-THE. MOKtfXKG - OREGONIAN THURSDAY, ABRIIT 27, . 190o. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Or., &s secoaaclass matter. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) Dally and Sunday, per year. DaUy and Sunday, six months B.ro Dally and Sunday, three months ........ o Dally and Sunday, per month - Dally -without Sunday, per year. 7-w Daily -without Sunday, six months 3.0 DaUy without' Sunday, three months.-... 1.05 Daily -without Sunday, per month.....- .65 Sunday per year..... 2. co Sunday, six months., '- an Sunday, three months.. ' ,w BT CARRIER. DaUy -without Sunday, per week r. Dally per -week, Sunday included...... THE WEEKLY OREGONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) "Weekly, per year Weekly, x months ij Wekly, three months HOW TO REMIX Send postotflce- money order, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency New York; Rooms 43-50 Tribune building. Chi cago; Rooms 610-512 Tribune bulldlnc. The Oregonian does not buy poems or stories from individuals and carmot under take to return any manuscript sent to It witn out solicitation. No stamps should be- in closed for this purpose. KEPT .ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postotfic "News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex. Globs News Depot, 260 Main street- . BenTer Julius Black, Hamilton & Kena jrlck. 806-012 Seventeenth street, and Frua Huff Bros.. 605 Sixteenth street. ,... De Moines, 4a Moses Jacobs, 509 Fifth street. Goldfleld, Ner. C. Mai one. Kansas City, Mo. Klcksecker dear Co Ninth and Walnut. Los Angeles Barry Drapkln; B. E. Amos, 614 West Seventh street. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South third: Xi. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue South. . New York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Oakland, CaL W. H. Johnston. Four teenth and Franklin streets. Ogden F. R. Godard and Meyers & Har rop, D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnham; "Mageath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnham: McLaughlin Bros.. 248 South 14th. Fboenir, Ariz. The BerryblU News Co. Sacramento, CaL Sacramento News Co., 429 K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second street South. Santa Barbara, Cal. S. Smith. San Diego, CaL J. Dillard. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 746 Market street: Foster & Crear. Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter: L. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand: F. W. Pitts. 100S Market; Frank Scott,. SO Ellis; N. Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Hotel St. Francis jsews Stand. St. Louis, Mo E. T. Jett Book & News Company, SOS Olive street. Washington, D. C. Ebblt House News Etand. ' PORTLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1905 THE EDDY AND THE STREAM. The other day Mayor McClellan, typi cal Eastern and Tammany Democrat, ssid the Democratic party must have a distinctive policy of its own, and must not depend on Republican blunders for Its success. It was a high-sounding sentiment, but the Brooklyn Eagle, a "conservative" Democratic newspaper, does not approve it. The Eagle de clares that the blunders of parties have ever been the great causes of the sue cesses of their opponents. The Eagle illustrates by saying that the election of Lincoln In I860 was due to Democratic blunders; that the May ors father. General McClellan, was de feated by the blunders of the platform makers of 1864 which, however", is only partly true, since "General McCIellan's ottn character of a trimmer between ir reconcilable opposites was a great ele ment and factor of his defeat. The Eagle continues: Samuel J. Tilden was elected In 1876 by the blunders, and worse, of Republicanism In Grant's second term. The Democracy was defeated In 1SS0 by the blunder of not forcing Tilden into renomlnatlon. Grover Cleveland was twice elected, once by the Republican blunder of the nomination of Blaine, and the second time by the blunder of President Har rison, who had an uncanny way of being unable to confer a favor without making an enemy. Republicanism has been kept in puwer by the Democratic blunders, and worse. of Bryanlsm. Man moves in mysterious ways his blunders to perform, and parties are made of men, to whom blunders are fatal. or to whom the blunders of the other party prrsent a usable advantage. There is truth in all this, but all the truth is not in it. Every party follows its own main bent and inclination, and cannot do otherwise. Every party, from the very constitution of its nature, fol lows Its main Idea to an extreme if time and opportunity be allowed it, These tendencies may be called its blunders, perhaps; yet they are logical consequences. But even when no serious blunders are committed by a party, the people after a while will tire of that party and call in another. They may not know why, but they "want a change." Then very likely they fall back soon to the old party again. It was not the blunders of the Grant Administration that elected Tilden though, by the way, Tilden was not elected. The Republican reverses of that year were due to natural reaction from the tense conditions of the Civil "War and its consequences. The spirit of the country, at white heat for twenty years, was cooling down. The reaction had indeed long been overdue. This gave Tilden the vote he got, There were Republican blunders in the nomination of Blaine and in the second nomination of Harrison; but nothing that seriously affected the course of our National Mfe. The eddy will run against the stream, but the wise do not mistake the eddy for the stream. The Democratic' party had long-con tinued success, because it was the party of our growing