'"esr -"v-wFvfmvfi'0f t,tm " i.j 'S pww WW" I THE MORNING OREGONIAN TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1901. '-v -S""t j-fi iw romcm Entered at th PostofOoe at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. JCdltorUl Rooms.. ,...160 Business Office. .007 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By X-bM (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month ? S3 Daily, Scnday excepted, per year 1 BO ally, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 Thtf "Weekly, per year 1 $0 Tea. Weekly, 8 months co To CSty Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.l5c Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. - T7clted States, Canada and Mexico; 10 to 10-page paper. .......... lc It to 32-page paper 2c Torelsm rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication in The Oregonian should be addressed Invaria bly, ""Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name fany individual. Letters relating- to advertis ing subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories irom Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn, any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should "be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A- Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 955, Tacema Postoffice. Eastern Business Office 43, 44, 45, 47. 48, 40 Tribune- building; New York City: 469 "The Jtookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency, Eastern representative. Eer al In San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold artith Bros., 236 Sutter street; I". W. Pitta. '100S Market street: Poster & Orcar, Ferry Slews stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 258 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 108 Bo. Spring street For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1C12 Farnam street. For sale la 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 er fciblt at the exposition. t For salo In "Washington D. C, by the Ebbett Souse newstand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & iKendriek. 006-912 Seventh street YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 64; minimum temperature, 53; no pre cipitation. TODAY'S "WEATHER-Generally lair weath er; northwesterly winds. POBvTLAJVD, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1001. JTO REASON FOR IT. Though the importation of tea is telowly increasing, the Pacific Coast ports receive no benefit from it The country as a whole imported 70,000,000 pounds of tea in 1898, 74,000,000 in 1899 and 84,000,000 pounds in 1900, but the imports through Pacific ports are sta tionary at about 1,000,000 pounds. This stagnation in direct trade across the Pacific may be due to the tax on tea. The tax operates equally, it is true, but here on this coast is espe cially felt the lack of return cargoes - or ships that take over our wheat, Sour and lumber. It is Interesting to observe, also, that members of the tea trade, who favored the tax, are seeing their mistake. They said it would dis courage the use of cheap tea. The actual effect is the reverse. One of J these short-sighted worthies is thus quoted: The retail dealer could not raise his price at all because his competitor had on hand some old teas which he was selling on the old basla The retailer, therefore, has been buying lea staiSljrpeorer than before in order to meet 4ti taltor's figures. If the duty continues j fW9 years longer tea will be reduced to one ! st a low price. The retailer who had i Warn te the habit of buying 35-cent tea now 1 fsay .IB-cent tea in bond and pays 10 cents laSr-MiMr'lM collects in turn from the con MMr. The effect has been to discourage the mwr res of tea, which are now sold at 4siMMtJthe. same prices as before the duty. Trig hurrnmr'r'irnp teas get poorer teas than tor the buyers of good teas get what to at about the same price, and the yay the tax. Btaanint testimony to the correct- ' paM of this assertion is borne by the Ooyfniment statistics. In 1893 we im- s prt4 7f .&00.000 pounds of tea worth Xlijm.m, and in 1900 we imported 34,- "" 9MW -pounds of tea worth also $10, Mt,IM. The tea we get now is so much f lumper -that we buy 84,000,000 pounds for -what we used to pay for 70,000,000 pounds. Yet if there is any change in the price of tea of any uniform grade It isupward. " "We ot & tax on tea and no tax on , because the ugar trust wanted 4Jrtrade In coffee to beat Arbuckle ,-witn, ana oecause tne tea traae tnougnr. they could use it to Improve the grade In use. Another reason was the Treas ury needed the money. If there are any other reasons for its laying or jjgalnst its abrogation by Congress at the December session, we should be glad to have them pointed out. The tax on tea operates just like the lax on wool. A man who "wears $15 suits of clothes isn't going to pay $20 lor the same grade if it is taxed $5. The family that uses 35-cent tea willj pay that price after the tax of 10 cents a pound is laid, and take what it can get. - ARGENTINA'S DIFFICULTIES. Later dispatches tend to discredit the fast Teport that Argentina was about to rise en masse against the govern- eatls.pjau for refunding the national jebt SChlsJs-disconcertlng. As misery lore company, so does folly; and It ""would .hive been pleasant for this na tion, which settles mint ratios by ap peal to popular vote, to find in the Ar gentine a national crisis turning upon the rate of interest on a public debt With them, however, as with us, there are mitigating circumstances. Part of the disaffection at Buenos Ayres is caused by the scallng-down process the republic inclines to with its creditors. Originally the heavy provin cial debts bequeathed from the Baring boom and failure were converted by the national government into bonds of lower denominations. The foreign debt aggregated $437,700,000, and the Internal debt was $6,375,000 gold and $105,951,300 paper. It is now proposed to convert the foreign debt again and the Inter est reduced. The Argentine Government, In fact. has the hardest kind of a time to get along. Though it manages to keep its gold