THE MOBKiyQ OREO OKI AN, WEDNESDAY, JULY . 16, 1902. he regoittcm Entered at the Pcstotnco at Porttand. t Oregon, as pecond-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. By Mall ipostag? prepaid. In Advanced ally, -with Sunday, per month j Dally, Sunday excepted, per 3 ear J J Daily, with Sunday, per year g ); Sunday, per year X The Weekly, per j-ear The Weekly. 3 months To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday escepted.ISc Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncludedo POSTAGE BATES. United States, Canada and Mexico! 10 to 14-page paper Jc 14 to 28-page paper.. ..........c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name ot any individual. Letters relatinc to advertising-, subscriptions or to any buslners matter thould be addressed stmply "The Oregonlan.' Eastern Business OClce. 3. 4. 45. 47. 45. 49 Tribune building. New York City: 010-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by I E. Lee. Pal ace Hotel news stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts, 1003 Market street: J. K. Cooper Co. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley. S13 Mission street. For .sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. E30 So. Spring street, and Oliver Halnea. 303 So. Spring etreet For rale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co., 420 K etreet. Sacramento, Cat Foy sale in Chicago by the P. O. Now Co.. 217 Dearborn etreet. and Charles MacDonald. CS Washington street. For tale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1012 Farnam street: Megeath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam street. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Eecond South rtreet For -le In Ogden by a H- Myers. For rale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co.. 24 Third rtreet South. For sale In Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House nev-n stand. For enle in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendriok. 000-012 Seventeenth street: Louthan & Jaokson Book & Stationery Co.. 13th and Lawrence street; A. Series. Sixteenth and Cur tis streets: and H. 7. Hansen. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair; -warmer; north west winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 08; minimum temperature, 58; pre cipitation. 0 06 inch. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 0.0. TWO KINDS OF EXPANSION. The recent oversubscription of the Spanish loan of 550.000,000 Is affordiag the text cf homilies on the great ad vantage accruing to Spain through the loss of her colonies. The natural but Illogical commeotary on the event Is the ruinous cost of expansion. Some few temporary signs of recuperation In Spain are taken as evidence of Its per manent rehabilitation, and the United States Is pointed to the phenomenon as a warning. In the first place. Spain 19 In a very bad way, notwithstanding this evidence of hoards among her people and their willingness to invest them in national securities, whether from motives of thrift or patriotism. The outpouring of savings does not alleviate the agri cultural distress prevalent over great part of the peninsula, nor does It abate the labor disturbances in Catalonia. Probably the best that can be expected of the present period of Spanish hope fulness Is that it is an intermission, not too short of life, in the fateful history of modern Spain. Material social and Intellectual conditions are too deeply rooted to be radically bettered by any surface indlcationa In the second place, nothing In Spain's colonial history is a precedent for American " expansion. The whole tenor of the two movements Is generlcally unlike. In her proudest years of ex pansion Spain was proverbially likened to a sieve the spoils from the New World ran through her fingers and left her no whit richer. Plundered and ex ploited to the last ounce of gold In Mex ican and Peruvian mines, drained to the last drop of blood in the veins of their tortured slaves her New World colonies were made to pour a constant stream of treasure into the lap of Cas tile, but they were squandered as fast as they arrived. Ill got, soon gone. Never was so strikingly illustrated the New Testament doctrine of the profit In giving and the ruin of self-seeking. It is a favorite argument of anti-Imperialism that we are spending more in the Spanish islands than we get from them. The Ideal of these com plainants is found in the -old Spanish policy get everything, give nothing. We are giving tremendously to Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines, not only In military and naval expenses, not only In roads and streets, bridges and sewers, sanitary and police administra tion, but in the lives of our brave sol diers and in the devoted bands of teach ers, doctors, missionaries, nurses and surveyors who frequently leave their health and sometimes their lives on the altar of the Americanization of our new possessions and the responsibilities they Incur. History leaves us In no doubt as to the difference between these two forms of expansion or as to their relative merits In the long run. The mainte nance of new territory Is costly. If it is Justly and wisely administered, but in the end It brings forth an hundred-fold in trade, in national dignity and great ness, in breadth of the racial view, and eventually, as the South African War has shown, in defensive military power. We have seen the Canadian and Aus tralian contingents hurrying to the support of the empire against the Boer uprising; and our descendants may yet see the day when to the defense of the United States against Latin or Cossack invasion the harried soil of Luzon shall rush its loyal armies to the shores of New England and the bluffs of Puget Sound. National expansion reaps what it sows. For the rapacity and cruelty of four hundred years Spain has harvested the bitter hate and eventual loss of her last foot of soil In her once vast New World empire. For the extension of British liberty at great cost to her distant isles, the United Kingdom has reaped a passionate loyalty that almost puts to shame the patriotism of the native-born. Between these two courses this country has no occasion to err. A