- THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1903. Watered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month -"S Dally, Sunday excepted, per year...-. Dally, with Sunday, per year .... " Sunday, per year ?) The Weekly, per year X'J-X The Weekly, 3 months , rr" Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday exce xttA..ae. Dally, per week.-dellvered. Sunday lncluded.-tfw POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper ,le 16 to 80-page paper ; 2 to 44-page paper .- ... Foreign rates double. New for discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should he addressed invari ably "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the nam of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription, or to any business matter, should be addressed simply. '.The Oregonlan. 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YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 50 dcg.; minimum temperature, 46 degr.; precipitation, 0.40 inch. rOBTLAD, MONDAY, DEC. 21, 1003. A CRISIS IN OREGON'S HISTORY. Whether or not the State of Oregon provides the War Department with right of way for the canal and locks between the -dalles and Celilo Is appar ently the most momentous question which confronts the Legislature con vening this morning in special session. To act promptly with an insignificant appropriation of $100,000, perhaps half of which will be covered back Into the State Treasury, will mean the canaL To adjourn without doing this, means In definite delay. It is no answer to say that the War Department might, could, would or should secure this right of way for itself. It will not do so. It seems that to use money for that purpose would bring the cost of the canal above the Harts limit and throw the whole project back upon Congress. But even if this is not true, the' fact remains that all proceedings are blocked, pending dona tion of the right of way to the Federal Government by the state. In another article on this page we have set out the situation as It is. In an interview on another page Mr. Moody explains the situation in detail. We cannot be lieve that the Legislature will be blind to the significance of this crisis. Eastern Oregon asks this appropria tion. For that reason it should be passed. Portland asks it, and for that reason it should be passed. But the man who from Western Oregon or Southern Oregon resists this plain move for the welfare-of the Columbia Basin goes against the interests of himself and of his section. The Western Ore gon man who Imagines that high rail road rates from Eastern Oregon and I Washington to the sea benefit Western Oregon; the man who Imagines that to build up Puget Sound at the expense of Portland helps the Willamette Valley or the Coast counties has a very erro neous idea of production, consumption and transportation. It has been feared that the movement in favor of the canal and the right of way had behind it some hostility to the 6tate portage road. Well, let the portage road stand. If there are any who hope to defeat the portage through the canal, let them be disappointed. But If there are any who hope to defeat the canal through the portage, let them also be disappointed. Let both projects stand and let them, be pushed with every in strument that can be called Into requi sition. They who oppose the opening of the Columbia River have now found a weapon ready to their hand In the right-of-way obstacle. The Legislature can frustrate them by passing this small appropriation for the right of way. Let every one who wants the river opened work for this appropriation. Let us hear no paltry excuses of economy, or sectional feeling, or the duty of the War Department. Let us move straight forward and get this appropriation and thus remove the last obstacle' to an open river, to low rates from the Columbia Basin to the sea, to the pre-eminence of Portland as a shipping center and a great market, and to the rightful growth of the State of Oregon. Fortunate Indeed for. the memory of a number of departed pioneers who had blazed the trail for civilization In Ore gon and Washington is the fact that so creditable a representative of their class as Colonel B. F. Shaw is still -with us to resent any aspersions that may be cast on their acts in connection with the settlement of the early Indian troubles. Colonel Shaw, with as brave a band of pioneer volunteers as ever enlisted In any cause, not only ended the massa cres of the white settlers by threshing the Puget Sound Indians into submis sion, buf he also brought the Indians in the Grand Ronde country to terms and made life and property safe for settlers in that beautiful valley. The Medicine Creek treaty, because It re stricted the domain tif the Indians and gave the white settlers a chance for their lives end to develop the"-country, was naturally distasteful to the Indians, but It seems passing strange that not until nearly all of that generation of pioneers had passed away did any of the whites discover that "more than questionable methods" were used in per fecting the treaty. Colonel Shaw was not only one of the builders of the com monwealth of which he Is still an hon ored member, but from territorial days down to the present time he has held high rank In the political councils of Washington. As an Indian fighter, a lawmaker or a plain citizen his record J5 unimpeachable, and a decidedly large majority of the people of the Pacific Northwest, whether they came In "pal ace cars" or. ox carts, will accept with out question his version of the Medi cine Creek treaty In preference to that of the disgruntled descendants of some of the Indians, even though the latter be presented by eminent latter-day his torians. XET REWARDS BE MADE EFFECTIVE. The effectiveness of an offer of re ward for the arrest