THE MOBNINC? OREGOyiAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1902. fre x2$onicax 1 Entered at the Postoface at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mall (postage prepaid. Jn Advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month 55 Dally, Sunday excepted. per year... J ;J Dally, with Sunday, per year J Sunday, per year ............,.......- a The Weekly, per year J" The Weekly. 3 months w To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered, Sunday ereepted.lBo DaUy. per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.2Qo POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: SO to 14-page paper... ...............J K to 2S-page paper... ...... ......"'0 Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication to The Orejronlan ehould be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the nam or any IndlvlduaL letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter ahould be addressed simply "The Orejronlan." Eastern Business Office. 3. 44. 43. 4T. 45. 49 Tribune building. New Tork City; E10-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwltb Special Agency. Eastern representative. For rale in San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Uros.. 233 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts. 100S Market street: J. K. Cooser Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news stand; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and 2i. WheaUey. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines,' 305 So. Eprtng street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento -News Co., 423 K street. Sacramento, CaL For sale In Vallejo, Cal by N. Watts. 403 Georgia street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 17 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. t3 Washington street. For cole Jn Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street; Megeatb Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake Newi Co.. 77 W. Second South street. For rale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey A Co , 24 Third Ftret South. For tale In Washington. D. C, by the Ebbett House new stand. For rale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. DOG-912 Seventeenth street; Louthan A- Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. 15th and Lawrence street; A. Series, Sixteenth and Cur tis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, wMh south to west winds. TEPTERDAT'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 77; minimum temperature, 53; pre cipitation, none. . PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30. HOPE FOR. CHINA. Great Britain's pending treaty with China, promises most momentous things for the development and future welfare of the great .Asiatic Empire. To the five great treaty ports it Is proposed to add four, namely, Chang Sha, Nanking, "Wan Hsien and Wal Chou. There is an undertaking looking toward amicable settlement of the missionary problem, while other articles deal with the reg istration of trade-marks, the navigation of the Yangtse and Canton Rivers, bonded warehouses, the equalization of duties on junks and steamers, facilities for draftsacks, the establishment of a national currency, the revision of the mining regulations, new regulations for the navigation of inland waters, the opening of Kong Muh as a treaty port on the West River, and the appoint ment of joint commissions to settle dis putes. The benefits of these reforms will not be- confined to Great Britain or China herself, but will ere long spread to other nations, and work pow erfully for prosperity and peace. Yet the most important part of this treaty Is, wo should say, the proposal to substitute an additional Import duty at the seacoast. In lieu of all likin du ties, stations and barriers, and every form of internal taxation on British goods. Here is a proposed removal of an obstacle to internal trade which for cibly suggests the enormous domestic development of the United Statee, due in great part to the inspired policy of free trade between the states. The eventful benefits of these abrogations, when we contemplate their extension to other powers and their Influence in free ing all interior trade In China, can readily be recognized as stupendous. There can be no manner of doubt that a reform of this sort would nave re moved much of the present friction over the war indemnity. The original proto col seems to have erred In leaving In tact the whole administrative corrup tion of the empire. It is said that there is hardly a province in the empire where the money collected meets the quota assigned to it of the annual in stallments; but the declaration Is made with equal confidence by observers on the spot that at the rate the people are being taxed in some rlaces the whole Indemnity could be paid off in five years' time. In the Province of Chi 1.1 it was said that the late Viceroy, Li Hung Chang, had already collected the amount due for two years ahead, and yet reports are current that some of the local magistrates have been, extorting money from the people in unheard-of amounts, all in the name of the foreign indemnity. In short, the indemnity has been seized on. by the mandarins as a pretext for doubling and trebling the burden of taxation for their own profit and to the consequent revival of feeling against the foreigner. "We are familiar with the operation of the law that moral obliquity In leg islation induces commercial difficulties. China is an evidence that the converse is also true; for the source of the awful corruption that hangs like a pall over the empire's Interior is readily traceable in part to the provincial Isolation. The mandarins or governors, being in re ceipt of the provincial revenues, are paid almost nothing by the Pekln Gov ernment. Hence they resort to plunder. Exactions of all kinds are unscrupu lously plied, justice is sold, and the re sult is dishonesty and untruthfulness among the people. Bribery and torture are the accredited agencies of public opinion and official conduct All these things are menaced by freer trade among the provincea Tariff reform may