Kntered at the Postofflce at Portland, Oregon, as eecond-class matter. REVISED -SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Mail (postage prepaid. In Advance Dally, with Sunday, per month Dally. Sunday excepted, per year J w Sunday, per year ..,.. .. The Weekly, per year The Weekly, 3 months... 2 00 1 60 CO To City supscribere . . . . ,- Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays cpte0.lBC Dally, per week, delivered. Sandaya lncluded.oo POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: JO to 14-page papers.... ? 14 to 28-page paper f. M Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should .be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the nam of any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." Eastern Business Office. 43, 44. 45, 47. 48. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City; 469 "The Rookery." Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 snt'or tri- v w. pitta. 1008 Market street; J. K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. , For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 59 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 305 So. Spring street. For sale in Sacramento by Sacramento News Co., 420 K street, Sacramento. Cal. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, 63 'Washington street. For sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street. For ealc In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 W. Second South street. For sale In New Orleans by A. C. Phelps, C09 Commercial Alley. For sale In Ogden by W. C. Kind, 204 Twen-'ty-flfth street, and C. H. Myers. On file at Charleston. S. C. In the Oregon ex hlblt at the exposition. For sale In "Washington. D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlek. 900-pl2 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co., 15th and Lawrence streets: A. Series, 1653 Champa etreet. TODAY'S WEATHER-Showers; eouthwest erly winds. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, CO; minimum temperature, 29; pre cipitation. 0.24 inch. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, MARCH 21. RESTRICT A3TD BROADEV. The large representation secured by certain Simon leaders In Wednesday's convention through use of proxies was not In itself mischievous, and even pro voked the gaiety of the gathering. But it was portentous enough to Justify the strictures made in these columns Wednesday morning against the proxy system. It Is certainly not within the spirit of representative government that men elected under laws to discharge certain designated functions, as dele gates'are now elected under the primary law, should delegate their powers to whomsoever they choose. For if so, there' is nothing to prevent any man thoroughly repudiated at the polls from exercising the right that the ballots of his 'fellow-citizens have denied him. If so, there is no reason why Mr. Simon himself should cot have secured a proxy and carried his fight on the very floor of the convention. If so, there is no reason why in Oregon, as once in Washington, a powerful band of rail road lobbyists, defeated at the polls. cannot secure seats In convention and possibly defeat the popular will with tricks of subterfuge and intimidation. It would be a good Idea for the com ing Republican State Convention to adopt a new procedure in this matter and make it binding not only upon fu ture state conventions, but on city, county and district conventions as well, providing for election of alternates, de nying proxies, and giving to such rep resentatives of a precinct or county as appear the right io cast the full vote of the precinct or county, without regard to the absentees. Another reform needed In our conven tions is a broader basis of representa tion. The number of delegates has not kept pace with the growth of popula tion and of parties. Here is the big county of Multnomah with only 162 men in its county convention. It would be far better to have 300. The state con vention will number about GOO. It ought to have 500 or GOO. In this way the participation in party affairs would not be confined to a few. The party or ganlzation and policies would be brought nearer to the people, the hon ors and responsibility be more evenly distributed, and the chances for boss dictation reduced to a minimum. The relative strength of localities would, of course, be preserved, but the conven tion would come nearer being, what it purports to be, a representative gather ing. The practice for the country districts would ;be In every way more satisfac tory. .Suppose that for a distant county we had six men elected Instead of three, and six alternates. The Interest and participation in the primaries would be noticeably and beneficially extended. The chances would be greatly Increased for a good representation, and cases where the distant county had no repre sentative present would be very rare. The -sections would be brought Into closer touch with each other, to the promotion of better understanding and good fellowship, and the party would be the gainer in the communion and attrition of more of its brightest mlnd9. The country districts, whether in county or state conventions, should be required to be present. No such impro priety should be permitted as that of city men sitting In the convention to represent distant communities. These and other reforms ought to be seized upon now and made into landmarks of our present passing from boss dictation .o representative rule. PRACTICALLY AX AMERICAN TER RITORY. It seems now practically certain that an arrangement will be effected by which the Cuban sugar product may be marketed in this country upon condi tions of reasonable advantage. The concession to be made in the tariff rate is not great, but It may be sufficient to turn the scale from loss to profit and to enable the sugar industry of Cuba upon Which everything else in a business way in Cuba depends to