THE MOROTNG OREGOjNIAN, TUESDAY .AUGUST 9,- 1904, Entered at the Postoffie at Portland, Or., as second-class mattter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, with Sunday excepted, per year 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 9.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 The "Weekly, per year 1-50 The Weekly, 3 months 50 .Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted 15c Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday In eluded 20c POSTAGE RATES. United States," Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper lc 16 to 30-page pape 2c 82 to 44-page paper................ 3c Foreign rates, double. The 'Oregonlan does not buy poems or Etorles from Individuals, and cannot under-, take to return any manuscript sent, to it without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency) New Tork; rooms 43-50, Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SALE. Atlantic City, N. J. Taylor & Bailey, sews dealers, 23 Leeds Place. Chicago Auditorium annex; PostoElce News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rlck, 000-312 Seventeenth street. Kansas City, Mo. Ricksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and "Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 250 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; L. Regelsburger. 217 First Avenue South. New York City I. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden F. R. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros.. 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 "West Second South street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co., Joseph Copeland. Wilson '& Wilson. 217 N. 17th st.: Gee. L. Ackermann, newsboy. Eighth and Olive sts. San Francisco J. IC Cooper Co.. 740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel: Foster & Orear. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sut ter; L. E. Leo. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market; Frank Scott, SO Ellis; N. Wheatley, S3 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House News Stand. j YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 87 deg.; minimum, 63. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and continued warm; northwesterly winds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1904, WAGES AND PRICES. Kepresentative Cowherd's answer toA Carroll D. "Wright's statistics of wages and prices is in many respects admira ble, and occupies to some extent, it will be recalled, the ground covered in these columns at .the time Mr. Wright's de duotions. "were given out. And yet it would be very easy to show that the Cowherd arraignment of the industrial situation is no more logical than Mr. "Wright's glorification of Republican rule. As we have often sought to show in these columns, statistics are capable of almost any desired exhibit in the hands of skillful manipulators. One has only to pick out the years, Indus tries, articles, etc, to suit the purpose in hand, and the thing. Is done. It was the structural weakness of Mr. "Wright's argument, for example, that he undertook to demonstrate an Im provement in prices by making compar isons with 1S96, when business was so unusually depressed that products of all sorts had no value in the ordinary meaning of the term. No trustworthy or serviceable cbncluslon as to the con dition of our working people can be drawn from the abnormal year of 1S96 It Is a perfectly fair answer which Mr. Cowherd makes, mpreover, that wages have risen In unprotected Industries; and that upon those industries Mr. "Wright largely depends for his optim lstic exhibit, and that In other lines. ;whlch Mr. "Wright carefully ignores, the wage fund has actually declined. But if Mr. Cowherd thought to make any better showing for his own side of the controversy, he has failed. He says that increased wages are due to unions and most prevalent in strongly union ized industries. But he goes right on to complain of the bad conditions .among railroad men and miners. These two fields of labor are well unionized -whatever Mr. Cowherd may say; and if the -tariff has not raised "wages where wages are higher, then It has certainly not reduced wages where they are lower. His reference to scanter hours of labor is "at least "unfortunate; for Is it not' one of the dearest purposes of urilpnlsm to secure a constantly lessen ing. number of hours in the day and days in the week? There are two reasons "why these" dis cusslons are unprofitable. One is that in the general run of things high wages and high prices go together. It is foolish task for Mr. "Wright to seek, through manipulation of figures, to show that the Republican party has brought about an era of high wages and low prices; and it Is equally boot less for Mr. Cowherd to intimate that Republican rule means low wages and high prices. The other reason is that every such undertaking Is a two-edged sword. Cheap bread doesn't suit the farmer, nor low cost of meat the stock grower. It is questionable, also, whether a demonstration in high labor , cost of manufactures does as much good with workingmen as it does harm with owners and investors. There is another element In the cost of living which it seems to us these partisan controversialists too much ig nore, and that is the effect of cheap ened processes of manufacture upon products not foodstuffs. The man who earns from $100 to $150 a month spends approximately $30 to $50 a month on his table. The rest goes for things outside the necessaries of life. Clothing is much cheaper than it used to be. So is furniture and so are all the odds and ends of housekeeping. Interest on the homebuilder's mortgage Is lower, and as for house rent, it rises and falls with the general condition of industry. Rent is high when employment Is plenty and the worker has the means to pay it; and it comes down when jobs are scarce and rent-paying capacity Is impaired. The