THE MCVRNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1901 . Entered at tho Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Booms.... 160 Business Office.... CG7 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance Sally with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year 7 50 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year -J w The Weekly, per year .... 1 W The "Weekly. 3 months W To City Subscribers ... Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays exceptea.loc Daily, per week, delivered. Sundays lncludcd-liUe POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada &nd Mexico: 10 to 10-page paper lc 1) to 32-page paper - Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication in The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly 'Editor The Oregonlan," not to the namo of Any individual. Letters relating to advertis ing, subscriptions or to any business matteu Should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 035, Tacoma Postoffice. Eastern Business Office, 43, . 45, 47, 48, 40, Tribune building. New York City; 4C0 "Tnu Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For sale is San Francisco by J, K. Cooper, 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotol; Gold smith Bros., 236 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street. Foster & Orear, Ferry News ctand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, C39 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, lOtt 8a. Spring street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., Kl7 Dearborn street. Far sale la Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street. For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 7T W. Second South street. For sale in Ogden by W. C Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street On file at Buffalo, N. T., In the Oregon ex hlblt at the exposition. For sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Eb feett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & fendrlci, 000-012 Seventh street. appear entirely from public view before the fraud could be detected." It is added that in private hands the post office "would never be suffered to con tinue under existing haphazard meth ods, which are largely the product of polities'. For even yet, the service de pends largely on the mutations of Na tional politics, notwithstanding the con siderable progress that has been made with the merit system. Observe, moreover, that there is no necessity of rendering the system self supporting. It cannot 'therefore be a model for those who would extend the industrial functions of government. It is not in fact an industry; It produces nothing and the taxpayers make up the annual deficits. Nothing therefore could be more erroneous, more at fault, than the habit of using the postoffice as an Illustration of what might be accom plished under a general system of mu nicipal, state or National collectivism. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and cooler, with Westerly winds. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 90; minimum temperature, 61; pre cipitation, nonet PORTLAXD, "WEDXESDAY, AUGUST 7. his source: OP WEAKNESS. The McKinley Administration has many points of excellent achievement, but It has one point of most damaging weakness. Affairs of diplomacy, finance, the Navy and (since Alger's retirement) the Army have been admir ably handled by efficient Secretaries; 'but there Is one very important matter that cannot be delegated to Secretaries, and this Is the matter of appointments. The President's amiability, -which pre vents him from saying "No" at oppor tune times, is a prolific source of trou ble, but the main difficulty is in the method the President adopted at the beginning of his first term and has pursued -with fidelity throughout. The -watchword of the McKinley method of appointments has been ma chine rule. Wherever he found a ring in apparent ascendancy In a state, pos sessed of the offices and party organiza tion, he has recognized it to the exclu sion of all other persons, influences and community interests -whatsoever. To these Republican rings throughout the country the President can refuse noth ing. To them he has turned over the Army, the Federal appointees through out the country, and the civil service at "Washington. This "was not Cleve land's "way, nor Harrison's. Their effort -was to ascertain the needs of the vari ous offices, large and small, and find the men to fit them. Thus they strengthened their Administration and tHelr party with the people, whereas McKinley has weakened both. A prime qualification -with an execu tive is the ability to say "No." Espe cially In the Presidential office, encoun tering, as it does, the tremendous pres sure of unscrupulous political rings, this ability to say "No" is all-important because it alone can stand against de moralization of the public service. In its default, we shall see just "what we have under McKinley sacrifice of the Army to spoilsmen, an odious "Federal brigade" in every state, wholesale vio lation and scorn of the civil service laws, leniency for offenders and par dons for bank-wreckers. A significant commentary on the civil service situa tion is afforded by an article from the New York Times, reprinted in another column on this page. The President's method is not only bad for the country but it defeats the end aimed at. He thinks to intrench bis party, but he only "weakens It His course Is natural to him, and he will doubtless pursue It to the end of his incumbency. By that time he will leave his party In a very unenviable eltuation. It is already sadly demor alized through his policy of leading it from the rear, and even now it looks forward to the approaching Congres sional elections and the greater events of 1904 with misgiving and justifiable alarm. In conse quence of his failure to strengthen it through firm leadership, It looks for ward to a most desperate effort to maintain itself, notwithstanding the brilliant record of Its chief departments it "Washington. THE NEW RECIPROCITY. Reciprocity is not tariff reform. It