THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1001. The omaha Daily Bee. E. H03BWATER, EDITOR. PU1JLIBHED EVERY MORNING. THUMB Oil SlIIlSt'IltPTtON. Dally Ilea (without Sunday;. Ono Vcar.J6.00 Dally Jleo and Sunday, Ono Year 8.10 Illustrated Doc. One l'eur il.W Hunday Hpc, One Year 2-OJ .Saturday lice, Onu Year. Lo" Twentieth Century Farmer, One Year.. 1.10 OFFICES: Omaha; The lleo llulldlng. South Omaha: City Hall dulldllig, Twon-ty-nrtii unii m streets. Council Muffs; 1U Pearl Street. Chicago! 1010 Unity Building. New york: Temp.e oourt. Washington! tol Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter should he addressed! Omaha liee, Editorial Department. Ill'HINKSS LETTERS, liuslncss lettcra and remittances should be addressed: The Ueo Fublwning Com pany, omuha. REMITTANCES. Kcmlt by draft, express or poital order, payable to The Uce Publishing Company. Only Il-ccnt stamps accepted In payment of mall accounts. 1'crsonai checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THIS I1EE PUHLISIIINQ COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Htato of Nebraska, Douglus County, s.: Oeorge U, Tzschuck, secretary of The llee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Ually, Morning, .Evening ana Hunday Ilea printed during the month of April, 1D01, was us follows: 1 M.MHt 16 117,0.-0 2 SMI.M70 17 UT.700 3 U'J.ftMII IS ii7,MO 4 U0,,-,;!O 19 7,10 b UO.-NO H) -7,0 10 6 no.ouo 21 u,:ho 7 -'o,;!.i( a ur.uoo b ail, 100 23 'J7.U50 H U7.000 21 i!7,7SO 10 20,-100 26 27,100 11 118,180 26 27,. 10 in ;..:to,r:ro 27 27,soo 13 ...2S.000 2S 118,375 II S,Mir. 29 27,020 15 ;I2,;100 30 27,'JttO Total 8S7.SOO Lem unsold and returned 6opies.... 12,201 Net total sale 81(1,000 Net dally uvcrngc 2S.1S5 OKO. D. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed In my presence nnd sworn to before mo this 1st day of May, A. D. 1901. M. 1J. HUNOATE, Notnry Public The pojiorrutH are now llnlile to hnye another attiu-k of "Damn the supremo court." lty tlio way, Ik the smoke nuisance ordinance still 011 the municipal statute hooks subject to enforcement? It will take several Philadelphia law yers to tell just what the supreme eonrt of the United States lias decided in the Porto ltlcnn Vases. If the ehatKCS npuliibt Fire Chief Iledell were coiitlned to tall swearing, lie would doubtless lmvo n rlfjht to plend privilege. All lire chiefs do sweat on occaslou. Omaha would have been pleased to have President McKlnley stay longer and accept lis hospitality, but under the circumstances the president will take the will for the deed. Of course Omnhn constantly wants now school buildings Just ns every growing child constantly wnnts new clothes, but sometimes both have to get along awhile without them. It lh to be hoped the South Cnrollua Konatorlal contest will not absorb nil Interest that would otherwise huvo been taken In the Charleston exposition, which Is billed to open In Deeembct next. Chicago policemen should not be so easily stampeded ns to turn In a riot call when the Hosebud Indians enroufo east arrive In town. The Indlaus have lived too long In Ncbraskn to be trouble some. If the fusion reformers had remained 111 control of the state Institutions, does anyone Imagine they would have discov ered that the paid employes In some of them almost outnumbered the pupils or Inmates? French agriculturists propose to use cannon against the grnsshoppers. A hummer and a small block of wood brought together with force with the grasshopper between them will also kill Iho pests and cost less. The sultan of Turkey has changed his mind Hbout prohibiting the importation of typewriters Into that country. As the mnbnssudors of nil tlio powers signed the protest the time was considered opportune to put his mind Into the back motion. Two members of the famous First Nebraska regiment lmvo In succession held the position of water commissioner ut Ilentrlco. The members of the regi ment made n record In tho water works line while lu the Philippines which ap pears to stick to them. Tho Presbyterians lmvo settled the creed question so far as It npplles to them. It might be lu .order for the democratic party to get together and try to detennlnu Just what they believe and what It requires besides an appe tite for otllce to bo a democrat. The government will have all tho vol unteers out of the Philippines by July 1, although tho democrats have loudly proclaimed that they would never bo withdrawn. It Is simply tho old differ ence between republican and democratic promises nud predictions. The first Interest of Nebraska and Its neighbor states Is to linve tho uuocoii pled territory built up by Industrious peoplo who will contrlbuto to as well ns share In the general prosperity. So rur ns tho various Irrigation project are a means to that end timr will linve the cordial support of every ono Inter- esieu in me upbuilding of this western country. Stories that tho Porto Hlcau Immi grant? arriving lu Hawaii nro being mistreated on the route come from the Islauds. If It Is true that tho contrac tors and steamship companies are abus ing them nnd furnishing Insuillcleut food It Is time that proceedings were Instituted to punish the guilty parties. Aside from questions of humanity the goTernment cannot afford to couute utiucu suvu uctlous. STATVS OF XKIV FUSSKSSIOXS. The llrst reports of the decisions of the Pnlted States supreme court in the Porto Illcnn cases were misleading nnd consequently the Inferences and conclusions drawn therefrom were fo" the most part Incorrect. The decisions were not nil Verse to the policy of the government, as was nt tlrst stated, but In the main sustain that policy, par ticularly In regard to the status of the new possessions. This Is that