THE MOUSING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1S02. fte x$gcttxxan Entered at the Postotllce at Portland, Oregon. as eecond-class matter. ItEVISED SUBSCRIPTION .BATES. By Mali (postage prepaid. In Advance Dally, with Sundav, per month J Dally, Sunday excepted, per year T ou Dally, .with Sunday, per year JC! Sunday, per year r$5 The "Weekly, per year 1 ffhe Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered. Sundays xcepted.lJc Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20o POSTAGE RATES. . United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper lc 14 to 2S-page paper 2 Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name ol any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should 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 lor this purpose. Eastern Business Office, 43. 44. 45. 47. 43. 43 Tribune building, New York City: 310-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; Uie S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Fran&sco by L. E. Lee, Pal nce Hotel news -,tand: Goldsmith Bros.. 23G Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street: J. K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. T. Gardner. 53 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Halneb. 303 So Spring street. For sale in Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 429 K street. Sacramento, Cal. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn, street, and Charles MacDonald. B3 "Washington street. For sale 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 New Orleans by A. C Phelps. C09 Commercial Alley. For sale In Ogden by C H. Myers. On file at Charleston, S. C, In Ux Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale la Washington, D.-C.. by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick, 000-912 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. 15th. and Lawrence streets; A. Series. 1C53 Champa street. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair; warmer: north westerly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 58; minimum temperature, 40; pre cipitation, trace. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1002. INESCAPABLE RESPONSIBILITY. Upon every citizen rests the responsi bility for the result of the election June 2, and the verdict then to be rendered which will interpret the attitude of Ore gon toward the Issues that confront the Nation. Are the purposes of the Re publican party worth standing for? They are known of all men;.they are re flected in the results of the past five years. What are the purposes of the Democratic party? And are they worth standing for? They are reminiscent of the distress of that time, not long past, at thought of which all men shudder, but which ended with defeat of the Bryanized Democracy. The purposes of the Simon fuslonlsts, what do they stand for? What, but lltle, narrow, selfish, revengeful, petty and factional politics? Republicans throughout the state must know that what the Republican party of the country stands for is at stake in the election that is coming. The voice of Oregon is no unimportant factor. It comes at a time that gives it special significance to the country. Candidates who stand before the peo ple in a general election ought to repre sent something They ought to stand for a party and for a cause. Parties are an indispensable agency in repre sentative government. They who stand before the people in a general election, representing no party, having no policy or purposes in which any general body of citizens is concerned, responsible to no party or through no party for any thing that can be determined, fearing to adopt any party creed or policy lest they might alienate some whose support they seek such are merely in the posi tion of a faction or an aggregation of factions pursuing motives petty or per sonal, and little entitled to considera tion. Such is the "fusion" movement in Multnomah County. Its authors dare not call themselves one thing or an other. It is not a Democratic ticket, for it is based on no principles or purposes of that party. So far as the Democratic party is concerned, it Is a sacrifice of everything to a Simon alliance. And what is the purpose of the remnants of the Simon faction? Ruin when they cannot rule. If not leadership, if not control and victory, at most revenge. Here is a ticket, especially the Simon part of it, nominated by not more than three men, and handed out to be rati fied by an assembly, comppsed in part of Democrats, who, however, had abdi cated their functions as members of the Democratic party and put themselves into an assembly of mongrel descrip tion, to which the last remnant of the Simon faction, self-appointed, had be taken themselves as "citizens." By this combination, authorized by nobody, emanating from darkness, of the ring xlngy, axtlcket Is put forth which is said to have been "nominated by the people, not. by a ring." It is not possible to misunderstand. What sort of Republicans are they who join this effort to make Oregon a Demo cratic state? Again, the Inquiry is, Are the pur poses of the Republican party worth standing for? Or is experience with Democratic policy and with the results thereof so soon forgotten? Take it on another basis. Oregon is faring well at the hands of the Repub lican party and the National Adminis tration. Congress is giving attention to our wants. The river and harbor bill carries nearly everything we could ask. We are vitally interested in retention or the Philippine Islands. Expansion of Pacific commerce, just begun? depends on continuance of the poilcy that has called it Into existence. Are we to give all this up for a little petty scheme of factional politics, inspired by a narrow partisanship, in conjunction with mo tives of personal revenge? This is the nature of the present con test in Oregon. Is Oregon to adopt the larger ideas of the time and get ahead, or sink back Into petty, narrow, cheap and trifling politics, personal and fac tional? It deserves the earnest atten tion of every citizen of Oregon. It really seems" as If the powers that hold dominion in the air were abusing their prerogative in