-X J X THAT DISCRIMINATING DUTY Wha1 avsII be known in our history as the discriminating duty of 1S07 is a Avhich seems to have been sur reptitiously inserted in the tariff bill without the knowledge as tliey aver of either Dingley or Alli son or even of Speaker Reed the Czar of the House of Representatives who was resting in his official dignity and fatness under the erroneous impres sion that he knew it all and that nothing could go through the House he had gagged and terrorized without his knowledge and express permission He aiow insists like President Grant when the latter signed in 1S7 the bill de monetizing silver that he didnt know the pesky thing was in the bill It is the excuse of the small boy makes when he pleads that he didnt know it was loaded The discriminating duty of 10 per cent is -to be levied at all Custom Houses in addition to the regular tariff rates on all goods brought into the Tnited States from a foreign country ihi which those particular goods were not produced It would naturally inter fere with the trade carried on with Japan through the Canadian transcon tinental railroads and with the goods brought to New York from Buenos Ay res in steamers sailing under the flag of Sweden ami Norway This blunder of the legislative body has caused much botheration in the Treasury and Law Departments at Washington and those functionaries who are experienced in construction have all been called upon to construe the new regulation All agree it it is chiefly aimed at the Canadian railroads and that some enemy has sneaked the provision into the statute And now it has also been concluded that the -clause is invalid as against goods brought by sea in foreign vessels of most of the European countries -with whose governments ours has treaty stipulations which cannot be broken So that the whole matter appear to be involved in an inextricable confu sion and it may be as in the case of tne Income Tax the administration may liave to resort to the courts ana ask the judges to tell it what to do New York News 3allinc Gold Prices Senator Chandler has succeeded in getting himself disliked by the advo cates of gold because he is honest enough to tell the truth In a recent article given to the press i by the Senator he says The fall in v silver will not lessen the present or -prospective Avoes from monometallism It only points the moral of demonetiza tion The gold price of silver falls and so falls the prices of all the other com modities Such sentiments as these will call down upon the Senators head the choicest invectives of the subsidized press All men who fail to worship the golden calf are characterized as foois lunaiies knaves and repudiators by the intellectual giants who Avrite editorials to jjrove that when a man borrows one dollar he must pay back to the lender two dollars in order to prove that he is honest Nothing can be plainer to a man of sense than the fact that a two busnel measure will hold twice as much as a one bushel measure and when the measure which contains two bushels is called a bushel measure the price of the commodity measured is cut in two When half of the Avorlds money was destroyed the other half Avas doubled in value and it now requires twice as i much of any product of labor to secure n dollar as was necessary before de monetization took place Wheat went down and down keeping pace with the fall in silver until the famine in India and the short crop in Argentina and other foreign wheat-raising countries created a demand so great The price Avas forced up by competition to obtain it Under normal conditions wheat Avould sIioav no increase in price Create a demand for silver by opening the mints to unlimited coinage and sil ver Avill rise just as wheat has lisen but unlike the cereal silver avouIw re tain its price because the demand would be continuous and unlimited V Ioss and Gain to Farmers ProAidence has given the farmers of the United States an opportunity to sell their wheat at a profit of some 20000 000 What has the gold party given them Take the Avheat crop alone for an ex ample Under the Avorkings of bimetal lism dollar -wheat Avas the rule but since the demonetization of silver 50 cent Avheat has pre ailed For fifteen years the farmers hae been robbed an nually of 5200000000 making a total loss to the agriculturists of 3000000 000 This is Avhat the gold party has done for the farmers so far as Avheat is concerned It is not at all reasonable to suppose that those avIio have tilled the soil for the last fifteen years only to find them selves robbed and almost ruined by the clique of gold will be fooled and cajoled by the hypocritical cant of Republican newspapers over the rise in the price of Avheat this year Three thousand mil lion dollars of loss cannot be balanced bv two hundred million dollars of gain especially when the gain comes from an act of Providence and the loss came from an act of the Republican party Do the Republicans take the farmers for unreasoning men Avho cannot trace an effect to its cause It is a good thing for the farmers that the price of wheat has gone up they can reap what benefit the speculators in grain have left them and they can re flect on what they have lost through