they are "domestic" territory, belonging to the United States, but not 11 part of the United States, within the revenue clause of the constitution. Therefore the Fornker act 1$ constitutional so far as It imposes duties oil Imports from Porto Itlco and as congress has full authority, In the opinion of the court, to control and govern ncqulred territory, that net Is In nil respects vnlld. Tho one point on which the court ruled ngalnst the government was the contention, In the Delimit case, thnt du ties were properly collected on Imports from Porto Itlco after Its cession to the United States and before the legis lation by congress because It was still 11 foreign country. Its cession, how ever, having made it "domestic terri tory," the Imposition of duties upon Imports from the Island was held to he Illegal until congress had so ordered and the Importers can recover what they paid. In the Downes case, on the other hand, duties were, collected under the act of congress and .In this the gov ernment was sustained. It thus ap pears that the products of territory ac quired by the United States must, be admitted free of duty to this country until there Is, legislation directing otherwise and that congress can act In the matter without regard to the rev enue cintisc of the constitution,' vhkh the majority of tiro supreme court held "deals with states, their people and their representatives." It would there fore seem to be within tho power of congress to make different tariff regu lations for Porto Itlco nud the Philip pines, to 1)0 determined solely by the conditions lu those islands nnd the com mercial relations deemed to be desira ble between them nnd tho. United States. In a word, the constitutional provision requlrlng'thnt duties, Imports. nnd excises shnll be uniform through out the United States, has no applica tion whatever to acquired territory nnd need not be considered by congress In making revenue regulations for such territory. Nor does any part of the constitution extend by Its own force to ncqulred ter ritory Tho decision says: "The prac tical Interpretation put by congress upon the constitution lias been long continued and uniform to the effect thnt the constitution Is applicable to terri tories acquired by purchase or eou- quest only when nnd so far as congress shall direct." It was held that the power to acquire territory by treaty not only Implies tho iwwer to govern such territory, but to prescribe tho terms upon which Its Inhabitants shall be re ceived by the United States and what their status shall be. Thnt Is to say, congress may determine whether the people of our "domestic territory" shall be clt Izons or subjects. This, however, will apply only to the Inhabitants nt tho time of acquisition. Their children thereafter born, "whether savages or civilized," said the court, "will be cit izens of the United States, entitled to all the rights, privileges and Immunities of citizens." There will bo very general onciirrenco In tho opinion thnt "If such be their status tho consequences will be extremely serious." The dissenting opinions are strong and will undoubtedly exert a great deal of Influence upon tho public mind. Tho majority decision, lu sustaining the policy of the government toward tho new possessions, assures Its continu ance, with such modifications ns chang ing circumstances nud conditions shall require. That this will bo satisfactory to n majority of tho American people It Is probably safe to assume. i -J CANADIAN CUMFF.TITIOX. Our northern neighbor Is showing a grent deal of Industrial nud commer cial enterprise and promises to de velop a competition thnt may provo quite formidable. Kspoclnlly Is this tho case In the Iron and steel Industry. There nro now several large companloB engaged lu -thnt Industry nnd n few days ngo there was reported tho or ganization of another company with a capital of ?120,000,oor, which menus lu Canada that this amount will be actu ally Invested lu tho enterprise. Some of tho directors of tho company nro Amer icans, but tho business will be con ducted in Canada nud will come Into competition with tho American Indus try, unless It shall bo absorbed by tho steel trust of this country. An Ottavn dispatch says, that such Is public confidence In the future devel opment of tho Iron and steel Industry lu tho Dominion thnt tho government, not satisfied with having contracted for the supply of rails to relay 1,000 miles of tho Intercolonial railway, Is en deavoring to nave a tleet of fast steam ers for tho Atlantic service built In Canada out of Cnuadlan material. It is stated that there Is a standing offer of a subsidy of $750,000 n year from Canada nnd $130,000 from tho Imperial government for tho establishment of this Hue. Owing to the demand for shlpplug caused by tho war In South Afrlcu this offer has not been availed of, but now tho government' has en larged Its plans. Tho tlunucc mliilster auuouuced In the Dominion Parliament last week that he had offered several British shipbuilding rirms a substantial bonus to transfer, their plaut to Canada and construct the ships ut Sidney, whero plates will bo turned out shortly In the necessary quantity by tho Do minion Steel company. The subsidy of $1,000,000 a year for operation of tlio steamers will bo u further luduccuiont, Caunda has been maklug for several years steady Industrial and commercial progress, realizing from It an Increase In capital which Is stimulating tho en torprfso of fls people. At tho name tlmo the government Is mnnlfestlug a hearty , sympathy with tho ponuliu- Interest In Industrial and commercial affairs and 11 liberal disposition to promote such enterprises ns will contribute to the de velopment and prosperity of the conn