THE MORNING OUEGONIAS. MONDAY, AUGUST 19, lyui. v&Qimxcuw t Entered at the Postoffice at Portland. Oregon, &s itecond-claci matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms.... 160 i Business Office.... GS7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mali (postage prepaid, la Advance Xauy with Sunaaj. per montn...........$ 85 4JSui, buuda excepted, per ;ar 7 ; Aay, -with bunaaj. per year...... V w Bun&ay, per year .. - w Te 'Weekly, per year .................... 1 So 2 tie Tlekl, it months So To City fcubscrlbers DaUy, per -week, delivered. Sundays excepted-15c JJlua, per week. deiUered. Jsundas lncludea.20c POSTAGE KATES. United States, Canada ana .Mexico: Id lo 10-page paper,-,... .............. ......lc il to 22-page paper..... ................ ....2c Foreign rates trouble. Stews or diaouafcioa Intended for publication '.a The Oregonlan should bo addressed lnvarla L.y Editor The Oregon! an," not to the sums ct any individual. Letters relating to .advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matte. fcould he addressed dimply ""The Oregonlaa." The Oregonian does not huy poems or Btorles Xroni Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn an manuscripts bent to It without solici tation. Ho stamps should be inclosed for this turpose. Paget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, cilice at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 055, Tacoma Postoffite. Eastern Buslne&s Office. -S3, 44. 45. 47. 4S, 40, Tr.Iune building. New Yc-rk City; 460 Tbe Jtookery." Qhlcao: the S. C Beckwlth special axny, Eastern representative. For sale Ja San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. T46 Market street, near the Palace Eotel; Gold- Esilh Bros., 236 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts; 100S Market etreet. Foster & Orear, Ferry News tana. Far sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, S9 Bo. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 10t j Spring .street. Fr sale In Chicago by the P. O. ifews Co., i!7 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Fan-am street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 "W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by TV". C Kind. 204 Twen tj fifth street. On file at Buffalo, JC. T In the Orpgon ex h.l :t at the exposition. Fjr ale In Washington, X. C, by the Eb oct blouse news stand. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & XerdrJck, 000-912 Seventh street. "SCFTERDATS WEATHER-Maxlmum tern-rr- ure, 70; minimum, 85; fair. T 1DATS "WEATHER Generally fair; winds wcrt to north. . 1 PORTLAND, aiOSTDAY, ANGUST ID. A DAXGEHOUS POWER. "The great Western works of the American Tinplate Company never will be opened," Is the definite announce ment made Saturday "upon positive irformation" by a Joliet representative of the steel trust. Doubtless the trust can do just this If it likes. It can close and dismantle plants at its will. Its power in this xespect Is most dan gerous. It menaces the wellbelng and existence of thousands of inoffending citizens. It tends to promote disorder, it is a covert blow at the perpetuity and efficiency of political government itself. We have not at hand the population of Joliet by the census of 1900; bit in 1890 it was 23,000. There are now on strike In Jdiiet 3500 workmen, and the closing down of the Illinois Steel mills, a constituent part of the steel trust, will throw out of work 3200 more.' It is perfectly certain that the life and activity of Joliet are largely bound up in the continued employment of these 6700 men, 'They and their families, with the tradesmen they indirectly support, make Joliet what it is today. Should the trust pursue' its closing and dismantling programme, already in course of execution elsewhere, in Joliet, :oPEejuences to its inhabitants are appalling to contemplate. Yet this Is nothing more than the le gitimate fruit of the trust principle. Tnder the old system of independent competitive plants the proprietor had the same permanent interest In the community possessed by the laborer. If he underwent a strike, he started up his mill again when It was over. "Under the non-competitive regime of the trust these conditions have passed away, As the trust owns all the steel plants, it is a simple matter of busi ness for It to run such plants as can "be run at a profit, and close the others. It wants to make goods where union sentiment is not strong, where freight rates are low, where supplies and mar kets are accessible. The trust is in a "battle for supremacy over organized labor. It conceives it a necessary part cf its campaign to discipline such com munities as are friendly to the unions. Its policy has always been to perfect the machinery of its nonunion plants and let its union plants run down. It is but a step from this proceeding to the final abandonment and destruc tion of its least desirable properties. The point we are seeking to make is that this revolutionary and dangerous programme is an Inevitable property cf the trust principle that is, the prin ciple of monopoly as opposed to inde pendent effort, the principle of so cialistic non-competition as opposed to the principle of competitive effort To admit that the elimination of competi tion is a correct basis of industrial pro duction carries with It consent to the idea that the subordination of disad xantageously situated plants may rightfully be extended to the point of their abandonment or removal. Now, what is to be the effect of this revolutionary readjustment? The work men, it Is superfluous to argue, can not transplant themselves from place tD place with the facility of "boilers and furnaces. Their means are limited, their habits fitted to their environment Homes cannot be uprooted and fami lies dismantled as easily as steel walls and iron beams. Nor is It any way certain that the strikers can obtain employment whither the plants are mcved. The active, brainy fellows who bave organized unions and wrest ed concessions from employers are in deed the object of special aversion by the trust The more of them starve to death, the better for Schwab