revenue above the indispensable gold expenditure, it has the paper habit in an exaggerated form, and annually rn.akes a much larger paper expendi ture than it takes paper receipts. The paper dollar as a medium of exchange I is quoted at considerably less than one- I halt the gold dollar. Added to this are the crop difficulties. i A correspondent of the London Econo mist, writing May 19 from Buenos Ayres, reported that the great staple, wool, was of an inferior quality and that the other great staple, wheat, -would show a deficiency. Speaking generally of the foreign trade, he said: The shrinkage la exports is S per cent, and In imports 11 per cent, the combined value of both being nearly $10,000,000 gold lees than in the same period of last year, when tne decline In trade set in. As the first quarter of the year is always the. busiest It Is to be feared ,tht the returns for tho second one will be still more unfavorable, and the receipts from customs up to date, which are published dally, unmistakably point that way. General Interest In Argentine affairs, especially her competitive cattle and wheat productions, is now enhanced for Oregon by reason of ex-Chief Jus tice and ex-Governor Lord's presence as United States Minister there. The place is one beneath his capacity, but if international complications should arise, the Government would And itself fortunate in having: him there. Given the opportunity, and Minister Lord would' exhibit diplomatic ability of high order. When we consider the pre cariousness and costliness of domestic politics, it is not strange that a diplo matic career offers serious temptations to men of civic ambition and high char acter. In the twentieth century our important diplomatic relations will more and more require such men at foreign posts. PROTECTION IS REFUSED. Mention was made in Sunday's Ore gonlan of the charter of the big steel American ship Astral to load wheat at San Francisco for the "United Kingdom, and now comes the news that the steamship Oregonian, one of the very latest additions to America's merchant marine, has been chartered for similar work. These engagements are very serious matters for the shipping sub sidy grafters. They have repeatedly told us that the protection afforded them in jthe "coastwise" trade was all that enabled American ships to keep afloat, and that the withdrawal of that pro tection meant financial ruin to their owners. Now we are confronted with the spectacle of two of the very finest representatives of America's merchant marine being withdrawn from the pro tected coastwise trades and put in com petition with British, German, Italian, French and Norwegian ships. Of course, the owners of these ships may not be familiar with their busi ness, but as the Astral is owned by the Standard Oil Company and the Ore gonlan by some of the oldest shipping men in America, it is hardly probable that they will lose any money by switching over from the coastwise to the foreign tijp.de. As a matter of fact, the only trip the Astral ever made be tween American ports was when she "coasted" down from the Maine yards, where she was built, to New York, where she loaded for Shanghai. Had the theory of the subsidy beggars been correct, the operations of this fine ship would have been confined to trading between American ports. The rate re ported for the Oregonian is 40 shillings per ton, which is the same rate paid for the British steamship Glenlochy, which was chartered a few days earlier, and the Italian steamship F. S. Clampl, which was chartered yesterday for ex actly the same business. The withdrawal of these American ships from the coastwise trade is not the only thing that is making the de mands for a subsidy appear more ridic ulous every day. The workings of the subsidy scheme as presented by the French fleet now headed for the Pacific Coast offer an admirable illustration of the injustice worked on the taxpayers. There are thirteen French ships headed for Portland, and all but two of them are coming in ballast Not one of these ships is bringing freight from a French port, and not one of them has carried freight to a French port for the past, year, and yet the French Government will bq called on to pay the owners of this fleet something like $150,000 sub sidy for the trip to Portland and re turn. The subsidy is of benefit to no one but the owners, and the French shipper in need of tonnage with which to move freight finds the rate regu lated, not by the French subsidized fleet, but by the fleets of the world, with which it is brought in competition. Grain freights out of Portland today are exactly the same under all flags, and If the Astral and the Oregonian were today drawing a Subsidy which their owners are seeking, the rate would be exactly the same as that paid the British, German and other ships for similar business. In other words, the subsidy would all go to the ship owner, and 'the producer would pay not only full rates for Jils freight, but in addition his share of the subsidy tax, from which he would derive no bene fits whatever. SICKLES ONCE 2IORE. General Sickles has grown very angry over the matter of what he describes as the promised removal of Pension Commissioner Evans. He says, among other things, that "on November 27 last the assurances of the Republican Na tional Committee that Commissioner Evans would be superseded were rati fied by the President in the presence of a number of representative 6oldiers from different parts of the country when we visited him at the White House by appointment to congratulate him upon his re-election. He then stated tp us that it was his intention to choose a successor to Commissioner Evans at the expiration of his term of office. The testimony of these gentle men will be given If necessary. The same assurance was given to me In the week followlnr inauguration In March last when the President gave me the name, confidentially, of the successor to Commissioner Evans whom he had chosen." On June 17 last General Sickles wrote the President a letter, urging him "without further -delay to make an ap pointment which will satisfy