THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, 'AUGUST U, 1901 he rsgpomcm Entered at the PostofGce at Portland,. Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Cdltorlal Booms.... 10Q 1 Buslne&s Office.... COT REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month $ S3 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 1 &o Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 Uu Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 SO The Weekly, months &0 To City Subscribers Dally, per 'week, delivered. Sundays excepted. 15c Dally, .per weak, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to Its-page- paper... .......... ........... .lo Li to 82-page paper 2c .toreign rates aoubie. News or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan. ' The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories am Individuals, and cannot undertake to re- any manuscripts sent to it without sollci- JiO stamps should be inclosed zor tms Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, -1111 Pacific avenue. Tacoma. Box 055. Postomce. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45, 4T, 48, 40. Tribune building, New Tortc City; 4C0 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale la San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros., 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market street. Foster & Orear, Ferry News eland. . For sale In ios Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 250 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Hafnes. 100 Bo. Spring street. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., "E17 Dearborn street. For p ale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam .street. For -sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News fco., 7T W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by W. C Kind, 204 Twen-ly-flfth street. On filo at Buffalo, N. T., In the Oregon ex hibit at 'the exposition. For sale In Washington, D. C, by the Eb feett House dews stand. For aale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-912 Seventh street. ington, but In New York he was the almoner of party sifts. He enjoyed the practical, fighting politics of New York City far better than the dull and dignified proceedings of the United States Senate. The times and circum stances were far different In Clinton's day than they are now, and De "Witt Clinton In no respect resembled Tom Reed. Nevertheless, a place that so able a statesman as Abram S. Hewitt thought worthy of acceptance from high and patriotic motives might tempt Mr. Reed. To be Mayor of Greater New York at its present critical period of municipal history offers Mr. Reed a larger oppor tunity for permanent public usefulness and Influence than any position he has thus far occupied. Greater New York has a population of 3,500,000; it Is a vast cosmopolitan community; it is one of the greatest marts of trade, one of the greatest seaports In. the world; it Includes vast wealth. To be the executive for two years of such a city in the critical stage of Its municipal growth Is to a very able and high minded man a great opportunity to ob tain enduring fame and exercise vast influence for good. From a broad, pa triotic point of view, Mr. Reed ought to accept this great office, even at cost of the sacrifice Of his personal ease and pecuniary advantage. It is a great place for a man of great ability and rare force of character, and such a man is Thomas B. Reed. It would not be a political office. It would not drag him back into partisan politics, for he would be supported by enlightened and upright men of all parties, who would nominate him and vote for him as a great exeoutive field marshal of the forces of municipal reform. Mr. Reed couldi greatly add to his best fame in the position of Mayor of New York. If he is nominated he ought to accept, and if he accepts he will be elected. TODATS WEATHER Fair, with northerly winds. TESTERDATS WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 85; minimum temperature, 63; pre cipitation, none. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14. c form, and they finally mustered enough strength in the legislature to defeat an adequate primary election law. They found that the proposed reform In the method of .nominating candidates for office would eradicate the political boss, and they were sure that the people of "Wisconsin still needed that species of functionary; and they were so averse to surrendering the power which they held by virtue erf the political machine that they chose to have the Republican party stultify itself rather than carry out Its plain pledges. And it did so after a wrangle that lasted through the Legislative session. Now the anti-La Follette faction has organized for the avowed purpose of taking possession of the Republican party in the state and evicting the Gov ernor and his friends, and particularly their odious reform notions. They re gard the necessity for this action as im mediate because there is a great deal of work to be done If the hold of the La- Follette people Is to be shaken from the regular Republican organization. The new movement is fathered by men who were lieutenants of Sawyer, sup ported by those Republican members of the Legislature who opposed the pri mary reform bill and other La Follette measures, and it also has the favor of Federal office-holders. An address to "Wisconsin Republicans is in course of preparation by the newly organized faction, and promises are free that the fight is to be carried to the bitter end. Either side would prefer to see Democratic success rather than the success of the opposing faction, and the merriest kind of a time may be looked for. La Follette has already announced that he will be a candldate'for renom inatlon, and the issues are practically .nade up for the campaign that will end In November, 1903. blned, has increased upward of 250 per cent. Canada's exports and Imports are about twice, per capita, those of the "United States. Her population is about 5,500,000. Her export trade for the year ending June 30, 1900, is given as $191. 