THE MORNING OHEGONIAN. MONDAY, AUGUST il, 1&02. ) , its vzgoxticax fctewtJ &t the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION KATES. 35r Hall postage prepaid. In Advance) 3ally, with Sunday, per month I 83 iDeJIy. Sunday excepted, per year . 7 oO 2llr. with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year r 2 00 The "Weekly, per year.' 1 55 She Weekly. 8 monthi M To City Subscribers Dally, per -week, delivered. Sunday epte4.13e lily, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 30 to Ji-paga paper... it to 28-page paper 20 Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication n The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name t any Individual. 'Letters relating to adver ittelng, subscriptions or to any business matter Should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." Eastern Business Office. . 44. 45. 47. 48. 48 tlrlbune building. New Tork City; 610-11-12 .Tribune buUdlng. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. S"or sale In San Francisco by L. B. le. Pal co Hotel sews stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 233 Cutter street: F. W. Pitts. 1003 Market street; . K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market streot. near the iFalace Hotel; Foster St Orear. Ferry news land; Frank Scott. SO Ellis street, and N. STheatley. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. tM So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 303 Co. Cprlng street. For tale In Sacramento by Sacramento News 'Co., 420 K. street. Sacramento. CaL For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 517 Dearborn etreet. and Charles MacDonald. 43 Washington street. I"or eale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros.. 1012 aFarnam street: Megeath Stationery Co.. 130S STarn&rn street. Eor nale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News to.. 77 W. Second South street. For tale In Minneapolis by R. O. Hears ry & Co.. 2 Third Ftreet South. For eale In Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett Bouse new stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & SCendrlck. 000-312 Seventeenth street: Louthan iackton Book tt Stationery. Co.. 15th and Lawrence street; A. Series. Sixteenth and Cur Xli streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Increasing cloudiness, followed by showers, possibly attended by thunder. Cooler. Winds shifting. to southerly. TESTERDAT'sf WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 97 deg.; minimum temperature, G5 o"eg ; no precipitation. 1 PORTLAND, MOJVDAY, AUGUST 11.- AS IXTERESTIXG EXAMPLE. The -City -of St. Louis, after a long fcleep, is again coming to the front as one of the greater American marts. With the rapid development of. Texas and the Southwest, over which, by vir tue of geography, she holds a limited monopoly, she Is coming .Into a busi ness great enough to recompense her for the loss In earlier years of the Northwestern trade to her Northern rivals of Chicago, Omaha and Kansas City. Nor is St. Louis limited wholly to the Southwestern district trade, for in several trade lines she is reaching out ambitiously to reconquer something of her old-time general prestige. In he hardware trade, especially in . the branch of stoves and stove fixtures, she Is making a pace which even Chicago finds it not easy to equal, while In the boot and shoe line she has easily taken the first place, leaving - Qhlcagq. far- behind. EvenNorthvvesterh merchants who make up their general orders at Chicago, Omaha or Kansas City, - in three cases out of five come oh to St. Louis with their boot and shoe orders. There would seem on the face of l things no reason why St. Louis should surpass or even equal her great rival In a branch of. trade so staple, so lack ing in the elements of mystery or art and so independent of special condi tions in its processes. And there is, in fact, no reason for it excepting that St. Louis at a critical time in the busi ness happened to have men with experi ence and adequate capital, while the energies of Chicago were given to other things. Through this combination of xnen and capital plus a thorough under standing of the business and unlimited faith in it, a lead has been gained and a reputation established which, with ordinary prudence and good fortune, ought not to be lost In a century. Chicago has always, broadly speak ing, been a mere jobber In boots and shoes, and this was the status of the trade at St. Louis up to a comparatively 5ecent time. The whole supply came from the New England States, and was handled by- the Western jobbers on the usual basis of Jobbers' profits. But with the evolution of business, under the conditions which cut down margins, the New England makers of boots and Bhoes began reaching out for direct trade with the "West, to make prices which put a handsome premium upon direct trade, leaving nothing for the mere Intermediate handler of merchan dise. At this point Chicago lost interest In the boot and shoe trade as a played out thing; and this gave to St. Louis the opportunity which commonly waits upon commercial alertness when com bined with resources and the courage to "venture. As Chicago merchants, under the new conditions, lost faith In the trade, the merchants of St Louis gath ered new courage and resolved to make the "Western trade their own, by