the demonetization of silver and they can ponder on the fact that this loss is per manent and will continue so long as the advocates of gold control the currency Chicago Dispatch Foolintr the Wn ire workers During the last Presidential cam paign the laboring men -were told by the gold advocating employers and the Republican spellbinders that a Arote for Bryan Avas a vote to reduce Avages and to increase the cost of living Under threats of this kind enough of the labor Aote Avas coerced into Repub lican ranks to put McKinley in the Presidential chair To day the laborer is confronted with a demand to submit to a reduction of Avages The President of the Amalgamted Association of Iron and Steel AVorkers has already signed a scale reducing wages all along the line These laborers get less money for their Avork than heretofore and are com pelled to pay more for the necessities of life When the Avorkman buys flour uoav he has to pay a dollar for the same quantity that seventy live cents Avould buy last month Soon Avoolen goods -will go up because of the beneficent Dingley tariff and in fact almost every neces sity of life is going to cost more money But let the Avage Avorker dare suggest an increase in pay to the gold brick employer Avho played a confidence game on the employe to get his vote and Avhat is the result Refusal and if the demand is persisted in discharge AVhat glorious things the Republican party has brought to pass for the mass es IIoav perfectly ha e the politicians kept their promises Surely the wage Avorkers will believe these hypocrites hereafter and always Aote for low Avages high prices and protection Altirelds Trenchant Utterances Crushing out of government by injunc tion the municipal ownership of gas and water plants and street railways the Gov ernment ownership of coal mines tele graph service and railroads and the es tablishment of postal savings hanks these were the keynotes Avith which John P Altgeld sounded a grim warning mk1 pointed i moral in his Labor Day speech at Philadelphia Some of his bitingly sarcastic sentences on the question of government by injunction follow The corporations discovered years ago that to control the construction of the law was even more important than to control the making of it The corporations do not buy the courts because it is not necessary The favor or the opposition of the cor porations has come to be almost the sole test of the constitutionality of a law The laborers first got hungry and then restive A whip was needed to restore contentment and the Federal courts promptly furnished it It will be noticed that these injunc tions are simply a whip with which to lash the back of labor Almost everything a corporation lawyer could think of has been covered by these injunctions All of these proceedings in the Federal courts are an attempt to do things that belong exclusively to the police powers of each locality in the administration of which these courts cannot interfere with out being guilty of usurpation My friends let us save our institutions government by injunction must be crush ed out If our government is not rescued from corruption and if the snaky form of gov ernment by injunction is not crushed then it would be better for your children if they had never been born Theres No Escape The treasury statement for August sIioavs that for the first tAvo months of the present fiscal year there is deficit of about 23000000 At this rate the Avhole fiscal year should show a deficit of 150000000 The only thing which can prevent this enormous minus sum is a policj of strict economy in every department of the government Pen sions public buildings rivers and har bors salaries in all civil departments must be held doAvn to the actual work ing necessities But pensions -will not be reduced On the contrary they -will be larger than ever There is an enor mous list of public buildings demanded by the Congressmen and which having been held back so long by the policy of Speaker Reed -will brook no curtailing Fees Avhich under the Cleveland admin istration Avere derived from the consul ates Avill noAv go to swell the pickings of officeholders But greater far than all these means of deficit is the new tariff If it really does Avhat it is in tended to as a prohibitor of imports it Avill throw all other deficit makers into the shade There seems therefore no escape from a most disastrous year for the government Chicago Chronicle Senatorial calaries Bir Enoiierh It is a mistake to suppose that the salary of a Senator 5000 a year Avill not support him and his family in a re spectable manner in this city Of course a Senator can spend any amount of money if he has it and Avishes to do a good deal of elaborate entertaining But a man of small fortune coming to the Senate can get along Aery comfort ably on his salary There are Senators avIio have saved and invested 1000 a year and have at the same time lived in a style not discreditable to them or their constituentsWashington Post Prosperous Time for Trusts The Sugar Trust is increasing its -wealth the Glucose Trust though young is doing well the Steel Trust is I multiplying its resources and all other trusts are enjoying increased revenues under