&&-&,, -nomsmG -.xmmomA, hqotax eptembbe im. km rgg&&txan. -5aterea at the PostoEce at Portland. Oregon, 3 becond-class matter. TELEPHONES. 32dliartal Booms... . 108 1 Business Office... .037 BEYISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. By Hall -postage prepaid)? In Advance Dally with Sands., pa vonu S3 Dally. Suadaj -excepted, per jcar.. 7 bo UDalty, with bundaj. 'per i ear ,..,. 00 Tfiunoay, per year .u............ .......... 2 Ot) jThe Woklj,, per jear -...;. 1 -50 'JThe Weekly. J months ....,, CO .To Cfty iubaerlbere . Oail". 3treat, .flellyered. Sundays .excepted.l5c Dally, per wuk. 4eUierta. Sundays tacludedJiOc POSXAGE BATES. United Slates, Canada and Mexico:.' !0 to ItHpage paper,. ...".. .., lc vi to -K-jpafco paper, ....... .2c Foreign wjcs uouble. New a orIacasocc. Jnttnded for -publication .la The jOregonian snould fce addressed Invaria bly Editor Tha Oregcmlan sot to the aaw t&$ y indiviouaL letters xeta.Uag to .adverUu ag eubscrlptoas pr, to any Omslness mallei houl bp addressed :3cpl-''The Oregonlau." 5Phdconlan dees, not Auy poems .or Etoriea "J iMvui uiuavoiais, ana cannot omaerHiHe w -TXurffaay eianuscrpts i-sent -to-4t -lh6ut .soUcj ftatIoa.i 2Co &s -should, be inclosed for thl purpose. " ' . Pueei Sound Bureau -Captain A. -Thompson, hsf&ce at llli Pacific .avenue, Tacoraa. Box 053, CTacoma Postoffioe. , .Eastern Bueiaesp Office. 3. 44. 43. 47. $, iS, tocttmao -building. Now York City: SC9 "XUe JBpokery. Chicago. 11 C. Beekwith ppedal IBgency, a,tsSJ.eprentailvc. Far sale 4n ,n Francisco 3y J- K- J3oof. wa6 ilsrXet .strisi. near abe Palace Hotel; Gold pmlth Br-os.. 2oS iSuiter sgrntti r. W. J'ltts. JJPuS Market street, roster 1 -Drear. Perry News Jptand. For sale In X-o Ageless fry B F. Gardner. 1259 So Spring street, -and Oliver & Haines, 40a "For sale !n Chicago liy Jthe P. J3. News Co , Kir rcarbcrn sjrpat. Eor ,taje In Omaha b Barkalow Bros.. 10J2 nam U-eoi. . 4a1e lr Sajt "Like bv the Salt lake News fl3o . 57 W. Second South street. Tor fcao in Oaden by W. C Kind. 204 mjsrea-f?y-flfth Mrt-ct. and tj C. H. Mjr? lwPor sa! n Kans -city. 2to. y red WutohlnBoa. ft94 Wyandotte street. I o We at Csftalp. ?f Y In the Ofoa ex- nlbtt"ftt the iorostion. 4 I"or sale in ja'ashlnpton. 35 C.,. by the Eb ftoett ??ufa p, v s ina. i For tale Jn ronpr. Colo, by Hamilton &. JKendrick. fiOG-B12 ?tnje"th street. SSTESDAVS WEATHER-; Maximum iem flflJQBfe 'ijnlinura upgierature, 45. prpcip ;itauon, nose. TOfcAVSWEATHER-rair; noriherb winds. PORTX.AAB, 3IOXDAV, SEPT. 1Q. . " A CHAiVGE I METHOD. Standing in the presence .of his dead 'Chief. Inibued with the solemnity and Sond reverence of the occasion. Presi dent Roosevelt said: In thl6 hour -at deep juid tcrrjble National ,1)reayamat I Jnfa u tate thit It shall be Ijni4 aim ip ooniicupabwlutol." without arlanc ihe policy of Prepldent McKlnloy for the peacp and prspecUy and honor ot our belo-.ed country. Such are the needs of the Hying that we must look to the new regime ven before the l epresentativ of the old has Jbeen carried to lis rest. The new Presi dent xeallzed this, and felt the neces- feity of a -word of nromise and assurance. The utterance reflects credit upon his J sucai i, auu utiuiit us ine auijra.Die spii it of loyalty and conseratism in which 2ie talces up his task. But it is vain to bllnk:he fact that he has used the word "policies" in a mistaken sense, smd it must be recognized as soon as possible that the programme he out lines 'is beset with very grave limita tions. A "Washington dipatch says it is realized there that the new Admin istration is embarked on unknown eas. K. , wuc, OUU ttUlUlU UUU1 J that with the change of Administration' v. . : .. , STCU;XTff jfrom -the one pursued by the old. n . J, u , . The difference between McKInley and JRoosevelt is in the personal initiative whioh the aew man has and the other had -not. Therefore the reference to policies" needs to be corrected. Boose "velt .sets something before him and aims at it. This is his uniform history, Jthis is the law of his being. In his case policies are the result of study and cqn,. J friction. In the case of the Administra tion jiist closed policies have been the resultant of circumstances. As to tii hvar with Spain, as to the disposition lbf the. Philippines, as to the treatment sof Porto Bico. as to the tariff, as to iourrencj', we have dons what tardily developing events have made inescap- fetble. If we except the recommendation of free trade with Porto Rico, deserted, ithe word to Pans Commission or Con- grpss 3ias practical' been to do the ' Jbest it could, and instructions have been as a constant state of flux. What the Administration's policy was concerning 3the Philippines, concerning the reforma- I tjon of the currency, concerning the sreforoiatlon of the tariff, concerning iA-nny reform or ship subsidies, many Shave speculated about, but no one has ("known. Policies have been formed byi teyents and slow-torming public opinion. This is said respectfully, not invidi ously, and It is said at all only because Hfc is necessarv for the country to un derstand at the outset that it can no longer expect a similar course, but must adapt itself to a President who jwHLknow what he wants and wi"J use means to get it. Congress wil get a ftnessapre in December wrhose Import it 1 iwi? 1 need be at no pains to understand !Qertaln well-defined courses of action 3 rfil be offered and -urged. As Hayes thad a Southern policy that meant spe- ciSc -tilings, as Cleveland told Congress 1 Shat he wanted the Sherman silver pur acjhases stobped and the tariff on raw 1 iTcnaterials withdrawn, o Theodore ''"Roosev-elt will tell us what he thinks Bhould be done for the tariff, for the (currency, for the Philippines, for vio-1 riators of the civil service law. Each Uf these two antagonistic methods of J procedure has its merits and its perils. J President Roosevelt's errors should be minimized by the sagacious counselors ' he is certain to call to his aid. His in-: -Itiative and resolution should be of- IjreaJ .service In holding him firmly on B.ue rjfjnt -course, nce ji is einuruceu. 