and Mor gan. We confront, in fact, the imminent spectacle of whole communities re duced to Industrial stagnation, wbich speJs beggary and want, crime for men. shame for women and vice for children. There Is no law to reach the case. The trust has risen above law, above public opinion, above even the powers of organized government No representative government In the wcrld today would dare to wipe out whele communities in pursuit of econ omy or vengeance. The trust is mak ing rapid progress toward that point where society will turn on it and com pel abandonment of its socialistic sys tem for the old and natural regime of competitive effort People who need strength are often recommended by their physicians to take Iron, but there is often trouble in getting It to assimilate with the blood. A German physician has devised a new scheme for administering the' Iron, which is found to work well. The metal is first fed to hens In a carbon ate of Iron mixed with. 20 per cent of , powdered sugar, which is Etirred into the mush fed to them. The eggs pro duced by the hens thus fed are found to contain a large percentage of Iron, and when they are cooked in any way desired and fed to invalids he iron thus conveyed is found to be readily absorbed and taken up by the blood. Persons feeding extensively on such eggs might have the iron enter their souls without the usual unpleasantness. THE ISTHMIAX DIFFICULTIES. How shall we explain the confused and conflicting versions borne daily in the dispatches from Colombia and Venezuela? Each of these powers at tributes the difficulties to the machina tions of the other. Each protests its integrity, each holds the duplicity of the other up to scorn. Which is right, or are both wrong? To begin with, the International character of the uprisings it is impos sible to doubt Venezuelans in arms on Colombian soil, and Colombians in arms on Venezuelan soil, demonstrate conclusively that we have something more to deal with here than the ordi nary Latin-American revolution of dis affected factions. There Is definite hostility toward each of the national governments on the part of the other. What is the source of the antagon ism? Indications strongly point in the di rection of Venezuelan responsibility. There Is no explanation of Colombian aggression that at all compares In plausibility with the explanation of Venezuelan aggression. We know what Uribe wants. He has confessed his Bolivar dream of a ''Greater Co lombia," to Include Colombia, Vene zuela and Ecuador. How, then, is he recruiting his forces on Venezuelan soil, and with Venezuelan arms, unless by consent of President Castro, not only to the war, but to its political purposes? It is not difficult to picture Castro himself as ambitious to become a second Bolivar, and to form a union of the three states mentioned, such as lasted under Bolivar from 1819 to 1829, when Venezuela seceded. Further significance is supplied by the fact that If such a programme were contemplated, Its first strategic blow would be directed at precisely the object now engaging TJribe's at tention. This is the conservative gov ernment at Bogota. There it is that the opposition to the proposed union is virtually centered and most effect ive an opposition that voices Itself most strenuously in passionate loyalty to Colombian Independence. It Ib not strange, but to be expected, from the readiness with which armies spring Into being in Iatin-Amerlca, that Ven ezuela now finds herself on the defen sive against Invaders from the north in Colombia's behalf. If her states men's claim of victory over these Co lombian forces is valid, it augurs fa vorably for Castro's and Urlbe's re puted ambition, and 111 for early ces sation of the disturbances. There is only one cloud upon this troubled horizon for the United States In an international aspect, and that consists of these ominous rumblings from France. Why Is it that the French people, alone in Europe, are loud and bitter In animadversion against the United States? The an swer is found in the Panama Canal. It is in the latest of these fulmina tions that we find the reason for all the bluster" that has been burdening the cable. The Journal des Debats serves notice that France is concerned in the execution of a contract between the Colombian Government and the canal company, and that she Is de termined "to insist peremptorily on the carrying out of this contract" What does this mean? Well, it seems to mean, when taken in "connection with the simultaneous and unwarranted outbursts of French journals upon the inception of the present disturbances, that the Isthmian revolutions found France prepared, perhaps forewarned, if not in actual participation. Some body apparently knew what was going to happen and imparted to the Paris ian press the cue for the French atti tude. This attitude is unfriendly, and has to do, as has been said, with the Panama Canal. We also have a con tract with Colombia concerning the canal, and American attention has been directed toward It There is just one thing that would end our treaties with Colombia concerning the isthmus, and that Is for Colombia to pass again under the control of Venezuela, with which our relations, almost pre-eminently among South American states, are unsatisfactory. How much of Venezuelan hostility to the United States is of French promotion? How much has French Influence been lent to the assault on Colombia's sover eignty? OREGON APPLES. There Is a future for apple-growers In Oregon. Varieties must be selected with a view to their late-keeping and marketable qualities of the fruit; trees must be intelligently planted in locations judiciously selected, and or chards must be properly cultivated and kept free from pests. Nature, in this fair and favored region, will do the rest until such time as picking, sort ing, packing and shipping the apples comes. Here haphazard methods will not do. Every orchardist must know how, and, happily, any intelligent man can learn how to do these things with out feeling his way through a too long labyrinth of experiment. Apples are in one respect like