the operation of the new tariff laAV But the records of the treasury tell a different tale The customs re ceipts for this month -will be less than for any month recently and the deficit promises to be upward of 10000000 the largest for a long time But Avhats the odds so long as the trust magnates are happy Kansas City Star Moved to Mysterious Silence One might conclude for all that he can learn from the editorial columns of our contemporaries that the Avar in Cuba ended soon after McKinleys in auguration and that peace reigns there and prosperity is preparing to alight upon the desolated island Save for their news columns Avhich now and then contain some note about Weyler no one Avould knoAV that the same cruel Avar that so stirred their hearts and Avagged their pencils a few months ago is still in progress St Paul Globe Callinjr Too Many Hard Names It is high time that a little more dis cretion Avas manifested in the applica tion of hard epithets To call a man an Anarchist may In time make him so and persistently to call a man a pluto crat may ultimately drive out of his heart much consideration for his fel lows that had place in it The industrial problem cannot be solved by calling names and men who belieAe them selves right are not going to be silenced epithets New York Journal Keyond the Dreams of Despots Overtaxation has been the bane of governments since the earliest his tory of the Avorld It has overturned empires and created republics Yet an examination of the expenditures of the nations shows a Avonderful increase in modern times It shows that when the taxing poAver is intrusted to the repre sentatives of the people themselves they go beyond the utmost dream of an cient despots Mihvaukee Journal Runnins Too Much to Militancy The increase of militancy is to be studied as a sign of the times to come in connection Avith other signs But it is not to be studied as an outgroAvth and a guarantee of political or any other kind of freedom Ail increase of mili tancy is certain in the long run to de stro3r both political and individual free dom History does not teach any truth more plainly or persistently than this Rochester N Y Herald Something Not Yet Explained The connection between dollar Avheat and the new tariff law is not quite so obvious as it might be to some of us but of course it must exist and it will doubtless be made perfectly plain Avhen the Republican stump speakers get to Avork this fall Providence Journal Brief Comment If many protected Republican bosses had not cut Avages the phantom of dear bread Avould be Avelcomed instead of dreaded by thousands on this side of the water Kansas City Times It is very considerate on the part or Mr Havemeyer of the Sugar Trust to Avarn the public that the heaAy fruit packing season is likely to cause an ad vance in the price of sugar Mihvaukee Journal The South has paid about 750000000 as a Avar indemnity in the shape of pen- sion money since 1S05 and before the last pensioner dies if he ever does she will have doubled that Aast sum Louisville Post Mr McKinley has settled it The crops did it in the West and the tariff in the East As betAveen Providence and William McKinley honors are easy in the estimation of the latter Min neapolis Times What has become of that adAance in Avages that Avas promised under the Dingley bill j he advance in the neces saries of life is here but the boom in the wage market for some reason has been delayed Peoria Herald The latest ruling of the pension de partment to the effect that a marriage certificate is not necessary to make a Aalid marriage for pension purposes shows that the pension fund bunghole is still kept Avide open Boston Herald The Crescent tin plate mill in Cleve land O has fenced out its striking hands Avith barbed Avire Barbed Avire is an ideal protection and Iioav beauti fully it typifies the barbed Avire tariff which keeps out of the country even the skins of foreign calves Philadelphia Record The printing and binding scandals that Avere unearthed during Drakes term are enough to damn the Republic an party of Iowa as effectually as the expose of the rottenness in Republican circles in Nebraska has damned that party in this State Ouna ha World Herald John Sherman is to appear on the stump in Ohio this fall In shoving the old gentleman out of the Senate to let Mark Hanna in and then forcing him to tell the Buckeye voters that the trans action was O K the Republican lead ers are going to the extreme of imposi tion Manchester N H Union There does not seem to be any suffi cient virtue left in the Republican par ty to enable it to escape unassisted from the tangle of corruption and in Avhich it has become in volved It is the mere plaything of self helping schemers Avho use it for their own advantage and advancement Philadelphia Record It is reported that an English officer named Harrington has discovered in India a working telephone between the two temples of Pauj about a mile apart The system is said to have been in operation at Pauj for over two thou sand years In this connection Ave may observe that Egyptologists have found unmistakable evidence of wire com munications between some of the tem ples of the earlier Egyptian dynasties