5Je may make mistakes, but bis aim fwiil be civic righteousness. In patriot- i ism and high purpose the two Admin istrations are alike, but they will pur 'cue their ends in different ways. In Frank Carpenter's recent letter upon Java and the Javanese It was 6tatedthat,ln the bazaars of Java the "women--do Fhe greater part of the buy fog -for" 25,000000 people. This disposes of the charge that the invasion of the business field, and especially the field of merchandising, by women is "due to the .development of the "new woman' since nowhere on earthig "the matter of woman's rights or ivoman'-s educa tIpn."a"M'o low an ebb as 'among the lit tle. ,ytdlow peoples of jthe Orient. Old i as the ages are the customs that bind womaa to "man's will and service in thes& countries, and yet here & naye j them as buyers and sellers for a nation. If it shall develop, af-ter all, that the woman in business lias a more ancient place in the economics of life than the woman who stays at home, what shall we do for a stock argument against the "new woman," as illustrated Joy the modem wide-awake woman, who can upon occasion take care of herself and make a living for the family? In view of the evidence adduced from the Orient by so observing a traveler as Frank Carpenter, is not the new wom an, as an institution, when reckoned upon the business basis, an ancjent dame, after all? THE UXSEEX WORED. President McKinley seems to have been a man who held to his religion without ostentation and believed with out great adp. Ministers were within call at his dying hour, but none was summoned. He preferred to commune with his loved and loving wife, to ex press simply and solemnly his resigna tion to the divine decree, and to recall one of the noblest and most helpful hymns of the Christian church. He seems to have felt that his cross iifted him nearer to his Maker, he wished to pass out of life with a heart in tune with the infinite. Almost as impressive as this death bed testimony was another scene, enact ed almost slmultaxueously before a bul-letin,-Joard in the .great, wicked -City of Chicago. As the dread news came over the wire from Buffalo and was spread in view of the surging midnight throng, voices took up the President's hymn, and when the strains of "Nearer, My God, to Thee" died away, the dis patches tell, J'here was a pause. Many were in tears. A college student then bared his head and prayed aloud, while the great crowd listened." Prayer, we can readily understand, was something unfamiliar to most of that crowd upon the midnight streets At any other time it would have been the .signal. 2ot for reverential silence, but for ribald Jeers and derisive-groans. What hushed them into soiemnity was the presence of death, the sense of sor row. And life is tull -of just uch mournful and subduing passages. How often the deathbed brings the scoffer to his kneesi How eagerly the unre pentant prays for priest or preacher in the hour of supreme mystery and dread! How .differeptjy then do the careless regard the house of worship, the hymn of praise and prayer, the words of Holy Writ, the supplication forinercy at the awful Throne! Well, which Is the sane and which the foolish view? Is the reckless ab sorption of life or the .solemn medita tion of the dying hour the safer and more worthy state of mind? Is death the only reality, and living, as the poet calls it. only a fever, or are the hopes and fears of the passing soul only the creatures of vaiD superstition, at which the thoughtful .should smile for them selves forever? Can there be, after all, any God, any life heyond the grave, any word of truth in hymn or prayer or -v olee of danger in neglect or promise of safety in holiness? The only answer to these, as to all such inquiries, is that we ,do not know. It is our privilege to doubt and -scoff or to believe and do. In the spiritual realm is perfect liberty. Science at length has banished the tyranny of en trenched authority over individual con science. We are free to Ignore the spir itual world, or to enter there with all our aspirations, resolves and works of .faith and lpve. They are few who longer put their trust in streets of gold and gates of-pearl, or shudder at the 1 !,-. -.v1 fl R.momt lrtC rfTiL LJ to whom the unseen world is an eyer- ?r!sent reaUt ieine Gf d-out l: tauon. impulse to acts of continence and mercy, solace in the dying hour. Busy as the President had 'been, and care less as is the crowd upon Chicago streets, there is something in the uni versal heart that responds to the mes sage of religion in an hour when sol emn thought .presses upon the mind, and the vanities and worse than vani ties of business and pleasure for the moment fall away. The pity of religion is, perhaps, .the greatest pity of all, that so many of Its devotees unduly magnify its place in life. A proper sense of proportion will save us from sanctimoniousness as well as, from irreverence. Beware them whao about with long faces and covet the chief seats -in the syna gogue, and for pretense make long prayers. Verily, the publicans go into Heaven before them. There is no prep aration for death so good as a hlame iess and a -busy life. For such there may be no ostentatious pietj' there was none with President McKInley. But when the end comes, the faithful soul wilj &in iTJith. love and lohging to its Maker, and breathe a word of xesigna jtion ito the Infinite Will, of which we know so 1lttie hut in which we trust so much. AS OLD, JfEW KAILTJRE. The failure of another co-operative experiment was lately recorded In the collapse of the Ruskin colony, in Geor gia. This colony was apparently two years ago in a flourishing condition. Here, it was fondly believed, the so cialist had found vindication of his