set ting up at home factories to compete With the New England factories. Great energy and large capital were given to this effort, and one may not pass through the streets of St. Louis today Without seeing the' effects of it The trade of the whole West in boots and shoes has been brought to St. Louis, and has become something like a corner stone of the movement which is pushing the city into a new era of commercial life, with more business, more profit and larger prospects than she enjoyed even in the day whea .she looked upon Chicago as impossible in the character Of a rival. We give this chapter of trade history at some length because there are several lessons in it which may be useful to Portland. First of all, it em phasizes the fact that a good time to take courage in those large depart ments or Dusiness which rest upon a fixed demand is when other and rival communities are losing It and letting up In thelr energies. It emphasizes, too, the fact that under the modern tend ency, which is slowly eliminating the jobber, a city to command supremacy In a large branch of trade must make herself a primary producer, literally a home of original production. The time Is past when a strictly crossroads and middleman's business, such as every ambitious jobbing town attempted to do twenty years ago, is able to com mand a permanent and leading rank, for under modern conditions it is al ways in danger of being cut under by the manufacturers from whom its own supplies are obtained. Nothing, we think, in the business life of Portland, not even the amazing energy which our wholesalers are putting into the "drum' ming" system, is eo hopeful as the be ginnlngs now making in domestic man ufacture by leading wholesale firms, to which reference was made a few days .fcack. It means a good deal that our Bobbers are seeking to supply them elves by original manufacture with vn&ayurtaples for which, la past years they have depended wholly upon the general market The beginning and the "know how" are most Important ele ments In matters of this sort; and Port land appears to have bbth of them. More and more as competition works out Its natural results and establishes new conditions, communities on this Coast as elsewhere will find their chief success in those lines of trade in which they are original producers. No city will be able permanently, as San Fran cisco and Portland long have been in connection with the general Jobbing trade, to hold a trade position of olid and assured importance on the basis of a mere handling businesa Hereafter cities to maintain a commanding posi tion in trade will have to have some lines at least in which they are "head quarters'' and in which they can, through tthe advantage of original pro duction, meet and overcome all rivalry, precisely as St. Louis over-reaches Chi cago in the boot and shoe trade on the basis of her boot and shoe factories. Mere handlers of goods have no such possible advantage, because any day there may rise up rivals whose ability to buy is aa good as their own and who may sell on equal terms. It Is the community of original production which has in Its own hands the assured means of its own protection in the great and vital emergencies which now and again befall every branch of trade. GREAT BRITAIN'S G RAX ART. The continued sagging of the wheat market in the face of exceptionally small reserves of all kinds of grain emphasizes the remark of a prominent operator that "this is a great year for statistics, but a bad year for prices." The latter as yet have not retreated to the depths reached a few years ago, but there has been a steady decline and weakness for a protracted period, at a time when statistics warranted the be lief that better prices would prevail. Exceptionally favorable weather and at tendant big crops In sections of Europe which last year bought American wheat are prime factors in the existing weak ness, and even our own country has been so especially favored with admir able weather for the past month that the wheat crop Is now promising to ap proximate 700,000,000 bushels. This, with a record-breaking corn crop coming along under the most favorable circum stances, and plenty of oats and barley, offsets to a considerable degree the ef fect of the abnormally small visible sup ply of grain In the country. The wheatgrower of the United States, however, is now confronted by a new factor, which Is increasing in Importance so rapidly that It undoubt edly has a more potent Influence In the present weakness than any other single feature thus far presented. When Sir Wilfrid Laurler. in a speech at London a few years ago, alluded to Canada as "the granary of Great Britain," the phrase was generally regarded as an overdrawn figure of speech, conveying no -serious meaning. Since that time Canada has exhibited an astounding effort to live up to the prophecy of her enthusiastic Premier. Two years ago an exportable surplus of about 20.000,000 bushels from that country attracted some attention on the American side of the line. Last year the surplus amounted to about 40,000,000 bushels, and before the end of the season some of this wheat was brought across the line and ground by American mills. This year the outlook Is favorable for a surplus of 80,000,000 bushels, an amount which brings Canada well up toward the Argentine as a factor in the