similarity between Spanish empire and American empire Is real to nothing but the most superficial observation. The statement that cleanliness Is akin to godliness has long been accepted as true. Proof of it, however, continues to accumulate. Late evidence is found in a circular letter sent by the State Factory Inspector of Indiana to the larger manufacturing firms of the state recommending that they provide bath ing facilities for their employes, on the ground that abath after' a day's work does much to remove the desire for stim ulants. When one .thinks of the thou sands of laboxers, reeking with per spiration combined with the effluvia of rank tobacco, the pores of whose bodies are further clogged with dust, and who drop into saloon on their way "home to stimulate their flagging energies and spend money that should go to the maintenance of homes, he Is impressed with this bath Idea as with a great dis covery, and longs tq see facilities pro vided for carrying it out It is well known, however, that it Is one thing to lead a horse to the water quite an other to make him drink. It may be doubted whether a bath as a substitute for a drink, evfcn If the former were free and the latter had to be paid for, would find universal favor with thQse to whom It would do the most good. Still, the experiment is worth trying, as it is distinctly in the line of prac tical temperance endeavor and econ omy of the laborer's resources. PANAMA ROUTE PROBABLE. The hope or expectation that the Nicaragua route for an Isthmian canal will eventually be chosen through fail ure of the Panama negotiations is not encouraged by anything that has hap pened since the adjournment of Con gVesa Senator Spooner's conference with the President at Oyster Bay and his prospective Journey to Paris cer tainly lend no color to the hypothesis bf anticipated failure. Even more sig nificant is the attitude of Colombia, the country from which our title must be obtained. Nobody is going over to France to contract for the payment of $40,000,000 with the canal company if there is a reasonable probability that the deal will be nullified by our subse quent Inability to secure title to the necessary belt across the Isthmus. It will be remembered that while the Spooaer act specifically appropriates the 540,000,000 requisite for the Panama Canal Company's rights and property, the amount for buying the strip author ized for the canal was left Indefinite. Considerable latitude is left to the Ad ministration, and this Is well, for the Indications are that we shall have to do some very unpleasant Bort of dickering before the obstreperous Colombians are brought down to a rational basis. The draft of a Panama Canal treaty sub mitted by the Colombian Government provides for the immediate payment to that government of 17,000,000 by the United States. At the end of fourteen years there Is to be an agreement as to further compensation. It the two gov ernments cannot agree," the matter is to be submitted to arbitration. It Is said a hint has been given to Secretary Hay that a treaty containing the latter pro vision will not be ratified by the Sen ate, and that for this reason he has pro posed to Colombia that the demand for further compensation be dropped. To this. It is said, Colombia demurs. She wants a heavy lump sum, and a hand somo annuity besides. The ephemeral character of Latin American governments Is such as to Justify belief that the men temporarily In charge of affairs there may readily be brought to the cash Jn hand basis and let the annuity in the bush go by default. The United States certainly would do far better to pay a stated sum once for all and acquire its necessary holdings In perpetuity than to negotiate a running contract open to fresh de mands every time a new set of offi cials come In for a temporary enjoy ment of the governmental plunder. Another conclusion that compels rec ognition is that the Colombian officials will not be deterred from accepting the best offer of ready cash they can get by any consideration for their country's future rights or technical constitutional difficulties. The Panama people at Paris and the Colombian negotiators on this side will take what they can get and look upon It largely as clear profit The menaoe of the Nicaragua route will doubtless prove as efficacious in the one case as it has already done in the other. The canal will probably be built at Panama. COLLAPSE OP A CORNER. July corn m Chicago yesterday made a sensational drop of 15 cents per bushel a new record for lightning changes in the yellow cereal. The Incongruity of July wheat at 75 cents and July corn at 90 cents, or even 80 cents, was so pronounced that even the Gates clique of millionaire' operators was unable to prevent a disastrous break in the coarser grain. To what extent the possibility of the Chicago Board of Trade's establishment of a marginal price for corn figured in the break will never be known. It Is not improbable, however, that it was a prominent factor. Unhampered by any limits which the Board of Trade might put on their operations, the Gates people might have absorbed all of the corn that was offered them, and thus been in a position to put the price wherever they pleased. The shorts played the "baby act" In petitioning for the marginal price, but as they were sufficiently numerous to sell something like 15,000.000 bushels of corn while they had only about 2,000,000 bushels with which to meet call for deliveries; they without doubt had more than a fighting chance to secure help from the anti quated and unjust rule regarding the establishment of a marginal price. A not uncommon expression In com mercial circles Is the statement of some men that they will sell anything they have if they get their price for it. This Is what happened to corn. The failure of the crop last year caused a great scarcity and attendant high prices, and seldom If ever since the cereal has be come an important article of commerce has the statistical position, been as strong as it is at the present time. There is something in common, how ever, between wheat and corn, and whenever the price of the latter soars above that of the premier cereal it Is the result of unnatural