THE MOftNIXG OKEGONTAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBEK 30, 1901. ' ifau? rgomcm Entered at the- Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, &s second-class matter. TELEPHONES. Editorial Rooms 106 Business Office... C57 REVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In "Advance Daily, with Sunday, per month $ 85 Dally. Sunday excepted, per year......... 7 50 Daily, with Sunday, per year... 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 u The Weekly, per year 1 50 The Weekly. 3 months W To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered. Sundays cxcepted.lic Dally, per "week, delivered. Sundays included.20c POSTAGE RATES. 'United States, Canada and Hexico: 10 to 16-page paper...... ................ ..lc 16 to 22-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. Mews or discussion intended for publication Jn The Oregonlcs should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter 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. Ho stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Puget Sound Bureau Captain A. Thompson, office at 1111 Pacific avenue, Tacoma. Box 055. Tacoma Postofllce. Eastern Business Office, 43. 44. 45, 47. 48, 49 Tribune building. New Tork City; 403 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. BeckwJth special. agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by J. K. Cooper. 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Gold smith Bros.. 236 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 1003 Market street; Foster & Orear, F-irry news stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 259 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 100 So. Spring street. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street. For sale in Omaha, by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street. For eale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 "W. Second South street. For sale in Ogden by W. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street, and by C H. Myers. For pale in Kansas City. Mo., by Fred Hutchinson, 904 "Wyandotte street. On file at Buffalo. N. T., in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For Nile in Washington, D. C hy the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-012 Seventh street. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. G5; minimum temperature, 48; pre cipitation, 0.44. TODAY'S "WEATHEIt Fair, -with light frost in early morning. Northwesterly winds. PORTLAND, MONDAY, SEPT. 30, 1001. F OREGON FOR HOMESEEKERS. Oregon, the oldest Pacific Coast ter ritory of the United States, stands with a larger proportion of its area untakea than any other Pacific Coast state. And yet It offers a greater range of Indus trial possibilities, perhaps, than any other state In the Union. Oregon has not been "boomed." "What has been accomplished In the line of develop ment has been without excitement. This has contributed somewhat to the reputation of the state for ultra-conservatism. It has also contributed to the present fact that Oregon's business and industrial life are on solid foundation and In prosperous condition today. Ore gon has not discounted its future, and it is therefore ready for a rapid ad vance. It does not have to wait for repairs. Homeseekers find an attractive field in Oregon. They find here a variety of climatic tnd Industrial conditions. There are not, of course, fine farms cr valuable timber lands in accessible localities waiting for entry at the United States Land Offices. The choice lands in choice locations have all been taken. But the extension of transpor tation lines will make valuable the lands now deemed so inaccessible as to be comparatively worthless, and ir rigation facilities now projected will bring the arid or semi-arid tracts up to the highest standard of farming utility. "We have plenty of room for farmers of energy and intelligence, for dairy men, for fruitgrowers and for other capable and industrious citizens. Such people may turn Oregon's advantages to their profit. However, ready-made fortunes are not to be picked up in Ore gon without an effort, nor is it desirable that they should be. In this Issup of The Oregonian may he found much Information of special value to homeseekers unacquainted with the Pacific Slope. It Is not an ex haustive presentment of Oregon's natu ral and acquired advantages, not a re port of her productions and her com merce. It is rather a view of some of the points of Interest to homeseekers who are actuated by the laudable mo tive to have the best homes possible for themselves and their families amid surroundings and conditions that pro mote the best citizenship. In order that the statements may be entirely within bounds and command attention and re spect abroad, they are for the most part made by officials who have to do with the special matters of which they write. Every one is entitled to full faith and credit. They show Oregon to be a great state, with climate and lands that any able-bodied, intelligent citi zen may turn to his comfort and profit ANTI-CIGARETTE LEAGUES. The proposal for anti-cigarette leagues in the public schools is one that should, and doubtless will, meet the iodojcsement of parents and of the public generally. The idea of throwing boys tinon their honor, after first ex plaining to them the reasons for a re quirement of this kind, is one that can not be too strongly commended, and it is believed that it cannot be pushed in the direction indicated without great and permanent advantage. The work will be much more effective with boys of the grammar grades than with those in the High School, for the very obvi ous reason that it is easier to forestall a habit of any kind, and especially one so seductive as the cigarette habit, than to break a habit once formed. The fact that cigarette smoking is sapping the physical vitality and weak enintr the mental and moral force of the boys of the present generation is known to all thoughtful persons. Of course, there are boys who do not smoke: who have resisted the tempta tion as constantly presented by those who do. in deference to the wishes of their parents. But it is not too much to say that these are in the minority after the sixth or seventh grade in the public schools has been passed. There is no reflection upon the public schools in this statement. It is merely to say that in his own estimation the average boy is ""old enough to smoke" by the time he reaches the grades named, and his comrades, many of whom, perhaps, have begur much younger, strengthen him in the belief that it is manly to smoke and not at all dishonorable to conceal his newly acquired habit from his "home folks." Upon these points the ordinary boy a creature of ego and impulse needs to be defended against himself. The proposed anti-cigarette league may prove valuable in providing such defense, or in strengthening that which home training provides. It is at least worthy of earnest, judicious trial, its promoters remembering that the great danger to success lies in the tendency evolved irom the very nature of the case to allow zeai to outrun judgment in pushing the crusade against the pet vice of "Young America, the Mighty." LIGHT ON THE CONSTITUTION. It has been the commendable idea of the authors of "The Government of the American People" to put results of modern historical scholarship in suitable form fcr the information of young minds. In several important re spects they have succeeded not only in that aim, but also in getting broad facts now but little understood before the general reader, upon whose attention their work is most earnestly urged. Especially happy Is the treatment given to the Constitution of the United States. In most minds the conception of this historical document is still that of Gladstone "the most remarkable production ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man." But the Constitution was not "struck off." It was, as this book points out, not a creation, but a growth. The founders got their fdeas from experi ence, under the Confederation, under the New England Confederation, and Indirectly from European practice, both In England and on the Continent. It has proceeded from progressive history, therefore, "as much as the British con stitution."" It is refreshing and gratifying to come upon discussion of the growth of the Constitution through the years since its adoption growth through amendment, construction in the courts and popular usage and especially upon the phrase "The , unwritten Constitution" with which readers of these columns have been familiar for many years. Thus the original Constitution contemplated, if it did not recognize, not only seces sion, but slavery. It took the election of Presidents out of the hands of the people and put it in the hands of an Ideal body of "electors." The four teenth amendment prohibits disfran chisement of negroes and prescribes penalties for the offense. All these things have been set aside or overcome by the unwritten Constitution built up by popular growth. Soon, maybe, we shall be electing Senators by popular vote, just as now we elect Presidents, just as the Union has become inde structible, just as our boundaries are extended upon occasion, just as we for- PWd Presidents a third term. Upon the broad view of the unwritten Constitu tion, the book Is so felicitous that we shall quote one passage of some length: The real life of the Constitution Is In Its un written parts, in the construction placed upon its provisions by the courts and by Congress, and In the construction which the will of the people and the political necessities of a grow ing Nation have made inevitable. ... It is the unwritten part that enables our Constitu tion to reflect accurately the changing life of the people. . . . The possibility of an un written Constitution Is due to the doctrine of implied powers. Jefferson said that Chief Justice Marshall and the Supreme Court were making a new Constitution by means of the Implied powers of the Constitution. He was right. ... A Constitution Is not an end in itself, but a means to an end; and that end Is the security of life, liberty and property, and the opportunity of each Individual, as a part of society, to develop his powers to the fullest. It must conform to the expanding needs that new conditions bring, or be thrust aside as were the Articles of Confederation. The authors of this important and serviceable work, which Is published by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston, are President Strong, of the University of Oregon, and Professor Schafer, of the department of history of the same in stitution. In the edition we have seen, some sixty pages are devoted to the State of Oregon. Not only on account of its local historical value, but also because of its enlightening discussions of our National and local governments in all their bearings, we commend it to the attention of every thoughtful citi zen. THE PRICE OP WHEAT. Now that the wheatgrowers of the Pacific Northwest have a record-breaking crop pretty well under cover, their greatest concern is in regard to prices. The present season does not differ much from its predecessors so far as1 a lack of unanimity of opinion en the future course of the market is concerned. Every argument that is presented by the bulls in the trade is countered by a seemingly plausible statement from the bears. If it were not for this dif ference of opinion, even a horse trade would be effected with difficulties. The farmers of the Pacific Northwest, hav ing a large surplus of wheat to sell, are naturally inclined to regard the cereal as too cheap at present quota tions. In support of this belief, a num ber of bullish factors can be cited. There is unquestionably a large short age in the German crop, Russia is famine-stricken in some districts, and the French crop is not all that can be de sired. The bears, when confronted with this testimony, respond with the statement that the American crop is so much above the average that there will be an exportable surplus over and above