THE MOKNIRG UKiSliUJSlAJJf, IfiUIJAY, UJEUEMBEK 13, lyOl. Wm (rggomcm. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Daily, with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year 7 CO Dally, with Sunday, per year............. 8 00 Sunday, per year '.. 2 00 The Weekly, per year..................... 1 GO The Weekly, 3 months CO To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays exceptd.l5o Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays lnduded.20c POSTAGE RATES. Unlt'd States Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper........ ...........lo 14 to 28-page paper So Foreign rates double. News or discussion intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription or to any business matter should be addressed iilmply "The Oregonlan." The Orcconian does not buy poems or dories from individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscript sent to it -without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 45. 47. 4S. 49 Tribune building. New York City: 4C3 "The Rookery." Chicago: the S. C. Beckwith special agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco byL. E Iee, Pal ace Hotel news tand; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. "W. Pitts. 100S Market street; J. K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand. For sale in Ixjs Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 250 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 So. Spring street. v For Fale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street. For tale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 "W. Second South street. For sale in Ogden by W. C Kind. 204 Twen-ty-ufth street, and by C. H. Myers. On file In the Oregon exhibit at the exposi tion. Charleston, S. C For sale in Washington. D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale In Denver. Colo, by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 000-012 Seventeenth street. TESTERDATS WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 30; minimum temperature, 20; pre cipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Increasing cloudiness, probably followed by snow or rain; warmer; northerly winds, becoming southerly. PORTLAND. FRIDAY, DEC. 13, 1001. A DIVISION OP LABOR, "We have a respectful letter from a correspondent who cannot understand why The Oregonlan "supports Supreme Court decisions denying that the Con stitution follows the flag," and then "demands of Congress legislation dia metrically opposed to the effect of the decisions." It Is a fair question and deserves a fair reply. Fortunately and unfortunately, we live in a world of law. That is, we imitate Nature as far as we can in es tablishing certain rigid rules of pro cedure, which fall with cruel and benefi cent impartiality on the Just and the unjust The August rain, that revives one man's dying garden truck, spoils another man's hay. The law that cuts short the career of a red-handed villain sends an innocent man to the gallows upon circumstantial evidence. In the long run there is no other way but to make a law and enforce it according to its text. On the whole, we get Justice, but occasionally we get outrage. The question in each case has to be, not what Is right, but what is law; and while verdicts and decisions often make our blood boil, yet our judgment is compelled to approve. It is so with our new islands.' The Supreme Court is not the lawmaking 'power. Our courts are disposed. In gen eral, to claim 'jurisdiction whenever adequate ground for it appears, but in 'the Insular cases the Supreme Court has not found warrant In the Consti tution for annulment of the acts of 'Congress. It has interpreted the treaty of Paris as an incorporation of the Spanish Islands In the territory of the 'United States; but it has sustained the acts of Congress in relation to those Islands. The American Nation is under the heaviest sort of obligation to deal justly and even kindly with the people that have come to us under the war with Spain and the treaty of peace con cluding it But the proper medium through which that obligation is to be discharged is not the Supreme Court, but Congress. The Supreme Court will sustain the Constitution and the laws, but the Supreme Court cannot pass the laws. This is thepeople's task, resting upon them through their representa tives duly elected. There is a far-reaching good In this development of American history, lor where could this power so advantage ously rest as with the Congress? The Supreme Court is beyond the reach of public desires Congress is within easy reach. "We can petition Congress some constituencies make so bold upon occa sion as to instruct and if the popular will is defied we can turn the whole aggregation out to grass. The entire House of Representatives goes before the people every two years, and Sena tors resign upon slight provocation. It is doubtful if there is a single man in either house of Congress who would dare defy the demand of his party state convention and his state Legisla ture for his peremptory retirement. Manila was captured May 1, 1898, and we have just found out from the Su preme Court that it is domestic terri tory. Yet within that time two suc cessive Houses of Representatives have been elected and the terms of two thirds of the Senators have expired. Perhaps it is a sign of the times that the Supreme Court turns the Islands over to Congress. Perhaps it Is a step in that evolution of representative gov ernment which is steadily bringing power more directly down into the hands of the people. ' PENALTIES OP CHANGE. "While it is doubtless true, as the Washington dispatches point out, that Oregon and "Washington might have fared more sumptuously in the matter of House committee places, yet the more obvious lessen of the assignments is the reward accruing to long-continued service. New members go to the foot of the class, old members take the prizes. This is not true in the Senate, but is uniformly true in