conditions which the established laws of trade generally equalize with considerable celerity. When the manipulations of Mr. Gates and his friends put the price of corn jip to 90 cents for July delivery, the farm ers throughout the corn belt began sell ing their stocks down to the last "nub bin," and replacing each bushel thus disposed of with something like 14 bushels of wheat of a much greater In trinsic value, bushel for bushel, for feeding man and beast. This selling of individually small lots resulted in some thing over 800 carloads of corn being delivered in Chicago yesterday. The amount was sufficiently large to Indi cate that a continuation of the deliver ies until the end of Julyon a. similar scale might leave more corn on the market than was required at such top notch prices. The experience of Mr. Gates and his friends with corn does not differ ma terially In some respects from that of Mr. Lelter with wheat about five years ago. When the Napoleon of the wheat pit had his boom Just getting under way oa the up grade, wheat seemed scarce, and he had 'but little difficulty in taking care of all that was offered. Conditions were favorable for high prices and the market was worked up with a rush. B when the price passed $1 and $1 25 per bushel, wheat began to come out of unexpected places and all over the West and Middle West the farmers In moderate to good cir cumstances unloaded 'to the last bushel and took up corn or rye as a substitute for the higher-priced article, which was worth more to sell than It was to eat Now the situation has been reversed, but the conditions which caused the re versal are exactly the same. Lelter added millions to the wealth of the farmers with his wheat deal, and Gates has proven the same kind of a bene factor with com. It Is a matter of re gret, however, that the perpetual bears who went short on corn and then played the "baby act" were not made to suffer to the limit for their Indiscretion. - PASSING OF A GREAT OPPORTUNITY A new episode has risen to a place In the annals of the table and what a goodly company they are! There Is the story about Sheridan, who heroically devoured, unseen by any but his host ess, a stray crustacean. Informs, hor rendum, that had Inadvertently been left In the leaves of the salad, and thereby made the lady his devoted slave for life. There Is the yarn about Secretary Blaine, who Was accosted at a reception by a countryman, who, out of unfamlliarlty with Ice cream. In formed him that through some over sight the pudding had been frozen, and who promptly tasted It with every show of concern and assured the guest that he would at once have the matter looked into. Another heroism was that of the lady who. In order to spare the confusion of an awkward 'guest who had broken a rare bit of china, smashed another piece herself instantly with the remark, "Oh. we are always breaking thes? things they don't amount to anything." Then there Is the man who drank from the finger bowl to show his guests the way to cover up the error of an unlearned visitor who had inno cently perpetrated that same action In good faith. Yes, the annals of the table are full of delicious memories. But a certain Prince and Princess Engelltcheff seem to have missed the opportunity to add another to the al ready long list of charming stories. Their butler, from what motive does not appear, but presumably from com mendable originality and bravery, dis tinguished one of their dinner parties by serving soup after meat. The royal thing to do, of course, was to stand by him, and thus set a fashion which would have interest and variety If not Universal vogue. They should have given It out by looks If not by words that in their set hereafter soup after meat was the correct thing. Then they as well as the butler would have scored a gastronomic triumph. Instead, they only looked confused and shrank before the Inquiring gaze, of their guests. The butler Is hopelessly discredited, and their own dignity has suffered .serious abatement, all through the absence of quick wit and neglect of "noblesse oblige." Nobody should be a Prince or Princess, or be permitted to exercise the function of host or hostess, who fQrfeits the claim to that noble privi lege by deliberate assassination of the comfort and equanimity of guests or faithful servants. ' All of which may serve to remind us that the world we live In Is a very exacting one, and that the gbd3 of in civility and forgetfulness are always on the ajert to undo us at the unguarded moment. Thoughtlessly we fail to make room for the tired mother and child on the crowded seat, and the next moment the? car moves on, with the beautiful deed forever undone. The kind word rises to our lips, but In weariness or inattention we wait the saddened face has passed and there Is a blank In life's diadem where a star should shine. A word or even look of disapproval at a low act or a brutal word might have helped the boy or girl over a critical hour of hesitation but it wasn't thought of or was weakly neglected, and in that downward career we have a part. General Intentions are of little avail unless the fleeting impulses of the Isolated moment are instantly Im proved. No habit Is formed but by rep etition of unconsidered trifles. Unread iness is the worst of social crimes. HISTORIC STREAMS. Palmer Creek, presumably named for Joel Palmer, who for many years lived and many years ago died at Dayton, Yamhill County, Is honored ab a his toric stream. At its mouth, where it flows into the Yamhill, the first steam boat that ascended that stream made its landing; a pile of sawdust Indicates an old mlllslte near the same spot; a gristmill occupied the opposite bank of the creek, and to this mill the pioneers of a wide section brought their grist for many years. These monuments of early enterprise have long since passed away, but the creek, still bearing the name of the pathfinder, whose little guidebook was consulted for "camping places" by many successive emigra tions that came across the plains In the middle and later years of the ox-team era, still Joins Its waters with those of the river, unmindful of the flight of time or of the coming and passing of men. Modern