t'jwrw r - 'Hrt r3Pv " Pf" T THE MOKXIXG -OHKGOXIAN, TUESDAY, ,'JUXE 23, 1901.. V uKite rQomotL Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, as eccond-elass matter. TELEPHONES Editorial Booms 100 Business Office.. .667 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid), in Advance Sally, with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 7 50 Daily, with Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday, per year . ...... 2 00 The Weekly, per year ...., 1 00 The "Weekly; 3 months ..... 00 To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered. Sundays cxcepted.loc Daily, per "week, delivered tinJdaB lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada andtcxico: 10 to 16-page paper .....'.. lc 10 to 32-page paper ...!'. 2c Foreign rates double. News or dlscurelon intended for publication In The Oregonian should be- addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonian," not to the name of any Individual. letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter ehould be addressed simply "The Oregonian." Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue. Taoomo. Box 055, Tacoma Postofflce. Eastern Business Office. 47' is. 40 and SO Tribune building. New York City; -1C9 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency. Eastern repreentative ,) For sale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 740 Market street, near the PalacftHotel; Gold smith Bros.. 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street; Foster & ()rear. Ferry news stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring stret. and Oliver & Haines, 100 So. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. , For sale In Omaha by BarkalowBros., 1612 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co , 77 W. Second South street. J For sale In Ogden by W. C. Klnd,ot Twen tj -fifth street - On file at Buffalo. N. T., in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. 1 For sale in Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House newstand. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 000-912 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER- Partly cloufcy. with probably an occasional light shower. Warmer. Westerly winds. YESTERDAY'S AVE ATHER. Maximum tem perature, 00; minimum temperature, 48; pre tlritatlon, 0.10 inch. ' PORTLAND. TTESDAY JUXE.S.V1001 y 3IUXICIPAL OWNERSHIP "PUBLIC , UTILITIES.'' r In the Charter Committee of theXJIty of Portland there has been some Senate whether, in the article as to franchises, such as the right to construct and oper ate street railways, telephone and tele graph lines, light plants, etc., witHin the city, there should be inserted a pfo lision giving the city power to appro priate such properties to its own. use, upon appraisement and payment there forafter the lapse of a fixed period, say twenty-one years. The Oregonian most positively holds that such franchises ought to be granti ed, or renewed, only on conditions that wilj yield-the city a revenue, propor tioned to their value to those to whom they mav be cranted. "Rut tho flptnlf of taxation of such franchises is a sublj ject open to opinion and debate. The- franchises have a value beyond the mere valuation of the property, 'rated in proportion to other property; for the use of the streets is a privilege or ease ment of large value, and practically ex clusive to each company for the pur poses granted; hence, in addition to the moderate property tax there should be in most cases if not in all a tax upon the franchise, in the form of a levy on the gross receipts, under each particular franchise. The city has a right to adequate compensation for the use of these franchises, and it will be gross dereliction to allow these valu able uses to continue longer without proper prevision for compensation of the municipality. But the question whether the city is to go Into the various lines of business that may be founded on these fran chises! is a question of quite another character. Sb Is the 'question whether It should reserve to Itself the right and power, to resume these franchises and take over the property to itself, after a term of years. The Oregonian will say plainly that it is no believer in the socialistic jargon about state or mu nicipal "ownership of public utilities." Beyond question, the right of. regula tion belongs to the state. But the pro posal df state-, or- municipal ownership opens (a question of a very, different kind. lA-s. a policy it is not merely ques tionable, but held by many, and we think by most, to be very erroneous. If the State Is to embark in this busi ness, how far is it to go? "Where is It to stop? The term "public, utilities" can have no restricted definition. Every Important Industry is a public utility the making of shoes certainly not less important than the operation of .street cars. Again, it is well known that the ex penditure necessary for the use of any important franchise and the develop ment of a property upon It must be large; also, that for a number of years there is likely to be little pay or profit, especially In a city that has not yet passed, beyond Portland's stage ol growth. Investors therefore are not likely to take franchises for short terms, or even for terms of considera ble length, and go forward with exten sive and expensive improvements, un der notice that by the time profit might be hoped for they will be required to surrender both the franchise and the property. True, It is said they are to be paid upon an appraised valuation. But the first property the plant by this time will probably be thought to have little value. It may be worn or antiquated, and -would be appraised for little; and undoubtedly it would be al lowed to run down and the service would become poor, toward the end of the term when the state was to take it. No plant is likely to be kept in high order, when it is understood that the state Is to take it at its own valuation, at the end of a term. It would seem, therefore, that no better way of para lyzing the undertakings necessary for public convenience and municipal de velopment