and aggressive pioneer life.' As the party of primitive life, it attached itself naturally to slavery, and fell with it. It. never has been able to accommodate itself to' the higher growth demanded by the advancing movements of human opinion. It stands for all crude, opinion, as it stood for the silver craze, and. as- it stands for the nascent vagaries of socialism. Now and again a body of the electorate turns to it "just for a change." But the result is arid and barren, and the waters of the eddy, after the short re current movement, resume their course with the stream. FINANCIAL GAINS IN THE MIDDLE v WEST. James H. Eckels has an article in The World Today in which he shows the tremendous financial gains that have been made in the typically Western States in the last twenty years, espe cially since 189S. He gives figures which show that in this later period the National banks west of the Mississippi River made a gain in loans and dis counts of 133 per cent, and in individual deposits of 139 per cent, while National banks In all the rest of the country gained only 65 and 72 per cent, respect ively, in the lines mentioned. Taking only the .states and territories on the immediate Eastern slope of the great divide North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Montana, Wyoming-, Colorado. New Mexico. Oklahoma and Indian Territory, the Increase In loans and discounts in the same period was 217 per cent. Mr. Eckels says further that there are bankers not yet gray who used to s'pend their time seeking Eastern money, that they might lend it af30 and 40 per cent, today soliciting- their Chi cago correspondents to buy Eastern commercial paper that will yield an an nual interest rate of 4 per cent. The financial transition thus presented is as great in its way as is the political transition in the same period and area. Twenty years ago the wail of calam ity was heard throughout the states above named. Kansas was its storm center. Jerry Simpson "sockless Jerry" was its most conspicuous mouthpiece; capital was arraigned as the foe of the "plain people" and populism ran riot in that part of the land. All of this- is of the past. The voice of calamity sunk by degrees to a whis per and then died out, and prosperity, induced by wise investment and revival of agriculture and manufacturing, came to the people, with the. result chroni cled by Mr. Eckels.- THE FACTS. Br DIAGRAM. A diagram of the liquor shops estab lished directly opposite the main en trance to the Exposition grounds, with marks showing sites of other places for which license has been solicited, is pre sented by The Oregonian today. The Oregonian is not a. fanatical nor unreasonable opponent of the liquor traffic It must, however, say that it thinks it a most unfortunate mistake that licenses .have been granted for liquor saloons directly in front of the main entrance to the Exposition. What do we wish or expect visitors to think of us? That Portland is a frontier town, of the mining-camp and cowboy era? Of course there will be liquor shops, but none should have been licensed or permitted at, near or oppo site the main entrance to the Fair. We should "preserve our own dignity and the dignity of the Fair. We shall not do this by making it necessary for visitors or for our own people to pass through a lane of liquor shops, to en ter It. " The Common Council can do what it wilj. It can revoke or cancel these li censespaying back the money If it sees fit to do so. The Oregonian simply presents the facts. CORNERING THE HOP MARKET. Oregon hopmen have formed an iron clad combine for the purpose of forcing the price of hops to a higher figure than consumers are now willing to pay. The system on which they are proceeding is the same as that followed by John W. Gates with the wheat market. In his -efforts to force the price of wheat to an unnatural height Mr. uates secured control of all of the wheat that he or j his friends could purchase. This took such a large amount off the market that, for a time at least, the price soared up to unnatural heights. The hop corner, which is now getting under way with so much in its favor, has many advantages over the wheat corner. Gates and his accomplices placed their limits at no stated figure, but were apparently content to watch the market rise and take advantage of a favorable opportunity to unload at a good profit. The hopmen go a step farther. They have fixed a limit of 30 cents per pound. and nothing is to be sold at a lower figure before August 1. Meanwhile there can be no short selling or long selling, and unless the men who are be hind the hop corner weaken, the shorts or the consumers may as well come up to the captain's office and settle. Another decided advantage over .the wheat corner comes from the restricted area of hop-producing territory. The wheat corner was weakened and dis turbed by Importation of Canadian wheat, and the cereal is of such uni versal production that it was Impossi ble to hold in line a majority of the producers, who were willing to sell at a reasonable figure. As a result, while some of the wheat producers were lying back waiting for the corner to force prices up to a dizzy height, others were making hay while the sun shone by un loading their holdings at . a price far enough above the cost of production to admit a handsome profit. There is less danger of this kind of work in a hop corner, for the reason that a very large portion of the Ameri can visible supply of hops Is right here in Oregon, where the "cornerers" dwelL The Injunction suit to restrain the hopmen from creating this unnatural condition of trade will be watched with considerable Interest. The legal method of checking exorbitant advances in