of a criminal de pends largely upon the certainty tliat the reward will be promptly paid when it has been earned. Laws authorizing such offers of rewards should be so complete and specific in their terms that no doubt or controversy shall arise. Some officer, board or court should be vested with the power to determine without delay to whom the reward should be paid. Provisions should be made by which those who have per formed the work shall receive the pay. An offer of a reward becomes a con tract when the conditions of t& offer have been fulfilled, and, as In all other contracts, there should be no uncertain ties or inequitable results. , In 1902 the State of Oregon offered a reward for the capture of an escaped convict A woman accidentally discov ered his body several days after he had been murdered by his comrade. The body was returned to the prison and the full reward was claimed. Sympathy for the woman aroused the demand that she be paid, while both law and good sense made It plain that she had not earned the reward. While she had rendered the state a valuable service in proving beyond a doubt that Merrill was dead, she had not "captured" him within the meaning of the offer of re ward. A few years ago one tramp robbed an other while the two were riding together in a box-car. The robber was later ar rested and the man who took him into custody claimed a reward under that section of the Oregon laws which Is in tended to reward men who capture trainrobbers. Technically he had com plied with the requirement of the law, for he had arrested a man who had robbed another upon a train, and yet he had not fulfilled 'the intent of the law by capturing a desperado. The criminal in that instance was said to be a simple-mlndod boy who was scarcely accountable for his act. Recently a hold-up was attempted a few miles from Portland and an express messenger shot and disabled one of the robbers. A few hours later the wound ed man was discovered and taken Into custody. The man who discovered him has claimed, and is entitled to the re ward which the state has offered for the arrest of trainrobbers. He who firs caught sight of the form of the helpless desperado and first reached his side had fulfilled the letter of the law; yet who will deny that it was the heroic messen ger who did the real, effective work on that dark and perilous night? Merely wounding-a robber is not sufficient to entitle a man to a reward, it is true, for an arrest and conviction must follow If the end of the law is to be attained. The capture of the criminal is the pur pose of the offer of reward, but It should not be the rule that he who takes Into custody has .done all the work and should receive all Jfae reward. The foregoing references to specific cases are not intended as reflections or criticisms upon any one.. Whoever has compiled with the terms of an offer Is entitled to and should receive the re ward. The instances mentioned serve, however, to Impress the casual observer with the Idea that the law upon this subject needs amendment. The pur pose is to Induce men to Incur expense, endure hardship and face danger In or der to apprehend criminals. If this is to be accomplished with justice to all, the law should be so framed that every man who alds directly and materially In the capture of a criminal will share in the reward according to the service he has rendered. OPEN RIVER HOW TO GET IT. Major Langfitt's letter to Governor Chamberlain several days ago shows the Oregon Legislature how to bring about early construction of the Celilo canaL The National Government will begin construction just as soon as it ob tains ground and right -of way free of cost. Such was the recommendation of the Board of Government Engineers, approved by the Chief of Engineers and the Secretary of War. Here, then, is the opportunity that has been long awaited. By an expen diture of from $50,000 to $100,000 the State of Oregon can Induce the United!! States to expend $4,000,000 for the long sought open river. If the Legislature of this state could appropriate money for a more profitable purpose, It has never yet done so. Oregon may labor through the courts, state and Federal, to condemn ground for the portage; It may Invest $165,000 in that enterprise, and yet, when done, it may find the portage of no utility, since Three-Mlle Rapids, leading up to the lower terminus of the road, would not be navigable. The state does not provide means for removing the ob structions in these rapids. The work devolves reasonably upon the National Government The United States Is "ready to perform that duty. Its plans Include removal of the obstructions. And it doubtless would make Three-Mlle Rap ids navigable whenever It began con struction of the canal, inasmuch as that Is naturally the first thing to be done. The Legislature, by appropriating the required $50,000 or $100,000, would insure the earliest possible completion of the waterway. The War Department has means to begin the Improvement It need not wait for further Congressional action before -starting the work. Once begun, the improvement wouM continue as all other National work authorized goes forward, namely, by Congressional appropriations as the improvement would advance. It Is believed by the engineers that the canal could be fin ished within four or five years. Without the appropriation by the Ore gon Legislature the opening of the Co lumbia may be deferred indefinitely. Nor need such action by the Legislature jeopardize the portage road. That road will serve its purpose while the" canal is building. Portland by Its own energy kept -open its highway to the sea, and now the National Government helps the more willingly.' Oregon by the same energy can open its highway to the sea. BELL TO RESTRICT TRADE. The bill extending to the Philippines the coastwise navigation laws Of the United States could most truthfully and appropriately be termed a "bill for the restriction of trade between the United States and the Philippines." No coun try on earth ever increased Its business by restricting Its transportation facili ties either by land or sea, and the United, States will be a distinct loser'lf the iniquitous proviso In the act of March 2, 1902, is operative, or if the f Frye bill on the same lines becomes a , venlence. We should say that this pre law. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Bentation of the case against the metric ever on the alert to boost along the cause of the millionaire shipowners i at the expense of the producers and ship pers, comments as follows on the Frye bill: f Tho bill will encounter strenuous opposi tion from those Atlantic ports -which prefer to seo the product of the Philippines carried led In American ships through the ports on tho Pacifls. The products of tho Philippines can ba laid down as cheaply to the consum ers of this country through Pacific ports, carried across the ocean in American ships, as they can through Atlantic ports, carried In foreign ships. There Is an abundanco of tonnage already available on tho Pacific Coast to handle this entire trade cheaply and adequately. It is not exactly clear where Atlantic ports. Pacific ports or Gulf ports have anything expept a common interest in securing abundant and cheap transpor tation facilities for doing business with our new possessions In the Far East If as the Post-Intelligencer confidently as serts "the products of the Philippines can be laid down as cheaply to the con sumers of this country through1 Pacific ports, carried across the ocean in Amer ican ships, as they can through Atlan tic ports, carried in foreign ships," the American ships will get the business. Everything else being equal, the Ameri can importer, whether he dwells in New York, Seattle or Portland, will give the American Bhlp the preference, and If, as the Post-Intelflgencer says, there are plenty of American ships to handle the business, the protection of the coast wise law is unnecessary. Unfortunate ly the Seattle paper's theory is not in accordance with the facts. There are not enough American ships to handle the trade of the Philippines to the best advantage, and by giving the American ships a monopoly trade would suffer, as it always does when monopolists secure absolute control of a transportation line route. Competition has been the life of trade since the beginning of commercial his tory, and there can be no competition where a monopoly Is created. Ameri can shippers to. the Philippines are, by reason of the numerous foreign steam ers In that trade, securing the lowest freight rate ever made out of Pacific Coast ports. These low rates are due to the fact that English, German, Jap anese, Danish, Austrian and American ships are engaged in the traffic. Does the P.-I. believe for a moment that rates would be so low and the corre sponding benefits for the Philippine pro ducer and American consumer so large. If all of these ships except those flying the American flag were prohibited from plying In that trade? It Is contrary to all established laws of trade to expect that limiting the facilities for transpor tation will do otherwise than hamper trade. In reply to the statement that there Is an Insufficient number of American vessels to handle the trade, the P.-L will probably supply the statistics show ing American tonnage of dimensions sufficient to carry the imports and ex ports between the United States and the Philippines. By forcing the shippers on both sides of the Pacific to supply full cargoes all the time, 'the American ships might handle tjie business In its present dimensions, but the business is growing, and Importers do not wish to be hampered by insufficient transporta tion and Infrequent service. Thousands of tons of Philippine products now leave the Islands In small lots on foreign steamers which call while bound from China and Japan, and pick up 500 tons to 1000 tons to finish off a cargo. This gives the shippers a service which In frequency could never be approached by an "all-American" line. The average" American Is an Intensely loyal Individual to his flag, and would like again to see it on .the high seas as prominently as It was before Internal development proved more remunerative, than seafaring and retired It The aver age American, however. Is not a mil lionaire shipowner, but Instead Is a con sumer, an Importer or an exporter. As such, he declines to enter Into any U scheme which would Increase the drain on -his cash-box In order that the profits of a few millionaire shipowners might be Increased. The extension of the coastwise navigation laws to the Phil ippines would be the greatest restriction we could place on our growing trade In that direction. The attitude taken by the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers at its recent meeting In New York to ward the bill In Congress for the com pulsory use of the metric system Is very pronounced, a resolution against It hav ing been adopted by a vote of 40 to 11. As the members of the society are the very class of persons for whose benefit the "system" Is supposed to be de signed, their rejection of It is very sig nificant They seem to take the view that it Is a hobby chiefly of amateurs who de sire to exploit themselves as extremely "scientific" persons, but a hobby which can only make trouble for practical peo ple. It is nowhere in universal use, it is shown not even In France and Ger many, where the metric system Is sup posed to be a great blessing. To change from our own measures to the French measure Is not only to substitute incon venient units for convenient units, but also to cause enormous expense