readily prove the Influence that is to open interior China to redemptive forces of "Western civilization. The Lake George conference of anti imperialists has framed up an indict ment of civilization that may well cause the stoutest heart to quail. One can only conclude from this complaint that not only the President, Cabinet, Con gress, Army and Navy and Supreme Court are engaged in a conspiracy to enslave the Filipinos and elevate false hood to the place of truth, but that the entire population, with the exception of the devoted band at Lake George, Is consenting to the Infamy. One shud ders at the thought of leaving a circle of human beings, however small, in such extremity of dejection, but there appears tittle else to do. All that can be done to console them "has been done. It remains, perhaps, to show them that In proposing to rescue "the good name of the country," for which they fear, by proving the Army a band of robbers and cut-throats without a redeeming feature, they embark on a vain and foolish errand, but this would undoubt edly be an error. There is no convinc- ing them of anything but their own Impeccability and the. otherwise hope less Iniquity of all mankind, and this they already know. The case la appar ently hopeless. CONDITIONS PRELIMINARY. There are a great many Democrats Who are for harmony regardless of the UKes ana dislikes of men like Cleveland and Bryan, Gorman and Hill, Watter son and Yilaa. Unfortunately they are, while numerous, not powerful enough to prevail over those same eminent statesmen. Theoretically, every Demo crat is an Independent sovereign. Prac tlcally, every Democrat Is actuated by the same sheeplike propensity to run In a bunch which animates human beings generally. The Chicago convention had its Bryan, but Republican conventions have had their Garfields, Blalnes, In gersolls and Conkllngs. A summary of the New York Herald's poll of Democratic committeemen, print ed In our Washington dispatches yes terday, shows the strong hold that Bryan still retains upon .his party. From an interview had by a New York Sun man with the Nebraska candidate. It appears he regards Mr. Cleveland as "nothing at all," "of no account," etc., and views both Hill and Gorman as completely removed from Democratic consideration now or hereafter, because they had "sulked in 1896 and 1900." At the recent Nantasket Beach gathering It was necessary to exclude Cleveland on Bryan's account and Hill on Shep ard's account. Where the Cleveland wing dines the Bryan wing will not sit down, and under the ' BryAnlo tents there is no room for the Cleveland braves. Even in the party of great principles, by which we are given to understand the Democratic party Is somewhat re dundantly described, we must take ac count of great men; and It may as well be observed here and now, as In July or even November, 1904, that there can be no effective agreement on principles until we can, get some agreement be tween persons. Draw up a platform embodying what-Cleveland and Bryan can both sign, and that is not harmony, so long as the two men with their fol lowers are personally hostile. And hos tile they are. Neither will refer to other except In terms Invidious. From such a situation, harmony is very re mote. Get the antagonistic Democrats together and they will agree on a plat form fast enough. Large numbers of Democrats went for Eilver for no other reason than that Cleveland, whom they hated, was for gold. The personal ele ment Is a force in politics that must be reckoned with. VOTERS BY COMPULSION. Professor Barnes, of Philadelphia, says: "I would. If I could, give woman the ballot tomorrow,, but I would de mand that she use her right. If she did not, I would fine her. If she did not pay her fine, I would imprison her." This view is in accord with that of a Toledo (O.) statesman recently ex pressed, for the cure of what he terms "official Infidelity," except that he would make suffrage compulsory upon men, especially In primary ejections. He argues that If even' man could be compelled to assist In choosing party candidates, better men would be chosen than now, and prevalent political evils would cease. This is an extreme view of the case, and one that cannot be sustained. It strikes at the very foun dation of republican Institutions, which is individual volition. Compulsory at tendance at primary elections or at the general hustings would be an infrac. tion of this fundamental principle. Its very Inception Is abusrd. Good citizens, as all will allow, ought to pte at the primaries. A wider application of this principle than usual in our own pri maries last Spring disclosed the power that is behind alert citizenship. Good citizens should also control the cau cuses; but compulsory attendance at political functions, even could It be se cured, would cot make good citizens of men who are habitually careless of their public duties. The political need of the time Is not, says the Pittsburg Gazette, a compul sory suffrage law, but "an awakened public conscience that will move men to labor voluntarily! for honest adminis tration of the public, buslnesa" As long as voters do not care enough about the affairs of state to give them voluntary attention, there can be nothing gained in good government by driving them to the polls, for when, there they would vote carelessly. The almost universal disinclination of women to engage in public affairs is the rack upon which the Contention of woman suffrage has long been stranded. Professor Barnes' proposition to give women the ballot and then arrest, fine or imprison them if they do not use It is sufficiently ab surd. Only less so is the proposition to bring men who do not prize the bal lot highly enough to use It voluntarily and interestedly to the primaries and later to the election booths by compul sion. Good citizenship is not, induced or cultivated in that way. GERMANY'S STRINGENT MEAT-IN-T3PECTION LAW. The German meat-Inspection law, dis cussed at great length and with some acrimony for some years, Is finally to be put in effect In October of the present year. This law was passed In June, 1900. The first section, prohibiting