try. Canada has large resources nud there seems to be no reason why the Iron and steel Industry should not be developed there to extensive propor tions, while the policy of building up a Canadian shipping Interest, even If It be necessary to employ liberal subsidies for the purpose, Is obviously wise. A Canadian merchant marine, cnrrylng the products of the country to foreign markets, there Is no doubt would be the means of adding very materially to the volume of Cnuadlan commerce, be sides creating a shipbuilding Industry that would be valuable. It Is gratifying to note the enterprise and progress of our northern neighbor, because It adds to the aggregate wealth and to the Industrial and commercial power of this continent, nnd the United States has little to fear from Cnuadlan competition lu tho world's markets. nit: statu faiii am;. The Hoard of Public Lands and Ilulldlngs Is responsible before the people for tho selection of a suitable site for tho fair. It Is the Judgment of tho State Hoard of Agriculture and citizens generally who are Interested In the fair that tho old site is essential to tho success of the enterprise. If tho state officers can find a better loca tion and equip It with buildings for less money thin the old site can bo secured for, they will be given unlimited praise for their good management. If they make a blunder and wreck tho fair for all tlmo to come, ns they can easily do If they take the advice -of Interested property owners here anil enemies of tho fair In other cities, they will bo held accountable by the voters. Tho responsibility rests with the state board, and It Is Impossible to shift it upon any other shoulders. Lincoln Journal. There Is no doubt that tho people of Nebraska will hold the Hoard of Public Lands and Buildings responsible for the selection of a suitable site for the state fair and a proper expenditure of tho money placed nt Its disposal by the legislature. We heartily concur with the Journal that tho board should steer clear of the advice of parties Interested In any par ticular site. For that very reason tho board cannot consistently accept the ad vice of tlio Journal, whoso mnnnger Is reputedly Interested In the sale of the old fair grounds nt the exorbitant price of $-J2.000. There is no danger that the board will wreck tho fair for all time by entering to the enemies of tho fair In other cities. The assumption thnt there are enemies of the fair In other cities hns no foundation In fact. If other cities had been disposed to wreck the fair, they could hnve prevented Its permanent locntlon two years ago and benten the appropriation this year. What the peo ple of other cities and for thnt matter tho people of tho whole state Insist on Is that the stnto board exercise the same business judgment that its mem bers would with an Investment of their own money. Another feature tho people outside of Lincoln deprecate Is thnt any consid erable sum should hnve to bo paid for the purchase of a site lu view of the fact that the legislature of 1890 wns persuaded to locate the fair perma nently nt Lincoln on the express prom ise that suitable grounds would be do nated for thnt purpose. During the period when tho fair was located In Omnhn Its citizens contributed over $100,000 for site nud buildings or which the state fair was given freo use. And this enormous expenditure only covered three actual fairs. With a permanent location Lincoln hns been favored sufficiently wlthdut asking the stnto to retmburso stockhold ers lu a former fair association for money subscribed with no idea thnt It would over be repaid. The difficulties governments contend with In dealing with Oriental peoples are ngnln Illustrated In the case of tho English lu Iudln. Tho authorities lmvo been forced to relax regulntlous In tended to prevent tho spread of tho plague simply because the people would rather die than receive medical treat ment. Unfortunate as such conditions are, It would be moro disastrous to en force the regulations ngnlnst tho preju dices nud superstitious- of the people. In some portions of the Philippines tho United States Is confronted by slmllnr conditions, though they do not nffe.ct tho public health. Manners and cus toms of centuries' growth cannot bo overturned and brought Into conformity with modem Ideas In a day, a month or a year. Those who complain because this is not done nro either Impractical enthusiasts or simply grumbling for po litical effect. The doctors of theology have dis agreed as to tho propriety of censuring Mayor Moores for the policy he Is pur suing simply beentise no two preachers have tho same Idea ns to what policy should be pursued. Tho truth Is that Omaha Is us well governed as any other American city of equal population. Vice nnd lawlessness nro Inevitable lu population centers, nnd the only prob lem Is how far repression nud suppres sion can bo carried. Experience hos taught that spasmodic crusndes accom plish llttlo lasting good. Tho stream never rises above Its source. In tho loug run tho grent majority of a com munity get the kind of government they want. American buyers of Northern Pacific stock have kindly consented to let tho British speculators caught In tho squeeze off on tho snnio terms ns were granted In Now York-. The next time tho British speculators see an Ameri can trap set they will bo careful about sticking their lingers luto It. There Is nothing to prevent any sub urban railway promoters from proceed ing to make surveys nnd lay out their lino without waiting for tho county to give them a freo right of way; In fact, a survey would bo an evldeuco of good faith thnt would go a great deal further than mere hot air. If Tillman should be defeated for re election as senator from