894,723; her Imports as $189,622,513 a total of $381,517,236. This gives a for eign trade of $70 per capita for Canada against $30 per capita for the same period in the United States. Her lum ber and timber exports are from $5,500, 000 to $6,500,000 a year. Her agricul tural and allied exports have more than doubled the last decade. Canada ex ports annually $18,000,000 worth of cheese, $10,000,000 worth of cattle, $10, 000,000 worth of bacon, $4,000,000 worth of butter, and $3,000,000 worth each of oats and apples, and raises 50,000,000 to 60,000,000 bushels of wheat. In all, Can ada sells about $80,000,000 a year of the products of her fields and farms. In the exportation of fish Canada leads the United States in the proportion of about $10,000,000 to' $6,000,000 a year. Canada enters and clears about 1000 sea-going vessels a month. For foreign and inland navigation there are 2000 steamships of Canadian registration. She. has 18,000 miles of railway, 2700 miles of canals, 33,000 miles of tele graph lines, and more than 80,000 miles of telephone wires. THE UTOIDEJiCE OP TAXATION. The fact that taxes are falling more tnd more upon real estate till now there are few other values that are reached lor taxation, almost puts a quietus on the demand for single tax. We have, virtually, such tax now. Incident to land values. Is a lucid letter in the New York Herald, of which the paragraphs that follow are extracts: What axo tho causes for the present de pressed .condition of real estate in tho United States, and what the remedies? There ore undoubtedly certain localities In which real estate Is held firmly, and can be sold at good prices. However, in large sec tions of tho East and Middle West outside or the business centers, real estate docs not com mand the prices, nor is it sought as an in vestment to the same degree as within a few years prior to 1893. In view of this condition of affairs, I wish very much, for the sake of many of your real estate readers, that you would answer, if pos sible, the following questions: First Has the prevailing popularity of "in dustrials," so called, or tho boom in stocks and bonds of corporations anything to do with the shrinkage in the demand for real-estate Investments ? Second Hare tho present laws relating to taxation of real estate and the burdens im posed upon real estate for the maintenance of all the departments of city, state and county cavernments anything to do with the depre ciation of real-estate values? Third Has tho maintenance of free schools, free hospitals, free libraries, free dispensaries, free parks, etc (personal taxation being evad ed and shirked), anything to do with tha pres njt depreciation? Fourth What proportion of the voters of our Cities do not pay any taxes to the various municipalities in which they live for courts, police and fire departments and other munici pal charges and luxuries? These questions touch the very heart of the matter. Yet It is not certain that any remedy can be suggested. Heal estate Is the one form of prop jerty that cannot escape taxation. Hence the increasing disposition to hide values in stocks and bonds. It is "this state of affairs that makes oppor tunity for the promoters of the great trusts. People avpld real estate, be cause of the burdens upon It, and buy trust bonds and trust stocks. The trust then In turn becomes odious, and in creases the public discontent. Between all these things there Is intimate con nection. One of them follows another, and the Inciting causes lie behind all. The writer of the letter from which the above extracts are made puts his finger "upon. them. But It Is easier In this case, as In most others, to make a diagnosis than to offer a hopefnl rem edy. People will have things, through taxation, and real estate cannot escape- it. Property in most other forms can and does, in large degree. THE DISEASE-BREEDING MOSQUITO Entomologists are giving a very close and minute description of several vari eties of him. But you must have a microscope. In order to identify one from another, and you must know how to use the microscope, as well. The malarial mosquito has mottled wings, while the harmless insect's wings are clear. In other ways also he dresses like a dandy or dude. He wears some thing like a cutaway coat and a spotted necktie. One peculiarity he has that can be detected by the naked eye. "When he bores for blood his head is down, and the tails of his coat point up at an angle of forty-five degrees, while other varieties of the mosquito stand with horizontal body. This also Is the fellow that spreads typhoid fever, but not till after he has bitten some one infected with that disease. To get malarial poison, however, he doesn't have to go abroad. It is part of his original constitution. It Is another variety that propagates the yellow fever. The home of this gentleman is in tropical or semi-tropical countries, on the seacoast or banks of tidal rivers. But before he can dis pense the disease he must bite a yel low fever patient. After that, for ten days or more, the generation of the spores or bacilli' is going n within his anatomy, and his bite within that period Is pretty sure to set up the fer mentation In the blood that produces the disease. Minute descriptions of these pro cesses are furnished by physiologists those of Europe taking the lead. But the opportunities of our own people in Cuba have 'supplied a great deal of original and confirmatory evidence. The tendency of opinion now is that while typhoid may be and doubtless Is spread by other modes of Infection, a mosquito also carries it; but that malaria and yellow fever depend wnolly on 'mosquitoes for- their propa gation. . These discoveries are hailed as among the most remarkable In the his tory of science. But It Is a pity that man has been compelled to fight the mosquito for thousands of years, un der the disadvantage of