THE MORNING OfcEGONlAN,? MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1900. '& v&gjomaxu at the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, as second-doss matter. TELEPHONES. Hal Rooms.... ICC Business Office CCT XSED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. 11 (Dost&jre nrpnRlfll. In Advance with Sunday, per month 50 83 Sunday oxeetited. Tar vear ...... 7 00 With Rtlnriotr tiwT.or 0 00 gij. per year .'...... 2 00 tecKiy, per year . . l w wcjsiy, 3 months w My Subscribers Sper Week, delivered. Kundnvs ereeDted.ISc iy, per weok, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. Jflltod StatPR. fjirtp-A nnA TiXfvir-at ;to ia-page paper .............. ...........lc to 22-pace naner ..........2c foreign rates double. KewB or dlocusslon Intended for publication In P Oregonlan should be addressed Invariably pdltor The Oregonlan.' not to the name of Tlndl'Idu4L Letters rcratlng to advertising, fibscrtptione or to any business matter should addressed lmnlv t'Tht. nwimnion" Tbe Oregonlan does not buy poems or rtorle ,w inaivjauais. and cannot undertake to rO Ml any manuscrlots sent tn tt Trithnnt Uritn.- a. No stamps ohould be inclosed for this orpostt. I'nerot Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, nil .Paclflc avenue, Tacoma. Box 355. Oma PoRtnfflra ICastem Business Office Tho Tribune build- pc. now York City; "The Rookery." Chicago; F0 S. C Beckwith Rnr!n1 nr-oni. Wtr Vnrlr. por sale In Snn FranclBco by J. It. Cooper. JiiarKet street, near the Palace Hotel, and Goldsmith Bros.. 5ftT. RtiHur ot-m pior sale in Chteasro by the P. O. News Co.. m-4 jjearoorn street. i (TODAY'S 'WEATHER Showers, warmer; pauieriy -winds. 2OItTXAKDf MOJVDAY, SEPT. 24. PHE HEART OP THE PROBIEM. W-e shall r.ot justify our occupation the Philippines by defining- our title the islands. The paramount Issue in j-espansion controversy is not wheth- lat title -was legitimately trans- d to us, or whether Spain had any le to sell. We shall Justify our oc- apation by our present and future ac- in. Subtle abstractions or legalities 11 not change the actual face of the luestion. We are not Just going into ie Philippines; we are there. The fact lust be faced, nothing else. The real Bsue is whether we are able to gov- grn the Filipinos; -whether we can do o with Justice to them and -with honor ourselves. Even if the subjects of itle and of consent did obtain, they DUld not obtain against the fundamen- al -single issue. If we are fit to govern ie Philippines, we are fit to stay there. we are not Jit to govern them, we lould clear out. Neither is the assertion pertinent that ie Filipinos once had a stable govern- ient, and that we destroyed it What done is done, and antls should rec- ignize the fact Expansionists may mt, -without impairing the integrity their position, that we destroyed that lovernment. The assertion and the oacesslon do not touch the Issue. We ire face to face with the present, and must meet it squarely. We are con- srned more with the future than with ie past If we are fit to govern the (iilplnos, we should do It If not we lould clear out Thus the dispute re- olves itself Into its lowest terms. The iiverging arguments converge to the jediency or inexpediency of spread- fig bej'ond the sea our National Idea" idividual freedom concomitant with ieneflcent government We are to de- ade if we can do this without hazard- lg the genial spirit of that idea. Be- llde this high conception of the issue. fconBent" and "imperialism" reveal leir true character as catchwords. fhich fade into nothingness amid the lear light of rationalism. If we are fit govern the Philippines, we are fit to ty there. If we are not fit to govern lem, we should clear out Abstractions will only cloy the discus- Ion. We must deal with a question expediency. Not what is best to be ione, but what is best to bo done under ie circumstances, must engage us. 7e may reason from the inalienable jhts of man, from the doctrine of Sopular sovereignty, or from the pre- t of consent of the governed, up to ianclusions which show our conduct einous, but our conduct is not thereby ieoQSsarlly made so. We may torture consciences with the supereroga- ;ry indictment that we have shattered ie inalienable rights of a sovereign pie, liave destroyed their firesides have ravaged their country after iq manner of Tarleton in South Caro- Ina, but we cannot be oblivious of the sal fact Order must be established. should look at the issue stripped disconcerting habiliments. If we ! fit to govern the Philippines, we are ft to stay there. If we are not fit to svern, them, we should clear out IHo who doubts the ability" of the lericaa character to evolve a scheme K government adapted to the Philip- lines doubts the most essential attri bute of our National life. -Teutonic snius has always prided itself that it uld meet every political difficulty and Dpe with every political exigency. It always succeeded, in a manner rhich has most conserved personal rerogatlve and spared Individual privi lege. It has not always succeeded in a loment A perplexity which never iefore had been experienced sometimes juld not be solved In a day, or even a generation. By a long course of sEtticui development the English sys- xax has reached its present perfection ich perfection as the human mind only lows perfection. The English sys- 3m, which Includes the American, Is lie only one that has made human ights inalienable, for everywhere else iey, are alienable. One has -merely to vejr tlie organizations of the two furopean governments which make (pretensions of individual equity to see aw their subjects are abused in sailed inalienable rights from the idle to the grave. All imitations of lerlcan and English models have iled of the originals. It is absurd, therefore, to say in the rknesS of bigotry that the Filipinos, fith their narrow scope of political ex- jrleuce, can fashion a pattern of gov- linent superior or equal to the Amer- m. Yet they must do this themselves, sdbe independent thereafter. If they to hare consent" The historical