theories. Idealists, even from as far away as the Pacific Coast, looked upon it with feelings of mingled triurhph and longing. Now, however, coms the news that this .experiment has gone the usual way of co-operative colonies, and has heea dissolved In a hopelessly bankrupt condition. This result is -simply a duplication of the general history in this country of atterapts to carry out practical ,ccm- munism. The pathway of idealism is I strewn with wrecks of this character. Many attempts have been made to carry out the common property idea, but even comparative success has been the'-exception, and this has never been scored with Americans ns the moving .force. As opposed to individualism and independence, the -communistic experi ment goes to the wall. Enthusiasts haye time and again invested their all in the futile attempt to demonstrate the doctrine -of the brotherhood of man as exemplified in the elimination of the possessive pronoun "mine" from the community's ,. vocabulary, putting "ours" in its place, pursuing this at tempt 'to the bitter end, theyTiave not Infrequently lost their last dollar in the maelstrom of community investment j and -fared forth Into the world penni less, victims of misplaced confidence. Stm, jthe theory of a co-operaiiye com monwealth is attractive to minds pf a certain order, and a-repetition of the co-operative experiment may be ex pected from time to time, regardless, of the failure that has 130 generally fol lowed them. It is safe, however, to predict that not while human nature Js human natur, in is ragged, prac Itical, aggressive sense, will the affairs of mankind be conducted on the co-operative and generally communistic plan. Selfishness, or that phase of it that is denominated self-interest, is op posed to the property equalization plan. And justly so, since the accumulative powers in men differ as widely us do their moral and social qualifications and their intellectual fiber and grasp. It is neither possible cor advisable to deprive human effort of individual en ergy, since this is the mainspring of all accumulative endeavor the force that finds expression in success. This being true, co-operative accumulation, from which individual holdings are elimi nated, fails; as long as it Is true, the theory of communism cannot be reduced to practice, howeyer mightily and in all sincerity idealists wrestle with It. A WORD ABOUT THE FAIJU Every friend of the Xewls and Clark Centennial Fair will sincerely regret the letter that Mr. Edward Everett Young, a member of the Oregon Fair Commis sion, has written to members of the Legislature asking their opinions on the advisability of calling a special ses sion to promote the enterprise. Mr. Toung appears to have written the fet ter on his own responsibility, and dt is not apparent that his act has the in dorsement of Hon. H. W. Corbstt, chair man of the Oregon Commission, or of Hon. J. M. "Long, chairman ot the pro visional committee of arrangements. Commissioner Young's recommendation that the state issue $1,000,000 bonds to aid the enterprise is as unfortunate and thoughtless as his idea of a special ses sion. It wiH hurt the fair. Besides, the state Is not permitted to .go In debt to aid any cprporation, as the following provisions from article 11 of the fcon stitution amply testify: Section 0 The state shall not subscribe -to, or be Interested In, the otock -of an company, association or corporation Section 7. The Legislative A'mWy .shall not loan the credit of the ftatc nor In an .manner create anv debts or liabilities, which ehall, Kingly or In -the aggregate, w 1th jorev lous debt? or liabilities, exceed the sum of ?5O,O0O, jex ocpt in case ot war, or to rep-M ipaslcn, or suppress insurrection, and aery contract of indebtedness entered into or arsumed 'by or on behalf of -the state, when all Its liabilities and debts arpount to said sum, shall be void and of no effect. Scotion 8 The state .shall neir assume the debt at anj count, ,town or other corporation yvhatecr, unless such -deb's shall hae been created to repel .-invasion, suppress Insurrec tion or defend the state In var In dissenting from Commissioner Young's extreme -views, The Oregonian fepls that it should -say a -word of cau tion to the gentlemen who are tempo rarily In charge of affairs pending the organization of the .Exposition company and to those who may be the leading spirits pf the Exposition -company. If, as Commissioner Young says, "It Is hardly worth while to attempt the cele bration contemplated in 1905 with less than $10,000,000 as a wprklng capital," we .should abandon the project at once We cannot finance so .great an under taking, and that is all, there Is to it. Commissioner Young thinks the state should raise $1,000,000 tram bonds, the City of Portland $1,000,000 for a corpora tion, California -l,000,v00, Washington $1,000,000, the other JNorthwestem States $1,000,000. This would give $5iO00.000 and form the basis of a request tor $5,000,000 from the Government. California can afford -$1,000,000. but it will never give so large an amount, or it has not a !