extending March weather far into May. It is sad to think of the wealth of cherry, peach and plum blossoms that fulfilled their mission by blooming and casting their petals. It now seems evident that the fruit crop In these lines will be short over wide areas of the Willamette Val ley a prospect the fulfillment of which is further Insured by every additions,! day of cloudy, showery weather and cold southwest winds. However, half a crop of cherries Is a big crop In Oregon, and with this assurance we roust per force be content. Plenty is not so bad, though abundance was desired. THE FAIR SITE. The lively Interest that is being taken In the choice of the site of the Lewis and Clark Fair is gratifying as show ing a genuine Dublic Interest in the suc cess of the Fair, that, when the proper time comes, may be depended upon to rise superior to the narrow personal in terest t)f real estate holders and center upon the Exposition, whether it is lo cated upon the East Side or the West, A to the northward on the Peninsula or southward toward Sellwood. To the ex teat that Interest is taken in this mat ter there will be disappointment when the choice is made, but this will be tem porary, and should not Influence ad versely the effort that will follow in making the Fair a credit to the State of Oregon and the City of Portland, and grandly commemorative of the cen tennial which it will fitly celebrate. Men, we are wont to say, are but children of larger growth. Hence some expression of chagrin, of disappoint ment, and perhaps of ill-feeling, may be expected to follow the choice of this lo cation. But Just here is where thel "larger growth" of men as individuals may reasonably be expected to appear. Disappointment, as represented in sulk ing or other manifestation of vexation, is childish; as shown in the power to rise above personal considerations it marks the "larger growth" which the well-worn adage proclaims. Upon one proposition all are agreed. The grounds chosen should combine utility and con venience to the greatest possible extent. That is to say, they should be readily convertible to the uses for Which they are chosen, and accessible without un necessary loss of time in transit of vis itors from the center of the city's busi ness These main points settled, the rest will follow. Every public-spirited citizen should make up his mind in ad vance of the selection of this site, to abide by the decision cheerfully, uphold all criticism of the choice as wholly use less, and therefore unwise, to the end thaf. all things may work together for the good of a common cause.' THE COAL-MINERS' STRIKE. A strike far-reaching in its conse quences, and one that should be avoid ed by all conciliatory means on the part of both employes and employers that are at ail compatible with justice. Is the coal-miners strike. The history of the industrial dissensions of the past ten years contains a no more unsatis factory and disastrous chapter to all concerned, which includes a. vast army of consumers, than that which gives in detail the events and the consequences of strikes and lockouts in the coal-producing regions. It is conceded by the general public that President Mitchell, of the Ameri can Federation of Labor, and the ex ecutive committees working with him, displayed great caution and moderation In matters leading up to and finally cul minating in this strike, while employ ers' agents of National reputation as sound business men from time to time dealt with the matters at Issue in a careful and conciliatory spirit Still, the strike Is on, a lockout has followed in some of the mines, and the battle of the contending elements promises to be stubbornly contested. It Is evident that this industrial war is a question in which the public has deep Interest and concern, since it men aces the prosperity which extends far beyond the coal region Into the Indus trial life of the Nation, Its convenience and its prosperity. There Is nothing certain In the outcome of a contest of this kind. The strike will doubtless be a long one. If it succeeds it will require many months of hard labor to make up for the loss in wages. If it fails no body will even be ultimately benefited, while the enormous and far-reaching losses will bear heavily upon various industries, not alone In the, mining re gions, but In a much wider field of human endeavor. The operators and the railroads may repair their losses In time by increased production and an added tax upon consumers, but the loss in wages is Irreparable. That Is to say, the miners and their families will bear the chief burden, and the coal-consuming public will follow them a dlose sec ond. That there Is a real grievance behind a strike of this nature cannot be doubt ed. That, growing by what it feeds upon agitation, injustice and stub bornnessunreason, follows in the train of grievance is no doubt true. And, since it is also true that a strike in a great Industry that bears so close a re lation to business, trade and home as does the anthracite coal Industry quick ly assumes the proportions of a calam ity, such a strike.should be by all pos sible means avoided through mutual concessions 4n the beginning, which in the end must be made. That this is not done proves that with all their getting in the great school of experience men have failed to get an understanding of each other; that through the open causeway of human nature and corela tive interests they are not yet able at all times to- reach the goal of harmony, at which alone employer and employe can rest In security and mutual good feeling. INDUSTRIAL PROGRESS OF A HALF CENTURY. The progress that was made in manu facturing in the last half of the nine teenth century that is, from 1850 to 1900, inclusive Js shown in a census bulletin recently issued. This present ment makes quite interesting reading of its class, being an epitome of the industrial growth of a period the most wonderful in every respect, in the world's history According to the most careful summary that It was possible to make, the number of wage-earners in .the time covered was multiplied by 5, then wages by 10, and the value of the product by 13. That is to say, the