svelopment of the individual idea neg- es the proposition. The record of ie Filipino insurrection conclusively sgatives the proposition. The evolu tion of personal privilege scouts the roposltlon. It is an offense against ra- Sonalism to affirm that we, with all political heritage, are less fit to' induct the work of regeneration than lie crude Filipinos. Wherefore we are lin confronted with the real issue. iut we are fit to govern the islands, id hence we shall stay. lit la wrong to synonyznize independ ence with freedom. The two ideas are as distinct as they possibly could be. Absolute freedom never exists, either with or without independence. There may be lesB freedom in a country which Is independent than in another which Is not Freedom 1b entirely separate from the condition of independence or dependence. The Individual has more freedom in Australia, which is depend ent, than in France or Germany, which are independent Canada is as free as England or the United States, yet It is a subject of Great Britain. Just so, the Filipinos will have as much freedom as they are capable of exercising, nor will dependence upon the United States limit that freedom. They shall be more free under us than they would be under their own dictators, or under a state of anarchy, or under the rule of any other nation. We are fit to give them this freedom; therefore we shall stay. According to the Declaration of In dependence, the adopted shibboleth of the new Democracy, rebellion is justi fiable when a government becomes too bad to be endured. Upon this sentiment that party bases its opinions. It de clares that the Filipino rebellion is jus tified. It asserts that the Filipinos, an incongruous hodge-podge of semi-barbarous races, is a nation, entitled to the political organization of a national state. They, are further entitled to in dependence because of the vicious gov ernment of the United States. We should be grateful to the Democratic party for this grand discovery. We did not know before that our Government was too bad to be endured. Oregon has good cause to withdraw from the Union tomorrow. However, It might be wise first to prove that our Government Is too bad to be endured. Nobody has done this yet; probably has not thought of It The opportunity for some Popu-llst-Democrat to win lasting fame and honor has come. THE MIJ.7TEAPOI.IS SETBACK. At first blush the result of the di rect primary nominations at Minneapo lis is a staggerer. Democrats marked their ballots for the weakest Republican candidate for Mayor and thus Insured his nomination. Loud are the protests of the politicians against the law, and proposals for its repeal and amendment are offered on all hands. The night of the Minneapolis election The Ore gonian obtained a special dispatch from Minneapolis on the working of the primary law. The comment that came was from, the Journal, but was so evi dently partial against the law that some hesitation was felt about print ing it It was printed, however, as it was then too late to. obtain a different report It now appears from the St Paul Pioneer Press, just at hand a paper without superior In reputation for candor and public spirit that the Journal's comment was, as suspected, unfair. The Pioneer Press says: With the exception of this one untoward circumstance, the law and the system demon strated Its success. Those who have been ac customed to make a living- by politics, and those renerally who prefer the excitement of the came to the welfare of the public services or to real popular rule, have not scrupled to declare in prlvato that tho people could not make proper nominations. Loud as they have been In their professions of love for 'the people," they have fought, and will make tho Minneapolis test an excuse for con tinuing to fitrht, a system that takes out of the hands of the politicians and places in the hands of the people the business of nomina tion. But the Minneapolis test showrd that their distrust or pfofecsed distrust was ut terly unwarranted. Jot only did the rank and file show such eagerness to take ad rantnee of their new privllece that the Vote was actually greater than in the regular elec tions of 189S. but they voted Quickly, Indicat ing minds already mnde Up as to the merits of the various candidates with whom a pre liminary canvass had acquainted them, nor did the novelty of the machinery embarrass them. This was shown by the rapidity with which the very early morning vote, which Is gener ally supposed to include a large proportion of those who have little political discrimina tion, was cast. In districts where this vote is heaviest an average of almost one ballot per minute wai checked off. indicating a thor ough understanding of what was expected and no hesitation In marking. . . . Tho Minne apolis law. in a word, oujrht not' to be re pealed, but extended to cover Bt. Paul, Duluth and the other cities and counties of the state. The "one untoward circumstance" to which the Pioneer Press refers was the nomination of Dr. Ames, the objection able Republican aspirant, by Demo cratic votes. It is evident that a direct primary law which ad mits all voters Indiscriminately to the UBe of one blanket ballot contain ing the names of all accredited aspi rants affords the opportunity that was availed of by the Minneapolis Demo crats. There are two ways of answer ing this objection. One is by a pro posal to have voters designated on poll-books by their parties, or else give each voter a separate party ticket such as he shall choose. In this way the chances of Democratic tampering with Republican nominees, or the contrary, would be reduced to a minimum; for if a man had to use an entire party ticket, he would not be apt to deny himself the prerogative of Influencing his party nominees on all the rest of the ticket for the sake of voting for a weak opponent on a single office. But there are objections to this plan so great that the other way of an swering the difficuly la perhaps pref erable. The objections are that the es pionage of the state in such