roses. There are very many varieties that it Is pleasant to have, and that the grow er and his family can enjoy, but when it comes to cultivation for the market half a dozen varieties meet the demand. A London dealer now in this city thinks the "Yellow Newtown" should head the list of the planter of the commercial orchard. While perhaps no variety ex cels this in shipping, keeping and tooth some qualities, there are doubtless others that fairly equal it. The main point Is to select good varieties, and not too mans, since there is manifest advantage in handling large shipments of a single variety. If the Yellow New town, well; if the Red-Cheeked Pippin, well; if for nearer markets the Spltz enberg is chosen, it will prove satis factory among the earlier Winter ap ples; the same is true of the Baldwin and Yellow "Bellflower and several oth ers. Whatever variety or varieties is or are chosen, study the tree and its fruits with the purpose of becoming thoroughly acquainted with them, wait patiently for a few years the process of Nature as developed In growth and the expectation of a just reward tor intelligent Industry will be fulfilled. Of this there can be no doubt. The fame of Oregon as the home of the "big red apple" was dimmed for some years by the lack of a market This Induced I carelessness and the neglect and decay of orchards. But this lame was not destroyed, and it only remains for Oregon horticulturists to revive and re-establish it upon a paying basis by planting suitable lands in considerable areas 'to carefully selected apple trees. BOUNDARIES OF TERRITORIAL AC QUISITIONS. Director Merriam. of the Census Of fice, is entitled to thanks for a semi authoritative definition of the bound aries of territory acquired by the United States. At his request a conference was constituted of representatives of the Department of State, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Geological Sur vey, the Census Ofllce and the Library of Congress. While the findings of this body have no official standing, they clear up a number of disputed points. The main conclusions may be sum marized as follows: First The region between the Mississippi Rher and Lakes Maurepas and Pontchartraln to the west, .and the Perdldo River to the east, should not be assigned either to the Louisiana Purchase or to the Florida Purchase, bur marked with a lecend indicating that title to it between 180.1 and 1813 was in dispute. - Second The line between the Mississippi Riv er and the Lake of the Woods, separating the territory of the United Statrs prior to 1S'J3 from the Louisiana Purchase, should be drawn from the most northwestern poinf of the Lake of the "Woods to the nearest point on the Missis sippi River, In Lake Bemldji. Third The western "boundary of the Louis iana Purchase between 40 decrees and 42 de grees north followed the watershed of the Rocky Mountains; thence It ran east along the parallel of 42 decrees north to a point due north of the source of the Arkansas River, thence south to that source. The northwestern boundary of Texas, as an nexed, extended up the principal Stream of the Rio Grande to its source, thence due north to the parallel of 42 degrees north. Fifth The southern boundary of the Mex ican cession of 1848 should be drawn from a point on the Rio Grande eight miles north of Paso, Instead of from one about 30 miles far ther north, as Is the usual practice Vt preent, west three decrees, thence north to the first branch of the Gila River. The Oregon Country, as defined by the conference, Is set apart from any connection with the Louisiana pur chase. Many persons have been dis posed to Include Oregon in Louisiana, though the weight of historical author ity is against any such interpretation of the treaty with Napoleon in 1803. The Oregon Country is held to include all of the present States of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, part of West ern and Northwestern Wyoming, tak ing In the southwestern part of Yel lowstone National Park, and Western Montana, Including the present Cities of Anaconda and Missoula, Wyoming has the odd distinction of lying partly in the Oregon Country, partly in the Louisiana purchase, partly in Texas as annexed in 1845, and partly in the Mexican territory ceded in 184S. As to the Oregon Country, the con ference found nothing in history to warrant mention of the claim of Spain rather than that of Great Britain. The final settlement of the question of sovereignty and boundaries by the treaty of 1846, fixing the forty-ninth parallel "by an amicable compromise" as the northern boundary west of the Rocky Mountains, seemed to be a rec ognition by the United States of the importance of the British pretensions sufficient to warrant mention on the map. The treaty of 1819, the Florida cession, had already served as a con clusive relinquishment by Spain of any claim in this quarter. The conference, considering these facts, together with the historical narrative of discovery and occupation of the northwest; coast of America, and the part played by traders, explorers and settlers from the United States within the territory known under the name of Oregon in the eighteenth century, decided to place as a legend on the face of the map, to describe briefly with historical accuracy the area in question, the fol lowing words: "Oregon Territory dis covered and settled; British claim ex tinguished 1846." THE HOUSEMAID'S OPPORTUNITY. In too many cases the two sides in volved In contests between capital and labor are the inside and the outside, but in the Irrepressible conflict which is constantly waged in a large number of kitchens in every community there are two legitimate points of view. In England, where lines of station are firmly laid down, the problem of do mestic service is not so troublesome, for cooks, nursery maids and house maids are trained for their several callings, and never hope for anything better than a good position. In Amer ica, where the young woman who is now washing dishes looks forward to the time when she will be courted under a lilac bush by a struggling young blacksmith, who will