In crease of product was greater than the increase of wages, and the increase of wages was nearly twice as great as the increase of wage-earners. Being fur ther elaborated. It shows the develop ment of machinery within the half cen tury, since by no other means could the apparent value of the wage-earner's product have increased from 5L0S5 in 1850 to 52.451 in 1900. If this is true and great pains have been taken to make the estimates at least approximate to facts the workman n a factory, rep-, resenting the average of all workmen, now turns out a product 2-1-3 times as valuable as that which his predecessor of fifty years ago turned out When we consider that all sorts of manufactures are included in this stupendous average, and since the1 market value of very many manufactured articles is much less, than in 1850, this general result is j surprising. . The one fact brought" out distinctly as the leading element Jn. this summing up is that this progress is due to ma chinery as auxiliary to the wage-earner's endeavor. Men In one vast depart ment of our Industrial life make the machines; men in other departments operate them, assuring a more valuablev and at the same time a lower-priced product and a much more abund&fit one. Further than this; this interesting bul letin presents a table of the growth of our manufactures by decades apd In' detail that Is well worth scanning. Thus it. is shown that the rate of In crease in the number of establishments, in their capital, in wages, In the num ber of workmen, was smaller between 1870 and 1880 than during any other decade of the five covered, while in al most every respect the most rapid rate of increase was noted in the decade fol lowing, from 1880 to 1890. The stagna tion of the first half of the next decade and the slow recuperation ofvindustry during the second half are matters of common knowledge. For these reasons the results of the business of the decade ending with 1890 did not become appar ent until within the last few years of the century, when the tremendous in dustrial equipment of the country was magnetized into life. Perhaps the most Interesting fact in this presentment is that which shows that the immense gains in manufac turing industry have gone largely Into wages. The story is told in the state ment that the increase in wages was nearly double the increase in the num ber of wage-earners. Beyond this It is not necessary to explore In order to un derstand why the skilled American workman and the products of his hands lead the world. OUR NEUTRALITY LAWS. A correspondent asks The Oregonlan: "If we have the right to sell supplies to a belligerent In our own territory, why not In theirs?" The citizens of the United States have a right to do within the domain of the United States what ever they may legally do within "the United States, and they 'may do with out the domain of the United States only that which the powers that be in a foreign country choose to permit. The citizens of the United States may, sell supplies to either belligerent subject, of course, to risk of-capture and con fiscationbut the citizens of the United States may not fit out a vessel of war in this country and enlist men to be employed against a friendly power. Our right to sell to either belligerent as a matter of private traffic is, of course, safe enough In our own territory; but our success in selling supplies outside of our own country would be like the success of smugglers. Our Government does not pretend to protect the private traffic with either belligerent beyond our own domain. The belligerent that buys the goods takes his risk on their delivery. The British merchants could sell goods to either belligerent during our Civil War, but whether- the Southern belligerent ever got his goods depended on the ability of the blockade-runner to escape capture by the cruisers of the enemy or his blockading fleet. We have our own neutrality laws, and enforce them, but we do not protect private traffic with either belligerent outside of our own domain. The private Amer ican trader must take care of his own ventures beyond the United States. No man may be enlisteu- in this country to fight a friendly power, but if an American citizen chooses he may go abroad and enter the service of an other government to fight a friendly power. Horses and mules are contra band 6t war, but either Boer or Briton may buy them in this country; but when these -horses and mules are found upon the high seas by the wrong bel ligerent, they are, of course subject to forcible seizure by Briton or Boer, as the case may be. The British shipments would, of course, Incur no risk, for the Boers have no navy any more than has Switzerland. It Is the misfortune, not the fault, of the'Boers that they have no navy; but that Is no reason why the citizens of the United States may not under our laws sell horses and mules to persons for shipment to South Africa. The Boers can buy horses and mules of our people today, and the only reason why they do not buy them is' because they cannot hope to deliver them. The British buy them because they can deliver them. During our Civil War both belligerents bought In the first year of the war arms in for eign countries. The North bought En field rifles of Great Britain, and the South bought Whitworth rifles. Whit worth and Brooke guns. The guns sold to the Government of the United States were easily delivered, because the Con federacy at that time had no navy, but the arms and military supplies sold to the Southern Confederacy had, to run the risk of capture by our blockading fleet and cruisers. An American citi zen might run the risk of trying to trade to both belligerents, but he would trade at his own risk, with, of course, the chance of being ground to death be tween two hostile jcamps. As to what is contraband of war, that is a very indefinite question.