average lot of common humanity is immensely easier today than it was a generation ago. Since population has doubled, the piano, for example, is ten times as common. This improvement is not due to the tariff, as Republican spellbinders would hav.e it, nor yet to the trusts, as their defenders fondly declare, but to the advance of science and Its application to industry. It is the chemist who has established the packing Industry by teaching it how to use by-products. It is the inventor, not (Rockefeller or Havemeyer, who has given us cheap sugar and kerosene These axe the great material-glories of our modern civilization, and it i3 better for the campaign hustler to leave them unspotted from his unclean hands. HOPE VERSUS DESPAIR. The November election will be decid ed, not by the veteran Gold Democrats who voted for McKInley in 1S96, but by men who at that time were from 13 to 21 years of age, whose first vote for President will belong in 1S96, 1900 or 1904. Of the men 35 years and over In 1896 some 2,500,000 have died since that ear, and the ranks of the voters have been increased by not fewer than 3,000, 000 who have become voters since 1895. "Whoever can get the bulk of these young men will be elected President. It is an Interesting fact, as a little inquiry will show any unprejudiced ob server, that young men of Democratic antecedents who cast their first vote in 1896 or 1900 show much less inclination to vote for Parker than do the older men. whose minds are swayed by the recollections of 1876, 1884 and 1892. This Is partly explainable, of course by ref erence to the power of old associations, but it may be explained also in many cases by the fact that the younger mind Is attracted more by the gospel of hope and endeavor than by the wall of com-. plaint and despair. The old man for reflection and misgivings, perhaps, but the young man1 for action and confi dence. "What a contrast in this respect Is af forded by the attitude of the two great parties today! 'The Republican looks out upon what- seems fo him on the whole a pretty good sort of world. Times are ,good, business is thriving, our foreign relations are peaceful and oUr domestic affairs satisfactory. The Treasury Is full, foreltm trade Is ad vancing every year, our Army and i Navy have sustained their high tradi tions on land -and sea, the isthmian canal goes ahead apace, the dependen cies are coming on comfortably, the gold standard is secure, capital is well Invested and labor well employed. "We point to the past with pride, we re joice in the present, we look to the future with resolution and hope. Cross the street and you enter the house of mourning. Sackcloth shrouds every form, ashes rest on every brow. Instead of the song of hope, we hear the lamentations of Jeremiah and the grief of Job. If you look at President Roosevelt one way 'he is dangerous to the financial Interests, and in another way he is under the control of the money power. The people are being ground into the earth, and on the other hand the country Is being delivered over to the rabble. Taxes are too high. the Treasury Is plundered, our foreign relations are Imperiled, our domestic affairs too much Interfered with and too much let alone at the same time, and our free institutions are menaced in a thousand different places. Everything that is, is to be viewed with alarm; whatever Is, is wrong. "While it is true now and always must be true that earthly Institutions and mortal men fall something short of the ideal; and while what Is satisfactory to some or even to most cannot be satis factory to all, and while there is no great and wise man or great and wise undertaking but will at some point lend itself readily to captious criticism, It Is yet very doubtful if this gospel of pes simism can address Itself successfully to the 3,000,000 young voters of the land, who will find it hard to reconcile things as they find them with the black pic ture painted by the Democrats; who will suspect there is something wrong when the party of despair can find no spot in all the wide domain of current progress on which to Test in approval, confidence and hope. DOLLAR WHEAT AGAIN. Chicago quotations yesterday made dollar wheat look cheap. Cash wheat and the entire list of options sold above $1 per bushel, and the gain in May and December was more than 4 cents per bushel. This wild market and excitable prices are due to the continued bad crop reports ffom all parts of the great wheat belt of the- Middle "West and Northwest, and are so unlike any of the previous booms of recent years that the professional operators stand aghast, afraid 'to buy and afraid to sell. A few months ago, when Mr. Armour was carrying on a systematic bull campaign in wheat, the sensational advances noted from time to time were the result of clever manipulation, and by these methods he succeeded In forcing the price up to $L09 per bushel. Then came the crash, and wheat went down with a rush, declining more than 25 cents per bushel before it paused for breath. The slump which followed the. close of the Armour deal was the logical termi nation of a clever piece of manipula tion, backed by a statistical position sufficiently strong to start a speculative movement, but not strong enough to maintain it to the end to -which It was sure to be carried by the excited specu lators who are always the most power ful as well as the most uncertain factor to be reckoned with In a. wheat deal. At the time Mr. Armour succeeded in forcing the cereal up to $1 per bushel the 1904 wheat crop in this country was sufficiently promising to warrant specu lators in selling wheat for July deliv ery at fully 20 cents per bushel under the abnormal and unnatural price of the May delivery. This was conclusive evidence that the strength in May wheat was artificial and due to manip ulation. In the present bull market, however, there Is a very pronounced reversal of conditions, for, while