South Carolina It would throw (he eutlre burden of lliaklnc tlllliL-s llvelv In the senate I111011 Bailey of Tcxns. As this Is Bailey's llrst season there It would be asking considerable of him to expect blm to till the places of Imth Tillman nud Petti grew. MlilllliiK nf the Storm Outer. Brooklyn Knglc. The storm center has shifted from tho lakes to Columbus, O. A mothers' con gress la in session there, presided over by a woman that never had a bnby! Ilellncil ,tMIi n limit. St. Louis Olobc-Democrnt. The Impression seems to bo slowly per colating at West Point that when Uncle Sam says hazing must be stopped he means "stopped." The word Is clearly defined In the dictionary. Annther Ynnkce Trick. Philadelphia Ledger. Uncle Sam expects to got Just ns much Indemnity from China as If he kept an army there to collect It. This Is another Yankee trick which the powers arc unable to either comprehend or Imitate. llurnliiK the llMtnnee of Trnile. San Francisco Call. Europe owes us a largo amount of money on the balance of trade, but from tho num ber of Americans who nro rushing across the Atlantic for a good time this summer II looks ns If most of It would be burned before winter. t'heiv, llrotlirrn. C'licw. New- York World. And now the tobacco trust Is to he "paralleled" by a strenuous rival. Thai's tho trouble! No sooner do you get your trust formed and sit down at ease to enjny your dividends than some rude outsider wants to share them. Cnn't Itu Without Them. Judlunnpolls Journal. A committee of fourteen British experts and scientists has reported, after eighteen months of careful Investigation, that there Is no such thing as hereditary drunken ness and that love of intoxicating liquors Is In no case transmitted from parent to child. This does not lessen the reasons for temperance, but It does away with n non-sclentlflc argument. 'I'm Ink llnllroitil Proper!). Springfield Republican. The Texts supreme court has reached the strange conclusion that to tax the tangible property nf a railroad and to tax tho franchise also Is a case of double tax ation nnd forbidden by tho stnte constitu tion. It has been said thnt corporation rights receive scaut respect In Tcxub. This can no longer bo asserted. Railroads aro taxed in Massachusetts on their tangi ble property, nnd also on their franchise, and no ono hereabouts has over had the hardihood to call It double taxation. DrnwIiiK Flnr Distinctions. Phllndelphla Record. James It. Keene, the great Wall street operator, mnlics a very neat distinction be tween stock gambling nnd speculation Speculation, ho says, Is based on knowledge of the markets, while tho gambling Is car ried on In Ignorance. Thoro Is a much bet ter distinction. The speculators are like the faro dealers, who manipulate the cards and tho box, while tho outsiders are sub ject to the "splits" and to all the other risks of tho unequal game. Though the dealers sometimes loso by overplaying tho game, the outsiders In tho long run never win. Chlnrwe I.out In Iloston. Fibre, nnd Fabric. Sir Claude MacDonald, when Interviewed In Japan on the' loot question In China, said among other things :' 1 much .deprecate the uitra-scnsationai accounts as to footing that have gone home, and cannot help smiling at the fact that one of tho gentlemen of your fraternity, (a newspaper man) who was' waxing Indignant on the subject, had In his pocket nt the very tlmo of hln accusations a Jade teapot valued at 500." Two thousand five hundred dollars seems a big sum to pay for a teapot, but in the days when thosd. things wero made men did not worship the almighty dollar ns now, and tho labor of an artist was cheap. Tho cost when mado and tho vnlue now nro very different. A Doston firm recently placed on exhibition In tMci Lart museum many rnro things which had been looted In China. Among them wore some very rnro Jades In tho form of vaBes, teapots, etc. Ono small teapot, not over four Inches cither wajs was valued at 1,000, nnd many vases were val ued at over" $1,000 each. It makes no differ ence 'what Ur. Wraonl or Sir Clatido Mac- Donald may say, tho loot Is here and In every largo city of Europe, America and Asia. TRADI; WJTH TWO HOWEHS, Commercial Itelntlona of the United Stnte. Germnny nnil Hiiln. New York Tribune. A few months ago, when this govern ment In accordance, with law and treaty obligations increased the duty upon sugar Imported from Itussla to an extent corre sponding with. Russia's practical export bounty thereon, there was a prodigious out cry to tho effect that we were alienating our best customer and jeopardizing the best part of our foreign trade and It was urged that wo should foster trade relations with Russia even nt tho expense of those with Germany and all other European countries. It was gravely asserted that our sales of machinery, tteel and Iron to Russia amounted to $30,000,000 a year and that a single city In this country sold $20, 000,000 worth of agricultural and other Implements to Russia rnch year. Wo pointed out at the tlmn the manifest ab surdity of such utterances, and now comes official corroboration of our view of the case. t Official reports show thnt In tho year 1900 Russia's total Imports from the United States wero valued at only $21,6G1,S1G, raw cotton forming about six-sevenths of the whole. At the same tlmo Russia's exports to tho United States amounted to only $1,780,280. Those figures Indicate nn Im portant commerce, yvhlch doubtless should be preserved and fostered Dut compared with our wholo foreign trnde, or with our trade with any one of many other countries, It Is pitifully small. For example. In Iho same year Germany's commerco with tho United States amounted to $242,941,832, or more than ten times as much ns