study law, go to Congress, and eventually make her the first lady of the land, the prob lem presents difficulties. Yet considerable may be yielded on both sides without loss of the great American prerogative of rising above one's station on the one side, or of self respect on the other. The young clerk in an office or store does not expect the manager to ask him to smoke with him every morning, partly because the manager doesn't have time or inclina tion to smoke with all his employes, and partly because he cannot afford to waste the time of the clerk for which the company is paying. The girl in the kitchen cannot expect to eat with the family, be she never so much their su perior In culture and Intellect, for the reason .that she has duties to attend to for which she is paid. Those du ties require her presence in the kitchen at certain times in the day. and if she ; performs them thoroughly she has all she can attend to without tormenting herself with the Tilack fear that she is being oppressed. On the other hand, the girl that is efficient and industrious has many rights which are too often abrogated. She is frequently subjected to sense less regulations as to her manner of addressing the children in the family, is often assigned tasks which are too much for her strength, and is not sel dom nagged and scolded when she is not really at fault. But, in any event, the girl has the best of it, for such is the demand for good servants that she need have no difficulty in finding a more congenial "place" if the one she has is too severe. Thus it has come about that in many households the girl is really the mistress of the situation. She can 'dictate the num "ber of "days out" she shall have a week, she can limit her duties to those she sees fit to discharge, and she can be far more independent and free from restraint than the girls who are em ployed in various capacities in mercan tile institutions. With all these things In favor of the girl, the solution of the problem seems as far off as ever; for, owing to the word "servant," hateful -to the American mind, young women prefer to work much harder and for much less money in other walks of life. We respectfully suggest in this con nection that if hntisewivpc will dwinml nate their help as per the following schedule, and treat them as employes in factories and stores are treated, there will be less trouble: OLD. ( NEW. Cook. IForelady culinary de partment. Second girl. Assistant forelady cu linary department. Chambermaid. Superintendent of sleep ing apartments. Washerwoman. Superintendent of the laundry. With titles such as these, and with no duties other than those laid down by the rules and regulations to be printed and posted in every room in the house, a girl' will submit to as much bullying as can be given by the most self-sufficient floorwalker or head of a department, and will never murmur. She will do five times the work she does now, and will never complain, and will take about .half the wages she now re ceives. But she mus;t not be called a servant, and her right to expect some day to be able to pass her employer on the street with a cold, stony stare must never be questioned even by intimation. In yesterday's dispatches from Salem It was shown that within the past week eight new companies filed articles of incorporation, with an aggregate capi tan of $2,930,250. Attention was -also called to the recommendation of Sec retary of State Dunbar to the last Leg islature that these corporations be charged a fee for the privilege of 'as suming corporate shape in this state. At present only a small fee for re cording the articles is charged. The Legislature gave no heed to the Sec retary's recommendation, and no ef- fort was made to enact a law in ac cordance with his suggestions. His report contained numerous helpful notes showing the fees charged in other states. If the Oregon Legislature had required the payment of the same fees as are charged in the State of Iowa, the State of Oregon wouid have received $3130 from the corporations last week. At this rate the income from this source would amount to 5162,760 per year. The failure of the Legislature to act upon Mr. Dunbar's recommendation was probably due to the fact that under the law determin ing the fiscal year the Secretary's re port could not be laid before the mem bers of the . Legislature until the first week of the session. The law has been amended so that the biennial reports may be issued in October or November, and hereafter the legislators will have time, before the confusion of the ses sion begins, to consider the sugges tions made by the state officers. The statement printed this morning concerning the Cascade forest reserve The Oregonian tried to get from the records and files of the General Land Office some weeks ago, but the Infor mation was then refused. When Com missioner Hermann found that Infor mation obtained from other sources reflected somewhat upen him, he was prompt to open his files and give out copies of documents that would tend to divert criticism from him. The In teresting question arises, Are the rec ords of a public office like the Gen eral Land Office of the United States for the benefit of the public, or merely for the personal benefit of the official who may chance to have charge of them, to be concealed or exploited as may suit his personal purposes? Are they to be opened to public scrutiny only for the vindication of the Commissioner, and not for public information? If for the former purpose, how may the public know that it has all the facts? What assurance is there that the whole story is given out? Secrecy in these matters is harmful to all concerned. Light' Is a great, purifying agent. The fact that in the past ten years the term of life of the people of the United States has Increased percep tibly, while the death rate has de creased 1 per cent per annum per 1000. as shown by the last census, is attributed principally to the increase of sewers and sanitary arrangements and public water supplies. Modern sanitation and medical discoveries have lessened the prevalence of many diseases, and