THE MORNING OREGOSIAN, FRIDAY, JDNF 20, 1902. toe v2$oxtiaxx Entered at the Postofflce At Portland. Oregon. as eecond-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In Advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month. ........ S3 Daily. Sunday excepted, per year 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year w Sunday, per year The "Weekly, per year... .............-- 1 The Weekly. 3 months M To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday excepted.l5e Dallj, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. Vnlted States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper... ......... ..-.-...--ic 14 to 28-page paper ............ e Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication in The Oregonian should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter ihould be addressed simply "The Oregonian." The Oregonian does not buy poems or etorles from Individuate, 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. 5, 47, 48. 49 Tribune building. New York City; 510-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwith Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco byL. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel newa stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Butter street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street; 3. K. Cooper Co., 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand; Frank Scott. SO Ellis street, and N. Wheatley, S13 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 59 So. Spring street, and Oliycr & Haines. 305 Eo 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, 12 "Washington street. For ale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam street. For wale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co , 77 W. Second South street. For aale In Ogden by C. H. Myers. For sale In Minneapolis by It G. Hearsey & Co , 21 Third street South. For sale In Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House newa stand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick, 906-912 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co., 15th and Lawrence street; A. Series. Sixteenth and Cur tis streets; and H. P. Hansen. TODAY'S WEATHER-Partly cloudy; north to east winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 88; minimum temperature, 50; pre cipitation, none. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, JUXE 20, 1002; I . S3 OREGO.V IX BAD COMPANY. The Oregonian fully recognizes and has repeatedly pointed out the futile dishonesty of nearly everything that passes under the name of reciprocity; 3 ft it does not approve the course of those Senators from the Pacific Coast and elsewhere who have joined hands with the Oxnard trust to defeat the Cuban programme of the Administra tion and the Republican, leaders. It Is a strange attitude for this wealthy and powerful Nation to assume toward a little island and an unfortunate people, that, having taken possession of their Island and at length relinquished to them the shadow, not the substance, of independence, we decline to accede them profitable terms of entry into our mar kets, their natural markets, and markets they prefer on grounds of sentiment as well as of convenience. The "insur gent" ranks comprise erne Senator from Kansas, Michigan, Illinois, Washington and Maryland, and two Senators from each of these seven states: California Oregon Net ada Nebraska South Dakota Minnesota West Virginia The merits of the beet-sugar conten tion we have so often discussed that It is useless and undesirable to consider them again at this time; but does It not argue a strange weakness in the justice of the Oxnard contention that it has failed to enlist the support and sympa thy of a single Republican Senator out side of the few we have named? If the Cuban proposals are so iniquitous, unjust, ruinous and unwise as the in surgents say they are. how Is it that they retain the adherence of such men as Lodge and Spooner, Hoar, and Haw ley, Cullom and Beveridge, Foraker and Frye, Hale and Proctor? "Who are these men with whom our Oregon Senators have allied themselves? There are Mason the clown and Welling ton the renegade; Gamble and Kltt redge, Dietrich and Millard, nobodies; Elklns and Burrows, trimmers on great questions and buccaneers in politics. Men "who had the courage to stand out against the pressure for Injustice to Porto Rico two years ago are now found with President Roosevelt In his appeal for justice to Cuba. Senator Simon, -ho dared to stand out against the President then for justice to Porto Rico, is afraid to stand with the President now for justice to Cuba, and in Senator Mitchell's action with the insurgents.we have the best possible proof that that past master of "Washington diplomacy never expects to plead that he lost caste with the Administration because he voted on Cuba just as Simon once voted on Porto Rico. "When Porto Rico was dealt her cruel blow, Oregon had one "vote for "plain duty." Today she has none for "plain duty" for Cuba. And the consumers of sugar, whose concern Is not for high prices, are left without representation from the Pacific Coast. THE "ACTUAL SOOXEnS." The Department of the Interior should have had experience enough with land openings by this time to be able to con duct one without injustice either to the old settlers on reservation lands or to newcomers who desire to file, in regu lar order, upon these lands for home stead purposes. It ssems. however, that there has been serious lapse of pru dence if not of justice in arranging for opening the Port Hall Indian reserva tion to settlement. Persons who have long resided upon certain sections by sufferance, which is considered tacit permission, of the Government, and who have made valuable improvements thereon, were not granted the protec tion that they felt they had a right to expect from the Incoming thtong of "sooners" and seekers, and many of them are threatened with the loss of the accumulations of half a lifetime, though now perfectly