In changing tools, machinery, etc., to say nothing of loss on stocks of goods and the difficulty of repairs. The number of nations and the people who use the metric system Is exaggerated by Its advocates. At the meeting of the so ciety mentioned, F. A. Halsey, an in vestigator of the subject said: It Is an error to totalize the populations of the nominally metric countries and express tho sum as representing the portion of the earth's people who use the metric system. While Japan is nominally a metric country, an examination of Its tariff, schedule a good Index of the systems of weights and measures actually used In any country shows only 14 Items stated In metric' units, the total list being very long and making a comprehensive document. Turkey tried to force tho use of tho system In a style char acteristic of that domain, hut had to give up the attempt, even tho most drastic measures falling of material result China is also quoted as metric, while, like the United States, her status In this respect Is one of permissive '' f use. Janan and Turkev are on the same ha- I sis. The most remarkable feature of the subject Is perhaps the slight extent to which the system la used In spite of government assistance In many countries. " Whltworth screw threads are almost universal In the metric countries. A newly recommended standard of plpo sizes and threads In Ger many .specifies Inner and outer diameters In Inches, but the point, and root diameters of the threads In millimeters. A folding pocket rule commonly used In Germany has Its our edges graduated, one in metric units, the other three In London, Paris and Rhenish Inches. There Is now a call In France, after more than a century of- the metric system, for more stringent laws compelling people to use the legal system to a greater extent than they will if left to suit their own con venience. The old units persist side by side with the new, manufacturers and workmen obstinately consulting their .own con- system will delay Its adoption indefi nitely. Five Oriental steamships of an aver age draft of more than 23 feet, and car rying cargoes averaging about 7000 tons eaoh. hftVa cleared frnm -PnrMjiTirl within . t h,i,,, ,,, ,, , , Ao. lay except for a brief wait for the tides at the bar near Tongue Point. Unfor- tunately there has been some delay at( the mouth of the river, and until the dredge Chinook begins operations we may expect a continuation of this trou ble. . The actual runs of these mammoth carriers over the hundred-mile stretch of river between Portland and Astoria afford convincing evidence of the good results that have been accomplished by the Port of Portland Commission. The long delays and heavy lighterage bill3 which were so much In evidence when the old commission began working on the channel are not yet forgotten, but the facility with which shipping has been handled between Portland and Astoria for the past year proves beyond all doubt that It will not be a difficult task to maintain a river channel always fully adequate for any vessels that can cross the bar. The time Is coming when the trade will demand thirty-foot ships, andwhen It arrives the thirty-foot chan nel In the river will be ready for the ships. Frequent complaint has been made In the past few months by Eastern finan cial writers because cash is not flowing badkfrom the West to the East In the same ratio that It moved to the West. The cause most frequently assigned for this unsatisfactory movement of money, Is that poorer crops through the Middle West may have restricted the liquidat ing powers of the Western borrowers. This In a measure may be true, but It Is not Improbable that the higher prices at which the short crop of cereals Is selling may" have retarded the flow of cash. The farmers profits are greater oil a wheat crop of twenty bushels per acre at 75 cents per1 bushel than they are on thlrjty bushels at 50 cents per bushel, but the receipts and profits of the railroads and warehousemen who handle the crop on the Eastern end of the line are reduced one-third. This year the farmer has the money that was sent West and he has returned a much smaller proportion than usual to the East for freight, commissions, etc. So long as poor prices have not accompa nied a poor crop, the financial situation might be very much worse, even in the East. j ' In 1891 the Legislature of Indiana en acted a corporation tax law for the pur pose of compelling corporations to pay a reasonable sum for the privileges con ferred by the state. In 1894, after the law had been In effect more than twp years, the Secretary of State said in his annual report to the Legislature: The law regulating the fee charged by the state for charters granted to corporations. passed by the General Assembly of 1S01, has not only been a source of considerable' revenue to the state, but has met with favor gen erally, and especially by the corporations themselves. It has had a tendency to prevent the formation of corporations for purely specu lative purposes and the practice of Incorpor ating with an authorized capital stock largely In excess of the actual operating capital. When Oregon's corporation tax law has been In force for the same length of time It will undoubtedly receive as strong an approval as that States that once adopt the policy of requiring cor porations to pay for their special privi leges do not abandon the plan after a fair trial. Some unnamed professor of something, of whom nothing more definite is al leged than that he is a "Harvard man," has been addressing a teachers Insti tute In New Jersey. In Itself this is not a combination of persons or events that would attract much attention, but the Harvard man Is said to have lamented that the translators of the Bible were so unforturiate as to live before the phrases'marble