fewer people die of typhoid fever, consumption, scarlet fever, diphtheria, smallpox, croup, troubles of the nervous system, etc. On the other hand, certain ailments, as cancer, Bright's disease, heart dis ease, dropsy and pneumonia, have killed off a greater number of people in the past ten years than in any pre vious decade. High living and the use of alcoholic drinks are supposed to have something to do with this, bat general ly speaking, owing to improved medi cal science and sanitation, the span of life is gradually lengthening. The patronage of American tourists is not as satisfactory to Europeans this season as it has been in former years. It is complained that the Yan kee abroad has formed the habit of using his money cautiously instead of lavishly. Whether this is the result of the lesson of the hard times a few years ago or of years of experience with foreign money-grabbers of American coin can only be conjectured. The fact probably is that the American snob years ago set the expense pace for American travelers, and not until this year have the Wter been able to secure a "go-as-you-please" gait. It will prob ably take some time to disabuse the Continental mind of the idea that all American travelers are rich, and there fore 'fair game for cheating and swin dling. Progress is, however, evidently being made in this direction, hence the growls at American parsimony that are coming across the water. Major Caukin's letter, elsewhere printed, is curiously instructive in the light it sheds upon his school of oppo sition to pension reform. Censure of pension frauds he designates as vili fication of the deserving soldier, which everybody knows it is not. Pension reform aims rfot at deserving, but un deserving. In assuming that the rank and file of Union veterans are hit by demands for honest pensions, Major Caukln comes too near the point of confession to be just to the great body of his comrades. Russell Sage has just had another birthday, and it is said that it was necessary to put more than seventy pennies in the cake. But Russell's credit is so good that he had no trouble in borrowing them. The steel strike is making a pretty good bluff at longevity, but it should remember that the Boer War had about two years the start of it. The Kansas City papers, which last month had to be printed on asbestos, are now shouting about the delightful moothar in that locality. DEFECTS IN PENSION SYSTEM. New York Evening Post. he New York Times, a few day9 ago, in its Washington correspondence, pub lished an item of intelligence from the rolls of the Pehslon Ofllce which sheds a ray of light on the system, or want of system, under which the Federal Treas ury disburses about $150,000,CC0 per an num. A report made by Colonel Barnes, of the Eighth Kentucky Infantry in the Civil War, describing a reconnolssance In force at Lookout Mountain, November 24, 1S63, had been examined by the writer, and an extract from It ls published In which 17 soldiers were branded by name for cowardice. They all skulked. One of them said that he hadbeen sent to the rear by a superior officer, and as he had previously behaved well, he' was given the benefit of the doubt. Turning to the pension list, the writer finds the name9 of these 17 men on it at the present time. Fifteen of them are drawing the pensions in person. One is represented on the list by his mother and one by his widow. The question naturally arises, how did these 17 men, who took 9uch good care of themselves in the war 2S years ago, hap pen to be, without a single exception, pen sionable persons? A service-pension bill has not yet been passed. We have not reached the point of pensioning every body whose name was on the Army roll, regardless of the question whether he received any hurt or disability. Yet it would seem from this recital as though, if such a bill were passed, there would be little scope for Its operation in the Eighth Kentucky, all the persons living who might desire to be on the roll having already found places on it. It has been a cause of increasing wonder during the past decade why the ravages of death do not lessen the amount of tho penslomappropriatlon bills. This question Is satisfactorily answered by Mr. F. E. Leupp in the August number of the Fo rum. The answer, in brief, Is that the ravages of deathare counterbalanced by the multiplication of frauds, which the most vigilant Commissioner of Pensions cannot control; and the most discouraging part of the system 19 that whenever a Commissioner, or an honest man in public or private station, starts a movement to investigate or expose the frauds, he can make no headway In Congress, but finds obstacles, Innumerable and insuperable. thrown In hi3 way and himself frowned down by an organized public opinion, man ufactured and wielded by pension agents, solicitors, touters, clerks, and hangers on, who probably number 50,000 In the United States. Medical examinations are tending to be come a mere formality, to enable any com munity where ex-soldiers are found to "get even" with all other communities in the drawing of pensions. A special in stance is 'mentioned by Mr. Leupp where a medical board of three examiners passed 32 cases as being pensionable for heart disease, all in one week. This seemed so extraordinary that 12 of the claimants were ordered for re-examination before a medical board In another county, and an Army surgeon of the Civil War was sent to witness the re-examinatlon. Not a single case of heart disease was found In the 12. To make assurance doubly sure, the Armv surgeon then personally exam ined the 12, and he confirmed the report that not one of them had heart trouble In any form. Frauds by personating dead men are numerous and increasing, and there seems to be no reason why these should not con tinue indefinitely. "Of 105 claims filed by a Tennessee attorney," says Mr. Leupp, "only eight were found on Investigation of sufficient merit to have passed the board if properly prepared; the rest were wholly fictitious or based on forged pa pers." An attorney in Indiana, the su perintendent of a Sunday school, forged