the wheat market has been attempted against wheat corners, with varying re sults, and the fear that injunction pro ceedings would interfere with the sky ward flight of prices in the Gates deal was, at times during the progress of that deal, a bear factor of considerable importance. The "cornering" habit seems to be growing in popularity. It has been tried on wheat, corn, pork, beef and a great many other staples with varying degrees of success. In the end, how ever, the old inexorable law of supply and demand gets in its work, and prices are adjusted, regardless of corners. If the hop corner just launched is carried to a successful termination, it ought to make pretty plain sailing for albklnds of corners, in commodities used by many and produced by few. It will also stimulate hopgrowlng and increase production to such an extent that eventually the . hop cornerers may be obliged to follow the suggestion of the cotton planters and burn a portion of the output to enable them to receive higher prices. Every wheat corner that has been carried to a successful climax has left on the hands of the cornerers a. large supply of the cereal, known in the lan guage of the pit as the "corpse." The cost of disposing of the corpse, at the cut-rate prices which follow corners, usually absorbs most of the profits which the public are led to believe are made by the men behind the corner. It is to be hoped that the Oregon hop com bine will not be left with a Corpse on hand to be marketed at a low figure after the collapse, which will surely come In the course of time Commissioner Garfield is now in California to Investigate the oil trust. The result of his beef trust Investiga tion was the discovery that the packers were making less than ?1 per head profit on the animals they killed. This announcement was followed" by an ad vance of several oentrper pound in the price of fceef. If Mr. Garfield is as sue cessful in investigating oil as he was with the beef matter, light consumers may as well get out the tallow candle in anticipation of an advance in oil prices. WORK FOR DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE. Yesterday's meeting was wanting neither in numbers nor enthusiasm. The general assembly at the opening session in the Marquam Theater showed representation of every district In the state, and of well-nigh every interest. The address of welcome by Governor Chamberlain expressed the hearty con viction that full advantage would be taken of the exceptional, unexampled opportunity of the Exposition. But the speech of C. V. Galloway, superintendent of the state exhibits in agriculture and horticulture, justified the introduction it received from Tom Richardson. Modestly delivered, in well-chosen sentiments, all words in it told. Mr. Richardson appealed to the vari ous counties, in organizing their exhib its, to expend their main strength on-the best possible show of chief products of the county; this not only as the path of wisdom, but of honesty. Not displays of phenomenal growth or beauty, but of average excellence, should be the Tule. Visitors will be impressed with ex hibits which they shall see duplicated in the journeys they will be urged to take through the state. What use to show them a special exhibit, labeled as from some special district, which they cannot verify? A point well taken by one speaker was that, whereas In previ ous expositions the Fair itself was the goal of the journey, in the case of the Lewis and Clark Exposition the Pacific Coast in general and Oregon in partic ular will "be the goal of Eastern visitors. Exposition visitors to Chicago, to Omaha, to Charleston, to Buffalo and to St. Louis have sought amusement and Instruction, without gaining well-defined notions as to the new environ ment in change of iife occupation and methods. Is it too much to suggest that this new possibility will be present In the minds of many thousands who are to come here? The visit to the Exposition will be the ostensible reason for the long and cost ly journey, but the wlBh to verify what has been spread broadcast, of the at tractions of this great and favored re gion will be the underlying cause. There is strong reason to believe that railroads will grant frequent and cheap excursions to all accessible points in Oregon. Daily trains at a dollar fare for the round trip was the suggestion eagerly accepted y the meeting. The advice to our country friends, so frequently urged by The Oregonian, was strongly noted to see that cities and towns of the state are cleaned up, swept and garnished, and that farm houses be painted, fences straightened up, outbuildings repaired, orchards, yards and gardens put in order. Possi bly under this special stimulus efforts will be made which, otherwise, in too common Oregon fashion, we should put off to a more convenient time. A blessed Fair this will be to many a country home if these good things shall come to pass. The general spirit of co-operation be tween widely separated parts of the state and diverse interests, now so gen erally in evidence, was referred to again and again, with deep satisfaction. Indeed, the farther this spirit goes and the more deeply it penetrates, the greater benefit to us all the Fair will leave behind. The too-current remarks about the absence of this "all-for-Ore gon" spirit .and its 'full scope in Wash ington and California, will lose their force and sting. RAILROAD INIQUITIES EAST AND WEST. The testimony taken by the Senate Interstate commerce committee on the railroad question reveals the presence in the East of antl-rallroad sentiment that has little in common with the West. The states tributary to the At lanta seaboard are so thoroughly grid ironed with railroads that