JDHE SUNDAY ORBGONIN, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 3, 1901. i"""1!"? lte rjesomoK. Entered at the Postofllce at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br Mail (postage prepaid). In Advance Da tin with Sunday par month $ S3 Dally, Sunday accepted, per year ... W Sally, with Sunday, per year 00 Sunday, per year .......... - J The Weekly, per year 2 The "Weekly. 3 months J To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays excepted.l3e Sally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: TO to 14pnfce paper ................ lc 14 to SS-page paper - Foreign tales double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to tho name of any Individual. Letters relating to advertlsf lns. subscriptions or to any business matter should be" addressed simply "The Oreconlan." Eastern Business Office (3. 44. 45. 47. 4S. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City; 403 "The Rookery." Chicago; the S a Beckwlth special agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by I. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel now stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter street: F. W- Pitts. 1008 Market street; J. ZC Cooper Co., 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For salo In X.os Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 258 So. Sprlnff 'street, and Oliver & Haines, 103 So. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. 'O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street. For salo In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt LUce by tho Bait Ike News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For sale In Ogden by W. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street, and by C. H. Myers. On file at Buffalo. N. T In the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 900-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER Generally fair weath er; variable winds, most northerly. TESTERDATS WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 64, minimum temperature, 37; pre cipitation. 5 P. M. to ft P. M., .00 Inch. POHTIiAXD, SUXDA.T, NOVEMBER 3. ELECTIONS THIS "WEEK. Elections will be held In many Btates on Tuesday next. There will be no great Interest, since the issues will be of local rather than of general char acter la Ohio, however, the election will have a good deal of importance. A full list of state officials is to be chosen, together with a Legislature that will elect a United States Senator, to succeed Foraker; and this Legislature, moreover, will rearrange the Congres sional districts an opportunity worth perhaps three or four members of Con gress to one political party or the other, as one or the other may happen to control the Legislature. It was believed, in the Summer, be fore the campaign had gotten under way, that the Democrats would surely win in Ohio this Fall. The Republicans, in power, were content and little dis posed to make exertion. Default was expected on their part, by moat politi cal observers, and contentions over lo cal matters seemed to be turning to the advantage of the Democrats. Political discussion was suspended for a time by the murderous attack upon Presi dent McKinley and by his death short ly afterward; but this deplorable event became the means, after the honors had been paid to the dead, of awaken ing a new and sympathetic interest in the purposes and policies for which Mc Kinley had stood, and the memory of McKinley hasj given an impulse to po litical ettort in Ohio which it could not have been supposed would enter into the campaign. For, in fact, "William McKinley was very strongly established in the good will, and even In the affec tionate regard, of the people of Ohio, and desire to honor his memory will be a positive force in this election, and per haps In succeeding ones. In New York and Philadelphia the local contests are of much Importance. Citizens are putting forth great effort to deliver the governments of these cities "from the domination of corrupt systems. But the bosses and the sys tems are so firmly intrenched, have so vast command of the resources of in fluence and corruption, that it Is doubt ful whether the "machine" and the ''gang" in either city will be beaten. THE "WEIGHTIER, MASTERS OP THE LAW. Dean Farrar of Canterbury recently caused a profound stir in the religious world by declaring that the Church of England, if it would avoid a complete loss of influence over the working classes, must, through a convocation, simplify the forms of service used in the poorer1 parts of great cities, bury controversies, incense and theological subtleties, and come close to the people with its ministrations. He regards it as & terrible fact that the church is losing all hold upon the masses. He thinks that not 5 per cent of the work men of the United Kingdom attend re ligious services, and scarcely 1 per cent join in the services of communion. He estimates two causes or reasons for this. First, the prayer-book is unsuited to the needs and understanding Of the working classes. Upon the testimony of earnest laborers in the poor districts of London he says the services of the church are too stereotyped, monotonous and long to attract and hold the atten tion of these people. In other words, the language of the prayer-book, while stately .and beneficial, is not the language spoken and understood by the people." The second cause is the counter at tractions presented by gambling and drlnklng-houses. Thpse attractions, he thinks, can be overcome by a simplifi cation of church services and the efforts of strenuous individual reformers con sumed with enthusiasm for humanity. This programme follows closely upon that formulated in all simplicity and urged with 'enthusiasm for humanity by one William Booth, and first car ried out at Mile End, London, on the Bth of July, 1S55. The plan was to take the gospel to the haunts of those