not knowing what enemy he had to deal with. TOM HEED FOR MAYOR, The suggestion of Thomas B. Reed as the anti-Tammany candidate for Mayor of New York City came from a Demo crat, Austin Fox, the leader of the iJunlor iar. Mr. Fox has always been a Democrat, bitterly opposed to Mr. Heed on every public question save that of Bryanlsm and expansion, but he soundly argues that the municipal cam paign against Tammany should be free Irom National politics and all partisan considerations, and from this point of view he declares that Mr. Reed pos sesses not only the ideal qualifications lor a candidate, but also for a Mayor. Mr. Reed has unflinching moral and physical courage, he Is a man of un spotted integrity, a man of tact, of per sonal geniality, who has not Incurred personal enmities or Jealousies thus far in Us New York career. He has a very Imposing personality, and a solid. National reputation for pre-eminent ability. He could probably be elected if he could be persuaded to accept the nomination, but it Is very doubtful if he would accept a nomination, even If It meant a sure election. It is true that De "Witt Clinton re signed a seat in the Federal Senate In 1803 to become Mayor of New York City, but Clinton had not found the Senatorshlp mlte so agreeable as he expected, and as Mayor of New York City bo was paid a salary of $10,000 a year and perquisites. Ten thousand dollars was a great salary for those days, and Clinton was not a rich man in his own right He cared more for money than he did for the honor of a seat in the United States Senate, and the society of New York City was more agreeable to him. than that of Wash ington. The compensation of Senator then could not have exceeded $2000 per annum, and the office of Mayor paid six times that amount, and Clinton was as a rule in straitened circumstances, although his wife, a Miss. Franklin, brought him a fortune of $40,000. Fur thermore, after less than a year's ser vice as United States Senator he found that he was but a cipher at "Washing ton, while he was'a great power in New Sork.' He had to beg favors at "Wash- REPDBLICAK SCHIS3I IN "WISCONSIN. "Wisconsin Republicans have fallen Into such discord that the Democrats have high hopes of again getting pos session of the 6tate. The Republican party is rent asunder, and all because of a personal fight that was started several years ago between the vener able Senator Phlletus Sawyer, who had long been the Republican boss of the state, but who has since died, and Rob ert M. La Follette, then an ex-Congressman and now Governor of the state. The two were never entirely con genial in their political relations, though there was no rupture until the cases against the ex-State Treasurers, to recover interest received by those of ficials on state funds when they were in office, were brought. One of those ex-Treasurers was a business associ ate of Senator Sawyer, and the Senator was surety upon his bond and also upon the bonds of other defendant ex Treasurers. The Judge before whom the cases were to be tried was a brother-in-law of Mr. La Follette. Mr. La Follette was a practicing attorney. Senator Sawyer met Mr. La Follette In Milwaukee one day and offered him a retainer of $500 for his service In the cases, and did it in such a way that Xa Follette construed It as an effort to reach and Influence the trial Judge. Instantly there was an eruption. That was the beginning of an open schism that has troubled "Wisconsin Republi cans ever since. La Follette was young, able and ag gressive, and had political ambitions of his own. He started out to shake up the bones of the old organization, and he did it with some effectiveness, though he was not able to bring about his own nomination for Governor until the death of Sawyer, a little more than a year ago. Then opposition ,to La Follette melted away, and he swept the conven tion last Summer and was triumphant ly elected In the Fall. The reforms he had agitated for years were indorsed by the convention, particularly a pri mary election law and a law for equal ization of taxes. Everything was so completely for La .Follette and against the old organization that Senator Spooner, who is no politician at all but was elected by the Sawyer crowd, be came panic-stricken and declared he would not be .a candidate for re-election. He had the impression that; the political stage was ta be swept by the La Follette people, and that it would be'better for him to make a virtue of necessity. The La Follette people, how ever, said they had no Intention of in terfering with Spooner, and would sup port him for re-election. After election the fright of the old line Sawyer Republicans, represented by Henry C. Payne, Charles Pfister and Senator Quarles, wore off, and they set about "construing" the platform as not Teally meanlnc full primary election re- NOT DETECTIVE, BUT NEWSPAPER. The Oregonlan is not in the business of ferreting out offenses against the laws of the country, of detecting crime or punishing criminals. But as a news paper It freqeuntly gives publicity to infractions of the law and to the doings of lawbreakers. In Its office as pur veyor of news it frequently reports dis putes Involving public property and public questions, and sometimes to disputes affecting private rights, when such disputes become a matter of pub lic record and attention. There are always at least two 'parties to a dis pute, and both cannot win, both cannot be wholly right; Indeed, It frequently turns out that neither is wholly right. It often happens, too, that the fairest statement a newspaper can make of these controversies, treating them sole ly as matters of news Interest, is mis construed by each party as a design edly partisan statement for the benefit of his opponent. And again, when any particular state of facts reflects upon the integrity of any person there is haste to impugn the motive and intent of the paper that shall give them publicity, and to declare the showing made, howsoever true to the