could be devised. t The philosophy of it, in short, is al together Utopian. It resembles the phijospphy of the .jubilee .year of the dreamers of ancient Israel, who at tempted, after the return from the cap tivity, to create an ideal state, founded on their conceptions of social justice. Every fiftieth year the first owner of the property, if he had parted with it, was to resume it The state was to take charge of the redistribution, strip ping of their property those who had had energy to acquire it, and stripping them moreover of opportunity. There is a difference between that case and this, indeed; mit it is a difference In detail, -not in fact; for here the state is to claim the right to take the property, there the Individual first owner was to have it back. It is not, indeed, pro posed in our Charter Committee to make state ownership general at least not yet; but there are those who think there ought to be state ownership of all the means of production and distribu tion, and their numbers are not few. Who, indeed, can give any adequate definition of "public utilities," and yet logically leave out any of those things that are useful to the mass' of man kind? The true socialist believes that the state should do it all; and these municipal propositions are directly in his line. These franchises belong to the city, and it Is its right and duty to require payment for the use of them. But that Is widely different from the proposal that the state or city shall acquire property and 'embark In lines of indus try, great or small. "Water supply stands alone, as a municipal undertak ing that Is not questioned. There is nothing else of its kind. Supply of light has, Indeed, some analogies to it, but it has not won its way to general acceptance, and probably never will. Carriage of people here and there in a city can properly be no more a part of the business of a municipality than the distribution of milk at their doors; and the transmission of Intelligence be tween them over the telephone is as little a part of the city's proper busi ness. The people of the United States, we think, are not at all inclined to allow expansion of socialistic ideas in municipal and state affairs, to meet the demands of theorists, dreamers and utopists. The true American idea, the idea of a democratic republic, Is to hold the state to limited functions. Let us regulate, control and tax the use of these franchises, but not attempt to operate Industries upon them, or to ex tend the functions of state or city, to meet notions about "public wants," of which there can be no end. The city may just as well publish its newspapers and conduct its hotels and boarding houses as to operate Its street railways and telephones. THE COLUMBIA IX HISTORY. The Columbia River, which the river and harbor committee will visit this week, has been known to navigators for over 125 years. Captain Bruno He ceta, commanding the Spanish ship Santiago, lay to off the mouth of the river on August 15, 1775, and Heceta, convinced that he was near the outlet pf a large body of fresh water, charted it the Rio de San Roque. The stupidity of the English sailors deprived them of the Ijonor of entering the river be fore the American Captain Gray. Lieu tenant John Meares. commanding the East India Company's vessel Felice, made a superficial examination of the coast in July, 1788, and re ported with great assurance that "we can now with safety assert that no such river as that of St. Roc exists as laid down on Spanish charts." Early in 1792 Vancouver was in the vicinity of the Columbia, but did not consider the opening worthy of attention, being satisfied "that all rivers or Inlets that had been described as discharging their contents into the Pacific between the fortieth and forty-eighth degrees of north latitude were reduced to brooks insufficient for our vessels to navigate, or to bays inaccessible as harbors for refitting." On April 29, 1792, Gray spoke Vancouver that he had been for nine days off the mouth of a large elver. Still Vancouver was incredulous, and with an air into which he doubt less injected a little English contempt for the upstart Americans, he wrote "lhat if any inlet or river should be found, it must be a very intricate one arid inaccessible to vessels of our bur den; owing to reefs and broRsn water." What a striking similarity between Vancouver's reports and some talk we heap nowadays! That which emanates from Seattle and is echoed at Astoria. The loss of the Peacock in 1841, and the Shark in 1846, were prejudicial to the Columbia, as the wrecks occurred at aitime when the probable value of the river to commerce was a large fac tor in; the settlement of the boundary question with Great Britain. But these wreck, and. in fact, all the early wrecks, were caused by lack of knowl edge Qf the river, and not that the channels were not sufficiently broad and deep. Before and after the loss of the -Peacock and the Shark, and prior tq 1850, Captain Crosby of the Toulon, Captain Couch of the Mary land, Captain Sylvester of the Chenan cas, Captain Gelston of the Whiton and the naval officers of the Hudson's Bay Company entered the river and depart ed from It without accident. Notwith standing the bad reputation given the river by Commander Wilkes for Ir regular titles, shifting sands and great distance bf landmarks, the Columbia has made friends and retained them. Jdhn Maglnn, president of the Asso ciation of Pilots of New York, examined the Wilkes charts shortly after they were published, and wrote to Senator Benton that "the mouth of the Colum bia is a better harbor, and has mani fest advantages over the harbor of New York in all the essential points which constitute a good harbor. . . . Taking the mouth of the Columbia as It now is in-a state of nature, without the aid of pilots, buoys, beacons, light houses and steamboats, I deem it a good harbor with the aid of these ad vantages. I would deem it a far better harbor than New York, and capable of containing an unlimited number of ships." The experienced eye of Ma glnn read In the charts a future which Wflkes was inacapable