6 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDASV aTTGUST 13, 1005. Entered a-t the Fostofflce at Portland, Or., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLE IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or Express.) Dally and Sunday, per year 92 Dally and Sunday, six months........ 5.00 Dally and Sunday, three months 2.55 Dally and Sunday, per month .S3 Dally without Sunday, per year 7-50 Daily -without Sunday, tlx months...... 3.80 Dally without Sunday, three months... 1.95 Dollv wifhmit Kitnrini nor month...... .05 Sunday, pr year 2-00 Sunday, six months l-Oj Sunday, three months - BY CARRIER. i Dally -without Sunday, per -week -13 Jaijy. per -week, Sunday mciuaea THE WEEKLY OBEGONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) Weekly, per year LoO Weekly, six months... -J3 Weekly, three months 50 HOW TO REMIT-Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on Tour local bank. Stamps, coin or currency1 are at the tender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The B. C. Beckwltb. Special Agency New fork, rooms 43.50 Tribune bulldlnc. Chl- .C&go, rooms S10-M2 Tribune bulldlnc KEPT ON SAXE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Fostofflce Kews Co., 178 Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex Globe News Depot. 260 Main street. San Antonio, Tex. Louis Book and Clear 521 East Houston street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend- rlck, 006-912 Seventeenth street; Harry D. Ott, 1503 Broadway; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street. Colorado Springs, Colo. Howard H. Belt Des aiolnes. Ia. Hoses Jacobs. 809 Fifth Street. Goldfleld. 2iev. C. llalone. Kansas City, Mo Ricksecker Clear Co. ilnth and Walnut. Los Anireles Harry Drapkln: B. E. Amos, 14 West Seventh street: DUlard News Co. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50 South Third; L. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue Bouth. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, SOT Superior ttreet. New York City I. Jones & Co., Astor House. Atlantic City, N. J. Ell Taylor, 207 North Illinois ave. Oakland, CaL W. H. Johnston. Fourteenth and Franklin streets. Ogden F. R. Godard and Meyers uar top. D L. Boyle. Omaha Barkaiow Bros.. 1612 Farnam: Mageath Statlontrj Co., 130S Farnam; 240 South 14th; McLaughlin & Holtz. 1515 Far nam. Sacramento, CaL Sacramento News Co rf 29 K. street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second street South; National News Agency. Yellowstone Park, Wyq. Canyon Hotel, , Lake Hotel, Yellowstone Park Assn. Long Beach B. E. Amos. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co., 740 Market street; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter ma Hotel St. Francis Kews faiana; L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel Newg Stand: F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott. SO Ellis: N. Wheatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand. St. Louifi. Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company. 800 Olive street. Washington. D. C P. D. Morrison. 2132 Pennsylvania avenue. PORTLAND, OR., MONDAY. AUGUST 14. STATESMANSHIP IN IDAHO. The impression we get about Idaho irough the frequent phillippics of Hon. IFred T. Dubois, of Blackfoot, is that fit Is reeking with polygamy and sodden rith Mormonism. The Impression we might get from the vivid rhetoric of iHon. TV. B. Heyburn. of Spokane, is of an indlcnant and deserving people jutraged by an unscrupulous national idministratlon through Its Infamous forest reserve policy. The Impression Kwe have from the quiet and convincing Oratory of Hon. W. E. Borah, of Boise, Is that Idaho gets along very well with the Mormons and with Roosevelt; and tat it refuses to get excited about jolygamy or the President's effort to fsave the forests for the benefit of the rhole people. The Mormons are criminals and there la nothing in Idaho but polygamy, cries )ubols. There is no polygamy in Ida io, because it is against the law, and the people of Idaho are law-abiding, lswers Borah. The forests were made to be despoiled by anybody that comes ilong, yells Heyburn. The forest re serve policy is correct; the bona fide settler will be taken care of, responds Jorah. Now, what is Idaho going to do about lit? Senator Dubois has done much to- Eward giving Idaho an unenviable no Storlety by his lamentations about the jriminal practice' of the Mormons, so that there is In the United States a considerable number of people who thlnk the dreadful monster polygamy has crushed out every decent instinct fcof Its citizenship. Senator Heyburn tas oDoosed the national administra tion in Its war on the land-crabbers id timber thieves, and he has done mch to show that Idaho Is not keep ing step with the mights' march on le grafters. If Idaho deserves to emerge from the cowboy and pickax eriod. it will have to change its rep resentation in the Senate at Washing ton. The Oregonlan doesn't at all say lat Borah is the man to send; but t unhesitatingly declares that some Irian who stands for the things Borah idvocates will do better things for iaho at "Washington than its present intl-Mormon acitator and bow-wow statesman. "Who It shall be Idaho will 3f course determine for itself. JAPAN AND THE NEWSPAPERS. Russia made no mistake when It sent Er. Witte to the peace conference. He Lnderstands the diplomatic came. Iiough his methods are not Russian. Jhey are American in their candor and Irectness. His first play is to "smoke mt" the Japanese by taking the lid off ielr subtle and ingenious secrecy. tussla. on the defensive, a defeated f.nd humiliated people, must depend iow on her wits to get the most favor ite possible terms from her victorious toe. it is