matters must be very sparingly exercised. It is doubtful If the state has any right to make a man declare his party af filiation, If he has any, and It is doubt ful if the state has the right to for bid a man to exercise his choice for candidates by voting a mixed primary ticket It is readily conceivable that freedom in this respect might fre quently be the sole reliance of the com munity to defeat for nomination a pow erful :and corrupt aspirant for office. All the liberty practicable must be al lowed the voter. Otherwise the law's constitutionality and its popularity will be jeopardized. The other way of answering the ob jection naturally raised by the Min neapolis incident is bj' denying Its seri ousness and explaining Its menace away. For the fact unmistakably ap pears from the detailed accounts of the Minneapolis election that the man Ames, while objectionable to politicians, has a noteworthy following among the people at large. The most serious ele ment in the situation, however, is that the political machines of both parties are opposed to the direct primary sys tem, and employed this means to bring it Into discredit This puts the matter in a different light If the bosses think by such cute tricks as thlB to over come public sentiment In favor of di rect nominations, they are likely to find themselves In error. Nothing could show this fact more forcibly than the conclusion of the Pioneer Press that the Minneapolis system should be ex tended over the whole of Minnesota. The Minneapolis election, therefore, shows us just what we knew before' that is, that the direct primary reform .must expect to contend with the most determined struggles of politicians to prevent its realization. All sorts of open arguments will be urged against It All sorts of concealed efforts to cir cumvent it will be made by the offer of bogus bills at the legislature, osten sibly for primary reform, but in reality for perpetuation of the present machine rule. The Oregonlan warns the people of the state and the members of the legislature to be on their guard against these specious schemes, and when the time comes it will ask the people and the Legislature to support a genuine reform bill. Very little open opposition, is to be expected. The task will be to discover and expose the schemes of the reform's r"eal enemies but pretended friends. ANTHRACITE COMPLICATIONS. The anthracite coal strike is no ex ception to the general rule that prob lems of this sort are too complicated to be settled by a simple wave of the hand. Questions of public policy are simple only to the simplermlnded. It Is not sufficient, as regards- corpora tions, to shout "Down with the trusts!" or, as regards our responsibilities In the Philippines, to cry "Imperialism" and run away. Publlo sympathy is with the miners in the anthracite difficulties so long as violence is aVoIded, and is probably right But the questions of detail involved are many and compli cated, admirably adapt themselves to arbitration, though they confuse the candid mind and prove that even where the best Intentions exist on both sides, friction at innumerable points of con tact is hard to allay. Perhaps the best-known cause of dis agreement 1b weight of a ton. The mines sell 2240 pounds for a ton, where as the miners are compelled to mine perhaps 3500 pounds in order to pro duce 2240 pounds of screened coal. The miners receive no pay, nominally, for the waste material mined but thrown away. The equity of the case, then, may not necessarily be that the price per pound now accruing to the min ers for the 2240 pounds net shall be ex tended over the whole 3500 pounds, net and waste. It is obvious that a price can be agreed upon for the 2240 pounds that, while not precisely accurate, shall be on the average fair. It Is not a mat ter to be settled off-hand, but to be reached by mutual agreement The miners are compelled to pay the owners $2 75 a keg for powder, which they profess to be able to buy for $1 50 a keg. This Is certainly wrong. But when It is explained that .this rate on powder is an intimate part of the ar rangement involving also the wage "scale, the question' at once passes from the simple to the complex. The owner's contention, moreover, Is that freedom of miners to buy powder wherever they choose would be likely to result in pur chase of Inferior and dangerous pow der, so the question gains a further com plication from admixture of a matter of public policy. The miner's demand that the com pany hire its own shovelers seems flaw less on its face, but the claim is made by the owner that the practice of the mlnere themselves hiring the shoveler and paying him was Instituted at the miner's own instance, because a lazy shoveler would Impede the miner's work and preventhiseaifrtlng aft his full capacity. The price of .the shov eler's pay, it is explained has already been allowed to the miners. The company store is an unmitigated injustice, for which there Is no de fense, and the matter, of the company doctor Is one of policy, on which no bitter disagreement need be kept up, if each side is open to reason. We have cited these details, Which are more fully explained In another col umn on this page, not for the purpose of discrediting the miners demands, which in the general .view resolve themselves Into a desire for increased pay and greater freedom, nor to pre sent the side of the owners, who seem singularly regardless of publlo opinion and public rights, but simply to show that the question is one calling for calm investigation, and not for violence on one side or cold-blooded indifference on the other. The efforts of disinterested persons of influence to compel accept ance of arbitration by both parties to the controversy should be pushed un remlCtlngly to a successful end. To permit this fearful struggle to continue Indefinitely will be a crime against our vaunted civilization. AW AFFECTIONATE TRIBUTE. The Albany Democrat thinks It has sufficiently answered The Oregonian's position on trusts when It has quoted Mr. Hanna to a different effect