few com munities are without facilities for ship ping. But Pacific Coast States are so poorly supplied with railroads that vast dis tricts of rich territory are practically uninhabited on account of the Impossi bility of reaching market. The East seems to be suffering with so many railroads that the competition engen dered has resulted In the pernicious secret-rebate system. The West has so few railroads that they parcel out the territory between themselves and enjoy a monopoly, which, naturally. Is not conducive to the development of the country. In all the complaint heard in the East since the anti-railroad crusade be gan, no charges have been made that railroads have failed to construct need ed new lines, but the grievance has been all a matter of rates. In the West much less complaint has been made about rates than about refusal of com panies to build new roads. At one of the meetings of the Senate committee last week Senator Elklns made the direct charge that railroads violate the law every day, and an offi cer of the Santa Fe line to whom the re mark was addressed retorted: "Chaos would ensue If they did not." In corroboration of this statement it was shown that there Is direct conflict in two of the most important branches of the regulation sought. The public is demanding, first, unrestrained competi tion among the railroads; and, 6econd, strict adherence to schedules. Each of these demands so conflicts with the other that the solution of the problem Is most difficult. The public does not care to do business under an elastic rate schedule, such as might be in evidence while the railroad com panies were In continual warfare neither would it be in the interest of trade to have these rates made stable by a monopoly controlling all lines. The existing rates on lines leading into the Pacific Northwest are not generally considered exorbitant, and the only rate contention that has ever bothered ship pers very much has been that affecting certain proscribed distributive territory The real grievance on the Pacific Coast is the refusal of the railroads to provide facilities In localities where they are sadly needed. Wheat in the Palouse, 300 miles from Portland, can be landed at tidewater by rail at Port land or Puget "Sound for 10& cents per bushel. Wheat in Central Oregon, an equal number of miles from Portland cannot reach the market without pay ing at least 50 cents per bushel freight and in consequence no wheat is coming out of that rich but neglected section. Neither of the two railroad systems which have bottled up the Pacific Northwest doubts the large traffic which could be developed in the sec tions they now Ignore, but so long as there Is no legal way of pulling down the flag of truce und.er which they are proceeding, the country can do nothing. Out of the very complicated rate situ ation, the Senate Interstate commerce committee may succeed in evolving a plan by which competition can be main tained, and at the same time can re main stable. Unfortunately, it is not clear that the isolated North Pacific can secure any relief from the monopoly now restricting its growth and divert ing its business to California. Canadian lumber manufacturers are making a vigorous protest against the unrestricted importations of American lumber into the Western Provinces. Ef fort will be made to have an import duty levied on all American lumber crossing the line. Cheap lumber is of great assistance to the thousands of new settlers who are now rushing Into Western Canada, but it is unsatisfac tory to the mills. The American lumber manufacturers who insist on a heavy tariff on Canadian lumber sold in the United States could not In fairness ob ject to the Canadians indulging in a lit tle reciprocity in this particular line of business. One-fifth of the inhabitants of New Tork, according to the New York Sun, are of the Jewish race. That -Is, there are S00.000 Jews In the City of New York. The population distinctively Christian Is about two-fifths of the whole. But the Protestant percentage is becoming less, the preponderance of the additions being of Roman Catho lics and Jews. In these directions there Is constant and steady movement. In JSSO only 3 per cent of the population was Jewish. Now It is-20 per cent. This exceeds even the Roman Catholic in crease. Representative Comerford, of Illinois, who made sensational charges of cor ruption against his fellow-legislators, failed to substantiate them, was ex- pelled--a!3was re-elected by his sympa thizing constituency, win not. una me Springfield atmosphere entirely congen ial, une otner members manifested their contempt for -Comerford by re maining seated when he was sworn in. So the honors are even. Comerford knows what the Legislature thinks of him; the Legislature knows what the voters think of them. The New York Times, an organ of the Cleveland-Parker Democracy, refuses to be comforted over the situation that the Chicago election has created or threatened. It says: The property that private capital has actu ally created and brought Into being by the expenditure of money and brains has In his (Mayor Dunne's) opinion been "seized" and is wrongfully withheld from the public When once it is entered upon this theory has no limits. Every form of property become rob bery, and the man who keeps and seeks to profit by the fruits of his own toil, hU own Intelligence and his own expenditure -is a thief. Out of the East continue to come ru mors of the retirement of Mr. Harri man from his present position of power In the railroad world. If a successor shall be selected for Mr. Harriman and Portland shall have any voice .in the matter (of course Portland will not), it would like to have a man as good at