has a claim to high regard for the ene mies it has made, and that is all. Those who will urge it upon the ensuing Con gress are not sincere in anything but their devotion to private and partisan ends. There is reciprocity and reciprocity. One Is a legitimate device of some real capacity for good if intelligently em ployed, and of this sort of reciprocity there are some sincere adherents. But the reciprocity with which we shall now have to deal is a weak and spurious Invention, advocated by protected in terests as a means of augmenting their own gains. Congress has refused serious consid eration both to tariff reform of the Babcock order and to reciprocity of the Kasson school. But popular disap proval of this course is finding loud and Indignant voice. Something must be done. It will be dangerous for the Re publicans to go into the Congressional elections of 1902 without the semblance of an effort to reduce the Iniquitous protection afforded to the industrial trusts by existing tariffs. The Repub lican leaders see this, and they have decided on their course, which is dis honest and should be Ineffectual. The programme is to" deprecate tariff reform and to tie up with reciprocity. The proposal Is for a system of letting in free such goods as we do not now produce in return for concessions by foreign nations on our manufactures. It is a hoax. The goods we do not pro duce are on the free list now. They have never been protected because no lobby has been sent to Washington for that purpose. We protect the in dustrial trusts, but we give them free raw material except in such things as are raised by others among us also clamorous for protection. Coffee is free and tea has always been free except under the war revenue tax. The great tropic staples of dyewoods, fertilizers, quinine, sulphates and salts, aromatic oils, licorice, indigo, iodine, crude rub ber, gutta percha, jute, manlla, phos phates, sulphur, turpentine, are on the free list. We tax sugar, hides, matting, rice, etc., because they come into com petition with home products. The num ber of goods not produced here and now taxed, available for this bogus reci procity programme, is Infinitesimal. Protectionists are for this form of reci procity because it keeps the word of promise to the ear and breaks it to the hope. The new and spurious reciprocity has another basis, and more( definite. It represents the desires of the industrial trusts and the Administration's perpet ual surrender to those trusts. Tariff reform, honest and actual, would cut down the duties which secure a mo nopolized home market to the Immense body of rail, wire, hoops, machinery, lo comotive and implement corporations that are based primarily upon iron and steel. These are strong in Ohio, whence come McKinley and Hanna. They are strong in Pennsylvania, where the steel trust reigns. They are strong in Illinois, for whose manufacturers Senator Cullom speaks In yesterday's rHsnntfihes. Through Morgan and Rockefeller they are strong in the great railroad combinations, identified in countless "ways with the industrial trusts. It is well for the country to appre hend thus early what these giant cor porations will demand and the Presi dent will recommend in his forthcoming message. They will propose to reduce the tariff through reciprocity in such a way as to hold the home markets for the trusts and secure to them entranced into foreign markets at whatever nec essary sacrifice of other interests. What among these other Interests will be of fered for sacrifice does not yet appear. Sugar and fruits, hides and wool, are likely to be among the first attacked. Whatever will minister to the profits of manufacturers who no longer need pro tection will be selected for slaughter. But the proposed victims will make themselves heard, and will not be easily silenced.' How well the country re gards a programme of free raw ma terials and protected manufactures can be gathered from the protest that went up from producers everywhere over the original draft of the Wilson bill in 1894. rlff-on tho upper Delaware, and a two-pouna bass will outfight. Outsklrmlsh. outgeneral any fish of his Inches that plows any old kind of water. And when It come3 to original devices and ingenious tricks to mystify and fool the angler, tfie black bass can give cards and spades to the most expert conjurer, and beat him out "hands down." Anglers who go in search of black bass will need to remember that it is a most capricious fish In its appetite. Some days It will rise to a fly, and other days the live minnow is the most killing bait. Sometimes the helgramlte, popularly known among bass fishermen as the dobson. Is the most fascinating lure, and at other times the black bass will take the common earthworm, or "angleworm," most greedily, and large strings are sometimes taken by using a bit of pork rind for bait, the bass evi dently mistaking the white of the pork rind for a small fish. Trolling for bass with a spoon is practiced in lakes, ponds and rivers, but It is poor sport compared with taking bass with fine tackle and a trout rod and reel. Of course, in using fine tackle ji landing net is Indispensable, for a bass that does not exceed two pounds is a far stronger fish than a trout of the same weight. If a fine tackle is not used, good sport can be obtained by using a stout bamboo rod wtth a reel, and a line and hook strong enough to hold the fish while landing him. A landing net Is desirable in any event, for a bass that exceeds 2 pounds is a very powerful and artful fish. The small-mouthed black bass. broiled or baked, Is an excellent fish for the table. The flesh is firm, well fla vored; there are few small bones, and next to the whlteflsh and the trout the small-mouthed black bass Is the best fresh-water fish In the waters of the United States. It is a far less bony fish than the pike or pickerel, or wall-eyed pike. Its flesh is firmer and better flavored, and as a game fish that fights for its life from start to finish there is no fish of its weight or inches that com pares with it. When a black bass feels the hook It leaps at least two feet