$1,000,000 interest in .the fair. The Northwest never will be able tp raise $4,000,000 without bankrupting itself Commissioner Young bases hie hope of financing the Exppsjtion in this way on the success at St. Louis. He forgets that while St. Louis is only six times as large as Portland, it Is many times richer. It ias an assessable valuation of nearly $100,000,000, whereas Portland has Ipss than $40,000,000. He forgets that Missouri has over 8,000,000 people, whereas Oregon has few more than 400,000. He forgets that the territory which will contribute to the success of the St. Liouis fair has a population of fully 15,000,000, while that directly interested in the Lewis and Clark Cen tennial the original Oregon Country has jaot more than 1.250,000 people. It Is absurd to talk of handling $10,000,000 here because St. Louis has succeeded in raising between $16,000,000 and $17,000, 000. An .exposition on the lines laid down by Commissioner Young would bank rupt every one identified with it and give the country a tremendous setback. The Exposition which we propose to hold must be managed in a conserva tive way. Charleston has glven us an example of what can be' done with a fair amount of money properly han dled. Talk about bonding the .state for $1,000,000 and of raising an equal amount in Portland is ridiculous, tor the one is unconstitutional and the other impracticable. We .shall not be surprised if Commissioner Young's let ter causes prejudice against the Expo sition and results in a mpvemnt to re quire members of the -next Legislature to pledge themselves to he watchful -of the Exposition enterprise. A FRUJTGIOWjUVG JBRA. , Records are constantly being made cf horticultural triumphs, which indicate that the .twentieth century -will usher in the "age of fn$tt," even as the clos ing years of the nineteenth were bril liantly lighted hy the appointments of the electrical era, and the few preceding years were, upon ample testimony of the world's progress in mechanical arts, known and hailed as the age Pf steel. Each In is own realm, a wide and prosperous domain, within past years, successively or jointly;, cotton, wool, com and wheat has been hailed king in the agricultural world, team and electricity in the transportation world, and coaj, Iron, copper and silver in the mineral world. Gold, of course, is ononarch of the mineral realm, a' clent and modern, and his glittering scepter has been extended -over aU .other domains- throughout the ages, -giving sanction and Impetus to all develop ment, prospering all h-y his bounty. But of the growing things, in an ag ricultural sense, that respond to the effort of man, fruit is forging ahead with gigantic strides. Jndeed, It has J been truly -said that the "procession of o-ur fruits is something wpuderfui at every stage." Detailing its inarch through a single season, the Independ ent says: "Peaches rom California are followed by those from Georgia, and these are supplemented by those from Connecticut. Last of all, Michigan and New York -fill their haiskets and round out a full two months' supply. Florida strawberries begin the proces sion, and each degree of latitude takes its turn until New York, ear Lake On tario, closes the llst This .giyes the consumer more than six weeks ,of his favorite berry, and he is quite ready then to turn to the raspherry. This fruii cannot he shipped to any distance with success, and is therefore a local luxury. Its season cannot extend over about one month. But the blackberry is ready before the raspberry is gone. The Southern dewberry is on hand by July 1. and the Northern Eldorados protract the season until September 10. The century, which began -with a mea ger supply xf fruits, closed wjth a suc cession that reached the. whole year round. The evolution of new and bet ter fruits, more beautiful and more luscious, still goes on." Apples follow, of course, sound and juicy; oranges, onee a luxury scantly served, are in riotous supply during many months; cranberries come to the table .before Thanksgiving time, and abide with us until Springy prunes, fresh and dried, take their turn and serve their purpose; pears join the pro cession at intervajs, giving variety to the toothsome display, and melons take their place in it quite naturally' at the time when they are most -appreciated. Of the small fruits, perhaps the greatest and most wonderful develop ment has been made in strawberries and .grapes. OX the former, the little field berry, the delight of the children of half a century ago, has expanded Into the luscious cone an inch In diameter and severs 1 inches in cii cumferen.ee. In 1840, the date at which Harvey's Seedling and Wils.on'3 Albany began to appear, not $1000 worth of cultivated strawberries -were marketed in the United States; Sixty years later, in 1900. not less than $80,000,000 worth found their way to the tables of the Nation Regarded in the main by con sumers as of value only to pjease the taste and nourish the body, the en thusiast sees in strawberries food for the soul and .stimulation to the brain. In other words, the priory of these evolved fruits Is not only "what they are dplnp to feed, but what they are doing to quicken our intellects and en noble pur characters." This is. witnessed in the creation of such men as Dpwnin.g, Barry, Long worth and Rogis, who have added over fifty varieties to our list of grapes; of Wilder and Seckle and Sheldon, the latter a woman, whose names are syn onymous svith pear culture; of Bald win and Hubbardston, odorous with the subtle perfume of apples, and of Bur bank, -of our own Pacific Coast, Tv-ho stopped not at th creation of new f rults. but who has reveled in the realm of beauty ,-3?vafvhig therefrom the love liest of flowers, and -walked prosaically in he domain of agriculture ancl turned from Its brown mold the best of ail por tatoes and given It his .name,. To have these names is to exalt vthe deeds of IrlendsVf mankind. So says the enthusiast above quoted, and so say we, voicing further with him the desire that the day may dawn when he who creates a -new fruit shall be honored as he has been honored who wins a battle. A paragraph ,in yesterday's edltipn pf The. Qregonian, through careless word ing, conveyed the impression that the gangrene which caused President Mc Kinley's -death followed the embedding pf the bullet in the back. The facts are as Mated in the dlsRatches. After the passage of the bullet the mischief was irreparable, if gangrene of sych a wound followed. Either the President had poor blood .and the iascerated tis sues refused to heal, and, of course, mortification followed, tt the bullet may have been Intentionally poisoned, as was the eustojn with a&sasekis in jthe Middle Ages, or it may have been dirty, and thus made