the al most universal desire of your comrades In the Civil War for a change in the Pension Bureau." General Sickles now gives notice that "if Evans is not re moved there will be music." General Sickles bitterly denounces the leading newspapers of the country for their "constant attacks upon the old soldiers and the G. A. R." It will trouble Gen eral Sickles to find anything in the press criticism he complains about so severe an attack upon the G. A. R. than is found in the following extract from General Sickles' letter to President Mc Klnley: If you continue the present Commissioner in office, jou will find yourself in painful conflict with the sentiments of the Civil War veterans, who, with almost entire unanimity gave ou .their cordial support In November last. So strong Is this feeling in Kansas and Kebrasita, for example, that, in my judgment, botn of those states would vote for Bryan, if an elec tion were to come oft tomorrow. General Sickles here says that If Com missioner Evans should be retained, the G. A. R., as a body, in Kansas and Nebraska, would change their vote of i900 and now vote for Bryan; or, in other words, the only Issue for the Grand Army fn 1900 was not honest money, National credit, the honor of the American flag in the Philippines, but pensions. If any newspaper which has ventured to question the merit of the existing pension system ever said as mean.a thing of the G. A. R. as that Quoted from General Sickles' lotlac. -we have never seen it. The G. A. R. ought to be preserved from such friends and champions as General Sickles. FARMING BY MAP. A soli map, printed in colors, will soon be issued by the Department of Agriculture, the object being to make known to the farmer, wherever he is located, in the most lucid manner pos sible, just what crops will bring him the most certain and profitable returns. The map is to cover the entire area of, the United States, and will be on such a scale that every ten-acre patch will be represented by one-eighth of an Inch square. Bach farmer will be able to procure a chart of his own lo cality on a larger scale, so that he can arrange his planting in accordance with the suggestions made. The "work Is first done by townships, and , these are Joined to make counties, -which are finally combined into states. The re sult will be, not to make farming easy, since work is the tribute which Nature exacts of those who would convert her domain to the uses and needs of man. But it will make returns from agri cultural labor more certain and profit able. It is explained that hitherto the business of farming has been to some extent guesswork. The farmer formed a surmise as to what crops his lands would produce most abundantly, and proceeded on this basis with his plant ing. From a study of this map, it is supposed that experiment will be large ly eliminated from agricultural and horticultural work. Prune trees will not be planted In soils where In the very nature of things they will not thrive; lands suited to certain grasses will not be wasted in the vain attempt to grow cereal crops that "will not prop erly mature or return a profitable yield of grain, and so on throughout the ag ricultural calendar. To enlighten farmers properly on the subject, this map will call attention to certain conditions of soils which have been subjected to thorough chemical analysis. One of these is acidity a property that has often been recog nlzed by observant tillers of the soil, who have yet lacked the knowledge to correct or utilize .It. Another is ex cess or deficiency of certain elements of plant growth, which can be correct ed or supplied by fertilizers, and yet another is alkali. For the last science has ascertained both the source and the remedy. With the latter the ag riculturist is chiefly concerned, and it Is held to consist in linderdrainage to wash out the alkali and to prevent the accumulation of seepage water in the subsoil. So It goes on this land for cotton, that for wheat; this for gar den truck, that for corn; this for grasses of one kind, that for those of another; this for hops, that for flax, or perhaps both will flourish side by side and can be so grown as a diversity of products. Truly, if the farmer is not the most successful of all citizens of this He public, it will be because he prefers plodding to planning, and neglects to study the book of knowledge which sci ence and a generous Government has opened to him. The old idea that boys could engage in farming successfully simply because they were boys, and that no special instruction in the vo cation beyond acquiring the art of running a straight furrow was needed, has fallen into line with the other idea that every girl or woman, because of a 6lmple generic fact, was able, without special Instruction, to cook and perform household work generally. And It may be added both are obsolete, except where common sense still struggles In an environment of Ignorance which science In more enlightened places has penetrated and dispelled. Of course men are still found who plant their potatoes in the moon, as did their great-grandfathers, and women still abound who, under the belief that their daughters are born housekeep ers, send them out into the world of domestic service -wholly unacquainted with the details of the vocation, but these are being, evolved from practical life as fast as agricultural colleges, soil maps, fanners' institutes and cooking schools can do it. Xiet the good -work go on, even though in prosecuting it J there are frequent stumblings, and many ludicrous and costly mistakes. GERMANY'S CEREAL SHORTAGE. According to Consular reports based upon the highest authority of the king dom, the cereal harvests of 1901 in Prus sia will show the largest and most dis astrous deficit that has been recorded in recent years. A memorial calling the attention of the government to the threatened calamity that overhangs the agricultural population has been pre sented to Chancellor Count von Bulow, urging that certain prescribed meas ures of relief be at once set in motion. This remarkable document is signed by Count von