of Puget Sound has Increased 1000 per cent in the last twenty years, while that of the Columbia has increased only 30 per cent. The cause Is said to be a matter of freight rates. All California and Washington towns on the coast are classified as common railway points, and are allowed the same rates on through shipments. Astoria, at the mouth of the Columbia, is not so classed, and its citizens complain that this Is due to the dog-in-the-manger policy of Portland, 100 miles up the river, which holds the railway advantages of a seaport without, having the navigation facilities to make good Its claim. ... If Portland would give up its ambition to be a seaport and would allow the railways to ex tend their tracks to Astoria, the natural Co lumbia River port, the people of Oregon would no longer be deprived of their share of the new prosperity. . . . It appears that the new jetties at Astoria, with a slight exten sion, will Insure from thirty-six to forty feet of water on the bar, while up at Portland the extreme depth Is only twenty-three feet. The largest ocean vessels are now built to draw thirty feet with a full cargo, and the prob ability Is that the size of freighters will be etlll further Increased. Under such conditions Portland can scarcely hope to be the perma nent seaport of Oregon. Astoria apparently has a right to feel aggrieved if secret Influ ences are depriving it and the whole ?tate of their due share of ocean commerce. Probably Portland Itself would gain moro than It would lose by .promoting Astoria's commerce. These assertions are so comprehen sive that they appear to transgress sub stantially all the principal facts con cerning the Columbia River. This river is .not only not falling to get Its share of foreign traffic, but is increasing that share. It Is silly to talk of an Increase of 1000 per cent In the foreign trade of Puget Sound In twenty years. Twenty years ago 'Puget Sound had practicaly no foreign trade. The main export ar ticle on this Coast is wheat, and twenty years ago Puget Sound had not yet shipped its first grain cargo. Its first wheat ship was cleared In 1882. The settlement and development of the young State of Washington of course shows remarkable Increase over the nothingness that originally prevailed there. From no bushels to 7,000,000 bushels, Puget Sound's export in the last season Is, of course, great gain, which is perhaps inadequately reflected In 1000 per cent. But the gain in bulk is not so great as that made by Port land from 6,444,000 bushels, perhaps, In 1S90-91, to 14,151,000 bushels in 1899-00. AH points on the Pacific Coast have Increased the amount of their foreign commerce, but Portland's gain in re cent years has been at a higher rate than that of Puget Sound. For the past five seasons Portland's average of the grain exports of the Pacific Northwest is 65.6 per cent, as against Puget Sound's 34.4 per cent; whereas In the five years preceding .that period Port land's percentage of the total trade was 59.8 compared with Puget Sound's 40.2 per cent. These figures vacillate from year to year, as the yield in vari ous sections Is good or poor. A light crop in the Willamette Valley will re duce Portland's average, while a bumper crop In Northern Washington would raise Puget Sound's average. But there is no such movement away from Portland towards Puget Sound as the Tribune has been led to suppose. What tendency there is, really points the other way. The effort to force a "common-point rate" -for Astoria by an unscrupulous campaign of misrepresentation against the Columbia River is utterly ill-advised and- futile. Especially damaging to it are the slanders dlrepted at the chan nel and the character of its trade fa cilities. Large ships, both steam and sail, are constantly coming here, as large as those that visit Puget Sound, and 6000-ton cargoes are safely and promptly dspatched. What has given Puget Sound an artificial stimulus has been the efforts of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern in bringing freight from the East and South for Asiatic trans-shipment. In this work the Union Pacific, Portland's transconti nental connection, has been culpably and unprofitably slow, but at length it has made a beginning, and now car ries its share of machinery, rails, cot ton, etc., through Portland to the Orl-. ent, and tea, silk, etc., from the Orient to the East, South and Middle West. So far as regards trade in products raised on the Pacific Coast and Asiatic products consumed on the Pacific Coast, there is simply no comparison between the meager supply handled on Puget Sound and the heavy volume constantly moving in and out of the Columbia River. Of nearly all the products of our far Western country, far more are shipped from Portland than from Pu get Sound. As to