who would not seek it in the churches, and the central idea was to present it in a manner and in language "spoken and understood by the people." Judged by results, this effort has been successful, and in its 2,500,000 meetings held annu ally, indoors and out, and through Its ministrations generally, it reaches a very large per cent dt the "unchurched masses," upon whom the church, as de plored by Dean Farrar, has "lost all hold." When this high churchman says "the church must simplify and eradicate the things that pall on the workingman and fail to stir his heart," he suggests a specific remedy for the condition that he deplores. And when he adds, "We must put aside all paltry and minute points of difference about things of no Importance in comparison with the wel fare of mankind, and concentrate upon the more vital points faith, hope, love and charity," he preaches from the pul pit of the Church ofjEngland doctrines that5have been tenderly voiced' and elo quently urged by James Martineaii, William Ellery Channing and Theodore Parker. The weightier matters of the law are not "incense and theological subtleties," but in the gentle graces that adorn humanity, touch the, hearts of the people and appeal to their understanding. WHEN PERSONALITIES ARE PO TENT. If Low is elected Mayor, of New York City, it will be due to Justice Jerome, the candidate for District Attorney, who is the most eloquent speaker of the campaign, if the power to make the most men listen is a test of effective oratory. But Justice Jerome is not an orator at all in the sense that Bourke Cockran is an orator. He makes no appeal to the imagination, uses no poetic figures of speech, makes no ap peal to passion or partisanship; h'e pleads for the redress and reform of great public abuses by describing the abuses distinctly, and above all by naming fearlessly the man or men In high places who are responsible for these abuses. Inevitably Justice Jerome deals In merciless personalities, with out fear of any man or favor for any man, no matter how rich or powerful he may be. This is the secret of Jus tive Jerome's success, and without this kind of moral courage, which is not afraid to name the man and excoriate him without mercy, no man ever yet conducted a successful movement for reform of public abuses. It is only the editor who is not afraid to denounce the public enemy by name; it is only the orator who is not afraid to point the slow, unmovlng finger of scorn at the powerful public robber and say, "Thou art the man," that ever arrests the attention of the plain people and persuades them to organize for the overthrow of plunderers and parasites. The trained few can be made to un derstand pleas forreform In the ab stract, but the mass of the people can not be roused to action by vague in sinuations or glittering generalities about "corruption," "immorality"; the plain people insist on object-lessons of the abuses you would reform; they in sist on the particular man or men who are responsible for public abuses being hung in effigy by you in your speech. Justice Jerome understands this fact thoroughly, and hl3 campaign Illus trates how absolutely indispensable are bitter, merciless personal arraignment and denunciation of particular men to secure a hearing and obtain converts and earnest workers for your cause. To illustrate, Justice Jerome says in public speech that William C. Whitney sup ports Shepard because the Metropolitan Railway Company, of which he is pres ident, wants Shepard and wants Tam many; he says there are men on the Supreme Court bench who are but pup pets of Tammany Hall and of this rail road company, which Is robbing the people through franchises that have been stolen. He Is ready to name these Judges who owed their place to this railway company and before whom no lawyer dares try cases In which that company Ib involved, Here is an ex tract from one of Jerome's speeches: If you want me to follow only those trails which lead to the house of the harlot or to the hiding place of the crook and be blind to the dishonesty of a man who has a social po sition don't vote for me. The gift of Andrew Carnegie of $5,500,000. to this city for libraries was a most generous, one. But that money might have been bet ter spent in making sweeter and more whole some the lives of the men who labor at Home stead. We are not paupers In this city. We con afford to pay for all the schools and all tho libraries that we need. The taxpayers do not object to the spending of .money so long as It Is honestly spent and not used to en rich a bunch of criminals and grafters. Justice Jerome addressed a meeting composed of women alone, and bluntly told them If they wanted to upset a civic government under which a traffic In young girls existed, to raise money for the campaign fund, and the wfimen raised $32,500. This money was better sinews of war than a babel of Indignant speeches and a torrent of sentimental tears. Justice Jerome sayB: "The city will not be thoroughly purged until three-fifths of Richard Croker's friends are behind the prison bars." These are bitter personalities, and nobody but a brave "man dare utter them, for Justice Jerome not only takes his life in his hand when he arraigns and defies Tam many, with Its thousands of ferocious criminal followers, but he endangers his political and professional future for the rest of his days. Rich, powerful men In both business and politics are repre sented by Croker, Whitney and Shep ard; the court Judges animadverted upon will have a long memory for this daring lawyer who has nailed them to the cross of shame. Justice Jerome may be beaten in his attempt to upset Tammany, but he will never be forgotten by either side to this battle, and never will be forgiven by the oligarchy of Tammany. Neverthe less, Justice Jerome could not possibly hope to win except by the battle tactics of unqualified personal arraignment and