If the Democrat thinks The Oregonlan is in any way bound or affected by what Mr. Hanna says, or that It undertakes to stand sponsor for his opinions, or that Its views In general are those Incul cated by Mr. Hanna, it might profit ably consult some of its Republican ex changes. There is a great deal of Re publican foolishness In the Hanna press, and tha. It Is not faithfully re produced in The Oregonlan is a source of rage and grief to the Hanna press. In jret more pitiable case, however, are the Bryanlte organs, who resent not finding in The Oregonlan the clap-trap they are accustomed to deal with In Republican machine papers. Their only resource In this baffled state is to Im pute to The Oregonlan what it never said, or else to make a puerile attempt to confound it with" the .utterances of Hanna. This Is a party exigency .which may provoke pity, but not wrath. The truth lies somewhere between the Ex tremes of party contentions, but this Is a fact not calculated to appease the rage at The Oregonlan which Is shared In about equal degree by our Repub lican and our Democratic critics. Be cause unvaried adulation of Hanna and McKlnley Is not the rule In these col umns displeases the Seattle PoSt-In-telligencer just as grievously as it does the Albany Democrat We should apologize to the Democrat, perhaps, for connecting it with a -reference to the Cottage Grove Leader, which indulges this original reflection: The Oreeonlan says it fully Indorses the tariff olanK of the Democratic platform, but whines that Bryan does not talk much oh this subject. Oh, well. Bryan knows Harvey has got his price for supporting Mr. Hanna any way, to what Is the use In wasting his breath on the "desert air"? We take It that this brother Is hun gering and thirsting for a notice, 'and as prosperity has warmed all hearts with a disposition to relieve the ' dis tressed, he shall have It. The fact that The Oregonian's opinions are -its own, and not for sale, and" the further fact that The Oregonlan does" hot now and never dfd 'support Mr. Hanna Is known and acknowledged by all read ers of Intelligence and In all circles of honest criticism, to neither of which classes the Leader is eligible. The Leader evldentljcthlnks every man has his price, and quite" as" evidently has the best ofreasops for thinking so, be cause from seif-conscloUsness there is no appeal. Our boasted freedom of the press has this drawback that It pro vides no punishment for Indecent ex posure. 'f In practical evidence of the revival of prosperity in New England cotton manufacture is the substantial Increase of the capacity for output of the widely known Ann and Hope mills, at Lons 'dale. The number of spindles added is 35,060, so that in T901 there will be a total of 105,000 spindles flying under, one roof. This is remarkable as showing an expansion of prosperity In a district wherein four years-ago-contraction of the cotton Industry was painfully in .evidence, attended by dire forebodings of Its relative extinction through de creased demand. and the rapid grow.th of .cotton manufactures in the South. All the sophistry of Colonel Bryan and his political lieutenants, urging upon the people of the United States the de sirability of a change nln our Industrial policy, cannot offset in the mind of the Intelligent voter, whose memory runs back for the space of four years, the logic of growth as exemplified in this single instance of industrial expansion. And it is but a single instance of a change from Industrial depression to in dustrial activity, that is Verified by thousands of whirring spindles In mills where oppressive silence reigned but now, and in payrolls carrying in aggre gate hundreds of thousands of dollars monthly Into homes shadowed a few years ago by that most bitter of all poverty, the enforced poverty of thrift The authorities of Tale University have opened a labor bureau for the ad vantage of students who have need to earn the whole or a part of their ex penses through college. The plan Is a novel one, and promises to be useful. Already It Is said there are more appli cations filed for students' services than the bureau is likely to be able to sup ply. In connection with this effort it is shown that in the class of 327 men who were graduated from Yale last June about one in five paid a large share of his expenses by his own labor, and one out of every twenty earned the entire cost of his college education. It may well be supposed that men thus equipped with the spirit of independ ence and self-support will carry into their life endeavor an equipment of en ergy and experience that free tuition, so-called in reality education at the ex pense of the taxpayers of the state, since nothing is free does not provide. Education by,.personal effort and self sacrifice cannot fall to prove a help In any career. A gratifying Incident, of Pendleton's grand street carnival -was the visit of Portland' business men, who were roy ally welcomed and apparently niade themselves agreeable; These and kin dred social happenings are strength ening the ties between Portland and the rest of the state. It would be a mistake to suppose, however, that the surround ing country is. developing. new 'traits of good-fellowship and hospitality. Tne fact Is tlje disposition, has been 'there all the time, but it has been a Hard pull hitherto to make both ends meet A man with his nose incessantly at the grindstone can't be very sociable, no matter how he craves companionship. Good times and'ready money have only enabled the latent pioneer spirit of friendliness to reassert itself.1 'May they long continue! The steamship Deutschland, in her recent record-breaking passage across the Atlantic from New York to Plymouth, maintained an average speed of 23.36 knots, or 26.5 mllem per hour. The time of the Voyage was 5 days, 7 hours, 38 minutes. The record of hu man edurance. and suffering in the en gine and fire-rooms will be forever un written. A suggestion of it only was in the utter physical prostration of a number of the men Hwho kept the mighty