Schwerln-Lowltz, presi dent of a permanent commission which sjerves as an advisory committee on ag ricultural subjects to the Prussian Government; hence it has the stamp of highest official authority, and on this account it has produced a profound sensation throughout Germany. Frank H. Mason, United States Consul-General at Berlin, has carefully studied this memorial, and presents a synopsis of his findings through a bul letin that has been given out bythe Department of Agriculture. He says: "Never since 1S93 have any consider able portions of Prussian wheat-fields stood at so low a figure at the middle of May as In the present year; and when it is remembered that this stands for only half the normal Winter-wheat area the remainder being wholly lost the extent of the disaster will be .apparent" Combining facts with fig ures, he finds that the deficit as com pared with last year's crop will be 1,053,515 metric tons. At 175 marks ($41 65) per ton, It will cost 183,750,000 marks ($43,732,500) to replace this defi cit with imported grain. The entire home-grown breadstuff supply of the German Empire In 1900 was 12,391,824 metric tons. Besides this bulk there were Imported in excess of exports 1,816,026 tons, giving an aggre gate consumption of 14,207,850 tons of the two principal bread-producing ce. reals, "wheat and rye. Material short age in the home-grown supply means, of course, a corresponding demand for foreign-grown cereals, but as the me morial points out with characteristic bitterness, this untoward prospect In Germany has had thus far only a slight effect upon the world's wheat market, "for the reason that the United States has 28,267,000 acres of growing wheat, which at the estimated yield of fifteen bushels per acre will give a surplus that will fill the German deficit and maintain the general wheat market on an even keeL" The commission through which this report Is given out represents, natural ly, and with creat "zeal 'and ability. the Interests of the agricultural classes, who form collectively the Agrarian party, which Is now so aggressive in German politics. From the standpoint of these economists, the impending dis astrous deficit in the wheat and rye crops, and the consequent loss to Ger man farmers, supply an additional reason why their scant harvests should be protected from foreign competition and made to yield the highest prac ticable price to the stricken husband men. The fact that a deficit so serious and imminent in German breadstuffs has produced scarcely a ripple in the wheat markets of other countries, and the certainty that the deficit will be made good by Importations, especially from the United States, are thus early and authoritatively put forward as proofs of the need of higher prptectlon for German agriculture. They may be held to foreshadow the struggle in the Reichstag next Autumn between the impending tariff act and the commer cial treaties. It need hardly be said, observes Consul Mason in concluding this bulletin, "that to all except Agra rian economists the meager home grown supply of breadstuffs and the necessity ofe large importations should rather serve as an argument in favor of reduced than of Increased import duties." The solid South, which has shown many signs of political transformation In the last few years, is unmistakably acquiring divergent opinions on Na tional questions. This situation is briefly described by Senator John L. McLaurin, of South Carolina, In the current "World's Work. Senator Mc Laurin is a Democrat, elected by one of th most "solid" of the Southern States, and his testimony carries additional In terest for this reason. What the out come of the altering process will be, he says, we can only guess at, but the result is sure to be a great change. Ho welcomes the new spirit, for he says there Is no greater menace to "the sta bility of a Republic than a minority voting on great questions from a purely sectional point of view. Whereas in terest has centered heretofore In the negro question, now that there is no longer fear on this score sentiment Is dividing and branching out toward Na tional and domestic topics. The peo ple and the press of the South already have diverse opinions on the subjects of expansion, tariff and ship subsidies, and it will be remembered that in the last Presidential contest the solid South was held together loosely on the silver question. Now, the public mind is exercising itself on economic sub jects and how to build "up industries. There is still a strong, stubborn senti ment of the old type, but it persists largely from lack of information and from prejudice. Senator McLaurin does not expect the Democratic party to be overthrown, but to adjust Itself to the new conditions. The so-called law-of-assoclations bill passed by the French Parliament cur tails largely the privileges of the re ligious orders, especially In the mat ter of holding property. Premier Wal-deck-Rousseau, In his speech In ad vocacy of the bill, declared that the associations held In mortmain property valued at 1,000,000,000 francs, and per sonal property estimated at a higher figure, and that this wealth had been employed for political as well as for religious purposes, and might continue to be so employed, to the constant danger of the republic. The govern ment, added the Premier, therefore proposed to place the associations in such a position, by making their ex istence entirely dependent upon the will of the state, that It would be im possible for them to be the center of political propaganda. The church In terests bitterly fought the bill, not only as an attack upon religion, but as a Socialistic assault? upon property. The whole power of the Socialist party was in support of the bill. At the rate at which the list of as pirants for .the various state, county and municipal offices Is growing, there will be a large crop of candidates ready to pick before the"1 advent of June pro claims the political harvest season as at hand. Most of them will, it is true, be cut down by an April frost that being state convention month. In the meantime, however, a year's time and more