all normal requirements sufficient to meet the usual shortage abroad. This argument is sound in a measure, but the present excellent financial condi tion of the American farmer must be reckoned with. If the latter decides that wheat at present prices is below a parity with other commodities, and indulges in a little speculation by hold ing his wheat, advanced prices will be necessary in order to make up the defi cit, unless substitutes or wheat sup plies are obtainable from some other quarter. The course of the market a year ago, if taken as a criterion for that of the current season, offers but little comfort for the believers in high prices. Last year the drouth In the Middle "West cut out over 100,000,000 bushels of wheat, and the Argentine crop came in on top of this shortage with at least 50,000,000 bushels less wheat than it turned off the preceding season. On the first wave of excite ment which followed the news of the crops burning up in Minnesota and the Dakotas there was a sharp advance, which in a few days ran prices up IS cents per bushel. An analysis of this sudden strength in the market proved it to be more sentimental than statistical, for the big shortage was net seriously felt except In the Imme diate locality where it was the most pronounced. The result was that wheat dropped back to about where it started, and even the direst reports from the Argentine a few weeks later could not start it from the rut in which It set tled. This year America and Canada have a surplus, generally conceded to be suf ficient to meet the shortages so far reported from Europe, and long be fore all of this wheat will be needed the Argentine will be in the market. This latter country,, in fact, may be said to hold the key to the situation. Her crop will come on the market just at a time when the early movement from this country shows signs of slack ening. Europe has demonstrated her ability to shake out enough early offer ings for ail immediate demands, and as the Argentine always sells regard less of prices, a good crop in that coun try would obviate the necessity of any advance on" the American holdings. The strike in San Francisco will un doubtedly have a bad effect on the Pa cific Coast wheat market later in the season. July, August and September are heavy shipping months for San Francisco, and had it not been for the strike at least 5,000,000 bushels of Cali fornia grain, which is still on the docks, would now be afloat. This grain will hang over the mar ket, and as it goes forward now will not reach the European market until steam cargoes from the Argentine are arriving off coast. In fact, the heavi est shipments from Oregon, "Washing ton, California and the Argentine will all reach the foreign consumer about the same time. Against this array of bearishness, as previously stated, is the possibility that the American farmer will not sell freely. The situation is certainly a perplexing one, and the old est operators show an unusual degree of hesitancy about assuming any fur ther obligations until conditions are more clearly defined. VIOLATIONS OP BANKING LAW. When the Seventh National Bank of New York City failed last Summer The Oregonian shared the gederal opinion of banking experts that no criminal pro cedure would lie against the offending officers of the bank. This conclusion is not yet put in deadly peril, but it is called in question by the indictment that has been found against the presi dent and receiving teller of the bank for infraction of the National banking law. As the New York Evening Post now recalls, at the time when the Sev enth National failed there was a pretty general exclamation that all the banks -which did a stock exchange business were constantly doing the same things that the Seventh National was accused of namely, overcertifying the checks of customers and lending more than one tenth of their capital to one person or firm. Both these acts are prohibited by law, and it cannot be said that the pro hibitions are without good reason. Now, the National banking law pro vides as follows as to restrictions on loans: The total liabilities to any association, of any person, or of any company, corporation, or firm for money borrowed, including in the liabilities of a company or firm the liabilities of the several members thereof, shall at no time exceed one-tenth part of the amount of the capital stock of such association actually paid in. But the discount of bills of exchange drawn In good faith against actually existing values, and the discount of commercial or busi ness paper actually owned by the person nego tiating the same shall not be considered as money borrowed. This provision is notoriously contra vened by every large bank in the coun try. Business on present lines is prac tically impossible without it. Equally general is said to be the habit of over certification. National banks in finan cial centers are accustomed to certify the checks of brokers before entering a corresponding credit on the books of the bank. The law forbids this in ex press terms. In a well-considered ar ticle on this subject, to which we fully assent, the newspaper already quoted takes the ground that these laws should either be enforced or repealed. If John Doe has bills of exchange or commer cial paper liona fide for $1,000,000, a bank may discount the whole sum for him, regardless of the amount of its own capital, provided it keeps a cash re serve proportionate to its liabilities, and after doing so it may lend to John Doe, in the ordinary way, a sum equal to one-tenth of its capital. The hardship of this provision is said to arise from the fact that it does not include stocks and bonds, as well as bills of exchange and commercial paper. Stocks and bonds are said to be often better secur ity than bills and promissory notes; therefore why discriminate against them? "The failure of the Seventh Na tional," says the Post, "would seem to be a pretty good answer to this query. Stocks and bonds are of various kinds. Those of the railroad that Marquand & Co. were