of conceiving, but which the commander of the wrecked Shark saw when he said "the introduction of steam and the presence of good pilots would render the pas sage over the bar comparatively safe." Captain Gray found the channel of the Columbia neither broad nor plain. Two crews of the Tonquin, with the exception of one man, perished in 1811 while sounding. In 1817, Captain Bid die, of the "United States sloop-of-war Ontario, was sent to take possession of Astoria, but the sight of the break ers upon the bar caused him to regard the bar as hazardous. In 1839 Sir Ed ward Belcher surveyed the bar In H. B. M. ship Sulphur, and grounded sev eral times. Navigation on the Colum bia has Improved wonderfully since the early days. Less than fifty years ago Portland became ecstatic because a barkentine drawing -seventeen feet of water was enabled to ascend the rivers and discharge 530 tons of freight at its wharves. Now 9000-ton ships like the Indrapura and Indravelli come and go almost without notice. Portland will ask Congress, through the river and harbor committee, to deepen the channel at the mouth of the Columbia to forty feet It will demand this, in behalf of the com merce which it is developing with Asia, and which Is justifying the use of large ships like the Indravelli, In drapura and Knight Companion; It will demand it in behalf of its station as a wheat-exporting city, fifth in the United States in 1900. and outranked only by New York, San Fran5isco, Galveston and Boston; it will demand, it in be half of the wheat exports pf the .ten years ending in 1900, aggregating 105, 395.105 bushels, being 62 per cent of the total shipments from the Pacific Northwest. In behalf of the tributary country in the Inland Empire, Portland will demand that the Columbia and Snake Rivers be opened to Lewiston at the earliest practicable moment, so that the food products of that great re gion shall have" outlet to the sea by their natural trade route. For an ex penditure of about $4,000,000 at the cascades the Government opened forty miles of river to navigation. For an additional expenditure of $3,500,000 be tween The Dalles and Celllo over 200 miles of river would be opened to navi gation. We should impress upon the river and harbor committee that We are not asking Congress to open the Columbia, but to improve navigation on it. ' Let us say frankly that the depth of water at the mouth of the river Is not suffi cient for the present commerce, let alone for that which Is developing by the opening of markets in the Pacific and the cultivation of large productlye areas east of us. The Columbia is the natural trade route of this immense basin, and should be made free from Its mouth to the farthest point Inland to which craft can ascend and load and unload. A STEP IN RAILROAD EVOLUTION. There is more thun one way to skin a cat, also more than one way to cook a rabbit; and recent events have shown that there is more than one way to combine railroads. Time was when It was deemed within the power of states to prevent great railroad corporations from absorbing their competitors. Time was when statutes were supposed to have some bearing on the control of railroad properties and. majorities of boards of directors were required to reside in the state which should au thorize their existence, thus to be more amenable to law. The railroad powers in some cases went through the form of objecting to these "regulations" and "discouragements to capital," but finally accepted them with good grace. In View of recent events, the verdancy of the people and the statesmen of the past generation seems quite refreshing. What railroad company wishes to ab sorb its competitors in these days? Is anybody afraid local boards of di rectors will direct important railroad moves? Does anybody suppose those carefully framed regulations, in consti tution and statute, achieve their ob ject? The corporations continue their several separate legal Identities with the utmost precision, but the boards of directors do what they are told1 to do. Harmonization of interests goes on just the same, and the railroad trust Is the result. All this is accomplished away over the heads of courts and Legislatures, even beyond the reach of the professional politicians and with out harassing popular campaigns. Gray brain matter and a turn of the wrist does it. Two groups of railroads seem about ready to do business on the new basis the Harriman group and the Hill group. There is no illegal or question able merging of corporations, no at tempt to do anything which the un sophisticated Legislatures would re gard as wicked. Of course it would be bad for one soulless railroad corpora tion to buy and own Its competitor and thus destroy competition; but nothing was said about one man or set of men buying and owning both corporations. Surely It would be a great curtailment of personal rights and freedom to say that a man should not Invest his money in whatever legal property might suit his fancy. This would violate every bill of rights from Omaha' to Runny mede. And there can be nq doubt that railroad corporations are legal prop erty to have and to hold. As matters have come to be railroad presidents are but general managers. The real executive function is exer cised in New York City. Those who wear the title and draw the comfort able salary of president have been re duced to mere operating officials from whom an accounting is regularly re quired. The chief traffic men of the different corporations, within a combi nation will have to report to a central traffic chief. There you have it one executive actuator, one traffic governor for a large group of roads of allied In terests. The combination is effected and nothing but the spirit of the old arrangement is destroyed. Empty laws cumber the statute-books, hungry poli ticians look on in grief. The people are passive. Now what will the great rail road combiners do with their properties make them agents of progress and development, or mere harvesters of div idends and trouble? SOMETHING SEW IN EXPOSITIONS. During August and September of this year there