hearf'and "glad hand" had .been evolved. He pointed out that the story of the prodigal son, although intelligibly told In the authorized ver sion, was entirely lacking In the graphic touches that he would have added with the aid of the "glad hand" and he "marble heart" The Harvard man should not repine. Let him retranslate the Bible, and see whether the public will give him the "glad hand" or the "marble heart" One by one the old branches of the National tree are lopped off, and there Is but little protest Yet when the sug gestion is made that the old office of Justice of the Peace be abolished there must be some lovers of the old order to raise their voices against such mutila tion. What makes the matter worse Is that the proposal comes from Now Jersey, a state that has given us a by word In "Jersey justice," an allusion, no doubt, to the services of the very squires that so-called progress would crush out of existence. The eagle, wounded by an arrow feathered from its own pinions, could feel, no worse than the old Justices over this heart less suggestion. London Is said to have a variation of "How old is Ann?" It Is "How old were Robin and Richard?" and the prbblem is thus metrically set out: Said Robin to Richard: "If ever I come To the age you are now, brother mine. Our ages, united, will mount to a sum Of years making ninety and nine." Said Richard: "That's certain, and If It be fair For us to look forward so far, I then shall bo double the age that you were When I was the age that you are." It Is a dangerous thing to keep a dog for the protection of one's property, in view of a recent decision in Rhode Isl and. A man attempted to climb upon a cart, and was attacked by the dog left to watch for just such persons. It was held that the dog's owner was liable for damages to any person traveling on the highway or outside the dog's inclosure that might be bitten. SPIRIT OF THE NORTHWEST PRESS . Probably No. More Than That. Olympla Recorder. An able-bodied reform wave In Seattle would reduce the present population by at least 50 per cent. Not the Reason That Was Given. Albany Independent. Mr. Hermann wanted Mr. Booth re tained, and therefore he was dropped from the office of register at Koseburg. See? Remarkable Clemency to Subscribers Hood River Glacier. The senior editor of the Glacier Is grand father for the first time In his life. It Is .expected he will be obeyed and re spected accordingly. There will be no advance In the price of subscription. Ad vertising rates will remain the same for the present. "It's a cold day when we get left" Morrow's Wonderful Climate. Woodburn Independent The numerous friends of John Kennedy n?rtli1 Vihvd Kaon aitTrtrferl owrl wotP to have seen him skipping around irrt. J gon. Eastern Oregon, like a young boy. He walked miles every day, and last Sunday he chased a jack-rabbit for three miles, and caught It This speaks well for the wonderful progress of one who was so recently an Invalid. Accurate Focus on Eddy Law. Eugene Register. The mining men are up In arms against the Eddy corporation tax law, on the ground that It Injures Oregon's min ing Interests. We believe the law, as it stands, is a preventive of wild-cat min ing, and In the long run will give Ore gon the reputation of being a field where legitimate mining prevails and where In vestors are not to be flim-flammed by hot air schemes. Way of the Independent Line. McMlnnvllle Reporter. The department has disapproved the re port of Major Langfltt recommending an appropriation of J2S.000 for the construc tion of a collapsable dam at the Yamhill River locks to make the river continuous ly open to navigation. The contention Is that the expenditure Is not justified by the commerce on the river. Neither will the commerce justify an appropriation as long as the steamboat trust controls the river. Orginal Joke by Eleanor. Hood River Glacier. The little daughter of Mrs. Ralph Sav age was born In tho South, where they have none but artificial Ice. During tho late cold snap. Mrs. Savage put out a tin cup with water.-In, It to freeze for the little one. In -the morning Mrs. Sav age gave little Eleanor a bit of the Ice to eat After crunching a mouthful of It, she looked up and said: "This Is the first time I ever ate wild Ice, Isn't It, mamma?" Mamma said yes, and col lapsed. The Force of Reputation. Lakevlew Herald. Dick KIngsley was In Lakevlew from his West Side ranch last Saturday. Dick was telling some of his friends about his digging post holes on his ranch since tho rain, and that the ground was wet down deeper than he dug. His story Is prob ably true, with the one exception that he had been digging post holes. It will re quire corroborative evidence to convince Dick's acquaintances that he exerted himself to that extent Good for a Christmas Dinner. Harrisburg Bulletin. Some one with a dastardly intent ad vised H. F. Bruce, representing the Ad vance Thresher Company, last week at Albany, to steer clear of the hotel here dnd Mr. Bruce says that he would have undoubtedly done so If It had been possi ble under his arrangement of business so he stayed over night with the gentleman ly and accommodating landlord, Mr. Shi3 ler, of the Harrisburg Hotel, and found the fare and bedding much better than the average of hotels along the line and that In the future he will make It a point to patronize this excellent hotel when at all possible. High Life in Wheeler County. Spray Courier. A. H. Akin made two good shots last week. Ho was out by Table Rock and jumped two very large lynx and killed one while the mate made good his escape. The beast weighed SO pounds and his skin Is four feet eight Inches long. Tho next day he saw a monster bird light In his field, and taking his gun, crept out and made a center shot. The bird was of the goose species, web