pension papers for friends on the ground that they were good men and deserved pensions, although they had never served in the Army. He said that the dead men whose names were used "would have been perfectly willing. If alive and present, to have sworn to the eame statements." An attorney of 'Providence, R. I., had charge of the collection of pensions for several clients. Whenever one of these pensioners died, he changed the man's address at the Pension Bureau to some other place and went there and obtained the remittances. He was drawing money for about 20 of these dead pensioners vhen he was detected. A soldier in Brook lvn flndlntr It easy to get a pension for himself, conceived the idea of personating some of his dead comrades. He succeeded In doing this at seven different points in tho TTnltprl States. No wonder that the pension list does not shrink with the lapse of time. Mr. Leupp's exposure is really startling, and It raises the query whether there is strength enough In the country to grap ple this monstrous abuse. People have consoled them9alves heretofore with the reflection that the soldiers of the Civil War would pass away in the course of nature, and that then the frauds would cease, but this is a mistake. If pensions are given to dead men, and if middle aged men (as Mr. Leupp affirms) ate drawing pensions as soldiers' orphans, there is no apparent reason why the pen sion appropriation bills should grow any smaller during the present generation. The loss of money to the taxpayers Is the least part of the evil. The poison that Is spreading through the country, the demoralization that is communicated to the young, teaching them that there is no wrong or harm in cheating the Govern ment, Is a menace to society. It cannot continue without entailing momentous consequences hereafter. Responsibility Locntcil. New York Times. In commenting in this column the other day upon the bullion robbery near San Francisco we endeavored to characterize the fellows who did the job by calling them "spacious villains." So the phrase was written, and it seemed to its lnvent oror adapter or adopter to be neat, but not gaudy, and to suit the circumstances of the case as well as any other he would be likely to find in the time at his dls posaU "Spacious villains," however, did not meet the approval of the linotype ma chine through which this particular piece of "copy" made the first stage of its devious journey to the public eye, and, ex ercising that stern but loving supervision which these marvelous Inventions regard as a part of their duty, it changed "spa cious" into "specious," thereby forming a combination of words which, though utterly irrelevant and meaningless, as ap plied to the California brigands, pleased the machine vastly better Because or us long established familiarity. "The editor person must have meant 'specious vil lainp,' " the Spirit of the Linotype mur mured, "because everybody always says 'specious villains' whenever opportunity arises or can be made, and 'specious vil lains' it shall be." So It Was, In im mutable print, the next day, and the editor person, who knows his plac sftid nothing, and, being unable to look happy over the change, looked 'as happy as he could. But he will be silent no longer, for here comes the Utlca Observer with the statement that to call the robbers of the Selby Company "specious villains" was an offense as heinous as that of the men who stole the gold. The statement is true, but let the responsibility for the dreadful, though doubtless involuntary, pun linotype machines never jest lie where it belongs, and that is on th6 lino type machine that made it. We are deeply grieved at finding ourselves com pelled thus publicly to reveal the secrets of the office, but compelled we are by a desperate sense bf cruel wrong, and now. the revelation effected, let the conse quences be what thej- may. A Good Democratic Plntform. Philadelphia Press. There seems to be one point on which the Democratic factions can unite, and that is opposition to Mr. Bryan. And this suggests that the next Democratic plat form consist of one plank of three words only, reading: "Down with Bryan." That might rally the party and enable it to go to defeat in 1904 as comfortably as it could oh any platform. WHERE IRELAND HAS BEST OF IT Chicago Record-Herald. Ireland, as Mr. Davltt says, has lost nearly half her population, but it Is re markable how she has held on to her rep resentation in Parliament. Here, at least, she has no grievance, but exceptional privilege which Is beyond anything dreamed of by the states which scheme for the best of it in our Congressional ap portionments. The population and non-university rep resentation of the different parts of the United Kingdom are now as follows: Popula- Represen tion. tation. England 30.812.S53 4C0 Wales 1.710.317 30 Scotland 4,471,037 70 Ireland 4,450,510 101 There are Irregularities which would require a reapportionment for the various English counties, but taking England as a whole her representation Is as 1 to 66.06S. That basis would entitle Ireland to only 67 members, Scotland to 6S and Wales to 25. There was a redistribution of seats In 1SS5. but the excess in Ireland and Wales Is explained by the fact that they were unaffected by it. Six additional members were given to England and 12 to Scotland, which until then had had only 60 members all told. Other comparisons will serve to bring out more vividly the overrepresentatlon of Ireland. The great manufacturing dis trict of Lancashire has a population of 4.375.471, about S0.000 le3s than Ireland's, but its representation Is only 57, or 44 less than Ireland's. The four counties, Mid dlesex, Surrey, Kent and Essex, have a population of more than S.OCO.OOO, nearly double that of Ireland, and a representa tion of 99, two less than that of Ireland. An analysis recently printed In the Pall Mall Gazette shows that upon the basis of 1 to 66.06S the greatest relative loss In England would fall upon the five Eastern counties Lincoln, Norfolk, Suffolk. Cam bridge and Hunts. They would lose 11 members 'for a population of 1,5S7,S15. But even they are not so largely over represented as Ireland, and they could hardly complain legitimately against a reduction if they were. As tho House of Commons Is a very large body (nearly twice the size of our House of Representatives) it would seem as though a general reduction were desir able, but if that is not proposed and a ratio be derived from the present popu lation and representation of the whole kingdom Instead of from those of England alone. It will be found to be 1 to 62.715; and It leads to the following exhibit: Entitled to Actual . members, members. Gn. Less. England and Wales. 