will be an international ex position of hygiene, maritime security and fishery, held at Ostend, Belgium, the object of . which is to make known the measures adopted by different gov ernments for the organization and working of services of succor on battle fields, and In cases of great catastro phes on sea or land as the use and working of llfesavlng apparatus, etc. An international congress will be or ganized In connection therewith for the discussion of questions of hygiene and maritime and colonial security. The scope of Inquiry proposed is wide and the topics seem to be irrelevant, but the work has been so systematized that investigation and discussion in each de partment will be carried on independ ently. The exposition will comprise three divisions. The first will be under the general head of hygiene, one section of which will contain publications relat ing to this subject; another will relate to the application of physical and nat ural science to the hygiene of seamen and of the inhabitants of the coast; a third to applications of civil or maritime engineering; a fourth to the prepara tion of food on board of vessels, pre served foods, refrigerating apparatus everything, in fact, suggestive of mod ern methods and inquiry into matters for the interest and welfare of coast and maritime peoples. Under the second division "Security" lazar-houses. Red Cross methods, lighthouse signals, equipment and dress for Balvors. apparatus for sal vage, life buoys and transports for the wounded and shipwrecked will be icon sidored. Under the third division "Fishery" fishing and Its auxiliary sciences and the physical, Intellectual and moral development of fishermen ,and sailors, will be considered. While necessarily there will be much that is purely theoretical In the discus sion of the topics thus briefly outlined, the simple fact that theories have been elaborated in regard to them Is sug gestive ot progress in ways of health, comfort and longevity conditions thai make for human happiness and useful- ness and exemplify evolution In some of ltd most subtle phases. It is small wonder that the proposal of Sir Thomas Lipton to race the cup defender and challenger- across the At lantic has been received with surprise by the New York Yacht Club, and there seems little likelihood that It will be entertained. The accidents that have already befallen the slightly built rac ing machines show that the factor of safety has been cut down as low as It was possible to cut It, and that it will be little short of wonderful if bbth yachts live through the races without mishap. Of course, In the event of a race across the ocean the sail plans would be modified, and the boats braced and strengthened to withstand the shock of the waves; but while the Shamrock, under rough-weather rig, and prepared fully for the voyage, may make the long Journey In safety, she will make no attempt at speed, and will be sailed so as to protect her from the violence of the waves. But even with all Ihese precautions, several challeng ers have been wrenched so severely on the high seas that it was necessary to dock them before they could enter the races, and it is hardly likely that either the Shamrock or the Constitution could be raced from shore to shore without grave danger, not only to the yachts themselves, but to the lives of those who sail In them. There can be no question that a face across the Atlantic would be fine" sport; that it would afford abundant opportunity for a test of sea manship, and that It would attract the Interest of the world even more, per haps, than the cup races off Sandy Hook. It should not, however, be made by feather-weight racing craft, such as the Constitution and the Shamrock, but by yachts built for that kind of work, and able to meet the high-rolling seas without danger of being wrecked or capsized In mid-ocean, to the deadly peril of all on board. All of the great trade centers which are the Initial shlpplng-pdlnts to the ocean for large" areas of production are In a limited sense inland cities. New York on the .Hudson, Chicago on a feeder of the St. Lawrence, Philadelphia on the Delaware. Baltimore on the Pa tapsco, St. Louis and New Orleans on the Mississippi, and Portland on the Willamette an$ Columbia, are exam ples. Witness also, In Europe, London on the Thames, Liverpool on the Mer sey, Bremen on the Weser, Hamburg on the Elbe, Antwerp on the Schelde, Bordeaux on tlie Garonne, and Paris on the Seine. If salt water Is the first es sential of a commercial city, why do San Francisco, Boston and Newport News yield tc Chicago, and Seattle, Tacoma and Everett to Portland? Ships go as far inland as they can, fol lowing the established custom of trade from the beginning of time of the meet ing of seller and buyer at the point on the trade route most convenient to both. The few days of sunshine of last week caused a marked Improvement In the appearance of lowland wheat, pushed the strawberry crop forward rapidly, caused peas to fill, currants to ripen, corn to start, and, Indeed, Induced a general forward movement In the, domjtfrl of agriculture In the Willamette Valley. Having thus per formed a generous act, the clerk of the weather changed the programme with out apparent cause or due warning, and let loose, as it were, "chill No vember's surly blasts" and rains upon the June fields and gardens. "Pota toes needed rain," say the growers of the useful tubers, and the rest of us are driven to seek consolation In the fact that this need has been supplied. The announcement is made semi-offl-clally that Pension Commissioner H. C. Evans has handed his resignation to the President. It is explained that while for personal reasons the Presi dent has been disposed to retain Evans in office, thcttltude of the latter has for months been that of "dignified Irri tation." President McKinley would like, it Is said, to stand between his Commissioner and the rascally pension agents who have made the life of the latter a burden, but political conditions will not permit this. So he will en deavor to soften the matter by finding a less trying but equally