feet and bill similar to the goose, but tho size was monstrous. The wings from Up to tip measured seven feet five Inches. When standing up the bird stood over five feet in height and when dressed, weighed 19 pounds. Ono pound of beautiful feathers were plucked from the bird. Better Call in The Hague Tribunal. Deschutes Echo. The Oregonlan prints In full the Bend Bulletin's first article on the organ epi sode. Whether the Bulletin has an ar rangement with the Oregonlan to reprint its attacks on this community we do not know, but circumstances seem to point that way. The Bulletin man had to eat mud when he published Judge Brock's letter tho following week, but he had furnished copy for Tho Oregonlan, and could safely beat a retreat no matter how ludicrous. The Bulletin man has two hobbies, one is libeling some one, and the other Is talking about character. The bulldozing methods used by both papers towards citizens of this place have caused more amusement than anger. Trolley Lines Needed. Newberg Graphic. A system of elpctric lines running out from Portland would do more in the way of developing the resources of the Wil lamette "Valley than anything else that can be named. Such a system -will come sooner or later and the people can sit back and wait for it to be pushed onto them or they can hasten the day of Its coming by getting together and taking steps toward making their wants known to men who have money to put into such enterprises. Newberg ought to combine with all the other West Side towns and lay plans for a war of agitation along this Une. Continued talk straight from the shoulder. In season and out of season, will bring the desired results and we ought not to wait a day to begin It Aids to Good Conduct. Arlington Appeal. As this issue goes to press we hear from various sources the rumor that certain public spirited men in this town, aided by one of -our preachers are putting every effort forward to organize a Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. Thank God for it. For while we personally are not so constituted as to ad vise humanity to emulate our example, yet one who Is a father can't go around town after dark and see and hear the "rising generation" swear and use obscen ity without bemoaning the fact that our boys have nowhere to go to but the streets and saloons. The Appeal is not given to sermonizing, it is too busy for that, be sides there are other papers exlstant that can only do that kind of business (through boiler plates.) But it does wish the enterprise a hearty godspeed, and takes this means of asking Its customers to "put their shoulders to the wheel" and help along the good work for the broadest klhd of political economy is to provide things educational and Instructive. Libra ries and gymnasiums are infinitely more satisfying and easily supported than peni tentiaries. And new that the right idea Viae Antarort ntn the rvnn1e. and the thins: will be managed according to the right J standard, let's help It along. I BRYAN ON ENGLISH ORATORS. Baltimore Sun. Hon. William J. Bryan, has been draw ing striking pen portraits of the most distinguished publicists and orators In England. Mr. Biyan la recognized In his native land as a speaker and debater of exceptional attainments. He combines eloquence, wit and logic to an unusual degree in his oratorical efforts. His views on the oratory of English states men have therefore a more than ordinary Interest, for he speaks as an expert on this subject Mr. Bryan finds much to ad mire in the former Colonial Secretary of Groat Britain. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, whom he pronounces "a man who would rank high in any land." Mr. Chamber lain Is a type of the educated business man In public life. He Is a graduate of one cf the great English universities, a wealthy manufacturer, and has a thorough knowledge of economics and of social questions. He has In tho last few years been a Radical, a Liberal and an ultra -Imperialist His success as a public speak er Is due largtfy to the fact that he has the courage of Is convictions and Is well Informed on any subject which he may discuss. His language is pithy, foreceful and alt times colloquial. His oratory Is of the harpshootlng order. He thinks straight and usually hits the mark. He may be caustical at times, but he is al ways clear and strong. Mr. Bryan repre sents him as "an antagonist who would not fear to meet the best on any plat form." That Is an accurate description of Mr. Chamberlain. He has absolute confidence In himself, and as a debater Is not afraid to break a lance with the strongest Intellects In the land of John Bull. Mr. Bryan not only heard Mr. Chamber lain debate revolutionary changes In the fiscal sypstera. of Great Britain, but he also attended a meeting at which Lord RoscLery, the Liberal-Imperialist orator, made a brilliant reply to the Birmingham statesman. Lord Rosebery represents the aristocrat In politics, yet he enjoys almost unbounded popularity In England. He Is the Idol of a large section of Brit ish Liberals and has the respect and ad miration of his political adversaries. There Is a striking contrast between the Lib eral nobleman and the Tory commoner. The latter is grimly In earnest all the time. Statesmanship Is a business with him and he takes politics very seriously. Lord Rosebery, on the other hand, seems to regard statesmanship as a diversion. Like Mr. Chamberlain, he Is a man of great wealth and la not In politics for what he can make out of It In the way of sordid gain. He likes the excitement of party strife because of the recreation It affords him. In his case It Is a sort of Intellectual sport The strong point In his oratory Is Irony, of which he la master. He excels In banter and raillery. In his speech In the Surrey Theater in London he held