THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1&02. he tzQoxawx. Entered at the Pcstofflee at Portland. Oregon, as eecond-claas- matter. REVISED, SUBSCRIPTION JIAIES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In Advance Dally, -with Sunday, per month.. Diilyt Sunday excepted, per yar ? 50 Dally, with Sunday. per year Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per rear 1 M Ibe Weekly. 8 months To City Subscribers !il JBfr we' delivered, Sunday excepted.ISc nr.Tcr week, delivered. .Sundays lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. ' United States; Canada and Mexico: " 30 to 14-page paper lo 1 to 23-page paper.. ......... ..........So Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." Eastern Business Office. 43. 44. 43. 47. 48. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City: 010-11-13 Tribune building. Chicago ; the S. C Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For rale In San Francisco b;L. Lee. Pal ace Hotel new stand. Goldsmith Bros.. 238 Sutter .street; F. W. Pitts, 1003 Market street: J. K. Cooser Co . 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster &. Orear. Ferry news stand. Frank Scott. SO Ellis street, and N. Wbeatley. S13 Mission street. For tale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 259 So. Spring street, and OlUer & Haines. 305 So. rprlng street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 420 K street. Sacramento. CaL For 6ale In Vallejo. CaL. by N. Watts, 405 Georgia street. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn etreet. and Charles MacDonald, 03 Washington street. For ale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. JC12 Farnam street: Megeath Stationery Co.. 1303 Farnam street. For eale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake Hews Co.. 77 W. Second South street. For sale In Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey & Co.. 24 Third utreet South. For sale In Washington. D. C. by tbe Ebbett House new stand. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrick. 008-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. 15th and Lawrence etreet; A. Series, Sixteenth and Cur tis streets. YESTERDAT'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 70 deg.; minimum temperature, 57. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, with nearly stationary temperature; northwest winds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1002. POPULIS3I MENACING PROSPERITY. Every great popular movement car ries within Itself the danger of. excess. From the extreme of abuses it is a quick and natural transition to the ex treme of persecution. Unless the radi cal reformer is held in check by con servative regard for the - underlying principles of human endeavor and so cial laws1, he may do more harm with his measures than good. These varia tions from one extreme to'another seem natural and inevitable. As far from the perpendicular as the pendulum was on one side, so far it swings on the other; but if It were to remain stag nant In equilibrium, the clock would do no service. We have been at one end of the pen dulum swing with reference to organ ized capital. It' has arrogated to itself excessive privileges. Corporations have multiplied beyond the power of slowly developing common law or slower stat utes to keep pace with them. In two respects their aggressions have at length been apprehended. One is their denial of organized labor's fight to maintain Its existence, and the other is their escape from Just taxation. The overweening desire of corporations to appear in the public's estimation as the exact equivalent of that public in their relations with labor, labor being mean while the recognized enemy of the pub lic as of the corporations, has failed of Its object Corporations are not the public, however conscientiously they seem to think so. Nor Is the commu nity necessarily inimical to organized labor, but it will ascertain Its interests and the demands of justice and appor tion Its support accordingly. The unreasoning impulsive antidote to monopolistic corporations Is popu lism; and while populism as a political party is discredited, Its mental attitude toward the world of capital may often be discovered in unlooked-for placea Some years ago we had synchronous populistic administrations in Oregon, In Colorado and In Kansas. The mem ory of that wretched time Is still fresh; and Industry in the three states is but now recovering the confidence of East ern capital that was then destroyed. Now we are apparently confronting an era of Republican populism, In Wis consin, in Washington, and to some ex tent, co-operating with a Democratic Governor, in Oregon. Governor Lafol lette is as anxious to put the screws on the corporations as he is to force direct primary nominations through the Wis consin Legislature. Governor McBride is determined to wring from his Legis lature a railroad commission with which he can utilize the railroads within the State of Washington to in crease the revenues of his administra tion and at the same time strengthen his own political fortunes. Governor Chamberlain will go into office with the avowed purpose of securing acts by the Oregon Legislature which will afford indirect methods of prey upon railroad and other corporations. Most of these enterprises are of a piece with mortgage-tax laws and similar devices, os tentatiously aimed at capilal, but doing their real execution In the ranks of bor rowers, small tradesmen, farmers, man ufacturers and laborers. The attitude of legislation towards capital engaged In productive enter prise must be friendly. If taxes on cor porations are too low, they should be raised, but In a friendly spirit and one not predatory or vindictive. The way to remedy abuses of low railroad and other corporate assessments is to raise them, not beyond the profit-producing point. It Is most unwise and mischiev ous to go after capital as If it were an enemy to be driven away. The 'only legitimate effect of such procedure is to cause its withdrawal, the cessation of constructive and development