polspnpus. A dis charge of pus from a healing wpund can he drained away, but gangrene is 1 due to an utter refusal of the wounded tissues to repair themselves by he&Ung. An Did man or any man pf poor blood who .gets a slight wound of the foot often dies of .gangrene even after rer peated amputations, hut a man of vig orous condition and non-vitiated blood recovery rapidly from suph wounds of the extremities. It would have done -no good tp find "the ball and remove it, for the .mischief which wrought the gan grene at both mouths of the wound and along Its trade was done by Jts passage, not by the incident of its remaining n the muscles of the back. Whether ihe -gangrene was due to the President's poor blood or to the poisoned quality of the hall. 1t was incurable. Hundreds of such .cases have been seen in Army hospitals. Even in case of gangrened (mortified) stumps of arms and legs, J where they were exposed to view and ware constantly treated -with powerful caustics and ,by aecpndary and tertiary amputations, deaths are common, but in such a wound as McKinley had, of gan grene following the infliction oi the wound,, it is 'incurable. This .gangrene, it should be noted, came -not from the retention of the ball in the muscles .of the hack, but from the passage of the ball. For some reason the tissues re fused to repair themselves, and ganr .grene followed, and then death was sure. There is little doubt that the President's blood was poor, and he died just as an old man -who has poor blood often dies, of gangrene from -a .slight wound that would promptly heal if his blood had -been good, when a yigorous man will recover frdm a severe wound. Miss Josephine Eastwick, the Phila delphia young woman who went over to England and tried to float flat stock to the extent of half a million, was shaky 3n her mind, joo doubt. She should have played or higher stakes and become a financial magnate. The schoolboy'-s estimate of magnitude as an exculpating feature of crime, as based upon the greatness achieved by Alexander through wholesale murder, and the Ignominy that followed the murderer who killed, a single man, as expressed in the lines, Well, then, if I should kill a man, I'd lttira hundred more J. would ;bo axeat and not get hung. May be applied to dropsical transac tions in finance. This young woman lacked the -nerve to play for stakes big enough to win. Of course vshe was daft. The certainty that Vice-President Boosevejt felt jn the speedy recovery -of President McKinley was expressed an positive words when he left Buffalo Wednesday, and further exemplifled in ,the out-of-the-way place in the moun tains to which he betook himself. Had the, .slightest doubt lingered in his mind in -regard to the matter, he would, it is needless to say, have remained within easy call o JMilburn house. This fact will disarm oil criticism upon his inac cessibility when the call for his imme diate return to Buffalo was .sent out. Theodore Roosevelt was bom in New York City, October 1, 1858. He be comes President before .his -43d birth day, at an earlier age than any other President. .Grant became President at 47. Cleveland at 48, Pierce and JQarfleld at 9, Polk at J50, Tyler .at Si. The old est at accession was the first Harrison, aged 68, LA,WSOAT.AKD HJS INDEPENDENCE New York SPrlbune. If there were reason to suppose that further tests might prove Mrl Thomas W. Lawson's yacht Independence to be superior to the Columbia and the Consti tution her owner's apparent determina tion to break her up would cause regret, for Shamrock II is universally believed to be a dangerous boat. Yet even in that case Judicious and well-informed per sons would not be ready to admit that the New York Yacht Club could properly modify the conditions under which the Independence was Invited to compete for tho honor of defending the cup. But the evidence all contradicts Mr. Laweon's an nouncement that she is the fastest acht afloat, and therefore there Is no occasion to shed tears at the prospect of her de struction. Nor, whatever effect it may have produced In the latitude of Bos ton, is Mr LawEon's recent explanation of his conduct likely to win- sympathy and applause elsewhere, though It was evidently designed to be extremely ap pealing. If anybody was still unable to account for the coqrse pursued by Mr. Lawson, his latest outgiving is a convincing proof that just such a course was natural to a man capable of defending it in such a manner. In the first. place, his statement of the terms on which he might have en tered the Independence In the trial -races bears not the remotest resemblance to the terms prescribed by Commodore Lcd yard. Mr. Lawson says he was required to take oath -that the Independence "no longer belonged to" him, and ''to turp her over to any member of the New York Yacht Club, arbo might he designated"; that he was told that when he iad done this he JV-ould hayeno more rights in her than Jf he hod pot given the boat a hougfrtv 3ftgt Jbe sfg to belong to the member of the club o whom she was gLven -Jn fee simple' and that Jihe might sell her, break her up, gink her or do -whatever he 4Wi?hed wljh her." "Now, the fact is that Mr. Lawson was of&clajjy Informed by Mr. Lcdyard that the Independence could be qualified to enter the trial races In :either'-of two v,fLysby being enrolled in. the name of one or more members of the Now York Yacht Club ana registered in the .name of such member or members, or by being chartered to a member or members for a period of iot less than two months. 