make a reasonable living. This concession has not easily been brought about; indeed, it would not have been accomplished but for the fact that it was promised by MoKlnley in return for the complaisance of the Cubans In accepting the Piatt amend ment last year, and for the further fact that, having broken the old Spanish connection of Cuba, we stand bound in a measure to give them another by which -they may live. , The tariff concession is hailed as a circumstance assuring the business prosperity and Independence of the Island; but this, it appears to us. Is a very shallow view of the matter. It will no doubt give prosperity to Cuba, but prosperity tinder such conditions 16 very far from implying independence, since the conditions are subject to change any hour at the -will of the United Statea To be independent a country must be able to control the conditions of its own existence and wel fare it must stand without ex ternal support and Cuba by the confes sion of those who speak for her Is in no such position. Her fortunes are in the keeping of the American Congress rather than in that of her own gov-, ernment soon to be established; and this being so, all talk about Independence is In the view of those who look at things from the standpoint of cold actuality mere sentimental twaddle. It may sat isfy the vanity of the Cuban people and It may technically answer our engage ments, but It does not alter the fact. All that we have done In our dealings wfth Cuba since the close of the Spanish "War Is mere circumlocution to the end of annexation. It is bound to come in time; we could not make it otherwise If we would. The island stands In such geographical relation to this country that we cannot permit it to fall under other political influence than our own; we stand pledged to the maintenance of social and political order; we control ab solutely the conditions of Cuban indus trial and business prosperity. These facts imply just one thing, and that is that Cuba is already in effect Amer ican territory. WISELY DECIDED. The Senate is probably right in law in its yielding to the House participa tion In the reciprocity treaties; It is cer tainly wise from the standpoint of pub lic policy, and it has doubtless estab lished a principle that will never again be brought in question. The Senate has been disposed to con tend that the reciprocity treaties are no concern of the House. It Is a very ques tionable position, in law and In fact. The Dlngley act contemplates In terms that the reciprocity treaties negotiated under it shall be not only "ratified by the Senate" but "approved by Con gress"; and in the face of this declara tion It becorries a very serious question whether tariff revision through treaties should take the form of a settled prac tice, involving as It does the proscrip tion of the House of Representatives, where, under the Constitution, all reve nue bills should originate. The Consti tution is sound in its theory that taxa tion should be very closely safeguarded in the more representative body of Con gress, drawn more directly from the people, more frequently returnable to them and corresponding in sectional strength to the Inhabitants. It is easy to see that if the practice of making and unmaking tariffs through treaties nego tiated solely by President and Senate were once established, It might easily lead to a situation where the House had only a nominal part in tariff legislation, or at least to a violent and disturbing controversy. The Senate, to be sure, reserves to it self the right to bestow this participa tion in treaty ratification as a gift, and that is to be expected from the most dignified deliberative body in the world. Yet its action In requiring the pending treaties to be acted upon In the House Is likely to be the first In a series of un broken precedents, as we have said, and Is moreover Ealutary In putting upon the House Its rightful share of respon sibility. It is doubtful If any of the treaties can muster so large a following proportionately in the House, this ses sion at least, as In the Senate. The treaties are unpopular, and members of the House are not courting any unneces sary hostility this election year. One can Indorse the Senate's action without feeling compelled to suspend the sense of humor at Its lofty esti mate of its own greatness. The Senate acquiesced In the Dlngley law, the com mittee says, even In section 4, with its heavily loaded phrase "approved by Congress," yet this does not signify. Great and mighty as are the acts of the Senate, and entitled to all respect and veneration, yet even they pale before the august character of the Senate itself as fixed by the Constitution. Nothing small or ridiculous that the Senate by the most violent wrench of the Imag ination can be conceived of as doing, can affect the Senate's inaccessible and even unapproachable grandeur. Great as are the Senate's acts, they are negli gible In estimating the Senate's great ness. It Is a refreshing thing, In this iconoclastic age to come upon a thing possessed of such simple trust and boundless veneration, even If the object of its adoration Is Itself. SCEXERY AND CLIMATE AX ASSET. Henry H. Gannett, the geographer of the United States Geological Survey, In a recent article on Alaska says of the wonderful scenery along the Alaskan coast that Its "grandeur Is more valua ble than the gold, the fiBh or the timber of the country, for It will never be ex hausted." In 1898 the tourists who vis ited Switzerland to enjoy its mountain landscapes, waterfalls and glaciers left $38,000,000 In the country. Scenery is Switzerland's largest source of wealth. The country does not begin to raise food enough for Summer visitors. It buys 50,000 beef cattle from Austria and Italy every year; It Imports from Russia, Hungary and the United States three times as much wheat as It produces, and It has to import a great deal more wine than