THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FKUJAiT, JANUARY 81, 1902.. he v&$imxfm Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. KEVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month $ S5 Daily, Sunday excepted, per year......... T 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9 0 Sunday, per year . - W The WeeKly. per year 1 M The Weekly. 3 months BO To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted.l5o Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays included.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper lc 14 to 28-pase paper -c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should 1e addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual. letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter ehould be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43, 44. 45. 47, 4S. 40 Tribune building. New York City; 4C0 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special cgeney. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by L. E. Dee, Pal ace Hotel news stand: Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutier street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street;). J. K. Cooper Co., 74G Market street, near the Palace Hotel: Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For eafe in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, C59 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 100 Bo. Spring street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co., 420 K street. Sacramento, Cal. For sale in Chicago by tho P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Pat-nan 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-nfth street, and C. H. Myers. On file at Charleston, S. C, in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale in Washington, D. C by the Ebbett Souse news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 000-912 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co., 15th and Lawrence streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Threatening, with probably light rain or snow; variable winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 32; minimum temperature, 23; pre cipitation, 0.22 inch. I . PORTLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31. t THE STEEL TRUST'S VIRTUES. When the steel trust decided recently to take the people into Its confidence by issuing frequent bulletins of Its affairs to the press, the new departure was hailed as a boon to the community and a stroke of brilliant policy for the trust. It begins to be doubtful, however, whether the net result of such state ments as It Is issuing from time to time will be helpful to It or otherwise. There are some things that look better the less light is shed on them. In a document printed yesterday. In which the management appears in the act of addressing the stockholders, the steel trust recounts the cost of its prop erties as $1,437,494,862. It Is true that this stupendous sum represents the amount of the stock, common and pre ferred, on which the steel trust with draws from its receipts annual divi dends of 8 per cent. But at that point all connection between the "cost of the properties" and their actual value stops. The component factories may be worth one-fourth of $1,437,000,000, but they are certainly worth no more than that. '"Publicity" may be a great thing for corporations, but the more light of pub licity there is cast on these peculiar operations of the steel trust, the more perturbation will exist in the ranks of consumers. How does the steel trust manage to earn this handsome dividend on its co lossal capitalization? Simply by hold, ing the home market up to high prices through the high tariff. In Europe it has to sell In competition at fair prices. Here it sells at fair prices plus the tariff. Abroad It is a colossus striking lerror to the hearts of British, German jand Russian manufacturers. At home It is an infant Industry crying for the tfillk of protection. In a burst of confidence the manage ment felicitates Itself, the stockholders and the community at large upon Its righteous firmness in refusing to ad vance prices. Its conscientious stand in this regard "would be of substantial and lasting value, not only to the com panies, but also to the general business interests of the country." Thus over whelmed, at its own moderation and jeelfdenlal, the trust presents a touching .spectacle. It would be superfluous to enlarge upon this remarkable exhibit of altruism and self-sacrifice. As Mr. Schwab, disports himself at Monte Carlo and flies about Germany in spe cial trains to the delight of all behold ers, he doubtless consoles himself with the thought that virtue Is its own re BvarcL SOME PLAIN TRUTHS. Mayor Low, of New York City, In a public letter to Rev. Dr. Park hurst, says that the clauses of the ex cise law that forbid the sale of liquor 2n saloons on Sunday are not compe tent to accomplish more than to prevent the public sale of liquor on that day. They never have stopped and never will Stop drinking on Sunday. The law that prohibits the sale of liquor on Sunday In the City of New York cannot be enforced, for the reason that there are at least 250,000 persons who not only do .not yield willing obedience to it, but yield no obedience and incite others to violate it. The only practical result during Roosevelt's very vigorous ad ministration of the police was that the liquor dealers paid for selling on Sun day $10 a month blackmail, instead of $5. Under Roosevelt there were three dry Sundays, but the whole police force was used to obtain it, and there was practically an open field for the perpe tration of other crimes. Mayor Low says that the excise law has been en forced by him up to the very limit of what Is practicable with the means at command, and substantially as well as when it was enforced by Mr. Roosevelt, with the exception of three Sundays, on which Rev. Dr. Parkhurst admits every other law was disregarded in or der to obtain a "dry" Sunday. Mayor