her first business, then, to use the active sympathy of the world's opinion. How? By making it Lppear that Japan intends to squeeze Ihe last drop of blood from Russia, and !hat her continued mystery and silence .bout her peace terms, entirely char acteristic of Japanese policy, and her hefusal to permit the Russian delegates make them officially public, are in spired by a fear that other civilized wers may Interfere. What Japan tvants is Russia's consent, willing or mwilling, to her proposals. What the Lorld then says will not matter much. It is therefore clear why we find Mr. fitte talking freely to the newspaper )rrespondents. He does not under stand English but he knows human Inature. "Gentlemen," he says in ef fect, "I want to throw these proceed ings open to the public. I desire that you shall know everything. We have nothing to conceal; but as it is, Japan wants everything kept dark. We want the world to Judge between us; but how can it judge unless it knows all about everything?" It cannot When Japan shall dis cover that the press of the world can not be continually mystinea about a momentous proceeding being carried on under its very eyes, it may see fit to change its tactics. The right of Japan to establish a press censorship in Japan and at the seat of war may be con ceded, because it has to be; but at Portsmouth, there is a difference. What is going on there the world has a right to know, and It is an error for Japan to deny It. A NEW LIGHT BREAKING. "While the light holds out to burn," etc. Former leaders of the opposition to the policy of reduction In the tarifT on sucar and tobacco from the Philip pines have suffered a change of heart. Not only would they now consent to reduction of the tariff, but they would willingly go a sten farther and entirely remove it from those staples which are such cTeat factors in the trade of our new dependencies across the Pacific It is of course not at all probable that the sutrar trust or the tobacco trust will regard this proposed reform with the keenest satisfaction, but there is a growing disposition on the part of the American peoole to get away from the domination of those institutions. So strong Is this sentiment becoming that it is probable the trusts may show loss direct antasronlsm to the proposed re form than is expected. The fight. If a hard one Is made acalnst free trade with the Philip pines, will undoubtedly be for reten tion of refined sugar or manufactured tobacco on the dutiable list, while the raw material will probably come in free with but little opposition from the big refiners and manufacturers; As It would be unfair to the American sugar and tobacco planters to bring in the raw material to help the manufactur ers, without also bringing in the man ufactured article to help the consumers. no distinction should be made. This belated reform movement, if it is car ried to a successful termination and we have the opinion of so excellent a tariff authority as Representative Gros- venor that "the outlook for its passage is very favorable" will prove bene ficial to this country for other reasons than the supplying of our consumers with cheap sugar and tobacco. Our American exporters have always suffered a handicap In securing ton nage for the Far East, by reason of their inability to supply return car goes for the ships which carry our flour, wheat, lumber, cotton and merchandise to the Orient. With the tariff removed from sugar and tobacco, a considerable amount of tonnage will be required to handle these products, and, with cargo both ways, ships can afford to handle our products at a lower freight rate than they could make if they were obliged to travel one-half the round voyage In ballast Now that the men who formerly opposed free trade with the islands have begun to appreciate its advantages, there Is hope for an other reform of even greater impor tance. In July. 1906, the law prohibiting any but American vessels from carrying freight between the United States and the Philippines will become effective. Unless this law is repealed in a very short time after it becomes effective, our trade with the Far East will re ceive a most serious blow. It has al ready been demonstrated, through lim iting the handling of government freight to American bottoms, that cost of the service is vastly increased over the cost where the business Is open to competition from the fleets of the world. The Philippines are producing and as civilization advances will increase pro ductionsugar, tobacco, jute, orna mental woodp. and other raw mater ials which can be turned Into manu factured state in this country to great advantage. Europe Is also an extensive purchaser of these products, and they are carried to her manufacturing cen ters by the ships that make the low est freight rates. Irrespective of the flas: that flies over them. This matter of freights on low-priced raw material is a very big factor in the cost of the finished product, and if the American manufacturers hope to enterthe field in competition with the Europeans, they must be permitted to take advantage of competition in freights, which, under the law effec tive next June, is eliminated. A good beginning has been made In the move ment to repeal the hampering tariff laws, but to make the work complete and place us in our own trade field on even terms with our competitors, we must be permitted to charter ships at the same rates paid by the foreigners. with whom we are competing In other trade fields as well as the Philippines. LOOKING TOWARD PARKED STREETS. A movement has begun In Portland whose object is to reform the paving of streets in residence districts and at the same time to park that part of the roadway not actually used for traf fic. Briefly