willing and even anxious to comply with the terms of the opening. Trouble upon this score was avoided when the Kiowa reservation was opened, and it was logically sup posed that the same rules would gov ern at Fort Hall, but this seems not to have been the case. If there is one thing in the way of a business transac tion that more than any other will put fight Into a man of mild temper and in cite a man of fiery blood to make deadly use of a gun upon a fellow mortal, that thing Is ruthless encroachment upon his land holdings. "Whether the Invader be a neighbor who disputes a boundarx line for a few feet or rods of ground, a claim-Jumper who catches the owner off guard, or a reservation rusher who ruthlessly files on land regardless of the technical rights of the man. who has built houses and barns thereon and cul tivated and perhaps planted it to trees and shrubbery, depending upon the Government to give him first chance when the time" comes to file upon it, the spirit that the invasion excites la that of bitter resistance, even if. It involves murder. It Is the regret and frequent ly becomes the scandal of a rural neigh borhood when the land in dispute in volves but a. few acres. It Is therefore not surprising If the involvement of large areas, including Improvements that represent the labor of years, should assume the proportions of a tragedy, calling for the Interference of state and even National authority. Trouble upon this score should be avoided by all rea sonable means, as Its Implacable nature is well known. THE SPIRIT OP THE MOB. These Paterson riots should serve as a warning to the peace officers of every community where labor troubles are at hand or impending. Their lesson is so plain that their reproduction anywhere else would be without excuse. What makes a labor riot? Not the employers, who are so often charged, falsely, with conspiring to goad the workingmen to overt acts. Not the strikers, who have learned woll by this time that violence only loses them the sympathy of the public. Not anarchists always, for, though anarchists have been active in this Paterson strike, they were not at all in evidence at Chicago. "The riot is caused by a mob. And a mob has no right to exist. It never should be permitted to gather. The men and women who constitute It have no business at the scene of the trouble. They should be kept away. Very little excitement will transform any closely crowded assemblage of human beings Into a, mob. .&. word or gesture, when the air Is freighted with suppressed ex citement, may light the potential fires of crazy passion latent in all of us, like the flame of the electric spark In a magazine of powder. The genius of the mob it may itself unsuspect, but It is there, terrible and all-devouring In un reason and intensity. The way to keep it from rising is to keep the crowds from gathering. There will be no riot If every unconcerned person Is at his own business. The most peaceable man in the world may become a fiend, once the spirit of the mob possesses him. The kindest woman In the world may forget herself in the hypnotic spell that passes over multitudes when they are laboring un der suppressed emotions of fear or wrath. How often do we see this exem plified in the case of a fire alarm at a theater or a panic among factory girls! It has been so in armies. Panic struck the Federal troops at the first battle of Bull Run. Panic ruled the Parisian commune in the revolution's bloody hours. Panic has killed and crippled hundreds of theater-goers who might never have been harmed if the spirit of the mob had not seized upon them. Panic makes the mobs that blacken the annals of our labor difficulties. It is a case where an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. IS THIS AX EXAGGERATIONS There has seldom, even in former years of mossback farming and farmers In Oregon, been so strong an arraign ment of the Willamette Valley farmer as a non-progresslve,.pessImlstlc. selfish individual as that made by a corre spondent over the signature of a "True Friend of Oregon," published in The Oregonian a few days ago. While ad mitting that in former years the Wil lamette Valley farmer was not as thrifty as he might and should have been,, the plea of Isolation and lack, of market was urged In extenuation of his slack ways, and of late years we have been glad to believe that, these- causes having been to a great extent removed, the worthy, non-progressive pioneer and his descendants were rising to meet the situation and now may be found gen erally in the van of progress. Hence we are amazed at the picture drawn by our correspondent of the "son of the pioneer with straggling beard, un combed locks and slouching gait, who meets newcomers who are in search of homes in the Willamette Valley with words of discouragement which his un kempt appearance and uncouth lan guage emphasize." Now we insist that, whatever may be truly said of the slack ways, and even of the slatternly appearance, of the na tive Oregon farmer, and his venerable forbears, the charge of disloyalty to the soil, the climate and the productiveness of Oregon cannot justly be numbered among his shortcomings. Is It possible that the belief In the Grange as an edu cator is not well founded? That con fidence In the passing of Isolation from the farming districts, as an element of civilization. Is misplaced? Has not the log schoolhouse or the no schoolhouse given place to the modern country schoolhouse In, the rural districts gen erally? Do not church buildings lend a Christian air to every village? And has not every neighborhood Its contigu ous village and postofflce? That the farming districts of the Wil lamette Valley are still too sparsely set tled is true. The heritage left by the old donation land law is still perpetu ated in many Instances in farms the area of which Is too large for the-own-ers to cultivate. Yet relatively very few of these large Individual freeholds remain intact, or have descended to the sons of the original owners thereof. There may "be