Low says that when an at tempt Is made by the police power to close all access to saloons on Sunday the following results take place: "While the pressure lasts every vessel that will hold liquor is filled on Saturday even ing and lodgings become saloons the next day. Then arrangements are made by which liquor can be had In the room behind or above the saloon, or In the room on'one side, and then the Illegal Sunday trade goes on as smoothly as before. The law is not enforced: the sa loon is merely driven to cover. "The fires of blackmail burn with a forced draft, and the last state of the city under such a policy Is worse than the first." Mayor Low concludes by saying that while he will continue to enforce the excise law as one of the general body of laws which he Is called on to enforce, and that he will take prompt cognizance of any complaint of breach of the law called to his attention, he will not concentrate the entire police force on this one law and let all other laws go by the board, thus making the city an open field for the perpetration of other crimes. New York City made no mistake when it chose Mr. Low for Mayor; he Is a statesman; not a "tin horn" moral reformer. BEET-SUGAR PROTECTION". Inasmuch as the manufacture of beet sugar is an Oregon Industry, The Ore gonlan has asked the La Grande factory for any statement of Its views It might wish to make concerning tariff conces sions to Cuba and the Philippines. In reply the La Grande people have sub mitted an article contributed by a Colo rado beet-sugar man to the New York Evening Post. They request its publica tion, and we cheerfully accede. It will be found elsewhere In today's paper. The desires of any given industry for protection do not supply all the factors to be taken into consideration. The claims and needs of our beet-sugar In terests must be taken Into account, but the claims and needs of Cuba and the Philippines and also the claims and needs of the home consumers must also be taken into account. Not only that, but the mere assertion of a manufac turer as to the extent and prolongation of protection he needs cannot be ac cepted without question. "We must have more evidence. Mr. Carey says his company will need protection for ten years In order to overcome the difference between 25 cents a day wages (In Cuba) and $1 75 a day (In the United States). But this won't answer, for we know that our farmers eell wheat In Liverpool In com petition with equally low comparative wages in India and the Argentine. Other things may offset the disparity in wages. Maybe our $1 75 labor is cheap er, considering its efilclence, than Cuba's 25-cent labor. Moreover, nothing Is of fered to showy how protection in ten years is to eliminate this discrepancy In wages. In 1912 Is American labor to be paid 25 cents a day, or Cuban labor $1 75 a day? The question of equity is as to the dost of sugar production. Here the beet sugar men have put themselves In an embarrassing situation by their devious course. The cost they figure on when talking tariff Is very different from the cost they use in trying to enlist capital In their investments. The Michigan pro tests against Cuba, for example, say that It costs $4 63 per ton to manufac ture beet sugar after you get the beets. But Mr. Alfred Musy, a sugar expert trying to get a factory started at Chi cago, says the cost of manufacture, in a 5000-ton factory, is only $1 60 a ton. Mr. Carey figures cost of beet sugar on the basis of ten tons per acre, though he admits twenty to thirty tons are sometimes grown. But at Grand Island, Neb., they figure on twenty tons per acre. Thomas Cutler, a Utah manufac turer, says that a concession of 25 per cent on sugar from Cuba would not hurt beet sugar at all, and that one farmer can easily cultivate forty acres of the best roots and make more from them than he can on twice as much land devoted to other crops. It Is a curious fact that the beet sugar Industry In this country thrived apace under the "Wilson tariff. In Cali fornia the Chino factory made more than twice as much sugar in 1895 as in 1S94. The beet acreage around Watson ville Increased 50 per cent In a year under the "Wilson tariff. The Cerltos factory issued $450,000 of bonds to du plicate its plant The Californian gave a detailed statement of the cost of rais ing beets which footed up to $2 07 a ton, including cost of delivery and Inter est on land at about $150 an acre. At the low price of $3 50 a ton- beets netted $27 an acre. Sugar is remarkably well protected. Cuban sugar, sold in New York, sells for 3.562 cents a pound, of which 1.6S5 is duty, or 94 per cent protection. The steamship Dunottar arrived at New York October 22, 1901, from Ilo Ho, Phil ippine Islands, with 5000 tons of No. 3 sugar on board. This sugar was sold at 2 0-lGc per pound, duty paid, for 82 test, say 2.5C25 The freight and insurance was 3-10c per pound , 30 2.2C23 Tho duty, 1.105c per pound 1.105 Making: the free-on-board value at Ho Ho 1,0075 The duty of 1.195c per pound on 'the free-on-board value of 1.0675c per pound Is 112 per cent ad valorem. This Is pretty stiff protection. California beet sugar thrived steadily In the face of free sugar from Hawaii. Maybe Californian and Oregon sugar could thrive In the face of free sugar from the Philippines. It is far from certain what reduction the sugar trust would make In the prfce of refined sugar In case Cuban sugar came in free or with 25 or 50 per cent concessions. The beet-sugar profits are dependent, not upon the price of raw sugar, but upon the price of refined sugar. Mr. Carey does not help his case bj' talking about the Government "keeping faith" with him. There Is no Implied contract with any protected industry to continue the tariff longer than Con gress takes it into its head to repeal it. We cannot believe that Mr. Carey al lowed Secretary Wilson to gull him bo easily. And even If free admission of Cuban sugar and Philippine 6Ugar should make this article of universal consump tion cheaper, much cheaper