'In the former case she would be entitled to all club privileges, while In the latter cast she would be entitled to enter the squad ron runs on the annual cruise as vell as the trial races. Mr. Lawson was further informed that 4the selection of a member or members to whom the Independence might be thus temporarily intrusted would De a matter of his own personal choice,, and the arrangement would be one wholly between himself and the mem ber cr members selected by him. For a time these .conditions appeared to be perfectly satisfactory to Mr. Lawson, but subsequently, for reasons best known to himself, he changed hi? mind, or his at titude, apd finally submitted an impossi ble form of contract, drawn by legal, ad visers whom he declined to name. Now. on the eve of sending his yacht to the scrap heap, he evinces, to put it mildly, fln amazing forgctfulness of the simple conditions Jo which he was necessarily required tp conform, describes a state pf things which never existed except in his own Imaglnatjaij, and poses as a generous and patriotic sportsman Jn whose way in surmountable obstacles haye been unac countably placed. ' It is an ,errat,c performance, .If there ever woe one, but we are forced to be Jieye that it As quite' characteristic of Mr. Lawson. Fortunately no interests more important than his own seem to be in volved. Jt may be that a better boat than the Columbia or he Constitution is needed to defend the cup, but, if sp, there is no -reason to think that it coultj be. saved by tbe Independence. WHEN JIOOSEVJBL.T WAS AFBAJ- It "Was a JJlbllcnl Phrnse That Struck Terror to Small Tedly Soul. Harper's Weekly. Theodore Rposevelt was not always the mighty hunter he is now. He has had his day of being afraid of big game. But that was many years ago, when he was a wee little boy i.0 short trousers and used to play tag in Madison-Square in New York. Opposite the Square, on the east side, stood a Presbyterian church, and the sexton, while airing the building one Sat urday, noticed a small boy peering cur iously in at the half-open door, but mak ing no move to enter. "Come in, my little man, if you wish to," -said the sexton. "No, thank you," said the by. I know what $ ou've got In there." "I haven't anything that little boys mayn't jsee. Come in." "I'd rather jiot." And the juvenile The odore cast a .sweeping and somewhat apprehensive- glance around the pews and galleries and bounded oft to play again. Still the lad kpt 'returning once in a while and peeping dn. When he went home that .day he told his mother of the sexton's 4n.vitattoJn, and his unwillingness to accept it. "But uvhy didn't you jgo Jn, my dear?" she esked. ''It is the House ot God, but there is no harm in entering it quietly and looking about." With some shyness the little fellow confessed ifhat he was afraid to go in. because the eal might jump out at him from under a pew: or .same where. "The zeal? What Is the zeal?" the mother inquired. "Why," explained Theodore, -"J -suppose it is some big animal like a dragon or an alligator. I went there to church last Sunday with Uncle R. , and I heard the minister read from the Bible about the zeal, and it frightened me." Down came the Gpncorda-nee from the library shelf, and tne aWer .another of the texts contaialxig the word "jBeal" wap read to the child, whpse eyes suddenly grew big anahis voice excited, as he ex claimed: "That's itthe iaet you read." It -was Psalni ijxix., 3: -For the zeal of thine house hath eaten rae up." Tbje fxesiOent Unprotected by ITT Philadelphia Ps3. The assassination of two presidents failed" to convince the American -Congress1 that the chief executive of the Notion. - jjeeded special legislation for the protect Upn of his person. Will this foul crime in Buffalo, which has filled the whole Nation with grief and apprehension, con vince Congress -that the Chief Magistrate of a -republic does need special legal pro tection from the evil-minded, -the anarch ist and the insane? At presentihe murder of the President ot the United States or a criminal as sault upon him violates no Federal Stat ute, unless it 3s done in a for,t, navy yard, arsenal or other place within the" exclusive iurisdictlpn of the "UnitedS-States. The crime committed la Buffalo 6n "Frl- .,!!?, WS. feAJ' Presldcot of the United States In jeop ardy, is an offense not against the "United States, hut against the peace of the -single, State of New York, in which the .Fees!. dent happened to be when the attempt; on his life was made, Sr.Va'S Formidable Blearing. Npw York Times. Wu Ting Fang, who was a guest at a re cent wedding in Washington, was ap proached after the cercntony by the best man and jocularly asked to go over to the 9 joung couple and pronounce a Chinese parental blessing. The obliging Wu im mediately complied. Placing his hands on 4 the blushing ride and shaking groom, he said: jMay every .new year bless you with a man child ortsprJng until they shall tnunx ber 25 in all. May these 25 man children offspring present you with 25 times 23 grandchildren, and may these grandchil dren " It is said that the little bride grew hys terical about this time, and the best man made another request to Wu thla time to desist. A-SIUSEMENTS. "The Queen of'fiayti." one of the best "coon s&owq" that has ever been seen in Portland, oncned a week's engagement to a crowded house at the Metropolitan I last evening, and was given an energeut: reception. The company, which is un usually lafge for Its kind, numbers sev eral colored comedians who scorn, to have the knack of exciting laughter, a chorus of good voices, and half a dozen rcaliy exceptlonaj singers, the principal of whom was Laura Moss, billed as "the Austra lian nightingale." The entertainment Is the usual hodge podge of songs, dances and dialogue sketches, with a sprinkling of the Jokes which our grandfathers laughed at. and enough of a plot to provide a scene at court and furnish an opportunity for the gorgeouo costumes which are the delight of the African heart. Among the numbers which most Rleased the audience was that of the Sherrah quartet, which sang four or five song? with :hat the. nrogrammc called the mel aphone accompaniment, by which an ef fect was reached both pleasing and navel. The Grundys and Vaughner executed a series of buck-ond.