wheat trade of the world. The normal importations of wheat from America by Great Britain are (flour included) about 00,000,000 bush els per annum. This demand has been the regulator of prices of wheat In this country for many years, in fact since the inception of the business. England never bought any wheat from the United States when she could get It at the same price elsewhere, and when other countries have been favored with big crops our wheat export trade has been cut down and prices have suffered. This year, If Canada can spare 80,000, 000 bushels of wheat for her parent country, that much less wheat will be needed from the United States, and prices may suffer somewhat accord lngly. The wonderful development of wheat growing in Canada is due to the Activ ity of the Canadian Pacific in settling up vast stretches of land with a thrifty class of .farmers, who are making the most of their opportunity. The growth of the wheat output, considering the area involved, has been no greater rela tively than In the Big Bend and some portions of the Palouse country, in Washington, but the possibilities are al most unlimited, and the Canadian wheatgrower is today the most formld able rival the American has In the business. Not only Is the Canadian af forded plenty of cheap land, but he can farm that land with American machln ery, imported, frequently, by way of England, at about half the cost which la exacted from the American farmer. He is a preferred customer in the Brit ish markets, for he will take British wares at low prices in return for his wheat, while the Americans protect themselves so effectually that they can not secure the goods they need from their wheat customers unless . they pay an exorbitant protective tariff charge. Great Britain will need some Ameri can wheat for several years to come, but when Canada perfects her claim to the title, "Granary of Great Britain," the American grower must be prepared to accept lower prices for his wheat or find a new market for it The increas ing population of wheat consumers in this country will in time take care of all of the surplus which Is grown In the United States, but until that time we are dependent on Great Britain for a market, and the new bidder for favor In that market has a blood relationship in addition to her other advantages to help her. , It Is reported that General Delarey's release of Lord Methuen. who had been wounded In action wherein he suffered defeat and capture, had much to do with the offer of terms of peace so much more generous than those which had been announced by Lord Kitchener in August, 1S01. General Delarey sent General Methuen in his own wagon to Klerksdorp, because his distinguished prisoner was suffering from wounds to which no Boer surgeon could attend. Lord Kitchener acknowledged the gen erous conduct of General Delarey; Lord Roberts eulogized his behavior In "the House of Lords, and his chivalry' was warmly commended by the Londoa press. The terms of peace granted the Boers would never have been granted by any Continental pbwer, and the fact that they were accepted shows that the Boer leaders put faith la the sincerity of the British authorities. It4a?learat, to think that the humanity and knight ly courtesy of General Delarey was ap preciated by their British foes, and served to smooth the way to liberal terms of peace. Lord Roberts, Lord Kitchener, General Buller, General Me- thuen and Lord Mllner are unanimous in their praise of the Boer leaders as able, honorable and humane soldiers. King Edward's first act after his acces sion to the throne was strongly to urge the making of peace with the Boers as an exceedingly gallant people, who by their valor and humanity were entitled to peace on mcst generous terms. A CHRO.VIC FAULT-FINDER. The open letter to the President which was written from the Summer home of Carl Schurz and Is signed by him among others will recall the fact that during the Civil War Carl Schurz. then a General In the Union Army, addressed an open letter to President Lincoln severely criticising his political and military policy. Lincoln promptly re plied with a stinging letter, in the course of which he told Schurz that while his Administration probably did. not plase everybody, nevertheless he felt confi dent that there were quite as many people in the country dissatisfied with General Carl Schurz as a statesman and a soldier as there were with Abra ham Lincoln. This Is not the text of Mr. Lincoln's letter, but It Is the essence of Its thought Carl Schurz Is today just what he was In the Civil War a restless, hypercritical creature who has no use for any policy save that of his own contriving. It would be hardly Just to Impeach the sincerity of Mr. Schurz, who has never been anything but a thorn in the side of every party or cause to which he has pretended to attach himself. He was never so happy as when he was vexing Lincoln; he was worthless as a military commander for the same reason; he was always an eloquent critic and fault-finder; he did not lack courage, but he possessed no executive ability as a soldier. Whether he served In the Army of the Potomac or the Army of the West, Schurz won no laurels except with his pen or tongue. A Republican Senator from Missouri, Schurz soon became a thorn In the side of Grant's Administration. He was quieted with a place in the