Russia's trade with us. It was also, by tho way, greater than Germany's trade with any other country In the world. Certainly, then, if we wore confronted with the alternative of sacrificing tho trade of one or the other of the. two countries we should sacrifice that which wbb only $23,452,855, rather than that which was $242,941,832. A trade of $10 Is better than a trnde of only $1. There Is, howovor, no need of sacrificing one, for the other. The United States, on Its broad and equitable tariff system, can cultivate trade relations with all the world. We are not Informed that this government's action concerning Russian sugar has de stroyed American commerce with Russia or seriously Impaired It, nor do we believe It will do so. In this view of the case we are confirmed by the official statistics of trade between Russia and Germany. They are the two countries which have most been waging tariff wars with each other. Yet In 1000 they did business with each other to the amount of $170,535,320. If such commerce can exist between countries which confessedly wage Industrial and com mercial wars against each other, a country which eks only "peace, commerce and honest friendship" with all nations should be easily able to maintain Ita trade with aU.. .... Financing Union Pacific United States Investor. The cruel war being over, tho Union Pacific stockholders foot the bill. The Is what tho application for the listing of $100,000,000 convertible 4 per cent bonds means; the llorrlmnu syndicate nro financ ing their purchases of Northern Pacific with the new convertibles. The fight made by them In their Individual capacity Is paid for by the Union l'nclflc ns a corpora tion. Ami Wall street shivers nnd has forebodlngB. For Wall street, having re covered from Its speculative intoxication, sees things more clearly nud Is disposed to be critical. Sixty million more con vertibles moans an additional fixed charge of $2,400,000, the first $40,000,000 for the Southern Pacific purchase causing a charge uf $1,COO,000. Four million fixed charges means necessarily a less secure position for the stock. Th'osc who ore Inclined to measure values by tho yardstick of pres ent earnings will make light of this addi tional charge. They will show that Union Pacific Is earning 8 per cent on tho com mon nnd can be mado to earn 10. North eru Pacific Is earning 7 per cent on both classes of stock, and with the preferred retired can earn 10. Hence, why those forebodings? Have Uulon Pacific stock holders really anything to fear? This would seem to bo a 'fair question. Uut have wc any right to take present prosperous conditions us a basis for exam ination? No one knows how great n price was paid for Northern Pacific control. Suppose we tiike 120 for tho nvcrage price paid. At 4 per cent it nets 3V4 per cent. In other words, Union Pacific Issues n 4 tuy cent bond to finance, nn Investmeut yielding Si per cent. True, Northern Pa cific can puy mure, hut can It through thick and thin? Unloti Pacific can bear Its additional burden nnd still pay dividends, but what when the times of depression come and earnings fall off? These nro the questions that nro ngltntlng tho minds of the thoughtful and causing a more careful consideration of tho true reserve force of these railroad sys tems. Hut another phase of the subject comes more closely home to the holders of the convertibles nlrendy Issued. At present they sell nt a figure thnt amounts to n good premium. Now, for a 4 per cent collateral bond, even with tho "sweeten ing" of conversion Into stock, pnr Is high enough. It seems only rensonabto to sup pose, then, that Union Pacific convertibles nre selling too high nnd must drop when the new bonds nre put on the market. Of course, we will 'bo told that for a call 011 Union Pacific stock for five years, the Hli.ClvLIMTI.'G JUDICIAIXV llt'HKI.l). A IlnlliiK Fnvornlile to Colrt-Dlnodetl CniiNnlrni')'. Washington Post. Itoth the boycott nnd tho blacklist two evils that nre Identical In character hnvo been condemned by various judicial trib unals, Such decisions hnvo been approved by tho conservative sentiment of the coun try. Rut Judge Daker, In a recent Chicago case, has upheld blacklisting as the exer cise of a lawful right. He putB It on a par with strikes, thus: "One has the right to decline to enter the service of. another, and soveral persons act ing Jointly In pursuance of an agreement to that effect have the right to so decline. So one has tho right to decline to employ nnother, and several persons acting Jointly in pursuance of an agreement to that effect havo the right to so decline." The blacklist nnd the strike aro unlike in many respects.. Tho strike Is employed to enforce demands for a change In wages, hours of labor, methods of payment, and other conditions of employment. It Is n liarstT remedy for grievances, but It is often, tho only remedy. An unreasonable strike Is nlmost certain to fall. And a Justifiable strike generally falls If attended by unlawful violence. A strike Is but a temporary disturbance. Those who en gago In It do not unconditionally refuse to work. In fact, they want and expect to resume work with renewed zeal and energy under more favorable conditions. They do not enter Into a conspiracy to ruin their employers. It often happens thnt tho grant ing of their demands would be advan tageous to both sides. Rut blacklisting the agreement of a largo number of tunn-ratlons In tho same busi ness not to employ a man who has offended any ono of those corporations Is a con spiracy to ruin that man and starve his family. It Is a cold-blooded conspiracy. capable of doing Incalculable harm. It Is tho twin brother of tho boycott. Neither of them Is defensible. Both aro foreign