the Importation of canned meats, went Into effect in October of the same year. The other sections, providing for the inspec tion of all home and foreign meats, have been held In abeyance pending the construction of a competent staff of in spectors. These arrangements have been practically completed, and, as stated above, the law will be enforced In detail from and after October 1. It provides for the most thorough inspec tion of animals, slaughter-houses and meats throughout the empire, and of all meats imported. Fully 75 per cent of the preserved meats Imported into Ger many come from this country. Thlsjlm portatlon will be seriously affectedby the prohibition of the use of boracic acid and other preservatives in common use by American packers. Under these re strictions the value of canned meats im ported into Germany shrunk from $10, 000,000 in 189S to $4,000,000 in 190L So severe are the .restrictions imposed upon fresh meats that the natlpn even now forces a meat famine. Hamburg butchers had no beef recently because Denmark sent short supplies and Aus tria failed to meet the deficiency. Ac cording to the Tageblatt, Berlin had to pay famine prices in consequence. This means, of course, that a very large proportion of the city's population did not have and could not get meat. While this condition does not mean the hardship to the common people of 'Germany that it would mean to those of any American community, it means great dissatisfaction, and will result In strong protest against the law. The German people arc not, as gauged by the American standard, great meat eaters, but to cut off their supply will be to cause great complaint and not a little suffering. This Is what the new Inspection law threatens to do. American Imports have already been greatly curtailed, and in retaliation for the unnecessarily strict inspection Imposed, the shippers of fresh meats in Denmark, Austria, Hol land and Russia will turn elsewhere for trade. The results of the new law will be to Increase the cost, of meat In Ger many and greatly curtail the exports of American canned meats to that coun try. With their usual enterprise Amer ican packers will turn elsewhere for a market and leave Germany to the mi croscopic Inspection of meats as provid ed by this long-threatened law, and no meat to inspect. The United States, through the Department of Agriculture, has taken means to provide a reason able system of meat Inspection. It Is plain that its overtures have been re jected for the purpose of discriminating against American meats rather than in the Interest of the 'health of the Ger man people. This being true, it Is wise to seek a new market to replace the withdrawal of Germany as an importer of American, canned meats, and leave the German people to amend the law or to abide by Its conditions, unvexed by further protest from this side of the water. LIBERAL DIVORCE LAWS. Discussions of marriage and divorce reform Bcem to obtain Increasing inter est throughout the country. No sub ject is more deserving of consideration and on no subject is so much worthless stuff enunciated. The BoufTaon evan gelists are hopelessly wedded to their Idols because they are determined that modern freedom of divorce shall be adjusted to the demands of a dead and burled social and religious civilization. These advocates of divorce solely on Scriptural grounds when they are Protestants have not a leg to stand upon, for Martin Luther himself did not assume this position, and the Puri tans made marriage a civil procedure by magistrate rather than a religious rite. It is an indictment of clerical good sense that the' strongest opposi tion to the enlargement of modern di vorce laws has come, not from the courts, but from the church. To the Influence of the church in the past does woman owe the fact that not until com paratively recent years could the no blest woman obtain full divorce from the most brutal husband unless she could prove adultery on his part or persistent desertion for many years. When we remember what a hell can be made of a home to a decent woman without other than ceaseless cruelty of speech, It seems Incredible that for many years an excellent woman, ut terly lost all hope of conjugal happi ness In this life If she happened to choose for her first husband a malig nant tyrant against whom no act of adultery could be proved. Take the case of Mrs. Norton, the beautiful and gifted grand-daughter of Richard Brlnsley Sheridan, whose gen ius found voice In "Blngeti on the Rhine." Her brutal husband accused her of an intrigue with Lord Mel bourne. The courts triumphantly vin dicated the fame of Mrs. Norton,, but under the laws of England she could only obtain a separation from her slan derer and persecutor. This miserable husband survived his separation many years, and finally, on his death, a dis tinguished English nobleman of the highest rank married Mra Norton in her old age. The case of George Eliot (Marlon Evans) and George Henry Lewes Is well known. Because he had condoned his wife's first elopement, he had no remedy against her when she eloped a second time. The marriage of the deceased wife's sister Is still pro hibited in England. It would be easy to multiply histor ical illustrations of the far-reaching social and political mischief that has been wrought In Europe by limitation of divorce solely to causes approved by the church. There is nothing surpris ing that the church, with its charac teristic craft, endeavored to insinuate itself into the essential, supreme gov ernment of the state. There Is nothing remarkable In the papacy granting or refusing great Kings and Princes di vorce, but it Is remarkable that after the Reformation the Protestant Church persisted in trying to rule the state through the church, not only under Elizabeth, James and Charles I, who persecuted the Puritans, but under the Puritans In Old England and New England after the Puritans' had cut off the head of the blessed martyr. Peri odically the strong brain of Cromwell rose superior to his superstitious faith In government by theocracy, and he would stamp his foot and disperse the cruel clergy that busied