work, loss of employment for labor and great eventual loss In wealth, Inhabitants and taxation. It is matter of very recent history that laws hostile to capital have beeh tried and found ruinous in New York, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Ne braska and Texas. Sometimes the leg islative acts have been kindly nullified by the courts, and sometimes the Leg islatures themselves, overwhelmed by public protests against the flight of de veloping capital, have made haste to undo their errors and atone. .Against thja plain record It will be folly for other states to array themselves; and the folly Is doubly disastrous when It grows largely out of the desire of dar ing politicians to add to their own Im mediate resources, and the desire of partisan machines to outbid each other in base appeal to unreasoning popular prejudice against corporations. The new states of, the Pacific. Coast., especial - ly, have need at this time to pursue a moderate course toward the millions of outside capital that are becoming Iden tified with our railroads, mines, timber and manufactures. The duty and the high privilege of men of brains and education Is to correct and not to mln-ister-to the erroneous prejudices of their time. The career of Bryan should be a perpetual warning to all who are tempted to trifle with great moral and economic principles for the profit of a fleeting fame or temporary lease of power. The end of such unworthy struggles is political death. HARDIHOOD AND CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE. Taking Into consideration the history of surf-bathing at the Oregon and Washington beaches, the drowning of a reckless bather at Clatsop Sunday may be considered as slightly overdue. These distressing fatalities which periodically send a shudder over the Summer colo nies at the beaches, are the result of a familiarity which breeds contempt for the dangers of the ocean. There are a few bathers and their number is con siderably less than one In a thousand of those who enter the water who have a thorough knowledge of the difficult art of crossing, In and out, the tumult uous breakers of the North Pacific shores. This knowledge on the part of the fortunate lew Is supplemented by great skill as swimmers and plenty of nerve, which enable them to take things easy at a critical time when an inex perienced surf bather would rapidly be come physically exhausted through wild but misdirected efforts. The unfortunate victim of Sunday's fatality at the beach apparently swam out beyond the .danger line through Ig norance of the risk he was assuming. There Is something In the deadly sweep of the undertow that carries to its vic tim a thrill of terror such as can never be understood until It is experienced. The fortunate few mentioned know how to meet and combat the tricks of this fearful under-current without losing their presence of mind or exhausting their strength. The novice, however, has but little show for his life, and as long" as inexperienced bathers, even though they be good swimmers in still water, tempt fate by following experts beyond their depth, we may expect a repetition of just such accidents as that which cast a gloom over Clatsop Beach Sunday. It is apparent from the reports of the accident that the Clatsop Beach hotel proprietors are showing their custom ary indifference towards providing any means whatever for saving life in such cases as that of the unfortunate Mr. Stahl. Their Indifference has cost sev-i eral lives in the past, and the sacrifice will continue until the appeal takes a financial and not a humane aspect. If the drowning of a surf bather fright ens visitors away from that portion of the beach where the accident happened, the profits of the hotel-keepers and other beach tradesmen may be affected. When this fact Is Impressed on the minds of those whose duty It Is to pro vide lifeboats, rafts and lifelines, the unfortunate bather who gets beyond his depth will still have some show for his life. At every other well-regulated surf bathing resart In the country lifelines are provided for the bathers; and for the venturesome spirits who care to swim beyond the breakers,-large buoys or rafts are anchored well out, where exhausted swimmers can seek rest be fore attempting to return. A raft of this kind would undoubtedly have saved the life of the last. victim of the undertow. Finding his strength fail ing and insufficient to make the shore in safety, he could have sought refuge on the raft and waited until his strength returned or until a boat or line from the beach could have been car ried to him. Clatsop Beach Is today as safe for bathers as nature ever intended It should be. It Is not as safe, however, as the ingenuity and forethought of man can make it, and until it Is pro vided with all possible equipment for protecting and saving life, we may ex pect periodical drowning accidents. The ocean Is as merciless today as It was before civilized man ever wandered by its shores, and death is the penalty for unguarded encroachments on Its do main. Stahl's carelessness was primar ily the cause of his untimely death, but the criminal negligence of the keeepers of Clatsop hotels and other resorts at that point in not providing Hfesaving equipment was a contributory factor of great prominence. UNWRITTEN RECORDS. The unwritten records of the great Northwest country from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean and north ward to farthest Alaska contain many tales of life among the Indians In which white men. well born and bred, but falling under the ban of civilization, are actors. Despised "squawmen," first reckless, then weak and finally de based utterly, even In their own eyes, many of these wandering creatures have lived apart from home and kin dred and friends, maintaining to the end unbroken silence in regard to their whereabouts and hlstorj-. Children who have had a just grievance against their fathers because of the simple fact of their existence have been in many cases the powerful lodestones that held these Then to unsatisfactory conditions with