the "common point," It is a rail road problem, and will be settled some time by the railroads interested. The Oregonlan has never opposed it, has rather inclined to favor It, and has always looked confidently forward to Its ultimate coming to pass an event which is made manifestly more probable through the application of harmonious understanding and co-operation be tween the various railroad ownerships. Bat common point or no common point linn nothing to do with the channel from Portland to the sen. That channel will be maintained. It Is better now than it has ever been before; It will be better as time goes on than It Is now. Any efforts to resist or impede the work through "common point" arguments or malicious flings af the river and its trade will not only fall, but their certain effect will be to arouse this city to greater exertions. All who are concerned in such attacks may as well take their notice now that Portland Trill nintntnin'her channel to the xen and do the unsincsM of the Colnnilila basin in spite of all ene mies of the river and its commerce. It will exert, moreover, whatever political power Ik necessary to brine; thin to pass, and in those exertions it -will be supported by the State of Oregon. It Is hardly like the Chicago Tribune to join, either through Ignorance or through malice, in an attack on the maritime position of a city -whose pres enter future eminence involves no con cern to the City of Chicago, nor is it creditable. The. fair reply to its at tack is to invite Chicago to give over Its vain aspirations to be a seaport. Let it cease clearing grain ships for Liverpool, and abandon all effort at waterway Improvement at the numer ous obstacles between Lake Michigan and the Atlantic and between Lake Michigan and the Gulf of Mexico. But probably it would not be so easy to persuade Chicago, that it would gain more than it would lose by blocking up the Straits of Mackinac and the St. Clair River, filling In the Chicago River and the drainage canal and putting its commerce entirely at the mercy of the railroads. THE CRISIS IN SPAIN. The present critical state of public affairs in Spain is due to the recent strikes and disturbances In Catalonia. These disturbances have attracted un-' usual attention throughout Continental Europe on account of the part played by the anarchists, by the socialists, by tfie working classes, and by the Cata lan autonomists. The. anarchists first appeared In Spain In the days of the Spanish revolution, from 1868 to 1874, and again showed their hand when, fifteen or twenty years later, great out rages were committed in Andalusia against the property of absentee land--lords. ,The anarchists again appeared in the last decade of the last century as executives of terrible crimes in Bar celona and Madrid. These anarchists are most numerous In the manufactur ing districts of Catalonia, In the mines of Biscay, Almeria and Murcla. They hold meetings and make demonstra tions apart from the socialists and the working classes. They led the recent strike in Barcelona, and most of the men and women arrested In the collis ions between the rioters and the troops were well-known anarchists. The prin cipal foreign anarchists were deported to Italy and Austria, or sent over the French frontier. The socialists, who , are increasing every year in Spain, are charged with having aided or abet ted the recent disturbances In Barce lona, and in other provinces, but it was only a very advanced group of Spanish socialists that bore a conspicuous part in the disorders this year in Madrid, and these radical socialists went hand In hand with the anarchists In the Bar celona disturbances. These radical socialists are revolu tionists, but the majority of the Span ish socialists are wedded to measures of peaceful, constitutional agitation for reform. The leader of this socialist party proper is Pablo Iglesias, who speaks as the1 leader of a federation of 30,000 socialists, who have two news papers In Madrid and eleven in the provinces. Poverty, with its conse quent suffering and discontent, Is 'driv ing the working classes In Spain into revolutionary organization. Their dis content has grown with the increase in taxation of every kind and with the protectionist tariff policy, which has borne heavily upon the poor. The ne cessities of life, bread, meat, petro leum, sugar, coffee, colonial products In general, and clothing, have Increased In price considerably within the last decade, especially since the loss of the colonies. Rents In towns are nlgher, with small improvement in wages, while the profits of all the highly pro tected industries under the tariff of 1892 have been enormous. The working classes have been stimulated by this depressing situation to Increase In all parts df Spain their trades-unions