than a year's substance will i be squandered by a large number of able bodied men in the vain attempt to se cure a "push" strong enough to land them where, to the best of their knowl edge and belief, no work will be re quired of them, but good pay will promptly be forthcoming. Reflecting upon the resources of forest, field and mine that await development, and upon the promise offered by Industry In a thousand lines to the man who will pull off his coat, this scramble for office is, from an economic standpoint, a mat ter of Tegret. The "get-together" spirit, which ani mates farmers of the Willamette Val ley, as in contrast to the spirit of ex cluslveness bred by Isolation in past years. Is illustrated in the frequency of farmers' Institutes and the steady growth of the order known as the "Patrons of Husbandry." This being the busy time of year In agricultural districts, such Institutes are fewer and the regular meetings of the granges are" more sparsely attended than at other seasons, but the spirit abides and upon all suitable occasions makes Its presence manifest. Two new granges have been recently organized in Clack amas County, to which another will be added this week, making the four teenth lodge of that order In the county. This speaks well for the fra ternal spirit among farmers, and Is full of promise for an enjoyable and profit able season of recreation "after the crops are all in." Mr. Stubbs was in conference with Union Pacific officials at Omaha Stln day, but his visit, hevsald, was not un usual and of no special Interest Mr. Stubbs is a worthy disciple of President Burt, who assured a Portland repprter, that there might be a traffic conference on at Salt Lake,, but he had heard nothing of it. What kind of a government can the United States give the Philippines? The New York Evening Post answers, no better government than Croker gives New York or Quay gives Philadelphia. The Post's optimism Is equaled only by its fairness. The decision of the Supreme Court is sustained by the yacht race. The flag is the insignia- of liberty and independ ence, but the Constitution does not nec essarily follow it, nor does Independ ence co ahead of the Constitution. WHAT IS FAME? Louisville Courier-Journal. In the July issue of The Bookman, of which he is the editor, Harry Thurston Peck, apropos of Lord Rosebery's "Last Phase of Napoleon," says: How many writers of the English language are there in any department of literature what soever who impress you in the way 'wherein Lord Bosebery impresses you? How many o them sound even the faintest note of that dis tinction which is his? That is the word dis tinction, distinction, distinction the rarest f thin? in human thought and expression, as re is the finest thing in human life, what living essayist possesses it? Mr. Henry James, per haps, in a minor degree; Mr. "Whiblcy here anu there; but no one else that we can think of. There Is not a suggestion of It In Mr. Howalls, and ven Mr-. Churton Collins, who has almost every 'other quality that Is admirable, attania j distinction very rarely. In fiction Is thero puch a thing today except sporadically and In iso lated passages? Even among those scholars who have been nurtured on the classical liter atures of Greece and Rome we can think oi only one who has distinction", and that Is Mr. J. S. MacUall a very Important exception, to be sure, yet an exception which merely serves to prove this rule, And among historians dis tinction is sadly to seek. Professor MacMauer Is Macaulay's sedulous ape. almost his carica turist; Mr. Goldwin Smith is neat and lucid, but nothing more. The late Bishop Stubbs had a style that suggests a labyrinth full cf brambles. There Is only one scientific student of history and of historical theme who has dis tinction, and that is Professor Munroe Smith rind he, unfortunately, writes but little. Loru Rosebery, however. Is a master of a atjle whose charm Is all tho greater because It ts indescribable. Assuredly, Lord Rosebery has both in his style of writing and In his person ality what Hazlett describes as "the air of a gentleman," call It "distinction," if you will; but wherein is this quality lacking In Mr. Howells. or Mr. James? Perhaps In a cad, like James, and a prig, like Howells. one does not look for the Grand Seigneur. They grow cTSmmon through sheer redundancy. But who in thunderatlon Is Whlbley? And Churton Collins? And Mackall, who serves to prove the rule, ana Pro fessor Munroe Smith, who "unfortunate ly, writes too little"? Stubbs! Bishop Stubbs! we have a fancy to have heard of Stubbs second cousin to Potsy Grubbs, was he not? Mr. Harry Thurston Peck should not be so recondite. The persons he names may be Important as Importance goes in the Literary Hemisphere of the period; but they do not rank with Slubsky, or DIsmukes, or HInky Dink In popular fame. These Indeed he names to conjure with. And Bath House"' John! What's the matter with Bath House John? Even Rosebery arrayed In all his glory could never bo as one of these? "BLOOD WILL TELL." Maxim Ayiiose Application In In Most Cases a Fallacy. San Francisco Bulletin. "The puppies fight well," exolaimed Wellington, as he saw the fops and dandles of the Guards braving the French fire and dying like men. "Blood will tell," exclaimed the whole British Nation when the names of the noble and commissioned dead appeared in the Gazette after Waterloo. Their meaning was that noble ancestry begets a noble brood; that a line of gentlemen. for forefathers gives a man a certain spirit, stamina and courage which the yeoman and the shopman lack; that the thoroughbred man, like the thor oughbred horse, is superior to the common mustang or cart horse. It is true that the traditions of a noble family have a certain influence on tho scions thereof and keep them up to cer tain ideals, especially in the matter of physical courage. Moreover, wealth, edu-, cation and generous habits of living, with which most men of good blood are famil iar from birth, have a tendency to create a keen sense of honor and a personal pride that have a strong Influence upon conduct. Yet examples