denunciation by name of the engineers and corrupt beneficiaries of the Tam many machine. It is easy for political dudes and social snobs to denounce what is termed "a campaign of person alities," whether waged by a newspaper or by an evangelist of public reform, but it is the only way to secure and retain a hearing. Nobody ever reads a reform newspaper that speaks in the tones of a Sunday school gazette; no body ever listens to a reformer who is armed with nothing but a popgUn filled with rosewater. Personalities are the only kind of reform battle tactics that public robbers and wreckers dread. The police, the prosecuting officers, the Judges, are all held to -their duty by the knowledge that somebody Is likely at any moment unexpectedly to turn on the gas, without warning or apology. Personalities honestly employed are the only real potentialities in political or social reform. Edward S. Stokes, the slayer of "Jim" Fisk, is dead. Fisk, who was the fa mous engineer of the "Black Friday" gold panic of 1869, and the wrecker with Jay Gould of the Erie Railroad, was at the height of his fame when he was shot and mortally wounded by Stokes at the New York Hotel, New York City, In 1872. The motive of Stokes for killing Flsk was revenge and fear. Fisk had ruined the business of Stokes and had threatened to "rail road him to Sing Sing." This was no Idle threat In those days, when "Erie ring" Judges sat on the bench, ready to execute the will of Gould or Flsk, and Stokes, in his rage and fear of Fisk, shot him. Thejte were no wit nesses present during the encounter whose testimony could be relied upon, but Stokes was tried for murder. Dr. Carnochan testified that Fisk's wound In the liver was. not necessarily fatal; that he died of an overdose of morphine given him by the hotel physician to quell the pain of the wound. A loaded pistol was found in Fisk's pocket, and It was easy to say that when bitter enemies meet armed with loaded' pis tols either one IS likely fo draw and at once continence firing. But Flsk was a notorious coward, while Stokes was known to be a most resolute and cour ageous man, of most dangerous temper wtien roused to anger. No money was spared to convict Stokes by Fisk's friends, and Stokes father was bank rupted by the expenses of the trials. There was no moral doubt probably in the minds of the jury that Stokes sought Fisk out deliberately and shot to kill him; but Flsk, it was felt, had goaded him Into the madness of re venge, and ao Stokes was convicted only of manslaughter. After his release from prison Stokes was proprietor of the Hoffman House in New York City for many years. DISOBEDIENCE OF- ORDERS. Admiral Schley, of course, never called for a court of inquiry concern ing his conduct In the naval operations around Santiago because of the unwise and unprincipled warfare that has raged between the -blatherskite news paper partisans "on both sides; he called for a court doubtless In order that his defense to the official charge that he disobeyed his orders in withdrawing before Santiago, because in his judg ment he could not safely coal at eea, could be heard and officially judged. This is the only point at issue that jus tified a court of inquiry, for it was the only point of criticism made officially by the Secretary of the Navy. Disobedience of orders may, of course, in the Army or Navy some times be justified as. necessary, but the commander Is, of course, expected to make a good defense for his exercise of discretion. The great Lord Nelson dis obeyed orders both at the battle of Cape St. Vincent and .at Copenhagen with glorious results. Sir Hyde Parker sig naled to him to retire from action, but Nelson put his glass to his blind eye and claimed he did not see the signal. Parker was more than two miles off, and could not see that Nelson could not afford to retire. Lord Charles Beres ford was court-martialed in 1882 for leaving his position before Alexandria and silencing a certain battery. At the time of the great hurricane at Samoa the Captain of a British warship put out to sea, rode out the gale, and then sailed to Australia. He was court martialed for leaving Samoa without orders, but his action was recognized as necessary to save his ship. Gen eral Fitjs John Porter was cashiered for not obeying General Pope's order to at tack the enemy August 29, 1862, but the judgment was ultimately reversed and Porter was restored to the Army, the commission of review and Inquiry de ciding that General Porter was justified in his failure to obey an order whose issue was predicated upon the supposi tion of a military situation which did not exist by the time the order reached General Porter. In the six hours that elapsed between the sending of the or der to Porter and its receipt by him Longstreet's whole corps, 30,000 strong, had arrived In Porter's front. To have attacked this corps with his 10,000 men without any support from the rest of the Union Army meant the useless de struction of Porter's troops. Naval and Army history contains numerous cases of disobedience of orders by command ers who have ventured to supersede the Judgment of superior officers by their Own. If the decision of Admiral Schley to disobey his orders had been followed by the escape of the Spanish squadron, he probably would have had trouble over it, but he took the risk of deciding that he could not safely and effectively coal at sea, and his application for a court of Inquiry was to present his official defense for his technical disobedience to professional judgment. All the rest of the matter that has been lugged by the ears into court is nothing but a rec ord of the various bickerings and small Intrigues that have always formed part of the true inwardness of naval life since the days of Nelson, whose life is full of evidence that the British Navy of his day was divided into factions. Nelson was kept in retirement for sev eral years because