wheat for Sep tember delivery in Chicago closed yes terday at $1.01, for May delivery the close was $1.01. In other words, the near-by option during the Armour deal sold at a premium of about 20 cents per bushel over that for distant delivery, while on yesterday's market the distant option commanded a premium over that for September delivery. This reflects an intrinsic strength which was miss ing from the market -when It was under the manipulative Influence of Mr. Ar mour. Just how far this strength will carry prices it is difficult to forecast. As has frequently been stated, the American market is far out of line with the rest .of the world's markets, and it will be necessary for us to use all of our wheat at home in order to maintain these prices. Oregon and "Washington growers are both fortunate and unfortunate under present conditions. They are fortunate In having larger crops than have been produced this year in any other part of the United States, and in a measure unfortunate through their inability to reach the markets that are now paying the highest prices for the cereal. One pleasant feature of the situation lies in the fact that, no matter where the wheat is marketed, there is but a very faint possibility of the farmer being obliged to accept less than 50 cents net, and at present he can secure 60 cents net, and even better. There is a good profit in wheatgrowing at these figures, and a low valuation of the crop of Ore gon, "Washington and Idaho this year would be $30,000,000. "MORE POWER" FOR ICHABOD. It is conducive to the general gayety that just as the Interstate Commerce Commission has begun rendering decis ions uniformly in favor of the railroads the Democrats should be demanding more power for it. All of which seems solemn enough, of course, to the staid and conservative Financial Chronicle, to which we are Indebted for the dis covery, but such things are obviously no laughing matter for "Wall street. The St. Louis platform declares for "an en largement of the powers of the Inter state Commerce Commission to the end that the traveling public and shippers of this country may have prompt and adequate relief from the abuses to which they are subjected in the matter of transportation." It appears from the record, however. that if present tendency is a safe guide, the more power the commission gets the worse off the shippers would be. One case which has just been decided was "In the matter of allowances to elevators by the Union Pacific Railroad Company." The points of the decision are enumerated as follows: (1) That the comnensation nald for the elevator or transfer service is not unreasonable; 1 (2) that the' Union Pacific Is entitled to perform the work itself or have It done' by others and is not legally' at fault or guilty of wrongdoing because incident ally those employed by the carrier to transfer the grain are aided more or less in another line of business in which they are engaged; (3) that any Injury or detriment resulting to rival carriers' under the arrangement is something which the law does not seek to prevent The opinion In this case was by Chair man Knapp. Another decision was that In the cases against the Southern Railway Company and the Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Railroad Company", Involv ing the question of storage charges on freight held in railroad depots, the opinion In this instance being by Com missioner Fifer. The Commission lays down the sensible rule that a railroad freight depot and a public storage warehouse are not used for similar pur poses, and the charge for storage in the railrpad depot may properly be made higher than the public warehouse charge with the object of compelling the expeditious removal of freight. The decision -consequently is that the Southern Rajlway Company, in apply ing storage rates in excess of the usual public warehouse charge on interstate traffic at Macon, Ga., and the Columbia, Newberry & Laurens in applying stor age rates at Columbia, S. C, In excess of the usual public warehouse charges, did -not violate the act to regulate com merce. .The commission at the same time decides that storage rates and reg ulations enforced by common carriers subject to the interstate law must be published at the. stations of the roads and filed with the commission. There is a reasonable probability that nobody in the St. Louis Convention knew anything about the course of the Interstate Commerce Commission's re cent rulings. All simply recalled the same old cry for more power for it and supposed it periectly safe to take a chance in favor of the downtrodden traveling public and shipper. The Dem ocratic party Is the great apostle and advocate of every one who has noth ingthere is no doubt about that; but it is not always as judicious as possible in the means it suggests for getting even. A LESSON IN WOODCRAFT. "Wesley Pyle, S. youth of 19, who was recently shot for a deer In the moun tains near Cow Creek, In Southern Ore gon, w.as "not skilled in woodcraft.' Hence he became the target for the rifle of a man who, by inference, knew ex actly what he was doing. Rev. L. E Meminger was the marksman in this in stance. He was out for deer, and evi dently regarded any object that had the temerity to move in the bushes "his meat." Young Pyle, "ignorant of wood craft," was not able to get through the bushes without setting them in motion. He had, moreover, just shot his first deer, and the prudence that forbids a trained woodsman to move under such circumstances was ignored. A shot from the minister's rifle brought him to a realising sense of his ignorance of woodcraft Fortunately he was not killed, only winged. He now lies in i hospital in this city, his right shoul der shattered, but with a good chance of recovery. In extenuation of his lack of know! edge of woodcraft it is explained that the lad was but recently from Iowa and knew nothing about mountains Having