carrying and that the Seventh National took as collateral were exact ly the sort that Congress had in mind when the law was framed." Recent events are certain to empha size in the popular mind the necessity for less disregard of law. Defiance of laws and a disposition to do what seems right and necessary, regardless of them, Is a refined form of anarchy that needs rebuke, however high In station or powerful In resources the perpetrators may be. This is the spirit in which these prosecutions should be conducted, and in which amendment of the Na tional bank act should be approached. A pertinent answer to the misgivings of anti-imperialism on trans-Pacific trade is supplied by the determination of Mr, John W. Mackay and associates to build a submarine cable from some point in California to Hawaii and the Philippines, and thence to Japan and China. The proposal is in every way more desirable, also, than the two pro jects that were before the last session of Congress. One of these was the Sherman measure, which contemplated a private monopoly, binding the Gov ernment to pay as an-annual subsidy to the corporation constructing the cable the sum of $300,000 a year for twenty years a total of $6,000,000. The other was a bill by John B. Corliss, of Detroit, providing for the construction, owner ship and operation of the cable by the Government of the United States. The principal argument offered In behalf of the Corliss bill was the fact that the bulk of the business over the cable for a great many years to come would be Government business, and that the Gov ernment had already paid out vast sums for messages of the War Depart ment to the Philippines. These cable tolls to the Army officials at Manila had aggregated $325,000 in one year, while the cost of commercial cable com munications to Japan by way of Europe was estimated at $500,000 a year. Gov ernment control of the cable was also urged -as a naval and military neces sity. It was also pointed out that Great Britain had attained her commercial supremacy on the seas by the construc tion and ownership of cables to all por tions of her vast possessions. Mr. Mac kay's corporation, however, promises to lay the cable without any subsidy, and expects to be carrying" dispatches to and from Manila by the beginning of 1904. The distance will be shortened by about one-half, and the rates will be 30 to 60 per cent less than now. So we see that subsidies are not needed for cables any more than for ships. Some body may yet undertake to build the Nicaragua Canal without Government aid. Business circles generally are disposed to rejoice at the defeat of the Ne braska anti-trust law in the Federal Courts. This law not only aimed to prevent Industrial combines, but also prohibited insurance companies from forming any compact for the transac tion of business, or from entering into an agreement respecting rates. How ever, it exempted from its provisions all assemblies of laboring men and others seeking to combine for the pur pose of enforcing their demands. Suit was brought by the state in 1897 against certain insurance companies for viola tion of the anti-trust law, and a tem porary injunction was granted the com panies restraining the state from en forcing the law. When it reached the Federal Court it did not take the Judge very long to declare the law unconsti tutional, not only because it was class legislation, but because its anti-compact feature involved the constitutional rights of the parties to make contracts. The decision of Judge McPherson, of the Federal Court, is regarded as a final death blow to state legislation of this character on trusts, following as it dees several decisions of like import by state Supreme Courts. Several states, not ably Illinois, Missouri and Texas, mani fest a disposition to retreat from the extreme legislation which has driven business corporations from them into other states. Between this extreme and the opposite one of laxity exemplified in New Jersey the' trust legislation of the future, so far as states are con cerned, must be framed. One of the most singular changes in international politics and trade is the substitution of German for English in fluence in Turkey. Forty or fifty years ago it was England that was maintain ing the Ottoman Empire as a "buffer state"; earlier than that it was Eng landj supported by France, which pro tected the Sultan Mahmoud against the insurrection of Mehemet AH and his sen Ibrahim. Now 'the question is asked whether Germany will protect the ''in tegrity of the Ottoman Empire" against supposed Slavonic machinations; it was to Germany that the Sultan turned, and turned in vain, for support in his present controversy with France. It seems to be generally understood that England would not fight another Cri mean War. One reason alleged for this is that the power of the people is much greater than it used to be, and that the people are opposed to war, or do not understand international politics. The fact of the South African War throws some doubt upon the efficacy of this theory. It is also suggested that Turkey is no longer on the road to India; that that lies through Egypt, and England has Egypt. But with Russia in Constantinople and a Russian fleet in the Mediterranean Sea, the Suez route would not be beyond danger. For a generation a Euphrates Valley Rail road was an English dream; it never became an English reality, and now the concession for it is in German hands. The first race between the yachts con firms the general expectation of close work. The Minneapolis Tribune points out that there have been very few really close races In the twenty-four contests for the America's cup that have taken place in the last fifty years. It is a fact most persons have forgotten that only one heat out of the three usually sailed ever has been won by a British yacht. Curiously enough, that was when the American Columbia, obliged to sail in a crippled condition, was defeated by the British Livonia in 1871. Barring acci dents, there have been only two really close contests that between the Puri tan and Genesta in 1885, and that be tween the Vigilant and Valkyrie in 1893. All of the heats in these races were won by less than two minutes' time. Most of the other races have been won by the American yachts by leads so long as to diminish the interest on both sides to discourage any hope of later success not built on a foundation of stolid British determination. The Shamrock I was beaten by the Co lumbia last year by a distance of a mile or more in two heats, the Co lumbia sailing the third alone on ac count of an accident to the Shamrock. 