to the con sumers of the United States and all of us are consumers couldn't we, the con sumers, stand It? A PRACTICAL VIEW. Speaking of the withdrawal from set tlement for forest reserve purposes of another tract of over 1,000,000 acres of land in Flathead County, Montana, the Kallspell Bee says: "More than one-half of Flathead County has now been with drawn from settlement by the creation of forest reserves. These vast areas are to remain for all time uninhabited and unimproved. The people wha have gone Into these outlying districts to build for themselves homes. In the belief that they would one day be surrounded by neighbors and schools, must give up their homes or live for all time in soli tude. Had this policy been followed since the beginning of the public land system, some of the Northwestern States, like Wisconsin and Michigan, would today be a part of an undevel oped wilderness, instead of rich and populous commonwealths.'' There is andther side to this ques tion, the presentment of which Is fa miliar. There is, however, much in the above statement that appeals to prac tical common sense. If, to-further quote the journal above named, the lands suitable to settlement In these vast tracts were left open to homeseekers, and an effort was made to develop the country, there could be no serious ob jection to the creation of the forest re serves, but, under the present system, the method Is a most pernicious one, since every effort Is made to induce oet tlers with prior rights to vacate their holdings, and, so far as possible, the lands are held as an uninhabited wil derness a policy which, if pushed to Its' limit, as It bids fair to be, places a bar upon home-building over wide areas of our eminent domain. OVERCROWDING TIIE PROFESSIONS Judge Lowell, in his address before the State University, spoke words worth heeding by the young men he addressed when he pointed out that the legal profession had greatly degenerated from Us high Ideal through the Inva sion of demi-monde lawyers, shysters and various forms of legal quacks. But the most Important message he deliv ered was his warning that there Is no honorable profession, calling or occupa tion In which there are not greater op portunities. This Is true because of all the professions that of the law Is the most crowded. The law is always the block for men ambitious of polit ical honors from which to mount a win ning horse. All our Presidents save six were lawyers. Nine-tenths of our Cab inet officers have been lawyers. The great majority of our conspicuous statesmen within and without Congress have been lawyers. The law was an attractive profession during the first fifty years of the life of the Republic, when schools and colleges were scarce and men of Intellectual quality rela tively counted for more than they do today, when the vast Increase In the number of rich men has largely subordi nated men of pure Intellectual quality to the money power as expressed In despotic corporations and . tyrannical trusts. To a man of high ideals the law is no longer an attractive profes sion unless he Is content to remain a poor and comparatively obscure lawyer or Is early able to leave his profession for a successful life career in the ill paid profession of politics. But beyond all this there Is a severe overcrowding of all the professions In this country, even as there Is In Europe, where the pressure is more severely felt because the country is more thickly set tled, and there Is less room for terri torial expansion than In America. In Europe the overcrowding of the profes sions has resulted In creating a large class of educated men who, unable to make a decent professional Income as lawyers, doctors or teachers, become ad venturers, seeking to live by their wits. Sometimes these educated idle men be- COmc mprplv nunnlrc V,,l- .-. ninn they become criminals. It is not un common in Europe to find men of' fine education, cultivated manners and win ning address who are professional swin dlers, "confidence men," forgers, check raisers and sneak-thieves. In France a very large number of persons of both sexes are educated by the state with reference to their filling the function of public teachers, but when their school days are bver there are no positions open to them. They must live; they have been educated Into a contempt; for manual callings, and, not finding any pursuit suited to their tastes, they be gin to live shifty lives, and in twenty years the men have become quacks or criminals and the women adventuresses. We see comparatively little of this class of educated criminals in the coun try at large, but it is a good deal In evi dence In our great cities. It Is a com mon thing In New York to find men who have received a professional education brought before the courts charged with participation in criminal transactions. Every man whose professional unwor thlness has made his country town too hot to hold him comfortably takes to flight to a great olty, where there are more dupes and where It is easier to hide one's tracks and avoid detection. There is no doubt of the fact that the, number of educated men who live dis reputably by their wits has greatly In creased in this country in the last twenty-five years, and it Is doubtless due to the fact that all the professions have become fearfully overcrowded. Schools for the multiplication of lawyers, doc tors and teachers have greatly Increased where an education can be cheaply ob tained. Wealth that Is able to distrib ute the gift of free education has in creased, and this multiplication of grad uates of professional schools Is proving here, as in Europe, not altogether an unmixed good. The Idle graduate of a professional school Is the most danger ous of all Idle men if he has not reso lution and ability enough to get on hon estly in the world, for hetwlll seldom work with his hands, even if he knows how, and his tastes are generally ex pensive. Such a man soon decides to live by his wits. If he Is a doctor, he turns quack and