stated, the proposed re' form is based on the fact that except in the business sections, only about one-half of the space between curbs is used by vehicles. It is held by those who have watched traffic in other cities as well as in our own that a driveway 24 feet wide is ample for all purposes. This reform Is not theoretical. It has been adopted in several cities of the Middle West and Canada with more than satisfactory results. Illustration in text and picture of what has been accomplished in these cities was to be found In The Sunday Oregonlan yester day. For the views The Oregonlan is Indebted to Mr. E. A. Kempe, a former resident of Minneapolis, who has made Portland his home. He is a strong ad vocate of the reform and has been do ing some quiet missionary work. It Is likely that the movement will soon take concrete form in Portland. Property-owners on Fourteenth street have been conferring on the proposi tion to park that thoroughfare from Montgomery to Burnslde and make It the handsomest street in the city. This street Is 80 feet wide, the sidewalks take up 12 feet each, leaving a road way of 56 feet With a permanent roadway narrowed to 30 feet there will remain 13 feet on each side to be sown to grass and planted to trees. The prevalent Idea is to put out elms nine feet from the curb and 30 feet apart But most of Portland's streets are 60 feet wide. This cuts no figure in the general proposition, say those who have seen streets of that width parked. Make the driveway 24 feet wide and there will be eight feet at either side for grass plot and row of trees out side the present curb line. To the ar gument that some residence streets must, sooner or later, be given over to business there is offered the answer that you needn't cross that bridge till you come to it The parking can then be abandoned for durable pavement One phase will appeal to all prop-crty-ownexSi namely, xedace4. jnsl of street Improvements. The expense of paving 26 feet will be about one-third less than for 40 feet. Advocates of the reform see, as the outcome of the movement and It will take some years for fruition roadways of permanent material in the better residence dis tricts replacing macadam, which In Winter Is muddy and in Summer dusty. Whether the movement" shall become popular or not. the work of those who are pioneering it will be watched with interest. , MR. ILVRRIMAN'S NEW THEORY. Settlement of the whole United States for the last fifty years has proceeded on the idea that country must be made accessible, and its development made profitable, before settlers of average sense can be expected to enter it Ever since the notion was exploded that a neighbor within a mile was a nuisance, and injured the hunting, the plan has been followed of building roads, first dirt and then Iron, end lastly steel, as the forerunner oT settlement and. habitation. Even Mr. Harrlman knows and practices modern railroading else where than In Oregon. In Texas, for example, his companies have built hundreds of miles of road to open the country. After the road came settle ment and then the railroads sold mil lions, literally million?, of acres of land grant lands to the settlers at cheap rates. But the remaining lands of the great Oregon and California land grant thirty miles wide, have been taken off the market and are reserved for an increase of ultimate profit by the own ers of Mr. Harriman's roads. Possibly the railroad might earn more If these withheld lands were sold and settled. Certainly the population of Oregon would speedily grow more quickly than at present and, by Mr. Harriman's new rule, more railroad would be built Let that pass for the present with the suggestion to Mr. Harriman that, if he really desires more people here, more traffic, more products, one easy way would be to put the land grant lands on the market once again. Let us see. If the clamor of Oregon for more railroads should be hushed, even on the new Harriman theory of people and development first and rail road afterwards. The extension of the Columbia .Southern for the long ninety odd mile stretch from Shanlko to Bend was promised by Mr. Harriman a year and & half ago and is now promised again. Has Mr. Harriman, or has Mr. Cotton, who knows Oregon so very in timately, ever heard of the 600 people living on the agency plains, who raised 18,000 bushels of wheat last year? This region is less than half way from Shan lko to Bend. Who are right. Mr. Harriman and Mr. Cotton, or Mr. Hutchinson, the well-known land commissioner of the Deschutes Irrigation and Power Com pany? From the last named we learn that his company has sold 30,000 acres of, this irrigated land, already to actual settlers. These men have gone In, bag and baggage, J00 miles or so, beyond Mr. Harriman's terminus, hauling goods. Implements, furniture, three days' journey to their purchased land. with sublime faith In Mr. Harriman's promises. The irrigation works of that company will reach 214,812 acres. They say they have spent $SM,O00 and ex pect to spend in all 52,266.009. All this is at the end of Mr. Harriman's prom ised extension to Bend, and offers what railroad magnates, as a rule, would consider inducement enough not to stop at Bend, but to open up. the rest of a territory with more Irrigable land In it than the Palousc and the Yakima coun try combined. If Mr. Harriman does not know the facts about Middle Oregon for they are common property here, too well known to be disputed whone fault is it? His own delegates have spied out the land and reported on It The Gov ernor of Oregon, with the officers of state, journeyed over It and they told their tale. The newspapers have done their work, early ana late. Investors in irrigation enterprises, railroad