'Indications are that this year's trials are to be far more spirited, and this is well. Good sport is the least we can hope for in the way of consolation for the vanquished. The Oregonlan desires to offer a word of commendation of the management of the Pan-American Exposition at Buf falo and encouragement of those who have formed plans to attend it. The dread tragedy of three weeks ago has put a damper on an enterprise whose managers were in no way to blame for the catastrophe. Their conduct under the circumstances and subsequently has been unexceptionable. It is unfortunate that they must now be made to suffer for what was in no way their fault, but It is reported that since the burial of the President the attendance at the ex position has continued to fall off, until It now amounts to almost nothing. This is much to be regretted. There is no reason why people who had planned to visit the exposition should not do so. Certainly such a visit would mean no disrespect to the memory of President McKinley, who has made the exposition historic, not only by his death, but by the great speech he delivered on the day previous to his assassination, and which in the light of what has followed its de livery reads like a great farewell ad dress. From every standpoint and in every way Buffalo and its exposition deserve the support of the people. While the result of. Saturday's yacht race causes Americans to speak with increased respect of the Shamrock, there is every reason to be proud of the doughty survivor of the races of 1898, and to approve heartily of the choice of. the judges who selected her to defend the cup. There are still two more races to win, but first blood is a powerful incentive, and Columbia stock should be just as high today as it was after her long lead on her rival Thursday. With a successor to Mr. Boosevelt at Albany even more unmanageable than Mr. Roosevelt himself, and with that strenuous gentleman in the Presiden tial chair, and Low nominated for Mayor, it does not look as if Senator Piatt knew all there is to know about shelving troublesome politicians. Colleges which are jealous of the reputation' of West Point have found In the cane rush just as fatal an entertain ment as the administering of tabasco J sauce cocktails, MAJESTY OF LAW. San Fnanclsco Bulletin. No court in Christendom has given to history a finer example of the majesty of law than that which tried Leon Czolgosz at "Buffalo for the murder of President McKinley. -All the elements of a great historical drama were pres ent in the trial. The prisoner was charged with the murder of the Presi dent of the United States. To the moral atrocity of the crime as charged was added the fact that the man who fell under the assassin's hand was enshrined in the hearts of the people. His long public carrer had been marked by noble acts. He had risen to his high place step by step, and each trust he had accepted had been faithfully executed. His pri vate life afforded no provocation for an act of piivate vengeance. The method of the assassination showed premeditation. The assassin approached his victim with outstretched hand. The weapon of death was skillfully concealed in the other hand. He was so calm, so sane, so perfectly master .of himself, that the officers appointed to protect the Presi dent frcm such men as ho saw nothing In his manner to warn them, of the purpose of the assassin. Under these circumstances Colzgosz was rescued from the violent hands that were in the madness of the moment laid upon him, and conducted to a place of safety. "When the time came for his trial he was given every means of defense the law and enlightened public sentiment allow. He was not even presumed to be guilty un til the law had examined into all the facts of the case and so declared him. The Judge of the court appointed for his defense eminent counsel, who accept ed the duty Imposed upon them and saw that the accused was given the benefit of every provision of law that might mitigate the character of the crime. The trial occupied two days. It was as thorough and as definite in the matter of proof as if it had been spread over two moriths. Every point was made in extenuation of guilt that could be made without resort to legal technicalities. In the courtroom, in which the accusell had no friends, he was secure from even the impertinence of spectators. When the jury announced its verdict a hush fell upon the audience. There was no manifestation of exultation, simply the sigh of satisfaction that no urilooked-for diversion in the course of justice had arisen. It thus happened that a Presi dent's death furnished the occasion for a demonstration of the majesty of law that will constitute an example not only for our own people, but for the people of all civilized nations. A greater provo cation for violence could not be con ceived, nor a moro calm and resolute administration of justice be imagined. Judge White seemed the personification of the spirit of Justice, his horror at the enormity of the crime being eliminated from the proceedings he directed by a high sense of the duty devolve upon him. Let us hope that this exhibition of the majesty of the law will create a new standard of court procedure in this country. Who Bore the Brunt of the Strike f ', Chicago Record-Herald. According to Pittsburg estimates the loss in wages of the men Idle by reason of the Amalgamated Association strike was at least $10,000,000. That this esti mate cannot be far