"""w ?" wp"."' THE M0ENI2sTG OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1900. C&tared ct the PoetcSoe at Portland, Oregon, a second-class rattler. TELEPHONES. BdltorUU Rooms.. ..1CS j Business Office... .CST REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br MH (roertaee prepaid), in Advance DUly, WithSund&r. per month ,..- Dally, Sunday excepted. pr year. W Dclly, with Sunday, per year...... ..... JJ Sunday, perear ..............-...-- 3 The Weekly, per year. - 1 ; The Weekly. 3 months... .... To City Subscribers "Dolly, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted-ISo Diily. per week, delivered. Sundays lccluded-SOa P05TAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 30 to 16-pa.ge paper ........... .---...-.J0 10 to 82page paper ......so Foreign rates double. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, Sle at nil Pacific avenue. Tacorca. Box 853, Tacotna poetoflVoe. Eastern Business one The Tribune build ing, New Tork City; "The Rookery." Chicago; the E. C. Beck with special agency. Kw Tork. For nale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper, T6 Market atreet. near Jie Palace hotel, and st Goldsmith Bros.. 238 Sutter street. For eale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. "2i7 Dearborn street. TODAY'S "WEATHER. Partly cloudy and 'occasionally threatening; cooler; southwest "Kinds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST 21 vAPOLocir poa the lumber evil.. A great deal of latitude has been Jgien the assertions, accusations and defenses of correspondents and officials in the matter of public school lands, if the facts have not been published St Is not because effort has been spared to dig them up or because applications !for a hearing have been denied. But there is one aspect of the affair that 2ias not yet been presented, to which Jattention should be drawn, and this is the reason existing in public policy why acquisition of great timber land dis tricts by syndicates should be encour aged. Nobody seems to have a word of de fense lor the predatory lumberman "Who goes up and down the land seek ing what forests he haply may devour. As for him, he seems disposed to con fess judgment, and meekly await his anerlted punishment Tet a little reflec tion might discover mitigating clrcum etances even In the case of the hard ened lumber king. He develops the country, he employs labor, he brings money into the state, he clears land, 3ie makes business for the railroads 'ond Indirectly for all lines of trade. The same theory that would keep our irests intact from destruction could be Invoked with equal force to prevent minors from robbing our rich moun tains of their gold, and prevent the farmers from using up the nitrates in the soil of the "Willamette Valley. "We shall not undertake to defend or palliate the perjury of those who, hav ing signed a contract with a syndicate for purchase of the claims on which bey flle, make oath that the land is for their own use and not for sale. But their moral obliquity is no more patent than is the fact that If this timber land is held until individual settlers camp on each separate quarter-section and build a sawmill there, Puget Sound will continue to do the lumber business of the Pacific Northwest. If these syn dicates will only build sawmills and railroads, open up the country and add to its wealth, their turpitude In hav ing money and spending it may be 3orne and even condoned. Tou can't have- a thriving lumber .trade and at the same time have all the trees standing untouched on the hill sides. The forestry problem, moreover. Is essentially different here from the painful and oppressive nightmare It lias become In Eastern states. The Douglas fir recreates Itself with such fecundity and rapidity that in It is al most realised the traditional paradox of eating one's cake and having it, too. Jarge areas of land, treeless thirty years ago, are covered today with thick young forests. In the hills between the Cowlitz or the Willamette and the Pa cific Ocean, trees are growing up as fast as ax or Are is dragging them down. An abandoned farm Is ready for the FawmiH In a generation. Mr. John Minto, the Marlon County pioneer, has tv 'I ten a pamphlet on this subject WhUh every one should read who is ln f rested in practical forestry. The great difficulty in our lumber development, perhaps, is the aversion ej m.uiv exccnVnt people share to the epc taole of capital lucratively at work. It Is not the perjury of the timber c'.mmant or the forest supply of the 3 ar 2000 that worries them, so much us it is the apprehension that syndi cates buying up timber land and op-c-a'hig sawmills might- make Interest rr at Wtf taxes on their Investment. Wo cannot, as yet, imprison these dls c tinted persons as public enemies, or i"invlate them in boiling oil, or en 2arge the insane hospitals for their ac c mmodatlon. They must be permit ted to gTR'pte fiercely with a country that refuse to let them save It by main i-"-"gth Bat the syndicates will go i.' 1 1 as Ions as they can make any f' ' f Big tartts require big amounts ''Hal. and tbe money will be forth- " mg so ng as it can make anything i.' 1 s entire, or so long as it thinks 3r a- If it oaa't make any profit, it rU -hut up shop. The finest preserver tf 'orsts is the Populist legislator tallB a crusade against lumber syn c.v.as. Probably the next best is the rI'road with prohibitive lumber tariffs. fummimkxt ineroHE peace. Tl.e latest news from Pekln Is a re newal of ropo8Mte for peace on part cf V e ChitHfee Government through LI JT'isg Chanff. These propositions have been addressed, It is reported, to all of V e powers. So far as the United States la c ncerned, the terms of peace would seem tc be settled la advance. The dec 3aratlo. of thte country as to the open d vr and the recent demands upon the CUrese Government Itself set forth the V '.icy -which the United States has udo; 'ed and from which it is not likely to depart. Mr. Hay, in his