Mr. Chamberlain up to derision. Mr. Chamberlain is what Americans would call a "calamity howler." He asserts that the industries of Great Britain will be ruined it not protected by a high tariff from, foreign competition. Lord Rose bery, as reported In the London Chroni cle, made these keen thrusts at the Bir mingham. Jeremiah: Mr. Chamberlain has proved to his own satisfaction our own ruin over and over again. Wo are beginning to feel quite com placent In the contemplation of our own catastrophes. We are blinding our eyes to all facts and to all figures, and we enjoy the spectacle of universal desolation. I remem ber an old friend of mine who was of a pes simistic disposition not, perhaps, so pessim istic as Mr. Chamberlain, but he was no doubt of a pessimistic disposition and wish ing to express to me the highest possible praise of a mutual friend, ho said, "So-and-so Is a most sensible man. lie despairs of everything." And I am inclined to think that the historian of the future will be able to describe, in the spirit of the anecdote. Mr. Chamberlain as a most sensible man. as at the present moment he despairs of every thing, and we dre to despair of everything if we listen to tho lamentations of this modern Jeremiah. We aro hurried from gloomy prospect to gloomy prospect, all lurid with, thunder and lightning and catastrophe. We are told at one stnge, "You are absolutely ruined," and at another stage, "You are not ruined, but you soon will be." Every art Is used to raise our apprehensions. Tin plates are ratUed In the wings to produce the stage thunder that Is necessary the whole scene Is comfortable blackness, and these gentlemen have settled down like so many Jobs to be wail our fates. The worst Is that there comes some cheerful face peeping up from this scene of devastation, and saying, "I am very much obliged to you for your sympathy, but after all we are doing extremely well." Lord Rosebery kept up thl3 effective bantering in a speech whlcn would fill several columns. Ho was serious just long enough to show that Mr. Chamber lain's jeremiad was not justified in num erous particulars by the Government's trade reports. Then he would drop into irony or humor and evoke peals of laugh ter from his audience at the expense of the apostle of calamity, with an occasion al thrust at the Prime Minister, tho Right Hon. Arthur James Balfour. It Is to bo regretted that Mr. Bryan did not have an opportunity to hear Mr. Balfour in ono of his delightful philosophical speeches. Tho Prime Minister is one of tho most skillful political controversial ists In England. So subtle Is his intellect, so adroitly does he balance himself be tween conflicting opinions, that after read ing one of his speeches it Is next to im possible to tell "where he Is at" Yet ho is a master of fence and a very versatile and cultured man. In theological contro versy there are few bishops of the Es tablished Church who can hold their own with him. He has written books In which he proved to his entire satisfaction that there was ground for a reasonable faith and ground for a. reasonable doubt. He Is a large-minded man with a propen sity for Intellectual speculation. On tho "calamity" question he Is as noncommit tal as on other subjects of controversy. "Mr. Chamberlain,'! said Lord Rosebery. "tells us that wo are all ruined. Mr. Balfour tells us that we aro extremely prosperous, but that we shall soon be ruined. I am inclined to think that if we adopt the remedies of the first we shall soon fulfil the prophecies of tho second." It would be Interesting to have Mr. Bryan's opinion of Mr. Balfour, who is, all In all, the most many-sided states man in King Edward's realm, and is ac counted a very dangerous antagonist in debate by the readiest speakers in tho House of Commons. Speech Saved From the Flood. New York Sun Mr. Curtis, of Kansas, a new member of the committee on ways and means, did not make a speech on the Cuban reci procity bill, although he had a tariff speech ready for use. "I want to save It" he said, "for a gen eral tariff debate, should one occur. I think a good deal of that speech, for it was incidentally the means of saving the one book of my library that escaped from the ravages of the flood that swept over Topeka last Summer. "I was reading on the subject and had me second volume of Colton's 'Life of ciay' in hand. I laid It upon a tin box, resting on the top of the bookcases, and when the waters flooded the house every thing but that went "How it escaped I don't know. It Is the sole renc of a library that I had been gathering slnco 1879, when I began the study of the law." Terror-Stricken. Washington Star. He could thunder hU opinions When upon the stump he went; To rebuke the ruthless minions Of a glorious Government. He'd face a crowd unruly And he'd tell 'cm what he thought. And he met all dangers coolly. As an honest person ought. But his wife once gave a party At least he called It that. His manners once so hearty Straightway, grew subdued and flat. For chatter In -a small way His talents were so. few That he trembled In the hallway And he Just said, "Howdy do!" NOTE AND COMMENT, New York la acquiring the bridge habit Henceforth Max Nordau should b more Interested In degenerates than ever. All that Colombia has to do Is to. knock the chip off. Mr. Rhlnehart, of Seattle, must join St John Dlx in the ranks of discredited fi nanciers. Now that Paris Is to suffer from a great strike of bakers, what are we to do for our French bread? The death of a prizefighter Is reported, and marks the gradual descent from the stories of the football season. When Russia tries to raise another loan In Paris, she will discover that you can't always get face value for sentiment. The Courier-Journal weeps over the rape of Colombia. Senator Morgan talks of a Caesarean operation. 