devlcea and totally Inharmonious with that spirit of fair play which Is characteristic of Americans. Doth aro steadily growing In disfavor, and neither of them can be popularized by any amount of Judicial tink ering. In this age and country nothing cin last that Is manifestly unjust. "For over the right comes uppermost." IT.HSOVAl, NOTBS. Lieutenant Richmond P. Hobson, U. S. N., has accpted an Invitation to deliver tho Fourth of July oration at Jamaica Plaln3, Mass. George Lonnox Wntson, designer of Sham rock II, began hli work an a naval architect In 1872 and It was ho who de signed the Drltannla cutter for King Ed ward VII, then prlnco of Wales. Lester Morgan Spier of Glens Falls, N. Y., now a senior nt Yale, will come Into a for tune of $3,000,000 when he reaches tho age of 30. His late father, William E. Spier, thought that was soon enough for the youth to get control of such n fortune. General Catchlngs of Mississippi, whose term In the house ended In Mnrch, aald recently: "My congressional career took a big slice out of my life. I went Into the bouse at 38 and now that I am 54 I shall try to practice law and mako somo money. A Baltimore man, convicted on n charge of "having willfully neglected to supply a dumb animal a horse with tho necessities of life," nnd sentenced to pay tho costs, Jold tho Judgo thnt be might havo the horso for the fine, but tno magistrato in sisted Upon getting the money, $1.45. Prosper d'Eplnay, tho Parisian Bculptor, who if or somo' years past has done most of his work at Rome, has just comploted a plaster model of John Paul Jones, who Is represented standing beside an auchor, with drawn sword, ns If nbout to leap upon the deck of nn enemy's ship, at tho head of a boarding party. Secretary Lyman J. Gage, In an article In tho curreut number of "Success," says: "Tho successful banker must bo a trained man. Originality counts for a grent deal, but It Is safer when ono Is young to fid low the beaten track and to profit by the wisdom of thoBe who havo learned In tho school of experience." Alfrid Farlow, tho Kansas man who was slated by eastern papers ns tho successor of Mrs. Eddy as leader of the Christian Scientist, denies the allegation. Ho says there are several members In the rankB who are his superiors, and that "Christian Scientists obscrvo the rule that progress Is fostered by the survival of the fittest." Clarence Halstcad, son of tho noted edi tor, Is a Wall street broker and among the youngest of the lot. Six feet two. with a cold blue eye and great depth of chest, he does not look to be a man who would be put down easily. He Is on the staff of G. H. Holt & Co., bankera, to whom he Is of considerable value on account of his wide acquaintance among public men. bonds nt say 103, or even higher, would be a alr proposition. And then thcie are many who still loot, fur the common stock to go on a 5 per cent basis, nnd thus war rant higher prices thnt will more than Justify present quotations of the converti bles. Yet, wlthnl, this further large Isiue of convertibles Is menace to the holders of those marketed ngalnst the Southern Pacific purchase. And then the strange form the much' vaunted "community of Interest" has dc eloped Into Is startling those who have learned to respect precedent nnd swenr by Inherent natural laws. These continual and ever-Increasing Issues of collateral bonds aro looked upon aa designed tilt I mately to work dlsoMcr. Reference Is mode to the Reading crash brought nbout by n man ambitious to control the destinies nf several properties. It will be remem bered how purchases of stock made by him on mnrgln were foisted upon the Rending road, causing It n los of about $1,500,000. Here, In this Northern Pacific mutter, there Is n f rune what analogous position. The Ilarrlmnn syndicate enter Into n fight for control of the rond, pay stiff prices for the stock, nnd then calmly Issue Union Pacific bonds to financier their purchases It will be said that ns tho purchases wore made to protect the Union Pacific inter ests, It naturally should foot the bill. Nw, leaving nut of dlscussloiuwhether per sonal animosities did not play no small purl In the ronlcst, and whether guar antics could not have been obtained that would have protected Union Paolflc with out costing It one cent of expense for these opinions nre by no means rarely expressed tho principle Involved Is dan gerous. Granting that In the present case the Ilarrlmnn syndicate has acted honestly and fairly for the best Interests of Union Pacific, ennnot nn emergeney arise where unscrupulous men will make uso of this means to unload upon a railroad cor poratlon at much higher valuations than they paid for tho securities that give It no ndvnntago proportionate to the expenso entailed? To tho stockholder who remem bers the rotten manner In which of old railroad affairs wero transacted, the op portunltles which n continuance of tho present method would afford for wrecking railroad properties, is not ono to Inspire him with enthusiasm. It certainly Is time for the holders of stock to call a halt In the reckless and wholesale Issuing of bonds for the finan ciering of deals contracted by officials In their Individual capacity, and the sooner this Is done the better. tiii: vaki:k tf.iihoii. Knrnpt Xoir IVnrn to l.nse Kven Hit Itetntl Simp Timle. Lclpzlgcr Tngeblatt. It Is no pleasant feeling to see ono whoso progress wo have watched with t he su periority of a fatherly well-wisher gradually outstrip us. As long as the giant America remained In its child's shoes and amused Itself at the expense of Its old aunt Europe, but could not got nlong without her assist ance, wc were often Irritated nt the young boy which began to stretch out its strong, undisciplined