enginery of the steamship at a top rate of speed during these days and hours in Which she flew across the Atlantic. This is emphatically an age of rapid transit, everything else being sacrificed in the desire to annihilate, space and "get there" ahead of time. Figures showing decrease In the num ber of convicts In the Oregon Peniten tiary must be a Source of gratification to citizens and taxpayers of the state. This Is another evidence of the fact that the state has passed through the pioneer -and boom stages and has be come a settled community. It is pos sible, as Mr. Gilbert says, that chang ing from the fee system to salaries has had bearing on the matter, but it is also possible that the undue eagerness for fees in previous years led to abuses that the penitentiary record in some degree reflected. Unseemly strife and scandal over the text-book contracts for the Washington State publlo schools Indicate that there must be great profit in the business of supplying these books. Perhaps the best way of getting a fair deal for the people is to throw the market open again, as It was before the modern Idea of uniforming the equipment of the schools and the minds of the chil dren got Into such vogue. A Heavy Responsibility. Chicago Chronicle. , A hundred thousand men In the anthra cite mines In Eastern Pennsylvania go out on strike. The very same day the price of coal in Chicago jumps 75 cents a ton. 'The coal in Chicago yards . may have been paid for at a price leaving Chicago dealers a fair profit at the old figures. The price goes up just the same. The dealers may "protect" their regular customers by selling for a time perhaps selling the entire supply for domestic use for the Winter at the old rate. These regular customers are fairly well-to-do fieople, most of whom have already laid n tholr Winter supply. They do not suffer. Those who,.. for any Cause, have been unable to lay lh a sUpply must bleed. It Is the oia lawrtof human life enun ciated lh Palestine neatly 2000 years ago, "To him who hath Bhall be given; from him who hath not shall he taken even that ho hath." While the law is In Some sense lnevit&ble, it is said that it should bo made ,to bear "ith extraordinary se verity by avoidable acts. These who are responsible for thls'strike en the near approach of Winter have much t6 answer for to their own accusing consciences. Can nothing" "be done to piit an end to the barbarous strife between .employers and employed which is the" cause of so much misery? Multitudes will ask this question 'mosi seriously and not a few will feel impelled to demand that this country profit by the example of New Zealand In "compulsory arbitration." in n in Refusal to Arbitrate Is Censurable. ' New York Commercial Advertiser. To the unbiased observer this appears an Ideal case for arbitration. There is disagreement as to the amount of pay increase that is possible in tho present state of the market There is disagree ment as to the extent to which admitted evils prevail. These are almost like facts for a jury. They could be decided justly by any Impartial tribunal put In posses sion of data the companies need not care to conceal, since the Very large pub lic Of their stockholders is -entitled to know them. Public opinion will not ex cuse either operators or Intelligent strike leaders If they let the strike pass into a more acute stage without honest attempt to arbitrate. They will divide a heaw responsibility business responsibility to owners whose property is to be dissi pated, human responsibility Xo workmen whose maintenance is to bo Withdrawn. That both will bo deeply to blame if nt settlement is made is tho most general feeling in relation to the case. Strikes are said to be decided ultimately by public opinion. It is clear that public opinion supports neither Bide of this in its present Btage. It would pass eagerly and strongly to that which made the first sincere and practical move for arbi tration. ' Bryan as Anthor and Critic. Chicago Tribune. It is pleasing to note the naive ap proval with which Mr. Bryan surveys hl3 own handiwork. "The platform adopt ed at Kansas City," he says, ."commands my cordial and unqualified approval." This Is kindly and generous praise for a Critic to bestow upon an author. "It courage ously meets the Issues now , before tho country," he Continues, "and states clear ly and without ambiguity the party's po sition." Such approval from Critic Bryan must be profoundly gratifying to Author Bryan. Praise from any source is sup posed to be sweet to an author, but praise from so high an authority must be espe cially saccharine. Mr. Bryan's criticism of Mr. Bryan's literary production at Kansas City is of a sort that should meet the approval of the higher critics, since it is based on internal knowledge. No man knows more about the inside ap paratus of that platform than Bryan, the critic unless it be ,Bryan, the author. Since It meets the unqualified approval of 'both, it can probably also be accepted by Candidate Bryan. It seems to be a case for bouquets all around. It Is well that Mr. Bryan finds himself thus unani mous, so to speak, for the majority of the rest of the population cannot think highly either of his powers as an author or of his good taste as a self-complacent critic. MEN AND "WOMEN. The death of Max Koner is reported at Ber lin. Koner was one of the six German paint ers to receive the irold medal at the Paris exposition. Max O'Rell. the famous French humorist, . -who has 'been seriously ill at Rhurso, Is gain ing strength, and -wilt soon be. able to return to France. It is greatly fftared, though, that he -will never be quite himself nsaln. Finley P. Dunne, author of the "Mr. Dooley" papers, has resigned as managing: editor of tho Chicago Evening- Journal, and will remove per manently to New York City. Mr. Dunno has been connected with various Chicago news papers for about 15 years. Rev. Dr. Joseph Parker, pastor of thft City Temple, London, Is about to retire from tho ministry. He is the leading Congregatlonalist preacher in England, and