out of the water in its efforts to get free; It will swim for the boat to make the line slack; It will sulk at the bottom; It will make for a rock or a root in or der to snag the line. Altogether, no fish that swims affords more sport to a genuine angler. there is no relief there the moment you quit the seaside, while the Summer heat in Western Oregon is never severe enough to make a general exodus to the seaside a necessity, as It is to those who can afford it in the North Atlantic States." Some day there will be quite an addition to the transient if not the permanent population, of Oregon, be cause of its delightfully cool Summer climate compared with that of the rest of the country. The New Tork Journal of Commerce and a number of other reliable trade journals in the East are printing the following: State Grain Inspector Wright, of "Washing ton, has been over the state and says the wheat crop will be 33,000,000 bushels. So long as State Grain Inspector Wright keeps his wonderful crop esti mates to himself, or limits their circu lation to localities where he is known, but little harm can come from them. When they are given circulation by reputable papers, however, they are more likely to cause damage. Last year at this time Inspector Wright es timated the Washington crop at 30,000, 000 bushels, and his state actually har vested less than 25,000,000 bushels. That extra 5,000,000 bushels which never ex isted or never should have been In cluded in an estimate were sufficient to cause shipowners to hold tonnage at ex travagant rates. The estimate of 33, 000,000 bushels for the coming crop is worse than that of last year, and is fully 6,000,000 bushels higher than is warranted by the facts in the case. It will require sixty large vessels to carry 6,000,000 bushels of wheat to market, and the addition or withdrawal of a fleet of sixty ships from this section means a difference of several cents per bushel in the freight rates. The Wash ington farmers should muzzle Grain In spector Wright. He is costing them more than 75 cents per carload on their grain by the circulation of such rot as a 33,000,000-bushel crop estimate. NOT AX EXAMPLE. They who want to pu3h the Govern ment of our country into socialistic schemes continually cite the postoffice as a favorite illustration of the manner In which Government can do it, when it tries. But the postoffice is not a pro ductive Industry. It Is not even com pelled to earn Its own support, and in fact never has earned It. It by no means follows that because an under taking of this kind can be carried on, through the Government, the great pro ductive industries, as iron, steel and Bhoemaking, could be carried on through the same agency. But is the postoffice, as a National undertaking, really successful? They who are so fond of citing it as proof and example of what the Government can do would do well to read what the Auditor of the Treasury for the Post office Department says In the North American Review. He tells us that the Bervice "swarms with Incongruities, temptations and perils." There is abun dant opportunity for heavy embezzle ments and defalcations, which In fact are constantly occurring. Opportuni ties for forgery are numerous, and for geries outright, as well as successful attempts to "raise" .money orders, are of frequent occurrence. "Under the practice of paying money orders at of fices other than those at which they are drawn," says the Auditor, "an evil-disposed person could buy ten $100 orders at the New Tork office payable In Phil adelphia; hold them for a short time; apply for and procure duplicates: pre sent the latter at the Philadelphia of fice and receive payment; then Immedi ately collect his original orders at Bal timore, and have abundant time to dis- A GREAT GAME FISH. Something has been said from time to time in The Oregonlan, pro and con, concerning the merits of the black bass, meaning by that the small-mouthed black bass of the North Atlantic -States and the Middle West, and not the large mouthed variety, known as the "Os wego bass," a far Inferior fish both In the sport it affords the angler and In its value for the table. The small mouthed black bass is found in the St. Lawrence and all the Great Lakes; In Lake Champlain and Lake George; In the Delaware, the Susquehanna and the Potomac. It has been introduced Into all the lakes and ponds of the Mid dle West; abounds In the fishing waters of Minnesota, and is regarded by ex perienced anglers as the finest game fish in the country. The relative game qualities of the brook trout and the black bass have been the subject of long argument between, a good many good anglers, but the difference of opin ion is generally due to the fact that the anglers have not been familiar with both trout and black bass, or at least have not angled for black bass with the same fine tackle used In catching trout. The latest sportsman to confess judgment in favor of the black bass is Kit Clarke, who writes the New York Sun: For years, with tongue and pen, I maintained that the trout was champion among fresh water finny fighters. I desire to "withdraw my affidavit' chew the cud, "take water" and confess my error. It has been my good fortune to "lift" whole heaps of trout In various quarters and from many waters of this beautiful world, but my experioncc with black bass In swift waters during the last four years fills me full of the belief that he Is the greatest game fish that A HOT WAVE. The records of the fatal heat from which the whole country east of the Rocky Mountains and north of the line of the Ohio and the Potomac suffered last month ought to make our people thankful that we never experience a hot wave of equal duration and Inten sity. In the terrible hot spell of last month 250 people died in New York City in one day as the direct result of Sum mer heat. This was 109 more deaths than the highest heat mortality for any single day ever before recorded, the highest previous record being the 11th of August, 1896, when the number of deaths from heat was 141. The hot weather of 1896 lasted from August 6 to August 13. inclusive, and in