fulfilling promises as at making them If Harriman had possessed this charm ing trait, we would today have rail connection with Central Oregon and also with the Clearwater. The family feud, which is such a prominent feature of life in the corn. cracker and moonshine districts of Kentucky, is attracting some attention in California. Three brothers have al ready been killed, from one family, near Bakersfleld. The murderer of the lat est. Is In the hands of the Sheriff, and as some laws are enforced better In California than In Kentucky, this par ticular feud may die out at the end of a rope. The Oregonian is sorry its defense of Senator Mitchell and of Representative Hermann is not better appreciated by "Veritas," the unknown author of the following letter: Editor Orlgonlan: "A Dannlel come to Judg ment." Let me congratulate The Orlsonlan on Its able vindication of thlvees and here remark that churely the Orlgonlan Is a fit type of the historic "Bottom." No wonder that Orison la represented by those two worthce Senator Mitchell and Congressman Herman. VERITAS, The Wisconsin Legislature has passed a law making it a crime to "tip" a waiter, or any other individual, whose remuneration Is supposed to be supplied by his employer. This law. If it came Into force throughout the United States, would materially reduce the profits of the Pullman car owners. The public has been paying the graft so long that it has almost assumed a legitimate hue. Production of rice in the United States has nearly doubled within the last five years. It has Increased from 250,280,221 pounds grown In 1899 to 470, 000,000 grown In 1904. The Increase has been largely upon the lands on the Gulf coast In Southwestern Louisiana and the adjoining territory In Texas. The average crop was 730 pounds to the acre. Three Montana "ward ' heelers" have begun suit against the Amalgamated Copper Company for expenses alleged to have been contracted In behalf of the Republican party for the election last FalL Political Influence In Montana has been on a purchasable basis for so long that politicians probably think It time to get a legal opinion on Its actual value. - The world moves. A Jury of white men in Mississippi have acquitted a negro charged with criminal assault on a white woman. More or leas risk is usually attendant on the establtahment of a remarkable precedent; hence it is not surprising to learn- that the Judge advised the discharged prisoner to get out of town on the first train. Judge Parker advises the Demo cratic party to get back to the old moorings and Mr. Bryan advises It to get back to the people. The Dallas (Texas) News wishes some man of au thority in the party would advise It to go ahead. A saloon-keeper of Albany Is arrested for keeping open on Sunday. This is enforcement of law. Several candidates for Portland's Mayoralty have prom ised enforcement of law, but have not told what laws they would enforce. If Mr. Harriman is at the mercy of mightier railroad magnates, maybe his timidity In the Pacific Northwest Is not without cause and petitions for needed railroads should be sent to other-giants, NOTE AUDJOMMENT. Davy Jones is enlarging his morgue, in view of the approaching meeting of Togo and Rojestvensky. If Rockefeller has any human nature in his money-making machine he won't offer more money to any of those who look askance at his gold. Dr. Osier has brought out a new phrase. Addressing a body of medical students at Philadelphia, he declared that most men commit "mental suicide" after leaving college. What with mental sui cide, race suicide, and just plain suicide, the nation is in a self-destructive way. Revised proverb: Don't look a gift dol lar in the pedigree. Sarcasm flourishes like a green bay tree In the letters of Governor Chamberlain and Judge Burnett, and sarcasm makes letters interesting reading for those whom it doesn't like. It is said frequently that nobody can write a letter nowadays, but a standing exception must apparently be made of Oregon's governors. Mr. Geer and Governor Chamberlain may not be able to write those gossipy letters which delight the recipient, but they are masters of the art of writing "open" let ters. Seattle's city authorities object to tha Igorrotes eating dogs, not because of sympathy for the dogs but because of jealousy of the Igorrotes' pleasure, as Macaulay said of the Puritans and bear- baiting. A trust is a, terribly bad thing, but a pool Is an excellent thing. Photographs are developed in the dark room, but countries in tho daylight. Colorado can produce other things than bears and bobcats. Potatoes blr enough to feed a regiment are now reported from that land of mines and strikes. By the way, what arc these bobcats which President Roosevelt is shooting? Is a bobcat the same as a tomcat an abbre viation of Robert and Thomas? Burgess Charles H. Pennypacker. who Is a relative of Governor Pennypacker of Pennsylvania, recently declared that "the pathway to hell is through a church choir." Governor Pennypacker might give up his efforts to muzzle tne press, and try to muzzle his namesake. Writing to the New York Herald, an observant man calls woman the nation's alarm clock. The schoolboy Is rousted out of bed by his mother, and when he becomes a married man he expects his wife to awaken him In time to go to work. The writer of the letter asks if woman requires less sleop than man. but that is not the way to explain the matter. She doesn't like to see man serenely slumber ing, so she wakes first for the joy of dragging the poor fellow from his com fortable blankets. Colonel du Paty de Clam, whose blll-of- fare name did so much for jaded para graph-writers during the Dreyfus affair, is about to marry a Parisienne. We