T-jpr , ' ' JF -Wgff-fc-f "WHp5."lfflP,,"?,'TJ?,!f " "Wp The 5ch!ey Case A correspondent of the New In a. Nut Shell. York Journal puta the Samp- e on-Schlcy case in a nut shell "when he says: 1. Sampson's admirers claim that he was tho victor, while lie (Sampson) was never in the fir ing line (which was ahsolutely true). ' 2. Schley's admirers say that he won the hat tie, heing there all the time ana rollowing the enemy.. Now, as we are in possession of tiie facts, let the public decide between the two. 1. Is Sampson a hero because he was not there? 2. Is Schley a coward because he was there and won? Watered 5tock The industrial commission has to the Amount of recently completed some in $300,000,000. tcresting figures relating to the United States Steel Cor poration, otherwise known as the steel trust. Tho commission's inveetigations confirm the popular suspicion that this trust has in its stock a vast amount "of water. The commission claims that nearly one-third of the entire capi tal of this trust is water. It will be remem hered that Mr. Schwab, president of tho trust, testified that in the organization of the trust the property was under valued rather than over valued. The commission declares that this claim is-without basis and that the amount of watered stock in the trust will reaclfthe'sum of $300,000,000. ' The .Czar of Russia has given .uq a little lesson . iu religious liberty. Recently M. Pobed onostoff, the procurator of the Russian-Polish synod, called upon the czar and complained that some of the students of the university did not entertain religious views in harmony with those of the czar. A St. Peters burg dispatch, referring to this visit, says: "The czar told him to mind his own business. Ho did not think that justice is to be meted out to the orthodox alone. A little earlier Pobedono Btoit had proposed to the czar that in the blank application for army officers seeking promotion a column be added in which the officer should state his religion. The czar ordered him brought into his presence, and excitedly told him he did not cure a brass farthing what religion his officers professed; what he wanted was loyal, able servants." Edward H.' Curtis is the son of a bank cashier living at Southington, Connecticut. Young Curtis loved a working girl, and against the objections of L'c iristo cratic father insisted upon marrying the girl of his choice. Young Curtis held a responsible position in his father's bank, and as soon as his parent made known his serious objections to hiB new daughter-in-law the son promptly resigned his position in the bank and obtained a place as motorman on a trolley line. .He as serts that he does not care to be under further obligations to a parent who will not recognize his son's wife. Evidently there is good metal in this young man. If the father himself has any brains worthy of mention he will in time come to ap preciate the sterling qualities of his determined A Lesson In .Religious,'.,,. Liberty A Terrible "Crime" in Connecticut. The Commoner. offspring. The only objection to the bride was that she had been a working girl. A more unjust and absurd criticism could not bo conceived in this intelligent age. "A Shameless A New York millionaire who Wicked Will." recently died, designated his - mistress as one of his chief legatees. In fact, the mistress in this million aire's will was placed on a plane with the mil lionaire's widow. In a newspaper interview tlie widow publicly resented the act of her late husband in associating the name of a pure wife with that of an impure woman. Commenting upon this indignant protest, the New York World hits the nail on the head when it says: "All rightly constituted minds that retain a prejudice in favor of family ties, respectability and correct living will be. inclined to share tho widow's view that a will which puts a man's mistress on the same plane with his blameless wife, and gives to the foimer the home that is most closely asso ciated with the iamily name and traditions, ia 'a shameless, wicked will.' "The sort of 'honor' that is affected by 'men of the world' might lead a rich voluptuary to deal generously with his woman 'friend;' but surely a finer instinct would induce him to make the settlement, privately, and.. not glass her openly with his family in a will. Why is it that 'a good fellow' ameng men is so often a brute in his dcal ings with women?" r , Protesting Against Tariff. The Monthly Bulletin of the Fidelity and Casualty Com pany, speaking of the present tariff, says: "Such a condition cannot continue. It makes our people bondmen in a kind of industrial slav eiy. It deprives them of the right to buy in tho world's markets. It robs the many to enrich a few. It is wrong from an economic standpoint. Jt is wrong morally. The government has the right to impose tariffs for purposes of revenue or to subserve the general interest. It has no right to maintain a tariff which yields no revenue, which serves the general interests not at all, but does severely burden the consuming public. That is nothing more nor less than the promotion and protection of robbery. "AH this is pertinent to the plate glass situa tion. The prices of the trust are beyond the cost of importing glass plus .the duties. We are sub jected to threats that we' will be attacked in our business if we buy imported goods. Is a trust that makes such threats wise? The people of this country at large are greater than tho little sec tion of them that manufactures plate glass. We suspect that we can rest content in the idea that our plate glass friends are capable of understand ing this simple proposition." "The Host Dls- It develops that Edward S. lingulshed Living Maclay, the author of the American His- "History of the United States torian. Navy," in which work Ad miral Schley was outrageously assailed, was formerly an editorial writer on the New York Sun, a newspaper that has ac customed itself to abusing the hero of San tiago bay. Mr. Maclay's book has, by order of Secretary Long, been excluded from the text books used at the naval .academy at An napolis. In that book Maclay referred to Admiral w Schley1 as "A Micawhor Admiral." lie charged that Schley "exhibited either a timidity amounting to absoluto cowardice or a prevari cation of facts that wore absolute falsehoods." lie alleged that Admiral Schley "turned in caitiff flight from the danger spot toward which duty, honor and tho whole American people were most earnestly urging him." He said that Schley's warship furnished "the most shameful spectacle of deliberately turning tail and run ning away." The New York Sun in order to bolster up Mr. Maclay refers to him as "the most distin guished living American historian. " It is strango that a man designated as "tho most distin guished living American historian" would find it necessary to resort to the lowest form of abuse in dealing with an historical character. Men distinguished as historians are presumed to state facts and to state them in such a way as to impress upon tho reader tho impartiality of the writer. But this "most distinguished living American historian" shows that he is a 'partisan of the partisans; and tho observer is justified in tho suspicion that if Mr. Maclay does not entertain personal malice toward Ad miral Schley, other men who did have that malice havo engaged him as the medium for foul slanders. . r 'y -1"S! 7!" A Novel Posi- It seems. tthat this "most dis tion for a Great tinguished historian" is a clerk Historian. in the Brooklyn navy yard. It is strange that this navy yard clerk has discovered cowardice and general un worthiness in a man whom the American peo ple, regardless of political prejudice, delight to honor. It is strange that in spite of the per sistent efforts to discredit the important part Admiral Schley played in the Santiago battle, the American people have come quite generally to make, him the hero of that battle. It will be interesting to observe what disposition the administration will make of this navy yard clerk, otherwise known .as "the most distin guished living American historian." As a his torian he was discredited, not so much by tho ban placed by the secretary of the navy upon his works, as by the character of those works. As a clerk in the navy yards he should be dis placed because of his outrageous assaults upon a man who has been tho patient victim of tho most remarkable series of attacks recorded in American history. It is not at all likely that this "most distinguished living American his torian" is at all dependent upon his salary as clerk. It may rather be suspected that his em ployment as clerk in the navy yards was merely a cover whereby he could carry out the work mapped out for him. From tho beginning the attacks upon Admiral Schley have been wholly discreditable. From the beginning nothing lias developed to the discredit of Admiral Schley. He has been extremely patient under the most bitter attacks. The American people will keep a very close eye upon the Sampson-Schley affair, and they will not lose sight of the dis position made by the administration of the "most distinguished living American historian." J 1