remunerative place for him, thus making concessions necessary to his own peace of mind, to influential pension agents. Susan B. Anthony's address deliv ered on the opening day of the annual convention of the National Woman's Suffrage Association at Minneapolis In cluded the following passage:" When the mother of Christ shall be made the true irfodel of womanhood and motherhood, when the office of maternity shall be held a cred, and the "mother bhall consecrate herself, as did Mary, to the one Idea of bringing forth the Christ child, then, and not till then, will this earth see a new order of men and women, .prone to good rather than to evil. The New York Sun quotes this pas sage, and fairly says that If women follow such a model "they cannot be politicians. They will pull baby car riages instead of wires. Their ofilce is to raise children for the Republic and the future." ' A considerate public will deeply sym pathize with Secretary Hay in the be reavement that has fallen upon him and his household through the tragic death of his eldest son. The death of a young man just entering upon a ca reerof honoi and usefulness is, to a certain extent, a public misfortune, while to parents whose hopes are sud denly blasted by the untimely passing of a promising son, the event Is a bitter calamity. This being true, public sym pathy and regret In full measure attend Secretary and Mrs. Hay In the severe affliction that has overtaken them. It would be quite disloyal to McKin ley, Hanna, Foraker et al. even to sup pose that anything new or unexpected would come from the Ohio Republican Convention. Ohio is a great state, but its political parties are in that condi tion of subserviency expressed by the term "thoroughly organized." The ma chine does Its work there with neatness and dispatch. The population of Salem is again set down in the census "returns at 4258. It is a beggarly showing for the capital of Oregon. Has the place, grown at all during the past thirty years? Or was the census enumerator too stupid to make his returns Jn an Intelligible man ner? Salem certainly cannot "point with pride." We guarantee that Bryan, In declin ing a third nomination for the Presi dency which has not been offered him, d,oes not think he is rejecting an im perial crowot EAvST OREGON' IKKIGATlb.V Bakcr City Republican. Congressman Malcolm A. Mood hi succeeded In securing a promteb of a visit to Eastern Oregon by Professor F. H. Newell, chief hydrographer of the Geological Survey. Some time within the near future this distinguished Irrigation expert "will be in our part of the stute, to measure the prominent streams and furnish data regarding the possibilities of reclaiming arid lands. Announcement of this fact should create widespread Interest and generate an In tense spirit of activity. Professor New ell, the dispatch 3tates, has been visiting those regions where the farmers showed an appreciation ot such work, and by united, eager demand, offered some en couragement to the Government In uf fordlng all possible assistance. He did not come to the vast arid region of Oregon- before because there seemed no de mand for his services. He found nothing here to encburage him to believe that pre paratory work by the Government would be followed up by Intelligent effort to ap ply Information conveyed. Congressman Moody ha3 persuaded the survey that 'Eastern Oregon farmers are alive to the possibilities of Irrigation. His arguments have accomplished what ab sence of concerted action and progressive activity on the part of the farmers should have done before. It now rests with the farmers to substantiate Mr. Moody's statements in their behalf. In their keep ing lies the simple duty of demonstrating that the agriculturists of this vast unde veloped region' are awake, are in tl line of march to greater and better conditions than those which have blessed their ancestors. Oregon Is known to po?spss a vast arid j belt. Irrlgatlom enterprises here have not i gained the substantial headway noted In j many other climes. Land In this country, which If In California would be brilliant with orange groves or richly productive of luscious fruits, is set to sagebrush, has been set to that useless shrub for genera tions past, and will be so in the future un less greater enterprise Imbues the Inhab itants. Irrigation In Eastern Oregon will un fold possibilities so great that, compared with the present, they might b? thought a dream. There Is soil here, fertlh, pro ducing soil, quickly , responsive tb the hus bandman's touch if watered. Around the outskirts of other communi ties population is clinging to barren earth, thinly clad with soil, broken with boulders, and deprived of every produc tive Ingredient. Wavering at a move which takes them from environments fa miliar, to those they know not of, they pour forth good human energy upon ster ile ground. ; These conditions cannot exist when such vast tracts as spread .before the eye In Eastern Oregon are open to settlement. If these thrifty, Industrious people are taught where to look. Nothing In modern days does more to attract Immigrants and capital than legitimate advertising of re sources. If the eminent Government Irri gation expert Is known to be spending a considerable period In thl3 region, and the Intelligent reports sent out coyer facts outlining the vast resources of Eastern Oregon, no surer magnet cquld be formed for capital. Investors and homeseekers would follow his statements regarding agricultural development with absorbing Interest. Commencing at The Dalles, Congress man Moody and Professor Newell will traverse most of Eastern Oregon. All the larger streams will be carefully meas ured, and notes made of Irrigation possi bilities. One of the watercourses men tioned In the outline already furnished was Powder River, flowing by Bakef's very door. In anticipation of this, visit, farmers and business men generally would find It to the advantage of their community If an effort were made to prepare Informa tion, afford Professor Newell opportunity for observation and study, and manifest Buch nn interest as would