THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1901 h V8Q&nW&L Entered at the Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid), In Advance Sally, with Sunday, per month $ S3 Daily, Sunday excepted, per year 7 00 Dally, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year w 2 00 The Weekly, per ear. .. .................. 1 BO The "Weekly. 3 months 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays excopted.l5c Dally, per week, delivered, Sundays lncluded.20o POSTAGE RATES United States Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper lc 24 to 2S-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication la The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name ot'cny Individual. Letters rotating to adver tising, subscription or to any business matter should be addressed eimply "The Oresponlan." Eastern Business Office, 43, 44, 45, 47, 48, 40 Tribune building, New Tork City: 400 "The Itookery," Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisoo by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1003 Market street; J K. Cooper Co., 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orcar. Ferry news eland. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 59 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 100 So. Spring street. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1G12 Farnam street. For sale 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 Btreet. and by C. H. Myers. On file in the Oregon exhibit at the exposi tion, Charleston, S. C. For sale in Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett Souse news stand. For sale In Denver Colo, by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 006-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER Rain; brisk southerly wind. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER-Maximum tem perature, 54; minimum temperature, 40; pre cipitation, none. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, NOV. 7. THE -"LIHERAL PARTY" IN GREAT BRITAIN, It has been said that "the hopelessly desperate condition of decrepitude into which the Liberal party appears to have fallen in Great Britain Is one of the most extraordinary developments in contemporaneous political history." Tet it Is not surprising. The center of Interest In the affairs of Great Brit ain Is the South African War. The Liberal party there is not a party of resolute purpose and strenuous en deavor. It is a party of debate, rather than of action. And Great Britain knows that the only way to get through the war is to fight it out It is sub jugation of the Boers, or acknowledg ment of their independence and loss of South Africa. It was the Liberal party, under Glad stone's leadership, that got the British Empire Into this stress of difficulty. Gladstone, after Majuba Hill, yielded to the Boers. He made peace with them, on terms which virtually was a British surrender. At that time the Boers could have been conquered with but a small part of the effort which It became necessary to put forth twenty years later, after they had fully armed and prepared themselves for the con flict This South African War is the heritage left to Great Britain by the Liberal party, and the people do not forget the source of It Again, when the peremptory message of the Boers to the British Government made the present war Inevitable since no nation receiving such a message can have any choice, but simply must fight a large section of the Liberal party, trufe to the sentimental Instincts of men who think nothing can justify -war, or resistance, put Itself in attitude of opposition to the prosecution of the war very much after the manner of our peace-at-any-prlce faction during the Civil War in the United States. Another section of the Liberal party, however, seeing clearly that the alter native of vigorous war was the loss of South Africa, resolved to' support the government and have done so. These events have virtually disbanded the Liberal party; so that the decrepitude into which it has fallen -Js a perfectly natural consequence. The people of Great Britain see that they have to fight it through, or admit the dismemberment of the Empire. That Is what is the matter with the Liberal party. It is deemed too "lib eraP for the integrity and safety of the empire, and at this time, therefore, It -has no mission or function. HERaiANN ON RESERVES. It is evident that Commissioner Her mann is learning by experience. That part 'of his annual report touching the forest reserve system, published yes terday, is a commendable presentment of the subject It fails, however to cover one point that has been the basis of considerable complaint While the law opens the way to great abuse to permit indiscriminate lieu selections for land within the borders of a reserve, this Is only part of the evil. The other part is that relatives and favorites of Influential politicians are able by some process,- occult or other, to know long In advance just. where land Is to be reserved, which knowledge they turn to aocount by "locating" on the land in order that they may use it as base for lieu selections after the withdrawal of the tract This abuse is not due to im perfection of the statute. It Is clearly an abuse of official position by some- ooav, tms is not intended as a reflec titt on the Commissioner of the Gen eral Land Office, but It Is a fact that sttbuld be considered in connection with any statement of the present difficulty. Commissioner Hermann put one phase of the- matter very clearly In the f ollow lowing pertinent questions: Why should the Government bo required to part tlUo to millions of acres of the public .domain valued In the market at $5 per acre and sold by the Government itself under tho timber and stone act only In limited quantities, not exceeding 100 acres, at not less than $2 50 per acre, and then only upon certain proof and publication, and to accept in exchange lands held