this whole period there were 79 fewer deaths than occurred in New York City on the 2d ult. There have only been two occa sions in thl thirty years that the Weather Bureau has been in existence when the mortality from Summer heat for New York City has approached the figures of this year. One was in Au gust, 1896, "just mentioned, and the other, in 1876, lasted from June 24 to July 21, Inclusive. There was no sin gle day in all the twenty-eight days of torrid weather of ,1876 In which the mortality from hea't came near the rec ord of July 2. The highest temperature In the hot week of 1896 was 94, for New York City, while the highest tempera ture in the recent hot spell that scorched New York City from June 27 to July 5 was 99.8. The record of the heat for other lead ing cities of the country that were struck by the hot wave is appalling when we contrast it with the record of hot days in Portland. In Philadelphia the first two days of July the mercury rose to 102 degrees and 103 degrees, re spectively. In Boston the record for July 3 was 96; Baltimore's record for the first two days of July was 103. The highest record for Cincinnati was 106 degrees on July 22, but there were four other days in the month when the mer cury in that city reached 100 degrees. On the 10th and the 21st of July the mercury in Chicago marked 102 degrees. At St. Louis the highest record was 108 degrees, July 24, but there were ten other days when the thermometer fur nished the following terrible record: July 1, 100 degrees; July 5, 100 degrees; July 10. 104 degrees; July 11. 104 de grees; July 12. 102 degrees; July 17, 100 degrees; July 20, 100 degrees; July 21-22-23, 106 degrees each day. The record of Kansas City for the month is the worst of all, for there were twenty days In the month when the thermom eter did not fall below 100 degrees. Theie were two days "when the record was 106 degrees; five days when 104 de grees was recorded, and six days when the mark was 102 degrees. For the month of July the City of Philadelphia had but four days when the maximum temperature fell below 80 degrees, and New York had but six such days. Phil adelphia had twelve days when the thermometer went above 90 degrees, and New York had ten such days. The City of St. Paul had a record of 104 degrees for July 24, a record of 102 de grees for July 20, and a record of 100 for July 23. St. Paul had twelve days when the thermometer went above 90 degrees, and but six days when the maximum temperature fell below 80 degrees. These figures show that Chi cago and St. Paul had a dally maxi mum temperature about the same as that of Philadelphia and New York City. The hot days in Portland thus far were June 16, 17, 18, when the thermom eter rose to St degrees, 86 degrees, 87 degrees. Since that date we had no hot days until last Saturday, when the thermometer marked 85 de'grees; on Sunday It rose to 92 degrees, and on Monday It marked 91 degrees for max imum heat. In the whole month of July there was but one warm day, July 28, when 82 degrees was the maximum heat. These are remarkable figures, as illustrating the delightful character of our Summer climate. The day will come when hundreds of people will seek refuge from the dreadful Summer heat that scourges the whole country east of the Rocky Mountains and north of the Ohio and Potomac line in the cool cli mate of Western Oregon and Washing ton. Of course, those who are near tne great seaside resorts of New England and New Jersey will not seek the Pa cific Coast, but there will be hundreds from the heat-scorched trans-Mississippi States who will some day seek the Oregon and Washington coast as a Summer resort. In event of a hot wave at the East there Is absolutely no relief short of the great open sea beaches of The Hamburg-American line Is to build at Belfast a 21,000-ton steamer for the New York service. This is larger by 4498 tons than the Deutschland. The new steamer Is to be built on the model of the great freighters Pennsylvania and Pretoria, and she is not expected to log over 17 knots, but for a combi nation freight and passenger steamer she will be without a rival. Of course the great flyers will get the bulk of the first-class passenger traffic. The rul ing passion of the present age is travel, while the desire to "get there" is a constantly Increasing mania. Steam has about been pushed to the extreme limit 'of Its controllable power in re sponse to this demand, and now all eyes are turned toward the flying, ma chine, looking to an increase in speed. But for the combined freight and pas senger traffic the newly projected steamer will be a wonder, and she will find plenty to do without bidding for the patronage of the restless class whose anxiety to start Is only exceeded by their anxiety to reach their destination. WANTED BACKBONE. New York Times. We venture at this moment to call the attention of tne President of the United States to the extreme deslrabllly and even necessity of a backbone if he wishes to preserve an Important part of the .Governmental organization for which he is responsible, and to trne maintenance of which he is pledged by his express prom, lses and by his public duty, t The laws and rules relating to appoint ments and promotions in the. civil service are intended to enforce what Is known as the merit system. The essential require ment of that system is that selections shall be made of the best applicants and that application shall be free and open. The test of merit that has been found by experiment extending over a long period and a great variety of posltSona to be the most practical and the fairest la the test of competitive examinations open to all, followed by probationary service. It Is the testimony of responsible officers of thp Government during the past 18 years that this test has been efficient in direct and exact proportion to the fair ness and good faith with which It has been applied. Since Mr. McKinley came Into office, there has been a steady and progressive tendency on the part of his subordinates to evade this system and to make appoint ments and promotions for political or personal