soon criminal. If he Is a lawyer, he turns shyster, legal swindler, embezzler, robber of trusts, deed forger. Out of the ranks of thrift less educated men have come some very great criminals, like Monroe Ed wards; the Wall-street check-raiser, Gray, who was a college graduate, and the son of a clergyman. The trio of brothers who twenty years ago swindled the Bank of England and about every great, banking-house of Europe out of thousands of dollars were highly edu cated Americans of good family. Judge Lowell Is right. The profession of the law Is overcrowded to obtain honorable emoluments, to any large ex tent. So, for that matter, are the med ical profession and 'the clerical profes sion. Where, then, should a young man turn to apply his Intellectual energies? Electricity Is but in .the Infancy of its development and application to the busi ness of the world. A young man can not miss it If he makes himself today an educated scientific electrician and engineer, for the knowledge of the manipulation of this force can be util ized in the Army, the Navy, in the navigation of ocean steam traffic. In mining operations, in great engineering works of public Importance. But sup pose a young man has no turn for such pursuits; what is there left? There is mercantile life, in which 90 per cent fail, and into whose subordinate posi tions women have already forced their way and Into which they will continue more and more to Intrude, and finally there Is the soil. To the soil ultimately a far larger number of men will resort for a life pursuit than do today. The great railroads of the country are about completed, and young men will be compelled-hereafter more and more to resort to the soiL The vasttmass of clerical positions in mercantile life are lower paid than formerly because of the influx of women Into business. Women have cut the wages of salesmen, and as the country continues to fill up this pres sure of women Into the occupations of men will be more severely felt. There will be nothing left for a good many men who now hasten to leave the soil for .mercantile life or clerical labor of some sort but to go back to the soil or emigrate. Intelligence and energy with modern appliances can do more with the soil than It did formerly, for even the unlettered Scandinavians who have taken up abandoned farms in New England have made a gbod living. The whole effort in seeking a cure for consumption Is to And some medicine or treatment that will destroy the germs of the. disease without destroying the tissues upon which they feed. Thus far this quest has been practically in vain. If we except the tonic that Na ture distills from pure air and sun shine and a life out of doors, which has been held In many Instances to, overpower the germ and thus over come its virulence. This Is at present the approved method of dealing with consumptives, and If taken In the first manifestations of the disease and con tinued under favorable conditions there Is good reason to trust In the efficacy of the open-air treatment The very latest treatment which contemplates the cure of consumption by direct attack upon the bacillus of the disease is now under the direction of Dr. Bokenham, of London, which consists In the applica tion of Tesla's high-frequency electrical currents. This has to be applied with extreme care, for obvious reasons, but thus applied Dr. Bokenham reports that in V,ery bad cases the cough has been greatly reduced, the night sweats have disappeared, the appetite has Increased and there has been great gain in weight and general health. Phthisis special ists do not question the facts as stated, but doubt the permanency of the re SUUS . John L. Sullivan, in a performance of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" at Boston, played the part of Legree so realistically that Uncle Tom danced and screamed in his agony and fainted under the blows cf the negro driver's whip wielded by Sul livan, and had to be carried to a hotel to recuperate. The elder Booth used to play the part of Richard III so vio lently tha Richmond narrowly es caped death by the sword of Booth, but then Booth was not seldom intoxicated upon the stage. We do not insinuate that the great slugger was Inflamed with drink when he played Legree. It is not necessary to assume this. His fierce hate for the "nagur" would be sufficient to make him forget that Uncle Tom was only a dramatic counterfeit of Mrs. Stowe's blameless Ethlop. At all events, Sullivan was clearly not as drunk as the elder Booth, for he did not violate the text of the play in trouncing Uncle Tom, while Booth up set the whole dramatic catastrophe by running Richmond ignomlniously off the stage Instead of dying by his hand. Wireless telegraphy Is In use to a far greater extent than Is generally, known. In his recent summary of the progress of his Invention, given before an Im pressive assembly of scientists, invent ors and financiers, In New York, Mar coni stated that one of the trans-Atlantic lines has equipped Its steamships with transmitters and receivers, so that communication can be effected by those vessels with points 100 miles away. Thirty-seven ships of the British Navy and twelve of the Italian Navy are fit ted with wireless installations, while twenty-one merchant vessels are using the system. In the opinion of Dr. Pu pln, of Columbia University, who has achieved much distinction as a scien tific Investigator, "wireless telegraphy Is as definite a problem as was the cable In 1S54." That It will be worked to a like satisfactory solution, there can be no reasonable doubt. John F. Dryden, the newly-elected United States "Senator from New Jersey, Is described by the New York Evening Post as "a man who never would have been heard of In public life but for his money." This rich man, who is utterly without legislative experience or powers of public debate, was chosen over ex-Attorney-General Griggs, a lawyer of the first order of ability, an able speak er, of wide experience In public affairs. The Post