note of July 3, wrote T&e poller Ownt or the United &tatea t to wc a solutkni wlricfa may brine; tbcut pentMUtent rafetr Mt4 peace in China, p-eerve Chinese torrtterat and administrative ".i f, protect alt rtcht guaranteed to friend ly pcers b trvt an International law, and Ba.fecua.r4 for tfee wM the principle of equal t-4 'partial tt4e witk alt parts of the Cht aesexnptra Secretary Hay defined the policy of this country to be "to afford all possi te protection everjrhere ia China to .American life and property, to guard and protect our legitimate American Interests, and to aid In preventing a rpread of disorder to the other prov ince of the oaipire and a recurrence of such disasters.' The relief f our Le gations, the rescue of the American csalaaaries and other citizens la Pekln has been accomplished, and It remains to accomplish the rest of our avowed purposes and to see that our treaty rights In China are satisfactorily guar anteed by a responsible and competent government at Pekln. Our troops are, therefore, quite likely to Winter at Pe kln and remain until a final settlement has been assured. Our Government has more to ask than a mere money indemnity. The guilty officials and leaders of the mob who murdered cru elly our missionaries, men and women, at Pao Ting, in railroad communication with the capital, must be sternly pun ished, if our citizens are to be safe In the future. Our troops will not leave China until a Chinese Government is organized and an administration in stalled that will maintain order and protect foreigners. What will this new government be? It certainly will not be represented by the Empress Dowager and her fugitive confederates, who are responsible for the outbreak, and whose recent mis representations to the envoys was a clear case of double dealing. Of course, if General LI Ping Heng had 15,000 trained troops to resist our advance to the capital, and if General Tung Fu Slang has 30,000 trained troops to guard the fugitive Empress and her treasure, the Empress "had troops enough to have protected the Legations. She cut off the head of the Secretary of the For eign Office for sending food to the Le gations, and punished other pro-foreign officials with death. To allow her to remain at the head of the Chinese Gov ernment or to go without punishment for her crimes would be the height of folly for the future. Of course, the new Chinese Govern ment must be headed by some repre sentative of the ruling Manchu dy nasty to satisfy the public opinion of China, but some representative of that dynasty should be taken whose hands are not responsible for the blood of helpless American women murdered at Pao Ting. The Empress Dowager's life may be spared, but it would be a blun der worse than a crime to let her re sume her place at the head of the Pe kln Government Pekln Is the place to make peace; Pekin is the place where to determine who are the guilty, and Pekln above all is the place to punish them. DRUM AXD TRUMPET POLITICS. It is conceded on all sides that the campaign is dull beyond precedent. This situation Is natural, for the Re publicans are full of confidence and the Democrats have little hope. In 189S the Republicans were badly frightened, and worked with the desperate energy born of unusual alarm, while the Bryan Democrats were full of hope, resting on hard times and their ability to convince the farmers that the so-called degrada tion of silver was responsible for the low price of wheat If the Republicans had believed as firmly in 1884 or In 1S92 as tbey did in 1896 that defeat would pick their pockets, they would not have losb the election. The campaign of 1896 possessed all the conditions to warrant a bitter battle; for the Republicans be lieved that the triumph of free silver at 16 to 1 meant a financial revolution, whose fruits would be bankruptcy and mercantile disaster on every side. The fight was not for party pride or po litical traditions, but for the sanctity of vested interests, both of the poor man and the rich. Labor made com mon cause with capital because labor was convinced that a victory for free silver at 16 to 1 meant the practical confiscation of one-half its savings, whether represented by banks or insur ance companies, the sudden inflation of the price of commodities without a cor responding rise in the price of labor. Labor could remember the days of in flation prices in the Civil War, when the greenback dollar was worth but 50 cents in gold, a day of enormous prices without corresponding rise In the price of labor. With capital and labor both badly frightened there could not be an apa thetic campaign in 1896. But today the situation is reversed; for neither capi tal nor labor is as badly frightened as It was In 1896; first, because Ihey are not apprehensive that Bryan will be elected, and second, because they do not sincerely believe that Bryan's elec tion In 1900 could possibly prove as ca lamitous as it would have been In 1896. Under these circumstances, a drum and trumpet campaign today is out of the question. The people as a whole are too practical and intelligent to pretend to fears that they do not feel, or to affect a hope they do not entertain. The Republicans do not apprehend the election of Bryan, and they do not be lieve that, if elected, he could ruin the country as he might have done if elect ed In 1836 The Democrats do not ex pect to elect Bryan, and are, of course, apathetic in expectation of a losing fight. Thousands of them who will vote for Bryan will not worry over his defeat Probably thousands of them. If they really expected to elect him, would not vote for him, for they have ceased to believe in flat silver and feel noth ing but contempt for the issue of "antl- lmperlalism." The consequence is that the campaign will be as apathetic as that of 1SS6. when Van Buren was elected to succeed Jackson. Van Buren was not personally popular, although he Tras a very able man; but he was nominated and elected in obedience to the