favoritism. This tendency Is dis tinctly due to the fact that Mr. McKinley has appointed his immediate subordinates In great degree for like motives of politi cal favoritism. The consequences have been unfortunate and discreditable. It Is very desirable that the tendency shall be checked. It is demoralizing the service. It is destroying accountability. It is de basing the standard of efficiency and of fidelity. It" is bringing the President him self Into disrepute and encouraging the politicians to regard his promises made to the whole country as of little worth and their own hold on him as stronger than his conscience can resist. The only one who can put a stop to this is the President himself. The only way In which he can do it is by stiffening his backbone and firmly refusing any longer to tolerate the devices of the politicians. He cannot be unaware of them. They have been brought patiently and definitely to his attention in numerous instances during a long time. In the language of the street, an immediate and decisive re form is "up to" him. King Edward is an intensely prac tical man. This has been shown by the manner in which he has disposed of relics of his family gathered through out her long life and fondly cherished by the late Queen; the opening up, fur nishing and refurnishing rooms long sacred to the memory of the dead in the eagerness shown to discard all out ward semblances of mourning. In fur ther evidence of this characteristic was the undisturbed manner in which the King went abour planning for his own and others' pleasure while his sister's death was hourly expected. Sentiment was evidently left out in his make-up, or, perhaps, having been fed upon it in season and out of season for "many years, he grew tired of the diet and re pudiated it when, at "the advanced age of 60 years, he became for the first time "his own man." Two tragedies have recently occurred In Idaho of a type against which it is Impossible to Interpose defense. In each case a maniac, until then un known to be such, suddenly turned murderer. In one case a prominent citizen of Rathdrum, Judge Brady, was shot and died a few days thereafter from the effects of the wound; in the other, Moscow lost a worthy and useful citizen, Dr. W. W. Watklns, through the-maniac's murderous purpose. The community can only deplore events of this character, being powerless to fence against them, and scarcely seeing its way to punish the perpetrator of such acts of sudden fury. Perplexity on this score was ended In the latter case, however, by the killing of the insane man, who, with the weapon that had already proved so deadly in his hands, defied arrest. Wise people will remain as nearly sta tionary while the hot weather lasts as is compatible with the simplest re quirements of business and ordinary domestic duties. Moving about to find a "cool place" is a delusion, and iced drinks are a snare. The coolest "place about one's own domicile is the best place when the mercury is dancing among the 90s, and wise people, If they were not already ensconced at the coast In anticipation of the August tem peratures, will eschew crowds and take things as easy as possible, always re membering that to chafe and worry because of the weather intensifies any discomfort that heat and humidity con spire to inflict. San Francisco's maritime interests have suffered an uncomfortable setback in the Treasury Department's r,ullng that newly arrived Chinese cannot be employed to unload ships, for fear of violating the exclusion act. Doubtless much of the cargoes will spoil, but the poetic justice of the harvest may not escape attention from the reapers. Admiral Dewey was "too busy" to take part In the ceremonies of laying the corner-stone of a pedestal to himself In New Jersey. The Admiral has been married long enough now to boss the ranch himself. President Is for Reciprocity Washington Corr. Brooklyn Eagle. An Ohio politician who Is very close to the President and Senator Hanna, and who has just returned from a visit to his home In the Buckeye State, Informs me that in his coming message to Congress President McKinley will devote a large amount of space to advocating the pas sago of the reciprocity treaties now before the Senate, and that he will urge in the most emphatic language that action on these treaties be taken at the earliest pos sible date. My Informant says that the President appears to be more interested In this question nt the present time than In any thing else, and that in conversations he has held with the statesmen of his party who have visited him at Canton he has dwelt on this subject to the exclusion of almost everything else. The question of the action on the reciprocity treaties must not be taken to mean that the President favors any general tariff legislation, but that he believes that new conditions that have arisen and are arising as the out come of our war with Spain and the threats of certain nations of Europe to pass tariff acts aimed at the United States have rendered absolutely necessary the negotiation of reciprocity treaties. The President, it is said, thoroughly un derstands the attitude of certain Senators, particularly a group of New England men. In opposition to these instruments, and he is aware of the great difficulty in ob-tnlnlnc- for them a two-thirds vote. Not withstanding this, he proposes to bring to bear upon Congress the full weight of the Administration strength in favor of tho treaties, and it is the belief of the Admin istration leaders that in this effort the President will be backed up by many rich and powerful manufacturing interests whose export business will be seriously crippled unless tho treaties are passed. In case, however, the opposition Senators are able to prevent the treaties from going through, the Administration, it Is believed, may favor a tariff with maximum and minimum schedules; the latter for those nations thrft meet us half-way In regard to tariff rates, and the former to be Im posed against thoso countries that enact high tariffs for the purpose of keeping out of their countries American manufac tured goods and food