Cabinet under Hayes, but he labored for Blaine's defeat In 18S4; he returned to his old moorings under McKInley until the antl-Imperlallst craze captured him and gave him a fresh chance to play critic and fault-finder. When Mr. Schurz is not able to find fault with the state of the country he does not feel well; he knows that either his political sense of smell is extinct or his political vision has lost Its keenness. Fault finders and critics are common enough, but Mr. Schurz has degraded fine abili ties and large learning to unworthy depreciation of good men and good causes. He is very much such a man as was Charles Sumner In his passion ate fondness for fault-finding early and late. In season and out of season, some times with the opposition, but quite as often with his own friends. The pretense that Mr. Schurz Is a competent critic of Army affairs be cause he was a Brigadier-General dur ing the Civil War is laughable, when we remember that fie was an Incompe tent soldier, was always In camp what Is meant by "a sea lawyer" on ship board. His honesty and sincerity per haps cannot be Impeached; he has been everything by turns, but nothing long, chiefly, we presume, because he Is a slave to his critical tem'per. Mr. Charles Francis Adams is sympathetic with Mr. Schurz because he, too, has a strain of critical temper in him; it is an Adams trait more agreeably manifested today by the leading representative of the family than it was by the founder of Its distinction, President John Adams. But Schurz easily leads them all in ability as a critic and fault-finder; he brings to his work a subtle Intellect, a skillful pen and most adroit speech. He is probably an honest "free lance," and so for that matter was Don Quix ote in his warfare against windmills. The melancholy thing about Schurz Is that his great abilities and political learning have always been wasted in destructive criticism rather than de voted to constructive statesmanship. He seems like a man bom out of his time. Between 1835 and 1860 Schurz would have been an admirable coadju tor to Wendell Phillips, who surpassed him In nothing save platform eloquence. But in critical temper, .in polished sar casm and Incisive wit, in power of analysis, in cool. Intellectual self-possession, these men strongly resembled each other; they were born for the work of political agitators, not that of con structive, executive statesmen. Schurz at 72 Is justwhat he was 40 years ago a man who. when he could not find fault with somebody or some cause, felt low-splrlted. He began life as a lawyer, then he was a soldier, then a United States Senator, then an editor. then a Cabinet Minister, but his bright est laurels from first to last have been those he won as a chronic fault-finder. NO SAIiVATIOJf IX STATUTES. The incapacity to distinguish between the function of a sermon and a statute, between education to upright citizen ship and punishment and restraint for public turbulence, is the earmark of the Incapable enthusiasts who, like a swarm of wasps, are ceaselessly buzzing in your ears, that the times are out of Joint because the laws do not please the few, but are devised to enact the public opinion of the many. The Ideal state to satisfy these bigots would have to be ruled by an oligarchy of restless creatures, who, when they- hear the conundrum read, "Who is the one alto gether lovely, chief among ten thou sand?" Jump to their feet and yell with the battling voices of Babel, each call ing a different name but singing the praise of some self-sufficient human freak who wants his vagaries Incor porated in the law of the land. Behind these freaks there is not only no domi nant public opinion, but there is no justification of their faith by history, by philosophy, by logic or by the teach ings of human experience. Every man or woman of them is laboriously roll ing a stone uphill that Is sure ulti mately to come tumbling down again; every man or woman of them Is trying to make bricks without straw; trying to build a balloon which can be steered. out of all the broken bubbles of the past Sometimes the incapable enthusiast gravely proposes, like Henry George, to abolish poverty by legislation; some times the Incapable enthusiast is a Bel lamyite, who would exterminate the poverty that is incidental to individual- Ism by the erection of the Utopian ma chlnery of communism which, reduced to practice, would mean a state of social JLtyr&nai; a dismal snd. 3eitructiYe- all spiritual growth or free, lndepend- ent manhood as that of Sparta under Lycurgus, when everybody who was not a soldier was a slave. Sometimes the incapable enthusiast Is a "third party" prohibitionist, who Is sometimes nothing better than a prohibition dema gogue, a temperance charlatan, merely flippant when he Is not absolutely fool ish and shallow, a pettifogger in argu ment, a scatterbraln that makes the Judicial-minded grieve, since the third party prohibitionist holds that "every minister and teacher who refuses to vote for prohibition Is ruled by the liquor Interest" Clubs are always" trumps with these persons, who. If they had. the power, would be constantly stamping out the liberties of the people whenever the indulgence of the liberties of the people did not meet their ap proval. Sometimes an able, sincere but Im practicable enthusiast Joins their ranks and helps