shot a deer, he grew" excited It was his first deer and not being aware that he was in dangerous prox imlty to a man with a gun, who was used to killing deer, knew all about woodcraft and was skilled In mountain etiquette, he incautiously moved the bushes through which he passed. "What followed has been told. Clearly this untaught boy from a prairie state need ed a lesson in woodcraft, and, true to his vocation as a teacher of the Igno rant and a monitor to the erring, Rev S. E. Meminger gave it A calm and deliberate hunter who Is out merely for recreation and never gets "buck fever' Is just the man to give salutary lessons in woodcraft. , "POTENT, POWERFUL AND SINCERE.' The most practical phase of foreign missionary effort Is represented by the work of the missionary physician and his wife. Dr. J. Hunter "Wells, who has sailed again for the Corean field, pre sented very forcibly the possibilities in this line, in the examples that he cited from his own experience wherein not the comforts of religion, but of medl cal and surgical science, were applied as a saving grace to the afflicted and the needy. Ministrations whereby the blind can be made to see, the lame to walk and the sick are restored to health repre sent missionary effort that is indorsed by a multitude that cares little for creeds and to whom the forms of religion do not appeal as matters of vital lm portance. Upon this point those who be lleve in bending the energies to the so lution of the problems of "one life at time" are as cordial In their good-by and godspeed to these Portland mis sionarles as are those who regard rellg ious effort as the mainspring of foreign missionary work, arid who would first convert to Christianity the disciples of Buddha and Confucius and Mahommed and then relieve their physical suffer ings. As truly said by. Dr. "Wells, "the most loving expression of missionary enter prise Is the branch that has to do with hygiene in raising the standard of llv ing and in ministering to the sick, the sorrowing and the very poor." In. this resjject foreign missionary effort does not differ from missionary work in the home field. The work of the Salvation Army is the strongest exemplification of this fact that is now before the Eng-l llsh-speaking world. Energetic, me thodical, practical, merciful, these sol diers of peace and good-will labor pa tiently in the lowly field in home cities that Dr. "Wells and other practical rep resentatives of the missionary Idea have found so attractive in foreign lands. The work, wherever It Is done and un der whatever denominational name, Is commendable, and not the less so when it goes hand in hand with religious zeal providing. Its "most loving expres sion," as designated by Dr. "Wells, takes precedence, first making the present life worth living. "Potent, powerful and sincere" is the effort made by mis sionaries who enter the field from the standpoint of pure humanity, literally. at the present time, taking their lives in their hands as they go forward. in the most "loving expression" of the missionary spirit. The tragedies of railway travel multi ply. It is in vain that the champion of American railway methods cites the small number pf casualties from rail way accidents as compared with the Immense number of passengers carried. The public is confronted again and again witi familiar figures showing that on an average only one passenger out of 47,793,320 carried is killed on English railways, while in the United States one passenger out of every 3,963,- iD is killed. In England only one out. of every 1,540,745 passengers may expect to be injured; here one in 146,896 pas sengers, is injured. The explanation of the fact presented by these figures Is not far to seek. The first impulse is to place the blame upon traffic managers who drive their trains at too great speed, overload cars and employ in ferior men in important branches of the service. This explanation, savs the Rochester Post-Express, Is not carried far enough, adding: "Upon careful In- estigation it would probably be dis covered that traffic managers do not drive their trains at greater speed than is demanded by their patrons." Prob ably the correct . explanation Is found In the fact that we are an Impatient people,' and, w;hereas the Briton is con tent to take the accommodation train, the 'American is satisfied with nothing less than flying along- at fifty or sixty miles an hour. It is the eager desire of the people to "get there" that regulates the speed on American railways and is, indirectly at least, responsible for many accidents caused by rapid transit. The steamship Arabia, which was seized by the Russians with a cargo of merchandise from Portland, has been released, and that portion of her cargo which was not contraband will now be delivered at the destination for which it was originally headed. Eventually It Is not Improbable that Russia will pay up for that which she has confiscated, for if she Is out roaming the seas In search of cargo which might In the course of time reach her enemies, even though it now -be floating, in neutral bottoms to neutral ports and consigned to neu tral merchants, she will find It In such wholesale quantities that It would amass an overstock of. trouble for her. LSo long as flour, provisions and other contraband of war can be shipped, to Hong Kong there will be plenty of coasting vessels ready to run It up to Japanese ports, especially when they can do the running under the protec tion of Japanese guns, for practically the entire distance. Russia is powerless to stop this traffic. Robert Hess and Edward Chester, two noted horsethieves of the Inland Empire, are certainly experts in their line. Their latest exploit deprived the Sheriff of Malheur County, his deputy and the City Marshal of Vale of their horses. Mounting the steeds of their confiding custodians while the latter were at breakfast, they were "over the hills and far