products. This scheme offers the advantage of giving to our Government something to trade on In making commercial arrangements with other countries which need a market In the United States' for their products. Robnon Challenge to Critics. Chicago Record-Herald. Stuart Robson has taken his pen in hand to prove that actors are not illiterate, and the Forum has given his demon stration a place In its pages. Since the work Itself Is an essay in literature, its very existence might be considered proof of the author's contention, but Mr. ,kod son Is too modest to hint at this test. He waives the point and refers to William Shakespeare and others who were or are both play actors and play writers for the confirmation of his argument. This Is a fair defense of the stage folk, If defense against the charge of illiteracy were needed, but "Rob," as he Is famil iarly called, does not stop with the defen sive. His heart Is full of offense toward the judges of the drama who write for the newspapers, of whose parts, literary an'd mental, he has evidently a mean opin ion. Concerning these censorious persons fie says: A man of limited brain capacity may be come a successful stage critic. In tho popular acceptance of the term, but not a successful stage exponent. It is easy for the facetious critic to tear down In a single sitting the structure which the actor has spent weeks of studious preparation to erect. This Is surely an odious comparison, and the author-actor follows It up with a more comprehensive indictment thus: "The scurrilous style of some alleged critics causes a suspicion that if they chould depart from their accustomed methods and treat the actor seriously the managing editor would quickly call for their resignations." The saving clause, "fortunately such men do not represent the many, fair minded newspaper writers of which this country Is Justly proud," hardly removes the odium from the profession, but it cherishes no grudges, and Its most preju diced members will be disarmed when Mr. Robson appears as Bertie In "The Henri etta" again. Every one, high, and low, rich and poor, literate and illiterate, ad mits that he was made for the part. LATEST THING IN UNIONS. New York Evening Post. No sooner Is It announced that the steel strike will be speedily settled than news comes of another, great" uprising of labor against the oppression of capital. This time It Is the Working Women of Amer ica, an organization of Chicago servant srirls. that snatches the torch from the falling hand of the Amalgamated As sociation of Steel Workers. The name of President May Murphy bids fair to replace that of President Shaffer In the public prints, for she has now delivered her ultimatum to the householders of Chicago. She demands the immediate adoption of the following union scale: Cooks and housekeepers, $5 to ?7 a week; general and second girls, $4 to $5; young and inexperi enced girls, $3 to 54. President Murphy further insists on these concessions: "Rule 1. Work shall not begin before 5:30 c'clock, and shall cease when the evening's dishes are washed and put away. Two hour each afternoon and the entire evening, at least twice a week shall be allowed the do mestic as her own. "Rule 2. There shall be no opposition on the part of the mistress to club life on the part of the domestic. Entertainment of friends In limited numbers shall not be prohibited pro vided the domestic furnishes her own re freshments. "Rule 3. Gentlemen friends shall not be barred fror the kitchen or back porch. Mem bers of the family of the house shall not Inter rupt the conversation arising during said visits. "Rule 4. Domestics shall be allowed such hours oft on Mondays as will permit them to visit the bargain counters of the stores and enjoy on that day the same privileges enjoyea by the mistress and her daughters." Comment on these terms is obviously a delicate and difficult task, for every lover of domestic peace recoils even at the thought of stirring up further bitterness and inflaming passion. But in the hope of clearing away possible misunderstandings, and thus promoting unity and. concord, it may be allowable to suggest that rule 2 la so vaguely drawn that disputes as to its meaning are sure to arise. If the cook wishes to prepare for her club a paper on "Emerson and the Transcendantal Move ment," would the refusal of the master of the house to let her take his rare and costly first editions of Emerson into the kitchen be construed as opposition to cluh life? If the second girl is put down on the programme to play the overture of Wagner's "Walkure," must she be per mitted to practice on her mistress grand piano at any time, or shall she be re stricted, say, to three hours a day? Again, what are "limited" numbers of friends? Then, too, if the "conversation" in rule 3 Is so loud as to disturb the whole neigh borhood, is no interruption permissible? Of course. It is only to be expected that the Working Women of America should be somewhat Inexperienced in the busi ness of drawing up scales and agreements; and it is therefore in a spirit not of carp ing, but of pure friendliness, that we call attention to these slight matters, for ex perience has abundantly shown that just such trifles sometimes bring to naught the noblest and best-directed efforts. NOTE AND COMMENT. Those Vallejo thieves were very deep In Iniquity. Rudyard Kipling seems greedy to wrest the bays from the dead, cold brow of the Sweet Singer of Michigan. With the Invention of the flying ma chine, George Kennan will be able to hand the Czar a package of birdlike laughter. Somebody predicted four years of drouth, and the prediction brought more rain than all the piety and wit of the Kansas clergy. In the charge of plagiarism against His torian Maclay there are cited as exhibits no editorials from the Baltimore Ameri can. "B. L. T." in the Chicago Tribune prints a picture of a hammer as a photograph of Historian Maclay, without any saving claws. The El Reno lottery Is the only one of Its kind In which the prizes are all drawn by the players, and the blanks by the house. A Copenhagen chemist has Invented a substitute for