Industries, further Indic ative of the flight of time, have sup planted the old sawmill and the ancient gristmill. A fruit evaporator turns out Its product In sharp contrast to the quartered apples strung on twine by the- thrifty housewife's darning needle and hung to dry upon her kitchen walls In the long ago. Creameries hard by mock with the abundance .of their golden output the relatively meager product of pioneer churns sacred In memory to sweet butter and frsh but termilk. A little distance away the Yamhill River, fringed with willows, glides in and out among the shadows "unresting and unhastlng and un spent," a dreamy reminder of the touching refrain of Sam Simpson's sweetest poem: Onward, ever lovely river. Softly calling to the sea; Time that scars us, malms and mars us Leaves no track or trench on thee. Gale's Creek In the foothills of Wash ington County, Is another stream which tells tales of pioneer enterprise and In dustry to those who know how and where to look for them. Here an aban doned mlllrace, the waters of which moved an upright saw that with noisy energy slowly turned logs into lumber; there a ruined flume that conveyed water to on overshot wheel that kept a single run of burrs in a flouring mill grinding wheat all day long now given over to moss and decay these are some of the evidences of early thrift fed by the waters of the stream the name of which commemorates the one-time res idence in the vicinity of Joseph Gale. Simple evidences of pioneer lUo and en deavor, these ruins are meaningless to the many; the few alone understand them and recall the era of their useful ness and activity. Mary MacLane, of Butte, author of her own "story," was stranded In Chi cago a few days ago on her way to Radcllffe College, suffering pitifully from "nostalgia," an ailment known In the annals of country towns by the old fashioned name of "homesickness." An Interviewer reports the daring Mary as follows: "Parts of my book are false; they were written in moods that I do not feel now, for I do love my people, and I do want to see them oh, so much!" All of which proves that noth ing takes the romance out of a morbid young woman like a genuine touch of reality. Blood Is thicker than water, as even Mary MacLane admits, and "nostalgia" is a distressing though not often fatal disease. It has its blessings, however, since It is related that because of her low condition Mary was relieved by a sympathetic friend from the fa tiguing business of answering ques tions about-her work and herself, what she thought of Chicago, how she liked Chicago weather, and whether she were going to see the Chicago stockyards. If she Is an appreciative young woman, sh'e doubtless blessed the disease that preyed upon her spirits as, securely locked in her own room, she Indulged In dreams, of "home and mother." The frelghthandlers' strike, now on In Chicago causes the most serious inter ruption of traffic and business that has taken place in this country since the great railway strike engineered by Eu gene V. Debs in 1894. The means taken to end this strike are well remembered. It will not be surprising If President Roosevelt will And It neceeeary to duplicate- the action of President Cleve land on that occasion, since both sides In the controversy are stubborn, freight is piled up in enormous quantities, and rioting has bogun. It is idle to suppose that a suspension of traffic which causes business men to lose 1,000,000 a day will be allowed to wear on and on until the stubbornness of one party or the other Is worn out. Adjustment, however it comes, must come In a few days. The suffering public cannot and will not stand It. The leaders of the Populists in Kan sas are reported to be deeply discour aged. The country persists in being prosperous, and calamity predictions are at a discount. The most remark able part of this statcm-c Is that there are still any EepuHsts in existence to feel discounted. Both in name and in numbers the' peat Popullstlc party Of Kansas has J0iRe( the ranfcs of th$ Prohibition pjrty of the ;.ale. nd the Greenbacfcvparjy of the middle West and withdnn lnto the shadows that form a silent Weat for ephemeral Ideas. To disturb v. ., , . - . ,, " wis reuiui suggests u at once a doleful Vmnholeruirr s'jnr in consonance with t dolefu, theologJ of a past generation. e opening n of which were: ' - W Hark from tbe,.,h. A doleful Mun&t0:nl)5 Medical men who make a specialty of gunshot .wounds and Incipient lockjaw reap a harvest in the large cities of the country In the aftermath of Fourth of July fun. The variation In the number of cases of this Itind 13 very slight from year to year, showing conclusively that the fond parent is a very poor student in the school of other people's experi ence. Remembering- their own youth, they decide that the glorious Fourth would be shorn of its glory were bombs and tey pistols forbidden, and take ohances, with results which specialty surgeons anticipate and postpone their Summer outings until August, by which time usually the danger Is past or the victims have succumbed to shock fol lowing amputation, septicemia or teta nus. . "Once the site for the Lewis and Clark Fair Is selected, all controversy upon this point should stop ' So says Dan McAHen, and so say all practical minded citizens. Manifestly, nothing can be gained by continuing the dis cussion of the relative suitability of this site or that, while, on the contrary, more or less harm to the enterprise will result. If the City Park Is selected, why, then, logically, that Is the best place for the Fair, since It Is the only place where It will be held. So with any other site. The long pull and the strong pull will come aftec the location is decided upon. If it 13 also a "pull all together," the labor of carrying the enterprise through to a successful ter mination will be materially reduced. Eugene V. Debs, erstwhile strike leader and labor agitator, is now in the Rocky Mountain lecture field, a champion of Socialism of the rankest type. Anything with Debs to get be fore the public. He dearly loves to hear the sound of his own voice, great ly resembling Bryan In this respect, and In alleged logic, whatever his theme, bearing