shall have to look up the files for a few as sorted Jests in readiness for the wedding day. A New York beggar kept a stenog rapher in his employment. No wonder he had to beg. The residences of three beef trust offi cials have recently been entered by burglars. And yet "people talk of, honor among business men. It is a rare tribute to its intrinsic interest that anyone should read a 0000 word legal decision. A novelty in funeral services has been introduced in the East. A missionary, conscious that his death was imminent, preached his own funeral sermon and an nounced the numbers of the hymn3 to be sung, and when he was burled a large phonograph ground out his remarks. Ac cording to newspaper accounts of the affair, "the auditors wcro thrilled," so the plan was evidently a success. The superintendent of an Ohio railway has offered a month's pay as a bonus to any employe who marries within a cer tain time, As if a month's pay would induce a man to make a fool of himself. Big guns in the navy show a tendency to blow their muzzles off when they are fired. In view of this Idiosyncrasy every additional battleship may well be another guarantee of peace. Russian aristocrats dream of May poles decorated with their own heads. Irony is dangerous. Few there be that appreciate It. and, as a Portland man was accustomed to say, "It don't pay to ironlze." The New York Herald has a symposium on "What would happen Jf everybody told the truth for twenty-four hours?" It would simply make this world a hh heaven. Statistics published by the British Medi cal Journal show that men who drink alcoholic liquors live on the average 2 years and 22 days longer than teetotalers And the drinkers live a good deal faster at that. , There Is complaint among the natives In our Island of Guam that since we got the sovereign possession the cost of living has Increased 200 per cent, and now is oppressive. They say they could go naked before we got there, but now they are forced at least to wear mother hub- bards. Civilization has Its burdens. They say now that young Mr. Hyde, of the Equitable, who gave the big dinner. Is reading over the story of Belshazzar'3 feast, and wondering why he hadn't read It sooner. Wex J. A Change of Mind. Harper' Weekly. An elderly professor who had grown weary of the bachelor state determined to marry, and asked a lady whom ha had known for a long time to be his wife. The question was a surprise to her, and her answer was a confused "No." On re flection, however she reconsidered tha matter, and the next time she met the professor she said to him: "By. the way, Professor , do you remember the ques tion you asked me the other day?" The professor replied that he did. "Well," she went on. "I've been think ing over the answer I gave, and I've changed my mind." "So have I," replied the professor. The Latest. New Tork Sun. When we travel, in the future. To the distant foreign clime, Will these be the preparations .That we make ahead of time: Pack your trunk and buy your ticket. Read your Baedeker Improved. Then by way of final foresight Have your vermiform removed? HEIRESS WEDS NOT DUKE BUT COACHMAN: Niece of Andrew Carnegie, Secretly Married a Year Ago, Brings Hone Baby From Enroye, and Mother Refuses to Meet Her. Andrew Carnegie's niece -was to have ' married a duke; at least such was the plan ot her mother, the widow of Carnegie's millionaire brother. But a year ago the girl married the mother's coachman and the two went abroad at Uncle Andrew's ex pense. Last week the pair brought home a baby. The mother is horrified and. has issued a family tabu. But Uncle Andrew says he would rather see a niece of his marry a. poor, deserving man than a "worthless duke" and has re ceived the pair in his house and set them up in life. NEW YORK, April 22. Nancy Carne gie, favorite niece of tho Ironmaster, was married nearly a year ago to James Hever. at one time coachman In the em ploy of her mother at Homewood, Pa., and later a riding master in this city and Newport. The pair returned from Europe Sunday with their Infant daughter, who was born abroad. All of the family met the steamer but the unforgiving mother. Carnegie has re ceived them In his house. The mother has offered to support them if they will stay away from her home In Pittsburg, but probably Carnegie will do better for them. The sturdy Scotchman says that he would rather have "a sober, moral, well-doing" poor man as a husband for his favorite niece than "a worthless duke." It appears that the widow, who is connected with the Pittsburg Thaws, has been moving heaven and earth to capture a title for her daughter since she was a bridesmaid at the Yarmouth wed ding. The groom is said to be a decent person of good Irish stock. He is of different religion fromthe Carnegies and has a child by a. ..former wife of his own class. There seems to be absolutely nothing against him except that he has spent his life m faithful domestic service of the kind harshly described as menial. His bride was the greatest heiress in the country until Andrew Carnegie had a daughter, and is still rich beyond ordi nary aspirations. In announcing the wedding Mr. Car negie said: "Mr. Hever is not rich, but he is a sober, moral, well-doing man, aud the family would much rather have such a husband for Nancy than a worthless duke. "My niece and Mr. Hever were married in New York city a year ago. It Is true that the wedding was a quiet affair. No Objection to Union. I myself, you see. was abroad at the time, and none of my niece's immediate family was in town. But there wasn't the slightest parental objection to the union. Mr. and Mrs. Hever sailed for Europe lmediately after the ceremony had been performed and only returned a few days since. Mrs. Carnegie that Is to say, my wife and Nancy's sister and two brothers met her at the pier. we are all delighted with the mar riage. It was a true love match, and the pair are ideally happy. Mr. Hever is an honest, sober, industrious young man. and I would infinitely rather see my niece married to a poor but deserving man than a worthless duke." Here Mr. Carnegie interrupted himself long enough to insist "Now get that in- Be sure to get that in. 