in private or corporate ownership in reserves not worth anywhere or at any time 50 cents an acre? Are we not paying an unnec eS8? ,Kn rice for our roserXesr Appraisal of the land relinquished and that taken as lieu Is recommended as one solution of the problem present ed. In that case he who should have a poor claim In the reserve or a tract from which he had taken the timber, for example, would be permitted to take in lieu only land of equal value else where. The same would be true of val uable 'claims, equal lieu value being given. Another suggestion is that there ' be a competent appraisal of the larid to be relinquished, and that the Govern ment buy it outright. This method would be subject to abuse unless con stantly under the most rigid scrutiny. It might be wise to give the Govern ment the power to employ either of these methods In settling with reserve claimants. In one part of the report the reserve in the San Francisco Mountains of Ari zona, "where the checker-board system was observed and only the 'alternate sections reserved, is referred to as a commendable success. In another place the difficulty of keeping such reserves from being pastured at will by the own ers of the unreserved sections, or of enforcing regulations for preservation of forests or keeping water pure, Is pointed out The wisdom of this plan of reserve Is open to serious question. It might be preferable to the present system of unrestricted lieu land selec tions, but it is to be hoDed that Con- hgress will devise a better and juster metnoa or eirecung tnese very aesiraoie reservations of the public domain. NO "REALIGNMENT" HERE. Tuesday was inauspicious for the gifted authors who periodically in the magazines tell us all about the "re alignment of parties." As things are now they are not to be In the near fu ture, we rea.d over and over again. Readjustment of Issues and member ship is clearly Inevitable every few weeks, and whenever an unwary editor can be hypnotized signs multiply to the effect that the momentous and far reaching effect is near at hand. All of which Is Interesting and proper. It is, In fact, to be desired' There is nothing whatever wrong with this ad mirable programirie except the trifling detail of votes on election day. Then Old Realignment goes into his hole. Republican states returning to their an cient fold after the spasm of Bryanitis are: Kansas Colorado Nebraska Whereas Utah Montana "Nevada "Washington Idaho Wyoming the Democratic States of Maryland and Kentucky, lost to Bryan on account of silver, are again Demo cratic There is a. solid South once rmore, and substantially a solid North. fcucn effect as the Booker Washington incident had is in the same direction. It revived the race issue In the South, It sent 25,000 colored voters In Ohio solidly to the polls for the Republican ticket. To be sure, there is a little differ ence in the two returns. -The abandon ment of silver in the "West is hearty enough, as a discredited cause deserves. But the distrust engendered by free coinage in the East does not easily pass away. Maryland Is close. Massa chusetts and New Jersey seem no longer debatable ground. ' The price the Democracy pays for its silver lunacy is very high. Why didn't the demand for tariff re form make more Democratic votes? The reason Is that tariff reform is not a Democratic but a Republican de mand. Tou can find In Democratic newspapers and Democratic speeches plenty of hostility to protection, just as you can find hostility to everything Republican. But it is In Republican papers and in the mouths of Republican members of Congress only that Is to be found an intelligent discussion of the need for tariff reductions on trust-controlled products, of protected corpora tions. Where is the stronghold of tariff revision? In the Middle West,, in the Republican newspapers of Chicago, St Paul, Minneapolis. Milwaukee. Who is recognized champion in Congress? Representative Babcock, chairman of ,uie axionai Jttepumican Congressional Committee. Reciprocity is similarly circumstanced. Not from Democrats, but from Republicans, come its promo tion and advocacy. The Democrats are finding fault enougb,the Republicans propose to do something. There is, therefore, little encourage ment for the theory that parties are to be formed anew on tariff or other is sues. The only constructive measures for tariff reform in the fifty-seventh Congress, as for justice to the depend encies in the fifty-sixth, must be ex pected from Republican sources. A TALE OP TWO CITIES. No more damning Indictment has ever been framed agajnst an American mu nicipality than the City of Philadelphia framed against itself in Tuesday's elec tion. Its shameless x subservience to vice and official crime is brought out in bold relief by the opposing example of the City of New York. New York is a foreign city, Philadel phia an American city. The census figures for 1900 are not yet available, but in 1890 New York had six foreign ers for every eight natives, while Phil adelphia had seven natives for every two foreigners. Yet the City of New York shows today as it showed in the election of Strong in 1894 that it can rise above Its evil elements and put good men in power. Philadelphia shows itself unable to do this. It Is bound to a carcass of political and moral death, and when the knife is put into its hand to cut the bonds It refuses to strike. It is the most abject surrender to un worthy, and unscrupulous political ma chines known to our municipal history. Rothermel, candidate for re-election as District Attorney, was originally elected as a Republican. He did his duty and was entitled to re-election. But because he did his duty, the Quay machine determined to punish him. The citizens took him up and gave him the united support of the anti-Quay forces. But he goes down to defeat, and honest government with him, by an adverse majority of 35,000. Philadelphia was, on the surface, for