flat of Andrew Jackson bj the votes of the united Democratic party over the dispirited and divided Whig party, which really by its own folly threw away all chance of success. In the campaign of 1836 the Democ racy was apathetic because It felt sure of victory, and the Whigs were apa thetic because they were sure of de feat The campaign of 1S10 was the only real drum, and trumpet campaign ever seen In this country. It was liter ally a "song and dance" campaign, but its effusive, superficial, noisy enthusi asm had no serious moral basis what ever. The victorious Whig candidate was 67 years of age. a vain old man, who had won an Indian fight at Tippe canoe, In 1S11, and the small "battle of the Thames," over the British and In dians in the War of 1S12-15. In neither of these petty fights did Harrison dis play any military ability worthy o notice compared with that of Wayne or Jackson, and yet the united Whig party elected this commonplace old man President over a very able states man by a larger plurality than Andrew Jackson obtained over Adams in 1828, and falling short only 11.000 of the plu rality obtained by Jackson In 1S32. This drum and trumpet campaign of sixty years ago was, as we have said, utterly without moral issue of earnest ness. It was an absurd medley of "coonskins, hnrd cider and log cabins." No memorable speeches were made, al though the great Daniel Webster con descended la days of difficult stage travel to be the orator at a monster "Haprlson" meetingin the little town of Stratton, on the summit of the Green Mountains. The man Harrison, was fairly sung into victory by the most absurd kind of campaign Bongs con cerning "Tippecanoe and Tyler too," "Van, Van's a used-up man." Van Buren was satirized in the lines: Linden Wold, the Fox's Hole, The coons all laughed to hear It told. The American people behaved like a band of drunken mountaineers at a Kentucky barbecue. Such a campaign never took place before or since, for In the great campaigns of 1856, 1860 and 1864 great moral issues were involved, and when the people are terribly In earnest they do not sing and shout Since 1864 there have been no great campaigns of deep political excitement and popular apprehension equal to that of 1896. The absence of drum and trum pet enthusiasm today Is complimentary to public intelligence. OUR JfATIOVAI. FAILURE. The poets and composers who have failed to produce a satisfactory Amer ican National song and they are many are held up to renewed censure and contumely by an accomplished writer in the New Tork Sun, who ar raigns the old favorites for their well known shortcomings. "My Country! 'Tis of Thee" Is criticised because the music Is borrowed, because the musical accent falls upon the unimportant words and because the composition as a whole lacks force. "The Star-Spangled Banner" has borrowed music also (worse stljl, it Is borrowed from an old English opera), is unsingable in any key because Its range exceeds that of the average voice, lacks the right rhythm for marching, and is cheapened by the opening line with its flat ex clamation, "Oh, say!" "Hail, Colum bia," is put under the ban because It is musically wholly unworthy, and "Yankee Doodle," which is simple and rousing and endeared to us by tradi tion, is entirely wanting in dignity. Far be it from the present purpose to offer aught in extenuation of this our National fault, purely one of omission though it be. The critic's points are not open to objection. But where he seems vulnerable is in his failure to include other most grave and glaring shortcomings of our men of meter and melody. What the Sun's critic wants is a National song "as rousing as the 'Marseillaise,' as devout as the 'Gotter halte,' as martial as the 'Wacht am Rheln,' and better than any," and he undertakes to say that it is actually coming in the golden age ahead of us. But there are other things we ought to have in this country and for whose lack somebody, perhaps every body, Is quite as culpable. Why has no American composer produced an "II Trovatore" or a "Thanhauser"? Why has no American poet written the equal of "Hamlet" or the "Ode to a Grecian Urn"? Why do we still have to go to the old masters for canvases instead of to Chicago or Kansas City? -Jf any American poet has written a sonnet like that of Milton on his blindness or an apostrophe to the ocean equal to Byron's, the magazine publishers so far have failed, owing to press of other matter, or other causes, to make room for it. Is it possible after all to make a Na tional hymn, with the desired qualities, in a night? How much, after all, does the "Marseillaise" owe to the fires of the Revolution, or "God Save the Queen" to the memories it invokes, or "Die Wacht am Rheln" to the vine-clad hills and Teuton campflres where It grew to full maturity? "The Star Spangled Banner" was born out of the throes of a National peril; seventy years of civic occasions and fireside memories have entered Into "My Coun try, 'Tis of Thee"; it is the dangers and heroisms of the Lost Cause, and not its words or notes, that start the "rebel yell" when "Dixie" rises from the band, and the strains of the choir invisible itself could not recoup "Hall, Columbia" for the loss of the conscious ness that it has been handed down from sire to son through many a National crisis and many a bloody campaign. A National hymn must be sung by the Nation unless it is to be a misnomer, and the best part of It is something the poet and composer cannot put into It. Time must nurture the National anthem, If we ever have one and one only, danger and daring must contrib ute to Its history, and human life in tragedy and pathos be beaten into its lines and staves before It will rise spontaneously from the patriotic heart and prompt the patriotic cheer. This is a heavy task to require of our song writers, facile though they be, and handy both in ragtime and local hits. A man could almost as easily manu facture a few genuine Egyptian mum mies or Moselle of the vintage of 1870. Philadelphia has been a hot town this year. Here is the record of the hot wave that passed over it from July 15 to July 22: Maximum Mean temp. temp. July 15 93 SI 5 July 10 09 SO July 17 93 87 July 18 OS 8S July 19 01 SI July 20 92 83 July 21 94 83 July 22 89 80 And here Is the record of the second hot wave that passed over Philadelphia from August 6 to August 13: Maximum Mean temp. temp. August 6 95 800 August 7 97 81 August S 00 S4 0 August P 04 SG3 August 10 97 S83 August 11 100.0 P06 August 12 99 87 August 13 , .