and associatioas of every kind. In Barce lona alone there are several thousand unions and associations. The various trades, such as masons, tailors, miners, railway and tramway men, have en rolled tens of thousands in their fed erations, and the operatives In the fac tories of Catalonia have a federation 30,000 strong. In most of the strikes public opinion and the press have as sisted the worklngmen because of unde niable suffering, particularly in the mining districts and In the manufac turing districts of Biscay, Catalonia, Almeria, Murcla, and sometimes even In Madrid, where the railway strikes have been formidable to the authorities and a great hardship to the public. The working classes are at beart, most of them, advanced Democrats and Republicans, but they persist thus far in flocking by themselves because none of the political parties will consent to propose anything like adequate social and economic reforms, and because of this distrust of both the great political parties the worklngmen are disposed to swell the ranks of revolutionary so cialism and anarchism. More than half of the members of the trades-unions are socialists, and some of them are anarchists. These trades-unions and federations have increased their num bers tenfold in twelve years. They have a press and reviews of their own, and systematically collect subscriptions for their reserve and resistance funds. They complain that remedial legisla tion up to the present has been Insuffi cient and too much in the interest of the employers of labor, despite, the fact that the Cortes has voted laws reg ulating the work of women and chil dren in the mines,' the night work of both sexes, and the liability of em ployers In regard to accidents. The worklngmen demand arbitration courts With mixed juries of employers and workmen, and most of all some limi tation In the hours of work. When we add to this startling discontent of the working classes under radical socialist and anarchist leaders, the fact that Spain is on the eve of putting into exe cution an anti-clerical policy, to be fol lowed probably by some of the radical reforms enacted In Roman Catholic na tions, like Portugal, Italy, France, Bel glum and Austria, it would not be the happening of the unexpected if Spain before the year Is over- has a full-armed popular Insurrection on her hands. The situation Is not unlike that which preceded the first great Revolution in France, which drew its strongest breath of life from the working classes, who were taxed Into the earth so completely that they lacked bread to eat, while a luxurious court and a depraved priest hood grew fat and merry over the mis ery of the people. The French revolu tionists murdered without mercy the nobility and the priests, because In their wild rage they .believed the people had been starved to swell the revenues of both aristocrats and priests. The no ble picked the peasant's pockets, di vided the spoil with the priest, who ab solved him for his crimes. No such terrible convulsion as that of France awaits Spain, because in event of a serious threat of popular insurrection liberal statesmen, like Sagasta, would be sure to enact Important reforms. Nevertheless, it Is clear that the work ing classes are organizing and prepar ing to enforce .their demands by a for midable show of force, should it become necessary. Captain Richmond P. Hobson, famous for sinking the collier Merrlmac In Santiago harbor, and afterwards for being the klssee of some dozens, more or less, of silly women, has made the unpardonable mistake of appearing be fore the public In a "speech." The oc casion was Memorial day of last week, a'rid the place a pleasure resort near Detroit. Sentimental always and every where, Captain Hobson declared that the Civil War was a "sociological neces sity" to establish the fact of the per manency of the Union, and further, that "African slavery was a divine Provi dence to prevent the extermination of the African tribes In their native jun gles and to advance them In civiliza tion." Poor Hobbyl Why does not his mother, or his nnultltudlnous fiancee tell him that loglc'and sentiment don't mix, and to be quiet, please, lest he continue to make a fool of -himself on matters of which he knows nothing? He sank the Merrlmac Hobby' did and for the bravery displayed by this useless performance he Is entitled to due crediV. Events of his subsequent career, however, leave much to be de sired on the part of common sense, and his last performance Is the worst of .all. The man who rises at this day, before an audience of 2000 enlightened Ameri can citizens." to defend slavery as a special institution of Providence should be Induced hereafter gently If possi ble, forcibly If necessary to keep his mouth shut In public places,' especially on Memprlal