prove that blood has little advantage over the base-born, either In the matter of Intellectual or physical qualities. The greatest men have been the off spring of lowly people. The most rugged Intellects seem to have cpmo from the tillers of the soli and to have derived therefrom a certain natural strength that men born in castles and manor houses L do not Inherit. Of all Kings and rulers, the strongest were the founders of dy nasties. The first holder of a hereditary title nearly always Is the greatest. This fact was known to the French wit who said: "We cannot all be nobles. Some of us must be ancestors." In literature and all departments of learning the majority of the masters were plebeians. Shake speare was the son of a wool-comber, Johnson of a bookseller, Horace of a freed man, Socrates of a midwife but the list would be too long If It were completed here. On the point of physical courage the cadet of the oldest family In Europe and the commonest kind of a plebeian are equal. The well-born "puppies" fought bravely at Waterloo, but no more bravely than the common soldiers, the sons of tenants on the "puppies' " estates. As reckless and daring a body of men as ever faced biasing powder was a regiment in the Civil War recruited In tho lowest slums of the Bowery. The stripling rough In the cities of the United States is one of tho finest fighting animals on two legs. After all, physical courage Is a very common and not a very lofty attribute. When the Six Hundred made that charge at Balaklava the horses went where the men rode them, and six more horses than men were killed, but the horses are not celebrated. Tct physical courage will be admired until the end of time, and nine philosophers out of 10 would rather have their morals Impugned than their cour age: and ID philosophers out of 20 would rather be the grandsons of great men than be the famous founders of families. They Didn't Afrrec. Chicago Evening Post. The new phraseology introduced by Dar win and Spencer, the frequent references to "survival of the fittest." "natural se lection," "struggle for existence," "homo geneity," "heterogeneity," etc., came trip pingly on the tongues of the younger members. But there was one old codger, secure In his own wisdom, who occasion ally waded out beyond his depth. The privilege of a classical education had been denied him. but an elementary knowledge of Greek did not seem such an essential that Its lack should keep him out of the debate. So he sailed In. regardless of consequences Having occasion to use the word "phenomenon." he took the -opportunity of a fine bit of sarcasm. "Phenomenon, I say Mr. President, or phenomena for I perceive that my learned friends do not agree as to the pro nunciation of the- word!" Shaffer's "Vnln Glory. Louisville Courier-Journal. President Shaffer, of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Work ers, Is exuberantly boastful that the strike which he has brought about Is to be one of tho greatest strikes on record. The strike may be In all probability will be a losing one, and will certainly cost the men he has ordered, to quit work many thousands of dollars, but what matters theso things if Shaffer can be at the head of one of the greatest strikes on record? Still Lives In the Past. New York Mail and Express. -Bryan Is telling the bourbons of Virginia that his mind has not chansed about the "principles" of the out-of-date platforms of his party, and ho Is "fighting on." Bryan's mind Is the only thing iri th country which does not change, and his Inability to learn or to forget is true bour bon, but It will result In his "getting left" farther behind at every move of events. Expansion Sot a Theory. Louisville Cdurier-Journal. A New York estimate Is that the July disbursement of Interest and dividends will aggregate about 5120,000,000, against $105,570,000 a year ago, and $94,000,000 two years ago. Expansion In every sense Is a. condition and not a tMM-v in this country now. ' AMUSEMENTS. "My California Home," a drama much concerning black knavery and long-oppressed but finally triumphant virtue, was the offering by the Weideman company at the Metropolitan last night, and it was enthusiastically received by a very good house. The scene of the play is a small town In California where there are mines and large tracts of land, the same being the sole property of a young lady named Gay Howard, who fn consequence Is some what popular with the young bloods of the vicinity. One of Gay's suitors Is poor but honest; the -other Is a wholly bad lot, who, after wronging the usual poor man's daughter and escaping by tne stun or nis teeth from an ax In the hands of said poor man, proceeds to convince the easy and unsuspecting denizens of the local ity that the other suitor, who Is a very square sort of a fellow, has been making all the trouble. Naturally, complications ensue. The girl listens to the hoarse voice of calumny, and throws over the well meaning suitor, although she etlll hart bors in her heart a "hunch" that the other fellow has considerable of the mer cenary concealed about him. She decides to run away, but gets no farther than the left rear entrance, back of which she dons boy's clothes, and comes back to see the villain thickening the plot, tp block his game. In the last act a delegation of min ers arrive with a rope and the avowed In tention of lynching the basely slandered hero, but Gay, still in boy's clothes and playing tho role of a cousin who was looked for but never came, dashes in from the wings and saves the unfortunate young man's neck. Upon the almost sim ultaneous arrival of the wronged girl and her ax-wlelding father, the mask Is torn from the villain's physiognomy and the mob takes him outside, where they pre sumably consummate their long-planned festivities. Gay and trie true hero are married, and, for all the audience knows, live happily ever afterward. There are a good many situations of tne thrilling variety in the play, and so much action that one sometimes gets out of breath keeping up with it. The audience cheered all good deeds to the echo, and as warmly