has a fame -whloh, llko that of Spurreon and Beechcr, is world .wide. His views are broad. Ho believes in tho stage, which he says "responds to an lntstnct which is Ineradicable." Benjamin Constant, tho French painter, is now busy with , two portraits of tho Princess of "Wales, which he has taken to Paris to fin ish. In this country he is not unknown. About eight years ago, while in Philadelphia, he p alnted the portraits of George W. Chllds and Anthony J. Drexel. They hang on the Walls of the Drexel Institute. Thomas Oliver Colt, who died In New Tork the other day, was a subject of much in terest In medical circles. In boyhood he lost his nose and a part of his face, through a blow from a baseball bat. When ho had al most recovered, the little finger of his left hand was grafted on his face, in place of a nose. Tho finger was placed in position and held there with the hand by means of plaster of parts. When it had grafted is w'as cut off at the middle Joint, and air passages then in serted. The operation was entirely successful. PLEASANTRIES OP PARAGRAPHIAS Bill Wot did 'Any get for picking up the loldy's purse when she dropped it? Jim Six months. Tit-Bits. A Certainty. Playwright Sometimes I doubt whether this. play will be a success. Man ager Nonsense I It has no Slot; It abounds in cheap sentimentality; it is vulgar enough In spots, and the scenery is fine. It can't help but succeed. Life. Judging by Other Instances. 'Tou think we ousrht to undertake the publication of this novel, do you?" asked the head of the publishing house. "Well, I think It would bo a financial success." cautiously replied tho reader. "Why?" "Because It Is written by a zlrl, and deals with subjects of which she ought to know very little." Chicago Evening Post. Not the Conventional Woman. "But I don't know you, madam," the bank cashier said to the woman who had presented a check. But this woman, instead of saying haughtily. "I do not -wish your acquaintance, sltl" mere ly replied, with an engaging Bmlle: "Oh, yes, you do, I think. I'm the red-headed old vlra&o' next door tt you, whoso 'scoun drelly little boys' are always reaching through tho fence and picking your flowers. Whon you started down town this morning your wlfo said. 'Now, Henry, if you want a din ner lit to eat this evenlnc, you'll have to leave me a llttlo money. I can't run this house on the city water and 10 cents a day " "Here's your m6ney, madam," said the cash ier, pushing It toward her and coughing loudly. Chicago Tribune. The Changeless Plays. Baltimore American. I've- wandered to the theater; I'vo been to see the show. I'vo listened to the same old jokes wo heard long years ago. The Villain died tho samo old way hts death was hard and alow The last act sawhis finish, Tom, llko twenty years ago. The heroine She suffered, Tom you should have heard her weep Her hair was tfolden In its hue for peroxide is cheap. She found tho missing well, though, Tom she always did, you know, When we went to tho theater some twenty years ago. The Jokes vere just the same ones, Tom about the mtt-ln-law, Llkowise the Koat, the stovepipe and the female suffrage Jaw. And, yes, they sprung the one about the good old bald-head row. It sounded as It used to( Tom, some twenty years ago. Tho hero struts about the Stage, and hoarsely whispers, "Ah! 1 see it alii" And then tho crafty villain fcnutters, "Bah!" The piny is Just the same, dear Tom, the plot is thickened so. it looks the same as When we went some twenty years ago. The soubrotte Is tho same, old boy she has tho same otd wink. Her cheeks are just bb radiant they have the same soft pink. She's billed as "Little tottle" now and say, She docSn't show Her acre as much ae when she played some twenty yefirs ago. The sons are full bt "Mother, dears," tho star take's all the stage. The Jokes and other dialogue show very little ate. But youngest of the lot, dear Tom, tho soubrette's cheeks still- glow As plnkly as they used to do oomo twenty years ago. li THREE VIEWS OP THE STRIKE- The Ovraer' Side. Intorvlew in Now York Commercial Advertiser. Tho powder question Is a long story. The present price, $2 75 per keg, was fixed after the close of the Civil "War. The mining of anthracite coal Is fraught with many dangers, and in order to lessen tho dangers from firedamp and other gases, It is necessary to adopt every precaution. If the companies were to supply the pow der the miners would bo sure to grow moro or less careless In using It, So tho best Course has been to compel the min ora to. purchase their own powder. They use It with greater care, and uso smaller charges. The companies buy the powder in order to be sure that nothing: but tho best is used. If the men wero to buy It themsplves In the open market they might buy an Inferior grade, and thus cause a great deal of danger. "When the powder scale was fixed powder cost 52 75 per keg. Since then It has been reduced in the open market until now it can bo bought for about Jl 50 per keg. "Wo have several times suggested to our men a re arrangement of the scale. A miner works urtder a wage scale which gives him a net amount per car of cCal. A small car carries about 2 tons. Now, if we wero to reduce the price of powder to $1 CO per keg, wo should have to make a similar reduction in the price paid for a car of mined coal. Therefore, the miners would have the same net salary. Our miners have always refused to readjust the price of powder. They say: "What is the use? "Wo get just a3 much by paying J2 75 as we would if we paid $1 60, so let It go." Regarding the hiring of their own shov elers. The miners work In little cham bers and niches here and there, and have one or two, and sometimes three, shovel ors. to put their coal in the cars. It would be almost Impossible to havo a foreman over each of these gangs, and tho shovelers, being Huns or Poles, would be Inclined to loaf. This would hinder the miner in his work. The miner Is anxious to get out all the cool ho can, and so he says to us: "Pay us the wages you would pay a shoveler, and we will