doubtless there are farmers, so-called, In the Willamette Valley who scout the idea that the in sect pests of orchards and hopyards can be held in check or destroyed by spraying and cultivation, but the truth remains that spraying Is very geperally practiced, and that moss-grown, worm eaten orchards have been in the main destroyed. Is this a supposition or a fact? Let some member of the State Board of Horticulture answer this ques tion, and, if possible, refute the state ment put in the mouth of one who is proclaimed a typical Willamette Valley farmer that "time was when Oregon raised good apples, pears and so forth, but the worms and bugs and scale and scab have done up the fruit job." Again, is it true that the Willamette Valley is not getting its just proportion of the homeseekers that" have come Into the state this Spring? If so, there must be a reason for this fact that is not justified by natural conditions, and that should he removed by intelligent effort If it is left to Ignorant, thriftless per sons, who are In the state but not of it, in any appreciative, progressive sense, to meet and answer the questions of homeseekers, it Is but just to expect that these people will be met with mis statements and turned back in discour agement. But we are fain to believe that the example cited by our corre spondent Is, if not purely Imaginary, at least one that has been rarely met, and that there are Intelligent farmers In every rural community not only in Eastern Oregon, but in the Willamette Valley as well who In the true spirit of hospitality and state pride will tell the truth about the climate, soil, prod ucts and general advantages of their section to all strangers who may come thither seeking. DEATH AT THE CAMERA. Mr. Henry Harris, reporter on the Paterson (N. J.) Call, who lies at the point of death from wounds received In the discharge of duties to which he had been assigned, deserves honorable mention In the day's doings. He was a hero in unfamiliar role, but of a type that is universal in every walk of life. The man whom fear of death cannot deter from duty belongs exclusively to no calling, nation or time. Paterson, poor, brute-ridden Paterson, where fac tory girls are decoyed to death by lib ertines and whence anarchists go forth to terrorize the courts of Europe, pro duces also the man who will cover his assignment despite the fury of a mob. When the great dramatist frames his heavy tragedy, he does not make his hero out of the fellow who goes out armed with pencil and camera to bring in ''stories" and "snapshots." Probably there are few minds In which the task of Henry Harris would assume the as pects of the heroic But to him at least It seemed worth doing. It was a task he had been hired to do and had ac cepted. It was a task for which he had received or was sure of receiving his employer's money. He concluded, therefore, that It devolved upon him to carry out his end of the contract. The trust might be small, but it was big enough In his eyes for him not to betray. So when the mob made going hazardous, he added a revolver to his equipment and went to his post. How the mob set upon him and leffhlm for dead the dispatches have already told. His camera was In place and his hand on the slide until the ruffians brought him to the ground. It is a common fashion In these days to sneer at the man who stands at his post In the hour of danger. Young dandles assure us that if they had been at the messenger's post in the express car, or In the cashier's place in the bank, the robbers might have helped themselves at will. They say that no trust committed to them Is so great as to justify them in Imperiling their lives; and they say all this with an air of smartness that is apt to pass current for wisdom and discernment. Against this modern philosophy of Fal staffian valor, let us adduce simply the story of Henry Harris, of Paterson. It was not a very great matter, perhaps, whether the Call had the liveliest story and the best pictures of the riot; but It was a great matter to him whether he did his duty or deserted his post at the first sign of danger. Heroism often lies so near us that we pass it by. The lazy and the cowardly never give the race the traditions It loves to sing about and tell for their Inspiring Influence upon the young. Wherever this reporter's story Is told It ought to stimulate somewhat the desire of those In however humble lot to do the best of which they are capa ble, without slighting and without fear; and it ought to temper somewhat the blustering tone of those who proudly boast their highest ambition to be to save their own skins from harm, at whatever sacrifice of obligations they have been eager to Incur. There are too many watchmen who watch only for their own safety; too many Sheriffs who are brave In drawing votes and salaries and backward In catching crim inals. BRITISH ZOLLVEHEIX I3IPRACTI CABLE. Twenty-five years ago Canada and Australia asked Great Britain to estab lish a 5 per cent preferential in favor of colonial products. Great Britain re fused to give the proposition serious consideration. If Great Britain had given timely heed to this prayer of her great colonies, Australia could have produced a large proportion of the meat needed by England and Canada could have produced the bulk of the bread stuffs; but it Is too late today to wrest the business of furnishing England with her food supplies from the Amer ican meat packer .and American grain dealer. Should Great Britain now de cide to favor her colonial products by preferential tariffs, it would be at such a cost that no political party would dare stand responsible for the measure. This is the view of able Canadian as well as British political economists. The Halifax Mdrnlng Chronicle, in a very vigorous article, recently said that the demand for preferential tariff treatment comes not from the Canadian people, but merely from a section of the poli ticians and traders of Canada, and that it had small support from the Cana dian people. If a preference