which they had thoughtlessly surround ed themselves, the parental Instinct being stronger than the desire to return to the early home and to the friends of the old days, Including perhaps the mother whose eyes had grown dim with long watching for the boy that never came. A woman returning from Nome a few months ago displayed among the "snap shots" taken by her kodak the picture of two little girls twins the youngest of a family of twelve children, whose father is an Englishman of some cul ture and whose mother Is a low-grade native Alaskan Indian. The hut in which the family lived was In the back ground of the picture. It was the habit Of the mistress of this dwelling to sit placidly upon the earthen floor while she performed the minor duties of. her household. The man,' It was said loved his children and had no thought of de serting them. He had gone to that far away place twenty years before on what he and his friends believed to be a brief mission. He was stranded there unexpectedly; lost In his environment his self-respect, married a squaw, and as children came, settled himself down In exile, outwardly content. He does not expect to return to England, now or ever. His handicap is too heavy. Just people do not waste pity upon such a man.. There is no overflow of sentiment possible in his direction. His hapless children bright-eyed, passably 1 intelligent, but without place. Ja .the world better than that occupied by their stolid, affectionate mother, are entitled to all the sympathy that the situation can possibly engender. Another Instance among many Is just now before the public In Montana, A man who many years ago left his home In Massachusetts has, after painstaking search, been tracked to his grave by the side of his Indian wife. A son and two daughters survive, one of the lat ter being married to a man of her mother's race. Better for his relatives Id the East had his history In the far Northwest never been disclosed, since it only revealed the fact that he was twice dead to them. The records of the Northwest country are filled with facts of this type. It Is a pity that they cannot be construed into romances, but no such construc tion is possible. They exemplify unmis takably the truth of the assertion that "No man lives to himself alone." LESSON OP A WELL-SPENT LIFE. There was borne to its last resting place in this city yesterday all that was mortal of a man the simple annals of whose life as lived In and Before this community for a period of forty years attest the quality of his endeavor and make good his title to true nobility. John Catlin came here when a young man, earnest, unobtrusive, purposeful. Rising to meet such opportunities as pioneer conditions and a slowly advanc ing civilization presented, he became a significant 'factor in the great sum of endeavor that has marked the growth of the community along better and higher lines, and, full of years and hon ors, he has passed on. Following the lines of his life here, extending from 1&62 to 1902. we find no swerving from the straightforward purposes of an hon est, forceful nature. He was not In the generally accepted sense of that term a gTeat man, yet every one who sought the services of John Catlin In his pro fession found him able and trustworthy. Though active In the councils of his party, he was not a politician in the narrow partisan Interpretation of that term. A man of strong political con- vlctlons, that came to him, as Is usually the case, through heredity, It Is yet written of him truly that he "placed his citizenship above politics." Such happiness as comes to a man of upright purpose and affectionate nature came to him In his domestic life. He mar ried wisely and set up a home In our midst, into which, as the years went on, children came, and from which, in the fullness of time and In orderly manner, some of them have already gone out to take their places in the world. He did not accumulate wealth in the mod ern acceptance of that word, but he enjoyed a competency, the blessings of which were diffused in family life and in the best type of philanthroplo effort. A poor young man when he came to Oregon in 1S62, John Catlin was yet possessed of an abundance of resources. Integrity, Industry, a good education and a genial nature these were his re sources, and the record of his life as a useful citizen, a safe counselor, a judi cious father and an affectionate hus band shows that he made the most of them. His life was as an open book to those who walked close to him. Hav ing passed on, its unsullied pages are open to the scanning of the public. In its review, that which Is best In the community takes a just pride. Its les sons are full of encouragement and promise of success to young men who are starting In life as he started, with their own way to make In the world. Stimulating the faint-hearted, shaming the Irresolute, rebuking dishonesty, commending Integrity the life of John Catlin Is an object-lesson In character building, since without the character that was the mainspring of his en deavor its success would have been Im possible. Another man of simple pame and lowly lineage, but of wide reputation In finance, followed John Catlin a few hours later Into the realm of shadowa Jdhn Mackay, the owner of millions, lies upon hlB bier In his London palace. His life is also an open book, and the world has become familiar with Its In cidents. But It can hardly be said that the. scanning of Its pages will bring hope to the heart or strength to the pur pose of the ordinary young man, abroad In the world of opportunity, seeking. The chance upon which his fortune was built was the chance not only of a life time, but of a wonderful era of mining development. It has come to but few It can come 'to but few. Wisdom can not counsel emulation of his career, and prudence distinctly forbids it. But the career of John Catlin Is open to the emulation of every man, whatever line his endeavor follows, who, taking an Inventory of his individual assets, finds therein Integrity, industry and persistence of purpose. These are Che elements of