further resemblance to the wordy Nebraskan. He is disarmed for mischief by his record, amuses himself by his talk without hurting anybody, and only tiring those who are weak enough or foolish enough to at tend and sit through his lectures. Nobody would apologize when wrong any more quickly than Mr. Bailey, de clares an Irate correspondent, a the orem heHvIU doubtless maintain regard less of any such trifling detail as the fact that Bailey was clearly proven In the wrong and declined to apologize. Mechanical Stoklngr. Engineering Magazine. The small number of men to be seen In a modern large machine works or steel mill, as compared with an old-tlmo shop of similar Importance, Is a matter which has been a frequent occasion for com ment, and this is doubtless due to the very general ute of labor-saving ma chinery. The cost of production In Indus trial establishments Is made up of the costs of raw material, wages, toolagc, taxes and Interest, of which the largest filnglo item usually Is the wagc3 cost. One way by which this Item may be re duced is by the Installment of mechanical stokers. In the .great majority of steam plants the coal is. wheeled to the boiler room by hand, XX. is fired by hand, and the ashes are removed by hand, making in plants of 2000 boiler horsepower or over a wageo cost of some considerate amount The mechanical stoker may be defined as a system of grate bars, dumping bars, cool feeders and automatic devices to feed fuel and control Its combustion, and sub sequently to drop the ashes and unburnt coaL That It Is not In any ser.ee a new Invention Is to be learned from the fact that James Watt took out a patent In 17S3 for fJich a device. The mechanical stoker is ot English origin, though It has been very thoroughly developed In the United States to suit the. local fuels and boiler furnace conditions, S PRUNE FACTS. - The San Jose Mercury, which ought to know better, gives this curious picture of the prune Industry in the State of Wash ington: - Advices from various points In Washington are to the eSect that the prune Industry In that state Is under a cloud. Many growers are cutting down their prune trees and reset tins to apples and other fruit. The heavy rains which haver come at budding time and frequently Injured the prunes have discouraged the growers. A cold, late Spring destroyed over half the crop In Clark County, which Is the largest prune-growlng section In the North west. Thousands of acres were planted to prunes In the Yakima and Walla Walla Val leys, and the .growers now believe that the experiments extending over several yars have proved that other crops wilt yield a greater profit. Many growers think that the Wash ington prunes cannot compete with those of California, as the latter can be cured In the sun. It Is true that the prunes of Washington and Oregon have sometimes come Into competition with those of California, but It has been a competition which has not been profitable. It Is baod on cheapness of quality as well as price. There was an Instance In point when the prune combine was holding out for a price without putting In operation machinery for marketing, when the Northern prunes got Into the Eastern market by cutting prices. Hut that kind of competition has no element ot permanency. The difference in quality Is another factor against the Northern growers. California III general, and the Santa Clara Talley In par ticular, are peculiarly adapted by soil and cll mato to prune-growlng. as well as curing. The less-favored region which enters into com petition with them Is taking bold of the ishort end of the lever and working at a disadvan tage which cannot be overcome. This contains two wondere one that In vention should be at once so elaborate and so stupid, and the other that it should be gravely printed by a newspaper which sets Itself up as an authority on prune matters. Now, the truth about the prune business In 'Washington, and In Oregon as well. le that it Is quite as prosperous as the prune business in the Santa Clara Valley or anywhere else. Those who tirst went Into the business here made the mistake of planting the Petite or French prune, which is Identical with that grown In California; and only in exceptional seasons have results been satisfactory. This particular variety of prune cannot be profitably cultivated in Oregon ana Washington in competition with the cheap and dirty out-of-doors-cured product of California. It Is intrinsically a better prune because it has a thinner akin, and, being cured In-doors, Is cleaner and more inviting in appearance, but In the mat ter of price it cannot meet the California competition. But the characteristic prune of the North Is not thePetite or French prune, but the Italian, which does not grow at all in California, and which cannot be duplicated either In size or quality In Cali fornia. It is nearly double the size of the California prune, and has the sub-acid flavor which finds so much favor In the markets, especially In the markets ot rfStmany and the Continent in-general. Size. '-a every person familiar with fruit matters knows, counts for much every- paneclallv In Europe, and this in g6hVcct!on with the merits of flavor ana ohD-arance under the cleanly system ot rificial evaporation, easily gives it the market wherever the two classes of fruit n,-e brought into competition. We speak Sow, of course, of first-class fruit, not or lmn.rfpptiv rurpfl and oacked Roods, such as finds Its way Into the markets from here as from every other country. It Is this advantage which the Northern prune has In the points of size, tart flavor and cleanly appearance that enables -It to meot In competition xne pruuutu " California orchards grown under more ad vantageous climatic conditions, and gener ally on a cheaper basis. The Oregon grow er cannot count on such regular returns, but pound for pound, his fruit brings a better price, and when markets, are slow -he to certain of the preference wherever the two products are shown side by side. It is possible that in the long run the Northern prunegrower would be beaten by the Callfornlan If the science of produc tion were stationary; but. fortunately, thlR in not the fact We are steadily