encourage this valued department further to analyze Eastern Oregon and report on Its pros pects. This is one of thfe lines of legiti mate advertising, which produces tenfold results. A wlde-avake community will quickly grasp the opportunity. A Dangerous Gan. Hudson Maxim In the Home Magazine. During the last few years we have heard a great deal about the man behind the gun. He has had his share of pralst. We have pictured him in our mind's eye as a bronzed hero for whom death has no terrors. There Is another type of man behind the cun of whom we have not heard so much, but he Is an equally brave and Interesting character. He Is the In ventive crank. He Is usually possessed of the most unbounded confidence In his own devices, due to a blissful Ignorance of the powerful agencies he attempts to handle. He Is a real hero all right, and will al ways express his willingness to stand to his gun during tests, while the usual man behind the gun seek3 shelter. Only recently an Inventor constructed a gun from gas pipe for throwing dynamite with gunpowder. He took It to Sandy Hook for trial, but as the ordnance officers would not permit him to stand beside It while he touched It off, he was great ly enraged and refused to let the gun be tested at all by the United States Gov ernment. He threatened to give forelgr governments the benefit of his Inven tion, and Uncle Sam would be obllgea to do without It. He took his gun home with him, where he could test It all by himself, which he did In a field back of his house. He was picked up unconscious, with his under jaw gone, and a few other parts missing. What Tommy Atklnn Ilntci. Monthly Review. If tfhere is one thing Tommy hates It is being worried. The word is a poor one, and has better but less polite substitutes in his own vernacular. I don't deny that he will grouse (grumble) heartily over the most necessary work, but he will grouse In a very different and more justifiable way over unnecessary work, or work given h.m at t'ne wrong time, when a little con sideration would have shown the order to be unfair. There are times when details must be Insisted on; there are others when a sympathetic Instinct would say: "Let them alone." He hates a succes sion of contradictory orders, one counter manding the other. Often this is in evitable, but he Is shrewd enough to make allowances where It Is so, and to distinguishes cases where it Is only fore sight and consideration that are lacking. An officer's knowledge of his work and knowledge of his men. never far sep arated, are here .closly allied. An order which Is wrong through shortsightedness or ignorance, though Its results in incon venience to the giver, may be nothing at all, reacts inexorably on the rank and file In the shape of annoyance and worry perhaps far out of proportion to Its in trinsic importance. Tariff Itisne Apraln Forvrard. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Against the Eastern Republican move ment to punish Babcock by removing him from the ways and means committee and the chairmanship of the Congressional campaign committee, lies the certainty that the Western Republicans will resent the attempt and Insist upon some modifi cation ot Government protection to trust extortion in the home market. Babcock knew that Western Republican sentiment was strongly back of him in putting for ward such a bill as he has, or he would not have taken the step. He may be forced to retreat and the Western Repub licans may be Induced to keep still a while longer, most probably. The Eastern wing of the party Is the stronger of the two. and will be able to use the prevailing prosperity and the old tariff argument of protection to labor and small concerns, with powerful effect. But success in keep ing the party together against any change in the tariff must result In restoring the tariff question to something of irs old po sition of importance in American politics. WOOt, -VERSUS COTTON. Boston Herald. In the last bulletin qf the National As sociation of Wool Manufacturers the edi tor endeavors and to quite an extent suc cessfullyto meet the adverse comments that have been raised by the woolgrowers concerning the amount of cotton and oth er substitutes that have been used dur ing the last few years In the manufacture of alleged woolen and worsted goods. Probably few not Interested In the busi ness have been aware of vthe great ex tent to which of late wool has given placo to other materials In these classes of manufacture. One of the largest and most successful manufacturers of this country recently said that, In his opinion, cotton was used at the present time In the manufacture of wool and woolen goods to what would be the equivalent of 200.000.COO pounds of American wool in the grease. As the total wool clip of this country for the year 1900 Is estimated at less than 300,000.000 pounds. It will be seen that cotton plays a part almost as great as wool In the production of wool fabrics. The editor of the Bulletin admits that the use Is large; that as the predilections of the American people for the bargain counter Is notorious; that as they expect to purchase something for less than the cost of materials and manufacture, they Invite and cannot justly complain of de ception. But. without saying It In so many words, he admits that the difficulty In the present Instance Is the artificially produced high price of wool. He says that the free wool tariff of 1KM not only admitted an enormous quantity of adulterated woolen goods from abroad, but also reduced the cost of domestic all wool goods to a point In keeping with free raw material. When the duties on wool were restored under the new tariff, the manufacturers, particularly those making ready-made clothing, which repre sents a great part of the use made of wool and woolen textile fabrics, found It Impossible to put up their prices to cor respond with the artificial advance In the cost of the raw material. The editor of the Eulletln'holds the tariff of 1SD4 respon sible for the present use of substitutes, because it accustomed the American peo ple to a range of low prices from which