character that rise to meet opportunity, and, closing with it, com pass success In life. A REMARKABLE MAN. The story of the famous bonanza "big four," who, under the name of Flood, O'Brien, Mackay and Fair, rose to very great wealth probably faster than any other four men of modern times, has dften been told, and Its details do not need repeating. The riches of the Rothschilds, the Barings, the wealth of Astor, Stewart and Commodore "Vander bllt were of comparatively slow growth. Jay Gould cannot fairly be counted In the list, as the twelve millions he won in Erie was a stupendous steal. He se cured possession of the Erie Railroad by fraud and maintained himself In possession only through the fact that the corrupt courts of New Tork City were all members of both the Tweed and the Erie ring. Commodore Vander bllt. by a legitimate effort in open mar ket, had once secured the Erie Rail road, but he was beaten by Gould's going to Jersey City. "and printing an overissue of stock, which made It im possible for Vanderbilt to be victorious, as Gould's stock was enly limited by the power of the m printing press. Of course, if the courts had not been In Gould's hands he could have been promptly arrested and flung lifto Jail for a fraudulent overissue of stock. In this way Gould secured and kept the Erie until he had stolen It poor and the English stockholders were glad to bribe him to let go of the property, earning with him $12,000,000 of the stolen money. But the wealth of the bonanza "big four," while won with extraordinary rapidity, was not acquired originally by the methods of Gould. Something of exceptional luck attended the success ful operations of all these men, and yet one at least of them, probably Flood, must have been gifted with a soundness of Judgment, a shrewdness and a ca pacity for prompt and resolute action that belongs only to a person of su perior talents for trade. The Colorado millionaire. Tabor, rose to sudden wealth by "grubstaking" a mining prospector, after the manner In which Flood and O'Brien did Mackay and Fair, but the singular fact is that Mackay, Fair, O'Brien and Flood stuck together, rose to great wealth together, and kept their own counsels so perfectly that they were able when the big bo nanza was exhausted to conceal the fact and unload the empty pocket upon the people. There must have been at least one superior head among these men whom the others firmly trusted, or there would have been some break, some falling out. among the friends that would have spoiled their scheme. All of these men were of Irish birth. Flood may have come of the stock of the famous Henry Flood, who as a Parliamentary orator and debater was second only- to Grattan In his day. Mackay's name Implies that he was of Scotch lineage. The story of his life, how he began as an apprentice to Will lam H. Webb, the famous shipbuilder of New York City, and worked his way to the top of the financial ladder. Is well known. All of these men seem to have been intellectually superior to their station In life, save O'Brien, and he seems to have possessed the art of winning confidence by his genial man ner. Flood seems to have possessed the faculty of Justly estimating the worth of various mining properties, while Fair and Mackay were excellent executives of the plans of Flood. It was a singu lar chance that threw these four young Irishmen together, and It is still more singular that they kept Inflexibly to gether without serious break or quarrel until they had picked all the valuable feathers off their ostrich and unloaded the plucked bird, dead, upon a deluded public It Is easy to- call the success of these men luck; It was not all Juck, for if It had been the bonanza "big four" would have risen no higher than Tabor of Colorado, whose luck was re markable, but whose capacity to utilize his luck was decidedly inferior to that of the California quartet or mining "sharps." The Pacific Coast Is not likely to see a repetition of this rapid rise from pov erty to enormous wealth that has been Illustrated by Flood, O'Brien, Mackay and Fair. The American public knows more about mines and mining "sharps" than they did thirty .years ago. A burned child fears the fire, and it would be a deal more difficult today to tempt people into gambling in mining stocks than It was prior to 1S73. The public today do not bet as readily and reck lessly as they once did, either in rail road or mining stocks. Furthermore, the chance of the discovery of another property so .rich as that successfully manipulated by the "big four" is slight, and the probability is small that such a property. If discovered, would fall Into the hands of four men as capa ble of such absolute unity In thought and action, such fidelity and capacity to keep their own counsel, as was rep resented by the managers of the Corn stock lode. Dr. E. N. Hutchinson, of the local Btatlon of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry, is right when he says that to make pork packing a profitable Industry in this city or section hog raising Is the first requisite. "First catch your hare" Is advice with which we are all familiar. The inclination toward diversified farmlitg must de velop Into a reality before hogralslng will or can become one of the industries of the state. Our farmers, In aggregate, hardworking and' economical In many small ways, are yet sad wastrels. Oth erwise pork to supply the local market would not be shipped half-way across the continent, while the odds and ends of farm products the straw and scat tered grain in the fields, and the un marketable fruit in hundreds of or chards, are permitted to go to waste utterly, and the low-grade grain that forms a portion of almost every har vest Is sold at a loss to the producer. The transformation of the unused ma terials of agriculture Into the necessary beef, pork, mutton, eggs arid poultry would turn a waste heap into profit, and we should no longer hear the dis mal plaint that'"farming does not pay." The grainraislng habit In the Willam ette Valley and the cattle-grazing habit in the eastern section of