-wing dances which called forth an abundance of applause. Kraton, a clever hoop Juggler, contrib uted an Interesting specialty, and Stewart, a sj&ck-wire balancer, accomplished safely the, usual difficult feats in his line. t)r the Individual members of the cast.' Frank Kirk, as a ragtime hobo; Harry L. Gllham, an Afro-Sometlc wanderer of the earth, and Miss Lottie Lewis, as the Queen of Haytl, succeeded In winning tht largest share of popular favor. Tho costumes and scenery were new and bright, and the orchestra which Is carried by the company assisted much in the music. "The Queen of Hayti" will run all the week, except Thursday night, with the usual Saturday matinee. THE arEILLS TONIGHT. "The Case, of Rebellion 5aian!' at the Ulnrqunm Theater. All of the -members of the Nelll com pany save Mr. Nelll, Miss Chapman and three others arrived in Portland last eyen ing, and the latter 'will arrive this morn ing, having remained over one day 1j San Francisco. Their engagement at- the Marguam, which is to last all thte week, will open with "The Case of Rebellious Susan." "The Case of Rebellious Su3an" is an adaptation of "Francilllon," by Dumas tils. In It Henry Arthur yones. the au thor, has not In any case sacrificed any of the wit or situations of the original, but has added the gentle cynicism of a well bred Englishman to the eplgrammatlf raillery of the French. His version Is said to be loaded with delightful carica tures In the characters of a wouJd-he genius, a etrang-mlnded voung woman. tj plcal English squire and the wife of the squire. The great interest of the drama Is the tragedy that frowns through ino mask of comedy the exploitation of the sinister theory that a wife may break some of the commandments In retaliation of her husband's polygamous habits. The advance sale has been very heavy for the entire engagement, and especially for tonight. CpRDRAY'S TO OPEX TONIGHT. CIpBed Xnst Evening Out of Respect io Uad President. Out of respect to the memory of Presl. dent McKInley, the regular opening or Oordray's Theater In the "Daughter of the Diamond King" did not take place last evening, the doors, of the theater be ing closed. Jn the lobby a large framed portrait of the president, draped In black, had been placed, and a brief lettered an nouncement fchat the opening had been deferr.ed Until this evening out of respect to the President. There had been a large advance sale for the performance, and the money for the tickets was refunded. JSoffiti at thp 5tnre. "Wanda by Oulda, has been drama tized. Richard Carle has written a comedy called ,Tb.e Mimic Mummy." Martin Harvey Is to produce his version of "Eugene Aram" in Dublin. Elsie De Wolfe will begin her season hi Washington about the middle of October. Mary Anderson Navarro recently di rected a children's entertainment In Ens land. Charles Dalton will appear In New York In "The Helmet of Navarre" about Christmas. Four companies in Englnnd are playing "The Belle of New York,'' and two "The Caelno Girt Henry pixie, Mabel Love, Eme Fay and Madee Leasing are among the principals in "The Whirl vpf the Town," as it is to be given in London. George L. Baker, manager of the Baker City Theater and of the recent carni val in that city, 19 in Portland and v-lll remam about a week. It is not likely that Paderewakl's opera. "Manru," will he heard here until 1!K)-J. One new production In New York will be the "Messallne" of Pe Lara. Stephen Fhfuips is writing a play for E. S. Willard. L. N. Parker has also j play for the same actor, whose hero 1 Pope .eo .X, before the latter attained pa pal honors. La Belle Lourette and several of the members, pf the "Daughter of the Dia mond KJng," which iv ill play ut Coraray a this week occupied a box at the Metro politan Ja&t evening. Manager Clarence H. Jones, of the Met ropolitan, announces that out of respect to the memory of President McKInley, no performance will be given at bis theater Thursday, the day of the funeral. Grace George will soon begin refaearsnli fox her comff New York season. Her opening play js said to be from the pen of a famous American author, and she will probably present two or three more during the course of her engagement. "Wild West" 1a the title of the new bor der drama iii which John W. Cope, now plaj lng the part of the ranchman in "Ari zona," will star next season. The chief Character, which will be acted by Mr. Cope, Js Wild Bill, a frontiersman as weU known in the West 40 years ago as was Buffalo Bill. Joseph Jefferson's Fall tour of eight weeks begins September 30 In Troy. N. Y.. and ends November 22 in Baltimore, after which he goes to his -Florida home for -the Winter, ft will be welcome news to ithe thousands of Mr. Jefferson's admir ers to know that he Is la -splendid health and strength. The -veteran comedian is .good for many years of active stage work. Aaa?.cay Sb-ouid Go. Columbus Enquirer-Sun. It is surprising that any government :hnirtrt mmnivniv h A Mno nr npr. 1 mlt them to become citizens. At heart ,. ....... ....u . -w.., . each and every one Is a murderer, and but awaits the opportunity to commit it. othS Irftwr tod ca"n Vfoundror imprisonment for life, should be the im mediate fate of ay vrhp entertain such sentiments as are harbored by these ene mies of mankind. i The Hobo's .Dream. Ualthnftre "World. PtPJE I. X (dreamed of ja beautiful land. Where ithe rivers ran cold, foapdngr becx. SVhexe milk punches wc ever at hand, Aaa of tbbst I had .nothing to fear. . PIPE 2, Where jsbi fljies yvtte bubJUnr brlsht. And a whole eea of sparkling champagne; Where big cocktails were ever In sight. And high balls -shot trom mountain and plain. PIPE 3. Creme 4e jmeitfcje irwamps of cool-looking green, AVIth whole lsland3 of finely cracked ice; With the finest frapneB ever seen. Topped Kith cherries and other things nice. PIPE 4. Where the gutters oterflowed in-the street, With untold million gallons of hooscj In which tired hobos soaked their poor