day, since there Is neither profit nor honor In his utterances. Cadets at the United States Military and Naval Academies will no doubt soon learn that the authorities are in earnest in the determination to main tain discipline in those Institutions, and will govern themselves accord ingly. One cadet of the fourth class at Annapolis and two from West Point are now sadly weqdlng their way homeward for breach of rules, the for mer for hazing and the. latter for false hood. This represents punlsliment that punishes, and its infliction Is prescribed by Congress and recommended by self respecting military and naval men and Indorsed by the people generally. The passage of the ordinance carry ing an appropriation for the construc tion of a hospital building for conta gious diseases, enacted by the City Council Wednesday evening, was long overdue. The hospital lacking such a building is sadly hampered in its equip ment for the purposes for which is maintained, and the structure ordered cannot be built too soon, even though it should spring up In a single night. Tillman will resign if McLaurin will, and vice versa. The powerful cables attached -to these .sensational with drawals from the Senate have added to neither the dignity nor the reputation of South Carolina. It Is supposable, however, that bbth disputants, and probably the Governor also, have pre served their honah. Soldiers returning from the Philip pines declare that in case of a clash between a bluecoat and a "nigger," the officers give the native "the best of It" Oppression and despotism, apparently, are not working well as yet. The prudent man foreseeth the evil and gets himself and his family vac cinated, while the simple pass on, refus ing or neglecting this safeguard, and are more than likely to be punished. The good ship -Poitalloch Is again afloat a tribute to the skill and perse verance of her gallant master, Cap tain Young. His congratulations will be many, and all deserved. From the table of railroad earnings published this morning It appears that Brer Harriman has the roads that show the greatest per cent of gain in earnings, grjoss and net. By dropping the second- half of Its name, the Socialist-Democratic party of 'Oregon has purged Itself of the. grave crime of tautology. The simple South Carolina fact Is that nobody resigned. CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL. American Medicine. That this subject is of great importance for the future of all countries every one Is agreed. Indeed, it seems to have as much Interest for those who do not drink as for those who do. Statistics are constantly being twisted by people Interested In one or the other side of the alcohol question to sup port their own side, and an impartial study of the subject rarely appears. Such a study, we believe, is that of H. Bence Jones, which appears in the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, 1900, volume LXIII, page 272. Even a mention of the many Interesting facts brought out In this paper Is impossible in the space al lowed in these columns. But one fact will certainly be Interesting to all Amer icans who believe in the Importance of temperance. He states that the consump tion of drink in Canada is smaller than that of any country of the world for which statistics exist; that In the United States is also .small, and he Is able to trace a comparative decrease In the con sumption of spirits in -recent years in both the United States and Canada. In the United States in 1890 the consumption of spirits per head was 1.17 gallons: In 189S It had fallen to 0.92 of a gallon. There Is perhaps a slight Increase In the con sumption of beer and light wines, but the quantities used are still quite small as compared with some of the beer-drink ing countries of the world. In, Bavaria the consumption of beer per inhabitant Is given at 56 gallons, while In Germany as a whole It is 27 gallons; In the United Kingdom not quite 32 gallons, In the United States 13 gallons per inhabitant. However, the consumption of beer does not' Indicate the entire consumption of alcoholic beverages, for In North Ger many, for example, very little beer la drunk, the consumption of the Inhab itants of those parts being spirits rather than beer. Thus, also, there Is compara tively little beer consumed in Scotland and Ireland, while the consumption of spirits is proportionately larger. The question of the desirability of drinks is not discussed, the ques tion being as to what Is drunk In the civilized countries of the world rather than whether It should be drunk; or. otherwise. As to the latter question, there can be no doubt but that alcoholic beverages have their important uses in disease, and, whatever the teetotalers may believe with regard to the use of alcohol In a state of health, they