he was out of favor with the Admiralty, and, had it not been for the sudden renewal of war with France in 1792, the greatest naval genius in history would have died in retirement, although he was already recognized in the navy as the ablest post-captain in the service. To the last of his life Nelson was always In hot water with the British Admiralty, and was hated by the court. Nothing but his astonishing abilities saved him from court-martial and dis grace. The British Army was full of the same kind of Intrigues and quar rels In the days of Wellington that it has been during the Boer War. The armies of the Union in our Civil War were full of the same kind of jealousies and hates, which survive even to this day, when a partisan hand writes the life of General Meade, McClellan or Thomas. President Lincoln confessed once that the Insensate bitterness of this military partisanship obliged him to continue General McClellan in com mand after he had become personally convinced that McClellan "had the slows" and would never do anything. Prince Joachim Murat, who died re cently near Paris, was a grandson of Napoleon's famous Marshal Murat, King of Naples, whose son, Napoleon Luclen Charles, came to America in 1825 and married a daughter of Thomas Frazler, of Bordentown, N. J. This lady became the mother of the just deceased Prince In 1834. Prince Napoleon Murat and his young son went to France after the revolution of 1848, and the latter entered the army. He helonged to the staff of Napoleon HI in 1863, and be came General of Brigade in 1870, and "after the War with Germany retired from active service. In 1854 he married a princess of Wagram, who was pre sumably a dependent of Napoleon's Marshal Berthler. This Prince Murat Is the fellow who was engaged to marry Miss Gwendolln Caldwell, of Louisville, Ky., in 1889. When it came time to sign the marriage contract, Miss Cald well offered to sustain all expenses of the house, pay all living expense and make an allowance of $10,000 a year to the Prince, He grew angry and de manded that she take the $10,000 a year and give him the rest of her fortune. Miss Caldwell refused, the engagement was broken, and she afterwards mar ried the Count de. Meronvllle, who did not need any wedding- portion. The father of Prince Murat, whose wife sup ported him by teaching for many years at Bordentown, N. J.f led a dissolute life and was a worthless husband. Jp- seph Bonaparte, Kjngr of Spain, was another of these Napoleonic exiles who lived for many years at Bordentown, N. J. He was an accomplished' man, but he had several Illegitimate chil dren by his American mistress before he returned to France.- Anbther son of the famous Marshal Murat came to America In 1821, married a granil-niece of Washington, and settled in Florida. He died on his estate near Tallahassee in 1847 From first to last the French revolution and the Napoleonic wars sent jo. good many French exiles to the Uhlted States, Including; Louis Philippe, Talleyrand, Generals Moreau, Van damme and Lefebre-Desnouettea. THE IMMORTALITY OF NOTORIETY. The assassin of President McKinley belongs 'to that class of Illustrious ob scure people who live In history not because they have done anything that was worth doing, but because they have either wittingly or unwittingly Undone somebody spoiled a horn la their clumsy efforts to make a spoon. Fred erick the Great made a sarcastic re mark about the mistress )f Louis XV, and the angry harlot was able to per suade the King of France to declare war against Prussia, so that an Impu dent jest enabled a worthless woman to make it very "hot" for the greatest man of his day in Europe, when he needed friends rather than more ene mies. As long as Lincoln is remem bered the name of Wilkes Booth will be recalled. If Clement, Ravalllac, Ger ard, Damiens, Felton Fieschl, Orslnl, Gulteau and Czolg03z had attempted the lives of ordinary men they would be lost to history; but they struck at Princes and statesmen and therefore theeeobscure assassins have secured the immortality of infamous notoriety. Then there is a breed of vain fools whose inopportune speech endows them with Immortal notoriety, like Burchard, whose resonant and rancid rhetoric of "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion" quite possibly coBt Blaine the electoral vote of the State of New York. Burchard was a kind of clerical Erostratus. He fired with his torch unwittingly the Republican Epheslan dome. He shot an arrow over his house and killed his brother. He was a vain, pompous man, who dearly loved to hear the sound of his own voice. When the Oregon of his speech was flowing he heard no sound save its own dashings. His noisy, tact less tongue destroyed In a few minutes the fabric of triumphant popularity that Blaine for years had been fashion ing into an arch of victory. The pas sionate desire of poor, vain, fussy Dr. Burchard to listen to the gurglings of his own mouth was fatal to his po litical hero he thought to help. To pass from persons to things, instances might be easily multiplied of the course of great events being controlled by Insig nificant and seemingly remote causes. The Saxon Army was drunk the night before the battle that made the sober Normans masters of England. Lord George Germain, in his hurry to join a party of revelers, forgot to send an Important order to Sir William Howe, and Burgoyne's campaign ended in dis aster. Hampden and Cromwell were unexpectedly prevented from settling in New England. The brains of Hampden remained to organize a great Revolu tion, and the sword of Cromwell was retained to shatter the armies of Charfes I and finally to cut Qff his head. Napoleon overslept himself at Llgny and let Blucher escape from ruin. 