Swiss vineyards produce; so that a great deal of the money that Switzerland receives from tourists Is sent out of the country to pay for the food supplies she is obliged to import But the Pacific Coast is able to feed its rapidly Increasing army of Alaska tourists. There is no doubt that at no distant day the pleasure-seeking pas senger traffic to Alaska from the Pa cific Coast ports will be enormoua The visitors to Alaska have included a num ber of men of superior literary powers, like Thomas B. Reed, John Burroughs and John Muir, whose eloquent de scriptions of Alaskan scenery have been published in the leading magazines of the country. The high reputation of these men for large public intelligence and veracity gives a currency to the record of their experience that no trans portation company's advertising circu lars could hope to obtain, and Alaska in the near future will be to the Amer ican tourist what Switzerland is to the European traveler. There Is "a good deal of money" in fine scenery outside of the "Valley of the Nile, and the otherwise poor and un productive valleys of Switzerland. The peasantry of the Scottish Highlands make a good deal of money out of Eng lish tourists, and so do the Inhabitants of Ireland and the romantic seacoast of Norway. In Oregon we are disposed to smile when we talk of our mountain and river scenery and our fine Summer climate. Nevertheless, until the Nica ragua Canal is built our scenery and i our climate, added to our fertile soil THE MORNING and timber wealth, will be our strongest attraction to draw settlers to this coun try. There are thousands of men of middle life "who will be tempted to spend their latter years In a land that Is charming to the eye, well watered and free from Summer drouth or severe Winter cold. A land where the Sum mer heat is never severe, where the Winter's cold Is never biting, where the crops never fall, where fruit Is easily raised and where flsh and game are still plenty, Is an attractive land to hundreds of, people who have found neither profit nor pleasure In the hot, dry Summers and the bitter cold .Win ters of Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, Montana and Wyoming. Fine scenery will some day be Alas ka's best asset, and fine scenery and a good climate. Winter and Summer, will at no distant day put money in- the pockets of Oregon and Washington. SPIRIT OP '70 AXD '01. "It cannot be that the spirit of 76 Is entirely dead In the American heart" Thus speaks Hon. Champ Clark, of Missouri, in an article setting forth the attitude toward the Philippine question which the Democrats will occupy with hope of success In the ensuing Con gressional campaign. Well, what was the spirit of 76? Was It, as Mr. Clark conceives It, the spirit of surrender to a foreign foe, skedad dling oft the field and leaving the flag to trail In the dust? The United States Is at war. Its sov ereignty is assailed and the spirit of '76 and of '61 has inspired not only soldiers to enlist, but Congresses to grant sup plies and voters to sustain the party that In the White House and in Con gress is carrying on the war. Against this spirit the Democratic party Is op posed. Its aim Is to show, as in 1864, that "the war Is a failure"; that Amer ican arms and American diplomacy In the Philippines have erred in about everything they undertook; that Dewey, Otis, Merrltt, McKInley, Taft. MacAr thur and Bell have acted so badly ad to deserve censure o their conduct and repudiation of their acts; that all that has been done In the Philippines is ir regular in propriety, pernicious in re sults, and should be undone as far as possible, even to the point of yielding up our sovereignty and turning over the islands to the Insurgent guerrillas. Mr. Clark comes from a section and a party that learned at some pains a generation ago how little there is in fit ness for self-government to Justify a claim for political Independence. If any people were fitted for self-government lp 1861, they were the Southern people. Yot they were not given self government except In the limited way In which all parts of the American Em pire receive self-government, that Is, local self-government adapted to the needs and capacities of the different sectiona There Is one form and range of self-government In South Carolina, another m Oklahoma, another in Alas ka, another In Hawaii, another in Porto Rlco. another In the Philippines, an other (the least and most ethereal of all) In the District of Columbia. What the Democrats support and sym pathize with in the Philippines Is seces sion, pure and simple. It will not be tolerated there any more than It was In South Carolina, or would be In Alaska or Porto Rlco. The spirit of patriotism Is as strong now as It was In '76 and In '6L IMMORALITIES OP PROHIBITION. Prohibitionists both East and West are beginning to admit that prohibitory laws are worse than, useless In any com munity where public opinion does not sustain that policy. Rev. Dr. Funk, the leading Prohibitionist of New York City, recently said In a letter to the New York Sun that "If I was King of New York I would not make New York a prohibition city, even if I could do It by mandate. I don't believe that an at tempt should be made to enforce such a law until a majority of the people are In favor of it." Ex-Governor Morrill, of Kansas, recently stated that there are many places In the state 'where pub lic opinion does not sustain the prohl tory policy; that it cannot be enforced where public opinion is against It The Topeka Advocate, the Prohibition or gan, says that the law as now admin istered, in deference to public opinion against it, "is more injurious to the morals of the state as a whole than the licensed saloon"; that It "is a pretext in most communities for public officials to take boodle"; that "In many counties blood money Is exacted from the joint keeper by the County Attorney down to the Councllmen," and