working toward a variety of the Italian prune which will bloom a little later, and ripen a HUle earlier and so escape both the late Spring and the early Fall rains. A great ndx-anca was made when the empire wao brought out, and now we are told even more promising varieties are be ing developed. In time we shall get what we want at least this is the opinion ot experts who have given ie matter careful study. It Is possible that here and there in Oregon and Washington orchards Dlantca to wrong varTetls or In wrong situations are being out out This has been done in California In the Santa Clara Valley as elsewhere. It Is one of the universal experiences of the orchard business in evcrj country. But the assertion that prune orchards generally In Oregon and Washington are being dug out is a bald .absurdity. For every orchard dug out in a season It would be easy to show 40 new ones planted. Here as In California, where prunegrowlng has started right thnt is, where the situation is favorable, and where the business Is pursued with Intelligence and Industry It does not fall to pay. Independence and Consent. New York Sun. The enthusiasm in Manila on account of President Roosevelt's proclamation of peace and amnesty shows how easily peo ple reconcile themselves to American "tyranny." It must be saddening to the anti-Imperialists to see what craven cai tiffs these Filipino friends are. Is it not a terrible fate for a people to submit to law and settled government: to receive a wider freedom and larger rights than it ever knew before, and to prefer peace and civilization to miscellaneous throat-cutting, perpetual revolution and savagery? So many seas of tears and Ink have been shed over these recreapt Hampdens and Washlngtons. Yet all Is not lost, even if there are un worthy Filipinos. The high purpose of the anti-imperialists is not to be changed. In behalf of government by the consent of the governed, they will not cease to try to force upon the Filipinos independ ence without and against their consent The Filipinos must be Independent, wheth er they want to be or not Confound the scoundrels! What do they mean by rebell ing against' the anti-Imperialists, throwing over their rescuers and beading basely to satraps and despots? 1 1 Old Arc Fcnslom. Philadelphia. Ledger. Viewing the subject academically, many people will agree with Dr. Edward Ever ett Hale's proposition that persons in the decline of life should be pensioned by tho state, and this would seem, to be a neces sary corollary to the opinion expressed b" certain labor radicals that no man over the age of 45 should be given employment But, though something of the kind has already been begun In England, It will be a long time before the matter will be considered other than academically In this country. Most of our aged people have either means of their own or have rela tives able to support them. In the full ness of time, however, organized society will probably see Its way clear to some better method of caring for the old .and infirm than is now provided by the alms houses. The IVavnl Appropriation. Pittsburg Post ' Tho naval bill, as it passed Congress at the close of the session, makes ample provision to satisfy moderate people about the Increase of the navy. As for the place of construction, the decision of Congress to have ono battle-ship built in a Government navy-yard seems deserv ing of commendation. Conceding all that may be said as to the superldr and quick er work turned out In private yards, it is -well to keep at least one of the estab lished Government plants' in operation. The shipbuilding companies have lately combined and it would not be wise for the Government to place Itself In their power. PORTLAND'S ENVIABLE FAME. Minneapolis Tribune. The rest of the country found a deal of Interest nearly a year ago in a rather striking experiment of municipal reform made by the City of San Francisco. Sick of mlsgovemment and grafting by both political parties, and hopeless of relief by any ordinary means of municipal reform, the city deliberately elected a wild-eyed Socialist Mayor. Under the system pre vailing In San Francisco, this brought about pretlv complete revolution in the city government, as the Mayor seems to control most of tho municipal depart ments. So far as can be Judged from the city papers, the result of the experiment has been fairly good. Certainly life and property am as safe as ever, there Is no complaint of corrupt administration, and the business of the city seems to be car ried on with reasonable efficiency. Now comes the smaller city of Portland, Or., with an experiment In municipal gov ernment at the opposite end of the scale. We don't remember any tales of notorious corruption In Portland; but there must be some cause for a departure from the usual practice quite as remarkable in Its way as that In San Francisco. The latter city chose a labor leader; the former has chosen Its most eminent citizen. Every body will remember Senator Williams, who was a member of Grant's Cabinet and was . nominated for Chief Justice of the United States. His position In Portland must re semble very closely that of Alexander Ramsey In St Paul. Fancy Governor Ramsey being elected Mayor of St Paul, or Senator Washburn 'Mayor ot Minne apolis. But Senator Williams did not think It beneath his dignity to be elected Mayor of Portland, and he is taking- hold of the work of administration with great vigor. The experiment does not end wltfi the Mayoralty. The new Mayor Is getting the most eminent citizens to serve in places usually turned over to political grafters, to recoup themselves for campaign con tributions or pay themselves for political servicer. His Police Commissioner is the .leading banker of the city, a man who might be compared to Mr. Bell here or Mr. Upnam In St. Paul. Another leading banker goes on the Board of Public Works, and other offices are filled on the "same remarkable plan. It is all very well to Bay that every city would like to command the services of men like these. If they could b6 had. But tangible evi dence of this Is lacking. We doubt if any rran would think it beueath his dignity to accept the Mayoralty of any city, if it were