were granted to Cana dian breadstuffs in the British market, British manufacturers would Insist upon the admission of their products to the Canadian market free of duty; in which event the Canadian revenue now derived from the tariff would have to be secured largely by direct taxation. This thoughtful Canadian, editor does not believe that the proposal that the Canadian and Australian farmers shall be protected in the British market against their American competitors will ever materialize In legislation. If Cana dian grain is given preferential stand ing in the British market, similar treat ment could not be denied Australian meat and wool, and ultimately the pref erential tariff system would embrace the whole line of important colonial products. Under free trade Great Brit ain now imports annually from foreign countries products valued at $2,005,000, 000, while from her colonies she im ports products valued at only $550,000, 000. We are asked to believe that, in order to favor the colonial producer. Great Britain will seek to reduce the volume of tils enormous foreign trade, invite retaliatory legislation and " In crease the cost of living to the masses of the people that Inhabit her great cities. The British country dweller lives largely on British products, but the bulk of the population In the large cities of Great Britain live almost en tirely on imported breadstuffs and meats. Out of these congested centers of population, which are dependent on foreign food supply, would come the boisterous cry of discontent, when prices for bread and- meat rise through preferential -treatment of colonial prod ucts. The new bread tax has already excited discontent, and will be used by the Liberal party to their advantage. Sir Robert Glften, a distinguished British political economist, agrees, al though an-imperialist, with the views of the Canadian editor. In the May Nineteenth Century he says: "Such suggestions as the-zollverein scheme in volve the certainty of Injury to both colonies and the mother country, "With the uncertainty of any advantage what soever." Sir Robert GIffen holds that a customs Union for the Brltleh Empire is impossible, owing to the immenss variations In the economic interests of the widely scattered parts; separated by enormous reaches of ocean. The popular opposition to this scheme Is In dicated by the recent Bury election, which was carried by the Liberals for the first time In many years on the Issue of the bread tax. Mr. Chamber lain will be beaten In this scheme; the loaf is dearer already, and the British workingmen will never vote for a scheme that means not only dearer bread, but dearer meat.. But If Cham berlain should carry through his scheme, he will surely lead his party to defeat- It Is too late In the day for Great Britain to attempt her experiment of preferential tariff treatment with her great colonies. English manufac turing Interests lnthe markets of the world will surely decline In competition with their great rivals if the English artisan and operative is forced to pay more for his bread and meat to benefit the producer of food and raw materials In Canada and Australia. Great. Britain will never adopt any pollcy that means serious war upon the trade interests of the United States, for in event of war between the two coun tries not only would England be de pendent on the United States for her supply of bread and meat, but for her annual supply of 1,800,000,000 pounds of raw cotton. Trouble with America would mean not only shortage of food, but stoppage of cotton shipments, which would close the British mills and turn the operatives over to Idleness. For these reasons, if for no higher motives of sentiment, England will not tempt her colonies Into a zollvereln and thus adopt a policy hostile to the United States, for the moment we feel the shoe seriously pinch we are In a position de structively to retaliate. It .Is Incredible that the British. Conservative party seriously contemplates the adoption of a policy that means a higher price for beef as well as bread. When bloodhounds were first called for from Walla Walla to Salem to track Tracy and Merrill, the opinion was quite prevalent that the State of Ore gon should own and keep In leash and training at the Penitentiary animals of this class, in order that the escape of eloping convicts might thereby be ren dered Impossible. The experience of the past ten days has, however, dis pelled this view to a great extent. The convicts In this Instance, fully aware that the dogs are on their trail, have cleverly contrived to throw the brutes off the scent now by making reprisal upon ranchers for change of shoes and clothing, and again by Impressing horses Into their service. Bloodhounds are sagacious brutes, phenomenally keen of scent and wonderfully swift on foot, but the cunning of this brace of criminals has overmatched the in stincts of this brace of dogs. Tales of the great "Dismal Swamp" of slavery days lose something of their horrible significance in the presence of this lat est attempt to take human beings with bloodhounds. There Is more than the bitterness of death to the mother of the young woman of Medford, Or., who committed suicide In San Francisco Tuesday night of this week. Infatuated with a sol dier, this foolish young woman followed him from her home to the Presidio, and, deaf "to the pathetic appeal of her aged mother to return and assist her In the battle of life, finally made an end to her existence. How Insignificant seem the ordinary trials and common vicissi tudes of life over which the multitude groans and under which It chafes when confronted by an Incident like this! Well may the caretaklng, hardworking parents of virtuous daughters and up right sons exclaim, "Poverty is noth ing and hard work, is nothing; even sickness Is nothing, and death Is not the gravest of Ills. Only filial ingrati tude and neglect, the waywardness of children and resulting disgrace can be ranked in the dark catalogue of trou ble." Members of the Pioneer Association and