feet. And enjoyed a- heavenly snooze. W-E AND GQ&IfllENT., The whining sehqolboy veu know the rest. It Is high time to bogin, saying money for Christmas presents. The reports of a parl famine are not creating any uncnslness in tha pig' pens. The matinee girl is thlwkfr.g up new ways to extract mony from the ptarnal fist. The concert of the powers: fe nearly ready to open the Winter sasn In Europe. The price of cordwood now stps In to take a little attention away from the potato. The mosquito can point with prl-de to the fact that he is not o bad as the tarantula. If the weather man will osly earry days like yesterday In his sample e?e. 1 will get some large orders. The Sultan of Turkey is havinsr trouble with his cook. He shouW retektHl his orders for two or three warships and pay her salary. Mr. William Waldorf Aster eharaeter izea an American oditer who has. been abusing him as an insect. The editor un doubtedly is a little fty. Some of the men who rocked th boat are dead; others remain to prevent the Foo'.killer from talcing his long-deferred vacation next Summer. Many Indians are eollege graduates and have fortunes of several hundred thou sand dollars. That quotation begiiuilng "Lo." seems to be among the bask num bera. An English wrfter declares that not un til a woman reaches the age of 46 does she reach that maximum of her power over susceptible members of the other sex. "Her face," says the writer referred to, -"may have lines that 'sweet and 20' regards with dismay, her figure may be fuller than 'sweet 17' deems graceful, it may even be that art has to step In where nature fails in the matter of hals and complexion, but It is manner which tells- In carriage, In interest. In thoughtS. the woman of 10 at the present tlay Is as young as her daughter less than half her years, but her mind is better bal anced, her Judgments are eleaser." The English term of Invitation to a country house for the "week's end" Is so concise that it Is surprising that it has not been adopted moc generally in this coun try. A young bachelor, to whom it was unfamiliar, received such an. invitation from some acquaintances who have a house at Cedarhurst this Summer. It necessitated nn immediate anawer, and not understanding just what it meant he was in doubt about how to word his an swer. He was anxious to visit thte house because of a certain young woman who was spending two weeks there He did not want to expose his ignorance of the scope of the Invitation, however, and taken literally "week's end" Implied to him merely an Invitation for Saturday evening. There would so many other al mlrers of this particular girl there that an Invitation for Saturday evening only did not promise much. He ftsaMy doekled that the only thing for him to do was to plead another engagement. Whea he learned later that his invitation wa to come down Friday night and say until Monday morning his disgust at mteelng such an opportunity was great. Oh. bark. e doge. in pureet Jr a! gayly wag thy Tale. And purr full loud, ye Thomas Cat. who much ore wont to wajl. And yonder In e Pasture Lot. where revs ye placid Cowe. i Shall sweet Contentment surely reign some few brief Houres now. For ye small Boye hereafter shall have hut brief space to playe. For knowe ye creatures one and all that School takes uppe today e No mora ye Dogge need soutHe down ye Pike In sad-voleed woe. Because he hath a clanging Strkig et eW tin Cannes in tow. No more je Catte may oaly feel In aaiew S- curitje. When crouched upon ye topmaat Bough of some far-;spreading Tre. No more je Cowe je alrgun vlewe. and ruanes in Feare aw aye. Ye Boy no more at Large doth reunite, lor School takee uppe te,daye. Ye Mothers who no minute knew how long the House mlsht stand. Now flnde a lUtel Time to do the work that fallos to Hand. Ye Babies small that howled fuH sottde when harpooned with a Plnne, No lonjer add their dismal Watt to sweH the horrid Blnne. And all the Noise and Moll and Strife have vanished quite awajc. For ail je Bojcs are absent nswe, aed School takes uppe TadaxcA . T" Philadelphia's Falrmaunt Park has a caterpillar corps composed of men who do nothing but scrub down the shade trees and kill the dislodged Insects. The imple ment used Is simply an ordinary scrub bing brush nailed to a long pote, ad it takes considerable endurance to keep up such w ork all day. Aa soon as the cater pillars touch the ground they start to climb the tree again, and the men have to step lively to kill all the fallen oaes. Said one of them the other day- "This Is the only really effective way of getting rid of the pests. I have tried other ways, but they wore no good. Jake tar trups. for Instance. I hav e watehed caterpillars wriggle their way out of helr fur, leav ing it in the tar. Poisons, instead of kill ing thorn, seem to make them fat. I took one of these lotions to a drug store where I hid bought it and told tho man it was worthless. 'Just pour some of it down a caterpillar's throat and see if he doesn't die.' said the druggist- 'You're foolish I said. 'You've got to catch your eater- ... . , ,, ,.. i"r " " """ " "" jr. caught him you might as well stamp On him. and then v ou know he's dead.' " Some Advice Concerning Jntia'a Garden. Charles Edvard Thomas in Harper's Bazar. Julia bs a carden fair v At the edge o' town Marigolds and roses rare, S-eet to bind in Julkt's hair And upon her gown. Four-o'clocks and touch-me-not. Pride o' .prince's feather; DalMas and forset-me-not. Wistful -little bergamot Growing all together. Ssnday Julia walked with mn When the sun was down; Very sweet ard fair was she Heaven must have envied me At the edge o' town. What saw I of flowers fair Qr cared that I -should see? No flower in all the world so rare As that .sweet one beside me thero, When Julia walked with me. Julia has a farden fair At the edge o' town Would you .see the flowers rare7 Walk not. then, with Julia there. When the sua Is down. 4 A