-90 SO Severe as has been the visitation of this last hot wave, and breaking the Philadelphia record, as It did, for the two hottest days in August, it did not equal in duration the terrible ten days from August 4 to August 13, 1896, which caused the greatest number of deaths and 'prostrations ever recorded. Here is the record of the hot wave of August, 1896: Maximum Mean temp. temp. August 4 90 79 August 5 ....94 82 August 0 90 80 August 7 90 Si August 8 96 80 August 9 96 S7 August 10 93 84 August 11 97 87 August 12 97 87 August 13 94 85 These fourteen days of excessive tem perature caused 203S deaths from sun stroke in the entire region affected, Boston, New Xork, Philadelphia, Balti more and Washington furnishing 1461 of the total and St Louis and Chicago 310. The records, however, are known to be incomplete, and the actual num ber of deaths was much larger. The annals of the hot waves that pass over the Atlantic States and the Middle West stand every Summer for a rec ord of suffering and death that ought to promote an annual exodus to West ern Oregon and Western Washington. There is no possible hope In the near Zuture for pension reform. The Repub lican campaign documents are full of figures on the pension question, which ar denounced by the New Tork World as a very reprehensible method of cam paigning. So It is, but the Democratic platform includes the following plank: "Wo favor liberal pensions t6 them (soldiers and sailors) and their dependents, and -sve re iterate tho position taken In the Chicago plat form In 1890 that the fact of enlistment and service shall bo deemed conclusive evidence against disease and disability beforo enlist ment. '. This is a direct bid -for the Boldier vote in its offer to guarantee pensions on account of any disease alleged to have been Incurred in the service, though that may not have been the fact. Both parties are guilty this year of bidding for the soldier vote; both parties have always been guilty of it, and for this reason there is no hope of any pension reform legislation in the future. All the vicious pension legisla tion now on the statute-book has been placed there as a bfd for the soldier vote. It is reported that a resolution will probably be passed at the coming Grand Army encampment in Chicago to change the date of Memorial day from May 30 to the last Sunday In May. This would be an excellent reform, for the obvious reason that the day is, in its essential motive and ceremony, a sacred one, but it has come to be given over, outside the Grand Army, to sports and amusements, so that its signifi cance has been greatly Impaired in the popular mind. The celebration of Me morial day on Sunday is not out of harmony with the spirit of the day of rest; the music, the marching and the flowers are nothingi more than would be deemed fitting and appropriate to a mil itary funeral, and care could be taken not to have the exercises Interfere with any of the services of the churches. Forty-seven years ago, at a Demo cratic' state convention, held at Mont peller, Vt, the Democrats of Vermont adopted the following resolution on the subject of expansion, which was in troduced by the brilliant John Godfrey Saxe, wit and poet, who was then the editor of the Burlington Weekly Sen tinel: Resolved, That in opposing the narrow and timid policy which, had it prevailed, would havo limited the United States of America to the territory of Massachusetts, Connecticut and the "Providence Plantations," the Democratlo party has wisely favored the enlargement of tho domain of freedom; and that we are in favor of the acquisition of any territory on this contlnpnt or the islands adjacent thereto, whenever It can be done consistently with the rights of other nations and the honor of our cwn. London is disposed to think better now of the Treasury's action in turn ing the new loan over to Americans in exchange for badly needed gold. In this country we should hear fierce de nunciation of the Government for ex tending help to the banks and Indi rectly preventing a panic. If there is anything your true Populist loves, it's a panic. It shows the need of rotten money. Likely enough some shrewd Chinese General 'made an effort to keep the Dowager Empress from leaving Pekln. He was casting an anchor to windward, against the time when the allies were in full control. Gllmore's magazine story has given Arthur Venville an international fame. Oregon cannot afford to let him perish for want of a ransom. The Indiana wheat crop will be light, and therein lies Democratic strength. The shortage is directly attributable to Mr. Hanna. Another German-American's Views. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Congressman Bartholdt, a representa tive German-American citizen of St. Louis, entertains little fear of a defection on tho part of German-American, voters from the Republican, ticket this year. Ho reposes too much confidence In their habit of doing their own thinking to believe that they can be led astray by false doc trines. The Imperialism issue is a fake issue, just as the cry of "Caesarism" was In 1S72, he says. German-Americans learned 'at that time how they were de luded by this cry, for Grant's re-election utterly discomfited his calumniators. Congressman Bartholdt does not think they can be fooled again, and, moreover, he sees no argument in the present cam paign that is likely to make Democratic votes among German-Americans. In speaking of the Democratic method of campaigning, he says: "Let them con tinue their Jekyll and Hyde performance by talking Imperialism to the East and 19 to 1 to the West The intelligent voter knows full well what the real car dinal issue in this campaign is. He re quires no National convention to tell him. The important question is whether the country shall continue to be prosperous and happy, or shall again become poor and miserable. That Is the real 'para mount issue, as it Is understood in every home in America, or as It ought to be un derstood. Mr. Bryan observes convenient silence on this all-important issue, but he cannot deny these three propositions: First, that the American people are now enjoying a fair measure of prosperity; second, that want and misery are the memories of the last Democratic Admin istration; and, Ihird, that the change was brought about during the incumbency of President McKlnley and under a Repub lican Congress." Treason. Chicago Inter Ocean. "Every person owing allegiance to the United States who levies) war against them or adheres to their enemies, giv ing them aid and comfort within the United States or elsewhere, is guilty of treason. Every person guilty of treason shall "suffer death." This has been the law of the United States for 110 years, and is the law to day. Under other clauses of the same law, "every person who Incites" or "as sists any insurrection," or "who car ries on any correspondence with any foreign government with Intent to de feat the measures of the United States," is liable to heavy fine and long impris onment "If two or more persons con spire by force to prevent, hinder or de lay the execution of any law of the United States," each Is liable to similar penalties. The letter of Dr. Montague B. Lever son, of Fort Hamilton, N. T., to G. Apa clble, found among the rebel archives in Luzon, and published recently, cer tainly gives "aid and comfort" to the enemies of tho United States. Edward Atkinson, George S. BoutwelU Carl Schurz. Edwin Burritt Smith, J. Lau rence -Laughlin, A. H. Tolman and sev eral others of their kind, if the Govern ment chose to notice? them, could cer tainly be sent to prison for assisting an insurrection. The facts as to the acts and words of these men are notorious, and tho law i3 plain. Every reader can apply tho law to the facts. Whenever the word "treason" Is ap plied to tho utterances of Mr. Bryan's supporters. Democratic newspapers make frantic appeals to "the right of free speech." But here Is the law, and here are the facts. Neither can be changed by boastful defiance of the Government to prosecute the guilty. The United States Is merciful, but its mercy does not absolve the traitors morally or acquit them before the bar of public opinion. THOSE JEALOUS EASTERNERS. How Plainly Is Manifested Their Envy of Oar John. Barrett. Springfield Republican. Slam was never in its history so well known as it has been since the "Hon." John Barrett returned to his country men. Indeed, Slam may almost be said to have come Into international existence through Mr. Barrett It Is related in the books that the Portuguese discov ered the country In 1511, and that a Brit ish ship reached there in 1613; but it is certain that Slam did not become a world power until It was rediscovered by John Barrett in 1894. In our own case, Slam began to mean something more than a jungle place where they raise twins. In tho Winter of 1S97-98. Copies of th English newspaper printed in Bangkok began to reach this office, containing articles, heavily blue-penciled by a strong hand, warmly eulogizing "the Hon. John Barrett United States Minister to Slam," and lamenting tho fact that the necessities of American politics compelled the retirement of so great a diplomat from his majesty's court at Bangkok. Since then our acquaint ance with Siam has steadily grown more intimate. For Mr. Barrett came home a person of renown, "the late United States Minis ter to Siam." He is never known to write, speak, eat, or pare his nails, with out having it felt In ever-widening circles hat he is the "late United States Min ister to Slam." The magazines and weeklies that prize his views on Oriental affairs, invariably refer to him in con nectian with Siam. In the August North American Review his name stares at you from the title page as "John Barrett, formerly United States Minister to Siam." In the current Harper's Weekly you get him again In bold, black type, as "John Barrett, late United States Min ister to Siam." When tho Republican chairman in Vermont Introduced him at tho rural rallies, it is the same "tho Hon. John Barrett late United States Minister to Slam." When Mr. Reed, tho other day, asked, "Who is this man, Barrett, anyway?" of course the reporter chirped up, "the late United States Minister to Slam." Now, this is great for Siam (where did you say it was?) but It Is proper to inquire how much Siam the ordinary man can take along with his ice water, with out a nervous and physical collapse? We wish to be entirely Just to Slam, but really President McKlnley would confer a blessing upon the Nation if he would cut short the Slam advertisement by sending Mr. Barrett to Uruguay or Ecu ador for a diplomatic spell. As tho "late Minister to Ecuador' Mr. Barrett would be welcomed home again with demonstra tions of joy. THE SCIENCE OF BEAXS. The Sun's Funny Man Is at His Old Tricks Again. New York Sun. Bolls the world in torrid lakes, as a great bean-eater and pie-eater said, but the love of knowledge does not wi.t Salamanders were sunstruok and fire eaters, were dropping one by one tho day when this letter was sent to us by a cor respondent, whom we here thank In the name of science and of beans: To the Editor of the Sun Sir: Your article of today, dealing with Dr. Har per's experiment with cheap meals, is most enjoyable, and tas both understood and appreciated by mo as well as by others who are familiar with tho reputa tions of the learned and popular purvey ors of