- The French proclaimed rice contraband of war when they were fighting China some 20 years ago, and if France and Russia should go to war with England doubtless they would proclaim bread stuffs contraband of war at 'the risk of the possible Interference of the United States to protect her -export trade In food products from ruin- The United States Government permits traffic with either belligerent, but the American trader delivers his goods in a foreign country at his own risk. If they are seized on the high seas by the wrong belligerent and condemned by an ad miralty court as contraband of war, the American trader must pocket his loss. In our Civil War the smuggling of qui nine and other Important medlcalsup plles to the Southern Confederacy caused the expulsion of a host of North ern traders from the lines of General Grant. The British trader could sell anything In line of military supplies to the South from British dominions, but he had to make his delivery at his own risk. If we captured his cargo and con demned it as contraband of war, ha had to pocket his loss. . The same correspondent inquires why J our press dispatches allude to the Transvaal as Transvaal Colony while the war is yet undecided. The Trans vaal was proclaimed a part of the Brit ish Empire by Lord Roberts, September 1, 1900. The Boers have nq base, no real government; -they are only waging a guerrilla warfare; the "capital and all the chief towns of the Transvaal, its railroads, its mines, are all in British possession: the fate"of the war is really decided, although all resistance has rint yet ceased; legally and technically the Transvaal Is JSecome a British posses- slon- : - Secretary Shaw bids fair to be the most popular member bf the Roosevelt Administration, especially with Ameri jcan women "returning from abroad. He has given directions that are expected to infuse a new spirit of courtesy infft the Custom-House service by which of fensive and overminute methods of bag gage Inspection will be avoided. These methods have for years annoyed the traveling public in a degree out of all proportion to the amount of revenue which they have been instrumental In collecting through uncovering "attempt ed frauds upon the Government. It 13 hed, and very properly, that the law ought not to concern itself with trifles. While officers should be vigilant in pre venting smuggling, they should deal reasonably with the average passenger, J who; while he has no intention of de frauding the Government, has an in tense desire to protect his "baggage from ruthless and sometimes ruinous handling. The former policy has been to treat ail travelersas dishonest until proven otherwise; the new policy Is to treat all as honest until evidences to defraud are shown. It remains to be seen whether the average trans-Atlantic traveler Is worthy of the confidence thus reposed in his or her honorable. dealing with the Government. The cus toms receipts for the first quarter of the new fiscal year In the principal Atlantic ports will probably decide whether or not the traveling public is deserving of the magnanimity shown by Secretary Shaw in this matter. From the State Department today, May 20, notices Identical in language" will be sent to all United States Am bassadors and Ministers residing abroad, announcing the termination on that date of the military occupation of the Island of Cuba by the United Slates Government. Supplemental to this announcement will be the state ment that Tomas Estrada Palma has been duly installed President of Cuba.' There will be no invitation on our part to the nations to recognize the new re public, but it Is expected that they will of their own volition accept the fact of Cuban Independence and follow the ex ample of the United States by sending to the Island a Minister resident, staff of Legation and Consuls. This wjjl, no doubt, follow in due time the Inaugu ration of President Palma, which will take place today. Whatever the po litical future of the Island may be, It Is certain that the United States Gov ernment has discharged a delicate and difficult task In Cuba with honor and resigned it with dignity. In his budget speech last month Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, Chancellor of the British Exchequer, declared as prelimi nary to the presentment of his esti mates that "war is a costly thing to wage and a costly thing to terminate.'' Thl3 is perhaps truer now than in any other, period of the world's history, be cause of the more costly enginery em ployed in waging war, and of the char acter of the people against whom it Is waged. Great Britain finds in South Africa, and the United States finds in j the Philippines, va war costly to wage ana costly to terminate. Tne resistance of the Boers is that of stubborn chil dren untutored in thevvaiue of- scouting the necessity -ot yleldingfTtire resistance ofthe Filipinos 'is agaitt'that of chil dren schooled in treachery, but ignorant of the $rst principles of liberty, the blessings of which they scout while fill ing the air with clamor for their at tainment. The Dutch crisis has passed for the present, and the subjects of Queen Wll helmina, who have a genuine affection for her, may indulge in the hope that she will be spared to them for many years. Her recovery may not settle ffirever the disputed succession to her throne, but it will settle it or her life time at least. Her death. It was feared, would disturb the peace of Europe; her life, judged from the same standpoint of possibility, may prolong it. "It ain't such a thundering sight of fun when you come to light," was Dar ius Green's only objection td flying, and the pertinence of the observation has never been surpassed even in these days of airships. The one unconquerable thing that stands (n the way) of aerial paVlgation is the mortal peril of the oc- r-casional accident Shnnie. Minneapolis Tribune. There has been no more shameful episode In recent American history than the attack on the honor of the American Army by a lot of tin-horn Senators, who thought they saw a way to make political capital. These Are beginning to hear from the country, and, dull to sense of shame and honor as they are, they begin to realize that they have made a mistake. The assault on tho Army Is weakening, even before the Republicans, who should nave met It boldly at the beginning, had bean aroused to tlfeir duty "by the same popular message. It must be said that nobody In the American Govern ment,. In either