but whether these served a telegraphic telephonic or other purpose is not stated WANTED BABYS NAME CHANGED Christened It Cicero but Didnt Like the Pronunciation A man avIio was bald with the ex ception of a small red fringe Avhich reached around the back of his head from ear to ear Avas Avaiting for the laAvyer Avhen the latter came into his office I Avant to consult you on a rather unusual case he said after greetings had been exchanged What I came to find out Ls this can a persons name be changed Certainly All he has to do is to show some good and sufficient reason for adopting another name and it can be very easily arranged I knoAV that But can it be done without the knoAvledge or consent of the party most interested Why of course not I was afraid you Avould say that But maybe Avhen you hear all the cir cumstances But there are no circumstances which will permit you to change a mans name AAithout his knowledge There arc lots of mean things you can do behind a friends back but Im glad to say this is not one of them But this person isnt a man The same thing applies to a wom an But its not a woman either Its my baby The trou ble is that were having too much edu cation in our neighborhood I honestly believe that Avhat I am trying to do is for the babys own good My Avife and I were anxious to give him a name that Avould have a substantial sound and at the same time be associated with clas sical tradition So Ave hit upon Cicero Thats a very good name Your remark shoAvs how easy it is to be deceived We liked it first rate until our eldest girl got into the high school One day she came home and informed us that Ave Avere mispronounc ing the babys name It isnt Sissero she tells us its Klckero Thats the pronunciation usually taught noAv So I learned upon inquiry And if youll take the case 1 am Avilling to go to any expense to change his name to Thomas or John or Jeremiah or most anything that Avont sound as if Ave had taken an Indian papoose to raise Washington Star One More Enoch Ardon The story of a second Enoch Arden comes from Wilton Boone County Mo In 1SG1 Rowland Griggs a strapping young fellow of 25 years left his home near Wilton to join the Confederate army He bade good by to his young wife and their daughter Margaret and promised to return in a f eAV short months But months passed and then years and all the neighbors and friends who were in the armies on either side returned but Griggs came not After waiting nearly ten years for her husband Mrs Griggs gave him up for dead accepted the attention of Riley Riffelo a prosperous bachelor farmer near Wilton and married him Of this union five children Avere born A stranger came tills week to the Wil ton neighborhood No one knew him though he said ho was bom and reared near by He asked for Mrs Griggs and an old farmer told him of the mar riage to Riffelo The stranger said he had known her when a girl and would call on her He did so but Avas not recognized He was invited to dinner Then he an nounced his identity He said he Avas RoAvland Griggs and that Mrs Riffelo was his wife He told his story and proved it by documents and other eAi dence He had been wounded on the battlefield of Murfreesboro and cap tured by the Union army Remaining in the hospital and prison until the close of the Avar he heard Ms Avif e and child were dead He did not return therefore to Missouri but Avent to IoAva where he has been engaged in farming A longing to look on the scenes of his earlier days seized him and lie came back to Boone County After mutual recognitions followed a problem Avould he claim his wife She seemed happy and content in her new relations and the first husband would not disturb her Accordingly after a visit to his baby Margaret now mar ried for the second time Griggs left for his home in Iowa Kansas City Star Excavations in Rome Workmen engaged in digging the soil of Rome have within the last feAv days come upon remnants of the older and well nigh forgotten world of art and beauty In the Villa Lante on the Janiculum Hill in the making of a road the Avorkmen came upon an an cient but nameless tomb containing the bones of the original inmate and a number of the objects that were buried with him Nothing of unusual interest was found here Unlike many of the tombs opened near Rome Aery com monplace articles of terra cotta and metal were found In the Corso the chief street and the most fashionable highway of the city during diggings made in front of the princely palace of the Sciarra family a statue of marble has just been brought to light It is a female figure ef very good workmanship but head less and armless These essential re quirements for the identification of a statue being Avanting it has been found impossible to pronounce with certainty that the personage or divinity repre sented by the new found marble may be Just at this very time Avhen people are surprised at the extraordinary rich ness of the Roman soil in Avorks of an cient art an account conies from Pe rugia the chief city of Umbria of an other remarkable find A letter dated June 30 from Perugia relates that yes terdaythat is to ay June 29 the workmen employed in the reconstruc tion of the spire of the historical belfry of