'Worthless Duke is good. "We want no rich men In the Carnegie family," the dispenser of libraries con tinued. "Mr. Hever was a riding master at Newport, and it was there whlje he was teaching her to ride that my niece fell in love with him. Mr. Hever was at one time, I believe, in the employ of SLY TOGO WAITS FOR PREY New York Tribune. What Is Rojestvensky to do? He prob ably expected Togo to meet him In the Indian Ocean or at Singapore, or certainly In the South China Sea, and give general battle. In such an engagement his supe riority in heavy ships would have given him a chance of victory, while at worst his defeat would have been an honorable one. But Togo has not done so, but is instead, apparently, playing a Fabian game. The reason of this Is obvious. Defeat, or even a serious crippling, of the Japanese fleet would be an over whelming and perhaps fatal disaster to Japan, and. while there might not be great danger of It In a general battle, it does not seem. prudent to run even the slightest risk. So Togo seems inclined to keep at a safe distance and wear his enemy out until such time as it will be perfectly safe to close in and give the final blow. For. as we have said, time is tremendously against the Russians and on the side of the Japanese, for the latter can get all the supplies they want for months and years to come, while the for mer must achieve victory before their present supplies are exhausted or be hope lessly lost. Now, this Is Rojestvensky'a plight. He has gone many thousands of miles to fight a foe who eludes him. He is getting short of coal, and he has no base of supplies nearer than Vladivostok. 2300 miles away. He must either interne himself In a neu tral port or push on to Vladivostok. To do the latter he must traverse 2500 miles of narrow seas, In 'some unknown parts of which the Japanese ships are lurking, to strike at him unawares at any oppor tunity. He must traverse strange straits, i unllghted at night and strewn with float- ing and submerged mines. If he keeps I on the direct course, he must pass through ! the Strait of Formosa, and then through the narrow Corea Strait, almost within rifle shot of tho Japanese coast. If he breaks out Into the Pacific through one of the channels between Luzon and Formosa, he will have to get back again into the Sea of Japan to reach Vladivostok, and to do so must pass through either the nar row Tsugaru Strait, between the two chief islands of Japan, or through the little wider La Perouse Strait, between Japan and Saghallen. both of which straits will. doubtless, be swarming with torpedo-boats and with mines. It is really a desperate dilemma which confronts him, compared with which all the labors and perils be tween Cronstadt and Singapore were the merest trifles. If only the Japanese would como out Into the open and fight! But that, apparently, is just what they will not do; and so long as they do not Ro jestvensky's plight Is one of the most per ilous and most trying that any naval com mander ever suffered. Were at Lincoln's Deathbed. Washington Correspondence New York Sun. In a letter to a local newspaper, A. E. N. Johnson, who was private secretary to Secretary of War Stanton, says that there were 2S persons around President Lin coln's bedside when he died, 40 years ago Saturday, and tbat among those still liv ing are General Thomas T. Eckert, of New York, then Assistant Secretary of War. and afterward president of the West ern Union Telegraph Company, and Gen eral Thomas W. Vincent, of Washington, who closed Mr. Lincoln's eyes. Another correspondent of the same paper writes that Henry Dike, a portrait palntr, still living In Washington, was present also. No 3iddlc Partings of Hair. Pittsburg Dispatch. At the meeting of the Pittsburg Presbytery of the Cumberland Pres byterian Church, at Donora today the Rev. W. S. Danley proposed this reso lution: "Whereas sissified asses are no long er to bo tolerated In the ministry; "Resolved, That their admission be discouraged; that the ministers bo in structed to no longer part their hair in the middle." Lord Lord Somebody-or-Other in Eng landfor the life of me I can't remember the name." 3Iarricd Nearly a Year Ago. It was in May ot last year that Mr. and Mrs. Hever were married here. The bride's family belong to the Protestant Episcopal Church, while the bridegroom was a Roman Catholic The marriage was performed by a Catholic priest. Since that time a little daughter of Mr. Hever by a former marriage, who was being reared In a convent, has been taken out and has become a member of the new family. Mr. Hever was a widower with two children. Miss Nancy Carnegie, the present Mr3. Hever, was known as a beautiful young woman, with a pronounced fondness for outdoor life. She cared little for society, although she had been much sought after since her formal coming out a few years ago. She is now 24 years old. Always a daring horsewoman she has been espe cially devoted to cross-country riding. In appearance she resembles her mother in small but stury build, while her fair com plexion is in" sharp contrast with her dark-haired sisters. Bridegroom Born in Ireland. Mr. Hever, who is S3 yeara old, is al ready known in Pittsburg, where it was said today that he comes of good