en gineers and surveyors, land buyers. prospectors, deputations from groups of intending settlers, county surveyors, state Senators and representatives. mortgage loan agents, cattle buyers and cattle and sheep raisers everyone, ex cept Mr. Harriman knows of these 5$,0W square miles of country, abun dant in resources, not dependent on ir rlgation but being developed by it set tied, civilized, with, county seats and national banks, and with telephones criss-crossing the land. They know, everybody except Mr. Harriman knows, that the wealth of these counties even now is measured by millions; but It is Infant compared with what only waits a railroad to be produced. The Agency Plains settlers are types of thousands. They are courageous because they have dared to go forfh ahead of railroad and canal; energetic, because they have builded their houses, and set up their fences, and plowed their fields, and set out their orchards, in reliance on the ordinary, necessary, agencies of our civilized life followintr aulckly on their steps; patient and persevering, because when hope has been deferred and hearts have grown sick from waiting they have not given up their fight with na ture or lost faith in man. They are there yet and the stream of settlement, though slow and obstructed, has not en tirely ceased. California will get there if Oregon falls. That is sure. The Oregonlan prints today a letter from the New Orleans Progressive Union protesting against the "gross ex aggeration, misstatement of fact, and publications of an alarmist character" that have appeared in many newspa pers relative to the yellow fever situ ation In the unhappy southern city. The Oreonian cannot speak for other newspapers, but it can assure the Pro gressive Union that there Is no desire or purpose on its part to make heav ier the New Orleans burden of woe and misery. The truth Is quite alarm ing enough. Saturday there were more than 100 new cases of yellow fever and yesterday 50. The epidemic seems to be growing worse rather than better; but confidence may be felt that the splendid fight being waged on the scourge by the government marine surgeons will prevail. New Orleans faces its dreadful dilemma with cour age and has placed all needed funds In the hands of the surgeons and nurses; so we may expect beneficent results. The movement eastward of cattle from the great ranges of Montana and Wyoming Is in full progress. Accord ing to the Chicago Drover's Journal, through arrivals from these ranges have been "slightly bruised as a result of too frequent unloading consequent upon the enforcement of the twenty eight hour law." The National Hu mane Sacietv, that is responsible for the enactment of tljis twenty-eight hour law. will doubtless take Issue with the Drover's estimate of the cause of the "slight brulslngs" of these cat tle from the ranges. In transit to the stockyards In Chicago. If the crowding of the beasts In the cars and the meth ods pursued in loading and unloading do not result In more than "slightly bruised" arrivals at the slaughter houses. It is probably because those who make up the reports only take note of "bruises" that cause the animal to die before final discharge of enrge be gins. In view of the unavoidable suf ferings of range cattle In transit, not to mention the cruelties needlessly In flicted upon them, the humane person may look upon the canned product of the packing-houses with pleasure born of the thought that the miseries of the creature thus "embalmed" are over. It is gratifying to find the Seattle Times making diligent effort to see that Seattle week at the Lewis and Clark Fair Is a great success. The Times Is anxious to send Wagner's band to the Fair to show, no doubt, how much bet ter is Seattle's band than other bands and to that laudable end wants to raise $S00. Here Is the unique method the Times takes for getting the money: Through the Interposition of Divine Provi dence, about 500 men in Seattle have been made wealthy on account of the advance in reel estate recently. We can think of one gentleman who -was willing to sell his land on Denny Hill for about $50,000 before th re grade wax ordered on Second avenue, but -who did sell it a few weeks ago for the rplendld cum of J 123.000. What a bagatelle Indeed it -would be for that gentleman to Just order Wagner to take hla band to Port land and etay all the week. If the Second-avenue plutocrat resists this appeal, it may be hoped that the Times will not be discouraged, but will single out some others of the lucky five hundred. The' eleven boys who ran away from the State Reform School Saturday af ternoon may find that there are worse places than that institution. Most of the boys who have been committed to the Reform School are better fed. housed and clothed than they were at home, and perhaps have more kindly treatment But It Is one misfortune of many people, old as well as young, not to know when they are well off. Run ning away has Its pleasant features. but a few days of hiding In the woods with nothing but berries and cold water for subsistence will make some of the youngsters wish they were back at the school, where three warm meals are served every day and where soft beds rest the weary muscles at night. The determination announced by Food and Dairy Commissioner J. W. Bailey to compel all dairymen to keep their stables clean is commendable and it is to be hoped that he will carry his plans into execution. It Is more trouble to keep a stable clean than to let it become filthy, but the consumer has a right to have pure milk delivered when he pays for it It is not practicable for each buyer of milk to visit the dairy and investigate conditions, so it is entirely proper that this important duty should