offered with cordial unanimity as a 'tributi of public confidence and admira tion. These are not the kind of men most cities want for Mayor,' more's the pity. It they wertr. there would not be the least difficulty about getting them to serve. Golden Days. St Louis Globe-Democrat These are golden days for the United States. It will be hard to beat the pres ent great record In business activity and general prosperity. Tho coal strike is the only adverse feature in the financial situation of any consequence, but nobody now looks for so much embarrassment therefrom as was feared a few weeks ago. There is some talk about gold ex portation soon, as a result of the opening of South Africa to development, but this has no peril for the country. The gold production of the United States, which was J32.000.000 In 1S00. and which stood near that mark for several years, was SSO.000.COO in 1501, and, from the present outlook, as' based on the figures for the past six months, will be $S3,OOO,OG0 In 1002. The country can spare many millions of gojd. Its hoard of that metal is greater than it ever has been in the past, and far greater than that of any other coun ery, even than France. Germ-Cnrrylnsr Pljceons. New York Sun. An epidemic of carlet fever, starting In Cincinnati, has ftpread In the last few weeks through a number of towns in Ohio, and the health authorities, after taking extraordinary precautions to con fine the disease within the limit oflts first ravages, wero puzzled to understand tile means by which It was carried elsewhere. They made an investigation and have now come to the conclusion that much of the contagion was spread by tame pigeons and doves, which carried the germs from place to place. The evidence on which this the ory Is baed Is that scarlet fever spread under strict quarantine from a house on the roof of which there was a large pig eon cote. The only livestock about tho house not quarantined wa the pigeons, which flew about the neighborhood. If they didn't carry the disease germs the authorities don't know how the fever was spread. The Morning Snmmons. When the mist Is on the river, and the hare Is on the hllla. And the promise of the Springtime all the am ple heaven Alls; When the shy things In the wood-haunts and the hardy on tho plains Catch up heart and feel a leaping life through Winter's sluggish veins; Then the summons of the morning like a buglo moves the blood. Thon the soul of man grows larger, like a flower from the bud; For the hope of high Endeavor Is a cordial half divine. And the banner cry of Onward calls the lag gards Into line. There Is glamour offhe moonlight when the stars rain peace below. But the stir and smell of morning Is a better thing to know; While the night Is hushed and hoWcn and transpierced, by dreamy song, tiO, the dawn brings dew' and Are and tho rap ture of the strong! Richard Burton. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGHAPIIEItS The Suitor What do you consider the essen tial difference between friendship and love? "From five to ten thousand a year.' Life. More Cruelty. "I moke It a rule." he said, "to learn something every day." "My!" she replied. "How fast you must forget." Chi cago Record-Herald. On Toast. McJIgger The robin Is a very timid brd. Isn't tt7 Thlnsumbob I guess so. At any rate, the average restaurant cook can make It quail. Philadelphia Press. "His attentions to you have been marked, have they not?" catd the young woman's ex perienced friend. "Oh. yes. He has never taken the price-tag oft any of his presents." Til-BIU. John's Scheme. "John's college expenses must have come hlgh.""Yes, they did; but John's a good boy. He says If I give him a share In the business, he'll pay me back." Detroit Free Press. Another Theory. Phyllis Yes; he was pay ing attention to hor quite a long time. 'Blanche Perhaps he hadn't the courage to propose. Phyllis Oh, I don't know. Perhaps he had tho courase not to propose. Brooklyn Life. His Chief Solicitude. "How do you think you stand with the voters In your town?" "I never trouble myself about that," answered Senator Sorrhum; "but I stand all rlsht with the men who control the voters." Washington Star. It Was Hot Visitor (to Nebraska farmer) It has been oretty hot out here this Summer, has It not? Farmer Hot? Well, rather. Why. we even had to put lee In the pond to keep the ducks from laying hard-boiled eggs. Judse. Times Were Changed. Clara (to her old chum) And that horrid Jones boy that used to seater you with his love-making does he worry you as much as ever? Ethel Well, hardly: you see, we're married now. Balti more News. Tho Wily Dan and the Wary Kitchener. It was Just Saturday week when some of us expected tho peace settlement, that a worthy dean a most reverend gentleman possibly sly ly thought he could steal a march on Lord Kitchener. Ho telegraphed from the Orange River Colony, saying: "As I am acting as chap lain, and conducting divine service In very many camps tomorrow, may I ask if the hymn, 'Peace. Perfect Peace. would not be a most appropriate one to give out to be sung' And the great "X." wired reply: "Please your self; but I think 'Onward. Christian Soldier,' qulto as good." Pretoria (June 1) correspond enco London Telegraph. Vote and comment. Nobody complains about the weather but the Ice-man. If all Merrill's relatives go to his funeral It will have to be an open-air affair. A number of wild Indians are hunting Tracy, and there are evidently others. We haven't had a fire'for nearly two days. Is what remains of the town fire proof? The police never have to break up a fight In San Francisco. They are all given reserved seate. Tracy's chivalrous nature Is such that he scorned to put In a claim for the re ward for Merrill. The man who can show people how to live without meat, oil, sugar or steel, will be a popular Idol Indeed. Will our esteemed contemporary, the Congressional Record, be represented at the Jeffries-Fitzslmmons fight? Even the most fashionable of New York millionaires have not got to the point of ordering Panama hats for their horses. J. P. Morgan says he never plays poker, but his recent actions show that he is not oblivious to the value of a pair of Kings. Kansas finds