cannot afford to deny Us value as medicine. As to the hygienic side of the question. It is certain that alcohol Is not needed ordinarily by persons In a state of health, but It is also equally true that a large proportion of the people of civi lized countries will consume a certain amount of alcohol quite regardless of this fact. If alcoholic drinks are to be used at all. It Is important that a pure article should be sold, which will do as little damage as possible. The Increase in the use of beers and light wines Is encour aging .rather than otherwise, for it is the experience of the countries in which they are most generally used that they are not as commonly adulterated, and that drunkenness, poverty and disease are caused less often by them than by spirituous liquors. A decrease In the amount of nlcohollc beverages Is no doubt every desirable, but this will certainly not be brought about by the efforts of fanatics. We may be sure that the decrease In the use of alcoholic beverages In the United States Is due to an Increased Intelligence of Its people as a whole, and this Is' highly en couraging. Temperance In all things, and not tee totalism, is what is needed. Soldier, an to Size. Spectator. The untrained big man will beat the un trained little man at fisticuffs or In a wrestlfng match, but In trained armies weight tells for verj little. So. long as their armies were recruited from the clu les and Vlllagesof Italy, the small-limbed Romans defeated the large-limbed Ger mans In almost every encounter, and this although the men of the forest were hunters, lived In the open air, and ate, It is always assumed, quantities of meat. The wiry little Roman, who took blows from. a vine stock from his own officer must have been one of the best soldiers who ever lived. It was after Rome had enlisted the big barbarians In scores of thousands that her standards went back In battle. The slight and pallid Saracen drove the picked soldier's of Europe out of Palestine. If armor is any test, the heroes of the Middle Ages were com paratively little men. Of the men who fought at Jena, the Frenchmen were prob ably by 10 per cent the smaller, yet Ger man, Pomeranian and Pole alike receded before their charge. There are probably no such men In the world as are to be found In our Sikh regiments, their average being nearly two Inches higher than our own. yet Eng lishmen defeated them at Sabraon, and If they revolted our officers would lead the undersized Ghurkas against them with perfect confidence. That the Japanese "dwarfs" defeated the Chinese may be accounted nothing, but experienced officers who have watched the former In action believe they would beat the Russians, an opinion which Is shared by the Sikhs, who have observed both, which is the more remarkable because the Sikh has to overcome an instinctive feeling about the European. Our own "light" regiments e. g., the Rifle Brigade whleh, be cause they are "light" are tolerant of "weeds." are among the best regiments in the service; nor is there any regiment in the world that would not be proud of defeating Zouaves, whose average low stature has frequently been commented on. Tiie trutn s tnai weigni ana neigut have almost as little to do with fitness for soldiering as with fitness for com mand. Importance of Apples. Boston Herald. The statement made In the Independent newspaper that the value of the apple crop of this country Is greater than that of Its wheat production will bring a sur prise to many. The Independent says that the total yield of apples In 1900 was 215, 000,000 barrels. Supposing that an aver age price of $2 a barrel was obtained, the aggregate value of the crop was ?430,000, OOO. The average value of wheat Is but a little over 5300,000,000 annually. By this estimate the apple crop Is worth about 50 per cent more than the wheat. The ex port of apples exceeds 4,000,000 barrels a year, and It Is increasing. The price abroad ranges from $2 to J4 a barrel, the most of the fruit bringing nearer the larger price. Its production ranges over a wide extent of country, though few sec tions of it make the apple their chief re liance for support. Our home families do 'not ypend a gieat deal of money for It, but "we are growing fruglvorous Instead of carnivorous,'" observes the Independent, and before long pastry and bread will be subordinate to the better food. ; By Majorities of One. Philadelphia Times. Since a president was declared elected by a vote of 8 to 7 we have grown ac customed to narrow margins In the de cision of great questions. The status of the insular possessions Is determined or confused by a vote of 5 to 4. The river bill is sustained by 4 to 3. And now the Cuban convention has agreed on the Piatt amendment by 15 to 14. A judicial decision by a majority of one Is just as effective legally as though given by a unanimous court, though sometimes the moral effect is different. No Hope for the Treasnry. Salem Capital Journal. While a lot of tne older political game sters will be stranded on school land de falcation, no one believes that one penny will be recovered from men who are prominent in politics and have their waistbands ornamented with lodge ban gles as large as pie plates. If out of the agitation the people get a little cleaner and a little honester set of officials and clerks, they will be the great gainers from the shaking Up that is given the I whole rascally business. AN OLD-TIME EXPANSIONIST. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. It is odd that In thl3 expansionist age the centenary of the birth of one of the greatest of American expansionists should be allowed to pass with scarcely and public recognition. It is Just 100 years since the birth of William H. Seward, and the little town in Interior New York in which he was born was the only place In the country, so far as we have observed, which took any notice of the anniversary. The great State of New York had no son more illustrious than Seward, but in the 30 years which have passed since his death he appears to have dropped entirely out of the recol lection or the regard of that common wealth. The purchase of Alaska In 1857 was condemned by many persons at that time, Just as the acquisition of Louisiana, Florida and Texas were by an element of the people of an earlier age, but that territory has paid back to the United States many times the $7,200,000 which Seward gave to Russia for it. Seward, however, was an annexationist long be fore Alaska became United States terri tory. Many years before the Civil War he advocated the acquisition of Hawaii. More than half a century ago he fore told the place which the 20th cen tury's Mediterranean, the Pacific Ocean, would hold In the industrial and social life of the United States, and announced Ideas about the connection which the great Western sea would have with his country which the majority of his coun trymen are only Just now beginning to catch up with. Seward's case Is one of the many Illus trations of the fleeting character of poli tical fame In this bustling age. He wa3 In public life for 40 years, holding the most exalted positions In the people's gift short of the Presidency Itself, and for a long time his name was prominently coupled with that office. But many events the reconstruction of the South ern States, the building of the great West, the creation of the Industrial South, the Spanish war and the extension of the United States' boundaries lrito the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific have brought new men and Ideas to the front and have effaced the old. But In these expansive days, when great railroad mag nates, shipping masters and merchants are reaching out toward the Orient for new Industrial conquests, some public recognition. It would seem, ought to be given to the memory of the man who, al most alone among Americans, more than half a century ago saw and foretold the day when the Pacific Ocean would be come an American lake. A Visit to Emerson. Literary Friends and Acquaintances. W. D. Howells. I do not know in Just what sort he made me welcome, but I am aware of sitting with him In his study or library, and of his presently speaking of Haw thorne, whom I probably celebrated as I best could, and whom he praised for his personal excellence, and for his fine qual ities as a neighbor. "But his last book," he added, reflectively, "Is a mere mush," and I perceived that this great man was no better equipped to judge an artistic fic tion than the groundlings who were then crying out upon the Indefinite close of "The Marble Faun." After dinner we walked about In his "pleached garden" a little, and then we came again Into his library, where I meant to linger only till I could fitly get away. He questioned me about what I had seen of Concord, and whom besides Hawthorne I had met. and when I told him only Thorcau, he asked me If I knew the poems of "William Henry Channing. I have known them since, nnd felt their quality, which I have gladly owned a genuine and original poetry: but I answered then truly that I knew them only from Poe's criticisms; cruel and spiteful things, which I should be ashamed of enjoying as I once did. ' 'Whose criticisms?" asked Emerson. "Poe's," I said again. "Oh," he cried out, after a moment, as if he had returned from a far search for my meaning, "you mean the Jingle man!" Fnnston nt School. James H. Canfleld In the American Review of Reviews. During the two years of his stay, Fun ston did very creditable work In mathe matics, botany, chemistry, Greek and Ro man history, Shakespeare, German, Amer