facts it may be, as "vilification" and "persecu tion." No honest newspaper escapes this experience. "While it is no part of the business or purpose of The Oregonlan to play the part of detective or spy in the com munity, it is its business and purpose to give the news, "all the news that's fit to print," regarding matters of le gitimate public Interest. In pursuance .of this course The Oregonlan has given some attention to the public land ques tion, and It must continue to do .so. No body doubts that improper practices have figured in the disposition of much of the public domain. Everybody, of course, denies complicity In frauds. The Oregonlan accuses nobody, but publishes such pertinent matter as It can get, being careful to present the case fairly as the available information will permit "With respect to some of these cases It has been charged with more or less heat that The Oregonian was lending Itself to improper uses, and that these matters ought to be left for treatment in regular official form. The Oregonian has no desire to divert these matters from their proper official channels, and it cannot conceive how publicity should defeat honest pro ceedings. In fact, one of the objects in setting these matters before the pub lic Is that good may come of it, not evil. There is wide public Interest in everything pertaining to the disposi tion of Government lands these days, and The Oregonlan would fall short of Its duty as a newspaper lf it should fall to recognize this Interest The Ore gonlan 'does not propose to be found wanting in this respect In dealing with their strikers perhaps the Morganeercd trusts will "take a pointer" from the "leading citizens" of Tampa, Fla., who, a few nights ago, organized as a vigilance committee, seized the principal labor leaders of the town, took them in closed carriages to a steamer, just ready to sail for Havana, ordered the captain to receive them on hoard and sail away at once, and warned the men never to return to Tampa. On following days they went among the strikers and commanded them to resume work upon a certain day, or deportation would not be con fined to the leaders. Later, twelve more strikers, who were sub-leaders, were hustled out of the town. Then the committee issued a proclamation "to the anarchists a"nd labor agitat ors," saying: "Your days in Tampa are at an end. "We cannot and will not permit you to destroy this prosper ous city. If you have regard for your safety, you will shake Its dust from your feet" Surely this precedent will not be lost on the steel trustl , GOLD PRODUCT AND MONEYvM ARKET New York Journal of Commerce. The probability of an early resumption of gold mining, on its normal scale, in South Africa, lends interest to the dis cussion of the Influence of the production of the precious metals on prices, and on the rate of interest which capital can command in the money markets of the world. Tho discussion is a very old one among economists, and the principle has come to be pretty well settled that while an increase In the stock of gold and silver may advance prices, It can have but little effect on the rate of Interest. In the last century David Hume pointed out, with his accustomed clearness, that while prices had quadrupled since the dis covery of America, and the amount of gold and silver in circulation had in creased In a still larger ratio, the de crease In the rate of Interest had been less than one-half. He argued that the value of the money metals being largely conventional or fictitious, their greater or less abundance counted for little. Gold and silver did not properly rank among the elements of commerce; they merely supplied the instrument which men had, by common accord, selected to facilitate exchanges. They furnished the oil which made the wheels of commerce turn more freely. Mr. George E. Roberts, the Director of the United States Mint, take3 up this old but always interesting discussion, in the current number of the "North American Review," without, however, throwing any new light upon It. He finds that while the immediate effect of additions J to the money supply is to reduce the interest rate, It is a mistake to assume that an increase in the stock of money will permanently affect that rate. An increase in the stock of money will eventually find expression In a deprecia tion In the value of money, as compared with commodities; but interest is a pay ment in kind, and suffers the same de preciation in value as the principal, with out any reduction In the rate. Mr. Roberts goes on to argue that the rate of Interest depends upon the supply of capital, which may be quite different from the supply of money. But the first effect of ap Increase in the moneyi supply is upon the Interest rate, because the new stock swells the bank reserves and rates are put down to encourage borrowing until this new stock is absorbed either by tho actual growth of industries or by a rise in prices. It is to be hoped that Chairman Bur ton, of the Congressional rivers and harbors committee, will not suffer the fate of other statesmen who have fa vored tho digging of the "Seattle ditch." But It was before he had seen Seattle that he expressed his view of the mat ter; he may have repented later. "When John L. "Wilson lived In Spokane and was a Representative in Congress, he was not given to enthusiastic advocacy of the Lake "Washington Canal project, otherwise known as the "Seattle ditch," and he made the trenchant ob servation that it "had swallowed every man who went near it." Now he has identified himself with Seattle and es poused the cause of the "ditch." Per haps he thinks the "ditch" will not swallow a dead man. THE AMERICAN MAN. The Pacific Northwest has within a few years produced a large number of excellent horses for cavalry service. Not only is Uncle Sam in this field, seeking and finding, but the British and German Governments have made purchases here of horses for service in South Africa and China, and at home. The horses of the Rocky