the state were conditions fixed by a sfinted marr ket due to Isolation. But this latter condition passed away with the com ing of transcontinental railroads, and excessive gralnralsing and cattle-grazing are slowly giving way to diversi fied agriculture. When the transfor mation is complete,, rural Oregon will become a hive, noonly of patient In dustry, but of wise economy In saving and making over the waste of the farm into marketable products for which there Is always a steady demand at good prices. If the story is true that General S. B. M. Young, and not General Cor bin, will succeed General Nelson A. Miles on his retirement, a little more than a year hence, the compulsory re linquishment of his place will be shorn temporarily of Its bitterness for the Lleu-tenant-General of the Army. To Gen eral Corbin General Miles attributes the slights that have been put upon him by the present and preceding Adminis trations, though in point of fact he has been responsible himself for much of a disagreeable nature that has befallen him. But to see himself succeeded by General Corbin would be gall and worm wood to the loquacious, pugnacious Lieutenant-General. General Miles will reach the age limit August 8, 1903, after which time. If present arrangements are carried out. General Young will be at the head of the Army until his retire ment, January 9, 1904, at which time the President will be forced to choose between Generals Corbin and Chaffee. The strife In this matter differs in de gree, but not in kind, from the feverish endeavor for personal preferment In the ranks of official and social life all along the line. As proof of the selfishness of mankind, this push for place, even when shorn of power. Is Incontestable. The committee composed of business men of Mllwaukie and Oregon City that negotiated terms of settlement between the carmen and employers of the Oregon City Railway line, made the following valuable suggestion in con nection as supplemental to Its report: We suggest to organized labor and organized employers that If they will respectfully ak for a conference and Investigation of their demands when there Is a difference, before presenting an ultimatum, they may often reach a peaceable settlement that Is Just to both parties; but where notice Is served that ceraln dtmands must be compiled with before a fixed date. It shuts off any chance of investigation or agree ment, and leaves no room for anything but In dustrial war. This is commdn sense. Let us hope it will rule In the councils of labor unions -and in the organizations of cap ital In this region hereafter. OVER-CAPITALIZATION AND REMEDY Minneapolis Tribune. The New York Sun publishes a list of large trusts that are supposed to be In more or less financial trouble, and clear ly traces the cause of their woe to over capltalizition. The country has had a long era of prosperity, and is more pros perous today than at any previous period In its history. Most of these over-capitalized trusts were organized since the period of good times set in, and If they had been on a sound foundation and prop erly managed there Is no reason why they should not have rnide money nor why their stock and securities should not bo gilt-edged in the market at a time when good 4 per cent stocks are selling above par. The Sun quotes the head of one of the largest and one of the healthiest of in dustrial corporations to the effect that the trouble with the concerns that are In difficulties lies within themselves rather than without. "They were conceived in folly, launched upon wind, md are kept going by public credulity. They are load ed down with a weight of capital under which they C2n only stagger." The only salvation of concerns in this fix is reor ganization and the scaling down of cap ital until they reach a solid financial .basis. If this Is not done in time, many will have to go Into the hands of re ceivers, the crash will be felt by thou sands of small Investors, and the whole business of the country will be affected." It is the duty of men who have to do with large financial affairs to sit down on these shaky concerns at once, and to sit down hard. Such concerns are by no means confined to the East. The West has its full share of companies that are over-capitalized. Perhaps they do not average so large in size, but are quite as tenuous when assets are compared with liabilities. One of the great business men of these Twin Cities advised, some time ago, a perfect remedy against the organization of corporations upon an over-capitalized basis, and that was the requirement by law that every share of stock subscribed be paid for at par in cash before it could be Issued. With such a requirement as this the corporation would be subject to only the ordinary Vicissitudes of bad manage ment and bad general business condi tions. The foundation would be solid. But upon a shaky foundation, no skill and flo good- fortune will suffice to build a solid structure. This is demonstrated by the existing conditions wherein we see one unsubstantial business structure af ter another toppling over because It Is like a pyramid set upon Its apex. t Next-lands Has -the Price. San Francisco Bulletin. A Washington dispatch to the Bulletin yesterday contained the announcement that the Hon. Frank Newlands had de parted for hl3 nominal home In Nevada, there to Inaugurate his campaign for the United States Senatorshlp in succession to the Hon. John P. Jones, who. after a service of 30 years, has wearied of the Job and does not want it any more. Nat urally, the plum will fall to the gentle man who has long lusted for it, and who la blessed with the means to acquire It. Few people will be found inclined to grudge the prize to Mr. Newlands. He deserves well of his constituents, his sec tion and of the country at large. He has earned credit and renown in the late ses sion of Congress by his fight for the Irri gation bill, which he was partly influ ential in pushing to a successful issue. But ho should nol plume himself too greatly on the achievement. He is quot ed as saying that "the West has