that "the effect is damaging to the future greatness of the state." At a recent meeting of the Loyal Legion Temperance Solcety in New York Cltv Surgeon L. L. Seaman, First United States Volunteers, argued strongly In favor of the restoration of the Army canteen. He quoted statistics showing that while the canteen was In force Intemperance was greatly de creased and sickness greatly dimin ished, and read letters from'many Army officers in which they stated that condi tions have been much worse since Its abolition. He said that the canteen was a much less evil than the saloons out side the posts, which the soldiers fre quent In absence of the canteen. He advocated strongly the restoration of the canteen, and said that of 1000 re cruits whom he had accepted only five were total abstainers; that absolute prohibition 1b as visionary an undertak ing within the Army as it has proved without it. and maintained that if the Woman's Temperance Unions and other temperance organizations would under stand the situation correctly they would soon make efforts to, have the canteen restored. Rev. Dr. Prltchett, presi dent of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, In a recent address before the Congregational ministers of Boston, among other things said: I should prefer tb have students meet in a building under the control of the Institute, where beer was used in a rational way. than to have them sent where the use of beer la unlimited, and where there is no restraint. I believe that Is true temperance. I don't know why Christ did not use water Instead of wine when on earth, but I do know that that secured to him the opposition of some of the people at that day. There were temperance societies then, but he did not join them. While he condemned drunkenness he used the wine of the country. If students are to have such meeting I should much prefer them to have them In the company of their professors and .Instructors, and where I can personally join them. A large colony of Dunkards, including entire families and numbering In ag gregate between 2000 and 3000 people. Is en route to new homes In the North west The bulk of these colonists will go to lands that have been secured for them in the Mouse. River district of North Dakota. These people, wherever they locate, are quiet and law-abiding, but essentially clannish and nonpro gressive. They resemble the Quakers in their plainness of drees and speech, and OBEQONIAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1902. In their refusal to take oath or serve la time of war. As unprogressive as the Boers, they totally lack the pugnacious characteristics of those people. Inter preting literally the command "Is any sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil In the name of the Lord," they practice this method in dealing with the sick and many of them refuse all other means of recovery. In connection with the ceremonial of the Lord's supper, which Is observed In the evening only, are feet-washing and the apostolic "love feasts." These and other peculiarities set the$e people apart, so to speak, and make them objects of curiosity to more progressive, public-spirited people. Ow ing to their habits of excluslveness. they are not particularly sought after as Immigrants, but they are, neverthe less, accorded a welcome as self-supporting, law-abiding people. Great pressure has been brought to bear upon Governor Toole, of Montana, urging him to commute to Imprisonment for life the sentence of Clinton Dotson, of Deer Lodge, who has been con demned to death for the murder of his father. He, however, persistently re fuses to Interfere with the course of Justice, and advises the condemned man to dismiss all hope of clemency and de vote his time to preparation for the event that will end his career. This man Dotson seems to have been a crim inal by Instinct, and, though every ef fort has been made by counsel and fam ily to save his life, no extenuating cir cumstances softening the atrocity of his unnatural crime have been brought out A criminal and an associate of criminals, his business for years was that of plotting and committing crime. True sympathy enltghtened sympathy does not seek to stay the execution of penalty In the case of such a man, but urges, for his own sake as well as the sake of his family and of society, that the law be allowed to take Its course, unhindered by vexatious quibble and unnecessary delay. Charleston is a city of but 65,000 In habitants, less than 25,000 of whom are white, but It provided a capital of $250,000 for the South Carolina, Inter state and West Indian Exposition, and Is apparently making a success of the enterprise. It Is off the main lines of travel, but the railroads have taken a very Important part In contributing money for the exposition, and Improv ing facilities for reaching the city. The State of South Carolina has a building and a very creditable exhibit. The Na tional Government Is also well repre sented there. A dozen fine buildings serve to house the exposition. If all this can be done at Charleston, the Lewis and Clark Centennial, being of far greater historical and Industrial sig nificance, strongly appealing to several growing states and having Its seat in a commercial center of much greater wealth, may easily be made a greater success than most of our citizens look forward to. The ease with which an In stitution of this magnitude Is carried when a community Is united In Its sup port will continue to surprise our own people. The Turkish Government has refused the demand of the United States for a return of the sum ($72,000) extorted by brigands for the release of Miss Stone and Madame Tsllka from captivity. Since It Is fair to presume that the de mand was made advisedly, .it Is now incumbent upon our Government to take such steps as will make Its claim effective. This action on the part of the Turkish Government was no doubt