Mountain re gion have much greater endurance and are free from distempers that are prev alent among the more tenderly reared animals of the East, hence the favor which they find with Government horse buyers. This partially explains the de mand that has within recent years caused stockmen to turn their attention again to horse breeding for a wide and constantly widening market SCHOOL BOOKS AND THE CIVIL WAR. A convention of Confederate Veter ans, in session at Baton Rouge the other day, protested against the use of cer tain Northern text-books in Southern schools, and named many which they resolved ought to be excluded. They declared that these books do not prop erly represent the motives, the course and the purposes of the Southern peo ple In the Civil "War. A series of reso lutions was adopted, closing with the following: Resolved, further, That in our opinion no histories or other school books, which may treat of questions Involving the respective merits or demerits of the North or South, should be taught in Southern schools, unless written by ono In thorough sympathy ana afflllatlon with the South and its people, and unless intended to be used solely In Southern schools. It is the right of the Southern people to have in their schools such books as they choose. After some further years, however, when all the Confeder ate "Veterans shall have passed away, the personal element in the treatment of their history will disappear, and the causes and course of the Civil "War will be studied Impartially, South as well as North. A point upon which the Southern people who participated in the struggle are very sensitive is the statement that the cause of secession was their desire to perpetuate slavery. This they resent as a reproach to, them. But if the statement is not true, there can be no historic truth. Unquestion ably the motives of secession were com plicated with a lot of political meta physics; but the desire of separation was based on conditions of which slav ery was the corner-stone, and perpetu ation of slavery was deemed by them Indispensable to support of the system. Hence secession and the Civil "War. But there Is respect for the Confeder ate "Veterans, and no reason for sur prise or complaint when they are found protesting against school books that as they think, cast reproaches upon the cause for which they so stoutly stood. Shamrock II is a beauty. Upon thl3 point all who have watched her as she lies at anchor off Stapleton, Staten Island, are agreed. The opinion of ex perts, Indeed, is that she is by far the most handsome and graceful yacht that has come over seeking the America's cup. The general verdict is that It will be a pity to beat such a beauty, but the Yankee skipper who will sail the Constitution or Columbia, as the case may be, In defense of the piece of silver that has been In this country so long that It seems to be almost one of our Institutions, is not likely to be overcome with pity of that type when it comes to the test He may admire this lovely Delilah without submitting to be shorn at her hands. Not for years have forest fires been so general on the Pacific Coast as they are now. "We had grown to think that the infrequency of fires was due to the good work of the forest rangers, but that idea will now be subject to revision. The smoke that settled upon the city yesterday recalled to old-timers the excessively smoky season in the early '60s. There was another sea son of smoke In 1883, and again about ten years ago there were a few un comfortably smoky days. But a change in atmospheric conditions, a brief shower, and the air gets beautifully clear again. It is yet too early for the soft haze of waning Summer. Colombia and Venezuela each have a lively revolution on hand, and yet the two governments are about to go to war with each other. All this is con nected with the design of Uribe-Uribe to merge Venezuela, Colombia and Ec uador Into one nation. If this should be accomplished, it would probably only Increase the size of the troubles In that sputtering land. His Physical Condition ai Compared With Tliat o Europeans. International Monthly. The most Important, because the most fundamental, of problems concerning the quality of the American man concerns his physical condition as compared with that of his kindred beyond the sea. As to this point the evidence is so clear that It needs little discussion. It Is evi dent that the American Indians, a race evidently on the ground for many thou sand years before the coming of the Europeans had found tho land hospit able. For savages they were remarkably well developed, and, though unfitted for steady labor, their bodies were well made and enduring. Taking their place, the North Europeans, representing a wide range of local varieties, English, Irish, Highland Scotch, Germans. Scandinavi ans', Normans, French, and many other groups of Old world peoples, nave, since their Implantation, a hundred years or more ago, shown that the area of the continent from the Rio Grande to the far North Is as suited to our kind as any part of the earth. This is sufficiently proved by the sta tistics of American soldiers gathered during the Civil "War; the American waite man of families longest In the country is, on the average, larger than his European kinsman, the Increase be ing mainly In the size of head and chest. It is further Indicated by the endurance of these men In the trials of the soldier's life and by the remarkable percentage of recoveries from -wounds. This endur ance of wounds was regarded by the late Dr. Brown-Sequard as a feature common to all the mammals of this continent, being, as he claimed, on the basis of an extensive experience as characteristic ot American rabbits as- of American men. Moreover, tho statistics of life insurance companies doing business in this country aDnear to indicate that tho expectation of life is greater here than In the Old World. i NO SYMPATHY FOR MORGAN. Because He Is the Representative of Monopoly. Chicago