they cannot now be persuaded to depart. This, it seems to us. Is a back-handed responsibility, since, if in the Dlngley tar iff the wool schedule had been left as In the preceding tariff, the American manu facturers could have supplied their custo mers with the low-priced goods which they needed without having to resort so largely to the use of wool substitutes. Even the editor of the Bulletin admits that the wcol duties under the present tariff law are too high, that they oper ate to restrict the consumption of wool, and are thus Injurious to the grower of that staple, a result which he says the wool manufacturers pointed out to the woolgrowers at the time the Dlngley bill was under Congressional consideration. The statement has been frequently made at Washington by those representing the woolgrowers that, If a high duty was maintained upon imported wool. It would not required many years before there would be produced In the United States all of the wool that the American people require. To quite an extent present ex perience Is demonstrating the truth of this forecast, although in a manner that the woolgrowers could never have ex pected. Instead of Increasing their pro duction of wool up to the level of an In creased demand, they have, by Insisting upon extremely high prices, brought the per capita American demand for wool pretty closely down to the limit of their former production; hence. Instead of In creasing the supply, they have lessened the demand, and we have low prices for wool In our market simply because even the present domestic wool clip, which Is considerably less In quantity than It was fifteen years ago. appears to be mora than equal to the demands of the consum ing public. We are not Importing any considerable quantity .of the foreign manufactures of wool; we are simply doing without this staple and are using cotton In place of It. So long as cotton at ten cents a pound can perform the service of wool, which on a scoured basis costs fifty-five to sixty cents a pound, it is obvious that the former and not the latter will be used; and as the editor of the Bulletin points out, modern Invention has gone so far In the Improvement of machinery and methods that cotton manufacturers have had given to them not only the material appearance, but also the "feel," of wool len goods. The American consumers, numbering In the aggregate 75,000,000 people1, have In this way revenged themselves upon their woolgrowing and woolmanufacturlng op pressors. The latter, through Congres sional Influence, have decreed that wool and wool fabrics should have a high and artificially sustained market price given to them. The method adopted for the purpose of securing this result has been little less than legalized extortion. The only means by which the American con sumers have been able to defend them selves Is to announce that to quite a de gree they will do without wool, Just as their forefathers announced that they would do without tea when the autocratic English Government compelled them to pay a tax upon this. This Instinctive ac tion, just as effective in its results as though It had been planned, has great ly astonished and disappointed the wool grower, and Is changing the wool Into what may be fairly described as cotton manufacturing business. i La Grippe in Fifteenth Century. Notes and Queries. It Is very well known that the Influenza Is not an exclusively modern complaint, but I am not sure Whether a curious ref erence to it by Bower, the contlnuator of Fordun's Chronicle, has been noted. Writ ing of the year 1420) he says that among those who died In Scotland that year were Sir Henry St. Clair, Earl of Orkney; Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith, Sir William de Aberncthy. Sir William de St. Clair, Sir William Cockburn. and many others, all by "that Infirmity whereby not only great men, but Innumerable quantity of the commonalty, perished, which was vulgar ly termed le Quhew tie Quhew a vulgarl bus dlcebatur)." (Bower, xv, 32.) Now "quh" In Scottish texts usually represents the sound of "wh" (properly aspirated), therefore It seems that In the 15th century the Influenza was known as "the Whew," Just as It Is known In the 20th century as "the flue." I have refrained from quoting at length Bower's explanation of the cause of. the epidemic, but there seems lit tle doubt that the disease was Identical with that with which we are so grievous ly familiar. The Mr.n Behind the Pen. Magennls tveagh. In Leslie's Weekly. Horning, evening, early and late, Rain, or sunshine, or snow. Behold our friend of the fourth estate In the hives of Newspaper Row! Who uo tireless? day by day? Who so modeit of men? Who so young-, though his head be gray? The man behind the pen. Headache. heartache, merry or sad. True to his chrisen trust. Recording the deeds of the good and the bad. Gentle, generouE. Just. Happy-go-lucky, fond of good cheer. Little to show for it when He balances books, at the end of a year Tho man behind the pen. Popular Idols! Children of fame! Which of you pauses to think That most of the glory encircling your name Was born of printer's Ink? Towns turn out the people shout With rapture ecstatic ah. then Remember the wizard who brought It 'about! The man behind the pen. Morning, evening, early and late. Rain, or rinshlne. or snow. Behold our friend ot the fourth estate In the hives of Newspaper Row! Who so tireless day by day? Who se modest of tnon? Who so young, though his head be gray? The man behind the pen. NOTE AXD COMMENT. And the next day It rained. Last ditches appear to be scattered all, over the Transvaal. Drop a hundred million dollars Into the , slot and get a trust. Philadelphia Is achieving a hit In the role of a terrible example. What shall we do with our girls? Is be ginning to be a serious question in Rus sia and Italy. Having laid down hi3 arms, of course General Callles will no longer be able to lift up his head. The theatrical season has closed in the East, but the murder trials have stepped. In to amuse the matinee girls. Keep your eye on Funston. He wilt probably celebrate the Fourth