be performed by a publio official. Probably Oregon dairies are kept as clean as those of other states, but there are always a few dairymen who will be careless. It is a reasonable provision of law that a corporation which has not paid its taxes shall not be permitted to transact business or use the power of the courts during the delinquency. Cor porations are creatures of the law and can have no rights whatever except those conferred by law. Since they en joy special privileges they should bp required to fulfill strictly all obligation? to the government under whose author ity they exist Too often, on the con trary, their chief end seems to be to evade the observance of statutory reg ulations. In the case of payment of taxes. Oregon seems to have a law which should be easy to enforce. The French Arbitration Society ha3 cabled to Mr. Witte and Baron Komura the text of a petition signed by 100,000 Frenchmen asking for an Immediate armistice and the conclusion of peace. The response of the Illustrious pair who will receive the petition will probably recall the answer of Captain Carroll, the veteran Alaska navigator, who was approached by a lady passenger with a numerously signed petition asking him to tie up for the night in order that certain scenery along the route could be viewed by daylight "Madam," said the sad sea dog. "this boat is not run by petitions." Of all of the brutal, desplsable, cow ardly outlaws with which the earth 13 cursed but few can equal In malignant meanness, the brute who poisons or maims a dumb animal for the purpose of revenge on its owner. If It can be proven that the handsome mare which has been on exhibition near the Fair grounds was killed by a poisoner, every possible effort should be made to have the punishment come as near as pos sible to fitting the crime. The doctors who claim to have dis covered a cure for leprosy after sev eral months of experiments In the Phil ippines, decline to have their names made public Their reticence in thU resoect will add to the credibility of their assertions. One trouble with new discoveries In medicine is that too often their chief use is to serve as adver tisements for the discoverers. Young men who hope sometime to serve on the detective force In Port land must not be deceived. Profanity and other indecent language are not prerequisites to an appointment even thouch Portland can boast of having in its. employ the most foul-mouthed detective in the world. A correspondent declares that al though Hades may be a lake of fire, he Is certain that it supports vegetation, for Its Instruments of torture would not be complete without an evergreen blackberry vine. We suppose that Mayor Lane's hesi tation comes entirely from the fact that he is uncertain whether to require his detective force to bump the bumps or chute the chutes. Governor Folk may not come to Port land because he can trust no one else to sit on the lid. Has it occurred to the Governor that he might bring the lid with him? . All we can do now Is to hope that the parents of all those prodigies at the baby show will be the best pleased couples In the is: Grid, with, Dan McAllen Intending. OREGON OZONE A Xew Paper in Oklahoma. Now we'U catch it! Carrie Nation Runs "The Hatchet4, Great creation! As a slasher And a slammer And a smasher 'Tis no shammer. I Such a journal As "The Hatchet!" No diurnal Sheet can match It 1 To this weekly Let us bend us. Mild and meekly. Lest she end us. If the Sheriff Don't attach it. Long we'll hear of Carrie's "Hatchet." The group photograph of President Roosevelt and the peace envoys proves conclusively that Komura will never con sent to fight It out personally with Witte. The funny man on the Indianapolis Morning Star 13 named Joe Miller. It was Inevitable that the author of Joe Miller's Joke Book should break Into print again. A Portland young man who has been calling It "Loover" all his life has been enlightened since the Exposition brought its art exhibit to town, and now ha calls "It "Lowvcr." How could a foreign opera writer with a namo like Humperdlnck fall to score? Fate is cruel! A Kansas man died last week whose heart's desire for years had been to possess a Panama hat. He re solved, back In 1S90. to put away 23 cents a month toward the fortune required to purchase a real Panama. Last week his hoard reached the necessary figure and he started for the hat store, but died of heart disease upon the threshold. As James Whltcomb Rllcy would say, "there's nothln' more pathetlcker" than that Hiram Hayfleld writes from Grass Valley that he Is coming up to the Expo sition poultry show "with1 the oldest China peasant" In captivity. How about yellow slavory. now? To the Header. If I were you and you were T, Now wouldn't things be quite awry? You'd have to be Jocose and gay And sing the sundry songs I sing; I'd have to road them every day! (I wouldn't swap for anything!) Elucidated. Jimmy Say. what's a Woodman of the World? Tommy Why, it's a Wow; they spell It W. O. W. Jimmy I know, but why do they call him that? Tommy Well, a woodman, you know, as a man that handles an ax? Jimmy Cert Tommy And he lives in town and don't know the tricks of choppln' wood see? and ho chops off his finger the first lick. Then he yells Wow! and he's it The Optimist. It's better to be sunny and sad, I say; It's better to be merry than road. I say; Then let us be Joyous, Whatever annoy us Be sunny and merry and glad, I say. - An Invitation. Come out of the gloom; Climb up to the light; There's plenty of room Where the sun shines bright Come out of despair; Climb up on the slope Where the rays fall fair On the forehead of hope. Don't dwell In the twilight; Don't grope in the gloom; Up hero in the sky light There's plenty of