ican history and economics. The last two subjects he carried In my department, and under my personal Instruction. I well re call him in the classroom attentive, alert, always ready to take part In a discussion, but not over talkative; with a keen sense of humor and with no little wit; appar ently mastering with ease fundamental principles, though not always careful as to details in application; with rare good sense, holding tenaciously to his own opinion and, I always thought, because he had formed It carefully but always amenable Vo reason. It was entirely evi dent at first that he regarded my Instruc tion with considerable distrust, and was exceedingly slow and wary In making ad missions which might Jead to conclusions which he was not ready to accept. How ever, his Intense interest in both sub jects, anfi the ease and Informality of the lecture-room (the freest discussions were always permitted and welcome), soon brought us info closer and more friendly relations: and while I may not speak for him, I may add for myself that my confidence In him and in his ultimate success has never wavered, and my In terest In him has been continuous from that day to this. Saloona Are the Beneficiaries. Philadelphia Press. The closing of the Army canteen has been followed at Fort Sheridan, the Army post near Chicago, by an Increase of men absent without leave for drunken ness to 3S, the largest number the fort has known; while the morrow after pay day this month, 72 men were under arrest for drunkenness, another number which passes past post records. The saloons are the only beneficiaries through the sup pression of the sale of beer and other light liquors on the post grounds. Not the Way to Make Friends. New York Times. While we seek, and at present very suc cessfully, the extension of our trade In the markets of the world, we maintain Intact the barriers that bar others from our own markets. We strive with all our energy and Ingenuity to sell as much and as widely as we can, but we tax heavily the foreigners who wish to sell to us in return. Eurdpeans must pay a heavy fine If they seek to send their wares to our shores. .Distinctly this Is not a policy to win friends. .I The "Whole in a Nntshcll. New York Sun. Only what had been previously done by Jefferson and his various successors has the United States done since the Spanish war, but on a larger and. to the world, a more Impressive scale. We have merely followed the course of a manufacturing company that enlarges Its plant and per fects its machinery to meet enlarged and perfected competition, and nothing more. A Misfortune. Washington Star. "What Is the matter. Tommy?" asked the mother of the small boy In tears. "I'm lonesome. The other b.oys wouldn't play fair." "What was the game?" "We were playing United States Senate. I resigned, and the other boys forgot to coax me back." Exploded Theories. Toledo Blade. Why do not the fellows who for years talked about the per capita circulation come out And explain why thefr theories fell down? They declared the per capita would rapidly diminish under the gold standard, yet it is now over $28 greater than ever before in our hlBtory, and about one-third more than In 1S36. ,N0TE AND COMMENT. Cuba is pretty sure to get hard hit 'In the breakaway. American thoroughbreds are in the same class with American yachts. From East and Wsst and South and North They'll come to celebrate our Fourth. The Chicago butchers who are about to strike ought to be able to kill time while they are out. Investigation has proven that the aboli tion of the canteen -was a most excellent thing for the whisky dealers. I would rather be Mayor of Cleveland than President. Tom L. Johnson. WeB, all right. The Rest of the World. A man has not much chance for life. And that small chance is slimmer. Now bathing time Is here again. If he's an expert swimmer. There was once a man who rocked a boat. Especial attention Is called to the past tense of the foregoing statement. ' There must be something doing In Mars. She has apparently lost all interest in what is going on in this section of the. universe. Chicago is insulted because a Cincinnati paper has called her a jay town. As Chi cago Insists that she Is a C-port, she ought not to object to being shoved a lit- tie further up the alphabet. The Lick Observatory expedition broke a $3000 mirror Wednesday. Even the most "pizen" foes of superstitution will admit that this was a case where the breaking of a mirror brought bad luck. The Johns Hopkins professor who coun sels against reading too much was prob ably not led to his conclusions by the greed with which Webster Davis book on the Transvaal Is being devoured. Lively interest has been awakened in Sweden by the Importation of American quails. Count Claes Lewcnhnupt, of Foastorjo, has