of July by going out into the woods and capturing a Filipino private. LI Hung Chang has retained nn emlnont lawyer. The old man evidently Intends to make a will that will stay made for a few months after his decease. Another boom in tho stock market is predicted. Buy early and you will be out of danger of the fear which Is bringing Andrew Carnegie's gray hairs with sor row down to the grave. We have beat Hon. John Bull at golf. In the yacht races, ard on the turf, and the Fourth of July Is coming around to remind him that we had something fhe best of the War of the Revolution. Swiss cow bells have been Introduced Into the Himalayas to frighten the tigers away from the cattle. If the cow bells do not work, accordions can be substitut ed. Any tiger that ever growled woi?Ad fly from the sound of an accordion. A prominent colored man who Is com ing to Portland, organized a chapter of the Order of Hawks In Seattle. As the views of the colored race and those ot the hawk coincide on the chicken ques tion, tho good brother ought to be well qualified to put the order on an inter esting basis. The following dramatic criticism ap peared recently In a Norwegian paper: "The traveling theatrical company at present visiting this town gave one night a representation of a play styled 'Tho Merry W.ves of Windsor,' by a person called Shakespeare. The play Is said to be a comedy, but Is terribly monotonous In its effect, especially the two first acts. An uncouth and besotted cavalier, who flirts and spoons with a bevy of deml mondalnes, but who becomes a victim to their absurd Intrigues such Is the sum. total of the plot. We can only say that such a play Is roor fare to Invite an edu cated public to. It was a relief when the curtain dropped, and wo had an opportun ity of listening to a selection of humorous songs." "I heard Dr. Conan Doyle tell a good story during a trip I made to London last Winter." said an Eastern man a day or two ago. "He said that at a dinner party he had attended the guests began dis cussing the dally discoveries made to the detriment of people occupying high sta tions 'In life and enjoying the confidence of the business world. Dr. Doyle said that It had always been his opinion that there was a skeleton In the closet of every man who had reached the age of 40. This led to a lot of discussion, some of the guests resenting the Idea that there was no one who had not in his past something that were better concealed. As a result of the controversy. Dr. Doyle said. It was suggested that his views as. to family skeletons be put to the test. The diners selected a man of their ac quaintance whom all knew only as an upright Christian gentleman, whose word was accepted as quickly as his bond and who stqod with the highest In every re spect. 'We wrote a telegram saying: "All Is discovered, flee at once," to this pillar of society,' said Dr. Doyle, 'and sent It. He disappeared the next day, and has never been heard from since." Attorney-General Knox Is the most youthful-looking man that has occupied a. Cabinet portfolio In recent years. Ho looks more like a boy of 18 or M than he does like a man of middle age. The other day he was taken for a boy by an old gentleman who was at the Depart ment of Justice to see the Attorney-General on business. Mr. Knox's office Is on tho first lloor of the building. The walt-tnsr-room is on the opposite side of the hall. The old gentleman had been sitting there for an hour or more to see the, Attorney-General. At last Mr, Knox emerged from his office to go to some other part of the building. The old gen tleman mistook him for the office boy, and stepping up to him, said: "Say, sonny, what kind of a fellow Is, your boss? I see you coming out of hid office, and presume you know all about him. I have a little business to trans act with the Attorney-General, and would like to get a line on Mr. Knox before tackling him." Mr. Knox's cherubic face brightened, and. with a merry twinkle In his eyo, said: "Oh, he's all right. Walk right In and sit down until I return. I will then hear what you have to say." The old gentleman would then and there have sold nlmself for 30 cents. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGItAPHERS Mathllde Mr. Hungerford is a man who thoroughly believes In himself. Elaine How very gullible he must be. Town and Country. Too Fast for Her. Miss Elden There are so many fact young men nowadays. Miss Youn5 ly H'm yes? you do seem to havc difficulty In catching one. Philadelphia Eenlng Bulletin. Horticultural Millinery. "Harry, how do you like my new hat?" "I don't know, Harriet: doesn't it need a little more fruit on top and a little more snrubbery on the left side?" Chicago Record-Herald. At the Apothecary's. Poet How much for this prescription? Apothecary Two dollar, please. Poet (soliloquizing as he pays) And tho publishers toll me that poetry Is a drug In the market. Oh, that It were! Boston Transcript. No Sport About It. "I see that the cup de fender Constitution takes trial trips on Sun day. Is It right to indulge in a sport on vhc day of rogt?" "Trips in a cup defender don't como under the head of sport. They are classed as danserou scientific experiments." Cleveland Plain Dealer. So Sweet of Her! Mrs. Chattcrlelgh Fancy, dear, at the Browns' last night, they wera all sajlng how glad they -were to hear you were at last engaged! Of course, I didn't bl!ve the report, dear, and I said I wondered any one could be so stupid as to imagine anything an absurd !" Punch. His Marksmanship. "Did did you ever shoot a man?" questioned the tenderfoot timllly of Pepperhole Pete. "See here, young filler." bawled Pepperhole Pete, In a voice that shook Piko's Peak, "don't you never reflect an my marksmanship agin! Shoot a man! I never mlss'd one, y dern galoot!" Ohio Statt Jour nal. Caught Red-Handed. "We believe yoa to ba the guilty man." hissed tho great sleith. "I am innocent," retorted the accused. "Bit those red stains on, your hands? They art surely blood." "No, sir; lithograph Ink. I sarted to read the art supplement of a Sundty paper while I was perspiring." Chicago Naws.