room. ROBERTCS LOVE. SURGERY FOR CHILD REFORM Milwaukee Sentinel. In a dispatch from Indianapolis a cor respondent of the Chicago Record-Herald tells of three cases treated by a local physician In which Incorrigible boys brought before the Juvenile Court had been cured of their vlclousness. In each case, so runs the story, the patient had suffered through accidental Injury and a depression or thickening of the skull had followed. The children were young when the accidents occurred, but marked changes In their characters and dlsposl tlons followed, one becoming a thief and the others developing "pure cussedness' to such a degree that they were the ter rors of the neighborhoods in which they lived. The dispatch goe3 on to tell how tho Judge of the Juvenile Court and a physi clan, his personal friend. In the course of a conversation on juvenile depravity. speculated on tho possibility of bringing about a reformation In particular cases through the agency of surgical opera.' tlons. Examinations were made In the three cases treated, and. after the con sent of the parents had been given, the operations were successfully performed, In two cases reformation was complete in the third, that of the thief, the pa tient has but recently been discharged from tho hospital and the change in his character, if any has been effected, has not yet had time to develop. This would appear to be a matter that societies and public officers interested In the correction and management of vicious and delinquent Juvenile offenders might investigate with profit It Is understood of course, that the great majority of chll dren that drift into this class are influ enced by other causes than accidents to become incorrigible. Environment, hered ity. neclect and prenatal tendencies hav much to do with recruiting tho ranks of delinquent children; but bumps and blows come frequently and with some force during the days of childhood before tho skull has attained its growth, and while It Is susceptible to Injuries that may prove permanent. If three cases of this kind were discovered In Indianapolis, as re ported. It Is worth while to look for elm liar cases elsewhere. If three boys can be saved from Involuntary and irresponsl ble Incorrigibility by a simply surgical operation, that, too. Is worth while. The percentage of vicious children that could be reformed by this method is pure ly a matter of speculation, because the surgeon Is not called In to examine such cases. Parents do not as a rule keep record of the bumps acquired by their children from day to day, and it never oc curs to them to submit a case of that kind to a physician after the swelling has dis appeared or the cut healed, it is possible, therefore, for a child, born normal and fit. to become through accident a vicious and dangerous man, a disgrace to his family, a menace to society, and a curse to himself. The example set by the In dianapolLs Jnflay and nhvslelan Is Korth following. TARIFF TIDE TURNING. ew York Journal of Commerce and Com mercial Bulletin. Ind. Rep. Agitation upon the subject of tariff revi sion and reciprocity treaties nowadays Is Induced by anxiety about foreign markets for our surplus products. This Is In strik ing contrast with the time when the chief solicitude was over the home mar ket, and It Implies a changing sentiment which must sooner or later lead to a new commercial policy. The requirements for reserving and developing the home mar ket for domestic production are different from those necessary for securing and extending the foreign market. The old policy of protection was supported by plausible arguments. Its avowed purpose was to build up and diversify manufac turing Industries and provide a market among our own people for products of the oil. By restriction of the admission of foreign manufactured goods by means of high duties, foreign capital and labor were Induced to come here to produce them Instead of producing them at home and sending them here In exchange for raw materials and foodstuffs. This has tened foreign Investment in our industries and stimulated Immigration, and fo'r a time It contributed to diversity of em ployment for both capital and labor and Increase of population, restricting the export of natural products and enlarging the market for them at home. The plea was made that this not only stimulated the development of our resources and our growth in Industry and population as a nation, but made us more Independent of other nations and more sufficient unto ourselves. This was the theory of our protective policy in the Industrial and commercial Infancy of the country, and the argu ments In support of It had certain force which vanished long ago. Much fallacy has taken Its place. While It may be true that development and growth wero hastened by protecting the domestic mar ket against foreign invasion, that policy was not the source or the primary cause of the development and growth. That lay In the natural resources and advantages of the country, and foreign capital and labor would have come In to avail of these In profitable employment In any case. Without "protection early pro gress might have been plower. but it would have been more healthy, and later progress would have been more rapid as well as healthier, and we should have escaped the demoralizing and corrupting abuses of the tariff policy. There is no fallacy more gross and palpable than that which attributes high wages for la bor and high profit for capital in this country to the restriction of Imports. They are necessarily due to natural re sources and advantages which enable us to produce larger value than others at smaller expenditure of labor and of tho capital which Is the other chief factor In production. The result