themselves drowning demented old women In Scot land as witches on the strength of Bible texts, but even In the day of Will iam HI, after the great revolution, the New England theocracy hanged inno cent men and women for witchcraft and 1 Quakers for heresy. To this tenacious me or. tne cnurcn in tne life of the state 'even after stte and church were divorced do we owe the cruel limited divorce laws that during the larger part of the nineteenth century were supreme Upon the statute-book. A correspondent writes The Oregonlan saying that in its issue of February 9 Chatham was spoken of as "a compara tively cheap man," while In The Orego nlan of July 17 Chatham Is described as "perhaps the greatest Prime Minis ter that ever ruled England." The Oregonlan, in Its Issue of February 19, was describing Edmund Burke, the greatest political thinker of permanent quality ot his century, and 'among other things said: If to the understanding and Imagination of Burke had been added the matchless elocution of Sheridan, Burke rather than Chatham would have been the greatest orator of his century. He was the most eloquent thinker, but his voice was so badly managed and his whole elocu tionary methods bo defective that a compara tively cheap man like Chatham could surpass him In the power to thrill and sway an audi ence to tears, to mutiny or rage. There Is no inconsistency In our lan guage concerning Chatham. A great Prime Minister, a great executive, a magnetic orator. Is a comparatively cheap man when measured by the greatest political thinker and writer of his century. To Illustrate: Henry Clay was a magnetic orator, a man of great executive energy and force, a great Sec retary of State, but as an Immortal political thinker he was completely out classed by Alexander Hamilton. Cal houn or Webster. Hamilton and Web' ster reverenced Burke as a political thinker of the first order of genius for Jail time, while Chatham was a' great war minister, -a great executive and administrator, a great man, but no more to be compared In permanent fame to an exceptional political philosopher and thinker like Burke than a great Min ister of Foreign Affairs like Talleyrand or a War Minister like Carnot could be compared with Goethe, whom Napoleon treated as his Intellectual peer as a political thinker. We would direct attention of capital ists everywhere to this utterance of the New York Evening Post: Aside from the Intensifying Inconvenience and loss to which tha public Is being put by tho Indifferent and dilatory attitude of the coal operators, tho latter are rapidly alienating the sympathy of fair-minded men by the way In which they confuse all Just Ideas of what a freo labor market really Is. Such a market Implies that. If certain employes will not work, others can be found to take their places. It U this possible competition which Is one element In fixing the rate of wages, and one safeguard against Insensate strikes. But the companies have not Invoked It. Indeed, they practically admit that they must depend for labor upon their old employes. But what Inference do they draw from this? That they should seek an adjustment with tho men? No, they say to them. In effect. "We need you; In fact, we cannot get along without you. But wo will make no concession to your union, and shall wait till starvation drives you to beg work of us." That position cannot satisfy either tho humane Instincts or the reasoning faculties of the public It Is an entirely new, and not at all a sound or commendable way of dealing with a strike. If tho operators cannot get new men. and will not treat with their old ones, they had better announce their abandonment of tho mines and thflr complete retirement from business. Their cold threat of starving tho strikers Into submission is calculated to embit ter, In a foolish and wholly needless way, tho relations of labor and capital In this country. That Is what makes It a public wrong. In which wo all have a concrn. The Post's relations to capital and to the employing classes are too well known to need explanation. Its utter ance isa very significant sign of the times. Professor Earl Barnes, of Philadel phia, gave what he termed a practical talk before the National Council of school principals and superintendents In session at Chautauqua, N. Y., last week, of which It Is said he "spared neither men nor women" In his criti cism of teachera Said he: The great trouble with the teaching profession Is that there Is no solidarity In It. One roan Is making an experiment In one town, another man In another town, and neither confides In the other. It Is my dream that teachers shall stand together as physicians do. They consider It a much greater crime for a physician to He to another physician than to any other man. If teachers were so united, our Influence would be tremendous. We could. In a few years, mako all tho Americans anarchists. Christians or 'anything we choose. Heaven save us from a teachers' trust, for which "solidarity" Is only a tech nical name, if this estimate of its possL ble power- is correct. A combination that could make of all Americans any thing It chose, from anarchists to Christiana Is to be dreaded, since no man can say what might be the trend of Its effort It may be feared that even "Christians" molded by an educa tional trust whose power was absolute would be most un-Chrlstlan In their in terpretation of what constitutes Chris tianity, 'while the very suggestion that "solidarity" in the teacher's profession would be able to transform Americans bodily Into anarchists should be suffi cient to make the most bitter opponent, of women as educators be thankful that they are in large majority In the teach er's profession. Professor Barnes blames them for .the condition he de plores, saying: "Women Will not stand for solidarity." Truly, we have some things to be thankful for, even In this age of pedagogics, pedagogues and pedagogy. The Philadelphia Ledger notes tho rebukes which have been administered In the West to the Republican support ers of the beet In Congress, and ob serves: "In other words, wherever the people get a chance to express their