reform. The newspapers were for re form. Everybody shouted for reform. But they voted the other way. The dog returning to his vomit Is a prize winner In vacillation compared with the fondness Philadelphia manifests for its political refuse. Tammany-ridden New York, of the red lights and cadet system and awful tenements, sets an example of munici pal and civic decision that heartens men everywhere; while the descendants of William Penn and Benjamin Frank lin uncover their shame to the scorn of all mankind. THE AMENDE HONORABLE. Much as The Oregonlan has had to say against anarchy and anarchists, it Would not for worlds do them and their cause any injustice. It is accordingly moved to apologize to the whole tribe of them for an expression that crept Into its telegraphic columns yesterday through the temporary inadvertence of an otherwise assiduous and blameless telegraph editor. The offending words ran on this wise: Salem, Nov. 5. A letter was received at the Governor's office. today threatening Governor Geor with tho fate of President McKInley un less, within six days, he should release one Edwin V. Tweiman, who is now in the Walla "Walla Penitentiary, serving a term of 20 years. . . . A great deal of ignorance is displayed In thinking Governor Geer has jurisdiction over a penitentiary In the State of Washington. There is in this, covertly veiled, an aspersion unon anarchosophy which upon adequate reflection would have revealed itself even to the preoccupied eye of a Jabez Nelson. Since when were threats against a public official required to be reasonable, or their au thor presumed guiltless of ignorance? Since never, so far as we know.' Why should an anarchist, bent on vengeance, be guided by such artificial limitations as state lines? There Is no reason, re corded of history Governor Geer, we take it, is responsi ble for incarcerations in the Washing ton State prison, and chould be assas sinated with precisely the same logic used in the murder of Humbert because he was a King and of McKInley because he was a great ruler. Hence this apol ogy. We cannot go on record a's attrib uting to anarchists any of the limita tions imposed upon the rest of mankind by reason or humanity. CHOKER'S METHODS. The battle wonjby the Citizens' party of the great City of New York over Tammany Hall was most desperately and bitterly fought on both sides, and is the most important victory ever won by the friends of good government over the champions and beneficiaries of cor rupt mlEruie. It has been compared to the great victory of November, 1871, over the Tweed ring, but the victory of Tuesday was enormously more difficult to win. It was an easy matter to beat Tweed, for, compared with Croker, Tweed was merely a stupid, greedy thief, who, finding an open opportunity to rob the city treasury, plundered it by practices so grossly criminal and eo sure of detection that they would Im peach the Intelligence of a 'professional thief. Tweed and his fellow-conspirators robbed the city by forglns the Mayor's indorsement to city warrants. Tweed was at the head of the Board of Public Works, and Connolly was Controller. When these two scoundrqis needed the Mayor's indorsement to a city warrant, they forged It in a most clumsy manner. One of Connolly's clerks made secret copies of the neces sary figures from the books of the Of fice; one of the discarded and disgrun tled beneficiaries of the "Tweed ring'' sold these fatal figures to the New York Times, and with their publication a short investigation of the city warrants held by the Tenth National Bank proved conclusively that Tweed and his official associates had robbed the city of millions, and were liable to criminal prosecution. The victory won on Tuesday over Tammany was obtained over a far abler and more artful man than Tweed. Cro ker has grown rich easily through his headship of Tammany without stealing a dollar from the city treasury after the clumsy criminal methods of Tweed. As the leader and executive of the Tammany ring, Croker has always known in advance when and where new streets were to be opened, new parks laid out, new lines of transportation created, and, of course, this knowledge could always command a market price. His political and official favors always obtained him commercial opportunities. He was always sure to be let in at the bottom of every great enterprise that needed his help to obtain a franchise or a privilege for a song. He always had "the tip" when to buy stock at bottom prices. There is no limit to the opportunities for wealth-winning that are open-to a man like Croker with the vote and Influence of Tammany Hall in his pocket. The Tammany "delegation int the Legislature could make or break a bill whose enactment was wanted by a corporation; the Tammany government of the city could make or break a busi ness enterprise by its control over a franchise. Croker' could always raise all the money necessary for politics by assessment of every Tammany political office-holder, from Judges of the Su preme Court down to petty clerics in the city departments. Croker was the gen ius of commercialism in politics. He sold the influence of Tammany, its po litical and offlciaf favor, for cash or Its equivalent, at every opportunity. It is easy to see how such a man, by purchases of real estate, by purchases of stock, by "tips" and opportunities of all sorts, could get very rich in a few years and not do anything that could possibly subject him to successful crim inal prosecution. Below Croker's polit ical commercialism was a still more dreadful official terrorism which black mailed everybody, from property-owners and shopkeepers down to wretched street hawkers and prostitutes. To un seat such a man as Croker was a gl gantic task compared with the expul sion of a clumsy, common thief from power, like Tweed, and it has been ac complished chiefly by successful appeal to the heart and conscience of the vast