the House. The ways and means committee, which Is of pre-eminent importance just now in view of possible tariff revision, is composed wholly of old members, though Metcalf of California, who se cured his place by a trade, was first elected in 1S9S. Payne, the chairman, bgan his service In 18S3. Dalzell, Rus sell and Robertson date from 1887; Hop kins, Grosvenor and Richardson from 3885; Steele from 1881; Tawney, McCall and Babcock from 1893, whereas Tongue of Oregon took his seat in 1S37 and Moody his in 1S93. Had Oregon sent a new man In "place of Representative Tongue this session, it would have lost the chairmanship of the Important Irri gation committee and probably some also of our advantageous positions on rivers and harbors, public lands and mines and mining. The states that send new men to Congress every term get no important places or weighty recognition in the committee-rooms, where the real work of legislation is done, and must be done in a legislative body as large as the House of Representatives. The states that send the same men year after year secure lodgment in vantage-points where they wield a whip hand over rival aspirants for recognition. New lands of Nevada holds a powerful po sition in the House, though his con stituency is almost nothing, because he is now serving his fifth consecutive term. There is only one mistake a state can make that is worse than retiring a fairly good man for a new man no bet ter, and that is to elect an incompetent man in the first place. He has to be turned out eventually, and all the time he has been In is wasted. The offense is the more inexcusable because of the difficulty of finding a man who is unfit for the position. Really great statesmen do not court -seats in the House of Representatives. Oregon's present Con gressmen are 'way above the average. BEATJTIFUIi DREAMS OP HOPE. When the fair land of Poland was plowed by -the hoof Of the ruthless Invader, -when might With steel to the bosom and flame to the roof Completed his triumph o'er right. In that moment of danger, when Freedom, In voked All the fetterless sons of her pride. In a phalanx as dauntless as Freedom e'er yoked, I fought and I bled by her side. So sings Thaddeus of "Warsaw in Balfe's immortal "Bohemian Girl," and such Is the legend that still animates unhappy Poland, whose protest in the German Parliament on Tuesday discon certed "Von Bulow and set all Berlin agog with excitement. It Is fitting that Ireland should have sung fair Poland's wrongs, for nowhere else could they receive such intelligent sympathy. More than a century has passed since the great rebellion in Ireland, and since the third partition of Poland completed its overthrow; yet the fire of independence burns brightly from age to age. It .s impervious to reason, time and neces sity. It shows us that we live In a world, not only of progress, but of fidel ity. The student knows well enough that Poland, no more than Ireland, could govern Itself or maintain its independ ence. That acquiescence In the or dained will of the majority which un derlies true liberty as the Teutonic mind apprehends it, was as impossible in the one case as the other. Each fell under the necessity of Incorporation into an irresistible empire in the one case Russia, In the other case Great Britain. Government In Poland was simply anarchy. Government In Ire land was severity subduing the Irrecon cilable. The integration of nations has been encompassed in various ways. In fact in no two .cases In the same way. The parts successively joined to the, central nucleus may be happy as Scotland is, or Burgundy; merely repining, as they do in Rome and Alsace-Lorraine, cheer fully expectant as Palestine and spme Canadians are, or they may be Implaca ble, defiant, like Poland and Ireland. In the long run, of course, it does not greatly signify. Nobody expects Ire land to be independent, any more than Scotland. Nobody expects Great Brit ain to relax her hold on South Africa. Poland's national history is a closed book that will never be opened. Yet for all that we love to see and honor the spirit that sustains these bootless protests against the wheel of progress, roughly riding over the deep est sentiments of the heart He who sees most clearly the futile folly of the Boers can nevertheless glory in their spunk; unhappy Ireland has its friends everywhere, even among those who scout Its fruitless plans for Independ ence, and Poland never rises In the Reichstag i.o bewail her fate and up braid her conquerors but she makes sure of a sympathetic sigh whenever her tragic story is recalled. Among the dreams of unfading hope, none is more fascinating than the restoration 'of Palestine, none more beautiful than the vision cherished by the' Athenian of the day when Greece again shall rule the world. "Who shall reconcile the march of progress with the devotion of faithful hearts to a lost cause? Ncne, for the things are not to be compared. To ap prehend clearly the Inexorable logic of events is not necessarily to close our eyes to the splendor of vain fortitude and hopeless fidelity. There Is no com mon denominator for the world of force and the world of emotion. One exists independently of the other. The Irish flag may never be seen with the eye of serise, but in countless human hearts It floats unchallenged, endeared by pa triotic blood, immortalized by orator and poet, sanctified by the song of Balfe and Wallace. Heroism would be something less than it is but for the proud story of Poland and to American annals the memory of the Lost Cause imparts an increment of beautiful fidelity that neither Appomattox nor act of Congress could destroy. Which could be better spared the achievement of good government or the uplifting legacy of brave hearts that bled in i;ain? Fortunately, it is a useless ques tion. Neither need be spared. We have them both. THE ENGLISH PLAN. The youthful offenders' act, passed by the British Parliament last year, pushes earlier