away" almost before they were missed. "While the character of the horsethlef is not an admirable one, he who does what he sets out to 4o deftly, expeditiously and successfully commands a degree of admiration even though his talents are misdirected. This fact made "Gentleman Jack" the hero of a past generation, and for a time elevated the vocation of a highwayman to the rank of a profession. These bold, bad men of Eastern Oregon are likely to do the same by horsestealing. It be hooves the constabulary of the stock counties where these men are operat ing to look to their laurels. The timber supply of Oregon and "Washington just at present Is In jeop ardy from two different sources, both of which are making great inroads on the standing timber. The competition of the loggers Is so great that they are. said to be cutting 500,000 feet per day more than there Is a demand for, and the result will be a. waste of the sur plus. More distressing because, they leave absolutely no recompense for the destruction are the ravages of the forest fires. The business of logging requires the employment of many men and the distribution of considerable money for wages, and even If a portion of the logs are lost, some of the output will be sold. "With the forest fire the loss is complete, and in many places today are large tracts of smoking stumps and damaged timber -which a month ago had a merchantable value aggregating many thousand dollars. "With Sheriff's posses In pursuit of two separate and distinct bands of horsethieves, Oregon Is In a fair way to receive some-unpleasant advertising. It Is not so very long ago that Oregon horses were so plentiful and cheap that they were not considered worth steal ing, but the desperate chances which the thieves now fleeing from the wrath of the law are taking in an effort to round up a small bunch is a high trib ute to the present value of the Oregon range horse. Plans for a water system for Manila bave been submitted to and approved bythe Secretary of "War. The supply is io oe pipea in irom tne Aiarquina Valley, a distance of sixteen miles This is another phase of the outrage perpetrated by the United States in subjugating the poor Filipinos! A sys tem of sewerage will next be inflicted upon these people. "When abuses of this kind begin there is no telling when or where they will stop. Japanese soldiers continue to be slaughtered by the thousands at St. Pe tersburg. It is astounding In view of this terrible decimation of their ranks, that the little brown men continu'e to advance and .that General Kuropatkln and his undiminished .host continue to retreat RUSSIA'S PIRATICAL ACTS. St Louis Globe-Democrat The United States Government will demand full reparation from Russia for such damages to American proper ty as may have been inflicted by the outrage in which the Russians sank the merchant vessel Knight Command er. That was a British craft, and the government at London may be rolled on to look after Its own Interests In tne affair. A strong protest has been made by the British authorities, to the Czar's government, and recent developments in St- Petersburg show that it will be heeded.. But the goods on board the Knight Commander belonged to Americans. Under the commonly accepted defini tion, they were not contraband, and Russia had no right to interfere -with them, and no right to inolest the ves sel carrying them. The position of the Government at "Washington will be that by destroying the vessel the Rus sians forfeited all right to show whether the goods were contraband or not. Prompt and adequate compensa tion from Russia will be demanded by the United States just as soon as the preliminaries can be arranged. There j win uu uu ueaiiaiiuu oil luia puiui uj the Roosevelt Administration. Russia's recent depredations on the high seas have a piratical look which win aruusu u siruns leeiiiis aguiuat ' In the United States and England. It nn . - . . . f . . ,,,,, i.-, t. -r , , " on the Federal statute book to require re Is not likely that Russia Intends to In- . . . .,, t r-rLtA c... ,..,, fMo I ports of the Inner working of great in sult the United States, although this ,. XT, , ,. t. a , . . i ,,. 1 dustrlal corporations. Under It the se Is the way the matter Is looked at by . . , . ,,,, . et j many persons in this country. Rus- I cr Lf sreat n0?0 f , sla can gain nothing and may lose I arf n T,st' fm bc K a con- something by making an enemy of this 1 "0 director on this trust always country. Thus far the United States , ePubl,Icanv in thf past', nas re'USed, l has observed the strict letter of Presi- share in the work of electing President dent Roosevelt's proclamation of neu- i Roosevelt it is because neither he nor trallty. issued at the beginning of the Ms associates can forgive a party or a Russo-Japanese war. No legitimate ! candidate who has determined that there cause for offense on Russia's nart has ! shall be no great corporation whose secret been given by the United States dur ing this conflict. Yet Russia started out by slighting this country. Its govern ment refused to officially participate In the St Louis World's Fair, although it had promised to be represented. One of the reasons for Russian withdrawal from the Fair was said to be the ne cessity for the employment of all the country's spare cash at home on ac count of the war. Another reason as signed was anger at -what St. Peters burg called the antl-Russlan sentiment of the United States. These things will be brought to mind by the Knight Commander sinking outrage. A halt will have to be called on Russia's pi ratical acts. THE ADVANCE IN SILVER. Baltimore Sun. The price of sliver has advanced and It Is expected to go above 60 cents an ounce, unless the situation should change In some unexpected way. To a certain ex tent the advance Is caused, perhaps, by the nice handling of the market by large holders of silver. A disposition to specu late for a rise