wage-arnlng vote of New York City. The exposure of the horrible piracy and blackmail practiced upon the poor and ignorant and friendless by the ex tortions of the Tammany "push" within and without the police Is what won the labor vote. The story of Tammany getting fa't on the contributions of -a horrible traffic in young girls was a tale that stung and drew blood from Tammany with every blow of its lash whenever it was told. To the aroused conscience and hearts of the plain wage-working masses, New York City chiefly owes its emancipation from the corrupt tyranny of Tammany. WITHOUT PREJUDICE. They have high Ideals over in Seattle. The traditional" blindness of justice is deepened and darkened by several thicknesses of opaque bandages. All of which stands out obtrusively in the conduct of the Considlne case. Consl dine Is a "gambling man," and he is on trial for having assassinated Seattle's late Chief of Police. The defendant's notorious character thereupon imposes an added qualification upon those juris prudence has wisely adopted for pre serving the jury-box from men of either convictions or information. Thus, as the report reads: The defense was very careful In its examina tion of jurors, though not much more so than tho prosecution. No one was passed for cause by Mr. "McKIroy, of the defense, who was in the slightest degree opposed to individuals en gaged in the liquor trafflo or known as gam blers. In fact, the convictions of tho men in terrogated touching gamblers and Incidentally men in the liquor traffic was tho basis of all questioning on tho part of the defence. No good citizen, obviously, could be prejudiced against gambling or saloons. The man who could unblushingly con fess a doubt as to the high moral tend ency of roulette and twenty-one, or question the efficacy of saloons as a means of grace, must be far gone in unfitness to participate In the palladium of our liberties known as trial by jury, as any other palladium, like the ballot or the public school. All friends of good morals and human progress generally should make a mem orandum of the Seattle Ideal, for uSe in sudden emergencies and sociologlc reform. If we admit to juries the man With scruples against gambling-houses and saloons, next, thing we shall find men who detest murder, abominate se duction and even look with unfriendly eye upon rape and arson. One might think, at first blush, that this standard would Involve some difficulty in obtain ing a jury, but It is reassuring to learn that In -Seattle the "work" was success fully accomplished with neatness and dispatch, Altogether, the evolution of the jury Is certainly getting on. The fatal error of reading newspapers and forming opinions has long been recognized by the discerning mind of the law. If we can also uproot prejudice against vice, we shall pass on in time to, unbiased frames of mind concerning crime itself, and the Ideal juror may at last be dis cerned In Junch and Judy or, the totem-pole. William Travers Jerome, who has been elected District Attorney in the City of New York, mad- a series of speeches during the canvass which aroused the attention of the whole coun try. Nobody exposed Tammany so thoroughly and fearlessly as he did. He didn't proceed on the principle pursued by Mrs. Gamp's friend, in conversation "A-namln' of no names, Salrey, a-hamin of no names," but he did name names, right and. left, to the amazement and terror of Tammany, and he fixed the responsibility for evil-doing on this man and that, with terrible effect. Among those whom he arraigned was Tammany's Chief of Police, Devery, who made matters ten times worse for himself by this comment: Jerome's insulted everybody. He's insur rected tho public mind an' is leading It up to anarchy. The taxpayers ought to have him arrested for libel, and indict him and fellcM with him, for blackin' the fair name of the city. This reply provoked merciless ridicule from 'the press, and added It as a further force to Jerome's indictment and denunciation Low declared that if he should be elected, about the first thing that would happen after his In duction into office would be the ap pointment of another Chief of Police. But of course Devery Is no worse than the system that made him, and of which he is the minister. He was at the head of Tammany's system of blackmail that is, of dealing with those who were willing to pay for being "let alone." In March, 1819, the famous German dramatist, Kotzebue, was assassinated by a German university student named Sand, a young man not 25 years of age, a man of very mild, pleasant and affec tionate disposition, jof pure life and moral habits. Sand, like all the Ger man university students, was an en thusiastic believer in enlarged political liberty as well as political unity for Germany. Kotzebue, in his writings, had savagely satirized and ridiculed these opinions; Kotzebue was known to be In the pay of Russia. Sand came to regard Kotzebue as a moral outlaw, and because he could not reach him legally, believed it a religious duty to destroy him, so he stabbed him to death and then went Jnto the street, where he knelt down, and, raising' his bloody dag ger, cried: "Long live my Fatherland!" He made no attempt to escape, and, al though his crime was committed March 23, 1819, he was not executed until May 20, 1820.. He was a shy, modest fellow, personally greatly beloved, and was of the same type as the German Stapps, who was shot for seeking to assassinate Napoleon as the arch-enemy of his country. Republicans of Kentucky and Mary land have lost their respective states, largely through their own misconduct. Petty men have been In control. Cheap little politics have been the conse quence. It was only by high-minded conduct that the Republican party could hope to maintain the ascendant In states like Kentucky and Maryland, where it gained success only through a great National Issue. But the con duct of their leaders