rubber, and hereafter swan like necks will not be such an expensive luxury. The new cruiser Cleveland Is to be chris tened with water, and yet the most illus trious bearer of that name is famous as a fisherman. What the barbers lose by the Kaiser's decision to raise a beard is gained by the photographers. He will have to have an entirely new stock of portraits. A party of gentlemen in Colwlch, Kan., who could not get liquor, smashed tho town pumps. What grievance they had against the milkmen is not apparent. If we have been reliably informed on th glass-of-fashlon and mold-of-form attri butes of His Majesty King Edward VII, his crown will be on the' correct spring block. Dr. Koch is now busy inventing a theory which all the distinguished medical gen tlemen of the United States were not fa miliar with when Dr. Koch was learning the alphabet. Sticky, sticky weather. As these lines I spurt, Tet I am in very much doubt. Which sticks the more I can't find out If my back or If my shirt. Sticky, sticky weather. Prenclicr's Focus on Trust Demands The strike of the Amalgamated Associa tion of Iron and Steel Workers furnished the Rev. W. J. Lhamon, of the Pittsburg First Christian Church, with the basis for his sermon on a recent Sunday. The gen tleman's text was "Altruism Among La bor Unions," and his remarks were in part as follows: The modern Jericho road Is the factory road. The traveler who has fallen among thieves down that way Is the workingman. The labor union plays the role of the Samaritan blun deringly sometimes, but yet as well as It can. The trusts are the robbers, and their cry is. "Watered stock must have Its dividends." Capital combines. What can labor do If It does not combine? Capital cares far its dividends. What can labor do if it dues not look out for lt3 wages? Capital defends capital. Labor must defend labor. Sympathetic strikes usually kill sympathy, but strikes for Justice are applauded by most communities. The true altruism of the la bor unions Is In the granting of financial help to strikers who have cause to strike. There aro now, perhaps, a million and a halt of union men In the United States. Most or them are worklnj and are willing to be as sessed a dollar a week for striking brothers. The total Is enormous, and In such altruism worklngmen have their only hope of meeting capital with capital. From the standpoint of competition and In dustrial warfare the present strike Is Justifi able, and President Shaffer is a skilled tac tician. Freedom of Individual contract no longer exists on the part of capital. Th unions. In self-defense, demand that It shall not exist on the part of labor. It Is a bold thing for the pulpit to defend such a demanQ. but capital has forced the Issue, and the frlono of the workingman must advise the working man to stand by organized labor. Arbitration might have been adopted, slnco Is requires labor as much as capital to make the great Iron business. They might have said to each other, "Choose your representa tives and let them decide our differences. We seek mutual Justice." That would have been altruistic, but in forcing the strike on the issue named, the trust has virtually salfi, "Capital has ceased to compete with capital, but It demands that labor shall compete with labor." That Is not altruistic. Justice Is the demand of the hour. Let there be no riots and no bloodshed. Rwlms. Given a five-ounce rod, a good fly and a Maine, New York and New Jersey, and In spite of the reductions In war taxes, July internal revenue receipts were $700,000 greater than for July of last year." Verily the country Is boom ing and the surplus roosts high. Roosevelt has gone coyote hunting in Colorado. Perhaps he expects to have the scalps cashed In Oregon. Tillman opines that silver can wait This Is about the only way at present to do something for silver. A much-needed rain has fallen in Texas. This shows the Insufficiency of prayer. JuBt now. Oregon climate Is cooler at Buffalo than It Is at home. Question of A'ntlonnlity. Baltimore Herald. It happened at one of the Baltimore police stations. The prisoner, a long haired hobo son of Erin, lounged against the bar of Justice. The Justice glared at him over his spectacles. "What's his name?" he Inquired of the lieutenant. "Michael O'Hara, squire; charged with being drunk on the street." "Urn! Foreign born," mused the justtce. "Sprechen -sle Englishchen, O'Hara?" The prisoner straightened up in his sole less shoes, and, with the dignity of gen erations of kings, said: " 'Squolr, it's an American citizen I am, from me birth, being born In Olrland. I want me case tried by an American judge, an' not by a foreign dago with a spache that a Christian cant' understand." "Oh, you're Irish. I thought your name had a German sound," said the squire, more humbly. "Case dismissed, lleuten ant." An Aricnnsns Opinion. Boston Herald. Clifton R. Breckenridge, of Arkansas, comes forward to declare that' free silver is dead in that state. Mr. Breckenridge will be remembered as a member of the National House of Representatives some 10 years ago, and as a man of superior ability and influence in that body. He was later appointed Minister to Russia by President Cleveland. He Is a descendant of tho celebrated Breckenridge family, of Kentucky, which in earlier days fur nished some of the most distinguished of the state's sons. It is to be hoped that this restoration to reason may be tin means of bringing men from the South like Mr. Breckenridge again Into public life. The Populist delusion has materially lessened the strength In CongresB of the South, intellectually speaking. IiCnn Yenrs Sure to Come. Indianapolis News. The wayfaring man would do well to heed the signs as he runs along. They are plain enough. They tell him that In good times he should prepare for worse. These are the fat years. It is certain that they will be followed by lean. Hold on to your earnings until you are sure that you have an investment that is le gitimate and that; will give some return. Then If the panic comes it will not hurt you. The Lost Kiss. James Whltcomb Riley. I put by the half-written poem, While the pen, idly trailed in my hand. Writes on "Had I words to complete It, Who'd read It, or who'd understand?" But tho little bare feet on the stairway. And the faint smothered laugh In the hall. And the eerie low lisps on the silence Cry up o me over it all. So, I gather it up where was broken The tear-faded thread of my theme. Telling how, as one night I sat writing, A fairy broke In on my dream. A little, lnculsltlve fairy My own little girl, with tho sold Of the sun In her hair, and the dewy Blue eyes of the fairies of old. 