limbs. Wc could not bo ser iously angry with him, however, because the stronger nnd larger ho became the moro ho consumed, nnd one must say this of him, ho paid In ready money for what he consumed, nut tho boy with tho Insatiable nppetlto has got upon his own feet, and, like the man who would not marry becausu ho did not see why ho should support Vio daughter of other people, young America does not seo why It should support tho Industries It foreign 'countries. America, whoso Industries wero quite unimportant twenty years ago, has in tho menntlmo reached tho height whero it can get along In most things without foreign Imports, With a quickness almost without example In the history of civilization, nn Industry has been developed which, without any old trndltlou, produces In many respects pro ducts worthy to be used ns models. What Is Inciting In tradition Is mndo up for twice and three times In innchlnes and talent for Invention and Organization, more fnv orablo conditions of production and cheaper raw material. It Is difficult lo do anything ngalnst this. Wo ran not forbid America to develop Its Industries anil to expand the same with tho help of lis gigantic trusts to a dizzy height. AVo can not provent It, unfortu nately, from placing it preposterous duty on manufactures which simply cuts oft all foreign competition; but what we should strongly fight against Is being pushed out of our own market by tho underbidding of American industries. Tho Importation of American goods Into Euroro la becoming steadily moro dangerous. Even In fancy articles. In which tho European market has set tho styles for tho entire world, tho American manufac turers aro beginning to compcto with tho European. British calico prints aro also nlready receiving competition from Amer ica. As we hear, trnvelcrs of a known American house havo offered American cot ton stuffs In England with much success, and the London authorities declare them to bo tasteful and worth their price. nut also In other ways tbnn with the wholcsalo Import America Is becoming ominous to us. Tho enterprising country Is making us happy nlrendy with retail busi nesses of Its own. Tho largo shoo factory of Julius Barthmnnn, In Newnrk, N. J,, has decided to establish fifteen shoo stores In tho largo cities of Gormany. Tho largo department atoro proprietors, Slcgcl, Coopur ft Co., intend to cstnbllsh a branch In London. It ought to bo tlmo to consider how ono can defend ono's self ngalnst this dangerous competition. As wo have al ready stated beforo, tho only means we see to protect ourselves from this threatening storm of American goods Is a middle Eu ropean, or, still better, a European tariff alliance against America, In case America .docs not profer to adopt tho policy of the open door nnd by a considerable reduction of Its duties mako It possible for foreign goods to compete in Its own markets. COM.KOH-llltKI) WOMRX A0 WIVES. Ilemnrknltle Crltlflum uf n University Hour. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Tho Northwestern university at Evans ton, 111., Is a co-educatlonal concern, and It was to a class In this Institution that Prof. J. S. Clark talked last week of how poorly the modern woman compared with her mother and grandmother, nnd how gen erally the college. bred woman failed as the manager of a household. He concluded his remarks with the following, for which ho Is being widely donounced: "You young men who are looking for wives among tho college-bred women of today uro on the wrong track. If you over do get one, God help you." Rut this reckless Instructor should not be too severely crttlolsed, evon though ho does throw mud at his own employment. What bo says Is no moro than what wo hear said every day or two from successful business men and others regarding the higher educa tion of men, It Is tho voicing of a false Idea as to the object of education, which has pervaded the whole community, and which college men have done as much as anybody else to keep alive. If the college bred man falls to gain distinction In some educated profession he is generally ac counted a failure. If he takes up farming he usually figures as a good deal of a fail ure among hit classmates and others. If ho goes luto huskies with only Indifferent success. It is tho same. If he does not Hliltio conspicuously us an Intellectual fono nay whet c, tho money spent on his training Is commonly logartled n having beeit thrown nwny. lie Is poor, nnd tho unedu cated but successful business man points to his education ns something to be avoided. Ills w.tlk In life Ii uncnnrplcuous, nnd he figures poorly at tho class reunions, In a word, It the college education his not unfitted the mail for cerythlng except tho "higher vnll.s" of life. It comes lo bo accepted ns on expensive failure. What It has yielded In Iho way of i's personal us ftoclatloiitf, what has been acquired uncon sciously from It In Intellectual discipline, what has been gained in the love of books nud of the silent companionship thus af forded with the genius of all nges, ami what has been won In all the individual resources of self-diversion and entertain ment which become of priceless value n advancing ago cuts nway the compnulon shlps of life these count for llttlo or notli. big In the common ultimate by which the worth of education Is measured by the world's ntnndnrds of "suecesa." If so false nil Idea can gain prevalence la respect to the higher education of men, nothing more Is, of course, to bo expected In the matter of tho education of women, whore the mischief of It must be quite as pronounced. How general tho offent of the higher education upon women Is In creat ing discontent with the natural and ordi nary duties of life, nnd