'Gen eral Hancock carelessly congratulated the greenbackers of Maine on their vic tory and lost the hard-money State of New York. Henry Clay needlessly of fended James G. Blrney and lost the Presidency in 1844 by losing New York State, when a word from Blrney would have given him the Liberty party vote. Blaine's wanton, Insulting speech on the floor of the House obtained for him the lifelong enmity of Roscoe Conkling. Personal hate- of Calhoun rather than belief in Federal supremacy made An drew Jackson the foe of nullification. Tall oaks from little acorns grow, and great events have seemingly dated from contemptible causes. For example: Suppose Bonaparte had not married Josephine, one of the mistresses of Bar ras; the command of the army of Italy would have gone to another aspirant for command. Events moved so swiftly In those days that a man utterly with out money or political influence, like young Bonaparte, could not have af forded to wait long for the supreme command. He obtained it by favorit ism. It yas the dower that Josephine brought him In lieu of virtue or money. Suppose he had had to win in further battle the supreme command of a -veteran army that came to him as a gift at 26. He might have died heroically leading a division crossing the Rhine, like Marceau, or fallen trying to stem defeat, as did Joubert at Novl. Indeed, the death of Napoleon as late as Maren go, June 18, 1800, would have left him historically little more than the bright exhalation of a meteor, for the career that was to make Napoleon the most memorable and permanent political as well as military figure of modem times did not begin until after Marengo was won, and without the peace that was necessary to enable Napoleon to organ ize his opportunity and become Em peror. SOCIALISTS REPUDIATE ANARCH ISM. The letter of Mr. Folen, repudiating for true Socialists all sympathy with anarchism, Is a correct statement of the present attitude of the Socialist leaders In Germany, France, Austria and Italy. In Germany the Socialist party broke with the extreme revolu tionists among them In 1891, when the Erfurt congress expelled the extreme revolutionary remnant from member ship and passed a resolution to the effect that henceforth the Social Demo cratic party was a political , and parlia mentary party. Oh this occasion the great Socialist leader, Liebkne-cht, said: "Revolutionary methods were the methods of anarchists, and anarchists had achieved nothing but the alienat ing of worklngmen. With their sense less attempts at assassination they have done nothing for the proletariat and have merely worked Into the hands of their adversaries." The example set by the German Socialists at Erfurt in, 1891 was followed by those of Austria and Italy the next year, and by the In ternational Socialist Congress of Lon don .in 1896. Belief In Parliamentary action was made a condition of mem bership in the last-named congress, and even believers in revolution by a uni versal strike were by a very large ma jority excluded. The Socialist vote at the elections for the German Reichstag in 1898 was 2,120,000, or one-third of the whole poll, and the party returned 57 out of 397 members of the Reichstag. The Social ist party In Germany now boasts that they are not only a scientific, but a practical, party, so much so that the Socialist leader, Bebel,. says that; they are supported at the polls by thousands of voters who are-not technical Social ists, but believe that the Social Demo crats constitute the only party ready to give a little present help and redress of grievances that are actually oppress ing them. The policy of the party Is not shaped by Ideals of scientific So cialists, but by the wants of the un converted mass of their followers. The Socialist leader, Vollmar, In hla speech at the Stuttgart congress In 1898, de clared that social reform must precede social revolution. The German Social ists no longer urge the doctrine once taught of the abolishment of the pri vate ownership of land, as well as, of in dustrial plants. In the German Empire there are 3,000,000 small peasant pro prietors who till their own fields with their own hands. The committee of the Socialist, Demo cratic Congress at Frankfort in 1894, while It proposed to nationalize the large estates, recommended that the peasant should be left in possession of his property, and that a state bank be established to take over his mortgages and charge him the lowest possible rate of interest. This proposal, while It was supported by Bebel, was rejected at the Breslau congress of 1895, but It Is be lieved that the Sdcial Democrats of Germany will ultimately occupy the ground taken In 1894 by the French So cialists at the Congress of Nante3, who declared In favor of the perpetuation of peasant property, saying that Social ism "had no quarrel with producers owning their own means, but only with non-producers owning other people's means of producing; that the land of the peasant Is as much the Instrument of his labor as is the carpenter's plane." The Social Democrats of Germany are so practical that they co-operate with any party that will vote for "supersed ing in Prussia the present classified property franchise by universal suf frage. In France the Socialist vote in 1893 was nearly 840,000. The party has now thirty-eight seats in the Chamber of Deputies, and two of the Socialist Dep uties, Mlllerand and Baudln, are mem bers of the Cabinet. The vast majority of French Socialists, like the German Socialists, are parliamentarians and ardent social reformers rather than dogmatic theorists. Mlllerand favors compulsory arbitration, and ex-MIn-ister of State Goblet would at present nationalize no Industries but banks, mines and railways. Mlllerand would even go as far as sugar refining, but draws the line at petroleum. Other Socialists have proposed to make the production and sale of alcoholic bever ages a state monopoly; others favor old age pensions to every workingman over 60, and 30 cents a day to every unem ployed workingman. Other Socialists be lieve In municipalization rather than na