anticipated, hence the next step, whether of diplomacy or hostile demon stration, must soon be taken to bring Abdul Hamld to a realizing sense of the fact that the United States Is in earnest In this matter. While the amount is not worm going to war. about, there Is supposed to be 'a princi ple at stake which must te respected. It is a matter of common knowledge that It is very hard for young physi cians to make a livelihood In the first years of their practice. Yet, according to a recent report from Washington, there are now sixty-three vacancies in the medical corps of the regular Army, and qualified applicants are extremely scarce. This Is perhaps due In part to the severity of the examinations, which mu9t be passed In order to gain admit tance to the ranks of Army surgeons, but it might be supposed that the posi tions offered, with their security of ten ure, pay and perquisites, and the pros pect of eventual advancement, would prove attractive to young medicos fresh from their books and lectures, who pre sumably would have little difficulty In meeting the required tests. The King, of Great Britain, It Is said, has revived and made fashionable the habit of taking snuff. Of all the dis gusting forms of using tobacco, except perhaps the process called "dipping," which Is more or less extensively prac ticed among the "poor wlhtes" of the South, that of snuff-taklng Is the most repulsive. "Snuff-taklng at the royal table at the beginning of the dessert" Could any announcement be more nau seating to the well-ordered stomach? Or any practice more at variance with decent table manners? Senator Bard has doubtless aban doned all hope of re-election, or he would not so openly come out against the Mltchell-Kahn exclusion bill. His course can only be Interpreted as sac rificing the interests of the people of the Paciflp Coast to the railroads and steamship companies. This Is not the way to get votes, and it should not be. Senator Proctor is de-vilish shy. He knows that the Eastern men are op posed to drastic Chinese legislation, so be thinks to make a hit by proposing to re-enact the Geary law and thus kill off the Mitchell bill. He seems likely to succeed mere's the pity. Edward Green, the man who achieved whatever distinction he acquired In life as "Hetty Green's husband," has passed away. His wife still survives to keep up her long fight against tax-gatherers and lawyers. If the Czar believes so strenuously In the open door for China, why doesn't he secure some reduction on the pro hibitory tariffs maintained by Russia In Europe? When a man has won all your money it's confounded mean of him not to ap preciate harmony enough to give you about two-thirds of it back. Senator Aldrlch's speech puts another nail In the coffin of 'Kaesonlan reciprocity. BILL AGAINST THE ANARCHISTS The Senate bill for the protection of the President against anarchist assassins is, on the whole, a better bill than the House bill. The Senate bill Is a brief measure for the protection of the Presi dent and Is indorsed, while the House judiciary committee found Constitutional difficulties In a measure protecting tne President as a man, and it also attempted to deal' with anarchy and anarchists. The Senate bill would hang the assassin of the President, whether he murdered him officially or unofficially. It he at tempts to kill the President and falls In his purpose, his punishment would be death. Had President McKInley re covered and been injured for life, the New York law would have permitted a maximum sentence of 10 years only, which time commutation would con siderably shorten and set the miscreant free to fire another shot. Had the as sassin killed McKInley In Rhode Island, Maine. Michigan or Wisconsin, he would not have been hanged, because those states have abolished capital punish ment The House judiciary committee was not willing to Impose the death penalty on those who failed of their purpose to murder the President It was not willing to give the Federal au thorities Jurisdiction either in case of the assassination or a murderous as sault on the President or Vice-President unless It could be proved that the Presi dent was killed while -he was engaged In tho performance of his official duties or because of his official character or because of his assumed official sins of commission or omission. It would have been difficult, under the House bill, to punish, by the National authority, an assassin who shot at a President in a theater, or at ordinary Sunday church service, or on a railway or In. transit to a college commencement as Garfield was when Gulteaur shot him. The House bill Insisted upon attending circumstances, which would make the assault not personal, but an outrageous attack upon the official authority of the United States. The House Judiciary committee held that w'lthout this clear circumstance of resistance to Federal authority the Federal Government can riot constitutionally take Jurisdiction of a crime committed within the limits of a state, even If the victim be the Presi dent of the United States. The Senate bill provides that any per son who, within the limits of the United States, or any place subject to the jurisdiction thereof, shall willfully cause the death, or attempt to cause the death, of the President or any officer upon whom the power and duties of the Presi dent may devolve under the Constitution and law, shall suffer death. Those who conspire to kill the President or advise the same are punished with Imprisonment under this bill, but the punishment of anarchists generally Is left to be dealt with "in a separate measure. Senator Spooner Is sound in his contention that an assault upon the President Is always an assault upon the Nation, for the President Is always In discharge of the duties of his office. The House bill Is inferior In good sense to that of the Senate, In that It attempts not simply to repress and punish crime, but