measures In regard to Juvenile offenders a step farther and makes the 'parent liable for the mis deeds of hib child. Children under 12 and young persons under 1C, if convict ed of trivial offenses, may be sentenced to be whipped, but are not to be sent to industrial schools. If charged with any offense for which a fine and costs may be imposed by a Justice of the Peace, and if there is reason to believe that their parents or guardians are re sponsible by their neglect for the com mission of the offense, the latter may be summoned and tried with the offend ers, and may be ordered to pay the fine or give security for the good behavior of the culprits. Public opinion in the United States would not support a law of this kind. The sentiment with us is in favor of putting this class of reprobates in re form schools, maintained at the expense of taxpayers, including parents who do their duty by their own children. This is the progressive at least it is the accepted method of dealing with ob streperous and neglected children, but it is doubtful if its efficacy will equal that .of the sterner and with us out dated British method. While, however, deprecating in theory the whipping of Juvenile or even adult offenders as bar barous, it Is not easy to escape the feel ing that this theory, if Teduced to practice- hereabouts, would break up effect ually the predatory bands of boys and youth who have been wont as- night prowlers to terrorize certain sections of our city, hurl stones through win dows, stuff chimneys with rags, deface vacant buildings, board trains as tramps for a stolen ride a few miles out, and throw stones at car windows when pulled out of hiding by trainmen, etc. Boys committing such offenses, it is said, are Irresponsible. This being true, let responsibility be fixed where It belongs upon parents, cot upon the state. The wisdom of making those In au thority In official life responsible and then holding them responsible is con ceded. Why not go to the fountain head of all community order and make parents responsible for the misdeeds of their children, in accordance with the English plan, Instead of relieving those who are derelict in their duty of all care of and responsibility for their un ruly offspring? Drastic as are Its measures. Is there not something in the English plan of dealing with youthful offenders through and with their par ents that commends itself to a long suffering American public? LICENSED GAMBLING IN EUROPE. As late as 1840 gambling-houses were licensed in London, and Crockford, the proprietor of. the principal gambling establishment, retired with a. fortune of several millions of dollars. The Duke of Wellington was a nightly visitor at Crockford's. Today great gambling establishments flourish vigorously un der the laws of Belgium, which is the only Important country in Europe where gambling is permitted by the authority of the general government, and where gaming clubs are conducted under tho direct surveillance of the gov ernments of the cities where these clubs exist The great gambling establishment at Monte Carlo Is authorized by the Prince of lonaco, who is the sole arbiter of the affairs of his little dominion, bat while gambling is carried on in nearly all the great capitals of Europe and at all the Continental watering-places, nevertheless outside of Belgium and Monaco gambling exists in defiance of law, and only where the local authori ties choose to wink at its presence. At Ostend, the great cosmopolitan watering-place of the Belgian coast distant less than six hours' Journey from Paris, London and Brussels, Is a great gam bling establishment which rays to the municipality of Ostend 2,500,000 francs annually. The mluimum stake is five francs; the maximum 12,000 francs, and It Is no uncommon thing to see a single player win or lose 250,000 francs at a single sitting. An anti-gambling bill Is now before the Belgian Parliament, the object of which is to suppress this great gam bling establishment at Ostend, whose operations have become a Continental scandal. As originally introduced In the lower branch of the Legislature, this bill commanded an overwhelming majority of the "Deputies. It was subse quently amended In the upper house so that its provisions should not take ef fect for two years, and the localities affected by It should be Indemnified for the losses which they would sustain by its enactment Ostend and Spa, for example, are granted 5,000,000 and 3,000, 000 of francs, respectively, to compen sate them for their pecuniary loss con sequent upon the closing of their mag nificent gambling halls. These amend ments were rejected by the lower house, and the Parliamentary session closed last August without reaching any final action on this anti-gambling bill, but there Is no doubt that the end of li censed gambling in Belgium Is near at hand. Since licensed gambling was abolished at Homburg, Wiesbaden, Baden-Baden and Carlsbad, the popula tion of these spas has more than doubled, and they are more popular and prosperous resorts for a better class of Summer visitors than they were in the days of their notorious gambling halls. UnitedStates land officials at Oregon City seem to take cognizance of a pal pable tact that does not appear In the record testimony of the Tillamook tim ber contests now pending, namely, that It Is a fight between dealers and specu lators rather than between entrymen in good faith. Register Moores, noting this very evident condition of affairs, gives notice to the parties In Interest that dilatory tactics will not longer be tolerated, and that the cases must be heard and determined or dismissed. This position of the Register will find approval with everybody who does not have in view Illegitimate gains from timber land manipulation. It Is deserv ing of special commendation because land officials so seldom trouble them selves to act upon Information that Is perfectly obvious though carefully ex cluded from the record. More rugged