Park Bow referred to by you; but we have been fairly "stumped" by one word which you use. "Cyamologlsts" we never heard of before, and, though tho word was probably coined for the occa sion, you have doubtless good reason for its make-up. Please enlighten. H. Z. New York, Aug. 9. A cyamologlst or cyamologer Is a man versed in cyamology, which is the science of beans. Take one Greek bean, "kya mos," and the Greek "logla," a speaking, and you have "cyamology," a speaking concerning beans. Take "cyamologj" and graft on the ending "1st" or "er" to ex press the agent, and you have "cyamolo glst" or "cyamologer." Cyamology is a member of the old familiar "logia" or "logy" clan, and denotes a justly ven erated branch of science. But why should we be suspected of coining "cyamolo giBt"? There is excellent authority for It. Thus, In Mr. Hiram Cobb's "The New York Aladdin," we find this stanza: Then close up all our kitchens, Let all your cooks be whist; And shut up tight the mouth of might Of the proud cyamologlst 1 In Mr. Oxenbrldge Byles' "Thunder in Tooley Street" occurs this illustrative passage: For all it overweens. It doesn't amount to beans; This egotistical, cyamomystlcal, Anti-Imperialist League. "Cyamomystlcal" and "cyamomistlcs" are rare words, but we find In "The New York World of Words": "CamophllIst," "fond of beans, a lover of beans." "Cyamophagist," "a bean eater, a native of Boston, U. S. A. Cyamophagy," "the eating of beans." The work quoted does not notice the Latinized form In "The Paradise of Po sies" (1589): Tho Cyamophagl, and such as have No heads upon their shoulders. The Indebtedness of Shakespeare to these lines has been noticed, we believe, by the Hon. Ignatius Donnelly. Thus the Avon may be said to flow Into the Charles. The Strenuona HantinBtou. Boston Herald. Collls P. Huntington was one of the great railroad magnates, of whom the Nation has produced so many. His place is In the first rank. When Con gress had under consideration, 25 years or more ago, some question of dealing with the Pacific Railroad companies which brought all their representative men to Washington, it was remarked by members of the committee before whom they appeared that C. P. Hunting ton was the most wilful and com manding personality of the group. He was rugged, resolute, autocratic His grasp of affairs within the sphere of his particular business was comprehensive and Intense. The contrast botween his rude, aggressive, sometimes fierce man ner, and the calm, smooth, deferential habit of Jay Gould was Immense. Pow er was the impression produced by his aspect and, his speech. He was a fighter by nature, and a terrible one, who could be as ugly as relentless. He was self assertlvo to the last degree, a nature typical of ambition, self-reliant and greedy. Whatever graclousness he may have exhibited in private life, In busi ness be was hard, domineering and suc cessful. The Queennlmry Drama. Chicago Tribune. September 1 a new law goes Into force In New York which forbids prizefights within the limits of the state, no matter under what evasive title they may mas querade. It has been feared in some quarters that all the "pUgs" who have been making their headquarters in New York would take up their boxing-gloves and other apparatus and emigrate to Chi cago. That would have been bad enough, but a more recent announcement makes the prospect so much worse that In the Interest of suffering humanity Governor Roosevelt ought to call the Legislature together In special session and repeal the obnoxious law. Instead of coming to Chi cago, the pugilists are going on the stage almost in a body. From announcements already made, it appears that there are to be heavy-weight melodramas, feather weight farces, and even musical comedies with welter and middle-weight champions In the stellar roles. "Bloody-Nosed B1IV "George the Gouger," "Bat the Brute" and all the other young gentlemen who have won honors in the squared circle are to be starred, and if .they all suc ceed In getting engagements, it would seem that there will be little room for Richard Mansfield. Mrs. Flskfe, Maude Adams or any one else during the com ing theatrical season. It may well be considered a question whether the pu gilists will not do more harm on the stage than in. the prlzerlng, and. if pressed for a decision, most people would probably be In favor of letting them fight Prizefighting is not likely to lower the tone of morals in Greater New York, while a dozen or two pugilistic theat rical companies are certain to have a demoralizing effect on the country at large. PROPHECIES OF 180C. Mr. Bryan's Direful Views of the Gold Standard. Boston Advertiser. If the prophecies and predictions made by Mr. Bryan had proven to bo true, the gold standard, which has been in opera tion since he uttered them, would have produced the following dire results, to wlt: It would have Increased tho purchasing power of the gold dollar Madison Square speech. It would have been as certain to make prices fall as a stone is to fall when It is thrown into the air. Newton. la,, speech. It would have Increased the debts of the people and lessened their ability to pay them. Baltimore speech. It would have made times harder and harder. flame speech. It would have starved everybody except the money changers and the money own ers. New Haven, Conn., speech. It would have transferred the bread which one man earns to another man who had not earned It. Hartford, Conn., speech. It would have made tho rich richer and the poor poorer. Newark, O., speech. It would havo decreased the number who are happy and increased the number who are in distress. Same speech. It would have destroyed the hope of the tolling masses. Minneapolis speech. It would havo destroyed tho-opportunity to work. Same speech. It would have Increased the number of Idle men. Same speech. It would have decreased the volume of standard money. Same speech. It would have encouraged tho hoarding of money. Hornellsvllle, N. Y., speech. It