may be In creased by higher intelligence and ac tlvlty and greater freedom In the appli cation of energy, which add to efficiency In production, but we are apt to overes timate our superiority In those qualities. Opportunity, no doubt, tends to stimulate them, but so far as they are really more highly developed than elsewhere there Is the less need of protection against the competition of others. With superiority of resources and advantages, and of en ergy and Industry, we could defy the world in production and trade, with a free field and no favor. If we fail at any point It Is on account of inferiority, and the advance made by Germany in recent years Is mainly due to superior Intelligence, industry, skill and training applied to resources much inferior to ours. But that development and diversifica tion of Industries, that accumulation of capital and Increase of population, which the early protectionist sought, were long ago attained. The home market has been built un and filled up. and wo have reached the point where, not only In agri culture, mining and forestry, but In many lines of manufacturing, we are able to produce a surplus for export What we want Is not to hold our domestic mar kets against others, but to gain access to foreign markets. We can hope to ao that only In competition with others and by producing at as low a cost and selling at as low prices as they do. By su- oerior resources and superior capacity we can do that without diminution of the returns to capital or to labor pr lowering of the standard of living, for It la to do remembered that whatever the figures representing wages or profits or prices. the real source of wealth and weu-oetng Is In volume of production and facility of exchange. If we are to find more and larger markets abroad and Increase our foreign trade, we must abandon the policy of restriction, remove obstacles and lower barriers which add to the cost of Inter change and limit the opportunities of pro duction. In spite of a casuistry that has become so familiar as to be accepted by manv as" a truism, there can be no one- elded trade between nations, no selling without buying, no extension of exports without corresponding Increase or im ports in one form or another. The agi tation for "outlets" for our surplus, ior foreign markets, for freedom to sell to advantage, must inevitably lead to a change of view on the subject of restric tive tariffs, and already there are Indi cations that the tide of sentiment and of thinking is turning. Reciprocity Is but a means of mitigating the effects of an un dlscriminating protective policy, and, once beeun. It will find no stopping place short of a revision of the tariff on the principle of extending foreign trade by making it freer and gaining access to the markets of others by opening ours to them. A Famous Phrase. Anaconda Standard. An item going the rounds of the press ascribes to the late Daniel fa. iamont tne nriMn of the ohrase. "Public omce is public trust" As the story runs. "When private secretary to cieveiana. men wv ernnr nf New York. Cononel Lamont com piled a pamphlet made up of Cleveland's nntfthie utterances. Being a trained news- oancr man. Mr. Lamont naturally cast about for a striking headline or title and the famous phrase suggested Itself to his minH " The Dhrase Is commonly an buted to Mr. Cleveland himself. The fact Is, a3 may be seen by referring to Bart- etfft 'tFamlllar Quotations.- i.naney Sumner as long ago as May 31, 1S72, more than 10 years' before either Mr. Cleveland or Mr. Lamont had achieved prominence, wrote that "the phrase 'public office Is n. nubile trust has of late become com mon property." Bartlett, however, fails to locate the origin of the phrase more definltelv than that, although he lm plies that It is a paraphrase of Thomas Jpfferson's remark. "When a man as sumes a public trust, he should consider himself as pubjlc property. The Country Sunday. Isaac Ogden Rankin. In Consregatlonallat. Not as of old. the pilgrim ciimDa The -way to Zlon's hill; Quenched the old fires of sacrifice. The ancient praise is still. For thou, our God, in every land, Where'er thy people come, Makest their hearts thy dwelling place,. Their homes thy chosen home. And -where In fellowship we build Our house of common prayer. Still, when we meet to worship thee, Thou, Lord, art with us there. The clear bell from hill to hill. O'er meadow, stream and woed, "Come from your toll, ye children, come. Rest in God's fatherhood!" In these mysterious sunlit skies. Where white cloud chariots pass. This wind that like thy spirit breathes, This pool, thy heavens glass. This cool rest of the maple's shade. This song bird's carol free We thank thee for a world. O Lord, lniiinc.t with thoughts of thee JAPANESE JNDUSTRIES. Japan is succeeding in its efforts to control the shipping trade along the Chinese coast. The new service be tween Shanghai and: Hongkong vte. Fuchan and Amoy is doing a large busi ness, which will be permanent, as it provides connections between the serv ice Joining Formosa ports and prts of the Chinese coast. The Japanese gov ernment subsidizes the line, subject to the vessels arriving and leaving m time. At present tho vessels In uee ar all chartered vessels, but as sr as tho war Is over they will fly th - rayed flag of Japan. Of this Camms Coast trade American vessels only repre sent Vn per cent. Great Britain's shar is oVA per cent. Japan has 9020 agricultural, commer cial, industrial and transportation In corporated companies, with $S2.,a8 authorized capital, of which 5 4 ...- 000 was paid up on March 31. 