thinks the turning down of Griggs, who has what the Senate needs, intellect, for a man whose only title to the honor Is his money, "Js simply one more step in the commercializing of the Senate." Such a snowfall as has come to the Willamette Valley within the past few days is more than a phenomenon, pleas ant or disagreeable according to the spirit In which It is viewed. It Is a harbinger of plenty through Its guar antee of protection of wheat fields from the untempered energy of the frost; an element of beauty and a medium of pleasures rarely enjoyed In our mild and humid Winters. Few Oregonlans extend a cordial welcome to the enow. It Is. In fact, an unbidden guest whose coming is frowned upon, whose stay is grudged and whose going is cause of rejoicing. There is a censorship at Manila, says Dubois, because newspaper correspond ents file copies of their reports with the authorities. "You can quibble over that fact," he says, by saying that receiving reports Is not censoring them. As a judge of quibbling, Dubois Is quite as accurate and happy as he Is In mili tary knowledge and common courtesy. All the war revenue taxes to be re pealed will cease In July, except that on tea, which must run the year out. This Is reassuring. It might cause widespread heart failure if Congresr should treai Pacific Coast trade with any approach to fairness. It must take a good deal of temerity for a private concern to offer to build the; Isthmian Canal wltfibut cost to the Government. The fate of the private cable company should have been a warning. The true way Is to ask for a subsidy. An Incident announced for today in the Courthouse yard may serve to re mind young men that confession Is not enough to save a man's neck from the gallows. The time to escape Is before the crime is committed. The Democrats in Congress are evi dently very discontented and unhappy. Can you blame them? They have only been In two terms In forty-two years, and the storm signals arc still out. Again, let The Oregonlan say, anent Kipling's poem, that it Is "nuddled oaf," not "muddled oar though It was muddled In the copy printed by The Oregon kin. FOR BETTER STREETS. PORTLAND, Jan. 30. (To the Editor.) The Oregonlan of the 25th prints an edi torial on our bad streets, which has this central thought: "What we need is legal machinery by which the public may get itself enforced." "Citizen," In the 2Sth. contends that "the charter of Portland gives ample legal power; it only needs to be put in operation." "Nothing In Port land can withstand aroused public will." This morning Tho Oregonlan prints an article, "The Law at Fault," which article admits the legal power in the city charter, and points out the limitation in the power of the Common Council in the right of the owners of more than one-half of the abut ting property to defeat a street improve ment if they sign a remonstrance within 10 days from the final publication of the published notice of the Common Council's Intention to improve the street, and the article concludes that this renders the law ineffectual. It does so only when the pub lic will Is indifferent to street improve ments, or the proposed street Improve ments are of very poor quality, and at the same time very expensive. When either of these conditions exist, the Coun cil ought not to act. It la hard to get one-half the property owners to remonstrate when the public and The Oregonlan are making a vigorous campaign for street Improvements. Every body likes to be popular. If the public demands that streets be Improved, and the city officials act promptly, so that about only 20 days' time is allowed in which to get one-half of the abutting property to remonstrate, the remonstrance will not be signed by the necessary num bers in many cases. It Is a very mild veto to provide that one-half of the prop erty affected must remonstrate within 20 days from the proposed street improve ment or else pay the bills without further power to protect themselves. It will only be used to escape from unwise street im provements. Read what used to be In Portland. Under the charter of lSS2"the Council could proceed unless remonstrance was filed by two-thirds of the property af fected within 10 days of final publication of notice. Under the charter of 1SS3, a limitation was put upon the Council so .they could not proceed to Improve a street without a petition of one-half of the property af fected, and a right In two-thirds of the property-owners to remonstrate and stop It. Under the charter of 1SS9 a petition of one-third was required to start the Coun cil to Improve a street, and a remonstrance of two-thirds of the property could stop the improvement. Under the charter of 1S91 a petition of one-half the property affected was re quired to start the Council to improve a street, and a remonstrance of one-half could stop the improvement. Under the charter of 1S93 a petition of one-third of the property affected was re quired to start the Council to improve a street and a remonstrance of more than one-half the property adjacent could stop the Improvement. Under the present charter the only limi tation In the power of the Common Coun cil to Improve streets Is the right of the owners of more than one-half of the prop erty abutting on said proposed work or Improvement to remonstrate, which shall bo a bar to any further proceeding in re lation to the dolns of said work for a period of six months, unless the owners of one-half or more of the property abut ting shall subsequently petition therefor. At the end of six months proceedings can be started again by the Common Council. This much for the legal power under the charter. Where Is the weakness? In the public will and the desire not to pay taxes. Let the public demand street Improve ments and It will get them. Who are the public? The abutting property-owners. Who are the "abutting property-owners. The public. Who are the taxpayers who put the money Into the city treasury by direct taxation? Thenbuttlng property owners. If streets arc