the Democratic partly to thank for the pass age of the Irrigation bill." To our mind, such a statement savors slightly of ex aggeration. No doubt a number of patriotic and liberal-minded Democrats voted for the measure, but there is strong reason for doubting that it would be on the statute books today had it not been for the vig orous backing and promotion it received from President Roosevelt, the only Amer ican Executive who ever lived In the far West, or who ever appreciated the policy and justice of reclaiming the arid and semi-arid lands of the region. We are cheerfully willing to give Mr. Newlands all the praise he could ask for his devo tion to the cause, and for his untiring and successful efforts to bring it to fruition. But he should not demand all the credit in the premises, more particu larly as It Is cash and not credit that lands the political fish in Nevada. T. Johnson, Presidential Candidate. . St. Paul Pioneer-Press. Tom Johnson's candidacy for the Demo cratic Presidential nomination in 1904 stands upon a tripod whose three legs are: First, his reputation as a "Jolly good fel low," something after the physical and mental order of Senator Billy Mason: second, his advocacy of 3-cent street-car fares: third, his war upon Ohio corpora tions, whose franchises he has endeavored to have taxed. In his capacity as a Jolly good fellow he ha., in his brief period of office as Mayor of Cleveland, run up the current expenses of the city from $1,900, 000 under his Republican predecessor, to $2,800,000 for a year. Where most of the increase has gone is shown by figures given in the Cleveland Leader demon strating an Increase In the city payroll of $630,000 In a year. In other words, he has adopted the tactics once pursued by the city authorities in St. Paul, of putting everybody on the city payroll who could by any pretext be found a place returns to be made In political eupport. His ad vocacy of 3-cent fares has been very loud mouthed and dramatic, but mysteriously Ineffective in view of the long identifica tion of his personal fortunes with those of the street-car companies. As to his proposals for taxing franchises, he aim ply follows In the wake of President Roosevelt; the only difference being that while Roosevelt's work in this direction has been effective, nnd while the enact ments secured by him in New York have been sustained by the courts, Johnson has accomplished nothing whatever beyond some mere theatrical "posing." He would make a. better candidate than Bryan, whom he resembles in his love of the theatrical; but he isn't the typo of man that cool-headed Americans would trust with Presidential responsibilities. Good Men for the Canal Commission. Minneapolis Tribune. Two members of the Panama Canal ex pedition seem to have been settled upon. It is said that General Wood will be the head of the commission, and that Senator Spooner will be a member. Doubtless Senator Spooner will be expected to deal with legal, political and diplomatic ques tions which may arise at the beginning and in the course of the work. The selec tion of General Wood was not expected; but it grows in tho mind on consideration. General Wood Is not an engineer, and probably members of that corps will su perintend the actual work of construc tion. But General Wood has marvelous administrative power, which will have full play and large scope In the work of build ing the canal. He will be In practical command of thousands of workmen, camped for years in an unhealthy region of a foreign country. All tho experience he gained In Cuba, in grappling with san itary questions and dealing with alien races, as well as In settling a maze -of.ad-minlstrative difficulties, will stand him in good stead at Panama. Perhaps no bet ter selection could be made. A Sense of Loss. Washington Star. Now Times goes Jogging down the path With measured tread and slow; No statesman rUes In his wrath To cause another woe. No more the Record blossoms out With an exciting tale Of measures there are put to rout And mighty schemes that fall. But now nf miss the fray; We railed and wished the strife might cease. The Joys of quietude and peace. Alas! soon fade away. And so, though fair the roses be, .We feel a sense of pain. And sigh and wait Impatiently . Till Congress comes again. MARVELS OF OYSTER BAY. New York Sun. OYSTER BAY. July 14. Come, Alice, let me show you the Wonderland of Oyster Bay, where a President's normal life on vacation excites- more than a gub blechub. It Is a. pretty station. Mos quitos meet all trains, separating the leather-skinned from the edible. Are these the pirates of Oyster Bay? Quite so. Each Is captain of a one-horse rig which will sail you to Sagamore- Hill. They are the recrudescence of the Niagara Falls hack man. Let us submit to their extortions, driving slowly thrqugh the village that we may see the outer fringe of life here. See the man In the quack-quack trous ers screaming as he runs to the telegraph office. What Is he saying? "Quentln has thrown his father over the fence!" It will be told to New York In red Ink on the fudge page. But stay, another man halts him! He, too. has news that is worthy of the col ored ink. Yes. it Is as we feared. The President has changed his policy. This "morning, it seems, he 'used sand Suds polio in the bath. He tubbed this after noon with Spare's. "He can't float it!" cries the indignant statesman. Let us move on. How green the hedges and lawns that skirt the way to Sagamore Hill. Is there a secret service man behind each blade of grass? My! There comes the lawnmower! Run, men! Here is the private lane of the Roose velt estate. History Is making under that roof, beneath the shade of these trees and from the float near the boathouse- hard by. Where will the great Littlefleld con ference b; held in August month? On the Sound? Mostly. Will Mr. Littlefleld be taking a bath ing? Hardly. Octopl run close to shore In these waters. He will need all his arms and legs for gestures In next Con gress. Observe that tree. Standing beneath It. wo are told, the President told Secretary Root