to repress and punish anarchism. You can fairly fine or lm prlEon a man for "advoca'tlng, advis ing or teaching the duty, necessity or propriety" of the unlawful killing or as saulting of one or more of the officials of the Government, but you cannot, In practice, punish a man as a criminal "who disbelieves In or Is opposed to all organized government" You can punish a man for polygamy, but you cannot very well punish a man for believing in tho Mormon creed rather than In that of monogamy. Under the House bill no man holding anarchistic opinions would be permitted to enter the United States, or If he Is already here, allowed to take out papers as a naturalized citizen. How could you find out whether an Immigrant was of anarchistic prin ciples If ho tried to land? How could you find out If he was an anarchist If ho was already here and cared to stay here? Of course all this kind of legisla tion Is absurd. You can punish a man for his deeds, but not for his abstract views. We cannot legislate In a free country after the method of he Dutch man who asked his son: "Hans, did you -ay d n?" "No, fader." "No matter, you dinks dam; so I licks you any vay." The measure for the deportation and exclusion of alien anarchists proposed by Senator Bacon would practically serve small purpose of Increased protection. The anarchist would furnish no proof. A few notorious men might be excluded or deported, but these notorious anarchists are not the ones that murder Presi dents. It Is the obscure wretch who never was suspected of anarchism until he becomes an assassin that does the awful deeds. Tolstoi, In theory. Is an anar chist; so, for that matter, was Hugo, but nobody was ever afraid that Tolstoi would shoot a Czar or that Hugo would murder Napoleon III. Nobody ever thought of Booth as an assassin until he shot Lincoln; nobody ever thought of Gulteau as a President-killer until he slew Garfield; not even the most blatant aranchlst in the country ever heard of the existence of tho assassin of McKInley. We can keep out of America Prince Krapotkin, of whom nobody Is afraid, but we cannot keep out or turn out of the country the possible embryo an archist who, In all ages. In all times and climes, may at any moment shoot a President or kfil a millionaire. Henderson In Rccclvinff Light. Boston Transcript It must be admitted that when Speaker Henderson flops and his record In this line Is something remarkable he comes down with both feet. About a fortnight ago he was. If not openly and avowedly for beet sugar first, last and all tho time, leaning strongly toward beets as the basis of harmony. Tuesday night he was friendly to Cuba with all nhe zeal of the convert who has come to a definite conclusion as to which side of the bread Is buttered. He was for harmony with out beets as Ingredients. In effect he warned the extremists among the op ponents to Cuban relief that If they per sisted they had better make an assign ment to the Democratic party and bo done with It Tvro of a Kind. CMrs. Crawford She said she had no faith In men. Mrs. Crabahaw No wonder. Her first husband was a handwriting expert, and her second a weather prophet She Is ot Fair to Outward Vlevr. Hartley Coleridge. She is not fair to outward view As many maidens be; Her loveliness I never knew Until she smiled on me. Oh, then I saw her eye was bright, A well of love, a spring of light. But now her looks are coy and cold. To mine they ne'er reply. And yet I cease not to behold The love-light in her eye: Her very frowns are fairer far Than smiles of other maidens srt ROOSEVELT AS A CANDIDATE- New York Commercial Advertiser. An alleged remark by President Roose velt, reported In the press a few days agoF I& seized upon as startling evidence that he Is a candidate for renomlnatlon. Who supposed that he was not? It would be an extraordinary thing It he were not He Is young, he was a recognized Presidential possibility before he was nominated for the VIce-resldency, ana he Is now In the effice for a term of three years, during which he can show the people of the country what his abilities for administer ing It wisely and well are. Like every strong and healthy minded man, he be lieves In himself, believes In the pol icies and the principles that he Is endeavoring to put Into practice, and would like to so Impress the people with his capacity for the work that they will continue him In it. Whnt could be more natural or more laudable In a man who had come Into the Presidency Indirectly as he has than to desire to come Into It a second time by direct vote of the people? In a speech which he made at one of the harmony banquets of the Democratic party In this city a few weeks ago. ex Senator Hill charged that Mr. Roosevelt, on the day following McKinley's death, announced that he should not be a candi date for the Presidency at the close of his term. This was pure "fake," for no such announcement was made either then or at any other time. To his friends Presi dent Roosevelt has made no concealment cf his attitude. He has said, with no Injunctions of secrecy, that he should be greatly pleased If at the end of his three years his party were to renominate him; but he has said also that his course during those three years would not be deflected In the fcllghtest degree from what he be lieved to be his duty by a desire for re nomination. Whenever any one has said to him that he should regard himself as President for seven years, he has replied: "I don't know anything about seven years, but I do know that I am here for three years, and I am going to do my utmost to give the country a good President dur ing that period." Why should he not aspire to a renoml natlon with as much Justification as a reg ularly elected President? Other Vice Presidents In his position did so, though none of them had his ambition gratified. It Is quite beside the mark, however, to class him with them. As we have said, he was a