to be Improved they must be paid for by property-owners, either as special assessments or by gen eral taxes. One Is direct, the other is Indirect. It is similar to supporting your General Government by tariff laws Instead of by direct taxation. By the method of tho general city treas ury paying for the street Improvements, do not some of the public hope to get their streets Improved at general public ex pense, that some one else will pay their tariff (street) tax"? If all streets are to be Improved at public expense. It will amount to about the same thing to abut ting owners as each owner paying for his own streets. Should some streets be Im proved at public expense and not all? If so, where Is the dividing line? Who Is to decide what are favored streets? Let us get streets with the legal ma chinery we have. While we argue the streets are unpaved. Work with the char ter we have until we get a new one. Then work with that The result will be good streets. The public are in complete con trol. The city officials want to do the will of the public. CITIZEN. This Is Interesting if not convincing. It exhibits a mind alive to the proposal for better streets, which is a good thing, and It heltfs to keep the ball of popular agita tion in the air, which Is another good thing. " In one respect the writer exhibits confusion of Ideas, and that Is in relation to "the public will." The public will for better streets Is one thing and the consent of limited groups of property-holders to specific propositions for which they are required to pay. Is quite another. It will oftentimes happen that a noisy advo cate for better streets will become an even more noisy objector and obstructionist with respect to soma particular project which hits his own pocket It does not follow as a matter of course as we should all like to have It that "nothlng.can with stand an aroused public sentiment" Too often we know from experience that pri vate Inertia and obstruction hold out and continue to hold out against any and every manifestation of public sentiment It would be well if public officials could be roused to energy, and that, we hope, will happen when the state of the public mind toward the movement for better streets shall be more positively manifest POINTS ABOUT PEOPLE. After the Bishop of Liverpool preached a ser mon recently an old woman was heard to say: "Never was I so disappointed. I never heard a bishop. I thwot I'd hear something great. But 1 could understand every word he said. ' Queen Margherlta of Italy did a great many kind deeds In aid of men of letters and artists which are gradually coming to light. She dis covered the musical gifts of Puccini, and sent him to Milan to study at her expense. Gertrudo Cutchln, of Lebanon. Mo., who be lieves that her solution of the problem of tri secting the triangle has furnished her with the key to perpetual motion. Is 15 years old. Is a high school girl, and has received letters of congratulation on her accomplishments from professors in German universities. A school teacher In Newark, N. J., received, the other day, the following letter from the father of a pupil: "Dear Teacher Please don't teach Johnny any more about his Insldes. It makes htm sassy." It seems that Johnny had become entirely too scientific and critical con cerning the family bill of fare. Rev. Dr. MInot J. Savage,. In a recent ser mon, dwelt upon the mora permanent func tions of newspapers. "Here," he said, "is the making of history going on. the making of our contemporary humanity, the great questions of war and peace, of government, of sociology, of industry! matters of Importance on every hand, and you need to keep In touch with them." The minister who. In 1901. claimed the record with reference to the grand total of marriages and funerals, connected with a long minister's life, is the Rev. J. M. Haughey, of Mason City, 30 miles south of Pekln, I1L During his career as a preacher, a period of somq 40 years, he has married 1357 couples and conducted 1500 fuscrala. LIBERTY IX THE PHILIPPINES The North American Review recently addressed four questions to the three Fil ipino members of the United States Phil ippine Commission. It asked whether American occupation had Improved the political and economic conditions, what good results had -been secured, what the United States should do td promote com mercial progress and what form of gov ernment should be established. The an swers are printed In the current Issue of the magazine. It may be objected that the men addressed are prejudiced by their position. But those of their replies which deal with questions of fact are corrob orated by other witnesses, and their statement of opinion seems to be fair. The three agree that conditions have improved greatly. Two of them mention at the outset the curtailing of the civil power of the friars as one of the chief benefits from American rule. Dr. de Ta vera refers to the "sad and hated political Intervention" ot, the orders, and says that while the friars were only the tools of the Madrid Government, they were held responsible for the Injustices and er rors committed. American rule, he de clares, has brought a municipal auton omy not even conceived of under the former regime. It has brought, further, freedom of speech and of the press, tho right to assemble, the law of habeas cor pus and the abolition of banishment, im prisonment and military executions on account of political belief. Taxes. Dr. de Tavera says, produce double what they ever did before, although the rate of taxation Is unchanged. Under Span ish rule, harbors, channels, wharves and roads had been neglected; there were few public works of any sort The present Government Is taking these matters In hand. The other members of the com mission mention substantially the same features of the situation. All three agree that for the rehabilita tion of agriculture It would be well to establish mortgage loan companies In the islands, with branch offices In the pro vincial capitals. They urge, too, the