the attendance upon the annual reunion of that body, like the Govern ment pension list. Increase from year to year. And this notwithstanding the fact that pioneers and old soldiers are rapidly dying off. The explanation of this seemingly Incongruous state of af fairs is simple. Coaxed from their re tirement by sympathy and apprecia tion, our venerable state-builders ap pear In Increasing numbers In public year after year. While their numbers I are In reality decreasing somewha,t rap idly, the ranks of the association are fuller than ever before. Many pioneers with a little timely assistance have found themselves of late. Thus is the apparent Increase In their numbers, as shown by the attendance upon the an nual reunion, accounted for. A mob of the striking silk dyers of Paterson, N. J., has set upon and wrecked to a greater or less extent some of the mills of that city. Violence, as an argument, has never yet advanced the cause of labor. On the contrary, public sympathy that Is almost uni versally enlisted In the Interest of strik ers, the showing of whose cause Is even approximately just, suffers immediate revulsion when rioting begins, and the strike is lost from that hour. This les son Is as old as strikes, and Its sequel Is ever the same. No one at least no property-owner thinks for a moment of .the element of Justice In a conten tion that rushes upon property to de stroy It. The only thought at this crisis la to put an end to the strike. King Edward Is greatly fatigued, and his coronation is still ten days off. His physicians have prudently retired him and are carefully grooming him for the final struggle. If His Majesty survives the fatigue and excitement of the pres ent month without collapse, he may be considered Immune from the modern .disease known as "nervous prostra tion." Geer's Pipe Drezua. Lebanon Criterion. Governor Geer professes to believe that the vote ho received for United States Senator Is an indorsement of him by the people for that position." Had Fulton, Tongue. Hewitt, Moody or any of a dozen or more of Oregon's prominent men been placed on the ticket in a like man ner, they would have received equally as flatterlntr a. vote. Cicnr -ma nnuoi. in dorsed by the Republican convention for 'that nosition and stands nn rhannn -tvtmt- over of being ejected, to ail It , THE ANNIHILATION OF DISTANCE, St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The time across the continent by rail Is about to be shortened further. It takes In thc neighborhood of four days and four hours now to make the trip be tween New York and San Francisco. Four hours of this time is to be cut oft through a quickening of the .speed be tween Chicago and New York by way of the New York Central and also by the Pennsylvania. There are suggestions both in New York and San Francisco to shorten the distance, and the time still farther by leaving Chicago off the line and by taking a more direct course be tween the two coasts. It la calculated that about 200 miles of distance could be saved in this way, and this would mean a further shortening of the time by about foUr hours. In these days a shortening of time of a few hours counts for more than an abridgment of that many days did two-thirds of a century ago. How the present time schedule would make the transcontinental travelers of the earli er days marvel I Lewis and Clark, who took a ear and a half to make the jour ney between St. Louis and the mouth of the Columbia a little less than a century ago, never dreamed of any four days' trip across the continent. Said Asa Whitney, one of the first. per sons who advocated the project of a transcontinental railroad, in a memorial to Congress In 1&5 In aid of the scheme, "A railroad connecting the Atlantic with the Pacific Coast will bring the world to gether as one nation, allow us to traverse the globe in 30 days, civilize and Chris tianize mankind, and place us In the cen ter of the world, compelling Europe on one side and Asia and Africa on the other to pass through us." . Time has estab lished the truth of that prediction, though most of Whitney's countrymen at that time, especially In Congress, were skepti cal. When Oakea Ames, Collls P. Hunt ington and their colaborers brought the rails of the Union and the Central Pacific together at Ogden, In 1S69, the first part of Whitney's forecast was fulfilled, and the great work which he had been urging for a quarter of a century was completed. but not by his methods or Instrumentali ties, although he was still living. The continent has been spanned by four other lines sincq then, and the time consumed In making. the trip between the two oceans Is only half as long today as It was when Leland Stanford and Thomas Durant drove in the last spikes at Promontory Point's demostration 33 years ago. When Nathaniel X- Wyeth, the Lees, Marcus Whitman and the. rest of Oregon's pioneers of two-thlrda of a century ago made the trip across the continent four or five months was considered quick time to travel from the Mississippi to the vi cinity of the Pacific California's argo nauts of a decade or two later .found the trip still longer. Several circuits of the globe could be made in that time today. Moreover, the more ultimate consequences which were predicted by Whitney from the transcontinental railroad have already ap peared. The malls from some of Eng land's Asiatic possessions are being car ried through the United States to and form the mother country. The shortened dis tances give the United States a vast ad vantage over Europe in the trade with Asia, which Hill, Morgan and other rail road men are turning to account by the establishment of fast lines of steamboats to connect with their railroads In carry ing passengers and freight to and from across the Pacific. It will soon be not only quicker but cheaper for England, France and Germany to communicate with Asia by way of New York and San Fran cisco. Portland or Seattle than through the Suez Canal. The United States Is now the world's center In as direct and em phatic