tionalization of industries. In Roubaix the Socialist Municipal Council reduced the local entry duty on necessaries and raised it on luxuries, and thus added $25,000 a year to the revenue of the town. In Belgium, at the election of 1898, the Socialists elected 29 Deputies In a Chamber of 152, and in Italy In 1900 at the Parliamentary election the So cialist vote was 215,000 and the number of Deputies was increased from 16 to 34. In 1901 there were 11 Socialist repre sentatives in the Austrian Parliament, in Denmark 9, In Holland 4. There Is no sympathy between this party of parliamentary methods and the an archists, of whom the Socialist Lleb knecht said: "You could put all the anarchists in Europe In a pair of police wagons." "The Oregonian," says the Vancouver Register-Democrat, "prints a delinquent tax list of Multnomah County which fills 46 columns. There are evidently a few people over the river who are not prosperous." It Is no Indication whatever of lack of prosperity. This tax list represents only a small pro portion of the property of the county. Some people are careless and neglect to pay when they might and should. Others hope to "beat" the collection. Many are non-residents, and had for gotten that the time to pay had come round again. "In other cases there is litigation, or dispute, about property rights, and the taxes are left unpaid. As to prosperity, it never was eo gen eral In Portland and throughout Ore gon maugre the "accursed gold stand ard." The recommendation of General Miles In his annual report that the military posts throughout the country be put in excellent shape for troops that are returned from service beyond the seas Is humane as well as soldierly. The men "who have borne the rigors of the Arctic climate In Alaska and the heat of the tropics, and under all circum stances maintained the character of the American Army," deserve a housing after their homecoming equal to the best accommodation in barracks that la consistent with military discipline. Turkey has, of course, been obliged to comply with the demands of France for prompt payment of the French claims. If Turkey had plenty of money she could make a terrible fight, for she could put a million of excellent soldiers Into the field; but she has no money to make war with, and neither Russia nor Germany will Interfere with France's collection of her dues. The fact that there Is smallpox at The Dalles should Induce caution and not precipitate alarm. An Intelligent com munity, or rather a community guarded by lntelllgen health officers. Is not panic-stricken by the report of small pox within its limits. It simply ob serves the precautions prescribed by sanitary and medical science and goes about its business. President Roosevelt's Thanksgiving proclamation is a reminder that the harvest Is past, the Summer Is ended, and that the Nation, although but now brought to shame and grief through the assassination of its Chief Magis trate, still has an abundance of things for which Its people may fitly return thanks. For the first time In a number of years hoodlumlsm was held in check in this city on Halloween night. It is idle to say that the men of the city cannot control Us boys. They can If they will, as this latest demonstration fully proves. No vessels, laden, have been, able to get out over the Astoria bar, yet. Port land's drawback Is that seaport. The burden upon her commerce Is the" As toria bar. The trial of Schley for the crime of destroying the Spanish fleet seems to be nearly ended. HOME SCIENCE FOR PORTLAND. Scienco has busied Itself with measur ing sunbeams; -with photographing what does not sso the light of day the in ternal make-up of a living man; with counting the beats of the mad dance of molecules in a stone wall; with tracing the physical relationship between the colors of tho ranbow and the tones of a piano; with investigating the generation of light from a bit of gray radium found in a Bohemian mine; with studying the law of correspondence between the shape of a criminal's ear, and the propensity to filch and murderj with Imprisoning the spirit of the Asiatic plague In glycerin-Jelly; with hunting a child's soul to Its lair in a bit of protoplasm. With all these has science concerned itself; but not until the past decade has It seriously turned its attention to making the home of man a decent, wholesome, and habita ble place to live In. The era of sourmash bread, greasy po tato chips, shriveled beefsteaks, and col icky pies and pates Is on tho wane. Within the past 10 years the most Im portant revolution that the world has ever known has been going on about us. the revolution of sanitary living, Tho fight has heen a hard one, and victory is not yet; for still the deadly ptomaines lurk In innocent-looking tin Cans; and oven here in Portland alum baking pow ders are manufactured wholesale and emptied Into helpless and unsuspecting stomachs by restaurateurs and Ignorant housewives, who have yet to learn that, in the opinion of certain well-known ex perts, they are instilling alow poison. No other civilized nation has let Itself with such fatal nonchalance to adulter ations In food supplies. We Americans are such a hurly-burly people In our eager rush for making money that we could hardly spare the time to pause and reflect that eating is a science and an art, as well as a business. As private citizens we have tamely sub mitted to bo humbugged by unscrupulous manufacturers and irresponsible grocers. Without grumbling we have paid milkmen for bringing us typhoid fever germs In their milk cans. Every Summer death Infected Ice cream laid fair women and strong men in the grave. We bore all this with unflinching fortitude as the visitation of an Incomprehensible but all wise Providence. It was not until tho full horror of the embalmed beef scandal of the Spanish War burst upon the Na tion, that tho Americans were aroused from their mood