In Instilling the Idea of being destined for n "enrcer," Is a matter of somo dispute. This Northwest ern university professor would havo us bo Hove that It is very common. Hut no should question It. notwithstanding this ex istence of a foolish sentiment among par ents, nnd too oftou nmong tho educnteil themselves, thnt the education Is a failure If the "career" Is not forthcoming, and It the object of It is not above the perform ance of the duties of a wlfo nnd mother. The great majority of the graduates of women's Institutions of learning marry nnd settle down contentedly to a domestic' life, ami that they make any the worso house hold managers because of their education Is not credible. They turn out n good deal better than tho common public estimate re specting education would have them. They have not been unfitted for the humbler call ings of existence, and beyond this they have gained Inestimably In the capacity to do or vaiuo to themselves nnd others. Tho cases where marrlago has been followed by a fevorlsh and nbforblng ambition for ii public career are the exception and not the rule. To say that such women, by virtue of such an education, have been made some thing to bo avoided by men In search of wives Is to write down the latter as lordly brutes who can brook no measure of equnf Ity in tho other eex. Thero be some among them who answer this description, and evi dently they nro not nil of the uneducated class. WlllTTI.KII TO A POIXT. Somervlllo Journal: You cnn't hollpvn moro than half you henr. but you oueht to believe everything you Bay. Ohio State Journal: Miss Prtiiln I'm clml I didn't go down Wall atrcot the other iluv. na I Intended. -Miss Askor Why? " Miss Prude Didn't vnu henr nlioul Him dreadful manner they squeezed ono another uiiwn mere 1 Chlengo Trlb.ino: Merchant Yes. I you thnt keg of white lend. What's tho matter with It? Customer Well. It Isn't white, nnd It Isn't lend. Otherwise It's nil right. . ..,a.i:..,l I..-.UI1I. CMIUUK lirillK Will 4t.tu till ..nil fff .. .. ... ..... .. .. .. ... tll,llnflAl..l,ln 1J.....1. ..-,... ...... ...... .... vv... . luttii n nif,inm-, IIS- aertod the temperance lecturer. mime. rcmurKon me reilow with the nnwn tlrkft. 'lt tvlll tub tl,u 1.1.. back. Cln vein 11,1 Ttiif,i fl..!... .r.. . , . . - . ....... - ..... ... ...... . . n iuii ii.iii (lint Rlinn tl iip..t. i.lrl ... tnl.l c-...... 1 . much n distressing snlfflng habit." "I hndn't noticed It. Aro you dure eho sniffs? "Am I sure? Why, I nsked her to mam mo last night nnd she sniffed several times." Y.lHll!ni?tnn Klntv r ontifo. , - very poor judge of oratory," said the mild mannered person. "Can't you recognize fluent sp.aklng when you hear It?" JienemlN on my personal feelings. If a frleml Ik mnkliiLr Mm Bnuorti. i. 1. .i quencp. If It Is not n friend It is mere garrulity." Detroit l'rrn Prcia. HW'l.n. ,11.1 .....1 - - -- --- - - . ...(,. .l,l .,,.1, .11111 Joe full out nbout?" "He thought I ought tn be friendly enough to give him thnt dog; and I thought ho ought to be friendly enough lo buy It of 1,1V. Cnthnllr. Hlnii.tnr.l- "I K.1I.... ... the visiting Londoner, "thnt some of vounli best people claim descent from the Ktigllsh nobility." "(111. nn!" rnllH fVin .t......M ..... ..... .i,.,i.v, nirjj ia Hill hn best. Our best peoplo clnlm nscent lIUIll II. Philadelphia Press: "I ennnot treat voir case." began Dr. Price, "without a diag nosis," "That B nil rlnlit." Intitrrimloil Mr Vn. rltch. haughtily: "f suppose that'a the mcd- iciii worn mr ico in advance.' Nnnm yer Plttnl)iirt:li Chronicle: "Well, illrf vnu strlkp a gusher In your oil venture?" said iseecnwnoa to iNnrinsuiP, "No." was tho end renlv: "mv nil well tvn n gushlcsH one." TUB TWO FISIIKIOircV. J. J. Montague In the Orcgonlnn. Oh, ho wns a sport of the chilled sort. with a unity ouck sun ana n nig uiiick clear. And he raid that hN wish wns to lnnd nil "c Ilsli , , , . That would rise to n fly In the brooks nenr nnd far. His rod was of ateel, and his splinter now creel Astonished tho nntlvrs that lived there- nhollt. While his brllllunt-hued flle.s filled them nil with surprise He had every devlco for the taking of trout. He started nt dawn, ere the Inst stars were gone. For tho head of tho brook where the tlshtng was tine. I will not do n thing but bring back a big string," Ho observed with a wink thnt wna largo and benlen. Half 11 mile, up the brook this hot Hport ovcrtooK .v imrtfiiiuieii iw" wiiu 11 uiu willow poi. Who clearly wns bent -from tho wny that ne went For the heart nf tho brook the town flahcrman'H goal. They both angled nway through the warm xummur day Went wudlug throush rimes or casting In pnolo, Worked over tho ahoals and dipped Into tho holes, dinning minnows nhend of them,, schools upon schools. The city mnn'n tiles loitered oft for n rlro On the edge of a. riffle, with counterfeit squirm, Whllo tho small country lad, with whnt tackle ho had, Depended nlonu on tho succulent worm. They returned to the town as the red sun went down, Both torn on the bushes, and tired all out; And the small farmer youth, to be honest forsooth. Confessed ho hud landed all day not a trout. nut tho smart city chap took his creel 011 his lap, , And emptied out strapping big fhh by the score. "I'm no liar," he snldi "hut I've got 011 the dead, Threo hundred nnd twenty, perhaps a few more." The lesson, good friends, thnt this plain talo intends In its roundabout fashion to try to lm- purl, Is Uo on't always take every old country IllKO Of u "swell city fisherman" story to heart. No mutter what kind of (inn tacklo you find In n lIshcrman'H bauds, you will have to allow Thnt the fellow who'll get tho llsh out of the wet, He he bumpkin or dude, la the or.u who knows how. 1