recognized Presidential possibility when he was nominated for second place, and but for the great popularity and great political strength of McKInley, would have been a formidable competitor for first place. Most of his predecessors In second place were nominated to "fill out the ticket" not because of their National prominence, but because of their supposed availability to placate or please some po litical faction or some class of voters. Everybody familiar with the Influences which put Roosevelt into second place knows that they were quite other than these. That he will be a very strong candidate for renominatioq, as matters stand now, nobody can deny. His first five months of Administration have greatly strength ened him., both with the people and with his party. He has made no bitter enemies within his party, has caused no rupture either with Its leaders or with the ma jority in Congress, and he has alienated pone of the extraordinarily unanimous newspaper support that he had when he entered upon his duties. It is the actual fact today that from one end of the coun try to the other there Is no harsh criticism of him in the newspapers of all parties and of no parties. The whole pres3 of the country Is friendly, and the greater part of It heartily so. Of course, such an anomalous condition of political affairs as this cannot continue Indefinitely, but that it should exist after five months of office and after Congress has been In session for three months is a striking evidence of the President's suc cess. There Is no more sign of a for midable opposition1 party now than there was when he took office, simply because ro mistake has been made which could be utilized as an Issue about which an opposition could concentrate. The Defection of Senator Honr. New York Commercial Advertiser. What has become of Senator Hoar as a Democratic leader on the Philippine question? Since the advent of Governor Taft at Washington ho has scarcely been visible "at all In the foreground of this ag itation. In fact, from the time that Sen ator Foraker surprised him with the In formation that the terrible treason act of the Philippine Government was nothing more nor less than our own bill of rights as It has stood In the revised statutes for 1C0 years, the senior Massachusetts Sen ator has seemed to lose interest In the whole Philippine issue. While Governor Taft was testifying Senator Hoar remained quietly In the background, and allowed Tillman and Patterson and Money and Dubois to carry off the honors of leader ship, thus leaving tSte Democrats them selves to take charge of their own for tunes. With Senator Hoar getting quiet ly out of It, and Congressman ' Littlefield gone over to Oxnard and beet sugar, the cause of pure morals In politics Is in a very sad way. Senator Tillman will revive presently from his depression because of the harsh treatment of his fellow-Senators, a'nd then thlntrs will look brighter again, for nobody has ever given to the anti imperlallst cause the aspect of moral grandeur that he has been able to Impart to It Lost HIm Snnsngc Appetite. Philadelphia Record. "Another new waiter has come and gone," said the veteran of the 15-cent res taurant, as he deposited a beef stew in front of his favorite customer. "What was the matter with him?" asked the favorite customer. "Well, It wasn't exactly his fault," ex-, plained the veteran. "You see, the sec ond day he was hero a customer comes In and asks for a brace of frankfurters. Sausage Is all out," says the new waiter, 'but If you wait awhile I think I can get you some.' He was so eager to be obliging that he was going to send across the street for 'em. Well, sir, as he went through tho door Into the kitchen he happened to tread on the dog's tall. The dog set up a howl, and the customer yells: 'Hey, there! Never mind that sausage. I guess I don't want it!' Then he puts on his" hat and goes out "The boss saw the whole thing, and that night the new waiter was paid off, and quit Pretty tough, wasn't It?" Incapacity Among House Democrats. Philadelphia Times. Democratic statesmanship Is conspicu ous by Its absence. Instead of assuming an advanced position as the champions of the Cuban people, and of the American people as well, and the advocates of com mercial freedom, we find the Democrats In the House aiding the beet-sugar lobby and Joining In an Idiotic deliverance about the sugar trust and "subsidized newspapers" and other petty Inventions too foolish to be considered seriously ex cept for the revelation thus made of po litical Incapacity. Virtue Inimortal. George Herbert. Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright Tho bridal of the earth and sky; The dew shall weep thy fall tonight; For thou must die. Sweet rose, whose hue angry and brave Bids the rash gazer wipe his eye, Thy root Is ever In Its grave. And thou must die. Sweet Spring, full of sweet days and roses, A box where- sweets compacted He. My music shows ye have your closes. And all must die. Only a sweet and virtuous soul. Like- seasoned timber, never gives; But though the whole world turn to coal. Then chiefly lives. N0TAND COMMENT. Too bad some by proxy. pen cannot attend church March doesn't seem to be leaving any thing for April tov do. The Democrats all agree that this is a good year for Democrats. Prince Henry Bill, she's a great, coun try. Better go over there and run for office. Perhaps the Boston employers forced their men to strike by Insisting on paying their wages In beans. British Major-Generals are taking re markably good care of themselves. None have been captured for several days. Charges have been filed" against Minis ter Wu, but it Is not llkejy that any of them accuse him of refusing to talk. Politicians who have had their eyes on various offices did not report that they have seen said offices charging around seeking men. Now blooms the flower in the field. The gentie robin mates. And