helps the advance. The larger factor, however, is the Eastern demand, which has long been the main stay of the market The Far East has always been the great buyer of the white metal. In that quarter of the world are some 700,000,000 or SOO.OOO.OOO people, most of whom are very1 poor and use coins of small value. For their ordinary trans actions even bronze and copper suffice so small are their units of value; but silver is, used In larger transactions and for hoarding. It Is customary to get the village metal lurgist to turn one's, fortune In silver Into jewelry and wear it on one's person for safekeeping. Vast quantities of sil ver are yearly bought, and the demand increases when crops are good and the people are prosperous. India In very re cent years, it is pointed out, "has been unusually prosperous; crops have, been good and exports large. This has caused a demand for more currency, and has also resulted in larger purchases through the bazaars for personal use and hoard ing. For the first half of the present year the increase In shipments to India and the Straits, as compared with last year, has been 63.3 per cent" China has not bought directly from the West In as large volume as In some for mer years, but a good deal of silver has Indirectly found its way Into the coun try, It is believed, through Japanese and Russian channels. China pays out a large amount to Europe yearly in indem nities, but the expenditures of the West ern powers in China In recent years have been very large. Railway-building, sup port of troops and military operations have thrown a good deal of cash John Chinaman's way, and he will absorb a good 'deal more before the present Russo Japanese War is concluded. The price of 60 cents an ounce is a good one and promises to be stable enough for a year or two. But it is far below the value of $1.29 an ounce, which prevailed in 1S65, and which tho Sherman act tried in vain to restore. New gold mines aro being opened every year, and gold may become much more abundant than now, but there Is no Indication of a disposition of progressive mankind to. abandon gold for silver. Even Mexico Is looking to the employment of the gold standard of value. Terrifying Memory. Atchison Globe. An Atchison woman has remained an old main for no other reason "than that her mother once had twins. The Song of the Common People. Alfred J. Waterhouse in. Success. Wo are the common people, tho hewers of wood and stone, Tho dwellers In common places, mighty of brawn and bone. Bearing the common burden that only the shirkers shun. And doing tho common duty that others have lett undone. Dubbed, by the few, plobeian, rabble or proletalre. Ours Is the hand that feeds them, ours is the prize they, share. And ours Is tho common blessing, freo to the tollers all. To win from the lowly valley unto tho sum mits talL Common, and only common This by the might of birth Tet tho world in Its need leans on us We are tho kings of the earth. Wo are the common people, and ours is' tho common clay That a God deemed fit for using, when, In that olden day. He took tho dust of the garden, the dust that his will obeyed, Fashioned and formed and shaped It, and man In his image made; And, seeing that God selected such clay for tho human test. And deeming his wisdom suffices to choose but the surely beat. We. who aro common pcoplo and made of tho common clay. Ieavevto the proud uncommon to Improve on th Maker's way. Common, and only common Tattered, sometimes, and frayed Wo still aro content' with the pattern That God in his -wisdom made. Wo aro the common people, yet out of- our might is wrought, Ever, by God's own flat, masters of mighty thought, Men of that grand republic whoso rulers walk alone. Piercing the future shadows, knowing what seers have known: And, measured by these, the unco are petty and wee and small. Playing with gilded, baubles, chattering, voluble all; And these, our sons, surpass them as tho hills o'ertop tho glen. For their great hearts throb to the world's long sob, and they are the saviors of men. Conimon, andonly common. Hopelessly commonplace," Tet out of our loins still issue The saviors ox tho race. WHY TRUSTS OPPOSE -ROOSEVELT Philadelphia Press. "Why do the trusts oppose President Roosevelt? Because his policy and his speeches have brought legislation limiting their power. For 15 years Federal lawsuits under Fed eral legislation have been brought to regu late and. restrain, corporations, railroad and industrial. One of these suits alone, brought by President Roosevelt, the North ern Securities case, abruptly checked the community of Interest plan, which had ad vanced the cost of freighf tn this coun try to shippers and consumers by a round $155,000,000 a year, over 53,000.000 a week, or half a million dollars every, working day. But a lawsuit directed, against a corpora tion breaking the law is, after all, a de structive and not a constructive measure. It Is punitive rather than preventive. The Republican party and President Roose velt's Administration are to be measured, not by their chase of those who have done evil, which has been vigorous, efficient, ef fective and successful, but by the broad legislation which has taken a long step forward In the control of corporations. Tn,3 hQJ been accompUshe'd by two acts, one creating the Department of Commerce and Labor and the other the Elklns Rail road Rate bill. ' Both these measures were opposed by rt,.Mft., Th Arcf 1 tho onrlloot Inw forces shall go on amassing wealth at the expense of the people without publicity, required by law and enforced by admin istrative power. The trusts do not like this. Their work loves darkness. They turn naturally In this great contest to the Democratic party, which, through all the last 50 years since it cast In its lot with human slavery, has been the party of reaction In politics and of alliance with the darker forces of life, gambling among the rest. The