common sense In the land offices would result In les3 tricking of the land laws. Rejection of both contest and entry would often come nearer compliance with the law than does the toleration of pro forma proceedings that lead to legal title In defiance of the real spirit of the land laws. George E. Roberts, Director of the Mint, touches a popular note In his recommendation to Congress In his an nual report that the coinage of silver dollars shall cease. The same Is true of his plea for power to convert a larger amount of silver bullion into subsidiary coins than is now possible under the law. The cartwheel dollar burdens our commercial transactions; subsidiary e!1 ver coins facilitate them. For this good and sufficient reason Mr. Roberts asks that the coinage of the former (a tre mendous bulk of which is already afloat) cease and that the limit of the subsidiary coln9, now fixed at $100,000, 000, be advanced at least $20,000,000, the former quantity being insufficient for the needs of the country. Flying machines have found a cham pion in Henry Maxim, the Inventor of guns. He thinks that, so far as bal loons are concerned, It is Impossible to Improve upon that of M. Santos-Du-mont, but sayB that the developed flying machine is only a question of time and money, and -in the manner of actual flight His views were set forth in de tail in a paper recently read before the Aeronautical Solcety of London, and were received with the attention that the name of Henry Maxim commands everywhere In the world of Invention. All kinds of flying machines heavier than the air depend, he says, entirely upon the development of dynamic en ergy, and he thinks that people should be able to fly whenever the manner In which this power may be advantage ously employed Is ascertained. Un bounded faith In the possibilities of the human mind to bend to Its will and pur pose the laws and energies of Nature Is needed to reach, even at the present advanced stage of development of dy namic energy, the heights of expecta tion to which this inventor has attained. The city magnates of London gave a luncheon to the Prince and Princess of Wales a few days ago, one course of which was "lark pie." The story of "four audtwenty blackbirds baked In a pie," as 6ung for the wonder and de light of generations of children, be comes insignificant even as Imagery when compared with an actual pie con taining 1000 larks. It is not recorded, however, in the latter case, that the "birds began to sing" when the pie was opened. On the contrary, the poor, lit tle songsters were so dead that a sol emn protest has gone forth against the pie as. representing the wanton de struction of myriads of sweet songsters that the royal palate might be tickled and vulgar ostentation given a chance to air Itself. The Prince of Wales Is president of the Society for the Preven tion of "Cruelty to Birds, and it is fair to suppose did not appreciate the type of loyalty expressed, as the Saturday Review has It, "In terms of lark pie," though he did not Join In the Indignant protest of bird-lovers against the slaughter of a thousand songsters to produce the pie. The Scranton convention, in dealing with the exclusion question, discrimi nated sharply between Chinese and Japanese laborers. Labor organizations do not draw a fine line of distinction between these little yellow men of the Orient, but are generally outspoken In the demand that stringent restriction measures be made to apply to both. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, Is, how ever, more astute than the rank and file of his following, and warned the convention that it would make a mis take if it attempted to secure anti-Japanese legislation at this time. His statement that the "Chinaman Is the cheapest of all laborers" may not be borne out by facts, but it was forceful enough to table the proposition to ex clude Japanese laborers, and for the present the "yellow peril" that night mare of American labor agitators Is represented by the Chinese alone. There Is nothing remarkable In the statement that 2000 Jews have, fought in the English ranks during the Boer War. The Jews have been treated with great liberality under English law since the removal of their obsolete legal disabili ties more than sixty years ago, and many of them have risen to great dis tinction in law, finance and politlca Beaconsfield in politics, Rothschild In finance and Sir George Jessel In law are some of the great names among English Jews. Lord Rosebery married a Jewess. There Is every reason for patriotic attachment to England on part of the Jews, for Great Britain was the first great nation In Europe to give them their rights. The Jews in Amer ica were equally patriotic, during our Civil War. The suggestion that Portland be made a "rose city" In time for the Lewis and Clark Centennial promises to be made effective by the formation of a Rose Mission Club, the mission of which it will be to see that there are roses in all the lawns of the city before 1905. The truth of the saying that "what Is everybody's business Is nobody's busi ness" Is generally accepted, and the formation of this Rose Club Is timely. America, the land of the free and the home of the brave, must tax the poor, little Philippines. So much for the Na tion conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are cre ated equal. How just, how subtle and how mighty Is America! jThls is the way the United States has entered the theater of the world. If It Is a sample of this country's acting, Uncle Sam should "go 'way back and set down." There Is a movement to celebrate the 300th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown, Va., by a colossal world's fair. The "Virginia Legislature Is to be asked for a charter and a small appro priation, and then "the Government may be asked for $10,000,000." James town long ago ceased to exist, but the ruins of the old settlement are still visi ble about fifty miles up the James River from