St Glnliana discovered in one of the Avails a vast niche which had been covered up Within it Avas a statue of gold together with a very great num ber of ancient gold corns the AvJiole find of inestimable value Rome Cor Baltimore Sun IN NEWGATE PRISON The Prison Was a Noisome Place in Queen Elizabeths Day In St Nicholas there is the story of Master Skylark the story of Shakes peares time Avritten by John Bennett One of the leading characters Gaston Carew a rufiling player has been put in Newgate for killing a companion at cards The hero Nick Atwood the Skylark visits him there It AAas a foul dark place and full of evil smells Drops of Avater stood on the cold stone Avails and a green mold crept along the floor The air was heaAy and dark and it began to be hard for Nick to breathe Up Avith thee said the turnkey gruffly unlocking the door to the stairs The common room above was packed with miserable Avretches The strong est kept the AvindoAV ledges near light and air by sheer main force and were dicing on the dirty sill The turnkey pushed and banged his Avay through them Nick clinging desperately to his jerkin In the cell at the end of the corridor there Avas a Spanish renegade who railed at the light Avhen the door was opened and railed at the darkness Avhen it closed Cesare el Moro Ce sare el Moro he was saying over and over again to himself as if he fears he might forget his OAvn name Carew Avas in the middle cell ironed hand and foot He had torn his sleeves and tucked the lace under the rough edges of the metal to keep them from chafing the skin He sat on a pile of dirty straAV Avith his face in his folded arms upon his knees By his side was a broken biscuit and an empty stone jug He had his fingers in his ears to shut out the tolling of the knell for the men avIio had gone to be hanged The turnkey shook the bars Here Avake up he said CareAV looked up His eyes were SAVollen and his face Avas covered with a two days beard He had slept in his clothes and they Avere full of broken straAV and creases But his haggard face lit up Avhen he saw the boy and he came to the grating Avith an eager exclamation And thou hast truly come To the man thou dost hate so bitterly but Avill not hate any inore Come Nick thou will not hate any more T will not be worth thy while Nick the night is coming fast Why sir said Nick it is not so dark outside t is scarcely noon and thou wilt soon be out Out Ay on Tyburn Hill said the masterplayer quietly TAe spent my Avhole life for a bit of hempen cord Ive taken my last cue Last night at 12 oclock I heard the bellman under the prison walls call my name Avith those of the already condemned The play is nearly out Nick and the people will be going home It has been a Avild play Nick and ill played An American Lord Chancellor It may not be generally known that one of Englands lord chancellors was born on American soil His name was John Singleton Copely and he was born in Boston May 21 1772 He Avas the son of J S Copley R A the por trait and historical painter avIio was a resident of America during the Avar of independence and Avho at its conclu sion elected to remain a British sub ject When the future chancellor Avas 3 years of age his parents Avent to Lon don and resided at 25 George street Hanover square As a barrister the son joined the Midland circuit He en tered Parliament in ISIS a smember for Yarmouth and in 1S19 as Sir John Copley became solicitor general in 1824 attorney general and in 1820 master of the rolls In 1827 he became lord chancellor and Avas raised to the peerage as Baron Lyndhurst He was lord chancellor in two administrations and held the great seal until the fall of the Peel government in 1S4G Xounqest Daughter of Revolution A daughter of a reAolutionary soldier residing in Stamford one who might without much fear of dispute set up the claim to be the youngest real daughter of the Revolution living Her name is Mrs Nancy A Warren and her age is G5 years She is a daugh ter of Elisha Gifford of Patterson N Y Avho married May 21 1S30 Polly Washburn of Camiel N Y she being then 29 years and he 82 years of age The issue of this marriage was foul children Nancy Elisha now a clergy man in Somerville Mass Lodesco re cently deceased and Van Rensselaei living in Northfield Minn Mr Gif ford died June 3 1834 aged 86 the fourth child not then being born His AvidoAV survived him about half a cen tury and drew a pension for many years dying at the age of 78 Hartford Times Wouldnt Couut that Time A clergyman whose piety had not lessened his sense of humor pays that he A as one day called down into his parlor to perform a marriage ceremony for a couple in middle life HaAe you ever been married be fore asked the clergyman of the bridegroom No sir Have you to the bride Well yes I have replied the bride laconically but it was twenty years ago and he fell off a barn and killed hisself when wed been married only a week so it really aint worth men tioning Harpers Bazar There may be some doubt about a hell beyond the graTe but there Is no doubt about there being one on this side a it A LOST OPPORTUNITY The Story of How a Fortnnc Got a Man A little group of men were talking the other evening in the gloaming1 