everywhere around we see A swarm of candidates. Emperor William Is to name a torpedo- boat for Miss Alice Roosevelt. The gov ernment which fires upon It will then have a quarrel with Uncle Sam. Another coal miners' strike Is In pros pect. Just why the coal miners strike when the weather Is going to be hot la hard to guess. A Russian naval officer says the Amer ican warships are very formidable. The Spaniards entertained very much the same opinion after May 1, 1S93. Turkey wants the powers to help her dispute with Bulgaria. This la the power that was threatening to thrash the United States and France at the same time. General Miles threatens to leave the Army If the Lleutenant-General Is to have no power. Contrary to general belief, h seems to think the senior officer should have something to do besides wear a uniform. "A young friend of mine," says an Eng lishman, "charged with the repair of tele graph wires In the rear of Lord Roberts army when the Boers were particularly active on the line of communications, had one or two black 'boys' sick, and decided to ask a Basuto chief who was In charge of some hundreds of his tribesman re pairing the permanent way to supply them. The Basuto, with a billycock hat on his head, was sitting with his back against the corner of a truck, smoking a short pipe. To him our engineer, speaking very loud and clear in words of one sylla ble, said: 'We want two boys teleg raphers,' at the same time holding up two fingers and pointing with the other hand to certain 'boys' near. The Basuto swell took his pipe out of his mouth and slowly repeated the request. 'You want two boys and . So our engineer friend said It all over again. The Basuto, without without changing his expression In the least, replied In Incisive and rapid par liamentary English: "I don't know how far my instructions authorize me to de tach two boys from the repair of the permanent way to assist you In the tele graph department. However, I will stretch a point and do my best to accommodate you." A dinner at the House of Commons was, a part of the experience of William H. Crane last Summer. Mr. Crane dined there with an Irish member, and an ap petizer was suggested as a necessary preliminary to the feast. Mr. Crane was agreeable, and, following strictly the gen erally wise policy to do In Rome as the Romans do, "David Harum" ordered tho same as his Irish friends, which turned out to be Irish whisky. It came, a neat half-pint flask to each man. Mr. Crane observed the size of the drink with some Inward trepidation. The others In a matter-of-fact manner tipped the liquor Into high-standing glasses, which they then filled up with foaming soda water. Then they quaffed off the decoction with gus to, and Mr. Crane did the same, but with a silent prayer for the future. Conversa tion followed, which dragged with a de lay In serving dinner, when a happy thought struck a member, and he sug gested another drink, which met with the unanimous approval (bar one) of the par ty. The order was given without refer ence to the guest, and soon another half pint of strong Irish whisky rested on the table In frcnt of the American actor. He eyed It a moment, and then his pent up feelings burst forth. "Say," he queried, turning heatedly to his neighbor; "when you chaps tako a drink, do you always take one of that size?" "We do," was the chorused reply. "Well, all I've got 'to remark, then," returned the wanderer from the United States, "is that I am not surprised that the Boer War continues." PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS White Did old Green recover from that rail way accident? Black No; but his wife did to the tune of 2000. Tit-Bits. A Lucky Fellow. Cholly Been shooting for a week, old chap! Had great good luck! Algy What did you bring back? Cholly (proudly) The dogs! Judge. "I see they are talking of having isles of safety la New York; do you know what they are. Bridget?" "Enure. I don't; but I suppose It's an improvement on kerosene, mum." Yonkers Statesman. He Poor girl! Was her husband blown up, run over by an automobile, or killed In a rail road wreck? ShcS I don't remember the de tails. One can't keep track of bow those New Yorkers go. Life. Aunt Amandy Hain't yew ashamed ter kum around here beggln'? Onnlz Way Well, dis ain't a werry 'rlsterakrtlc neighborhood, fer a fact, but we mustn't be too pertlckler, mum. Chicago Dally News. Up to Her "I suppose," said Mrs. Gabble, whose husband had been dead scarcely a month. "If I were to go to that 5 o'clock, tea It would' cause a lot of talk." "Naturally," replied Mrs. Spyte. "unless you should happen to looe your voice." Philadelphia Press. Lenten Non Lent-'em. Frauleln von Under Standt How very plainly zat dear Lady Churchlelgh Is dressed! Friend Yes, Indeed. But you must remember, it Is Lent. Frauleln Ach, no! You do not mean to tell me really and truly zat she borrows her dresses? Puck A shadow crossed the young man's face. "Can It be that we will make a mistake In marrying?" he queried, anxiously. "How you frighten me!" exclaimed the maid; "let's have another wedding rehearsal, right away." Phil adelphia Record. Determination. "I hope," said the visitor, quietly, "that you will not use money In your next campaign." "I've got to do it.' answered Senator Sorghum, simply. "I come from a district where bulldozing would not be toler ated." Washington Star. His Greatest Achievement. "And now tell me," said the teacher, "what George Washing ton did that made him great. I see your hand raised. Arthur. What was It?" "Crossed the Delaware standln' up and didn't rock the boat." Chicago Record-Herald. The Next Move. "South Carolina is attract ing too much attention In tho Senate," said tha North Carolina politician. "She's casting us to the shade." "That's so." agreed his lieuten ant, "and what we want to do Is tor get Jim Jeffries to settle her and make hint Senator for us." Philadelphia Press.