would have made It more and more difficult for the farmer to live. Madison Square Garden speech. It would have injured the wage-earner. Same speech. It would have made employment less certain. Same speech. It would have discouraged enterprise. Same speech. It would have paralyzed Industry. Same speech. It would have lessened the ability of savings banks to collect their asset3. Same speech. It would have Increased tho danger of depositors losing their deposits in savings banks. Madison Square Garden speech. It would have compelled depositors In savings banks to withdraw their deposits to pay living expenses. Same speech. It would have lessened the salaries of those engaged in business occupations and would have lessened the permanency of such salaries. Same speech. It would have injured those who have permanent investments In railroad stocks and other like enterprises. Same speech. It would have Injured or destroyed tho manufacturers of agricultural implements, wagons and buggies. Springfield, O., and Flint, Mich., speeches. It would have lessened the ability of the masses to buv goods and thereby would have lessened the number of travel ing men. Indianapolis speech to traveling men. It would have made It Impossible for husbands and wives to nay off the mort gages on their homes. Minneapolis, Minn., speech to ladles. It would have made It necessary to ad vocate tho closing up of our public schools. Monmouth, 111., speech. Wharton Bnrfcer Not Ineligible. Chicago Tribune. The reporter of the Nebraska Supreme Court who was once a Judge sends out word from Lincoln, the home of all wise men, that Wharton Barker the Presi dential candidate of the Middle-of-the-Road Populists, has forfeited his Ameri can citizenship, and hence Is ineligible for the Presidency. Mr. Barker Is said to have forfeited his citizenship because, "when connected with some improve ments in Russia, he was titled Lord of St. Wenceslas bv the Czar, and before accepting the title he did not ask Con gress for permission to receive it" A lawyer who has been a Judge should be better Informed as to the Constitution. Ninety years ago Congress was afraid lest European powers might seek to at tach American citizens to their interests by titles or pensions. The fact that some prominent men west of the Alleghanles had been In the pay of Spain had be come known. So Congress submitted to the states an amendment providing that any person should cease to be a citizen of the United States who should accept receive or retain any title of nobility or honor, or who, without tho consent of Congress, should accept any present pen sion or office from any Emperor, King, Prince or foreign power. This amendment was not ratified, how ever. The only Constitutional provision bearing on the subject Is the one that no person holding any office or trust under the United States shall, without the con sent of Congress, accept any present, emolument office or title of any kind whatever from any foreign, state. This clause has no application to private citi zens. They can accept, and occasionally havo accepted, decorations and petty titles from foreign potentates. Possibly Mr. Barker has done so. If he has. that will not stand between him and the Presi dency. All that bars his way to that high office is his inability to get the necessary number of votes. MEX AJJD WOMEtf. Aram S. Hewitt, of New Tork, says that the world Is built three times in a. century. Mrs. Samuel Smartwood, wife of a railroad engineer living in Wllkeibarre, Pa., has Just given birth to her 25th baby. Duse's daughter, Elizabeth Marchetti. Is studying to be a schoolteacher at Munich. She Is said to bo an image of her mother. Evelina, Countess Pisani. who died recently in North Italy, was the daughter of Dr. Van MilllnEen. who attonded the poet Bron in his fatal illness. Tho Rev. James M. Gray, a well-known Bib lical scholar, has declined a call to become permanently nsioclated with the Rev. R. A. Torrey In tho work of the Moody Bible Insti tute. Chicago. Tho oldest of the colonial representatives In London is Lord Strathcona. of Canada. Gen eral Sir Andrew Clarke, tha noted soldier, statesman and engineer of Victoria. Australia, is next to him. Slam's Crown Prince, who is studying at Oxford. Is bound to be an up-to-date potentate like his father. He recently developed appen dicitis, and enjoyed the modern operation for that misfortune. The hat worn by President Van Buren during his Inauguration ceremonies has Just been pre sented to the museum of Illinois College. It Is a great beaver of tho style since associated with President Harrison. General Nelson A. Miles' famous collection of weapons has been recently augmented by the gift from n. South American politician of a sword worn in several campaigns by Simon BoUvar. "The Liberator." President Eliot, of Harvard, has declared himself In favor of tho shirt waist man as student. Several members of the faculty com plained of tho fatigue costumes worn to lec tures by students in June, but President Eliot did not sympathize with th complaining faction. NOTE AND COMMENT. Many a poor manha3 made $1000 by not going to Nome. The thermomotertwent np to 93 in Lon don last week and to 90 in the provinces. And Chicago, too. had her guess too high. Sha fell 2H,42S short of tho 2;0C0. 