astray is demonstrat ed by the fact that the average number of men idle during the period of the strike was 50,000. If the average pay was only $2 a day the total wage roll for that number of men for two and a half months would be over JV.OOO.CCO. Of the large total on a strike those members of the Amalgamated Associa tion numbered only about 9000. The re mainder were forced Into voluntary idle ness by the action of the leaders of the Amalgamated Association. As to the cost of the strike against the corporation against which it was aimed a dispatch from New York says that there was no appreciable diminution of the income of the "United States Steel Corporation becauseof the recent strike. The net earnings "for the quarter to end September 30 will be fully equal to those for the preceding quarter. The smaller output from the mills affected was fully offset by that of other mills. It must not be Inferred from these statements that the strikers and their families were the only losers by their unprofitable action. Business and em ployment all over the country has been unsettled and delayed wherever the products of the steel mills were , re quired in other undertakings and indus tries. But after all the loss has fallen heavi est on wage-earners, where it has been direct, and will not be offset by in creased wages. As to the Remedy. Boston Advertiser. The question as to the remedy against the anarchist terrorists who are morally responsible for the President's death is not to be settled off-hand. Neither Is It to be dismissed with the statement that no remedy is possible. Either course would be unworthy of the dignity of this Republic. That there is a line that can be drawn between free speech and un licensed speech Is certain. It may re quire a constitutional amendment or pos sibly concurrent legislation in the several states, to bring about what the people de mand. There should be a full and free discussion of the matter, undoubtedly. When public sentiment has crystallized unmistakably in support of some effectual remedy, it will be adopted. The grief which the whole country is showing to day is no merely temporary sentiment. It will bear fruit of some kind towards the prevention of further anarchist out breaks. Not a Question for Partisanship. New York World. Ex-President Cleveland, in his admir able remarks to the Princeton faculty and students on the death of President Mc Kinley, said one thing that should re ceive unanimous assent. The question of dealing with anarchy must be met, he said, "boldly and resolutely," but "it is not a thing that we can safely leave to be dealt with by party or partisanship." There is room, of course, for differences of opinion among ,good citizens as to what measures will be best calculated ef fectively to repress the anarchist proga ganda of murder and violence. But, whatever these differences may be, they must be discussed and settled, not on party lines, but on principles as broad as those on which all our institutions rest, and to which all Americans, without distinction of party, subscribe. And those principles are all to be found in the Con stitution. For Its Own Conntry. v Louisville Courier-Journal. The London Spectator expresses the opinion that "President Roosevelt Is neither for nor against England, but merely for his own country." The Spec tator is no doubt right. That Is the kind of man Roosevelt has heretofore shown himself to be, and It Is the only kind that ought to be President. The Lady Teller. Chicago Record-Herald. lOno of tho Chicago banks has employed lady tellers, and hereafter people who deposit or draw out money will find, instead of beard ed men at the windows, .polite young women, who, the cashier says, are better fitted nat urally for the work than their brothers are. News Item.) Tho lady feller's come to tell, She tells with all her might ' All through the busy days when men Pile dollars In the safes, and then Goes home to tell, at night. Tho lady teller proudly tell3 Her friends who never tell. And. having heard, they hurry out To let the neighbors know about Tho telling of tho bolle. Long may the lady teller tell I Oh, It Is only fair That she should tell, you must" agree, Since telling Is her specialty, As all the world's aware. AMUSEMENTS. "A Female Drummer," which opened a week's engagement to the usual packed house at Cordray's last night, proved to be the best musical comedy which has been seen at the theater since "The Tele phone Girl." Staged with those familiar pictures of modern-life which are so ef fective as scenery, presented by a com pany which made up in numbers what it lacked in voices, and given with a swing and life that kept the audience al ways unprepared for what would come next. It was not surprising that it made the hit it did. Johnstone Bennett is the one member of the cast who stands out prominently, but Tony Williams Is also present, and they two make up for any amount of mediocrity which may be scat tered about among the remainder of the cast. The play carries no unwieldly burden of plot. The first installment is deliv ered in a private office of Silk & Smooth, department store pro prietors, and the girl porters and floor walkers who saunter through in the morning sing songs, do dances, and poke the proprietors in the ribs in a fashion that affords the house all the enjoyment it can conveniently express. Mr. Wil liams, as Smooth the senior partner. does some exceedingly clever character work, and Miss Bennett, who makes a triumphal entry with a princely retinue, and proceeds to sell goods and deal out cigars, wins the favor of the house the moment she arrives. In the second act the scene changes to the interior of the department store, with girls lined up behind counters full of rib bons and goods, and customers thronging through to make purchases. An elevator that is as natural as possible is a ma terial assistance in making exits and entrances. Miss Bennett shines In the second act in the roles of saleslady, baby and again as the female drummer. In all of which she