to reform their manners while assenting to their methods, but as a rule their speech Is the harsh cry of political and social peacocks shriek ing from one end of the country to the other bald, disjointed chat under the sounding phrase and sign of reform. Scratch one of these professional re formers and you find a mossbacked, In domitable egotist, a persecutor, a social incendiary, a tyrant and an Inchoate anarchist masquerading In the sheep's clothing of philosophy, morality, phil anthropy and statesmanship. These creatures are all threshers of very old and very musty straw. If they knew anything about history or cared any thing about Its teachings, they would know prohibitory liquor laws were tried as long ago as the reign of George H under the ministry of Sir Robert Wal pole, and were a failure even In those days of military force and arbitrary government But the teachings of his tory, the wisdom of the courts, the teachings of eminent social philoso phers, are nothing to the crank with whom clubs are always trumps. When they are sincere. It Is the insane sin cerity of Don Quixote, who could not tell a barber with his brass basin on his head from a helmeted knight; when they are insincere, it Is the Insincerity of a bankrupt demagogue, who, like a drowning man, snatches at every straw. These shrieking peacocks and wauling tabby cats of reform are not content with free speech for their fancies and dreams and freaks, but they want to weld them Into a legal club of coercion with which to scourge society into sub mission and surrender, but society gives them a good-natured hearing and then promptly shows them the door. The world today Is very much of the same mind as it was in Shakespeare's day, when he makes Sir Toby Belch inti mate that while the world admires vir tue, It does not mistake mere abstinence from cakes and ale as virtue. Divorces are the consequent of bad marriages, just as the saloon Is not the cause but the consequent of the alcohol habit, and therefore to the education of the family, the church, the school, the press and the physician, and not to law, we must look to make our chil dren grow up to lives of temperance and virtue. Neither prohibition will keep them sober nor denial of free di vorce make their married life moral and content You can educate a man to the habit and practice of self-restraint, but you cannot eliminate temp tation from the world; you can teach him to abstain from evil If he will; you cannot save a man by prohibiting temp tation. You can only- save him by teaching him to save himself. If he will not save himself, the law cannot save him, for the law cannot do the work of education; the sermon stands for edu cation to righteousness, while the stat ute stands for retribution rather than reform. The August weather thus far could not have suited the farmers of the Wil lamette Valley better if It had been made to their order. True, the wind has caused pastures to turn brown and potato vines to look languid, as If pin ing for some'thlng that the, breezes have not Drougnt Jut wheat ana oats, corn and hops, have been drinking their fill of sunshine and give In return promise of ah early and abundant harvest As for the people of the city, or as many of them as can afford to do so, they have beaten a retreat to seashore and mountains, hoping to decrease the sum total of their discomfort while quad rupling their expenses. Those who can not get away make the best of the situ ation by eschewing Ice water and highly seasoned foods, courting shade and quiet, and really getting more comfort out of the Summer than the flitters, albeit they are fain to exclaim: Oh, for a lodge In soma vast wilderness. Some boundless continuity of shade! The fourteenth week of the great coal miners' strike has begun, and the men still stand together and refuse to work on the terms named by the companies. The strike has been unusually free from violence. The men profess to be able to hold out for a considerable time yet, though they are manifestly uncomfort able. The loss to both capital and la bor Is enormous, and society In general must pay the bill. If this shall make both sides more willing In future to adjust grievances before they reach the strike stage, there will be some recom pense to society; otherwise, we suppose there will be. repetitions of this expert ence and the progress of civilization will halt and misery will overtake com fort while the two mighty forces of In dustry glare- at each other with bared teeth. There will come an end to all this some time, but when? An evangelist of great pathos and power recently declared before an audi ence of 5090 people at a campmeetlng In Simpson Grove, Pa,, that "a great tide of righteousness is sweeping over the country." And yet the publishers say that the demand for the "Story of Mary MacLane" Is steadily Increasing, while those who have bought the book assert that "there never was such a book for borrowers," thus showing that for every copy accounted for to the publishers there are many (who knows how many?) readers. Oldest Skip In the World. London Shipping World. What Is stated to be the oldest ship In the world has recently been sold at Tene rlffo to be broken up. This Is the Italian ship Anita, registered at the Port of Ge noa. The Anita, which resembled Chris topher Columbus' ship, the Santa Maria- was built in Genoa in IMS, and effected her last voyage at the end of March. 