views, even In the beet-sugar states, they are willing and eager to follow an honorable and enlightened course. The so-called Representatives have misrep resented their constituents; they have made the grievous mistake of playing narrow, small politics because they have underestimated the intelligence and honesty of their own constituents, who are ready to support a policy which they believe Is In accord with National duty and honor. The President Is sup ported by the people on this question, and by making an Issue of it he has helped raise the tone of politics." Pittsburg seems to be the special home of typhoid fever. A recent compilation made by authority of the Chamber of Commerce of that city showed a grand total of Ilia cases of this disease there In five months. This, for a preventable disease, and one not personally con tagious, is an appalling record. Ty phoid is classed by the experts as a water-borne disease. The water supply and drainage of a city must be some thing frightful to contemplate when this disease assumes the character and proportions of an epidemic and rages with the fury and fatality of a pesti lence. All cities cannot have Bull Run water, but any city can, In this age of Intelligent engineering, ingenious de vices for filtration and meekness under taxation, have a relatively pure water supply. Details of the Baldwin-Carlson fight, which resulted In the death of the lat ter, as brought out at the hearing be fore the Municipal Court, are shocking to the moral sense and disgusting to the ordinary sensibilities of all decent persons. It Is clear that somebody, and indeed more than one. should be se verely punished for this disgraceful af fair and Its fatal termination. There are those who set this murder on, and these are they who are directly respon slble for the fight and its result. It Is to be presumed that Judge Jack son has no present purpose of running for office. No more expeditious road to unpopularity could be devised than his violent language and drastic rulings against the peaceful methods of trades union persuasion. Unique, also. Is his idea of the baseness of feeding strikers to keep them from Btarving to death. The Judge is not doing a great deal to popularize "government by Injunc tion." The San Francisco Examiner has lured Mayor Schmidt Into the an nouncement that he will Investigate the Jeffrfes-Fitzslmmons mill to find out whether it was a fake. This Is pretty buslnesa for a Mayor- Truly, the "jour nalism that does "things" is a success in "doing' people. Tracy has escaped his pursuers, but fortunately he has a face that will betray him wherever he goes, and un fortunately he has a penchant for crookedness that will forever keep him from losing himself under any name In the ranks of honest industry anywhere. EASTERN SUPERCILIOUSNESS. Chicago Record-Herald. Two characteristic Instances of the ai fected or real ignorance ot the Eastern press concerning men and affairs in the West have recently appeared In the New York Evening Post and the New York Times, two papers of large pretensions In the discussion of National affairs. In an oracular deliverance concerning the con ditional Indorsement of Senator Spooner by the Wisconsin Republican State Con vention the Evening Post said: Robert M. La Follctte, an ambitious and forceful politician, appears to be a man of much the same type as the late Hazen S. Plncree In Michigan, and. like him, Is consid ered by many a thoroughgoing demagogue. The most casual knowledge of National politics, to say nothing of Wisconsin af fairs, should have saved our contemporary from abreak like ibis. Governor La Fol lette figured in National politics before he became a candidate for tho Governorship on a platform largely of his own making. When in Congress, as a member of the ways and means committee, he took a prominent part In framing the McKlnley bill. He is a man of good education, a graduate of tho State University, a suc cessful lawyer, a natural leader and a man to be reckoned with among the strong men of the Republic. He has won his place by having convictions and by fighting for them against traditional wrongs and political do roL There Is nothing to BUggest the late Hazen S. PIngrce in his make-up. They aro as dissimilar as the potato and the peach. In Wisconsin politics Governor La Follette has been his own roaster. Like its metropolitan contemporary, the New York Tiroes affects a wide grasp of National affairs, and yet we find it pre facing a discussion of the problem of compulsory arbitration with such a para graph as this: We have not too pleasure of a personal ac quaintance with Judge Murray F. Tuley, of Illinois, nor do we know bis standing In the Judiciary of that state. ,But the address he delivered before the Bar Association on Fri day gives us the Impression that he la a gen tleman of excellent aenlments, sadly cloaked and muddled by confuted Ideas. This smacks more of tho condescend ing ignorance of a college graduate nowly endowed with the editorial WE than of the well-considered dicta of a well-informed writer for the New York Times. Not to know Murray F. Tuley, who for a quarter of a century has been a Circuit Judge in Chicago, and who has been one of the most distinguished public men in the Northwest for more than a genera tion, Is to confess to truly metropolitan provincialism. Judge Tuley's Ideas on the necessity for i somo legislation that will force great cor porations to arbitrate differences with their employes, where their disputes en tall 'enormous losses on the public, may not coincide with the views of the New York Times, but they represent a grow ing sentiment throughout the country. The people, and not the corporations in volved, are paying In Increased prices the cost of the anthracite coal miners' strike. The whole story is told in a let ter which the Times itself publishes of the boast of a large holder of Pennsyl vania coalmine stocks. Said he several months ago: There Is going to be a strike. It Is a hard thing, a seemingly cruel thing, to do, but It Is business. Wo are going to adopt measures that will force tho miners out, stop produc tion, put