Norfolk. In the case of Livingston, editor of the Bennington (Vt) Reformer, against ex-Governor Carroll S. Page, on a con tract for the influence of the Reformer to support Page for the Republican Congressional nomination In 1900, the Bennington County Court on the 6th in3t. decided the contract Illegal on the grounds of public policy. Exceptions were taken to the Supreme Court. The Democrats In Congress are In dignant over the prospect of reduced committee places. The remedy is easy get more Democrats elected. Out of 357 members of Congress, there are only 43 Democrats from Northern Statea No wonder there are not places enough to go around among the Republicans. Mr. John Barrett has made himself prominent at the Pan-American Con gress in Mexico. Mr. Barrett is a great admirer of Roosevelt, and would seem to have a few strenuous qualities of his own. This double reference Is meant as a compliment both to the President and to Mr, Barrett The example of George W. Davis shows that any man can steal money from the state and escape punishment, together with his official chiefs, if he 1s rogue enough to neutralize the law with technicalities. The golden opportunity to give to the Lewis and Clark fund has not flown, but it should be grasped at once. Port land has shaken off the old spirit, so don't let the other fellows give all the money. Miss Stone Is said to be trying to convert her captors to Christianity. She evidently prizes her opportunity as a missionary to spread the gospel. Wade Is willing to give his life in return for that which he helped to take. Evidently he has a good opinion of him self in spite of his crime. If somebody will Invent a substitute for the name "free trade," perhaps free trade with the Philippines will not be so. much of a, bugbear. . PACIFIC CODFISHERIES. San Francisco Call. One of the large Industries of the Pa cific Coast which at this time needs from the Government an assistance it can read ily give, but which no other power can. adequately provide. Is that engaged in codfishing. In the industry there have been Invested many thousands of dollars, and It employs many hundreds of men. It. Is capable, under proper supervision, of t continuing indefinitely as a source of wealth, and consequently merits such protection as the Government can bestow. At the present time the Industry has a right to expect from the. Government two services. The first Is diplomatic, and involves the settlement of the right of American fishers to catch cod In certain portions of Okhotsk Sea, over which Rus sia claims control. The second is that of providing for the propagation of codfish at certain stations along the Alaskan coast where the conditions for the propa gation are most favorable. The Manufacturers' and Producers' As sociation have taken the subject up and have prepared an instructive memorial upon it It appears from the statements of the memorial that within the last few years our codfishing industry has so expanded as to place our product In Chi cago. In competition with the Atlantic cod, to compete on the west coast of South America with goods from Norway, In Australia and New Zealand with the ling cod from Scotland, and to replace in a great measure with our codfish the dried fish from Japan, In Hong Kong, the Philippines and the East generally, as far as the Straits Settlements. Statistics compiled by one of the fishing companies show that since 1870 there have been brought Into this port Pacific codfish to the wholesale value of J3.130.0CO. It will be conceded that an Industry of I buui uiBguuuue uuu wun sucn possibil ities Is worth preserving. It is threatened, however, by the interference of Russia, with American fishers In Okhotsk Sea and by the diminishing number of fish along the Alaskan coast Concerning those difficulties of the in dustry the memorial says: "In former .years the greater portion of our supply of codfish came from Okhotsk Sea, where the fishing banks are much more extensive than are those of Behrlng Sea, but a ruling of the Russian Government im poses a license on all vessels fishing within 30 miles of the shore, and In 1S32 one of our vessels narrowly escaped seiz ure for getting within the prescribed zone at a time when the existence of the regu lations was not known, here. Being driven from the Okhotsk, all the fishing vessels are compelled to rendezvous in the re- "stricted fishing grounds in Bering Sea, where the supply Is notably growing less." "Upon that showing two things are asked: First that the Department of State make an early determination of our rights on the fishing banks of Okhotsk Sea, thereby, if possible, enabling our craft to renew operations in those waters. Second, to procure the establishment and maintenance on the coast of Alaska of one or more hatcheries for the propaga tion of cod, similar to those maintained by the Government on the coast of Mas sachusetts. The requests are not excessive. It Is only fair that the Government pay as much attention to Pacific fisheries as to those of the Atlantic. It is gratifying to have so energetic a body as the Manu facturers' and Producers Association at work in promoting the interests of this as well as other Pacific Coast Industries, and our delegation In Congress should co-operate In the work and urge the mat ter upon the Immediate attention of the Government Tariff Reform Will Not Down. Chicago Tribune. Investigations by German officials show that the reports as to the Industrial de pression In Germany have not been exag gerated. The aggregate of unemployed men is EO0.OC0, being 4 per cent of the total number of artisans in the country. In the larger towns from 7 to 10 per cent of the working population Is idle. In the metal trades 10,600 men are at work now, while 73,100 were at work a year ago. Tet at this distressful time the Reichstag Is asked by the government to pass a tar iff act which will increase greatly the duties on, and hence the cost of, bread stuffs and meats. The