10W. ttm close of the Japan fiscal year. Tlw growth since 1S96. the first fiscal yaar after the Chlno-Japanpse war, t 4SSB companies and $500.00ft.O.M paid up cap ital. A further great expansion of Jap anese business. " Internal and external. will doubtless follow the close of the present war. Japan's crop of barley and wheat was 20.000.000 koku (lO.O-W.OdO bushels) in 1904. against 13.000.000 koku (S.5M.MA bushels) in 1903. an increase of 7.)0.W koku (3,500,000 bushels) just when thay wero wanted the war year; the rice crop was 50,000.000 koku (25.M4l.dM bushels), an increase of 3.903. 0tW koku (1.500,000 bushels); the raw silk pro duced In 1903 was 2.400.000 kwan (24. 000.000 pounds troy), an Increase over 1901 of 200,000 kwan (2.00.9W pounds troy); tho 1903 production of cotton yarn was 2O.S0O.00O kwan (308,0,C pounds troy), an increase over 19J1 of 300,000 kwan (3.000.000 pounds troy); the "1903 production of coal was lt.dM. 000 tons, an increase of 1.50.0Mi ts over 1901; of Iron the 1903 product wiw 8,500.000 kwan (S5.000.000 pounds troy), an Increase of 700,000 kwan (7.034M pounds troy) over 1901; of copper the 1903 output was 50.000.000 kin (7., 000 pounds), an Increase over 1531 oC 5.000,000 kin (6.600.000 pounds): of pe troleum the 1903 production was S0O. 000 koku (liquid) equal to Sl.m.M American gallons, a small increase ov,i 1901, but double the product of lSt. and quadruple the product of 1S57. It would seem as If, for years, nature ImmI been helping Japan to acquire National assets as a financial basis for the pres ent war. Rice, barley, wheat, raw silk, cotton yarn, copper. Iron, coal and pe troleum are Japnn.'s chief products. From $13,500,000 exports and $13.04M. 000 Imports In 1SS4, a total of foreign commerce of $26,500,000. to $156.0M.MO exports and $1S1.000,00 imports in 104. a total foreign commerce of $337.M, 000, an Increase of $310,500.HM). is the record of tne growth of Japan s foreign commerce In only ten years. How e a country be kept back whoso ferelga commerce increases $31.646.9ee eeck year for ten years, starting with MAy $26,500,000, and two of the years wr years? Profanity In Golf. London Tit Bits. "I want your advice. Mr. Prosle." seld the church warden to the vicar. "Yes, dear friend." replied the raverentl gentleman, "and on what subjeet?" "I've taken to playing golf." explittae the other, "and I er find it difficult t restrain er" "Ah, I see what you mean." seld the vicar; "bad language." "Exactly." replied the pillar" ef the church. "Well, how would it be to pt a at a in your pocket every time you SmmmI yourself using a wrong word; Jeet a re minder, you know? "The very thing," exclaimed tne eMK&R warden. "Thank you so much!" An se they parted." A few days later the worthy ciene w passing along the road whleh led t the links, when he met an Individual wfcewe clothes stuck out an over wun great knoby lumps. Gracious me. Mr. Bagshawe. ' Ro crtett. as the object approached nearer; "la that really you? Yes, its I," gruntea tne voice ot mm warden. 'Why. you don't mean surely all those aro not the result of my suggostiear continued the horrified parson, gaztog at the telltale bulges. 'These!" snorted the other, contomptH- ously, "why, these are only the 'aaMMts. The others are coming along on a wheel barrow." Mayor "Weaver's Story. New York Press. Mayor Weaver, of the awakened elty of Philadelphia, was talking to a re porter about a very astute and wy pe tlclan. It is difficult" said the Mayor, "to get this man to do anything he doesn't want to do. Cornered he aavances argu ment after argument against the course you desire him to pursue. He begins with, weak arguments. You think you've got him. But just a3 victory appears asetired. he puts- forth a final argument that te Insuperable, a final argument that floors you thoroughly. "The fellow Is like the fickle sailor ef the old romance. This sailor was stroa. handsome and gny. The girls liked Mm. he. I fear, liked the girls. The foltowlafr conversation one moonlight nlght in tho tropics passed between him and a youur wonjan: " 'But I promised my wife, sweetheart, that I would never marry a second time." "The young girl, beautiful In the flat tering moonlight murmured: " 'Would you cast me off for the sake of a promise to a dead woman? " 'But she Isn't dead yet. said tho fickle sailor." Song of the Retrcatinc Russians. Bertrand Sbadwell in New York MaH. We're marching on to freedom. In the dark before the dawning: The shells are bursting round us. aud the shrapnel shriek on high. We're marching on to freedom, through the black and bloody morning: A crimson thread Is In the east and creeps across the sky. We're hopelessly defeated; let the Joyous news be shouted. Our armies are In full retreat and soon we shell be free. Outfought and outmaneuyered. outflanked and raked and routed. Three hundred thousand beaten men are singing like the sea. Our forces fill the valleys full; the plain Is overflowing; Our bayonets clothe the trampled earth like fields of sloping corn. Above the distant mountain tape the light Is slowly growing. A scarlet cord Is In the east and seen It will be morn. O grave, where Is thy victory O death, where Is thy stinging? "We die that Russia may be free; w9 Twse that she may gain. There's blood upon the read we take: ht -still we take It singing. Our triumph Is in our defeat, our glery In our pain. We're marching on Jo freedom through the blood-red light of morning; The cannon roar behind us and the dead are falling fast. You can see our patient faces, in the crim son of the dawnlngj We've suffered through the weary night, but day has come at last. For we're beaten beaten beaten! Let the Joyous news be shouted; We've lost the tyrant's battle now. and soon we shall be free. Wronged, robbed, oppressed, tormented. Im prisoned, exiled, knouted. A hundred million Russian Slavs are rta 1ns like tho sea.