carries off all the honors she finds lying around loose. Charlotte Scott and Harry Ladcll, as the cashgirl and Buttons, the store messenger, do sev eral things in this act that wins them applause, and Miss Graham, as Mrs. Smooth, the jealous wife of the head or the 'house, has considerable to do. In the third act, which consists of a blow-out, given by the salesladies, the Imperial Quartet, composed of four darK ies who really know how to sing, gives an effective specialty. David De Wolfe, who rather overdoes the part of the floor walker, sings "The Swellest Thing In Town" In a style that 13 his redemption. Mart Reagan gives a monologue composed of four or five new "gags," Mr. Williams sings a parody or two, and Miss Charlotte Scott and Harry Ladell do a clever sons and dance specialty. The comedy is elaborately mounted, each scene being a surprise in Its turn, and many mechanical effects adding much to the humor of the situations. The cos tumes are new and bright, "and the sing ing, while not brilliant, is better than that of many comic opera choruses. "The Female Drummer" will be attraction all the week. the COMING ATTRACTIONS. Scnbrooke at the Marqunm. Mr. Thomas Q. Seabrooke, who will appear Friday and Saturday nights with a matinee Saturday October 4 and 5 at the Marquam Grand Theater in Sydney Rosenfeld's comic romatic play, "A Mod ern Crusoe," has surrounded himselr with an excellent supporting company. Among Its principal members are: Miss Is abelle Evesson, Mrs. Mary Myers, Eliza beth Stewart, Helen Gladstone, Lynn Pratt, Leighton Leigh, G. A. Ltnderman. S. P. Hicks. C. Harry Robertson and Arthur Magill. The sale of seats will open Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. Paris, After the Commnnc. Century. A man standing at the corner of a street heard two officers talking of tho bravery of the troops. "Yes," said the loiterer, "if your men had fought like that against the Prussians, all this would not have happened." The officer pulled out his pis tol and shot him. "Our army has behaved heroically," said M. Thiers. "We execute with the law and by the law." "Where's your boasted liberty?" I asked of a friend, a Frenchman. Taking off his shoe, he searched the inside of it very minutely, and then said, "It has been there for the last two months, but I think It is lost now," The method of formal execution by young ' cigarette-smoking Colonels, as above indicated, was the usual kind of execution. The honor of a firing party was reserved for a few persons of dis tinction, such as Milliere, who had re signed a seat as Deputy forA Paris in the National Assembly to become a member of the Commune. He was placed in front of the Pantheon, and with arm raised, cried. "Vive le peuple!" There was a roll of musketry, a murmur, and he was dead. As I was walking away from the sad spectacle I met Mr. Holt White, of the Pall Mall Gazette, who said to me, "I am sorry I am too late. I wanted to see Milliere. People say he looks so much like Jesus Christ." We then witnessed a sight that made us both shudder. Up to the previous day the fight had been going on beneath a glorious sun and a cloud less sky. I was astonished to find how few traces of the carnage were to be seen in the streets. The reason was that the sunshine had dried the blood and it had become covered with a concealing layer of fine dust. Now, however, there had been showers of rain, and the effect was as if the very stones of the streets were bleeding afresh. Near the Pantheon, at a spot where several men had been shot, blood was trickling in sluggish streams to the gutter. Soldiers, fatigued with the day's massacre, reposed on the Wet pave ment, using It also as a dining table. Wo saw them eating raw meat, which they were too- fatigued to remove from the streams of blood that trickled about it a sorry banquet for M. Thiers' "heroes!" To detail what I saw during the rest of the fighting would bo to repeat in effect what is above written. Everywhere In the streets dead bodies were lying about. There were no wounded, for the troops gave no quarter. In every direction the work of death and destruction went on; the human brute unchained, the Imbe cile wrath, the mad fury of man devour ing his brother man. The part of the city In possession of the conquerers, however, was safe, though not comfortable to walk In. Scattered brains, -limbs, bodies and blood formed a ghastly spectacle. a His Own Logical Snccessor. New York World. With every member of McKlnley's Cab inet pledged to stay in his place to the end of Roosevelt's accidental term, It Is obvious that the prime cause which pre vented Arthur's nomination for President in 1SS4 cannot possibly operate against Roosevelt In 1904, if by that time he shall have decided, as in all human probabil ity he will, to be considered as a candi date. There will be no member of Mc Klnley's Cabinet to pose then, as Blaine did In 1SS4, as the heir and legatee of the murdered President. Mr. Bnsrmnn. Washington Star. Oh, Mlstah Busyman, hustlln foh de train. Goln' down to office an a-comln home again; Eatln In a hurry while ybh mln Is full o" doubt. Buying bran' new glasses case yoh eyes Is wearln' out. Never stop foh slngln case you' a got so much to do JDeed, Mlstah Busyman, l's glad I Isn't you. t "Sou's gettln' all de money an' you's puttln' it away But I knows you's gwlnter help me when I gets clean broke some day. You saya l's mightly lazy, an' a lot o" other thlng3, But you wish you'd, time to listen when I touch de banjo strings. I takes my hat off to you jes" as p'llte as I v kin be But I bet dar Is occasions when you wishes you was me. NOTE AND COMMENT. Td the weather clerk. Encore. The country Is obituary poets. unexpectedly rich in We may as well admit that Portland has seen better streets. Nothing like the close of the State Fair to clear up the weather. It begins to look as if the Columbia, was sailing in. her own class. Why not try to forget Czolgosz, and thus rob him of the only consolation h has left? Perhaps the Czar refused to go to Parta