party or In any branch of it, has come out of this affair with much credit. The War Department also Is overwhelmed with protests from the late volunteer troops, who feel that their branch of the service Is dishonored by the testimony of witnesses be fore tho Senate committee. This Imites atten tion to these precious witnesses, who have been playing a part less res'pectable. because less dangerous, than that of the few American deserters to the ladrones In the Philippines. The Senate cpmmlttee has scraped the country with a garbago rake for scum and rlfT-raft ofhe American volunteers, which wonld help the Democratic party to votes, by slandering the 'service they had left. . Tho singularly small result of willing wit nesses Is evidence, not only of the good con duct of the Array In the Philippines, but of the general satisfaction of the troops with the conditions of their service. Out of more than PO.COO Volunteers, the Senate committee has found barely a dozen disgruntled enough to do its dirty work. The episode Is nearly over now, but It made a bad smell while It lasted. . A Hindoo Obituary Notice. Seth Bam Das, the premier banker of Patiala, is Ao more. Poor soul! he was destined to fall a prey to his own wound ed susceptibilities. A man of high posi tion and of the venerable "age of 70. with an immaculate character and an unspotted name. Known tor ms large-heartedness and charity, Seth Ram Das was a unique figure irrl the native society of, Patiala, and his death has caused a gap which can hardly be filled up. The Seth was arrested "by the Patiala police among those ill-fated Chaudharies who were dragged by the Durbar to undergo the indignities and sufferings ot confirmed sedition mon gers. He felt all this keenly, and, see ing that the evening of his life was so clouded and begirt all round with humilia tion and disgrace, his heart sank and eventually failed, like a deserted castle, which comes tumbling down to ground for want of an inmate. As one muses over this grand ruin, in vain he seeks to trace this untimely decay to any dis ease or infirmity, for the "canker" had been preying all the while ""on his vital parts, and the poor Seth died of broken heart. i. SEATTLE AND THE BULGE. San Francisco Call. San Francisco has not indicated any fear of Jealousy of Seattle and her grow ing trade. Tho frequent statement of its percentage of increase has caused no dis-qulet-here, because; starting at zero any trade must be state'd at once in hundreds of. per cent increase! But Seattle pays this, city the compli ment of constantly attacking Its primacy in commerce, showing its mislocatlon, lack of facilities and its forlorn situa tion generally.- The Inst demonstration of this kind is ratner interesting. The Post-Intelligenc-er graces its pages with a map Of the globe, embracing the hemisphere from abput "WlnnemuCca. to Borneo. Across this is drawn Hogarth's line of beauty, a curve that starts at the Anaconda cop per mine, crosses the Siskiyou Moun tains, plunges 4nto the Pacific half-way between Seattle and San Francisco, and goes whizzing across the ocean to New Guinea. This is called "The Great Circle dividing the globe into trade heral- spheres." All the trade north of It be longs to Seattle. That city has filed a caveat on It. The trade south of it is given to San Fr&nclsco, and consists of the commerce of the Society Islands, Ha waii, a small piece of New" Guinea and a few miles of the -coast of Australia. It is a most depressing circle, and Is quite enough to cause a fall in real es tate in this city. It is introduced with the statement that "the bulge of the earth favors Putret Sound." and slves Seattle the bulge on San Francisco. Ldoklng at the formfdable and admonitory chart, one wonders at the self-denial of our enter prising neighbor. While inventing trade circles and stringing them around the planet like seams on a'baseball, this por tentious line might as well .have been thrown over San Francisco with the statement that It compels us to go to Seattle to do our shopping. After all, it is not worthy the com mercial dignity of that enterprising city. If a circle artist should draw his pencil through the Atlantic Ocean, the same sort of a line would locate all the trade of the Atlantic seaboard with Europe at Portland, Me., leaving New York a small speck made by a small fly In an Idle mo ment. It Is that Bort of theoretical greatness. which has been used by the boom cities. Fort Scott. Kan., tried to alarm the world by publishing a map showing that town to be In the center of the earth. But immediately the town of Hutchinson Issued a map proving that It was the center of the planet. Then many other towns made the discovery that the hori zon is a perfect circle around any given point of the globe, and that every place Is the center of the earth. Then every body breathed easier, and as the town, of Hutchinson had extensive and profitable salt wells, it Immediately proceeded to outrun and outgrow Fort Scott, and the latter has only a few miles of lot stakes to show for the advantages of its central position. Trade depends upon sometnmg nesiaes geography and imaginary commercial cir cles. The trade centers of Europe have shifted many times, and may shift again. Wisby, in. the far and -frozen North, once controlled the trade of that hemisphere. and so did Venice, and after her Genoa,1 in the soft and clement South. Then it passed the Pillars of Hercules to the Low Countries, and finally crossed the chan nel to the British Isles, ' The Immediate presence of production and consumption is a factor In centering trade. The friction of exchange deposits the profit of commerce. The enormous and varied production of California is the stable quality in the commerce of San Francisco. Trade that merely passes through a "place from a distant point of production to a distant point of exchange deposits no, profit in transit. The advan tage claimed for Seattle, and proved by a great circle that ha3 no more sub stantial existence and influence than, the witch circles that used to terrify the superstitious, is an advantage shared equally by Bitter Creek, Medicine Bow, Puyallup, Walla Walla and