con struction of good roads and railways, which would open up rich lands now un titled for lack of means of transporta tion. Dr. de Tavera favors the opening of United States ports to Filipino prod ucts free of duty. The Commissioners point out that the war has devastated the country districts and that active meas ures are necessary to restore prosperity. The political future of the archipelago does not greatly concern these Influential Filipinos. They regard the present prog ress toward self-government as so rapid as to be bewildering to the natives. "The system of absolutely separating the judi cial, legislative and executive powers Is so new to the Filipinos," one of them says, "that at each stp we pause with doubts and consultations. It Is novel In the extreme to think of the supreme ex ecutive power of the archipelago having a civil character." Another remarks: "The right of suffrage as exercised today Is an entirely new thing to the Filipinos." The Commissioners believe that the new form of government may well be con tinued for two or three years, until the people become more accustomed to self rule. Then they favor the constitution of a local Legislature and the selection of delegates to represent their Interests In Washington. Two of them hope that eventually the Islands may become a ter ritory of the United States. The statements of these three Influential Filipinos ought to allay the fears of those who have been persuaded that the United States Is crushing out liberty In the far East ANARCHISTS AND TIIE PRIXCE. Threats Uttered Turousrh the Annr chlut Orpfan.i. Brooklyn Eagle. Abraham Isaaks' paper. Free Society, and John Moat's better known Frelhelt, are publishing threats against Prince Henry, who is to visit this country pres ently, and who will incidentally visit Chi cago, where these papers are printed. There are In Chicago at least as many worthless people a3 In any other city in America, and such papers as these are their special organs. It Is obvious that their editors would be pleased If an at tack were made on the person of the Prince, and to that end they are playing on the Ignorance and prejudice of the slum population, with the Intention of in citing some hare-braln to attempt It It Is a sufficient ill that people enjoying the privileges of this country should wish to harm their fellow-citizens, but it Is far worse that they should desire the Injury of one who comes here as an ambassa dor of peace and good will, and who rep resents not merely one of the great pow res, but the ruling family of that power Itself. What the5e madmen and Idiots In Chi cago expect to accomplish In an attack on the German Prince Is not worth going Into, for they know less than any one else; but the fact that they are Inciting violence justifies a close watch on them, and to seclude them In jails during the royal visit would be only a sensible meas ure of protection. It is. to be sure, a sat isfaction to know there Is not an American In the whole band, yet If the Prince were to be hurt while In this country too many of hi3 people would charge the outrage upon his hosts, and Instead of being lessened, the friction between this country and Germany would be Increased. But no such attack must be made. Chicago will be held accountable for every un toward act and utterance of the wrong heads whom It shelters, and if It becomes necessary to put every one of them be hind the bars while the Prince Is In specting the stockyards, the sausage fac tories, the postofflce, Vhe sewer and the other beadtlcfi In the metropolis of the Middle West, let them be placed there. The Cornell Forest. Hartford Times. Cornell University Is now defending It self against an application to have the purchase of S0.C00 acres of land In tho Ad lrondacks declared illegal. This is the land which was bought for the Cornell School of Forestry, and it Is now alleged that the purchase was unconstitutional, and further that even If It were constitu tional the School of Forestry has violated the terms of the agreement by denuding forest land. In reply the university admits the de nuding, but says It was done with a view to proving that the forest growth could be restored. Neighboring proprietors suffer from the action of the School of Forestry. It Is now said that there has been a mis understanding between the state and the school as to the rights of the latter, but It is substantially agreed that the cutting of timber which the school has under taken Is Immediately Injurious to other property, as It Is certainly in opposition to the usually accepted plans of forest cul ture. Pointed Paragraphs. Chicago News. Him who can be dono the bunko man Is will ing to do. The sweetness of revenge often sours a man's disposition. Blesslng3 In disguise are responsible for a lot of profanity. Clothes make the woman oftencr than the woman makes the clothes. No woman can cultivate her mind and hor complexion simultaneously. The more pains some people take to show oft the more pains they give others. An Inventor is a genius who discovers a lot of things that are already patented. A soldier doesn't necessarily undergo a surgi cal operation when deprived of his arms. Girls are always trying to convince young men that two can't live as expensively as one. Lots of men will tell you how to get rich, hut they haven't time to explain why they didn't. If a man occupies a position of trust he can always find plenty of other men who are will ing to be trusted. The truly good young man doesn't accumu late a lot of letters and photographs for the purpose of making a bonfire the night before bis weddlxur. NOTE ANJ COMMENT. Every snow has Its thaw, worse luck. Can't the Port of Portland Commis sion turn the dredge loose on some of the slush? Marconi's sparking. It appears can only be done successfully with electrical appli ances. The steel trust Is prosperous. Schwab may yet put the bank at Monte Carlo out of business. A black man named Green with gray hair gave color to the Police Court pro