Evening Journal. True as it may be that the general pub lic Is not pleased with the action of Presi dent Shaffer and the Amalgamated Asso ciation, it is no less true that It has no sympathy whatever with PlerponO Mor gan, Mr. Schwab and the steel trust. It is said with some degree of plausi bility that trusts may be beneficial to the community, and combinations of capi tal can accomplish much rhat could not otherwise be achieved. In fact, there must be combinations of capital In order that we may have banks and railroads and steamships and all the other vast appliances by means of which modem business is carried on. But this is a very different thing from "Morganeerlng," or the combination of a grea number of plants carrying on the samo or cognate industries in order to bring about a monopoly and command the markets. "Regratlng" and "forestalling" were crimes at common law, and have ever been held offensive to good morals. They consisted of buying up a product or ob taining control of it in such a way as to sell it again at one's own price. They are known now under the more familiar name of "corner," though the latter is based on the factor of short selling, either in stocks or grain. li to buy up a product to corner It in the market is an offense, to buy up and con trol the mills and factories that manufac ture the product! is no less so, and that is what Mr. Morgan and his associates aTe dolnc. There ought to be, and there will be, some way found to control or break up such combinations by law. They are a menace to the just rights of the people. There can be no sympathy for them anywhere. WHAT CUBA NEEDS MOST. Chicago Tribune. The tobacco dealers of Havana are sen sible men. They make a forcible argu ment which may have some effect on the tobacco raisers of the United States, to whom it is specially addressed. These Cubans ask for a reduction of the duty on Cuban cigars. There is no doubt that such a change in thetarlff will increase the consumption of these cigars In the United States and thus benefit the to bacco raisers of Cuba. The American tobacco raisers are not Ignorant of thit and they are opposed to any change in the duty on Cuban goods. They are at one with the sugar producers of this country, who are against a reduction, no matter how trivial, of the duty on Cuban raw sugar. The sugar and to bacco Interests of this country when united havo much Influence In Congress. But the Havana tobacco dealers say that Cuba will be helpess unless allowed freer access to the American markets. If Independent Cuba cannot dispose of Its products in the United States more advantageously than at present, then Cuba will renounce the dream of inde pendence and ask to be annexed. Such a prayer if made would not be refused. Then say these Havana people, states like Virginia and North Carolina would be ruined so far as tobacco is concerned, as they could not compete with Cuba. This is sound reasoning. The American sugar and tobacco people could not pre vent the annexation of Cuba if Cuba wished to be annexed. They could not prevent for any length of time the free admission of Cuban products if the isl and were annexed. They must decide, therefore, whether It Is better for them that these products shall have lower duties than at present or no duties. They must choose one or the other horn of the dilemma. They must concede something to their Cuban competitors or they will be forced to concede everything. THE STEEL STRIKE. Efforts of the Truit to Get Rid of Organized Labor. Wall Street Journal. There Is reason to believe that the steel company expects some important advan tages to accrue from the Amalgamated Association strike. The first of these ad vantages Is expected to be a demonstra tion that the company does not depend Upon organized labor for carrying on Its work. The second great advantage is likely to be the opportunity given to close works In one locality and to increase work at another, having reference not only to the cost of production but to the general advantages of operation. Officers of the subordinate steel com panies who would not have felt justified In closing mills and throwing men out of work except as a matter of necessity. feel that when the men have voluntarlly qult work, the company Is justified In leaving the mill closed if the same work can be carried on to better advantage at some other point. In reducing work at some points and increasing it at others, the steel company has opportunity to se lect men who are contented with good wages and reasonable hours, but who do not deem It necessary to decide for the company what other persons it shall em ploy. The steel company has the great ad vantage of being able to change Its base of operations from one point or another according to the necessities in the case. The labor leaders can hardly know where the steel company may deckle to make some move, and if they undertake to picket all points, the line of pickets will be thin In places. Officers of the steel company believe that while the strike may cause a loss of profits this Summer, It will result in a gain in profits In the long run. . NOTE AND COMMENT. To get some of Rockefeller's millions, first find your oil. Kansas shows a disposition to say its prayers only when necessary. Steyn will go to Europe and join Kruger. Like the old man, ho desires peace. The only perpetual thing about perpetual motion is the perpetual discovery of It. The Lord loveth a cheerful giver. Re member the Lord and the bath-house fund. The strikers should make sure they will not be starved into eating their owa words. 