time Avhen people seem to think morej about Avhat they might have been than they do at any other hour of the day and the subject was lost opportunl l ties I hate to refer to the matter at all remarked the colonel Avho fought through the late Avar at the head of a Michigan regiment because It onlj makes me renew my contempt for my self but Ive had chances in the North west to put myself in the millionaire list that nobody but a confirmed yap would think of neglecting After the war I was a land looker as they are called and I knew the whole country from Detroit clean through to the far corner of Minnesota and right Avhere there are big buildings and beautiful city squares to day I could have bought land at any price I might name Onei man wanted me to buy in Duluth a few lots at 50 apiece and I laughed at him They are worth 5 a square foot to day and upwards I picked up one piece of land at Agate Harbor for a hundred dollars and sold it for a thousand that is worth 50000 now and I wouldnt give a man 250 for ai tract that is Avorth as many thousand j this very minute But those are small potatoes and feAv in a hill to the biggest piece of lost opportunityism I Avas ever guilty of and the colonel sighed profoundly You knoAV that famous Mesaba iron mine country up there on Lake Su perior Avhere they are taking out thou sands of tons every year of the richest ore on earth and any quantity of meix are enjoying princely incomes fronr their royalties Well before anybody4 eAer heard of the Mesaba iron ore JC was up there running a line north front the Cloquet river and one day I began to have all sorts of trouble with my compass Ordinarily it was a Aery tractable and reliable instrument but here for some reason it acted strangely or rath er refused to act at all and I could hardly get any sense out of it I kept going ahead however and for terrl miles my trouble continued Then it was over and I never Avas quite so glad of anything as when that com- pass began to work again and I did not have to lay my course by sun j I knew before I finished what the matter AAas but Avhat did that iron under the ground that SAverveJ my needle out of its course mean to me Nothing Thats all I was a plain every day chump What I was after was timber and the timber all along there was not of sufficient quality to justify my giving the land a second thought and I didnt Think of lt men and brethren sighed the colonel again there I was walking over and standing on millions and millions of dollars and I could have had all of It I wanted for the mere having sense enough to take it up and I didnt have the sense Washington Star Evolution of the Color Sense It has often been said that natlona are developed like individuals passing through the same successive stages ot infancy youth maturity and old age This theory receives support from Avhat is historically knoAvn respecting the evolution of the color sense in the infant According to recent observa tions the process is as follows At first it has only the perception of light but soon learns the difference between black and Avhite then begins to notice objects and apprehend their move ments At about six months the sensa tions of red and green take their rise in the central portions of the retina and are perfected at the end of the second year During the third year the child becomes acquainted Avith yellOAv dur ing the fourth Avith orange blue and finally with violet the chromatic sense is thus fully unfolded at the age of five or six Within another year he forma the habit of distinguishing the above named colors in his talk The Annamites we are told are able to discern aside from black and white only red green and yellow hence the intellectual growth of this people so far as vision is concerned may be com pared to that of a 2-year-old child Would Make Good Senators Washington correspondents are as a rule men of fine education and train ing for their Avork says Henry Wat terson The Senate and the news paper corps number about the same in membership Ill wager that take them man for man the newspaper men avou1 if necessary that they are better informed more active more skillful more competent in every way to deal with affairs of state than are the ators I think that if the Senators and the correspondents could change placest the work of the Senate would be muefcj better performed fewer mistakes would be made and Aviser legislation prevail and the country be better ofTi On the other hand the Senators Avouldt make a poor fist of it if directed to write daily to the home papers tha news of the day in the capital Americas Fishtinjj Population The Adjutant General of the TJnited States Army has reported to Congress that the number of men in the United States physically able to perform mlb itary duty is 10G245S4 The United States noAv leads the world in this re4 spect The foremost place was held previously by Russia The best esti mates put the present population of the United States at 72000000 The popu lation of Russia by the last estimate was 80000000 The number of availa J ble men in Russia however is not so large in proportion to the Avhole popula4 tion I 17e nver knew a loafer who did xo iay a lot of rights coming -to Mm I