hire them and pay them ourselves. "We'll see that they get tho coal out of the way all rlsht." And we let them hire their shovelers. and pay them the additional amounts. They compel their shovelers to shovel from six to eight cars of coal a day according to the vein they are. working in, and we could not possibly get that much work out of them. Justice for the Miner. Chicago Tribune. The anthracite miners ask that they be allowed to buy powder for themselves at 51 50 a keg, instead of having to pay their employers 52 75 for It. It is true that in the few mines where this is allowed tho wage scale Is lower, but tho miners figure that cheaper powder will add about 10 per cent to their earnings. They ask also that day laborers now paid $1 25 be 'given 51 50. Doubtless they would com promise on a 10 per cent advance. It must be admitted that $1 37 a day Is not too much for the man who leads tho hard, dreary life of a common laborer In a coal mines Nobody else is so poorly paid. In tho bituminous mines 53 is paid for day labor, and the miners are earning: now from 52 0 to 54 a day. Another demand which is made is that the extra amount of coal miners are re quired to deliver to offset wasto shall not excoPd 500 pounds to the ton. Tho min ers complain that thoy are sometimes forced to mine from 2700 to 4000 pounds for a ton, and are often docked exorbit ant amounts for impurities sent out with their coal. It is Impossible to defend such exactions, due either to the orders of the mlneowners or to the attempts of suprlntendents and Inspectors to curry favor with them. The mlneowners have not yielded to these demands, just as they are. Some of them might have done so. perhaps, had It been possible to reach them before tho strike was ordered. Some Of the oper ators were indifferent. Others saw only the fact that a strike would enable them to get higher prices for stocks on hand. Others felt that if there were a strike it would not last Ions. They aro the men who say cold-bloodedly now that "It Is onlv a question of time when tho strlko will Collapse," because the miners havo nothing to live on, and "the moment they aro distressed financially they will re. sume." Mlneowners who decline to consider tho demands of operatives because the latter can be starved out need expect no sym pathy anywhere. They ought to under, stand that they are embarking In a peril ous undertaking when they resort to co. erclon by starvation. Nobody can fore tell this outcome of such a strike as the one which has just begun. Much de pends on the attitude of the mlneowners. Their rapacity and lack of feeling: havo brouirht" on this strike. They can end it by dealing Justly with their employes, who have on their side public sympathy, and who may bo of such tough fiber that it will not be so easy to starve them Into surrendering. Really Mean Increnned Wngei. New Tork Journal of Commerce Several of the demands of the striking anthracite miners, which are not so ex pressed, are nevertheless domands for Increases of wages. The avowed demand for Increases ranges frCm 20 per cent for the lowest-priced laborers to 10 per cent for those whose wages are highest. There is, however, a concealed demand for 50 per cent addition of wages in the demand that the men shall be paid on the basis of 2240 pounds to the ton instead of on the basis of 3360 pounds. On their behalf It is asked why the men should be paid according to one weight and the coal sold according to another weight. The par ticular unit of weight does not affect tho laborer or the consumer; If tons were larger the consumer would have to pay more, and If the tons were smaller the Consumer would get each ton for less, though ho would not get his "Winter's sup ply for less. The rate of wages is based upon various conditions, chiefly the prices tho mining companies can get, and there Is no relation between the ton the miner Is paid for and the ton the consumer pays for except the relation which the cost of mining a given quantity of coal bears to the money obtained for that quantity of coal, whatever number of tons it may be called. The Increases in wages demanded are increases for the men who are paid by the day. The men who are paid by the ton demand an increase of 0 per cent by demanding that they shall receive the same amount for mining 2240 pounds that they now are paid for mining 3360 pounds. The question is whether the mining companies can and will pay so large an Increase. It Is not denied that tho earnings of coalmlners are very small, but they can get no more than the amount the coal will sell for less the cost of transportation, the Incidental costs of production, the Interest on the invest ment and a reasonable profit. The miners have little reason- for com plaining of a deduction of 50 or 75 cents a month from their wages for the ser vices of the company doctor, whether sick or well. If they were sick or Injured they could not get medical attendance for any such rate, and If they can be sure of getting a doctor when they need him by paying 56 or 59 a year, whether they heed him or not, they are more fortu nate than many worklngmen are. The company store has already been legis lated against by the State of Pennsyl vania, and is found no more among the mines of the large corporate operators: It Is said to be limited to the private operators, and its complete suppression cannot justify a general strike. The complaint against the company butcher may be well founded, but the complaint of overcharging is so easily made by customer's who do not pay cash that there Is room to suspect that this grievance has been exaggerated. An examination of the demands of the miners will confirm. the suspicion that the chief point at issue is the recognition by the operators of tho Miners' Union. NOrE AND COMMENT. Hobson but he is- a closed' Incident. Bryan Is more likely to be left than President. A census in Seattle Is -worth two la "Washington. Bryan will havo hard work to keep his 1S96 vote from Omahaing: The biggest fish 7nthe Chinese puddla was the one that