hissed the questionable deal ings of the villnln. Between the acts there were a number of really good spe cialties. Miss Claire Canfield, who has all the voices from sub bass to soprano, sang two old favorites In a pleasing style. Nellie Weideman's fire dance was a popular number, and the Mullally sis ters did a pretty danco and a clever Imi tation skit Tonight, "A Soldier's Sweetheart" will be the bill. Initial Production, "The Explorers." "The Explorers," a new opera by Bert Leston Taylor, the "Ilne-o'-type-or-two" man of the Chicago Tribune, and Walter H. Lewis, was produced for the first time on any stage In Chicago, June 30. It was well received by a large audience. The play opens In Madagascar on a New Year's day. Burdock Root Is In the Island as a commercial traveling man for a peroxide of hydrogen house. Lieutenant S. Max Nix, who has a reputation au over the world as an explorer, touches at the Island on his balloon trip from the South Pole. Having run out of things to rpnrt ti rrfits some discarded magazines, and sees in one of them the picture of Malzle Fields, of Red Ear, la., who has come into magazine notice as Queen of a corn carnival. The impressionable Ger man, denied any such visions in Terra del Fuego and farther south, telegraphs from New York for Malzle to meet him at the Hotel Limit. Chicago, February 14. As he signs himself simply "Nix," the Iowa girl addresses her reply to "a distinguished explorer who will arrive at the Hotel Limit, Chicago. February 14." She has read in a paper that he Is to address the Women's Science Club, of Chicago, the same day, and sends a duplicate letter In care of Mrs Fuller Prunes, tho presi dent. Root and Nix arrive In Chicago the same day, but Root appears In the hotel first. The fact that he Is direct from Madagascar suggests "distinguished ex plorer" to the clerk, and he turns over the letter from Malzle. Root 13 the adventur ous kind of a man who Is ready for any thing, so he Impersonates xsix, meets Malzle and promptly tries to win her. As she dotes on explorers and Is anxious to fit out a polar expedition In her own name, the situation Is plain for the perox ide salesman. Nix, In the meantime, gets the duplicate letter from Mrs. Fuller Prunes, but is too late. He is stamped as a counterfeit and even arrested. These complications made the scene in the Hotel Limit lively. The last act is in Lincoln Park, where the Science Club Is to hear all about both poles. Root has to tell them in carrying out the fraud. The plot Is cleared there, but Nix loses the girl. Some of the lyrics are very pretty, and tho music Is bright and catchy. Charles Dickson, Edward Mackey, Harry Stubbs, Ruth White and Lillian Coleman scored large hits. Notes of the Stage. The only church at Mount Hope, O., Is being converted Into a 'theater. Alice NIelson has leased for the Sum mer an estate at Thames Dltton, a sub urb of London. Blanch Bates continues to play to tre mendous business at the Columbia The ater, San Francisco, In "Under Two Flags." Mayor Thompson, of Salt Lake, bought recently property on Main street, In that city, measuring 25x165 feet, and contem plates erecting a theater thereon at a cost Of ?3O0.0OO. Maurice Grau is reported to have an nounced In London last Week his Intention to retire after next season from the man agement and lease of the Metropolitan Opera-House, in New York. Augustus Thomas delivered an address at the commencement exercises of the New Rochelle (N. Y.) High School, June 27. Mr. Thomas Is a member of the New Rochelle Board of Education. The Alcazar Theater stock company, San Francisco, last week revived "Sapho," which continues, to be followed by "The School for Scandal," with White Whit tlesey Edwin T. Emery, Barton Hill, Florence Roberts, George P. Webster, Marie Howe and Paul Gerson in me cast. ' Suffering Among Metals. Chicago Evening Post. The brotherhood of man widened Into the brotherhobd of the animal. Now comes a British scientist who has found feeling in metals. At a recent meeting of the Royal Institution the scientist "struck a piece of copper, pinched a piece of zinc, gave It poison and administered an anti dote." In each case the electrical emotion man ifested through the galvanometer "was painful to witness." The London Mall suggests the formation of a society for the prevention of cruelty to metals. An Interesting development of human ethics Is suggested, though Indeed thte extension is not at all original with tho 20th century. It Is an old story with the poets, and with none mora real than Omar: AnJ thU reviving herb whose tender green Fledges the river lip on which we lean. Ah! lean upon it lightly, for who knows From what one lovely Up it springs unseenT And the clay whose "half-obliterated tongue" Omar could heaY protesting to the potter, "Gently, brother, gently, pray." The Way to Stop Lynching. Houston Post. The Post wants to see the courts of Texas punish criminals promptly and vig orously and thus obviate any excuse what ever for a resort to mob law. If the courts and juries do not do their duty, Jet public Indignation be visited on them, rather than resort tp the administration of jus tice outside the regularly constituted chan nelschannels for which the people pay heavily. In taxes and from which they have a 'rfght to demand a- faithful discharge of! duty. NOTE AND COMMENT. Hot wavps and moral waves are about of equal duration. Our esteemed friend Lone Wolf Is no longer howling at the door of the Courts of Justice. There is great depression In Berlin. It is rumored that the Kaiser Is going to make another speech. There Is a large cash balance in the Pennsylvania State Treasury. No ex planation has yet been offered. Singular that the boy who was hurt on the Fourth of July has not yet communi cated with the pension attorneys. Such Is the march of progress, that it is very possible that King Edward will wear a shirt waist to his coronation. "When seen, made a prisoner of would be a good rule for the guidance of a Sheriff's posse of a highway robber hunt We should now like to hear a few words from Lincoln, Neb., on "Hot Weather, Directly