'Twas the dear little girl that I scolded "For was It a moment like this," I said, "when she knew I was busy. To come romping In for a kiss? Come rowdylng up from her mother. And clamoring there at my knse For 'One Mttle kiss for my dolly. And ono "lttle uzzer for mel' " ' God pity the heart that repelled her, And the cold hand that turned her away. And take from the lips that denied her. This answerless prayer of today! Take, Lord, from my memory forever That pitiful sob of despair, And the patter and trip of the little bare feet. And the one piercing cry on the stalrl I put by the half-written poem. While the pen. Idly trailed in my hand. Writes on, "Had 1 words to complete it. Who'd read it, or who'd understand?" But the little bare feet on the stairway, And the faint, smothered laugh in the hall. And the eerie-low lisp on the silence. Cry ud to me over it all. Pfo Bnsls for Reciprocity. "Louisville Courier-Journal. The news from Berlin with reference to the rates of the proposed German tariff is somewhat sensational. For example, it is proposed to raise the rate on cattle Im ported from 9 marks to 100 marks per ton. This is the extreme advance reported, as the rate on swine is simply doubled. On wheat the raise reported Is from 33 marks a ton to 65 marks as a minimum. The mini mum rates are to be granted to those countries that make reciprocity treaties with Germany. But on animals and pro visions there are to be no minimum rates in other words, no basis for reciprocity. Let us see what these proposed rates will mean. A mark Is valued at 23.S cents In our currency, so that 100 marks are equal to $23 SO. This is the proposed charge upon a ton of cattle or hogs Imported into Germany. It cannot be lessened, if tne proposed law passes, by a commercial treaty, because there is no minimum rate given.' There is therefore no basis for reciprocity. On wheat there will be a margin of 10 marks ($2 30) a ton. That Is the only reduction that reciprocity will be able to compass If the new rates prevail. t Denirnule AH Around. Chicago Record-Herald. Schley himself has been denounced as a liar, coward and incompetent. Sampson has been ruthlessly ridiculed as the ab sent commander who left other to do the fighting, and as the unworthy pet of the reigning official clique of the Navy De partment. The Secretary of the Navy has been fiercely condemned for leaguing him self with the bureaucrats. So serious are all the charges that there can hardly bo two opinions about the desirability of an investigation. The Logic of Uniformity. Typographical Journal. Thflrs la every reason why a trust can and ought to pay a uniform wage scale for the same class of work, and, being an advanced type of organization Itself, It comes with very bad grace from It to deny recognition to wageworkers organ ized for beneficent purposes, Instead of combining, as the trust does, to hold up society In general for the advantage and profit of the few. PLEASANTRIES OF PAItAGIUPHERS "You look nice enough to eat." he said ad miringly. "Ah! now that you mention it," she replied, "I wouldn't mind eating a little ice cream. Philadelphia Record. An Easy Choice. "You don't mean to say that she accepted him? He wasn't at all Ker Ideal!" "Well, it didn't take her long to choose between a fiance In the hand and aa Ideal In the bush." A Creditable Movement. Mrs. Horse A lot us girls have started an Audubou club. Mr. Horse What's that? Mrs. Horse Why we , are not going to wear birds or wings on our hats. Detroit Free Press. The Objection. "No," said Mr. Holtlte. "I don't object to the time a man takes for a reasonable vacation." "To what Is It that you object, then?" "The long rest he In variably needs after he gets back." Boston Traveler. Everything Checked. Floor Walker-Good morning. You wish to do some shopping I presume? Bride (with hubby) Y-e-s. Floor Walker Step Into the smoking room and the boy thero will give you a check for your hus band. New York Weekly. Good Judgment.-Mr. Bridal (at luncheon) Is this the best salmon you could get? Mrs. Bridal Yes, the grocer showed me sev5r' kinds but I took this can. Mr. Bridal-Did hit say this was the best he had? Mrs. Bridal No. but It had the prettiest label.-Phlladel. phla Press. The Rural Man of Letters. Josh Abner'l tho greatest reader here at the Corners. An that hain't all; he acts on what he reads. Llge Yew bet he does. Now, last week, tet my certain knowledge, he answered two adver tisements of matrimonial bureaus, sent for three packages of love powder an a book on hypnotism, an' he also sent a dollar ter feller In New York fer seventeen ways ter git rich in three months! Puck. Politics, BritiKli Style. London Globe. Oh, yes! we are united on most topics. Wa believe , That Phoebus rlse3 In the morn and sets a. dewy eve; .... That bicycles and motor cars should alwayi carry Usht3 When running down the public roads at certain hours o" nights; That one Is not compelled to buy a license for a pup; ' That, no matter what the time of year, tht Strand Is always up: That motor cars may not be run above a cer- tain speed; Oh. yes! upon such topics we are thoroughly agreed. With regard to current topics we are all agreed. God wot; That the war was either necessary, or that it was not: That the government in waging It Is partly to be blamed. Or else, as an alternative, that it has been defamed: That concentration camps and such are much to be deplored. Unless such camps protection to the women can afford; That South Africa must either subjugated be or freed. Oh, yes! upon such subjects we are thoroughly agreed.