got away. Chicago has a smoke inspector. Whoa he Is allowed a few thousand deputies he. will take up the candidate's clgar A California editor was robbed of 530 the other day. Tho man the 530 belong to is entitled to general sympathy. It Is understood from Mr. Bryan's let- ter the other day that he Is willing to become a candidate for President. If the porter would only ride in tho. baggage-car, Pullman passengers woald never need to see a train-robber. We get a rose with every thorn. Austir" is writing some more poetry, but fot- tunately, so is James "Whitcomb Riley. Trade unions resolute against foreign pauper labor, and then resolute with sympathy when pauper foreign labor goes out on a strike. An Indiana man tvas told by an anget the other day that when he was golngr to die, and he expired at t,ho appointed time. There Is nothing miraculous about: this. Many a Sheriff has done the samei thing: Among others summoned to serve on a jury In the State Circuit Court a few days ago was "W. H. Courtney, an old time citizen, who has a fair share of tha ready wit possessed by hosts natives oC the Emerald Isle. "While he was being; examined as to his qualifications for a Juryman, he was asked if he knew any of tho lawyers present He said he be lieved ho know them all. He was then asked if ho had ever had any business connection with any of them. Ho glanced over the somewhat lengthy list of legal practitioners present, and with a shake of the head replied: "No; and I never want to." This is about o.n a par with the reply of another old-time citi zen of Irish birth, who,, on being treated by a friend to some specially fine old whisky, swallowed two-thirds of a tum bler full without winking. "When asked If he wanted some water he replied: "Wather no; there's wather enough in that whisky." A citizen of Portland a number of years ago purchased a large tract of land In a fertile section of rolling land something; less than 50 miles from this city. Ho planted out a large apple orchard and a peach orchard. A few years later ha was sending friends here sample boxes of his peaches which were as fine as any ever seen in this market. Several days ago a friend met him and Inquired how his peach crop turned out this year. Ho. said he had no peach crop, as he had, pulled up all his peach trees. "When, asked If his peaches had proved a fallura he replied that they had not. Tha trouble was that they wero too good and some people io that region became so fond of them that they stole them alL Hl3 orchard was out of sight from his house, and people from a distance, great or small, invaded his place from tha rear at night or on a foggy day, with horses and wagons and actually harvested his crop and carted the fruit away. On. this point he had the peach trees pulled up and burned and now the thieves ara mourning because they practically killed the goose which laid golden eggs. The melancholy days are come, the saddestl of the year. The lawnmower's lying Idle, but tho steam wood saw is here. It starts its rest-destroying work before tho break of day And saws and sawn and saws and sawa and saws and saws away. Its rasping sound's enough to make your flesh get up and creep. And when Its whirr begins you know it's good, . and off with sleep. And to your tortured, frantic soul to add another sting. You lie there and reflect that you are paying; for tho thing. Tou presently will hear the sound of oft repeated blows r Upon your door; the steam saw men have come to get your hose. For their machine must work, they spy, and therefore it must drink. And so you go and get the hoie and sttflo what you think. They go away, but soon leave off their coun terfeit of toll. And rouse you from a doze to aslc it they, can get some oil. Tou ask them It they'd like to have you come and saw th wood, ;But they reply full solemnly, they do not think you could. Perhaps you saunter out of doors, and ser with rising Ire. For every stick of wood they saw, there's two go In th Are. ,,j,, And wonder nt how your patience so unfail ingly endures. For all the wood, both sawed and burned, is that is once wns your. Tour not a vicious man. perhaps, and do not like to see A fellow mortal mangled up to a mtnuto degree. But still in watching them you feel you'd' bo re'olced if you Could put one sawyer in the Are, and saw his "pard" In two. A teamster who Is Inclined to bo "sporty" and is anxious to gamble on eveTy possible proposition, always when he buys oats, stumps the dealer to judge the weight of the sack for a wager of 25 cents. The dealer, who handles mora. sacks of oats than his customer. Inva riably wins the quarter, to the chagrin of the betting man. Ono day not long ago the dealer saw his customer prowling around the ware house and Imagining that he was up to some mischief, kept an eye on him. Tho teamster found a billet of wood which had been left over from last "Winter, and after weighing It carefully, put it back against the wall. Next day he came in to buy a sack of oats, and this time he was stumped to Judge the weight. Ho said he was not at his best judging sacks of oats, he could do better on other things. He looked around and finally no ticing the old chunk of wood, said ho would bet on judging the weight of that. The dealer said "all right," and put up his quarter. The teamster said ha did not want to bet a quarter, and in sisted on betting 52 50. Finally the dealer reluctantly put up 52 50, and they marked the weight of the chunk. Tho teamster Judged it about three pounds too high and the dealer half a pound too low, so the latter pocketed the stakes. The teamster seemed dumbfounded. Ho looked over the scale and said thera must be something wrong with It. Ha was assured that the scale was all right, and finally in support of his Idea, stated that he had weighed the chunk of wood the day before and It had weighed threa pounds more. "Ah!" said the dealer, "but you did not weigh It after I had sawed three pounds off It." The teamster had no more to say. and hereafter will . not be so ready to back his Judgment.