was not high minded. Under such leadership as that of Wellington In Maryland and of Tay lor and Powers In Kentucky, there was no possibility of continued ascendancy for the Republican party. The Oregonlan trusts that President Roosevelt will accept the resignation of Secretary Long, of the Navy Depart ment He is the man chiefly responsi ble for the persecution of Admiral Schley. He has been the active or pas sive agent of a clique of Schley's ene mies, has supported a contemptible In trigue against the man who fought and won the naval battle of Santiago, and would better now retlce from public view. This Secretary, can well be spared from the public service and from the private service, in public sta tion, of the naval clique that has been engage'd In this ctntemptlble business. I It is difficult at times for trainmen, who deal every day, year in and year out, with the hobo element, Intent on stealing a ride on trains, to control their tempers sufficiently to prevent them from laying violent hands upon these Impudent creatures of the high way. It is most unfortunate, however, when loss of temper or even the neces sity of self-defense results In action that takes or seriously threatens life. In these Instances ofextreme provoca tion it may well be said that he who ruleth his spirit is greater than he who taketh a city. Croker is to quit politics In New York and take up his permanent residence in England. That this Irishman has found England so attractive a country to dwell In has not missed remark. "Cro ker pays $5000 a year personal taxes to KingEdward of England, and less than ?500 a year in. New York, where he got all his money,." said a New York news paper. Hits like this were very effect ive. Salisbury is willing to abrogate the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, but it must be for a "quid pro quo." All this goes to show what a fix we should be in if we did not have a school of diplomacy versed in the phraseology of the art as well as the technique. Democracy ia a great leveler, and one man in this country is as good as an other if not better. San Francisco has elected to the Mayoralty the leader of the orchestra of a theater. Is It possible that something of Phila delphia's subservience to official greed can be traced back to Franklin's mer cenary philosophy? . The Ladles' Home Journal offers $25 for the best suggestion as to how to improve the magazine. That's easy. Get a new editor. WILLIAM II AND ROOSEVELT. Slany Points In Common Bet-ween tuc Two Rulers. Theodore Roosevelt and the German Emperor have many points In common their fearlessness, their frank and impul sive natures, their Impetuosity of purpose, their Intense interest In their undertakings and their versatility, writes W. E. Curtis from Berlin to the Chicago Record-Herald. Roosevelt has never written an -opera or preached a sermon or offered a prayer in public; he has never composed a war song that I am aware of, but is young yet. William II established a precedent for sovereigns to do such things, although his opera was never produced, and half the editors in Germany were sent to Jail for making sport of his music- If there is anything in the world that William 11 likes less than another it is ridicule. He doesn't care so much how people abuse him, but the man who makes fun of him is never allowed to forget it. Editors and artists of comic-papers who publish impertinent cartoons are punished much more severely than those who write digni fied and serious attacks upon the. policy of the government and the motives of the Kaiser. Roosevelt is sensitive also, but he has such a keen and highly developed sense of humor that he is able to appreciate a joke on himself almost as much as if it were on another person. About the worft scalding Roosevelt ever got was Dooley's "Alone in Cuby," in which he was repre sented as writing tho history of the Cuban war as if he had fought it all by himself, but he roared when he read it, bought dozens of copies of the papers In which It appeared, and sent them to his friends. He cut out the article and carried it around in his pocket-book, and used to read It to people, and the first question he asked of me when I met him at the Philadelphia convention was whether Dunne, who wrote the Dooley articles, was in town. I told him I thought he was, and he said that he wanted to see hfm. Dunne" was as .reluctant as Roose. velt was eager for the meeting, and when they finally came together on the floor ot the convention hall, Roosevelt exclaimed: "By Godfrey, Mr. Dunne, I would rather meet you than any man in this hall. You gave me the worst roasting I ever got, and my wife has read it to me about 11 times, when she thought I needed disci pline, but it was tho best thing you ever wrote." Emperor William would paralyze people it he should talk in that '-nay to any one who had ridiculed him In public. The other day, at the dedication or a church at Konigsburg, he surprised the congregation by offering a most eloquent prayer, which would have done credit to' an archbishop. He asked the blessing ot the Almighty upon his people, that they might be taught to follow in the foot steps .and the faith of Queen Louise, his great-grandmother, the loveliest' of all the Queens of Prussia, In whose honor the church was named. This, I believe, is the flrrt time he has ever offered a prayer in public, although he seldom makes a speech without confessing to his depend ence upon the Divine Providence, and ho has a deep religious sentiment. Re is firmly convinced that he is the chosen of the Lord. In the Summer of 1500, during the Chinese troubles, he preached a ser mon one Sunday morning on board the imperial yacm Hohenzollern. The officers and sailors of that ship were his only congregation, but the sermon was intend ed for the world at large, and has been printed in many languages. A very good sermon it was, too. Rev. Dr. Dickie, pas tor of tho