'Trhere seems to bo a mistake somewhere. There was a. tyoung man in Domingo, Went there as a humorous gringo. He tried to keep cases On Presidents faces, Grew dizzy, and now he's a jingo. The Yale Dally News has been sued for ?10,G00 damages for an alleged libel, and the amateur journalists who control the paper's destinies are beginning to wonder If play isn't too serious at times. A bal pondre seems to have shaken Chicago society to Its foundations. It appears that the valse Is a feature of the show,, and a number of people, who are quite familiar with the waltz, were woe fully tangled up over the new dance. To appear blooming as the rose upon on? side of the face, while the -other side shows traces of the Iron hand of time, is sufficiently embarrassing to justify the sufferer in asking for damages. No one relishes the accusation of being double faced. Chicago, tho home of thugs and vigi lantes, union hearse drivers and scab motormen, tall buildings and low morals, ward heelers and dlvino healers, winds and bluffs, blessed with stockyards and ' cursed with a university Chicago, the queen city of Mid-America. A writer tells of seeinsr a number of Indians at Panama, each of them bound with rawhide lariats, and guarded by a soldier. "Are those brigands you've caught?" ho asked tho Colombian officer In charge. "No, Senor," was reply, "they are vol unteers for the army." The esteemed William E. Curtis is ex ploring Europe just now, and has suc ceeded in discovering a number of new countries, Spain among tho number. It appears from the letters sent by Mr. Curtis that thero are several cities in Spain, and that there are cathedrals of considerable local repute In some of the cities. Journalistic enterprise is a won derful thing. Senator Tillman, of blessed fame, re cently delivered a lecture somewhat to the north of' his own bailiwick. His re muneration was the net extortionate sum of $100. and he was paid in a bill of that denomination. On presenting this at his bank the Senator discovered that he had been handed a bogus bill. Possibly tho committee had come to the same conclu sion about the lecture he had handed them. In Arkansas, it appears, they prefer fighting for office to running for it, and the spectacle of two candidates for gov ernor mixing It In a rough and tumble Inspires the youth of the state with an Idea that there is a lot more fun in poll tics than one would think from merely readlng speeches. Scrapping Is a good way of popularizing political campaign ing, and of encouraging citizens in general to take an interest in the affairs of gov ernment "W. B. Yeats, tho English poet, got oft a good thing when he was at tho Frank lin Inn for lunch, the other day," said the literary man of tho Philadelphia Press. "Of course, he's all for art for art's sake, but he told of a woman who once said to Marion Crawford, tho novelist: " 'Have you ever written anything that will live after you havo gone?' ' 'Madame,' Crawford replied, 'what I am trying to do is to write something that will enable me to live whllo I am here. " WEX J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. She Life Is a lottery. He Sure; and tha automobile people Just now seem to be taking: the most chances. Yonkers Statesman. The difference between salary and Wages Is precisely the difference between accpUng a position and getting a Job. Detroit Free Press. "A man makes a bad bargain," said Uncle Eben, "when he has to git along wlf half a consclence In order to double hla money." Washington Star. Dinah Ebony Aunty, de papers ay mebby de black plague will come to dls country. Aunt Ebony Don't you worry 'bout dat. honey. It won't show on us. New York Weekly. "Hazel came over tonlsht to study with me," explained Dorothy. "And did you do much studying?" "Well, we would have If there hadn't been so much to talk about." Chicago Post. "Dabncy has an awful attack of indigestion." "How did ho get it?" "Ha tried to eat up all the warmed-over turkey at once, so It wouldn't come on the table again." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Were you at Miss Xewgirl's coming-out party?" "Yes, for a little while. But sho hadn't got more than a third of the way out when I left. Judging from her dress." Cin cinnati Times-Star. "Imitation may be the slncerest flattery." remarked the shade of the old dramatist, who had been looking over the book of one of Sar dou's plays, "but adaptation la not It's plain stealing." Chicago Tribune. Mlsa Youngbud Did you enjoy the play? Miss Elderlelgh Yes. Indeed especially the third act. Miss Younsbud Oh, yes; that was the act In which the heroine told how she Induced her husband to propose. Chicago Daily News. Mr. Elder There Is something I want to say to you, Bessie cr that Is, MIs3 Kuteley. Miss Kuteley Call me Bessie if you wisn. .Mr. Elder Oh, may I? Miss Kuteley Of course; alt old gentlemen call me Bessie. Philadelphia Ledger. Mrs. Suddenrlch I never heard no such way of talkln as you've got Into at boarding school. Daushter I've learned to speak as the teachers do. Mrs. Suddenrlch Well, Jus drop It. Them poverty-stricken hirelings don't move in our set. New York Weekly. The speeding trains came together with a dull, slckenimc thud. A moment later the happy pair sat facing each other In the corn field, far away. "Well, what are you crying for?" asked the man. The lady wept anew. "It It Is our first fallinz out." she sobbed. Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. "I wish we could discourage those cousins of yours, thcBlanks." she said, wearily. "The circumstances are such that we hava to Invite them to dinner about once In so often, and they never by any chance decline." "Sup pose," he said, thoughtfully; "suppose you cook the dinner for them yourself the next time." Chicago Post X H