ordered this Spring more than 5000 quails, costing 53300, and more orders are expected. The birds are sent In cages 50 in each cage constructed es pecially for the purpose. The small lot of American quails were set free In Count Lewenhaupt's estate at CJaestorp last Spring, endured the Winter well, and it appears that Sweden has good prospects of an Increase in its game birds. The little daughter of an Eastern Ore gon editor had been indulging in conduct unbecoming a well-bred young lady, and her grandmother, at whose housa she was visiting, filed a remonstrance. "You muen't act that way, little one," counseled the old lady, "you should try to be just as good a little girl as you can, so you will grow up to be a Chris tian." The child thought a minute, then she said: "I don't want to be a Chrlstln, ganma; I want to be a Presbyterian, like mama." Of all the animated beings beneath man kind, the bird Is the most Innocent the nearest akin to Eden, says a writer In Success. Open your Bible and eec how these aerial spirits flit across Its pages. It was a bird that Noah sent forth from the ark to learn whether a safe landing might be made. A raven fed Elijah, and Christ not only made frequent reference to birds In the parables, but declared . that not even a sparrow falls without the knowledge of, the Father in.heayen.aj , And we Americans, practical and senti mental, chose the eagle as the symbol of our National glory. Do I need to aay more? Will not public sentiment, all powerful In this land, crystallize Into leg. islatlon for the protection of. birds? An Indignant looking farmer returned to a horse dealer's about an hour after purchasing a horse. "Look here, sir!" he exclaimed, "I don't want this horse you sold me! He shies. I can't get him to cross the bridge." "That's the reason I sold him," said the dealer, calmly. "Why did you come to me for the horse?" "I saw your advertisement in the pa per." "I thought so. I cave my reaiwv for selling him." "Yes; to be sold, you stated, for no other reason than that the owner wanted to go out of town." "Well, If you can get out of town with him," said the dealer. "It will be more than I can do." PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHEnS "Is Mr. Petcrsby rich?" "I don't think so. He dresses too fashionably." Tlt-Blt9. One-SIded. She So this la the end of our engagement? He It may be for you, but It will take me a year yet to pay the bills. Brooklyn Life. Teacher And why should we endeavor to rise by our own efforts? Johnny Wise "Cause there's no tellln' when the alarm clock will go wrong;. San Francisco News Letter. Phenomenal. "We have the most wonderful cook you ever saw. You know, we only en gaged her as a plain cook." ;'Yes. "Well, she makes good bread." Town and Country. Guaranteed. Dinah What did the fortune teller say? Sam She said I'm gwlne tar had a great stroke ob luck befo' I die, an if It doan' come true, she's gwlne ter refun de money. Puck. - , Amateur gardener (to goat-fancying neigh bor) HI, madam! One of your confounded pets has got into my garden and ls(eating my bedding-plants! Neighbor Good gracious! I trust they are not poisonous! Punch. A, Slight Oversight. Mrs. Shopley Oh. George. I bought a real handsome set of books today on the installment plan. All I have to pay Is $1 50 a month. Mr. Shopley For how many months? Mrs. Shopley Dear me. I for got to ask! Brooklyn Life. Not Astonishing. "It Is astonishing that a large fortune should be left to him by a per son who had only seen him once." "In my, opinion It would have been more astonishing If It had been left to him after the person had seen him twice." Jewish Comment. Proof. "Yes, sir." exclaimed Codling! "my' friend, Simpson is a man of unimpeachable veracity." "What makes you say that?" "Well, I've known him 20 years, and never once, in all that time. Winter or Summer, did he exaggerate his thermometer record." De troit Free Press. Tlie Old Sinn's ViavTB. Indianapolis Sun. ' Back there in the old days, when 'pendtclti wasn't known. x Feller'd git to feclln bad, an git kind o out o" tone. "Doc" ud waltz right In an' say: "Got a fever? Had a. chill? Well, this weather's kind o bad. Rest awhllo nn' take a pill! Be all right tomorrow, Jo." Stop an' Joke some with the kid. , You'd be out the next day, sir plowln" like you never did! s Feller gits a chill today Ge-mu-nee! The doc tor comes. Stands an' feels your pulse an' then shakes his head an' haws and hums: "Gravest symptoms system is thoroughly run down, I fear; Sorry, sir, but there's some signs of appen dicitis here! See jou In a day or so!" Then a. feller lays In bed. An appendicitis comes from the worry In his head! That's the wa,y. It seems to me science Is a mighty thing, But when Ignorance Is bliss, let's be Ignorant, by Jing! J