the best bait for gubblechucs. Is the Octopus a fry or a broiler? We must wait for the next annual report of the Secretary of War. The children have found a new game to play on the barn top. That flying man with a camera streaming behind him has learned' the game, too, and soon the ca bles will be warm with it. "Frying the Friars" is played with a lukewarm egg and a dull thimble. It Is a delicate game. Behind the bushes over there the Pres ident told Senator McLaurin who will get the dead man's shoes In the Court of Claims. The Senator has small feet, yet they can be stepped on. Seven fat Jobs are growing over in the garden. That is the Panama Canal Com mission plant. Will our friend Jones pluck one? He may, if he will make the secret pact which the President demands. He must vote to retire the Panama hat from the fashion hook next Summer. That Is the main purpose of this Pan ama Commission. This Is Secretary Cortelyou coming over the grass. He has a definition. It Is smoothness without oil. Men feel his unction, but their hands are dry. If Mr. Dcvery were here he'd call Mr. Cortelyou "the. goods." He has come out to talk to the reporters. Has KIrmet flung the groom Into the sky? Docs the cook use yeast or baking powder? Is the sugar which the President feeds the saddler, Blelsteln. beet, cane, or bogus? Who sleeps In the" oyster beds? If we could look Into the house we might see the President lighting a cigar. Is It from the box which Leonard Wood sent him or the present from the Chief of Police of Havana? It would not be eth ical to examine the box. Be assured there Is no Binghamton brand on it. The man wringing his hands behind the hedge Is a photographer. He' did not catch the President in bathing. The Will lam Gillette Is showing him the return route. How thoughtless of the President to play tennis when there Is a postmaster to be named In Four Bears! Does he know that a Chinese laundry trust has ad vanced the price on pleated shirts right here in Oyster Bay? Do pleats plead In vain? You forget that he Is booked to speak at three New England fairs on his next trip, a fearsome trial, which calls for a study of hegemonic things. Let us leave him alone with the syno nyms. Another day we may return to calculate how many tucks make a blouse for Archie. PERSONS WORTH KNOWING ABOUT. The newspaper picture of Thomas MIskell, a boy missing from his home at Brookllne. Mas., led to his discovery in the Interior of the state, where he had secured employment. He was returned to his parents. Gabriel Harrison, of Sterling place. Brooklyn, retired actor 'and teacher of elocution, aged S3. used to run errands for Aaron Burr, and Is be lieved to be the last surviving close acquaint ance of that former Vice-President. State Senator S. Henry Cochran, of Williams port, Pa., has achieved a unique distinction. He has proposed to the Council of that city to pave one of the streets at his own expense, aud he has no personal or pecuniary interests In the particular pavement to be laid. Professor Capen. of the Boston Latin School, has seen 50 years' service In that Institution. He Is now 79 years old. but does not propose to quit active labor for some time to come. He Is widely known throughout the East as one of the best Latin scholars In America. Representative W. AWen Smith, of Michigan, says that one of his constituents who had been living on a diet of egg and sherry was asked by his physician how he liked It. "It would be all right, doctor," he replied, "If the egg were as new an the shery and. the sherry as old as tho egg." Nearly the entire town of Leavenworth lined up at the depot to receive the Sixth Infantry. It Is one of the most famous regiments In American history, and has been commanded by Zachary Taylor. W. B. Hazen, W. S. Hancock and A. McD. Cook. It was organized In 1708. and was first stationed In Port Leavenworth in 1S29. Rev. Dr. Max Werthelmer. who created a sensation a few years ago by abandoning Juda ism to Join the Christian Scientists, has mar ried Ruby M. Jewell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Jewell, Of Dayton, O. Dr. Wert helmer is 36 years of age, while the bride Is but 19. Dr. Werthelmer was the pastor of the local synagogue when he decided to renounce the Jewish faith. No one looking at Lord Charles Beresford today woutd Imagine that In 1SC0, when he first went to rea, he was a delicate lad. and was, In fact, put on board the warship Marl borough for his health. When he first set foot on board be heard a sailor say: "Poor little chap, ho ain't long for this world." Lord "Charlie" has seen many lively times since then, and is still sturdy and vigorous. It Is said that the bedroom of Czar Alexan der II Is kept exactly as It was on the morning he left to be brought back In an hour fatally torn and mangled by the assassin's bomb. A recent traveler was given the privilege of view ing the apartment, which Is simple almost be yond belief In Its appointments. A few toilet articles. Including a couple of well-worn brushes, lie on a little table, and the half smoked cigarette which His Imperial Majesty laid down before leaving the room still reposes in the ash tray where he put It. An Epitaph on the Admirable Dra matic Poet, W. Shakespeare. John Milton. What needs my Shakespeare for his honored bones. The labor of an age In piled stones? Or that his hallowed relics should be hid Under a star-pointing pyramid? ; Dear son of memory, great heir of fame. What need's thou such weak witness of thy name? Thou In wonder and astonishment Hast built thyself a livelong monument. For whilst to the shame of alow-endeavoring art Thy easy numbers flow, and that each heart Hath from the leaves of thy unvalued book Those Dlphlc lines with deep Impression took. Then thou our fancy of Itself bereaving. Dost make us marble with too much conceiv ing; And so sepulchered In such pomp dost He, That Kings for suoh a tomb would wish to die. NOTE AXD COMMENT, . God Is not a man, that he should He; neither the son of man, that he should repent. Num bers xxlll:I9. The Madison-street bridge of -sighs is