Elklns Railroad Rate bill directly attacked the power of trusts and rail roads by substituting for a fine or the Imprisonment of the officer making a pre ferential railroad freight rate, a heavy fine on the corporation which sought to profit by it. The trusts have been built up on preferential tates. Not one but owes whatever advantage It has, such a3 the Standard Oil or the Beef Trust enjoys, to the special rates granted by railroads. Through 20 years these have been at tacked, but here again a lawsuit, neces sary as It may be, is but destructive. The Important matter Is constructive legisla tion which makes it more the Interest of the railroad corporation to deal alike with all shippers than to give special favors to trusta Both these acts would accomplish noth ing if it were not for the suits which es tablished the power of the Government. The real value of the Northern Securities decision, one of the greater legal decisions on the control of corporations,, lies, not in the precise consolidation which It pre vented, but In the opinion which estab lished for all time the full and sufficient power of Congress to deal with any cor poration engaged in Industry and com merce. On this basis trusts can be controlled. Until this decision was 'secured they be lieved themselves free from regulation in tho space left between the limits of State and Federal jurisdiction. This Is true no longer. These lawsuits tho two acts and the policy of the Administration In enforcing both, constitute a construc tive reform In corporation control which only needs to be continued by re-electing President Roosevelt to Insure tho su premacy of law without shock or destruc tion of property. London Punishes, New York Pardons. Atlantic Monthly. One of the commonest ways of giving fictitious value to stock, and of selling large quantities of worthless certificates. Is by paying large dividends, not out of the actual earnings of the company, but out of the money paid by stockholders for their stock. Stockholders and others, be lieving from these dividends that the com pany Is actually prosperous and earning money, either Increases their holdings or buy stock at high prices, only to find later that It Is worthless. The penal code provides that the directors of a corpora tion who perpetrate this swindle are guilty simply of a misdemeanor. Equally serious Is the action of directors In know ingly making and publishing false state ments or reports as to the financial con dition of the company of which they aro trustees. Whittaker Wright (the great company promoter, who committed suicide after being sentenced to hard labor for Issuing false balance sheets of the wrecked London & Globe Finance Cor poration) was convicted In England under a statute substantially similar to this sec tion of the penal code. He was sentenced to seven years' penal servitude. Under this New York law the maximum penalty which he could have received would have been one year's Imprisonment, or a flno of ?50O. A Typical Trustbuster. Chicago Inter Ocean. It Is announced from Democratic quar ters that George Foster Peabody will bo appointed treasurer of the Democratic National Committee. At the same time It Is made known that Mr. Peabody Is a director in the following corporations: Morton Trust Company. American Beet Sugar ' Company. General Electric Company. Mexican Mineral Railway Company. Mexican Northern Railway Company. Potosl & Rio Verdo Railway Company. Southern Improvement Company. Alvarez Land & Timber Company. Companla Metallurglca. Conqulsta Coal Company. Mexican Coal & Coke Company. Mexican National Construction Company. Montezuma Lead Company. Here, then, is the barrel and the bung. No wonder the Hon. Thomas Taggart "greatly encouraged by the prospect," Is eager to get to work. New Light on the Servant Question. Lippincott's. "Here's a nice girl, Mr. Fenton." With unconvincing benevolenco the intelligence office "lady" anchored in front of him a stern and ancient Valkyr. "Have the others been long with yous?" The fierce newcomer took a fierce Initia tive. "No, oh, No." In his own office Edward was a man of authority, but here even the weakest woman rose immeasurably his superior. Overhearing a lady to the right bluntly assert, "You won't do; I never could stand a cross-eyed waitress," he envied her Inhuman courage. His examiner deigned to enlarge: "I never go where tho other help has been anny while, because sometimes they sides with the family." The Phantom Coasters. ' Edward N. Pomeroy in Atlantic Monthly. The'coastcra of the past aro back. The Emblem. Effort, Enterprise; T was long ago they wont to rack, But lo, they loom before my eyes. Below the cliffs that saw them strike And foaming breakers round them fold, Their skeletons are hidden, llko The pirate's bible and his gold. Yet now. as In their golden prime, Tho circles of the sea they sweep They pass behind the veil of time And traverse the primeval deep. About them howl forgotten gales; - Abovo are pre-hlstorlc skies; The fleet of ' Greece beside them sails . And Troy town's wreck behind them Ties. NOTE AND COMMENT., It's quite a pleasant walk from Irving ton. The dead-sure thing is usually deader than sure. Kuropatkln should be a stimulating name for a racehorse. The trouble about the gee-gees is that the right one doesn't always gee. We notice the London "comics? : are still running jokes about "Hiawatha." Now that the English have reached L'Hassa, the "h" will soon be dropped. Of a slovenly writer one might, instead of saying that he describes a scene, say that he descrlbbles i.t. The Sketch explains why certain build ing sites In London are. not finding a ready sale by saying: "The short lease, 0 years, is the cause of-lack of Interest" It shows a deplorpble Ignorance of woodcraft to be mistaken for a deer, and the experience of the youngster who re ceived a bullet In his shoulder should be a lesson to him to be careful In