that she cannot beat her politicians Into threshing machines and her spellbinders Into self-binding harvest ers. Perhaps if Tracy Is allowed a Httje more liberty he will get angry with himself and put himself in a position to claim the rest of tho reward. Of course, the surgeons who operated on the King will charge other patients extra for slicing them up with the instruments used on His Majesty. Aguinaldo will go to Boston by the Sues route, of course. He won't take chances going through the country in which pa triotic Americans are found. ( If Mr. Donnelly had attended a meeting of the Port of Portland Commission In the days of Its strenuoueness, he might, not be so hasty about calling It names. George J. Charlton, general passenger agent ot the Alton road. Is in receipt of a postal card, dated at Jollet, 111.. June 20. as follows: "Five years ago I used your road to Jollet, and have never used any other since." The writer does not sign his name, but gives his number, which In dicates that he is still In the penitentiary. He also gives the official number of tha state penitentiary building. His versatile and irrepressible Majesty. Emperor William II, has been fulminating again. This time It is one of the idols of his own nation, the late Richard Wagner, who has incurred the royal disaffection. The Emperor has been attending some op era performances at "Wiesbaden, and It is reported that he delivered himself thus weightily In comment thereon: "Wagner," affirms His Majcety, "I do not like; he is too noisy for me; indeed, the simple and withal so wonderful music of Gluck Is more to my liking." No day passes In Washington without giving gossips a new story about Presi dent Roosevelt One of the latest tells that Immediately after Senator Fairbanks rushed Into the Senate with a resolution appropriating 510O.C0O for the- relief of the Martinique sufferers, some one called the President up on the telephone and told h:m what had been done. That same afternoon Mr. Roosevelt sent In a message recommending that $500,000 be appropriat ed. "The ?100,000 would have been enough, but you know," said ono member of Con gress, "Fairbanks has been talked of as a candidate for the Presidential nomina tion." The following little scene at an Inquest upon the body of a murdered man Is re ported by a correspondent of "The Anglo Russian" from Astrakhan: The Coroner (dictating to the clerk: "On the table wes found a bottle. . . . No; stop for a mo ment; wo must ascertain Its contents." The Coroner, tasting the liquid, dictates: "The bottle contained English gin. . . . perhaps not; I am not sure; taste It your self." The clerk having done so, replies: "I think It Is simply strong vodka." The Coroner, tossing off another glass: "No, really. It tastes like gin." The clerk, tasting the liquor again: "I still think It Is only vodka." The bottle having grad ually become empty, the Coroner proceed ed to dictate In a decisive tone. "Write: An empty bottle was found on the table, and all measures taken to ascertain what It contained were of no use." PEOPLE WORTH KXOWKG ABOUT. Howard P. Frothlngharo. of 2 Wall street. New York, has arobably loaned more money than any other man who over lived. He repre sents leading banks and trust companies on tho floor of the exchange, and It Is no uncommon thing for blra to loan from $1,000,000 to f20,00O, 000 a day In times of money stringency, at prices ranging from 3 to ISO per cant On these loans ho receives handsome commissions, anil Is today ono of tho richest brokers on tho L street. He has been long known for the per fection of his dress and the urbanity of his manners. Baron Oppcnhelm, a German, "who has been traveling and observing in this country for several months, was asked what he thought oC American women. "That Is- a delicate sub ject, "especially as I am not leaving tbe coun try and might get Into trouble by dlscusslns It I can only regret that your American girls refuse to emigrate to my country. Tho American woman is truly a product of your climate, all vigor and freshness and a gentle aggressiveness that makes her a delightful con trast to the monotonous sameness and less vivacious sister across the sea." James Bryce. M. P.. In his recent address before Oxford University, said: "I have been struck by hearing men In the Rocky Mountains, who would have concealed any Infusion of negro bloody mention that their mothers or grandmothers had been Indians." A differ ence between .the Teutonic and the South Euro pean races was hero noted, the latter feeling far less repulsion to Intermarriage with a col ored race. "Where Americans. Englishmen and Germans rule," he said, "there Is no In termarriage with the color races, and conse quently no proSFct of race fusion." Bartlett G. Young, this year's president of the Yalo University Banjo Club. Is of Chinese parentage, though born In this country. Hla father. Dr. Young. Wing, graduated from Yalo In 185 and lattr married & Miss Kellogg, member of a prominent Connecticut family and a famous beauty in her day. He lived in Hartford for many years, being on lntlmata terms with Mark Twain. Charles Dudley War ner and other notable literary persons, and only returned to his native country on tha death of his wife. a few years ago. At tho time of hlji boy's birth. Dr. Young was a special envoy of China In Washington, and therefore the young man Is held to be a Chi nese, though born in this country. They say In London hat Lord Kitchener's unwillingness to be tho central figure of a big military display on his return to London Is quite characteristic of the man. To him warfaro is a business, and the spectacular aldo of It makes no appeal whatever to his Imagination. When he came back from the Soudan after crushing the Khalifa and had re ceived hl3 peerage and a grant ot $150,000, ho was entertained at dinner 07 merchants and business men of London. When it came his turn to speak, ho said In a simple, offhand way something like this: "Gentlemen, I aia very much obliged for tho complimentary things that you have said to me. You say that you aro very"anxloua to show your good will. Very well. Tell mo how I can Invest 1 this 30.090 so as to get 8 per cent oa It" V