Traceable to Republican Mis rule." Now that the hot wave has retired from the center of the stage, Hon. J. P. Morgan will proceed with tha continuous performance. We hereby claim the proud privilege of naming the Illustrious Pat Crowe as th man who kidnaped the $41,500 from the Great Northern train. Argentina In all probability Is merely getting up that war to encourage Immi gration. It will mean an Influx of thou sands of war correspondents. It has long been known that sea water is a good conductor, but it may be news to some people that It ha3 also bad con siderable experience in breaking. Tho' New York Zoological Society has published an important natural history paper, by William T. Hornaday, director of the Zoological Park, entitled, "Notes on the Mountain Sheep of North Amer ica." In a finely illustrated pamphlet of 50 pages, the six species of mountain sheep Inhabiting North America are described and figured for tho special benefit of tho general reader, and the geographical dls trlbutlon of each species, bo far as known today, Is shown on a largo map. Within the past six months two new species of mountain sheep have been added to the four previously known. These are, Fannin's "Saddle-Back" sheep, from the Klondike Mountains, described by Mr. Hornaday and christened Ovls fannlnl; and the Mexican mountain sheep, from Chihuahua, Northern Mexico, de scribed by Dr. C. Hart Merrlam. The pamphlet prepared by Mr. Hornaday haB evidently been prepared with special ref erence to the wants of the general reader and student, bu.t its scientific value is not thereby lessened In the least It brings together, for the first time, full Informa tion regarding a highly interesting group of American animals. Twas on the shores where rolls the tide Of mighty Oregon That I found a chap with a yachtlnc cap And a pale green sweater on. Bis face was weary, his boots were worn. And weary and worn- was he. And this sad-eved man forthwith began To heave this spiel at ma: "Oh. I'm a chump, with a capital C, I'm the sickliest sucker yet. I'm a limit dolt and a Thompson's colt. And a driveling Idiot net. And he said these words In a manner that "Was earnest and sincere, And Impressed me so that I thought I'd go, For I'm easily moved by fear. But he said: "Pray, pause, my honest friend. And a pointer take from me, And you'll some day thank a hopeless tank "WTio warned you not to be A cheerful chump with a capital C And the sickliest sucker yet. And a limit dolt and a Thompson's colt. And a driveling Idiot net. "I've a lovely homo long miles from here, And a Wife and children small,' And to capture trout I sallied out. And left them, ono and all. I've fished and fished and fished all day, I'vo climbed o'er mountains high, And I had not booze enough to use, For my throat is easy dry. "And I've landed here by the Tlver side. As the gloaming sifts below. And the sephyrs breathe on the water beneath In the rosy after glow, A wreck of what was once a man. And a pretty good man beside, "With never a trout to be lied about A thing to be scoffed and guyed. "I have barked my shins, I have bruised my nose, I've been bitten from head to toe. By mosqultos lean, with a hunger keen. And possessed of bills like a crow, I am smeared with worms and salmon roe. Till I look like a kitchen sink. And the whole long day as I fished away I had nothing at all to drink. "Excepting two quarts of bottled beer. And a three-pint flask of rye. And a bottle of ale, and some Scotch boo pale, So you see I was pretty dry. Young man. be warned of my awful plight. And when you start to roam The woods about in quest of tnmt. Stay quietly at home. "There's lots of good fish in the sea, they say; . If that's so, go there quick; v But don't be game for that chaps that claim That there's plenty In the crick. You've heard my tale, which is straight ard plain. And is neither ornate nor gay. And I think with me you will quite agree, When next you hear me say That I am a chump with a capital C, And the easiest Indian yet And the limit dolt and a Thompson's colt And a driveling Idiot net" PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS A Longer Dog. "Have you had this dog as long as the other one?" "Yes. longer. This Is a dachshund." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Just Like a Woman. Bcnham Why did that woman keep you standing at the door for half an hour? Mrs. Benham She said she hadn't time to come In. Brooklyn Life. Defined. "Say, pop, I've got to write a com position on hope "What Is hope, anyway?" "Hope, my boy. Is the Joyous expectation of being able to dodgo our Just deserts." Life. r A Reasonable Explanation. Minister Bridg et these potatoes tasto moldy. Bridget Tis. sorr, OI dare say, sorr they set nlxt to your barrel o' sermons in the suller. Harlem Life. Nell You surely don't think Jenkins's -Rife pretty. Belle Certainly not. "But you told May Sowers she was Just lovely." "That was because May was an old flame of Jenkins." Philadelphia Record. Going Away "Gracious goodness, Harriot seven trunks." "Don't get excited, Harry, I haven't packed" a thing except that little Hit of 'Home Comforts for the Summer Vacation which you clipped out of the newspaper." Chicago Record-Herald. Against Her Rule. "Cholly Dlnsmore pro posed to mo last nlghl." confided Miss Bunt ing to Miss fctldufC "Did you ask him If he could support you In the style to which you have been accustomed?" "Oh. dear, no. I never ask men who propose to me that ques tion." Detroit Tree Press. Management 'Don't you think you lose pa tience with your husband on rather slight prov ocation?" said the near relative. "I have to provoke him sometimes," was the placid an swer; "so that he will lose his temper, and then give me anything T want so as to atone for the way ho has" acted." Washington Star. Their Busy Day. "Who," shouted the impas sioned orator, "who among us has any cause to be happier than his neighbor on this glo rious day of tho Nation's birth?" A man wltn his head bandaged and both arms In a sting arose in the rear of the hall, and exclalmad: "The doctors !" Baltlmoro American.