chasing his hunting companions. At Skibo Castle, it Is said, Carnegie has hung- in every room a large pla card bearing the words, "Please do not tip the servants." If he can succeed in having his wishes carried out, it may become less expensive for Englishmen to visit a friend's country home than to stay at a fashionable hotel. Max. Beerbohm, the Irrepressible critic, has been complaining of the unreality of the love scenes in novels and on the stage. In real life, he says, lovers merely hold each other's hand and murmur "dearest." "What would this look like on the stage? Simply ridiculous. The novel ist, according to Max. has the advantage of the dramatist in that he can describe the scenery at great length. The dramatist must rely upon a few daubs of paint and a canvas? face. There's nothing like helping the homo team. Here is how the Norwich Sun appeals to Its readers: If the young ladles who aro helping to entertain the members of the team have the best Interests of tho nine at heart, they will deny themselves and send the boys home early. This is particularly necessary this week, as the team has live hard games ahead. Wo don't want to shut down on this entire ly, for we realize how the boys feel about It when they are with the girls, but unless something Is done we shall have to go out of business. So It Is up to the girls to show their patriotism and see that the boys get their sleep. It is a noble mind that will own itself mistaken. The Paradise City correspon dent of the aptly-named Aurora Borealis hag a mind of such caliber that he Is not ashamed to admit his occasional mistakes. Our Mayor is painting his house and says he will have a cook very soonf writes the man from Paradise. "We once bet that it would be a South Paradise lady, but we do not think so now." These affairs of the heart are deceptive, espe cially to the onlooker. The girl that gets the most Ice-cream sodas doesn't always get the heart Professor Starr, the "Midway" pro fessor of Chicago University, has been unburdening himself lately of his con clusions on degeneracy. Some of the signs which indicate the degenerate are .tho habit of parting tho hair In. the middle or on thoflgliaeT'tiaiu"' ness, gray hairs before the age of 45, stub nose, bat ears, small lobes on the ears, receding chin, protruding lips, left-handedness, cross eyes, fondness for jewelry for hand wear by men, red hair for most people (the proressor said that the Irish were entitled to tho privilege of having red hair with out being degenerates), blonde hair (except with the Swedes), teeth wido apart, pigeon toes and knock knees. If you have 12 of these signs you should be in tho asylum, says Professor Starr, while 15 almost certainly insures you a life in the penitentiary. Hitherto the drunken man has been looked upon with contempt and disgust. He has been held up, figuratively, to tho gaze of the young as an example of what uncontrolled indulgence In strong waters will do for a man, and he has been the horrible warning of countless flrey decla mations. Yet all the time the poor fellow has been wronged. Man drinks himself silly, not because of a brute craving for Intoxicants, but because of eye strain. Dr. Chalmers Prentice needless to-say he halls from Chicago has made this great discovery. Badly-fitting glasses causa nervous derangement, and nervous de rangement throws the system out of the proper functional arrangement This derangement causes an abnormal appetite which demands liquor. Here It Is in the physician's own words, and mark tho cose of his sentence, "demands liquor." Do not blame the poor drunkard; do not fine him in the police court; but buy him a good pair of spectacles and send him forth a reformed man. T7EX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. If it's a poor rule that won't work both ways, what about tho rule that won't work either way? Baltimore American. Johnny What does It mean to take a thing philosophically? Mother It's tho way your paw pays hla card debts, but not tho butcher bill. New York Sun. Grover Oh, by tho way, do you have steam heat In your flat? Forester Only In Summer, and we are away then, so we don't mind It, you know. Boston Transcript. "Yes, that Is a statue of Virgil. Ho was a great Roman poet." "Was that the reason ho couldn't afford to wear pants?" asked little Waldo. Chicago Record-Herald. "Do you believe In the 'barrel' In politics?"' "Not any more," answered Senator Sorghum. "A man ought to have a hogshead In order to amount to anything these days." Washington. Star. "He's just a bad egg." 'Yes? Wouldn't It be awful If he should fall and be broke." "Ho did fall once and It kept him from being broke. He fell heir to half a million." Phila delphia Press. Tired Tatters Dla paper tells erbout a feller wot died from ennui. Weary Walker Wot'3 dat? Tired Tatters It's de feelln wot comes to a man when he gits eo lazy dat loafln's hard work. Chicago News. Argus emitted a yelp, of anguish. "How would" you like to get a cinder In 50 of ybnr eyes?" ho demanded. Making a bee Una. for the drugstore, he proved mythology Isn't what It Is cracked up to be. New York Sun. Lady Caller I am sorry to hear that your husband has failed. Mrs. Taketeasy. It must be Mrs. Taketeasy (sobbing) Yes, It's dread ful: but (brightening visibly) thank goodnes3 my new costume came home just before the crash. New Yorker. Farmer Treefrog What makes you think Daniel Webster wuz a smart man? Farmer Hoptoad Waal, I'ye been reading somevof hlet speeches, an' they seem to agree purty thor oughly with Mary Jane's graduation essay. Philadelphia Bulletin. "Binka overcame a lot of obstacles," said Banks to his wife. "He never went to school In his life, but he Is a successful business man and prominent enough to be sent as a delegate to the St. Louis Convention." "Oh, I know!" exclaimed - Mrs. Banks. "He's one of. those unlnstructed delegates the papers tell about." Cleveland Leader. k