American .church In Berlin, translated It into English. Capital for Pacific Trade. New York Journal of Commerce. It was a timely topic which Mr. T. C. Kauffman, of Tacoma, introduced to the American Bankers' Association in dis cussing the financial and commercial fu ture of the Pacific Coast In its relation to the expansion of trade with the far East Of all the communities of that Coast, those of Oregon and Washington have shown the most Intelligent Interest In the development of Oriental trade and the greatest amount of enterprise in pro moting It. Mr. Kauffman thinks that to enable the United States to attain all the advantages arising out of a constantly expanding commerce, Congress snould enact the necessary legislation author izing the establishment of International banks, with headquarters in New York and branches in all the leading commer cial cities of the globe. That the time is ripe for the establishment of such banks in the far East is admitted on all sides, and would be welcomed by nobody more warmly than by the officers of the United States Government who are concerned with the finances of our new possessions in the Pacific. But it is not at all ob vious that the institution of such Banks can be effected only by National legis lation, while It Is sufficiently plain that they cannot be established without a very considerable amount of capital. It is, after all, the latter commodity whose subscription is the essential preliminary to the American banking system, for which there Is so excellent an opening In the far East. f Dancers of the Apothecary. Chambers' Journal. The distilled essential oil of almonds, which, when diluted, supplies the popular flavoring for sweets and confectionery known as "ratafia," contains in its strongest form a sufficient percentage of hydrocyanic acid to make It highly dan gerous. A young man who was executing an order by pouring it from a large bot tle to a smaller, noticed that ho had not put the label quite straight on the small er bottle, and took It off again. Before replacing the label he licked it to make sure of its sticking properly; but while pouring he had Inadvertently let a drop or two trickle on the outside pf the bot tle where he had affixed the label. Then, when he touched the label with his tongue, he felt as if something shot along that member, and also a jump of his heart, sp he rushed to a tap, which was fortunately close at hand, and put his tongue under '4he running water. Never, as long as ho lived, he said, would he forget that poisoning sensation. Here's The Whole Trouble. Brobklyn Eagle. There are half a dozen reciprocity trea ties under consideration now, bift they were framed in the Interest of people who wanted to get a freer market for their goods abroad, and their ratification has been prevented by the producers of American goods which would be com pelled to compete with the foreign goods to be admitted at a lower rate of duty in return for the concession on American goods exported to the country from which they came. It Is apparent that when once the desirability of reciprocity is ad mitted It is not easy to make a feasible plan for bringing it about. We shall see what the manufacturers can accomplish when they get together in Washington next month. Morgan Aiding: the Socialists. Sioux City Tribune. . The number of people is fast increasing who believe Mr. Morgan is the greatest practical socialist in the world. He Is getting things consolidated into such shape that society can take them over. He is taking the lead In the onslaught against competition, which is absolutely essential, or has always been so consid ered, to the continuance of a satisfactory condition of society under the individ ualistic regime. As competition Is ex tinguished the people feel more than ever the need of it Convinced that they can never have It again, they will cast about for the'next best thing; and public owner ship appeals to the mat bnce. The num ber of people whp believe they see ahead, as the unavoidable destiny of these great properties, government ownership, is In creasing .day by day. MONEY AND RANKING POWER. Resources Are Plenty Enensh ir Only Mode Available. Chicago Record-Herald.. ' So much has been said at the recant meeting of the American Bankers Asso ciation of the defects of our banking sys tem, of tho peril of funds looked up In the Treasury and the need ot keeping more of our stock of money in circulation that It may create a popular impression that our whole monetary system Is lna vtry bad way. Now, as a matter of fact the monetary system of the United Spates was never in a more healthy condition'' than it is to day. If Its flexibility were equal to its strength there would be little cause for the discussion of ways and means for its Improvement. To one thing the American people are reconcnea. aney prefer dealing with ai surplus rather than with a deficit. They prefer a full Treasury to an empty one. It is Just as well, however, that the American people should be assured that there Is no present menace to the trade and commerce of the Nation by reason of the stock of money "locked up" in the United States Treasury. According to the Secretary's last statement tho total stock of money held in the Treasury as assets of the Government October 1 was J28, S51.269. This was exclusive of the JW 306,757 in the National Bank depositories, against which there are outstanding lia bilities to the amount of nearly JW. 000,000. But ff there is J29S.861.269 "locked up" in the Treasury, It should be remembered that on October 1 there was a matter of $33S,029,S66 unsecured, non-interest bearing United States notes in circulation. So what the United States withholds on one hand it more than returns on the other. This brings us to consider the stock of money in circulation, which at the open ing of the present month, was $2,227,188, 491, or S2S.52 per capita on an estimated population of 78,098,000 the highest per capita circulation ever reached in this country. The general stock of money In the United States at the samevdate was $2,526,019,760. This Is two and a half times greater than .the monetary stock of the United Kingdom. Turning to the avallablo banking power of the United States we find It exceeds that of the United Kingdom by almost the same ratio. According to Muhlcman the available banking power of the latter in 1SS5 was as follows: Captal and reserve .r-. 