of fatal Indifference to the proper preparation of foods for tho market. The canned meat poisoner must go. We would not allow our soldiers, when fighting for their country, to be murdered by any other than an enemy in uniform. Now that we, as a Nation, have seri ously set our eyes toward reform, it Is safe to predict that the next 10 years will see a rebound from our ancient apathy such as will surprise the world. During the past three years a large amount of Investigation on the subject of food and nutrition has been carried on In different parts of the country. The work which the United States Government Is doing along this line through the Department of Agriculture. In co-operation with a con siderable number of universities and ex periment stations and scientific experts, makes, all taken together, probably the most extensive and thorough Inqulrv of the kind which has ever been undertaken In anv part of the world. This new era Is now to be formally Inaugurated In Portland by the public spirited women of this community, who nre preparing to open a Domestic Science School. This promises to be the most perfectly equipped, if not the first school of its kjnd on the Pacific Coast, for the far West Is only now beginning to feel the force of the Impulse toward mora wholesome and sanitary living, an im pulse which had its origin in Boston, and has been fostered and developed by the various slate agricultural colleges of tho country- Our own State of Oregon has had a department of domestic science in her agricultural college for many years. and during that time Miss Snell has done noble work: but ner Influence has been confined to farmers' daughters. The needs of a city, such as Portland, are In many ways different from those of Isolated farm houses. San Francisco has quite receni.y introduced domestic science into her pub lic school system. Oakland has felt tho contarlon of her example, and the move ment bids fair to spread to other parts of the Crast with lightning rapidity. That public opinion in Portland Is grad ually becoming aroused to the Import ance of this subject, is shown by our new state food law, and by such expres sions from the people as have recently appeared In the columns of this paper regarding pure milk, the necessity of having a poultry Inspector, and by the great Interest shown in the Exposition Cooking School. Some skeptic has said that the cooking-schools pay too much attention to terrapin, and not enoucrh to plain hash, but It would be hard to prove this true of the Portland school, whose plans of organization are now being per fected. In its courses of study science is brought to bear with Inexorable per sistence upon the most vital of all prob lemsthe practical, everyday affairs of the household, and the meals of the common man. It Is the intention of the board of di rectors to extend the work as rapidly as possible, Introducing laundry work, shirt-waist and skirt-making, dress-making millinery. Theirs Is no short-sighted policy, for they have one definite end In view which ,wlll greatly advance the In terests of the State of Oregon. A quick witted woman of practical bent and large Influence, who, many years ago. experi mented with great success In preserving" Oregon fruits winning prizes at State fairs, and profit enough to assure her of the feasibility of the scheme Is planning to Introduce, when the time Is ripe, nn Industrial department, wherein Oregon fruits shall be canned and preserved In such dainty and scientific fashion a3 has not yet been known In the Northwest. That there is an excellent field for such endeavor cannot be disputed. With most delicious fruits going to waste In our orchards, such as will lose nothing by comparison with the much-vaunted Cali fornia fruits, housewives are yet com pelled to buy preserved strawberries and raspberries, cherries and plums, peach marmalade and blackberry jam. that are canned In London, England, by Crosse & Blackwell. There Is absolutoly no ex cuse for this condition of things. Our dried fruits and preserves have been ao carelessly prepared as to make Oregon notorious for her Incompetent handling of Nature's choicest gifts. Oregon fruits nre today being sold In Philadelphia and New York as California fruit. An Ore gonian recently had occasion to Inquire in an Eastern market as to the reason for this. "It is because Oregon ship pers are so careless In canning and packing their fruits that we cannot sell them, except under the name of Cali fornia fruit," was the reply. Oregon even sends her fruit down to California, and suffers the Ignominy of having It seld there as California fruit. It is time to cry "Halt!" to such poor methods of work. If our fruits are good enough to pass muster as California products with an unsuspecting public then they are good enough to be handled with the science and the art that can alone placo Oregon where she rightfully belongs In the front rank of thi fruit-producing states of America. This Is one branch of work which the women of Oregon have in view The accomplishment of this purpose will necessarily require years of steady, un flinching effort, for the Idea Is new-born and cannot' grow to .strength without some kindly nursing from the people. This 13 a3 yet the day of small begin nings in household science. But with the loyal support of the people of Oregon, the Portland School of Domestic Science will repay all expenditure of energy and good will by bringing not only increased health to the community, but the merry cl.nk of dollars Into the coffers of the state. GERTRUDE METCALFE. SfcLNGS AND ARROWS. ' ''ji Ye Sons of Ye Sape. Lette now ye ehestyo Heroo who doth strutU upon ye Stayge. His Thlrsto for Fayme and Salarye as best ht mays assuage, .Let eke ye Bvllle VUllan who doth weare y savage Frowns Prepare hlmme for ye Present to go way back and sltte downe. And Lette ye star-eyed Heroine of tendex ycares and