510 4JM 29 Scotland 71 70 1 Ireland 71 101 .. 30 Such a change would affect the balance of power considerably by weakening Ire land and strengthening the Unionists cen ters of England at the same time. Rcpnblicnn Solicitude for Democrats. Louisville Courier-Journal. All is not gloom In the horizon of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat since the Ohio Democrat convention, notwithstanding the clouds with which the action of that body overcast the Republican sky, as purveyed from this Republican organ's conning tower. It sees a star of hope in Mr. Bryan's proposal to fight the Ohio Democrats. "Ho will work with all his power," re joices the Globe-Democrat, "to defeat the unholy alliance of the Cleveland-Mc-Lcan-Johnson aggregation, which has started out to efface the men who swayed the conventions of 1S96 and 1900, and who fought the battles of the Democracy in those National campaigns." What an estimate the Globe-Democrat must put upon the Intelligence of "the men who swayed the conventions of 1S93 and 1900" If It assumes that they do not see through this Republican interest In them now. In the connection a paragraph from the Philadelphia Record is pertinent: "It would be natural to expect that such Republican journals as the Tribune and the Sun, of New York, would rejoice In the Indication which came from the Ohio Democracy that the Democratic party does not Intend to continue under the leadership of Mr. Bryan. These news papers could hardly find words strong enough to express their feelings against the policy that was most distinctly urged by Mr. Bryan in his first campaign. Now, however, they appear to be disturbed by the injustice of the treatment which the Ohio Democrats have accorded to the re cent leader. They would like to arouse the remaining friends of free silver to the importance of holding the party to the standard of Mr. Bryan. There Is a sus picion that the Tribune and the Sun are not sincere when they give advice to Democrats." Other Republican organs are playing similar tunes Just now. But they should have a care. A very little of that kind of music is enough to defeat its ob ject. Mr. Havemeycr'H Rntlnpf. Chicago Tribune. It was reported on Wall street last Mon day that Mr. Henry O. Havemeyer, the president of the sugar trust, .was seri ously ill. Thereupon sugar stock fell from 133 to l9tf. It did not recover until word came that Mr. Havcneyer was in no danger. It must be pleasing to a man at the head of a great business enterprise to be able to learn to what extent the out side world looks on its prosperity as de pendent on his life. That there Is such a dependence, especially in the ca.e of a quaBi-speculatlve enterprise, is undeniable. The death of ex-Governor Flower worked havoc with the stocks of one or two of his companies. Mr. Havemeyer has found out that his serious Illness Is rated at a lit tle over four points. His death would be rated at as much again, perhaps. This is the Wall-street standard of the Import ance of men. No tedrs drop when a man of some consequence Is sick or dies, but quotations drop. Then, after he has died and has been buried but a short time, quotations usually go up again. Wall street finds out that the Interests he looked after are managing to get along tolerably well without him. Hott to Prevent IiyncniiiRs. Indianapolis News. It Is foolish for the people of the North to make any hypocritical pretensions of superiority over those of the South, or to pretend that they would not, under the same circumstances, act much in the same way. The thing to do is to encourage the sentiment against lynching everywhere, and to stand firmly for the rigid and or derly enforcement of the law. Chivalry Is Not Dead. , New York World. The seizure of a little postofflce from a Kentucky woman 'for a spoilsman does not mean that chivalry is dead In tb Blue Grass State, but that the politicians are on top with the kind assistance of the one-time civil service reformer Wil liam McKinley. SlnRlnpr of Good Times. Frank L. Stanton. In Atlanta Constitution. Let us sing: about the good times in the val les on the hills. The music of the mocldns birds the Joy of all the rllls; Let us ee in all the Winters, where the snow lies chill and deep. The soil that yearns to blossom where the flowers are safe In sleep. U. i Let us sins about the good times; they are bright on plain and slope. And all the world Is ringing with the siUery bells of Hope: The blue skies bend above us the grass is green and sweet. And the violets spread a carpet for the falling: of Love's feet.- III. Let us sins: about the eood times; they are coming right alone, And all the world Is sweeter for their hallc- lula song; And ho! for Love and llvinar. for no Blessing Love denies, And life's a sweet thanksgiving to the glad tnd answering skies I NOTE AND COMMENT. The adjournment of Parliament will drive the war correspondent back to South Africa. President Hays tenure of office seems to be about as Insecure as that 'of the Czar of Russia. If only President Schwab would strike, the trust would save enough on his sal ary to tide them over Its other troubles. How can the Pullman car porters, who pass the Glendale wreck, bear up under the spectacle of 10 carloads of ruined watermelons? General Gribski. the Governor-General of Blagovestchensk, has killed himself. He was undoubtedly making an effort to tell somebody who he was. A 20-year-old feud In Vienna was set tled effectively in a church not long ago. This method