every station on the Northern Pacific and Great North ern through which trains pass carrying freight to a far-away point of exchange. Of course, the exchange made on Puget Sound will increase with locaj popula tion and production, and they will con tribute to local profit and to the growth of Seattle. But San Francisco, in the lush abundance of production in Califor nia, from resources that are only scratched superficially, feels no fear of her own future "and no jealousy of the fu ture df Seattle. Whr Nixon .Retired. Chicago Tribune. New York, May II. In connection with Mr. Nixon's retirement hia friends told a story today that Mr. Nixon, whose reputation for integrity never was ques tioned by those who knew him, was re peatedly, after affiliating himself with Tammany, subjected to indignities by people who thought that he could bo bribed. One of these was an attempt to get him to change the specifications for the steel for the Williamsburg bridge by the payment to Mr. Nixon of 5100,000 In cash, or Its equivalent. He Indignantly spurned the proffer, and was with diffi culty restrained from assaulting the mm man who tried to bribe him. An old classmate at Annapolis, it Is said, was chosen to do the "dirty" work. He called on Mr. Nixon at his home and during the evening conversation drifted quite naturally to the bridge contract and the kind of steel that was to go into the structure. Mr. Nixon's old classmate proposed to him that a certain grade of steel would answer all purposes for the bridge, and that If Chief Engineer Buck could be overruled it would be either di rectly or indirectly worth $100,000 to Mr. Nixon. Springing to his feet Mr. Nixon Is. al leged to have said: " ," calling him by name, "you have insulted me. I never thought you would think me capable of .taking a bribe. I ought to knock you down. I'll let the Insult go because It may be that you are under the Influence of liquor and don't know what you have said." Then the old friends parted ene mies. Mr. Nixon virtually confirmed the ctory when asked about it, but he would not specify. That was not the only occasion when Mr. Nixon, because of his Croker affilia tions, was "approached" by men with unworthy motives. It Is believed to have been a steadily increasing accumulation df these exceedingly mortifying experi encesmortifying to an hjonest man like Mr. Nixon thit made him absolutely dis gusted with his political experiment os leader of a corrupt organization. Mount Pelce and Nicaragua. Chicago Inter Ocean. The opponents of the Nicaragua Canil Jnslst that the eruption -of Mount Pelee makes it necessary to postpone all isthmian canal legislation indefinitely. They contend that in the fict of the ter rible upheaval a"t Martinique it would be unwise to pass or attempt to pass the Nicaragua Canal bill at this session of Congress. Four years ago the Pacific railway lob by wanted information, and canal legis lation was delayed. Two years ago the Clayton-Bulwer treaty threw -the railway lobbyists into a panic, and again there was delay. When the Clayton-Bulwer treaty was Lremoved, the Panama scheme was .ex ploited. This having ceased to Interest the American people, the opponents of any isthmian canal turn to the volcanic eruption in Martinique for aid. The lake region of Nicaragua has never been disturbed by volcanic erup tions, and the ruteof the proposed ca nal, including Lako'NIcaragua, is as it was when first explored, 400 years ago. Besides, Mount Pelee and the Nicara gua route are farther apart than "Vesu vius and the "Manchester ship canal. The gentlemen of the anti-canal lobby should study the map. Then they might pwof3 TTtaVltcr tharnaalvaa rldlntiJmm. PUSILLANIMOUS CARMACK. Iew York Commercial Advertiser. r .What was the motive which Impelled Senator Carmack, of Tennessee, to apolo gize to the Senate for his language In de bate toward everybody whb Is in any way concerned with carrying forward the Ad ministration's policy in the Philippines? There was nothing unusual about that language in the mouth of a man engaged in the agitation of which Mr. Carmack is one of the leaders. He called General Smith a "bloody old scoundrel, murderer and butcher," General Funston "a deliber ate, willful and malicious liar," andsald of Republicans in general that they were guilty Of "devilish Impudence," and of one of them. Senator Dolllver, that "so far as hi3 argument is concerned he might just as well have been swinging from his prehensile tall from a leafy bough." This Is blackguardism, of course, but it is the ordinary ".antl" language of debate and expoelt.on. Mr. Carmack had used even more unusual language a few days earlier. The speech for which he aoolosrlzed was delivered on May S, yet on April 25 he said ? the Senate, in reference to President Roosevelt's speech at Charleston The President must not be Judged In his mo ments of oratorical ferocity or when the frenzy of battle Is In his blood. He Is not vindictive, but simply strenuous, and he resembles In his habits of speech a certain Tennessoean's horse, of which It was said that running away was his natural gait. In the same speech Mr. Carmack said of General Funston: He 4s the Jayhawker Brigadier" from the wind-swept plains, the mlghUest Samson that ever wielded the Jawbone of an ass as a weapon of war. ... If men are to be hanged without regard to law for speaking words calculated to Incite Insurrection, the first neck to feel the strangling clutch of fte soaped rope should be the heroic gullet of Funston. That Is regulation "anti" language, as we shall show by abundant citations from the highest authorities. Senator Rawlins, of Utah, arose in the" Senate on April 29 to explain that he had been misreported when he was represented as having, in a previous speech, called General Chaffee a "dastard villain," and then said: Did Chaffee, alone, unaided, in coldness and brutality, and In savage and unrelenting disre gard of- eery humane sentiment or possibility of human suffering, conceive thl Iniquitous scheme? "Whence from what diabolical source was It derived? The American people ought to know. Is there any penalty beneath the sun adequate to be meted out to the