a degree as the Italian peninsula was In, the days of Caesar and Trajan. The Rank of Lieutenant-General. Kansas City Journal. The action of the House committee on military affairs In refusing to make a favorable report on the bill to retire Gen eral John R. Brooke with the rank of Lleutenant-General will be approved by the country. General Brooke has a cred itable record as a soldier, but his claims are not great enough to justify the pro motion asked for. It was withheld even from George H. Thomas, "the Rock of Chlckamauga." and the victor of Nash villeone of the greatest Generals of the Rebellion, and the only one of whom, it may truly be said that he annihilated an entire army in one night. The consideration that prevented cer tain Generals of the Civil War from being made Lieutenant-Generals wero.walved In the case of General Miles, the only man who has held tho rank since Sheridan. Neither his services nor his abilities were sufficiently distinguished to entitle him to it. Congress gavo It to him in a fit of maudlin sentimentality. The country has had good cause on several occasions to wish Its unwisely bestowed preferment might be recalled. Doubtless the case of General Miles Influenced the House com mittee when considering that of General Brooke. The rank of Lleutenant-General should not be revived, after it expires with the passing of General Miles, unless In some future war an American soldier appears who Is worthy to bo mentioned In history' with Washington, Scott, Grant, Sherman and Sheridan. Corporations That Won't Arbitrate. Chicago Record-Herald. A new absolutism which is as unrea sonable end tyrannical as the absolut ism of Kings expresses Itself through Wil liam H. Truesdale, president of the Dela ware, Lackawanna & Western railroad, who says': The coal operators will not auhmlt to arbitra tion or Interference of any kind. That is intended to pass as the Impres sive ultimatum of a man who is standing on his rights, but It is evidence only of the Insolence of the power of monopoly, and 4t becomes the less impressive the more attentively Mr. Truesdale's position Is considered. The power which he Is pleased to exercise Is derived from an il legal combination of the interests which he represents. This combination which rests upon an illegal foundation pursues illegal methods systematically and per sistently. Its conduct of Its business is a mixture of force and fraud. Thus after crushing out competition, it manipulates railroad rates in such a way as to perpe trate extortion at the expense of the entire public Doalitfnl Declinations. Boston Advertiser. A more careful examination of the lp slssima verba of Mr. Bryan's declination to be his party's candidate for Governor of Nebraska will perhaps explain the doubt whether he means It. That the doubt exists is shown by the refusal of leading Democrats in his state to take "no" for an answer. 'Mr. Bryan said: "I am not and cannot be a candidate for Gov ernor' Those are" very nearly the exact words In which Horatio Seymour declined the Democratic nomination for the Presi dency In 1S68. ''Your candidate I cannot be," said Mr. Seymour to the National Democratic Convention which assembled in Tammany Hall on July 4 of that year. Before the close of the convention he was its candidate. The -Cuban Amnesty Dill. Providence Journal. President Palma, of Cuba, has signed the amnesty bill, which frees from im prisonment all Americans convicted of crime in the island during the American occupation and those awaitjng trial. Thus Rathbone and Neely. of Postofflce fraud, notoriety, obtain their release, together with other Americans less conspicuous In Cuban criminal annals. President Palma eays: "It Is Just another evidence of our gratitude and good will toward the United States and the American people." Inso far as It shows Cuban good will this action is all right, but few Americans will con template with excessive pleasure the free ing of men Whose names stain the record i of our insular administration. "IMPORTANT" AND 'TRIVIAL." Kansas City Star. In a curious essay In the current Atlan tic on "The Newspaper Industry" direct ed ostensibly against newspapers, but real ly against the policy of expansion Mr. Brooke Fisher exclaims: Think what It means that the Congressional debates are no longer a feature of the dally papers. All through the recent exciting" debates In, the Senate on. the Philippines touching on the very foundation principles of the Republic, the dally Congressional report, except In the case of the TlUman-McLaurln episode, was less than half a column la length on the average. This specific accusation has been made and answered so many times that it need not receive attention now. But In its generalized form that newspapers neglect the important and exploit the trivial the charge Is worth considering. Very many persons would yield a ready, though per functory assent to it. In fact, they would consider Its truth an axiom. "Dear me. Isn't it shocking" the conventional form ula runs "the space the newspapers give to gossip, to news of crimes and accidents and other trivial affairs. They almost never print sermons or political speeches In full, or the debates In Congress, or ad dresses at public or scientific meetings. In fact, they seem to avoid sctIous and profitable Instruction. The press has de-, tenorated since Che-day of Horace urceiey and the 'great editors. " That 13 the current criticism from which few persons would venture to. dissent. Yet, like many another creed. It Is dented dally by the deeds of those who profess it. There are a few a very few news papers in the United States that are con ducted approximately according to this Ideal. But for some reason their circula tion Is extremely limited. Now, If the correctness of the criticism is admitted, the disagreeable conclusion Is inevitable that the vast majority of people sin agalnut the light daily in buying the "In teresting" as opposed to the "instruc tive" newspaper. The ordinary newspaper frankly admits that It is