up the price of coal, and when stocks are reasonably reduced we can make a trifling concession, and the miners will come back. We Know exactly how and when to do this. and we do It, though It looks cruel, as a mat ter of business and profits. It Is all very fine to sneer at Judge Tuley and attempt to ridicule the demand for some legislation that will compel the settlement of such strikes along the lines of Justice and fair dealing between capital and labor, but the problem cannot be dis missed without breeding dangerous con ditions. The state creates corporations, and It can control Its creations. How It shall exercise that control Is tho gravest question confronting American statesman ship today. OMINOUS FOR THE FUTURE. Harper's Weekly. .Lord Salisbury's resignation comes at last as an event long expected, though often denied. Thus the last groat man of tho Victorian age passes out of the ranks a man whose name will stand in history beside that of Peel and Palmexston and Gladstone and Beaconsfleld, the contem porary of Tennyson and Browning, Hux ley and Darwin and Tyndall. Following the swan-song of Herbert Spencer, the retirement of Lord Salisbury marks the closing of an age which many believe will stand out as the greatest age of Eng land's history. Lord Salisbury, as a great feudal noble, a man whose family has been pre-eminent since the Tudor times, the days of the founding of the English church and tho English imperial power, the Oriental Empire, and Eng land's great colonies Jn the Old and New worlds, was in his own person a symbol and an embodiment of the feudal and oli garchical England which loomed so largo in the history of the world. As a states man he represented the Old World belief In the divine right of Kings, whosa Inter est, rather than that of their subjects, it was the business of the Minister to con sult. His diplomatic methods were those of the Elizabethan age; and he would have been well fitted to to cope with men like Henry of Navarre or Philip the Sec ond, or the great figures of tho Middle Ages. A part only of Lord Salisbury's mantle can be said to have descended upon his nephew, Arthur J. Balfour. Mr. Balfour has the same fine Individual man ner and high personal distinction, tho same perfect skill and polish In debate, the same classical and European culture; but Mr. Balfour la essentially modern. He recognizes, though perhaps unwillingly, that the scepter has passed from Kings to nations; that no longer the aristocracies, but rather the great commercial organiza tions, dominate and direct the policy of state. And while Lord Salisbury Is an old-faBhIoned churchman, of the Tudor and early Jocobean type, his nephew is a free-thinker, essentially modern and critical, by no means bound to the tradi tion of ecclesiastical authority. Mr. Bal four Is a much slighter man, a lighter weight, morally as well as physically: and something of dignity, of solemnity even, passes away from tho councils of the em pire with the passing of the venerable Premier. ' Signs are not wanting that this Is but the prelude to a groatcr passing. Trust's Contempt for the Public. New York World. "It Is none of the public's business," says an anthracite coal road president, in answer to the question why they will not consent to arbitrate -a strike the en tiro loss whereof falls finally 'on the pub lic "The public Is not concerned," says President Vrecland, of the Metropolitan Railway Company, In answer to an in quiry about poisonous sulphuric acid fumes forced by Certain of its cross town cars Into the noses and lungs of the public for months past. This is the bee that is getting into the bonnets of the presidents of our publicly franchised corporations "none of the public's busi ness." How far this contempt of public corporations for the public can be carried w!thout causing the meek and patient public to rise in effective rebellion no body knows. Thought He Might ?ceil It. Chicago Tribune. "Albert," said his -wife, "are there many rattlesnakes where you are going?" "Hundreds of them," replied the doctor, who was packing his valise for a vacation trip. "Didn't you tell me once that there was no authentic Instance of a person bitten by a rattlesnake being cured by whisky?" VI did." "Then why are you taking all this whis ky along, Albert?" "The er water Isn't good where I am going, Emily." DENTAL OF TRIAL BY JURY ' Chicago Chronicle. Judge Jackson of the United States District Court at Parkersburg in sentenc ing certain strike leaders for contempt ot court In violating an Injunction Im proved the opportunity to characterize them as "a professional set of agitators, organizers and walking delegates," whose "mission is to foment trouble." The Judge further called them "vam pires that live and fatten on the honest labor of the coal miners of the country and who are busybodies," etc. Admitting for the sake of the argument that the men whom the Judge sent to Jail are all that he said they were, how comes It to be the business of the Judge to find them guilty of these things and put them in prison therefor? In what law. National or state. Is It written that it is a crime to bo one of a "professional set of agitators, organ izers and walking delegates?" In what law Is it written that a man may be convicted of such a crime, if it be a crime, without opportunity of de fense before a Jury? Does any law authorize a Judge to de cide without evidence, without oppor tunity of defense that it is the "mis sion" of persons arraigned before him "to foment trouble" and to send them behind tha bars for trying to fulfill their mission? The Chronicle will undertake to say, and it will maintain that it Is guilty of no contempt of court In saying, that tho things charged against the strike leaders are not crimes, because there Is no law which declares them to be crimes. The Chronicle will undertake to say further that no Judge has a right to treat as a crime and punish as a crime any act which Is not declared by law to bo a crime or which does not fall by proper legal definition within some cate gory of crime. Judge Jackson says he recognizes the right of all laborers to