2ow doth the fly with buzzing din Besiege bewitching Ethelwyn; But never reach her beauty skin. For gauze and cheese cloth she's within. The South Is more bent on burning ne groes at the stake than on drawing the color line. "We always could do more work in Win ter than in Summer, especially now sinco It's Summer. George Gould has a daughter. She will nrobablv crow up to make some poor Count happy. Kruger will neither come to tho United States nor go to South Africa. Wo ad mire his pluck. In Summertime when the weather is hot. "When the sun Is boiling and the Ice Is not. How much more beautiful then, you know. The snow, the snow, the beautiful snow. The End of n National Chnrch. Sir Walter Besant in The North Ameri can Review. The Church of England Is now entering anew upon an acute form of that contro versyso acut) that, if it is followed up, the Church will undoubtedly be rent in twain and tho National Church will cease to exist. There are already within its divided fold two well-formed camps: tho one containing those who want no priest and will acknowledge no priestly preten sions; the other, those who find rest in the shelter of authority, accepting, as the price to be paid, the domination of the priest over their lives, their thoughts, their reason, their sanse and their phil osophy. Before disestablishment actually takes nlace there will be mountains of lit erature to be read; there will be a flood of talk. But the most effective arguments will bo those which Aow how, In the United States, not to speak of our great Colonies, religion takes no harm where there is no Established Church. Some of us will regret the loss of an Institution venerable and beautiful; glorious for tho saints and divines, the martyrs and con fessors, the scholars and teachers, who havo adorned Its- history. But we shall let it go in full confidence that, as In Ameri ca, so here, religion does hot need a national creed. Uncle Jesse Carr is likely to see lively work on that Interstate ranch when the United States Deputy Mar shals of Oregon and California get to tearing down those miles of stone fence. The proceedings of yesterday indicate that Judge Bellinger means that his orders shall be obeyed without further quibbling or delay. On the first of last month the 34th birthday of the Dominion of Canada was celebrated. "Within that term of thirty-four years her population has Increased but 50 per cent, while her foreign trade, import and export com- A Crushing Argument. Springfield Republican. The only sound argument made against his anti-trust tariff scheme, In Congress man Babcock s opinion, "lies in the state ment that to undertake to amend tho tariff law disturbs trade and unsettles business to a greater or less extent." But he meets this with a crushing rejoinder: "This argument would have conclusive force if tho Democrats were in control, but thero is nothing to fear from a Re publican Congress. When tariff changes are made the friends of protection should make them." And to that what can a good Republican say? Nothing. He is wholly silenced, for it is a corner truth of high tariff gospel that the tariff can not be touched by Its enemies without disaster to the country, but may be touched anywhere and anyhow by Its friends with "perfect safety to all Inter ests. - Wilt Not Fight Agrainst Improvement ASTORIA, Or., Aug. 13. (To the Edi tor.) In this morning's Issue of the Dally Astorian the following was printed In its local columns: The Chamber of Commerce met last night In regular session, and transacted considerable routine business. Just previous to adjournment D. H. Welch offered to contribute f 50 or $100 to a fund to pay the expenses of keeping a man In "Washington during the next se&alon of Con gress to fight appropriations for river Improve ment between Astoria and Portland. I desire to say that my name, used in connection therewith, Is an absolute false hood, and at no time have I ever men tioned or even thought of such a thing. I am not a member of the Chamber of Commerce, nor have I at any time attend ed any of its meetings. I would like for you to publish this de nial, that the public may know that I in no way countenance such talk and pub lications. D. H. WELCH. Dewey's Great Bnttle Record. Boston Herald. Admiral Dewey will go down into his tory as the man who was in command during two great naval battles the battle of Manila and the Sampson-Schley en gagement, whloh Is to take place In Wash ington in September. Times Have Cliangeilt Chicago Tribune. If tho Galesburg pastor who thinks the severo droalh of this Summer is a punish ment for the sins of the people Is right, beloved, times have changed greatly since J tho days of-Noah. Reservoirs on Union Pacific. Salt Lake Herald. Within a short time the Union Pacific will have completed ready for use, at a cost of over 51,000,000, the five great res ervoirs that are to furnish pure water for a long stretch In Wyoming. The first to be ready for use Is at Leroy, 43 miles west of Granger, and the others will be ready shortly afterward. Although the cost of this great under taking Is immense, the road expects to get it all back In the course of time in the difference in the wear and tear on the locomotives passing over that por tion of the line. At present there are long stretches where the only water ob tainable is saturated with alkali. This has a serious effect on tho boilers, cutting down considerably their period of useful ness and necessitating constant watch fulness and frequent repairs. By means of the reservoir system the road will catch tho mountain water in the springs and at other times of high water and pipe the pure fluid to the various tanks. It la estimated that this will save the com pany several hundred thousand dollars every year. , The Leroy tank has an area of 29 acres and a capacity of 41,800.000 gallons. The combined capacity of the reservoirs win be 177,300,000 gallons. The Steel Strike. San Francisco Chronicle. Whatever the faults of the trusts and they are many the worklngmen well un derstand that they work to their advan tage. The steel strike is an attempt to assure present or future concessions, which the strike leaders well know could not be given, except by such a powerful organization as the steel trust The boys want some of the trust pie for them selves. The struggles now on in differ .nt nrt of the country are purely eco nomic. So long as