ceedings Wednesday. A wooden drydock Is prefered to a pa per one, which is the only type Portland has been able to use up to date. Hawaii Is to have a millionaire Gov ernor. Hawaii. It will be remembered, sends no one to the United States Senate. Rhode Island now comes to the front as a divorce state. And yet a family quarrel oughtn't to get very far in Rhode Island. The law compelling Indians to wear short hair may so frighten Paderewskl that he will never again venture into this country. Spain would have done well trying to keep the Philippines and Cuba. Present events show that she cannot even keep the peace. Chicago college professors do not need to depend on Mr. .Rockefeller for support They can all get lucrative Jobs aa press agents whenever they want them. New York wheelmen are to ride under new rules. The public will not care what they ride under, so long as they are par ticular as to what they ride over. Carnegie say3 that war Is a terrible thing. He probably considers that the fortune he made In armor plate was ac cumulated In trying to prevent war. Distillers are endeavoring to have the tax on whisky reduced. They probably contend that necessities should be given to the people as cheaply as possible. A woman has got $G000 damages for breach of promise from a dead man. He would have saved money, without Incon venience to himself, If he had married her. The State Department blames the failure of the negotiations for Miss Stone's re lease on the newspapers. The newspapers have got enough copy out of the affair to be willing to stand a little blame. Viewed from tho gallery, Mr. Lessler, who defeated Perry Belmont the other day In a New York Congressional race, seems like a blade of grass, somebody In Washington say3. He Is less than live feet high, weighs about 60 pounds, and hl3 arms are like pipe stems. He wears boys' shoes and a boy's hat Under his hat, however, are brains entirely out or proportion to his size. Everybody agrees that ho has plenty of ability. "Alexander Stephens was the smallest man In Con gress," says Mr. Dessler. "but he was also one of the greatest men. There Is hope for me." Ambassador Cambon has given away a method used by the minority of the French Chamber of Deputies to attract attention. During Cambon's visit to Albany last week. Assemblyman McKcown was asked by the French Ambassador: "How much In the minority are you?" "Oh, so much that the speaker can run the whole thing." said Mr. McKeown. "Well, In France," said M. Cambon, "when the chamber does not like the ruling of the presiding officer they have a method of expressing their disapproval In a forcible way." "How do they do it?" asked Mr. McKeown. with some eagerness and a beam of hope. "They have desk lids which make a very loud noise when slammed, and they slam them until the speaker's, gavel oftentimes cannot be heard above the din." It was In one of Boston's art galleries, where there was an exhibition of the late J. Appleton Brown's pictures, relates the Herald. There was a fine array of beau tiful landscapes, with that mellow and radiant atmosphere that characterized all of Mr. Brown's work on canvas. The meadows were green, the foliage was rich and full, and the blossoms were true to Nature at her best A lady came Into tho gallery to enjoy the pictures, and as she stood gazing at the wealth of beauty on tthe walls she exclaimed, rapturously: "How perfectly enchanting! I declare 1 can almost emcll the sweet perfume of those apple blossoms." "What you smell, madame," said the matter-of-fact attend ant, with no poetry In his soul, "Is some thing of an odlferous character which the arllsts mix with their paints nowadays. It wears off In time after the varnishing." This was art dealing In Boston. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAFHERS Emmy Why does the clock start again when it gets to 12? Bobby Because 13's an un lucky number, of course. Punch. Something. Briggs I donated my brain to my college, and Just got an acknowledgment from the president. Griggs Was he pleased? Briggs He wrote that every little helps. Harper's Bazar. Her Side. "I wish, my dear, he had made his money Instead of Inheriting it. He would make you a better husband." "Nonsense, papa. Why, then he would know too well how to keep It." Life. Playing In Luck. Hixon Young Pellets tells me he makes a specialty of doctoring cats. Dixon Well, his patients are fortunate. Hix on How's that? Dixon They each have nine lives. Chicago Dally News. An Unusual Occurrence. Towne You seem to havo a little cash. Browne Yes: railroad accident. Towne You don't mean to say you got damages Browne I mean to say a. rail road I took some stock In years ago has finally paid a dividend. Philadelphia Press. A Broad Hint. Gerald I have often thought that I ought to have studied for the ministry. Geraldine You wouldn't have been- a success. Gerald Why not? Geraldine You couldn't make the necessary number of pastoral calls; you'd stay too long at one place. Brooklyr Life. To Be Expected. First Suburbanite I hear that Jones adopted that hired girl of his so as to get her to stay with the family. Second Suburbanite Yes: and now his adopted daugh ter wants to stay In the parlor and play the piano all day and let her mother do the house work. Judge. Probably an Oversight "How Is that new correspondent at Podunfc doing?" asked the managing editor. "I'm a little doubtful about' him," answered the telegraph editor. "I think he lacks experience." "What makes you think so?" "Why. he sent In a story about a girl who eloped with a brakeman last night, and he neglected to say that she moved In the most exclusive society circles." Chicago Even ing Post. The Honae Beautiful. Graven upon the knocker: O Hate, go by! Love dwells within And welcomes only kith and kin. Above the fireplace: Here, Friend, a dual pomfort find Warmth, my heart; and Llght, my mind. Within the living room: My bread was savorless, but Thou Hast shared It, Friend. 'Tls manna, now. Robert Gilbert Welsh in Independent