dastard villain who has thus brought dishonor upon the American name and the American people? On the same day Senator Teller declared: This Government cannot escape the condem nation of the world and ot every right-thinking man for this miserable, wicked attempt to compel these people to accept our Government whether they desired It or not. On the same day also the regular re ports of the debate contained this pas sage: Mr. Bacon, of Georgia, expressed the belief that the disease and great mortality among the natives of Batangas Province has been caused by the laying waste of the province by war. Crops had been destroyed and the In habitants had been confronted almost by a condition of famine. These citations give an accurate Idea of the regular style of language used by the allies of the "antls" in the Senate. Whence comes the inspiration? Why, from the chief "antl" organ itself. It is the plain, literal truth that the Senators from the far West and South have shown more restraint in their assaults upon the officers of the Government at Washington and In the" Philippines than the "antl" organ has. Witness the following, direct ed against Secretary Root, In the Evening Post of April 9: The War Department, as we see by the evi dence extracted from It about corruption In the transport service, and by the other official proofs of barbarities In the Philippines, which it was keeping dark, will hush up everything if It can. But Congress and the press must not let any, of these evil deeds be covered up. And the following against the Ameri can Army from the same paper on the same date: Our troops In the Island of Samar have been pursuing a "policy of wholesale and deliberate murder. They have made of their war simply "the hired assassin's trade." And the following from the same paper on April 11 against both Secretary Root and Governor Taft: Secretary Root and Governor Taft come very badly out of this affair of keeping back vital Information from Congress. The reports with held are terribly damaging, but the fact of withholding them Is almost more damaging. It Is not simply that It argues a lack ot can dor; It Is very nearly a breach of faith. ... The document Is one which should have been Instantly turned over to that committee of in quiry, and given to every American to read and ponder. But what was done with It? Why, Governor Taft concealed It, Secretary Boot plgtfon-holed Jt. and nothing but the Indiscretion of General Miles gave the public a hint that such a tell-tale report was In existence. This Is, to our mind, almost an impeachable offense. It Is to treat Congress und the people with, contempt. It casts In evitable suspicion on every statement of the case that Secretary Root may make. "What cards is he still keeping under the table? Those charges were made in reference to the Gardener report, and were untrue. Governor Taft did not "conceal" It and Secretary Root did not "pigeon-hole" it.. It was sent to General Chaffee for Inves-' tigation because it was on its face a hear say assault upon the Army, as it has since been shown to be. Ten days later, when Governor Taft and Secretary Root had made public the truth about their pro ceedings with the Gardener report, the Evening Post, April 21, never having with drawn Its first calumnies upon these offi cials, added a new one as follows: There can be no question that the War De partment has been seriously discredited by. the recent revelations of the manner In which It so long deceived the country regarding the question of torture by onr troops In the Phll ll pines. This deliberate misstatement was fol lowed three days later, April 24, with one like unto It: The attitude of the War Department and of the Army until a few days ago was that there had been no cruelty, and that soldiers who said there had been were liars. Now that It Is Impossible to cover the matter up longer, tho disposition Is to claim "that cruelty was neces sary, and" that only white-livered people would object to it. Now compare the following refined and gentlemanly allusion to General Funston in the Evening Post of April" 26 with those of Senators Rawlins, Cannack and others in the Senate, and see how perfectly it coincides with them: What Is General Funston to do with his mouth since the President ordered aim to stop talking? A man with the Funston type "of mouth evidently cannot long restrict It to the single purpose of eating. Surely he will not wear the gag which the President has Just In serted When he can escape the( necessity of behaving like an officer and a gentleman by the simple act of resigning his position. r Highland Mnry. Robert Burns. Te banks and braes and streams around The castle o Montgomery, Green be your woods, and fair your flowers, Tfaur waters never drumllel There simmer first unfauld -her robes. And there the langest tarry: For there I took the last fareweel O' my sweet Highland Mary. How sweetly bloom'd the gay green blrk. How rich the hawthorn's blossom. As underneath their fragrant uhade I clasp'd her to my bosom! The golden hpurs on angel wlnga Flew o'er me ahd my dearie; For dear to me as light and life ' Was my sweet Highland Mary. WI' raony a vow and lock'd embrace. Our parting was fu' tender: And pledging aft to meet oraln,- We tore oursels asunder; But. Oh! fell Death's untimely frost. That nipt myflower sae early! Now green's the sod, and cauld'e the clay. That wraps my Highland Mary! O pale, pale now, those rosy lips, I aft hae klss'd sae fondly! And closed for aye the sparkling glance. Tbrft dwelt on me sae kindly; And mouldering now lit silent dust . That heart that lo'ed me dearly! But etlll within ray bosom's cere au-w ii ,v Highland, Mary. NOTE AND COMMENT. What a short Summer we had! Those of us who. are still alive havu rea son to be thankful. There are other reasons for not living In Texas beside ex-Governor Hogg. A speechless politician might be a val uable addition to modern inventions. Curious that oratory and brass band3 should be needed to get the silent vote. The powers began to quarrel over "VI1 helmlua's possessions too soon. She heard about it, and got welL San Francisco has been shocked by an earthquake,. It takes an earthquake to shock San Frarcisco. E. H. Harriman has bought another railroad, probably for a birthday present for some cecond cousin. Nebraska reports a volcano. 