because he gets enough of the strenuotra life at home. It Is just as well to take In your gate. Some hoodlums seem to think that Hallo een lasts all the month. Never was a parting guest sped more effectually than Prince Chun, lately en tertained by the Emperor of Germany., Admiral Schley's present behavior un der fire shows that Maclay did not know much about the proper use of the word caitiff. The mothers of the country are wait ing with bated breath to learn what braad of soothing syrup will be used in tho White House. The Duke and Duchess of York, having tasted frontier life at Calgary, ought to make a side trip down to Wolfville, and see the real thing. Such a healthy city as Portland does not offer many inducements to doctors ordinarily, but we are now approaching the football season. "A cat of our acquaintance was run over by an eight-wheeled locomotive, aud we are alarmed lest it stray under the office chair and get killed," says a, bunchgrass -exchange. Now that ocean steamships are com municating with one another at a dis tance of 60 miles, it might be worth while to wait a few days fordevelopmer.t3 before spending money on any more sub marine cables. ' "I couldn't go to Sara Wilkins funeral,"' wrote Mrs. Haskins to her husband in tho far-off Nome country. Uncle Will iam was to come up and get me, but he got took sick like he always does, and so I hadn't no one to go with. I wasn't so particular about its being a funral. but I was anxious to go, for I did want to look on Sara's face Just ones when she wasn't chawing gum." Tho prisoners in the county jnil at Lawrence, Kan., made the following statement the other day In a local pa per: "We understand that some of the citi zens of this city think we are anarchists, which is a gross mistake, and also an. in justice. While some have acknowledged to wrongdoing and others are held wait ing the actions of the courtr their mis demeanors neither make them outlaws nor anarchists. Our loyalty to the Gov ernment i3 equal to that of the most re spected citizen. Anarchists say do away with the law. Do away with the law and the ultimatum Is barbarism. No one wants that, though they be hardened criminals. Politically we are about. xer Iy divided. It Is not the assassination, of McKinley, a Republicans It la the assass ination of the Chief Executive of tho greatest, grandest and most glorious Na tion on the face of God's footstool. The crime and what It portends is too great to realize. "These are the sentiments of the "INMATES "Of the County Jail of Douglas Coun ty. Kan." In his autobiography. "A Sailor's Log," Rcar-Admlral Robley D. Evans relates a strange Instance of premonition which a fellow sailor had the night before the at tack on .Port Fisher, in January, 1S6. Ho says: "We had on board the Powhatan a fine young seaman named Flanalgan, who came from Philadelphia. On tho night of January 14 he came to my room with a small box In his hand and said to me: , 'Mr. Evans, will you be kind enough to take charge of this box for me it has some little trinkets in It aad give It to my sister in Philadelphia?' I asked him why he did not deliver It him self, to which he replied: 'I am going ashore with you tomorrow and will be killed. I told him how many bullets it required to kill a man In action and. In other ways tried to shake his coavic tions. but it was no use he stuck to it. He showed no nervousness over it, but seemed to regard It as a matter of course. I took the box, and, after making a. proper memorandum, put It away among my things. On the afternoon of the next day, when we were charging the fort, and Jast as we came under fire, at about 800 yards. I saw Flannigan reel out to one side and drop, the first man hit, with a bullet through his heart. I stepped quickly to his side and asked If he were badly hurt. The only reply was a smile as he looked up Into my face and rolled over dead. The box was delivered as he re quested, and I afterwards assisted in getting a pension for his sister." ' PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHEIXS Badness. "Oh, mamma." cried Tammy, "Willie's pulling the pussy's tall'." "He's a. very bad boy to do that." oald mamma. "Yes, and he's selfish, too; 'cos ho won't let me pull It at all." Philadelphia Press. An Avenue of Escape. "I'm thinking: se riously of resuming business." "I thought you had retired permanently." "I thought so, too, but I need some excuse for not attending my wife's afternoon teas." Brooklyn Life. He was obviously anxious, and she seemed almost willing. "I must refer you to pa&a," said she, with a. becoming blush, "before giv ing you a final answer." "But 1 am perfeetly willing to take you without any reference." said he, magnanimously. Tlt-Blts. The Name That Appealed. Golf Export-So you received an accidental blow In the faco with a golf club, eh? What were you hit with brassle, cleek. mashle, lofter, or putter? Golf Novice I ain't sure which, but I think by tho way my nose felt when 1 was struck that it must have been a mashy all right." Judge. A Saucy Query. Miss Passay When I watched the dear old soldiers pass by I thought how splendid It must have been to have had the privilege of living right here In the mWst of the excitine times of the great Civil War. Johnnie Fresh Then you were abroad durin? the war, were you. Miss Passay? Cleveland Plain Dealer. Rules and Exceptions. "Politeness Is never wasted." remarked the man of Chesterfleklten manners. "Well, mlstar," answered the rough ly clad, weather-beaten person, "that may be true In your part o town. But If you was In the canal-boat business you'd know that there ain't any use whatever of sayln 'please' to a mule." Washington Star. He Would Enjoy It. "Did your father used to whip you when you were a boy?" askd the youngster who had been chastised. "Dkt her" repeated the old gentleman, reflectively. "In those days parents were made of sterner stuff, and he used to whale me with a, strap.' Tho boy's eyes brightened instantly. "Golly!" ho cried. "I'd like to see him do It now I" Chl- cago Post,