present rate on wheat is $S 20 a ton. It Is proposed to make the rate $15 40 a ton. Flour, which pays now $17 40 a ton, is to pay '$32 10. Proportionately the same rate of Increase Is proposed as regards pork, beef, butter, cheese and other provisions. Bread and meat are dear enough In Germany now, and the conditions of life almost unen durable, for a large percentage of the working classes. Food will be dearer yet. and existence a greater burden if the tariff Is raised. An Increase in German emigration to the United States may be looked for. It is, however, the plan of the German Government to mitigate these higher du ties. If voted, by commercial treaties. It will use them for trading purposes, as some of tho higher duties in the DIn'gley law were meant to bo used but have not been. Austria-Hungary, whose trade with Germany will be seriously affected by the new tariff, the United States, and some other countries will be notified that if they will make concessions, the duties on certain of their products will be low ered. The United States will be told that the duties on Its meats and cereals will be lowered if it will reciprocate as regards certain other articles. Then the reciprocity question will be come one that cannot be put idly by. In difference to It will mean that other countries will supply Germany with the foreign foodstuffs it consumes. It will mean that the consumption of many American manufacturers by Germany will bo cut down greatly. Congress may put the reciprocity policy on one side now. It will have to face It later on. A Physiological Difference. New York Times. "Commerce Is the life blood of nations," said Hon. John Barrett at a banquet given at the Chapultepcc restaurant. In the City of Mexico, by tho United States delegates to the Pan-American Conference in honor of their fellow-delegates from Mexico and the South American States. That was the opinion of President Mc Klnley. "The period of exclusion Is past," said he In that memorable address at Buffalo. But at Washington the re sponsible Republican chiefs are going In for anemia. They talk as If they were friendly to commerce, but there is no evi dence that they are preparing to remove or modify the Dlngley ban. Reciprocity is one of the subjects set down for consideration by the Pan-American Conference. If the American dele gates have observed tho neat way in which the Republican protectionists turned a recent deliberative conference at Washington Into an anti-reciprocity convention, and In particular if they have studied the message of the President and the report of the Secretary of the Treas ury, the American delegates must have reached the conclusion that further dis cussion of that topic will be futile. Vaccination by Low. Philadelphia Press. London, like Philadelphia, has a small pox scare. The number of cases appear ing in connection with the schopls Is so large that the school board has ordered an examination of all children for the vaccination mark, and provided for free vaccination on a large scale. The lesson is simple. London, like Philadelphia and other American cities, has this smallpox scare because compulsory vaccination Is not required in childhood. 'England had a compulsory vaccination law, but there was a foolish opposition to It, and its en forcement was dropped, after a frank statement by Lord Salisbury that it was impossible to enforce the law in the face of public opinion. France, Germany and other European countries where vaccina tion is required, and it is a penal offense, not to vaccinate a child before its first year, have practically ceased to have smallpox. WHOSE IS THE BETTER PART? San Francisco Bulletin. A newspaper reporter on the "hotel detail" encounters daily rich, self-made men who are cither national celebrities or the magnates of their ieveral locali ties. These wealthy personages occupy the most expensive suites in the .hotels, spend in a day more than the reporter earns in a week, and are inclined to patronize the newspaper man. The re porter, on the contrary, has a modest?, salary, is not even a little great man. J and could travel from here to Moscow j without receiving the compliment of be- ! lng Interviewed or written about in the neswpapers. Yet if the two men were compared by an eye not dazzled by the magnate's money, the reporter would seem, in most cases, the superior man. He, generally. Is better dressed and has a better .man ner than the,, magnate, and his conversa tion Is the more likely to be interesting. The reporter, as a cias3. has a higher grade of mind and a better education ! than the millionaire. Among a hundred reporters there would be more real gen tlemen than there would be among a hun dred self-made millionaires. Yet with this apparent advantage of mind and education the reporter se.dom acquires enough money to attract the notice of the commercial agencies. He sees dull men all about him making millions, and he wonders how thev do it. He beholds stunid men succeeding n i success is measured by money and he 1 philosophizes, cynically, on the unequal ! distribution of fortune. He Interviews a millionaire and often puts Into the rich 1 man's head those ideas which the rich man repeats for publication. He may J meet the rich man at a club ard he Is j chagrined to observe that if the rich man I makes an ancient and dull joke every- j Doay (including the reporter) laughs loudly, while the newspaperman's finer wit passes unremarked. This picture may present the Ideal newspaperman and only the real millionaire, but that is tho advantage of wielding the pencil. In fact. hOWeVPr tho infract 1 nnt tnn sharply drawn. It is clear, then, that brains that Is. a general high quality of brain3 are not necessary for financial success. Financial success demands moral rather than mental qualities. The newspaper man spepds all, or nearly all, his Income. When the present millionaire had the same Income cs the reporter has he lived on a quarter of It. If the reporter