123,910,000 Deposits 6-17,391,000 Circulation 39,138,000 Total ., S10,4W,000 This Is the equivalent of ?4,052.295,C00. Whereas we find by the last report of Comptroller Dawes that the available banking power of the United States In 1900 was 18,063,446,539. or, If we include savings banks, J10,6S5,317,704, divided as follows: ' Capital 51.024,728,675 Surplus, etc 882,202,792 Deposits, etc 8,513,090.123 Circulation 265.356,112 Total 510.685,317,701 It will be observed that our banking power exceeds that of the United King dom at every point. And by way of full measure it might be added that the cir culation of National bank notes up to Oc tober 1 had Increased to $319,773,315. In actual wealth, in monetary stock. In money in circulation and in available banking power the United States Exceeds the United Kigdom about in the ratio ot 2 to 1. And according to the Comp troller's report already referred to. fol lowing Mulhall's statistical method. It exceeded all Europe, Including the United Kingdom, by the following figures: United States 2,578,000.000 Europe and United Kingdom.. 2,50S,000,000 From all of which It is evident that the chief need of our banking system is flexi bility to make its enormous resources available at ihe place and hour of de mand. Is the Hackney Going Ont of Favor? Scrlbner's. There has been of late years a good deal of talk against hackneys. But there is a place for these horses. It is said that they have not the force and courage of trotters. That may be, but for that reason they may suit people who wish especially to have safe and quiet horses. An English man who has been a great exhibitor of show horses in this country, and who be gan with a natural preference for"hack neys, told me that he now preferred trot ters. As showing the superiority in cour age of trotters, he said that, when his trotters were lying down in the stall he could get them up with a word, but that he had to take a whip to get the hackneys up. I don't see that that objection would be serious to people anxious to have safe horses, which are at tho same time strong, handsome and have good action, qualities which hackneys certainly have. A breeder of hackneys to whom I mentioned this incident said: "What nonsense that is!" And he added: "Of course, hackneys have not great speed, but they can go as fast as carriage horses ought to go." Ho made this further claim for hackneys, that he could win In the show ring with a mare or gelding of hackney breeding, while nearly all the trotting-bred prize winners are stags that is, animals kept as stal lions long enough to get the. crest of a stallion. I believe it is true that most trotting-bred prize winners are stags, and that hackney mares sometimes win, as was the case with this black mare at Toronto, which also took first prize at tho Syracube State Fair. Little Bateese "William Henry Drummonu. You bad leetle boy, not moche you care How busy you're kipln' your poor gran'perc, Trln to stop you cv'ry day Chasin' de hen aroun' do hay Wy don't you geev' dem a chance to lay? Little Bateese! Off on de flel' you foller de plow. Den w'en you're tire you scare de cow, SIckhY de dog till dey Jomp de wall. So de milk ain't good for not'lng at all An' you're only live, an a half dis Fall, Little Bateese! Too sleepy for sayin' de prayor tonight? Ncer mln'; I s'poso It'll be all right Say dem tomorrow ah! dere he go! Fas' asleep In a minute or so An he'll stay lak dat till de rooster crow. Little Bateese! I Den wake ua up right away toute suite Lookin for somet'ing more to eat, Makin mo t'Ink of dem long leg crane. Soon as dey swaller, doy start again. I wonder your stomach don't get no pain, , Little Bateese! But see heem now lyin' dere in bed. Look at de arm onderneat hoes head: If he grow lak dat till he's twenty year I bet he'll be stronger dan Louis Cyr An' beat all do voyageura leevin' hare. Little Bateese! Jus' feel de muscle along hees back. Won't geev' heem moche lloddor for carry pack On de long portage, any size canoe. Dero's not many t'lng dat boy won't do, For he's got double-Joint on heos body. too. Little Bateese! But, leedle Bateese! please don't forget We rader you're staying de small boy yet. So chase de chicken an' mak' dem scare. An' do w'at you lak wit your olo gran'pore. For w'en you're beeg feller he won't be dere Little Bateese! Gold and Gray. A. M. Orpon, In Chambers's Journal. X told you once, sweet wife, long years ago. When all our blood thrilled with a jouthful glow. That In the whole wide world naught oeuld compare To the wild glory of your golden hair. Now a far other vision seems to rise. Nay! start not, dearest, with such wondering eyes. A deeper beauty I have learned to see; That silver-gray far dearer Is to me. v NOTE AND COMMENT. Low is aco high. Though her prsifien.t has resigned, it is again, "Hail, Columbia!" It Is a good thing for th Sultan that imprisonmbnt for debt has ben abolished. Concerning Croker's defeat, the country does not noed to ask "Where did he get it?" France seems to have provided herself with plenty of Turkey for a -regular old fashioned Thanksgiving. Bryan's $4S0 heifer came high, but she doesn't hokl the record by any means. There once was a cow that janiped over the mcon. In refusing to land a ship on Clatsop Beach. Pilot Matthews showed little con sideration for the Summer hotel-koepers of thai port , Buller assorts that he is the vistlm of a conspiracy. As he never won a