000 mark. A person experienced in the chattel mortgage business states that the filing of numerous such instruments in Port land does not always denote hard times, or that people are borrowing to tide over a bad spell. He says that some people could not well get along without a chattel mortgage on everything they possess, and a renewal from time to time is necessary for legal effect The attorney of the city and county of San Francisco has decided that tho rule providing for the dismissal of fe male teachers in case of marriage Is in valid, and says, among other things, that her marriage Is not a matter of school department's business. The Portland School Board recently adopted a rule adverse to marriage within the term of service, and a legal opinion of this kind in this state would doubtless bo wel comed by the teachers interested. Despite the state statutes which pro hibit sale of malt or splritous liquors in any form to any person under any cir cumstances, a compromise has been ef fected in almost every town or city of the State of Maine. By this compromiso saloons are tolerated on sufferance of an annual or a semiannual fine. This has been the arrangement In Bar Harbor for several years. The three selectmen elect ed at town meeting appoint the police and make the municipal regulations. The local regulations regarding the sale of liquors in Bar Harbor are that saloons or club3 selling llquora shall not keep open after 11 at night or on Sundays. The late Charles Russell, the first Cath olic to hold the high office of Chief Jus tice of England, was the son of a brewer; his uncle was a Catholic priest and pres ident of Wayworth College; a brother was a Jesuit priest, his sister was Mother Mary Baptist Russell, superioress of Uie Sisters of Mercy at San Francisco, to which place she went in V1S54, and a daughter Is at present In a convent in England. He was Intensely fond of horse racing, and a great student of the game of whist. The elevation of so devout and eminent a Roman Catholic to the highest judicial office in England proves tnat the English people aro no longer afraid of the pope. As early as 1S3S a Roman Catholic, Judge Tarey, wa3 made Chief Justice of the United States Supremo Cour:, but under our lawsifrom the found ation of the Federal Govenment no re ligious test was required for publfc of fice, but Catholic emancipation was not enacted by the British Parliament until 1S2), and even to this day the Viceroy of Ireland is always a Protestant In spite of the explicit provisions of the treaty of Berlin and thearemonstrances of England, France and Germany, tho Government of Rumania has practically denied citizenship to the Jews, for during the last 20 years less than 100 Rumanian Jews, members of a few wealthy fami lies, have been enfranchised. Of tho 260,000 Jews in the kingdom, most of them descended from those who have been settled there for generations, only 900 are now citizens. Even in their case the right is only personal, and does not de scend to their children. The Jews, be ing thus aliens In the eye of the law, aro denied free education. There are 30,000 children of their race who are entitled to it, but only by paying fees are 2000 of them able to obtain educational ad vantages which are free to Rumanians. The higher schools are closed to them, and they are hampered in establishing schools of their own. No Jew Is permit ted to hold a government office, or a position In a hospital or on a railway. No Jew may be an architect, a veterinary surgeon, a dispensing chemist or a law yer. No Jew can be employed In tha National bank, or serve in the Chamber of Commerce, or hold a commission in the army. A Jew cannot sell tobacco or salt, and by a special act against ped dlers 20,000 of them have been brought to the verge of starvation. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHEItS A Dashing Miss. "Is she a girl of tha period?" "Oh, no; she never punctuates with anything but dashes." Phlladerphla Bulletin. Charitable Old Lady. "Poor woman! And ora you a widow?" Beggars-Worse than a widow, ma'am. Ma husband's living, an' I havo to support him. Glasgow Evening Times. Much Needed-First Girl I thought that young man was going to bo hero two weeks. Second Girl Oh, he's coming iack. He's only going to town over Sunday to get a llttla rest. Harper's Bazar. That Boy Again. "Papa," said little Wlllio Asklt. "Well, my son? "la the days of Kings, and knights, and nobles, did they hav to put postage stamps on their shirts of mall?" Baltimore American. Too Much Poetlo Son Ah I father. Poets are born, not made. Father (angrily) Look here, you! Write all thet dern. rot ye want, but don't go blamln' mother 'n' ma fer it. Wa won't stand it! Puck. "Oh. my frlend3," exclaimed the earnest old man who was talking, "think of tho future! "What will you bo doing; SO years from now?" "Waiting for news from China," conjectured a reckless young person in tha group. Chicago Tribune. Apologies All Around. Mrs. Niblick You mustn't mind my husband. Mr. Von Bunker, if. ho swears terribly while he Is playing golf. Von Bunker And you mustn't mind me, Mrs. Niblick, if I taka tha words out of his mouth. Brooklyn Llfo. His Meter. Mrs. Floodyer Oh. Mr. Bates, how I enjoyed your lovely volume of poems! Batts You're very kind. Indeed! Do you lika the Alcaic meter? Mrs. Floodyer Alcaic meter! Oh, I see, you want to change th,e subject. Modesty is the crown of genius. But really I cannot say. Doe3 It save much, gas? Brooklyn Life. At the Daj' Dawn. Ripley D. Saunders in St. Louis Republic Daylight dawns In the dappled sky What shall the new day be? 'Tis but a flash till tha day goes by "What shall the new day see? Hopeful hearts that look for the best? Sorry souls in a mournful quest? With the sun In the east or the sun in tin west It's a choice for you and met Daylight dawns In the dimpled sky Joy that the night is done! f t Tis but a breath till the day shall die Get tha good of tho sun! For the little day Is yours to make Bitter or sweet for your own life's sake. And your heart shall strengthen or your heart shall break. As you choose while the day doth runt Goldenroil. Chicago TIm-es-HeraM. Far. for across the spreading lea I see the yellow waves that ljll Down through the rifts, from knoll to knoll. Like billows on some golden sea. And deep, deep down inside of ma I seem to feel my very saul Moved by some wondrous witchery That sets the burning teardrops freel Ah, goldenrod. in song set high O'er all the other weeds that grow I, too, would sing thy praise if I, Alas! wera not kept sneezing so If I codfoud tha luck atchool With drier eyes bight look at you!