had a hundred dollars he would attempt to double it in a day and, perhaps, would lose It, or Its Increment, at the races or in some foolish oil or mining venture of which he knew nothing. When the mil lionaire had his first hundred dollars he put It where It brought him from six to ten per cent, and where he could watch it Having accumulated his first thousand by two years of savlnsr. the nresent mil lionaire had a second thousand at the end of the third year. He was well advanced in life before his fortune was large enough to cause talk. At 30 he was rich. At 50 the reporter will be poor, because he will not make the sacrifices required to gather the first thousand. A man that once gets three thousand dollars together need never be poor again unless he is very foolish or his luck is very bad. No doubt It Is a pleasant thing to have brains, refined. If expensive tastes, and the hablc of living genteely, but if a man set3 out to make a million his vivacious brains and his nice habits will be a handi cap. Better he were endowed with a dull mind. Industry, perseverance, commercial caution, extreme respect for a dollar, not much sensitiveness or conscience, and the whole epicci with greed. Get a. Good Pernonnlltj-. The master of the Great Northern Rail way, James J. Hill, has recently told young men and woman "how to get and keep a position." "Always remember that, next to honor, the quality that counts the most Is per sonality," says Mr. Hill. "While many will tell you that personality Is a gift Just as surely as is the art of composing music, let me assure you that nothing else can be acquired as easily as personality. if one has the mind and the inclination to ncqulre It A bad temper, a sour disposi tionbecoming cross and petulant when denied your way, speaking with sharpness when a kind word can just as easily be uttered, and letting anger have Its sway are faults that may be overcome If one earnestly and persistently tries to do so. They hinder the acquirement of a desir able personality, and so lessen one's ad vancement, and. more than all besides, they shorten life. Personality Is nothing if It is not the companion of politeness. "No man wants to keep a person in his employ who is not polite. Never let a harsh or Impolite personality be the weak link in the chain of your qualities. If it is, you can rest assured that it is the easiest link to strengthen. I do not mean to Infer that one should be maudlin and putty-like in order to produce per sonality, or that he should assume polite ness. Such a condition or attempt never exalts a man; It simply makes him appear false in the eyes of his employer. Nature made all of us to act naturally. A bad temper can be expurgated the same as any other vice. Don't confound anger and firmness. We admire a man who can as sert his rights and stand by them, and we more than respect a man who can say 'No,' with vigor and purpose, when 'No should be said; but we rightly despise a person who scolds and vociferates." Imports and Exports. New York Journal of Commerce. Arsentlne Imports from Great Britain In the first half of this year were $13,452. 532. and from the United States. $6.S54,S49. It Is true t: .t as compared with the first half of last year this shows an Increase for the United States and a decrease for Great Britain, but the fact remains that British exports to Argentina were more than three times as great as ours last year and nearly three times as great this year. The chief reason for this Is prob ably that the British goods are cheaper than ours;, we Insist that they are when ever a modification of the tariff is pro posed, and If they are cheaper they wouU naturally be bought more freely by South Americans. Another reason is that Eng land buys Argentine grain, and we have no occasion to do so. Possibly a third reason might be found In the fact that we take considerable pains to bar out Argen tine wool, of which we imported 15.136 bales in the first half of this year, while France took more than 10 times as many. Germany more than five times as many, Belgium more than four times as many, and England nearly three times as many. Great Britain and Germany exported more goods to Argentina than we did, but France and Belgium did not. The Rhyme of the Country Road. Emma Endlcott Marean. in The Churchman. Oh, the life one leads a-tramplng. Tramping a country road! A-farlng in gypsy fashion With never a gypsy's load; Set free as the winds In Springtime, Heart-glad as the day is long. Rejoicing In rain or sunshine. In tune with the robin's cong. Oh. the things one rs a-tramping. The green, wild things that grow. The gleam of the tall red lily. The tangle of ferns below; The gay, glad life of the trcctops, The shadows that slowly fall. The long, still slope of the meadows And God sky over all! Oh. the thing one hears a-tramplng. The whimper of woodland trees. The call of a hidden brooklet. The murmur of sleepy bees; The distant roll of the thunder. The drip of the silver rain. The startled rush of a squirrel, Then robin's note again! Oh. the thlr.tr3 one feels a-tramplng. The Joy of the country road, A-farlng In gypsy fashion With never a gypsy's load; Delight in the world of beauty, A rapture of lovo and praise. And a will to make the truer Tor this glory of common dayal X0TE AND COMMENT. Looks like snow. Resemblance Is merely fancied, however. Even Congress will soon be making resolutions. Portland offers no inducements to the highway robbery Industry. Czolgosz didn't get any better article of. justice than Wade and Dalton. The weather well, so long as it doesn't snow we have no complaint to make. President Roosevelt wants wild animals protected. Tillman ought to be grateful. Tho only way for Maclay to get back into public notice Is to claim the author ship of "Beautiful Snow." People who have holly trees should now build barbwire fences around them and lay in a stock of bull dogs. If the Schley matter ever gets into Congress we wiil have