viclory, however, there is little to give color to his contention. It looks as if the battle of Santiago would look like a friendly series of ma neuvers, compared with events at the court of Inquiry. They are arguing the Schley caso In Washington, as If it had not already been argued threadbare in every grocery store and barber shop in tho country. The Tammany braves must feel In re gard to Now York much as the braves who found they had sold It to the whites for the equivalent of a gold brick, In early days. Of course. If the lady who went over Niagara Falls In a barrel had lost her life It woukl have been the fault of the barrel. Since the barrel evaded destruc tion, credit should be given where credit is due.. Just 200 years ago there lived, at tho court of Prince Ferdinand de Medici, a Paduan harpsichord maker, by name Bar- tolomeo Christoferl, a man of great in ventive genius. After Innumerable ex periments, he solved the problem, a long standing puzzle to the musical instru ment makers of the period, how to make a satisfctorlly working "keyed psaltery," and by the method he Invented of over coming the difficulties Inherent in tba task, produced an instrument-which was the undoubted ancestor of thlrjpknoforte of today. For the piano Is, ln-eseentlal, says a writer in the Universal Magazine, a dulcimer with a fitted keyboard; It Is not simply a modlflcfiton of the old harp sichord. The latteV, It is true, did possess a keyboard, but the depression of Its keys caused a "plucking." harplike action on the strings, and not the striking of a hammer, with controlled rebound, the pe culiar characteristic of the newer instru ment. From 1709 the date when Christo foro made his four "keyed psalteries" the piano, at first slowly, but afterwards by leaps and bounds, went on increasing and increasing in popularity, until now its manufacture has become a great in dustry. Not long ago an American briefly tarry ing in London had occasion to send a postcard in a great hurry. As he was In tho neighborhood of the general poatoffice he purchased the card there, thinking to write and to post it all under the one roof. But as he took his pen in hand at one of the many well-equipped desks In the building's spacious corridors, a uni formed officer stepped up and said: "You can't write that 'ere, sir." The American apologized, removed to another desk, and had barely grabbed Oils pen a second time when another officer appeared. "You can't write that 'ere, sir," he said; "hit's ha gain horders." The American betook htmbelf to a third desk. A third official appeared and told him ho couldn't write at that desk. "In Heaven's name," asked the American, "at what desk can I write?" The officer looked puzzled. "H'im sure Hi don't know, lr," he replied. "Ye might go houtside to some 'otel hor hother. But ye can't write letters nor postcards hin the posthoffice. These 'ere desks his hail reserved for those has wants to write telegrams." "They may think they aro running a postofflce over there," concluded the American, in telling the story. "If they did but know it, It's Just a branch of Westminster Abbey." Apropos of tho recent marriage of an Ensign In the Navy a short time ago who did not have an overabundance of this world's goods, "some of the veterans at the navy-yard recall the story of Rear Admlral Kirkland, who was affectionate "ly known in the Navy as "Red Bill." A young Ensign hesitatingly found his way Into the Admiral's cabin one day, and. with a groat deal of circumlocution and coughing finally let It be known that ho loved the Admiral's daughter, and would bo the happiest man on earth If he had her parent's consent to marry her. "No, sir!" thundered the Admiral. "No, sir- ree! Not now, anyhow. No pauper of an Ensign is going to marry my daughter. You'd better wait until you are promoted and are able to support yourself beforo you think of marrying." The young offi cer astounded the Admiral by not retir ing precipitately. He even ventured the reminder that the Admiral him -t had married when he was but an EnKbt and that his married life had been a happy one. "Red Bill" Kirkland glared at tho presumptuous speaker for a moment and then thundered: "I know I married when It. was an Ensign. My father-in-law sup ported me for several years, too, but I'll be hanged if yours will!" PLEASANTItlCS OF PARAGHAPIIERS She Won. Tese I acepted Jack Tlmmld lest night! Jess Oh, I'm so glad. Tesa Are ou, really? Joeo Yes. I bet him a box of gloves that J oil would. Philadelphia Press. After the Surgical Operation. Barber What will you haw on your face, witch hazel or bay rum? Pat-ron Nalthr a.n nor the ether. Jutt put on plain court-plashter! Judge. Nervous Tourist Stop, driver, stop! There's something wrocf! I am sure a whrs coming off! Driver Arrah, be aisy, then, yer honor. Sure, it's the same one's been eomla' off thiu these three days bark' Puneh. And That Accounts for It. "I cannot con ceive why she lnlted that grass widow to her wedding. Why, she's a woman with a norrlble past." "Yes, my dear, but nen enough to furnish an elegant present." Phlladlphla Evening Bulletin. Success at Last. Dr Brown Well, did you keep the thermometer in the room at TO de grees, as I told you? Mrs. Murphy I did in- .dade, doctor, but I had a hard toime to do it. The only place it would stay at elvlaty was fornlnst the chlmney-plec?. Life. Harry (hesitatingly) Mhw Mabel, I ah have something moat important to ask you. May I that Mabel (encouragingly) What to it, Harry? Harry May 1 Mabel woukl jou bo willing to have our nams printed In the pa pers with a hyphen between them? Glasgow Evening Tlmee. Edith I hear that you and Fred are quite in terested in one another. Bertha Don't ou tell a soul. Edith, but really X boMeve Frvd and I were made for each other. We have played golf together three times, and we have never quarreled exeept two or three times when Fred tvas clearly In the wrong. Boston Transcript.