combine for tho purpose of protecting all their lawful rights, but he does not recognize the right of laborers "to conspire together to compel employes who are not dissatis fied with their work in the mines to lay down their picks and shovels and to quit their work without a just and prop er reason therefor." Every just-man capable of forming a sound judgment will agree with Judgo Jackson In the opinion that if any man attempts to "compel" another to quit work or If any number of men conspire to "compel" others to quit work against their will by violence or Intimidation there Is a criminal violation of law. But is a man or any number of men to be adjudged guilty of such -violation of law and punished for It without such trial as Is guaranteed by the Constitu tion? Judge Jackson seems inclined to answer that question in the affirmative. The Chronicle agrees with the plat form of the Democracy of Illinois in the opinion that If a man is accused of crime he Is entitled to trial by Jury and to all the recognized means of legal de fense before the Jury. Darke's Retort. Chicago News. Edmund Burko was ever ready with his retort. He had been attacking the Government one night In Parliament very fiercely for a policy which, it was well known, waa strongly advocated and ap proved by the King himself. Stung by Burke's sarcasm, George Onslow, a sup porter of the government, rose and said, with a haughty air, that tho member really had gone too far; he had delib erately Insulted the sovereign. Burke lis tened to this harangue with due rever ence, and then gravely addressed tho speaker: "Sir, the honorable member has exhibited much ardor, but little dis cretion. He should know that, however I may reverence the King, I am not at all bound, nor at all Inclined, to extend that reverence to his Ministers. I may honor His Majesty, but, sir, I see no possible reason for honoring" and ' ho glanced round tho treasury bench "His Majesty's manservant and maidservant, his ox or his ass!" PERSONS WORTH KNOWING ABOUT. Mrs. Humphrey Ward, the English novelist. Is planning a visit to this country for tho coming Autumn. Governor Crane, of Massachusetts, dlsllksa public speaklnr. and. though he Is always In teresting In his "addresses, he considers the ne cessity for their delivery one of tho most trying features of public life. Mr. Balfour, the new British Premier, nearly always stands while writing or studying. For many years bo has worked at a tall desk, on which he keeps two candles, so as to be ready for tho dark days so common In London. J. D. Wood, a rancher of Spencer. Idaho, has sent to Boston the largest consignment of wool eyery shipped by one man from the West to the East. It amounted to about 030,000 pounds, which, at 14 cents per pound, ylolded Mr. Wood nearly JSS.OOO. A traveler who has recently returned from a tour abroad In tho course of which he met friends of Mascagnl, the famous Italian com poser, says that the musician's stock of English words Is limited to "good-by," "New York," "Philadelphia" and "San Francisco." Bret Harte, during the last months of his life, gave much time and care to tho composi tion of the libretto of an opera. The com poser was Emanuel Moor, and the subject of the work, which has not yet been heard, was taken from tha story of "Alkali Dick." The scene is laid In France. Clarence H. Mackay. who succeeds to a vast estate by tho death of his father, has been In training a long time for the duties he now takes up. He Is either vice-president or di rector In most of the corporations with which his father was connected, and Is believed to be fully capable of assuming control. Prince Henry of Prussia Is Insured against assassination. The policy is for $000,000, which sum Is not .payable in case of death from any other cause than that stipulated. The Prince entered Into this peculiar Insurance arrange ment when ho sailed for the East to take com mand of the German fleet In Chinese waters a few years ago. Harry Lehr. tho Baltimore fashion plate, threatens that If the newspapers do not leavo him alone he will be obliged to leave this coun try and live abroad. "For," says he. "I am a gentleman." It will be remembered that Will lam Waldorf Astor said the same thing somo years ago. It has been remarked that Mr. Lehr's career as agent for a firm of dealers In champagne has not apparently left him en tirely Invulnerable to newspaper lampooning. The Mitsui family are called "the Bothschllds of Japan," standing upon a pedestal as com pared with other business firms In that country. The line comes clearly from the thirteenth century, but It was not until 300 years later that they became merchants. Since that time the Mltsuls have been pre-eminently the lead ing business family, connected with every largo commercial enterprise In the country and con ducting many undertakings as much for public benefit as for private gain. London, 1802. William Wordsworth. O Friend! I know not which way I must look For comfort, being, as I am, opprest To think that now our life Is only drest For show; mean handy-work of craftsman, cook. Or groora!-;We must run glittering like a brook In the open, sunshine, or we are unblest; The wealthiest man among us Is the best: No grandeur now In nature or In book Delights us. Rapine, avarice, expense. This Is Idolatry; and these we adore: Plain living and high thinking are no more: The homely beauty ot the good old cause Is gone; our peace, our fearful Innocence, And pure religion breathing household laws. THE SAME. Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour: England hath need of thee: she Is a fen Of Stagnant waters: altar, sword, and pen. Fireside, the heroic wealth of hall and bower. Have forfeited their ancient English dower Of inward happiness. We are selfish men: Oh! raise us up, return to us again; And give us manners, virtue, freedom, power. Thy soul was like a Star, and dwelt apart; Thou badst a voice whose sound was like the sea. Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free; So didst thou travel on life's common way In cheerful godliness: and yet thy heart A.The lowlleat'dutles on herself did lay. NOTE AND COMMENT. Ex-Senator Peffer Is writing history. He finds this easier than making it- The young, lady who rode 33 miles an hour on a wheel is clearly not a resident of Philadelphia. The Sagamore Hill larder must be run ning low. All tho great men are eating In New York now All we lack is a Couple of months of continuous rain to make the weather, ab solutely perfect Colonel Lynch is f ortuhate that his trial Is not being conducted by'his name sake, the Judge. Perhaps Tracy has merely gone to New York to warn Edgar Stanton Maclay not to write a history of his escape It Is understood that the last Van Allen wedding was a trifling affair, costing only a couple of millions of dollars. Captain Hobson gets his name in the papers every now and then, but he dis creetly keeps away from Summer resorts. The sporting editor of the Congressional Record will have plenty of time to wrlto a good report of the Fltzslmmon3-Jeffrles affair. It has taken Havana an amazingly short time to acquire American methods. Her Chief of Police is already under arrest. J. P. Morgan still lingers in Europe, and It Is astonishing how well this coun try gets along without any Director General. In the absenco of W. J. Bryan 'a num ber of Industrious earthquakes are doing their best to break the galling monotony of life in Nebraska. Seats for the coronation are selling so cheaply that It may now be necessary to put the throne on the market in order to make the show pay out. It cost Major Glenn 550 to give tho water-cure to the Filipinos, and tho patients who benefited by the treatment didn't oven furnish testimonials. Lord Salisbury Is now entitled to wrlto K. G. C. B, V. O. after his name, but he doesn't, probably because he doesn't want people to mistake him for a railroad line. The King of Saxony is ill with pneu monia. Emperor William seems to be about tho only ruler who is In any danger of being troubled by life insurance agents. Now that good train service makes it possible to run up to Portland every now and then to get a square meal and a few hours' rest, life at the seaside begins to be supportable. A skeleton with an eight-Inch Jaw has been discovered in Texas. Possibly thl3 discovery will assist some of the states men of tho Lone Star State in tracing back their ancestry. A New York bank set a time lock wrong and was unable to get Its money out- Usually it is the depositors' money which Is held so securely In bank vaults that no one is able to get any of It out. This item is from a Korean newspaper, published In English: "Seoul, Korea, May 23, 1902. Lately the Police Headquarters ordered to forbid the servants, etc,, to run the horses fastly on the -big streets as they sometimes pressed the children down and hurted them on the ground and the Police stopped a Mapoo running a horse hardly on Its back, but a number of Soldiers came along .quickly and cap tured the Police away.' The Japanese Army is equipped, organ ized and drilled like a European army, and many of its officers have received their education In European countries, says an exchange. Conscription was in troduced into Japan in 1874 and the reg ulations now in force were adopted In 1SS3. Every male citizen between the ages of 17 and 40 years owes military service, which Is given three years In tho active Aiany, four years In the First Reserve, five years in the Territorial Army and 11 years in the National Army or the Second Reserve. The aggregate is 8116 officers and 135,533 men on a peaco footing. The war strength Is 302,220 men and 1093 guns, the reserves excluded. A parrot fish In a New York aquarium is said to be responsible for a good deal of gambling among the small boys. It has strips of blue and red and has yellow eyes. As the fish turns In the water It looks red at one time and blue at another. When a crowd is about the parrot fish tank, cries of "Come, you blue!" "Coma you red!" may be heard, with the snap ping of fingers, such as players at crap games are accustomed to. The big par rot fish makes frequent "turn-overs." and when it straightens out again the an nouncement comes. "Red wins," or "Blu wins." as the case may be, and the gam ing youngsters settle their bets on the color of the fish on the turn-over. Abraham Lincoln and an Illinois farmer had long been friends; and the latter had written an everyday sort of letter In which he said, among other things, that he had been In poor health. Out In Illinois, they are able to this day to quote what is called "Lincoln's prescrip tion," sent to tho farmer in reply by the President- "Do not worry," it read. "J2at three square meals a day. Say your prayers. Think of your wife. Be court eous to your creditors. Keep your di gestion good. Steer clear of biliousness. Exercise. Go slow and go easy. Maybe there are other things that your special case requires to make you happy, but, my dear friend, these, I reckon, will give you a good lift." PLEASANTRIES OP PARAGRAPHERS If tho people who can't write had the brains of those who can. And those who can had tha skill of those who can't, what a glorious lit erature we would soon have. Life. The Obstacle. George I proposed to that girl and would have married her If It hadn't been for something sho said. Fred What did she say? George No! Brooklyn Lite. Times Have Changed. The Prodigal The fa ther In tho Bible story, dad. killed the fatted calf for his son. The Old Man Tep; but ha wasn't up against the Beef Trust. I reckon. Judge. HJs First Impression. It was the first tlmo little Alfred had ever seen a shredded-wheat biscuit. Leaning over, he whispered In his mother's ear: "Oh, mamma, what did they soak that Turkish wash-rag In milk for?" Chicago News. Accidental. "Wot d that tenderfoot thet came here last week die of?" asked Terror Ike, of Stony Gulch. "Throat trouble. Th", boys was playln' throwln a rope over a limb, an ha got hl3 head caught In the noose." Baltimore News. American Nabobs. JJpton Who Is that man? Ho acts as If he owned the earth. Downtpn Oh, he'll get over that In a few days. Hrs a good fellow at heart, but he has Just been on a vacation, and he rode both ways In a palaco car. Now York Weekly.