to bid a long fare well to all hopes of needful legislation. Now is when the turkeys that outlast ed Thanksgiving are beginning to wear the furrowed brow of care. . Miss Stone's captors object to being converted. As Christians they could not conscientiously accept any ransom money. The solemn proceedings of the court of claims in arranging the details of the cor onation ought to be dramatized. They would make a roaring comedy. Paris is now enveloped in a fog, and Santos-Dumont is thinking of borrowing the Holland submarine boat fc.r his next flight around the Eiffel Tower. Personal Mr. S. C'.aus passed through tho city yesterday on his way to Alaska to lay in a supply of r.indr. He ha3 let the contract for furnishing the ani mals this year to Itev. Sheldon Jackson. A suit for ?5O,C0O damages has been com menced against the company cp-ratiiig the "looo-the-loop" at Coney Tsland. A girl of 17 took a ride on this crj.y.y ma chine and became delirious soon .-.fur re turning home. A day later her mind gave way nnd she is now in a New York State Hospital. In bringing the suit her guardian declares that the machine is directly responsible for her condition, that It Is dangerous to life and reason, and that these facts were known to th" com pany before they permitted the girl to take the risk of a ride. r - A news dispatch from Spokane recently stated that the project of tho Washing ton Wnter-Power Company to transmit electric power 10D miles from Spokane to the Coeur d'AIenes was the greatest en terprise of the kind in the world, o far as distance was concerned. Tins state ment Is disputed by a correspondent, who says that the Bay Counties Power Com pany, of San Francisco, furnishes power from its Colgate plants, on the Yuba River, 30 miles east of Marysville, through Oakland to San Jose, a distance of ISO miles. The current has a 40,000 voltage. The days of whispered conferences In the White House arc past, says a. cor- respondent. The President sees most of his visitors In the big reception room. Ha goes from one to another and says what he has to say in a voice that reaches to every part of the room. A week or two ago, a Justice of tho Supreme Court camo in with his son. Then he leaned over and whispered a few words to the Presi dent's ear. "I am sorry," said tho Pres identand fifty people heard him rasp It ' out "I am sorry, but it cannot bo done. All promotions must be on merit" A very much abashed Justice of the Su preme Court, with his son in tow, left the White House hurriedly. "It is curious," says the London Chron icle, "how St Paul's, although tho first cathedral church In England that was built actually for the observance of tha Anglican ritual, manages nevertheless to retain something of a foreign and a Cath olic nature in the way it offers shelter to the tired passer-by. Apart from the rest less groups of sightseers, there arc al ways plenty of people there who have gone in solely for the sake of its wonder ful peace and quiet. They have found neither, by tho way, in old St. Paul's of the fifteenth century, for while mas3 was being said In one chapel, a funeral service In another, and so on, all sorts of commcrco was carried on In the mid dle aisle, from tho hiring of servants to the transaction of legal business. Wo have altered all that nowaday?, and St. Paul's Is the quietest spot in the noisiest city In the world." The technical school near Kalspie. Scot land, in which the Duchess of Sutherland and Andrew Carnegie are jointly Interest ed, will devote special attention to hanJi crafts likely to enable young men and women to earn their living. Its aims aro thus explained by the Glasgow corres pondent of the Montreal Star: "For bye fairmln' will be a principal subject, an' there will be Ian' near the school for tho purpose o experiments. Then splnnin', weavin' an dycln' will be developed, par ticularly among the lasses, wha will get besides, needlework, cookery, laundry work, scientific dre5smakin poultry, an dairy work, as weel as ordinary learning like mathematics an the three Rs. The Duchess is appealin for bursaries an money to start a fund to meet rinnin' expenses after the school ha3 been start ed. She'll get It, for she has the knack o" workin' up enthusiasm, on any subject she tackles." PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS The general worthlessneas of advice Is ex hibited In the fact that the average man would rather give It than take It. Life. Mistress I am not quite satisfied with your references. Applicant Nayther am I, mum; but they's the best I could get. Puck. But a Bad Cook. "I have a friend who has kept a cook for nearly a year." "Is It pos sible?" "Yes; he's a jailer." Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. All He Had. Tom What! a dress suit and russet shoes! That's wretched bad form. Dick I know, but a dress suit and btockiiig--l feet are worse. Philadelphia Press. Kedd No. he doesn't wear anything but an ordinary business suit when he goes oa th.5 Hnk3. Greene How in the world, then, di they know he's playing golf? Yonkers States man. Objection Not Sustained. "This ain't a freight elevator." said the grumpy elevator man. "Yes, It Is, replied the boy with tha bundle. "It carries a big hog up and down all day long." Chicago Tribune. Point of View. Duffer The favorite in the third race yesterday fell in the stretch, and the Jockey was instantly killed. Buffer Hor rible! DuffT I should say It was horrible. Why, I had ?15 on the horse to win! Chicago News. Mra. Jenkyns I see Mrs. Hoetong Is going to have "King Lear" at her next private theatricals, lire. Newrich (furious with en vy) Is she? The affected thing! Do you know, I don't believe he's a real King at all. Tlt-Blts. And so Prince Charming and Princess Brighteycs got married and he hit her with a chair, and she would not give him any money to pay hl3 debts and keep up his string of horses. And eo they got a divorce, and lived happily ever after. Baltimore American.