they are peacefully conducted society must endure the In convenience and loss, whatever it may be. i The Roclc Thnt Mennces. Indianapolis Sentinel. The report that John D. Rockefeller has become a billionaire serves to call at tention to that alarming concentration of wealth which the trust principle encour ages. Such immense personal fortunes have always preceded the domination of plutocracy and the downfall of repub lics. There Is no reason to believe that our republic will prove an exception. At present we are going the beaten path. Thin Attendance at the Churches. New York Herald. The latest reason given by experts for the great falling off of attendance In New York churches is the increasing pros perity, which enables citizens to leave town for the Summer. There are some "old-fashioned" churchgoers who dispute this and assert that less sensationalism, less worldllness and more practical "gos pel sermons" In the pulpits Will bring more hearers into the pews. She was Indeed a charmer. And with her boa looked sweet. But I didn't dare go near her Her boa constrictor to meet. Our own John Barrett seems to be the only one of the late war heroes who has not suffered from lconoclasm. A bald-headed man is not necessarily a victim of circumstances. He may be a writer of testimonials for hair restorers. Sleeping-car porters will form a union, but whether to demand bigger tips or to boycott the comic papers is not given out. He was caught by the undertow In bathing In the sea. But he never was In danger, for It was a crab, you see. A man in Chicago killed his wife and himself because she wouldn't go some where with him. Let us hope he has gone alone. It has been found expedient to reduce the size of the British force in South Africa. The reason Is that only a small part of the army could keep up with tho enemy. When Hanna promised the full dinner pall we thought he was big enough man to give it. But it turns out that Hanna is a mere shoat compared with Carnegie and Morgan. In a recent imaginary battle the fleet defending England's coast was totally defeated, and all the shlp3 were destroyed. The English are rejoicing that the enemy, was not a real one. For a watering-place It sets a fast pace. And none better exists, I weeni The coffee and milk Are of the same Ilk. And are the best watered I've- seen. Tho Navy has ordered all its officers to cease talking about the Schley-Sampson dispute. If the order could reach tho newspapers there might be something left for the court of inquiry to do. It has been quite a while since Admiral Dewey was married, and It Is therefore probable that he will preside over tho court of inquiry Instead of Mrs. Dewey. Indeed, the Admiral has so far recovered himself, that she has expressed no opin ion about the Schley-Sampson controversy. How In the world is the boys' bath-houso going to be free If it Is not a "public utility"? We commend this very serious problem to the Hon. J. N. Teal, of tho Charter Commission. How in tho world can any "public utility" be free unless property-owners pay for It? We propound this also to the Honorable Gentleman. Can Lapybody Imagine a greater "public util ity" than a bath? Will not baths Increaso the mutual comfort of those who ride In public street-cars in warm weather? Next to a well-fed citizen, is thero any better citizen than a clean one? Let us discover whether it was an oversight that baths were omitted from the list of "public utilities." "While society was -busily engaged on Thursday afternoon enjoying the social functions," says a Newport special to tho New York Tribune, "Cornelius Vanaer bllt, Jr., dressed In grimy overalls and Jumper, covered with dirt and oil from, head to foot, was crawling In and out among the intricate machinery and boil ers of the torpedo-boat Stringham, crit ically examining every part of the little craft, which is here awaiting her speed trial before sho is accepted by the Gov ernment. For more than three hours Mr. Vanderbllt was aboard the vessel, and it is 9afe to say that not the minutest details of the construction of engine and boilers escaped his critical eye. Mr. Vanderbllt had accepted an Invitation from the build ers of tho boat to inspect her, and spent the greater part of Thursday afternoon In what appeared to afford him the greatest enjoyment." T PLEASANTRIES OP PARAGRAPHERS Our latest submarine Is named the Adder. Her business will bo to subtract from tho numbers of the enemy. Boston Transcript. Ho I hear that Jack Dashaway Is blowing lot of money nowadays. She Tou ought to try and get to leeward of him. Brooklyn Life. Ought to Be Happy. "Blackwood has bitten the dust." said Kcedlck. "Well, he always did want the earth," commented Fosdlck. Detroit Free Press. Worn-Out Methods. "That actress seems to bo somewhat behind the times." "Palnfullyt Why, she een had her diamonds stolen last week." Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. The Joys of Touring. Traveler I say, your razor's pulling most confoundedly 1 Local Tor turerBe It, zur? Well, 'old on tight to tha chair, an' we'll get It off zummowt Punch. Sorrow In a Slde-Show. "How did the beard ed woman take it when the manager dis charged her?" "She faced It like a man till she wont In the dressing-room, and got her false whiskers off. then she broke down and cried like a woman." Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. Vigorous, but Futile. Wealthy Patient What Is your bill for amputating my leg? Era nent Surgeon Three hundred dollars, sir. Wealthy Patient (filling out a check) ThaVa a brave effort, doctor; but It will never restore tho leg to Its normal length. Chicago Tribun. A ticket-collector on a railway got leave to go and get married, and was given a pass over tho line. On the way back, he showed to the new collector his marriage certificate by mlstako for his pass. The latter studied It carefully, and then said: "Eh, mon, you'vo got a. ticket for a. lang. wearisome Journey, but not on the Caledonian Railway." Tlt-Blts.