again open. Only the Summer hotel man finds this hot sunshine 'golden. If there were not so many fair sites, there would not be such a dearth of them. The question as to who will get to heaven concerns us mostly as it applies to our neighbors. No hot weather ever grew cooler from our talking or thinking about it. Yester day was cooler for some other reason. ( Governor Geer has the distinction of reaching the highest elevation on the recent ascent of Mount Adams. Think it over. Caesar had his Brutus. Charles had his Cromwell. Aguinaldo had his Funston and Tracy may yet profit from their ex ample. Nine-tenths of the time the one-halt does not Know how the other half lives. If it did the wife would hurry 'home from the seaside. Our ball tossers are putting us to a strong test. but. with all thelr.faults. we love them still especially since ttfey have taken a brace. A "nutty" came la ping pong. A rerfect rhyme with ding dong; But I'm here not for Jokes. This Is all for a hoax. And I'll say to you kindly, "So long." John Barrett Is convincing the Orient that the St. Louis Exposition is one of the greatest things on earth. He has arranged so that the Orientals will not mistake him for the exposition. We shall have a fireboat if we don't persist In letting the other man put up the money. The other man has been ex pected to put up the money heretofore, but It has not always been the other man whose property was destroyed. Mrs. Waggoner hold's out for reward for finding Merrill's body, and she is in deep trouble for fear she won't get It. If she hadn't come upon the body by acci dent, she would be spared the anguish. Accidents are Indeed sometimes very cruel. The dear thing Mary MacLane con fesses that she is no genius. But here la the first spark of genius that an "or nery creetur" ever displays. She has vis ited Chicago, and the halo which crowned her has vanished. S6 much for Mary. Now, If she could Just be put to scrub bing floors and washing dishes, she might become a sensible woman. Her freak Is natural. It will be educated out of her by Eastern associations. Her no toriety has already passed its zenith. Once upon a time some wise men came together. Now these men were very wise, above the wisest that were In the land, and they said unto each other. "We will do in this even against our own profit." Now these men were come together for a great purpose. It was to find the locus of the 1905 coefficient. And they said to each other, "Our children will look back at us as moved by exceeding wisdom, even as our lathers will look forwardat us In the same way." And It happened that 96 years before mighty heroes Clewls and Lark had come to spy out the promised land, which now nourished the wise men who were con gregated. And these two heroes were held In much honor In the promised land. And the Inhabitants of the land said: "Let the honor of Clewls and Lark wax great among us. Let us hold up their mem ories so that the world may look and re joice with us." So they appointed wise men to carry out their will, above the wisest that were In the promised land. And these men were sore afflicted, for although the promised land was a mighty land, as broad as the arc of the dally sun. they could not find a site whereon to rest the surpassing fame of Clewl3 and Lark. And in their affliction they lifted up their voices nnd cried: "Who can show us a place whereon to rest tho fame of Clewls and Lark and the Iovo our people bear to them?" But this only increased their affliction, for a multitude of voices lifted them selves up and cried. "Here! Here!" un til the wise men knew not whither to look or whither to listen. Then one of the wisest spoke up and said: "Remember our vow. which wa vowed unto our people, that we would do In everything even against our own profit." So the wise men decided not to choose until they were sure that what they did would not redound to their own profit. And in this way a long time went by, and they were as much in doubt as ever about their own profit. Then, in their perplexity, one of them 'said: "Let us go out unto the people." And so they went out unto the people for advice. But all their troubles waxed as great again as before, until a voice was heard, "Remember our vow unto the people"; and they decided to rest again. And thus time went on. The wise men could not choose because they hearkened unto all the people. And when they hearkened only unto-themselves they-re-membered their vow nnd did nothing. And it came to pass a'fter a long tima that the problem of the 1905 coefficient was forgotten and the fame of Clewls and Lark rested on Its own pedestal. Moral. Never put off for the morrow that which can be done today. PLEASANTRIES OP PARAGRAPHERS Van Dabble This Is my latest picture: I sold It jesterday. Visitor Indeed? You are a genius! Tit-Bits. The man who never knew the word failure" can find It in the fs In almost any first-class dictionary. Baltimore News. Housen What's wrong, old chap? Forgot something? Lotts Yes: confound It! And that Isn't all. I've forgotten what I forgot I Chi cago Dally News. In Need of Treatment. "He says he fell In Jove with her at first, sight." "Perhaps I can be of service to him. I know a first-class ocu list." Philadelphia Bulletin. No Business. Miss Prim (severely) Married women. aboe all others, have no business to flirt. Mrs. Gay Business? Of course, not; It's a pleasure. Philadelphia Press. Information Cheerfully Furnished. A corre spondent asks If the 'g" Is silent In Mascagnl. It well. Jt depends a little on how you pro nounce It. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Her Reason. "But why did you encourage him If you didn't want him to propose?" "Be cause Just tit that time there wasn't any one else to encourage." Chicago Evening Post. Very Different. Benham I believe a woman can love two men at the same time. Mrs. Ben ham If she Is a married woman she has to try to. Benham What do you mean? Mrs. Ben ham Sho has to try to love her husband, and he Isn't the same man when they have com pany that he Is when they haven't any. j Brooklyn Life.