a newspaper and not a cyclo pedia. It does not pose as a reform agency. It holds, with Charles A. Dana though with certain reservations for de cency's sake that what Providence per mits to happen it Is not too proud to re port. It does not try to usurp the func tions of the pulpit. It prefers live news to moral essays. Undoubtedly It gives the people what they want, but It does" not believe that what It prints is less im portant than the fervid sermons of Gree ley. It would be an oddly made world If the things that most interest the great mass of intelligent people were really of no consoquence to them. "Important" Is a relative word. What may be Important for one generation may be -trivial for Its" successor. The modern press prints plenty of matter that even our grandfathers wduld- have considered Important. But It adds a vast amount of. literature calculated to throw light on human nature. It is concerned with persons rather than with theories. In the growing complexity of modern life, man Is even more a proper study of mankind than he was In the days of Pope. It Is as stupid to censor newspapers for preferring Items of "human Interest" as they are technically called to dull con gressional debate as It would be to censor Millet for painting 'The Angelus" In stead of a French court scene. A few days ago the Star printed a col umn article about Judge Wofford's conver sations with prisoners he was about to sentence. Now the Insight which this ar ticle gave Into motives and character was far more important for any one except a recluse than several Issues of the Con gressional Record. Yet Mr. Brooke Flsh .ct would probably regard the article Jn question bs beneath contempt. A story of a little girl and her dog, of a man who decorates his mill with Bible texts, of a woman who has a fad for collecting halrpjns, may be trivial In one sense, but in another It Is of Importance In giving a better comprehension of the main springs of human conduct. It is quite conceiv able that a good description of a Fourth of July picnic crowd would be more im portant than a full report of Senator Hoar's Independence day oration. The development of what newspaper men call the "human Interest story" in re sponse to pdpular demand Indicates a growing anxiety of men to understand one another. This is at the bottom of their intense curiosity, although they may not have analyzed the feeling. He would be a bold man who would assert that anything that vitally concerns human character is trivial. Roosevelt and the People. Brooklyn Eagle. Truth to tell, the people have not yet been heard ;from. There has not been time. The press has not had time yet to dissect out the mixed case presented by Presidential appeal, Republican division and Democratic pettifoggery at Washing ton. The President has done right with in his limitations. The beet moiiopollsts have solidified against him with a de fiant confidence or desperation. The pid dling Democrats, Instead of holding up his hands, are trying to trip up his feet The country is making up its mind. Re publican state platforms so far have "generalized" expression on the subject Republican party organs are in the main doing the same. Democratic party or gans are taunting their opponents in stead of monitoring their party leaders. Independent papers alone are heartily upholding the President for starting to ward a go-it to which he Is loth to go the whole way. Ho Is for tariff revision a little. We who know that his little would have to mean more are for him to his limit, and for the cause far beyond, his limit The effect of the humane and moral consider ations involved must be awaited. They appeal to the National heart, rather than to the political head. It is to that heart Abraham Lincoln, Grover Cleveland and William McKinley at times effectively ap pealed. Theodore Roosevelt's appeal to It Is opposed by Influences and interests as Insolent and as united as any that confronted his predecessors. We shall be surprised if he does not overcome them as they did, though we must admit that the Immediate situation reveals a dangerous proportion of his party that would like to beat him and would, but for th,e apprehension that thereby they might beat themselves, too Alabama Lynchers. Buffalo Express. Only four men were ever sent to prison In Alabama for lynching and the Gover nor has pardoned three of them on the ground that they were deceived as to the nature of the offense which the lynched man had committed. So the Alabama Governor holds that lynching Is not a punishable offense when the man lynched appears to deserve It? , t Hester. Charles Lamb. When maidens such as Hester die Their place ye may not well supply. Though yo among a thousand try ' With vain endeavor. A month or more hath she been dead, . Tet cannot I by force be led To thlnlc upon the wormy bed ' ( And her together. , A springy motion In her gait. A rising step, did indicate - Of pride and Joy no common rata i That flush'd her spirit: I know- not by what name beside I shall It call; if 'twas not pride. It was a Joy to that allied She did Inherit Hef parents held the Quaker rule. WUch doth the human feeling cool: But she was traln'd in Nature's school. Nature had blest her. A waking eye, a prying mind. A heart that stirs. Is hard to blnd;v A hawk's keen sight ye cannot blind, Ye could not Hester. My sprightly neighbor! gone before To that unknown and silent shore. Shall wc not meet, as heretofore Sqnie Summer morning " "When from thy cheerful eyes a ray Hath struck a bliss upon the day, ' A bliss that would not go away. A sweet orewaxnlnsc?t NOTE AND COMMENT. Maybe -the Portland baseball team can play marbles. Maybe the Portland baseball team can phy ping pong. It is the open season for convicts, but the" game is scarce. . " Maybe the Portland baseball team can play drop-the-handkerchief. Mount Pelee is determined to magnify fame's little day as .much as possible. Up to a late, hour last night the out laws were still leading the procession. .Paterson, N. J., taken for all