saves two long hauls, but it is rough on the carriage companies. Lieutenant Watterson, of Kentucky, who married a Cuban girl, will not run any chances when he smokes the cigars she buys for him. She will try them herself to see that they are all right. The typhoid germ notes with consider able satisfaction that the soldiers In tho desert military posts prefer to drink the water in which he abides to the bad whisky sold by the antl-cantcen saloons In hot weather. Diamandi. a native of Pylaros. one of the Greek Islands. Is a remarkable cal culator. After a mere glance at a black board on which thirty groups of figures are written he can repeat them in any order and deal with them by any arith metical process. It Is said that he never makes an error in calculation Involving millions, and he can extract square or cube roots with marvellous rapidity and accuracy. Diamandi writes poetry and novels in the i Intervals of business and shows considerable intellectual capacity. The poets sins: of budding Sprinff.. Of April's gentle ihoweri. And many a lay of blooming- May . Is bright with birds and flowers. ' And January's hoary face And March's howling: gale, And February's biting cold. Fill many a rhjmlng wall, v July calls forth the comic mus? That Pins the singed small boy. And in the tearful Autumn dirge "' The solemn bard flnds joy. The Yul-tlde Alls Decembr with Glad measures not a few. But poor. hot. smoky August, thers Is not a song for you. The San Francsco Argonaut tells this as a true story: "When the Transvaal war was at its height, Paul Kruger smnt a Commissioner to England to find out If there were any more men left there. The Commissioner wired from London to say that there were 4.C0O.0OO men and women 'knocking about the town;' that there was no excitement, and that men were begging to be sent to fight the Boers. Kruger wired back: 'Go North The Commissioner found himself In New castle eventually, and wired to Kruger: 'For God's sake, stop that wart England Is bringing up men from hell, eight at a time. In cages I He had seen a coal mine." A fruit supposed to bear the mark of Eve's teeth Is one of the many botanical curiosities of Ceylon. The tree on which it grows is known by the significant name of "the forbidden fruit," or "Eve's applo tree." The blossom has a very pleusaitt scent, but the really remarkable feature of the tree, the one to which It owes Its 'name. Is the fruit. It is beautiful, anil hang9 from the tree in a peculiar man ner. Orange on the outside and deep crim son within, each fruit has the appearance of having had a piece bitten out of U. This fact, together with Its polaonoua quality led the Mohammedans to represent It as the forbidden fruit of the Garden of Eden and to warn men against its nox ious properties. "The City of Cebu has something like 200,000 inhabitants, but this population i3 largely made up of people who are hud dled together in native huts." said Cup tain Going, of the Forty-fourth, Just back from service in the Philippines, the other day. "They live year In and year out on rice and corn. There Is no hunting, but thousands of small fish, less than six Inches long, are caught and dried for local consumption. We had a contract with an old man who controls the fishing at Dumanjug, to furnish us with all the big fish he might catch. Once In two or three weeks he would bring us a fish a foot long, but such are very rare. The natives, even of the lowest classes, are extremely fond of cock lighting. Thoy arm the birds with saber gaffs, and noth ing is regarded as a fight unless both the birds are killed, the money, of course, being awarded to the backers of the bird, that survives the longer-. A native, who Is able to get as much as 50 cents, know3 no more delightful way to spend It than to wager It on the outcome of a cock fight." PLEASANTRIES OF PAR.VGRAPHEnS Orange Citizen Did you say he hod on hK Sunday clothes? Newark Man Tea, he hod on his golf suit. Yonkers statesman. Deaf and Dun. ). "How many serants have the "WrltleysT "Two. a deaf cook and a dumb waiter."" Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. "Man wants but little here belov," remarked the landlady "Ard hore Is the place to get it." continued the facetious boarder. Tit-Bits. Very True. Sunny South De -world owea eery man a. living Brake O'Day Yea; but It costs more ter collect It dan wot it's worth. Puck. "I had a good Job on hand last night." said the first burzlar, "but I was stopped by an open-faced watch." "Get-out!" "Fact. H -was a bulldog in the yard." Philadelphia Rea ord. Taking No Chances. First Caddie Wot hev yer got dot breastplate an' muzzle on ferl Second Caddie Vc wlmTn olr goin' ter play terday an I ain't takin any chance-i. Ohio State Journal. Her Opinion. The Captain Why. yes; we can tell when a storm is approaching. There are weather prophets at sea." The Passen ger I hope they are not so often at sea na those on land. Puck. Characteristic "I wonder Jiow Admiral Dewey will start that court of Inquiry?" "I suppose he'll look around and say, 'You may begin firing, gentlemen, 'when you are ready.' " Cleveland Plain Dealer. Our Remarkable Language. Mrs. Snaggv They must have somt bis pistol? out West. Mr. Snaggs Why? Mrs. Snaggs There's some thing in the papr about a train robber cover ing a conductor with a Tevotver. Plttibur;? Chronicle-Telegraph. Heroic Measures. "Miss Creeoher says th neighbors don't appreciate her singing becaus they haven't cultlvatsd ears." "Cultivated? Well. I guess they will have If they keep oa listening; to such harrowing sounds." Phila delphia Evening Bulletin. A Constant Reminder. Dusnap I see yau call your naphtha launch after your wlf. Bertwhlstle (working over launch engine, per splringly Yes; because whenever I want to. go anywhere with it. it takes so long t)4fr it gets ready to start! Puck. The Up-to-Date Girl. Of eourse. it waa all the result of her business training. "B mine,' he urged. And started to plead his case. "My dear sir," she replied, "put your proposal fn writing and submit It by mall I have no time to listen to oral arguments." Chicago PcJrt.