Irish stock and was raised asa foster child in an aristocratic family near Dublin. When he came to America to make his own way in the world his knowled;e of horses and capability in handling them determined his -means of livelihood. Mrs. Thomas Carnegie first engaged him about five years ago. While In her employ in Pittsburg he had the reputation of being a clean-cut, capable and industrious man, with few bad habits and decidedly superior to tha class of men usually found In his place. He was highly thought of by the mem bers of the family. The Thomas Carnegie home in Pitts burg is at Penn and Lexington avenue-. In Homewood. Some time before his wedding Mr. Hever had left there. It was said today that he quit after asking an interview with his employer, at which he told her that he intended to become a suitor for her daughter's hand. Such an outspoken method, it was said, was characteristic of James Hever and not without its subsequent value in winning Andrew Carnegie to the young folks side. Thought Acquaintance Ended. After Hever's departure It was thought that the acquaintance with Miss Car negie had ceased. They heard from eaeh other frequently, however. It was said that the intermediary might possibly have been a personage very well known Indeed, and not In Pittsburg and New York alone. According to his curtom of giving all his nieces and nepfcews a comfortable gift of money on the occasion of their marriage. Andrew Carnegie, it is said, presented $20,000 to Mr. and Mi's. Hever as a start in life. He is also said to have expressed his admiration of the self reliance displayed by his niece Nancy. ! Mr. and Mrs. Hever. it was announced, have planned to make their home In the i country, and are even considering the i purchase of a stock farm in . Virginia, j Mrs. Hever Is not a rich woman In her ' own right, as her father's will made Mrs. : Lucy Coleman Carnegie, the widow, his j only heir. The Thomas Carnegie estate ) was a considerable one, though not of : any such fabulous amount as his broth--er's famous property. WHO OWNS THE SURPLUS. Hartford Times. The agent of the Equitablo Life, ; ranee iociety, who wrote a letter t Jfie .riartiord Times the other day, stating in a very positive manner that the 530,000,000 surplus of the society belongs to. the policy-holders, and not to the stockholders of the society, should road the report "of the proceedings In Judge laddox's court room in Brooklyn, N. Y., yesterday. He will learn by so doing that Instead of Its being quite certain that the $50,000, 000 is the property of the policy-holders of the society, it remains a moot question which will have to be decided finally by the courts of the United States, since it Is easy for the lawyers to appeal from any decision of the Supreme Court of New York, of which Judge Maddox is a justice, to the Federal tribunals. He will find that although the Equltable's adver tisements declare that the policy-holders are protected by the surplus and huve a right to share in the benefits, one of the stockholders of the company, taking Pres ident Alexander's statements as a basis, has appealed to the courts to confirm his belief that at least $10,000,000 of the sur plus belongs outright to the owners of the 1000vshares of stock, thus making the 3fi shares of the litigant in this case. F. B. Lord, worth $360,000. He will also dis cover that the plan of mutualizatton cun ningly devised by the Hyde party and purporting to be in the interest of the policy-holders, in reality vitiates what ever right in the surplus policy-holders now have. Edward M. Shepard, the lawyer era ployed by Mr. Lord, is second to no man in his profession In acutencss, and his analysis of the Hyde mutuallzation schema Is one that should set both the policy holders and the agents of the society to thinking. Possibly Mr. Shepard under-, takes to prove too much when he asserts that the new mutuallzation plan really proposes to destroy the rights ot both the stockholders and the policy-holders, putting the control of the company enr tlrely into the hands of Its agents. It will not be ready to believe that Mr. Hyde and his friends arc really proposing to deprive themselves of any right to share in the millions of the Equitable's surplus. But his argument serves to emphasize the confusion and uncertainty that now ex ist as to the rights of all persons who have money invested in this particular in surance company. It Is obviously neces sary that there shall be a judicial deter mination of the respective claims as to the Equltable's surplus: First Does the surplus belong, as as serted by Mr. Hornblower, the counsel for Mr. Alexander and tho Equitable Society, wholly to the policy-holders? Second Or does It belong in part to the stockholders, as claimed by Mr. Shepard. counsel for 'Stockholder Lord? Third Or does It belong entirely to the stockholders, as would apparently hap pen If the company were to be wound up and Its policies reinsured In other com panies? The sooner these questions are decided the better It will be for the Equitable So ciety and for all the other life insurance Interests of the country. Lines to a Mountain lion. Maurice Morris, in New York Sun. Take to the timber tall On the loftiest mountain top. And cut your yell it's a sure death kneJt' It your night serenades don't atop. - Lope till you cross tho line; ; Colorado is hot this date; Less strenuous times and cooler climes You'll find In some near-by state. Call all your boys and girls In the Thompson-Seton mode. Tell 'em this tale till they all turn pale. And then let ;em taste the goad. Beware of a four-eyed man. With a wide and cordial smile: If you see him around, start in. and pound The trail for & hundred mile.