'Somo states can't be anything but Imitators, r.j matter how hard they try. Cuba now has an opportunity to frams a constitution that will mean whatecr any party hereafter chooses to make it. The difference between J. P. Morgan ari the Count of Monte CrLsto is that the Count only thought he owned the earth. Kipling says that America has the deir Cbt little army in the world. Events h"nc proved, however, that it is worth all it cost. The American troops are almost as long in wi(hdrawlng from Cuba as the British forces are in withdrawing frorn the Tranjv aal. If the camera trust will only put its product beyond the reach of the fiend, the President ought not to set the Attorney- General on it. The young King of Spain is already a target for anarchists. It bis mother doesn't keep her eje on him he Is likrly to drop the scepter and run. The new Secretary of the Navy siys that naval officers should go to sea once in p. while. If this plan is carried out it will prove disastrous to the controversies which form, part of the attractions of Washington. "Paul Leicester Ford," says the Phila delphia Record, "was quite a familiar figure in Philadelphia when he was gathering material for his bIograp.ii-aI works dealing with the lives of Wabhing ton and Franklin. Much of his rsc-irch was accomplished in the rooms of the Historical Society of' Pennsylvania, at Thirteenth and Locusjt streets, and thero he delved into musty documents eany ana late, seeminjr Indefatigable in his labcrs. He had a little desk reserved for his own use on the Thirteenth-street side of the nuiidlnff. where the light wa3 best, and there the pathetic but eager figure of the little hunchback could be seen every day fnr spveral weeks, poring over the rec ords and copying notes with an apparently . tireless energy. He lived very quieti here, and made few friends, but many frequenters of the Historical Soclet's building will recall the crouched-up l'ttlo man working away in the corner." Miss Christine Ross, of New York, is the only woman in that city, if not in th United States, who has held the of fice of certified public accountant. She was the first woman to attempt the ex aminations for the place. She was second nn fhp. list of candidates, being only six- tenths of a ooint below the mark received by the most successful competitor. When asked about her duties. Miss koss saiu io u rfnrter: "People, principally women, send for me from all around .to straighten rhPir accaunts. Charitable organizations which are managed by women are amo"g my steady clients. Few things, indeeu. a-e more helpless than the average young s--siety woman' who, from all sorts of good motives and kindly Intentions, attempts to kpen the church diet, kitchen or day rur- bm-l- hnnks. If she should turn her ac counts Into a crock, beat them thorougiiy nn hk them In an oven for 30 mirutcs. the treatment would be about as sensible as that which .ey ordinarily recele. Oklahoma' Advancement. nviivicrn "Rppord-Herald. t ,ra Vino Vithrtn heen anv doubt as to Oklahoma's right to statehood, it should now disappear iorever. vivi tion follows the college yell. Where the college yell Is never heard it may be un i . if tVio territorial form of ROV- ernment be dropped; but. there noer can bo any question as to the presence of ad vanced thought where the college yell echoes and re-ecnoes tnrougn wi? iu. The Oklahoma Agricultural and Medical College has just adopted the following of ficial yell: Oh, we are the students of the A. il. C! Kl! Yi! Kl! Te! The 'wearers ot the black nnd the orange we, Blp Zip! Hooray! We haven't any great excess of cash! YjbII A. M. C! And that's- why we don't do anything rash.! O. K. L. A. Kl Yl! Kl Yel Rip Zip! Hooray! Hooray! Hooray! r- nr ni O. K. L. A.! O. K. U. A. I Let Oklahoma come right into the sis terhood. With tnis yen io mi i. culture can no longer be disputed, and the lustice of her claim for the benefits and privileges oi siaieuuuu w Siuuuuai; onstrated. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHEnS The roan who can't swim is a fool to rock the boat; but so Is the man who can.-Baltl-more News. Bella-He said his ears burned awfully last night. Stella Well. I'm sure ne s got w burn. Yonkers Statesman. m TX....1 "Tif Rrpnletim advised me to gc n -warmer climate." "He sends most of his ntirnt there." Detroit Free Press. He YoU promised to be my pupil ani learrJ trt love me. "But 11 maes sutu u. uii.tU" h.n vonr heart Isn't" In your work.' Life. More Evidence. "There Is nothing so sweet ..- .nn.Af her voice." declared the young i,... hi Hcems to think so." put In thd .in.. inrfv. Baltimore American. JCC.W. ,- - He You are worth your weight m goia. acarj ci,. nvi ihnt's old: elve me someming newj "What 'shall It be?" "Say I'm worth mj welcht in beef. Yonkers Statesman. Often the Case. "They say his wife drove him to drink." "Perhaps sne am. Dut iron u t tnnr nf him T think he would hav been awfully disappointed If she hadn t. ChH casra Post. Guilty. "Do you know anything about hypj notlsm?" asked the girl in the pink waLstl "Well." replied tne nuny-nairca maia, as snj hat. n her tart hand to dlsnlav a. spurkllmi solltalrg to better advantage, "you can judgl for yourself. Chicago Dally rews. tvillv T mpl our new minister on mv wai to Sunday school, mamma, and he asked me lj I ever played marbles on bunday. fiiotner H'm! And what did .you say to that? Wllly- t Mid. "Get thee behind me. Satan' and walked right off and left him. Tlt-Blts. AmpnltlM of the Game. Mr- Meddleton (s the "amateur athletes" exhibition) I say. BJxj By., we a oeiier put a. n&iurai ioui on nrsi oa tt mfirht npHdentnllv catch the ball sor times. Mr. Blxby (amiably) Oh, very wHlJ I'll exchange places wun you, sir. juage.i Discouraging. The Messenger Boy Well, A' vbt lltro mercftntllft life? The Offlce.hov de boss don't give me any encouragemjnt Boy Why, he never gives me a look when L'nl workln ; but Just as soon as I start ter lo: bit, he's Johnny-on-de-spot wit his eagle ci .fUCK.