Hearfe, Content her for a Time at leaste to playe a thinking Parte For we shall sing of hlmme who is ye greatest In ye Troupe, Though be his Nayme unknown to Fayme the sayme Is he, ye Supe. Who marcheth forth with Spoare and Shield and falleth In the Flghte? Who rlscth up right lnstantlye upon ye self same Nlghte. And donning garb of Husbandman besiege ye Vlllian's Dooro And for "A cruet, a crust of Breade." full hungrily implore? Who soon thereafter robcth him as courtlye Gentillmanne And smlleth at ye Ladye. who doth flirt ye silken Fanne? Who langulsheth as prisoner, and flyeth soon ye coope. Who playe th each and every part? Who but ye humbel Supe? When Mobs da most assemblo to heave Brick bats in ye Aire. With lHstye Voice and strong Right Arm. ye Supe is always there. When Battles rajge upon ye Stayge and Bloode doth flotve amain. And Powder Smoke is thick aboute, ye Supe is there again. "When Horses rayce and finish to the Plaudits of the Crowd, It Is ye aeeents of ye Supe yt swelleth out so Loude. "Whatever Scene requireth a Coneourse or a Grouse. Ye Stage Director mnye depend upon ye hum bel Supe. Oh, prithee, do not think ye Supes be unim portant Thlnges, For hath not Klehard Mansfield deigned tc throw one through ye Wlnges? Hath not full manyc a Brutus talked In plead ing Eloquence To showe ye Supes all yt he had to say in his Defense? Hath not Jack FaMtafTe often been right wel content to Sltte And please ye tattered Prodigals (all Supes) with his good Wlite? Lette not ye Here, Vllll&n, Lorde, thinke he is ye whole troupe. No Company may bee complete without ya humbel Supe When the Editor Fainted. "I have here,'' said the long-haired In dividual, "a Christmas p " "Oh, don't." sighed the editor, wearily. "We've get 10 times as many as we can use. Please leave me In peace." "All right," ild the visitor, briskly. "I was going to say that I had a Christ mas present In the way of five years' back subscription, but of course If you are so nell stocked up, I will not leave It." And tho door closed on him just as the e'dltor fell heavily to the floor. Where They Got It. Here's good luck to bluff Jim Riley, An' a-hopln that his pen Will long keep on a-wrltln' Fur to cheer his feller men. He's the chap as has provided All these poets with their atock O" the fnt upon the punkla An' the fodder in the shock. Caught on the Wires. Paris, Oct. 25. Abdul Hamld, Constan tlnoDle. Honalre Brozzer: Complaint ees f make at zees capital zat certalne monees by you owe for damages ees not yet come to ze hand. Vat you got to zay? WALDECK ROSSEAU. Constantinople, Oct. 26. Waldeck Ros seau, Paris: Not got de mon. Pay may be 60 day. France and Turk good friend. With respect, ABDUL. HAMID. Paris, Oct. 27. Abdul Hamld, Constanti nople: Accept my compliment, my dear brozzer, but cet eez neccssalre for me to remlne you zat ze money must be pay. Ze honaire of France eez at ze stake. Zcre is nozzin to It. WALDECK ROSSEAU. Constantinople, Oct. 2S. Waldeck Rcs- seau. Paris: I get much tire telegram. 1 think you better go to the way back and finda de seat. ABDUL HAMID. Paris, Oct. 29. Abdul Hamld, Constanti nople: Pardonne me, most esteem friend, but I have ze honalre to remark zat ze navy of France will be. compel to collect ze monies eef you do not forward ze same Immediate. WALDECK ROSSEAL. Constantinople, Oct. 29. Waldeck Ros seau, Paris: No got de mon. I send you a few wife as Christmas present. ABDUL HAMID. Parte, Oct. 30. Abdul Hamld, Constanti nople: Allow me to romlne you, noble rulerre, zat von wife ees consldere enough for zc gentleman of France. 1 have ze honalre to eenrorm you zat zo navy will' sail to ze Eosphorus tomor row eef ze money not be pay, and zat ve shall be oblige to blow our beloved broz zer of Turkey higher zan ze kite of -M. Gllderory eef eet be necessalre. WALDECK ROSSEAU. Constantinople, Oct. 31. Don't sen ship. My lingers cross. Pay sure two week. ABDUL HAMID. And here the wires went down. It Jntt-Rcmlnd Us. Those here Spring days still comes around Without no kind o' sense or reason. Tho Autumn leae in on the ground. But sky and sun are out o' season. The mornin' sunbeams, soft an warm. Comes stealln' In at dawn to find us, AH day. without no sign o storm: The skies above well, Jest remind us. Remind us of the golden past Of meltln wows and op'nln flowers, Of days we longed for come at last. Of brooks that sang through happy hours. Remind ub of the hummln" bird That once again has gone to nestin. Remind us of the sounds we heard When twilight brought the time far restln'; The robin shouting out his glee Because his weary Journey's ended. The bluebirds, chlrpln' cheerily To find their last year's box Is mended. The crows, that spent the Winter here. Not always certain sure o" dinln, A-cawin' loud that all may hear Because the sun once more's a shlnln. The thrushes, pourln forth the song Tho love ' life an' Natur taught 'em An' then, a North wind comes along An gruffly says that this is Autumn. Woll, so It Is; an' Winter's near; But every day like this that's brlngln Remembrance of the early year. With birds come back an flowers sprlngln Juflt shows us that the spell that's cast By Spring keeps on a grow In stronger Though all Its warmth of sun Is past. And birds and flow'rs are here no longer. J. J MONTAGUE Ala.nknn Gold. Wlnthrop Packard in Youth's Companion. A million years in the smeltlng-pets Of the great earth's furnace core It bubbled and boiled as the old geds tolled Betorb It was time to pour. A million ears In the giant molds Of granite and mlca-schlst It oooled and lay In the self-same way That Into their hearts It hissed. A million years, and the clouda of steam Were rlvern and lakes and seas; And the mastodon to his grave had gone In the coal that once was trees. Then the Master Molder raised HU hand, He shattered the gray rock mold And sprinkled Its core from shore to shoro. And the dust that fell was gold.