In all, is about as unhealthful a place of residence as St Pierre. ' Everj man thinks he was intended by nature to put up a screen door until he tries the job once. It begins to look as If a thermometer race might be made one of the features of the Fourth of July celebration. Every once In a while a tank of gasoline forcibly demonstrates that It was . not meant for a metropolitan existence. Perhaps the convicts will try- to climb Mount Rainier and fall down a crevasse in a glacier. Then we shall have the villains. Ahal Personal Harry Tracy and David Mer rill, two former residents of Salem, are now sojourning In Cowlitz County for the benefit of their health. The wreck of the Maine Is to be re moved from Havana harbor. It ought to be donated to Spain and erected in Madrid, lest the Spaniards forget One thing Is sure, and that Is there will be enough troops in London to prevent any uprising which may occur while the coronation ceremonies are in progress. ' Roosevelt and Van Sant and an anti trust platform would form a combination that might succeed even without drawing on M.A. Hanna & Co. for campaign expenses. Grover Cleveland te willing to give the Democrats the benefit of his political knowledge, but will not give up any of tho secrets by which he catches so many black bas3. Ingram, the brave convict who saved guard Girard from the bullets of the es caping assassins, has been pardoned, but the state cannot restore his missing leg. It can, however, prevent another out break by taking proper precautions. Now Is the time to begin. A dispute recently arose at a beer table In Germany between a group of unlve,rslty men as to- which science was the oldest. A representative of the law declared that Jt was jurisprudence, for this science must have been known In Paradise, seeing that Adam and Eve wero evicted therefrom. "Why," said a graduate of medicine, "medicine Is certainly of older date. Just think of the operation that Adam had to submit to in order that a rib should be obtained for Eve!" "No, no, gentlemen." retorted an electrotechnician, "for before anything was created God said, 'Let there be light!' " Then came the theologian, who said: "I do not wan to appear pre sumptuous, but I think that precedence belongs to theology, for before it was" light it was dark!" "This year," said a Philadelphia young man, who haunts the theaters, "there doesn't seem to be any one popular song that has caught on, to the exclusion of others. This condition of affairs is really remarkable, when you come to think of it Of course, the Summer is young yet, and It may still come, but tnecondltlons are against It In previous years, where ever you would go, you would be sure to hear the popular song of the day, played by bands in the various parks, whistled on the streets, sung by the colored boy quartets that make night hideous and ground out on street pianos. We had lots of good musical comedies during the past season, with lots of good songs, but no one seems to have just caught on to such an extent as to be 'it' " Representative Lacey, of Iowa,, has con tributed to the Congressional Record the following essay on the buffalo: The buffalo was the noblest of all the wild animals that Inhabited this conti nent when America was discovered. The ages In which this wonderful creat ure was evolved into his peculiar form and size are Inconceivable in duration. How admirably he was adapted to Ufa upon the Western plains. When he had fed xhe traveled with his fellows in long lines, single file, to the favorite watering place. The herd did not spread abroad and trample down ard destroy the grass la such journey, but in long and narrow trails the journey was made, and when the drinking place was reached and thirst was sated the buffalo never defiled the pool In which he drank. He was a gentleman among beasts, Just as the game hog Is a beast among gen tlemen. 9 Havana Lottery Revival. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Cuba is contemplating the establish ment of a National lottery as a means for raising revenue. Of course there is no possible question, so far as the United States is concerned, of the right of the new government to do as it pleases in this regard, but It could scarcely do any thing In the way of internal administra tion that would make American citizens generally sorrier that the American occu pation hadn't lasted somewhat longer. The Havana lottery was a detriment to Cuba and a nuisance to this country when Cuba was under Spanish rule, and will be so again under the republican regime. The Cuban authorities will not show much wisdom by taking a step, inimical to sound policy aqd public morals, that will tend to lower the American people's esti mate of Cuban fitness for self-government and seriously embarrass the postal relations between Cuba and the United States. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Head of Firm (to new office boy) Can you do anything, else but whistle and loaf? "Yes, sir. I can play craps." Life. Startling. Strawber Did anything 'happen while I was out, James? James Yes, sir. Nc one called to collect a bill. Life. Classifying It "Is that poetry or verse?" "Verse, of course. "Why, you can understand what It means." Chicago Evening Post. An Experienced Angler. Ethel Would you consider Percy Monckton a good catch? Mailgi Certainly If all the others got away! Puck. Envy. Scene Miss Semple and Dawbet standing near his picture. Miss Semple Why, there's a crowd In front of Madder's plctural Dawber Some one fainted. I suppose! Punch. The clergyman's little boy was spending thi afternoon with the bishop's children. "At tht rectory," ha said, "we've got a. hen that layi an egg every day." "Pooh!" said Master Bish op, "my father lays & foundation-stone once a week." Tlt-Blts. .A Very Good Day's Work. Weary Willie 1 Jes put In a good day's work In 30 minutes. Frayed Fagtn Explain yerself. Weary Willie Well, I put In six pies, a pan uv doughnuts, an' four Jars uv preserves. Dat's a .good. da-i work f er any woman. Judge.