1902, from Naples to Tenerlffe, several weeks ago. The Anita was of tremendously stout build, and had weathered countless storms and tornadoes in all parts of the world, but It was also the slowest ship afloat taking 206 days on one voyage from of J,Ea4Utaore toRlo d Janeiro, THE IOWA IDEA. Chicago Record-Herald. The platform pronouncements of the i Iowa Republicans on the subject of the tariff and the trusts confirm the opinion concerning the tariff sentiment of West ern Republicans which was printed in these columns recently. A perfect loyalty to protection is mani fested, but real protection Is meant not protection plus a premium. With this Idea In mind the delegatos approved the following utterance: "We favor such changes in the tariff from time Jo time as become advisable through the progress of our industries and their changing relations to the com merce of the world. We Indorse the pol icy of reciprocity as the natural comple ment of protection, and urge Its develop ment as necessaryi to the realisation of our highest commercial possibilities." This Is very different from the stone wall Idea which has blocked the way of the reciprocity treaties and led to pro tests against any changes In the sched ules of the Dlngley law. And it Is strengthened by what is said later, as follows: "We favor such amendment to the inter state commerce act as will more fully carry out Its prohibition of discrimina tions in rate-making, and any modifica tion of the tariff schedules that may bo required to prevent their affording shel ter to monopoly." Substantially the same views are held by the Republicans of Minnesota, and the National leaders of the Republican party should think carefully -over the situation, which Is as clearly prophetic as anything merely human can be. On the one hand there are the Democrats, who are nearly united in the demand for tariff revision and for the denial of a tariff for the ben efit of monopoly. Of the other are those Western Republicans who are equally In sistent on the same points, though their method of revision would not be so dras tic Now If "no revision" should bo the continuing decree of a Republican Con gress under a Republican Administra tion, how will the sentiment for revision that has been cultivated in both parties work out? Manifestly through Republi can defections to a Democratic success The demands of Western Republicans must be recognized and granted as a con dltlon essential to the supremacy of that party. The Post Coining: Round. New York Evening Post. President Schunnan Is performing an Invaluable nubile service In discussing on all proper occasions our National policy In the Philippine archipelago. His aa dress last Saturday "before the Chautau qua Assembly should bo carefully read by those who carelessly believe that the Phlllppino problem is settled; Its temper In refusing to dwell too long upon tne blunders of the past may ajso be com mended. President scnurman ngnuy maintains that American sovereignty in the Philippines Is an established fact and that the duty next at hand is to Inaugu rate such measure of self-government for the Filipinos as the present condition of the islands justifies. So far we agree with President Schurman, but we find In his notable address a somewhat too amiable willingness to clean the Philippine elate. It Is true that the past is the past and that mere recriminations should now fall under some political statute of limita tions; but has the past no lesson for President Roosevelt, in whose hands the future of the Islands largely lies, has It no counsel for those who wish to see i great mistake and a great injustice re paired? We believe It has lessons which every patriotic American should take to heart Chief among those lessons is this, that no step must be taken without con sulting the temper of the people whom that step affects. It was the failure to recognize the Filipinos as men of like pas slons, suspicions and ambitions with our selves, that let us slip light-heartedly Into a heart-breaking war. Only recently Senor Buencamlno. whose sincerity in this matter, at least, cannot be ques tloned. wrote In these columns that Presi dent McKInley, had he merely kept the leading Filipinos Informed of his lnten tlons, mlrjht have had sovereignty with peace. Mr. III11 and the Shippers. Chicago Tribune. Mr. Hill's public conference with the shippers of Washington is an innovation in the railroad methods as welcome as It Is unprecedented. The public has had good reason to believe that In the past there have been private conferences be tween the biggest shippers and the rail road magnates to. the benefit of the pro ferred shippers, but to the Injury of small shippers and of the railroad guilty of favoritism. The Invitation extended to the Washington wheatrateers to confer in public with Mr. Hill and the heads of two railroad lines besides his own shows that Mr. Hill still maintains his position In the forefront of his business. Railroad legls latlon to which Mr. Hill objects Is chief ly aimed at discrimination In favor of the larger shippers. If the public conferences mean that that discrimination Is to be abolished there will be much less lncllna tlon to enact legislation unfavorable to the railroads, and the relations of the public and tho roads will be mutually profitable. Mr. Hill has had a happy thought Ho thinks railroad managers and the people whose produce they ship to market will get along better together after mey have met face to face and had heart to heart talks. So they will no doubt and tho precedent Mr. Hill has set may well be Imitated by other railroad men. The rail road manager should be what politicians call "a good mixer." He should got out among tho people and take them Into hla confidence. He should discuss rates with them openly instead of discussing them Drlvately with the favored fow. The more publicity there is about the manage ment of a railroad the better. Bryan Telia a Joke on Brynn. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Washington. William Jennings Bryan made a flying visit to Washington last night The leader of tho Western Democ racy was In a buoyant and witty irame of mind, and told many good stories on himself. He said that not long ago n. Western town he hod occasion to get shaved. The barber, a colored man, felt highly complimented by the opportunity of shaving a man who nad oeen a canai date for the Presidency, .and when the operation was over Mr. Bryan gave him a silver dollar, some weeKs afterward traveling that way, he met an old friend in the same town, who told him he had got the barber In trouble. "How's that?" 6ald Mr. Bryan. "Why. ho ha3 been up before the bar ber's union, had charges preferred against him. and was then put on trial for shav ing you." "I don't understand that" replied Mr. Bryan. "I paid him all right" "Oh, yes, you paid him all right, but the other .barbers said that he was cutting under and should have charged S3 for shaving a dead man." Photographing; for Posterity. Sketch. London is being pulled to pieces so rap- Idly that the snapshot of the amateur in the streets has a chance of acquiring historic Immortality. In a few years time a panotaralc photograph of the north sld of the Strand, from the Gaiety Theater eastward, will have a sensational value for those of ua who loved the "roaring Strand" at the end: of the last century, while for the generation which will know only the modern buildings on the famous site it will be an absolute curiosity. The Merry Larlc. Charles Klngsley. Tb merry, merry lark was up and staging:. AnQ the hare was out and feeding: on the lea. And the merry, merry hells below were ringing When my child's laugh rang through me. Now the hare is snared and dead beside the snowy ard. And the lark beside the dreary Winter sea. And my baby in his cradle In the churchyard W<eth there until tb 1m 11a torts saa, HANNA TO RETIRE. Washington Special In Chicago Trlbtine. It Is now certain that Senator Hanna will not manage the Republican campaign of lOOi. when In all likelihood President Roosevelt will be the Republican candidate for the Presidency. Mr. Hanna ha3 acted as chairman of the National Republican Committee since 1836. I largely because of his personal interest I in the late President McKInley s welfare. The death of McKInley has removed this ncentrve to active political management. besides which Mr. Hanna's health will not permit him to undergo any more physical and mental strain than is absolutely neces sary. More important than these two reasons, however, will be the feeling on the part of President Roosevelt that he hught to have his personal representative as chairman of the National Republican Committee. Although the Presidential campaign Is still two years dlstanct, there Is consider able gossip in political circles as to Sen ator Hanna's successor. Prominence is given to the name of Governor William Murray Crane, of Massachusetts, and there is much plausibility in the sugges tlon that he will be selected. President Roosevelt has a high opinion of his po litical sagacity. It was his confidence In his judgment as well as in his executive and financial ability, that led the President to Invite him into the Cabinet, and it Is not unreasonable to suppose that the President should wish him to assume the management of the campaign two years hence. With Mr. Hanna's retirement there is really nobody except Governor Crane who fits all the requirements of the situation. Postmaster-General Payne, who Is the vice-chairman of the National committee. would be a strong possibility were it not that his position In the Cabinet forbids his election. Governor Crane In 1S04. will be out of office, but he will not be out of poll tics. He has the confidence of the great business Interests, he Is a consummate manager, and he is popular. He Is young. energetic and resourceful. The chairman of the National committee In each campaign is selected by the can dldate, and is usually chosen from outside the committee. This was the case in 1S84, 1SSS, 1S32 and 1S36, neither Jones, Quay, Carter nor Hanna holding any mem bership in the committee at the time of their selection. Should Governor Crane be chosen, it would be following the old practice. It Is hardly likely, of course, that the President has yet consulted with him about the matter, although when asked whether there was any foundation for the talk, Governor Crane has declined to say anything for publication. It Is Senator Lodge's opinion that the matter has not been dlscusesd officially, and he does not believe that any decision will be made for some time. Mr. Lodge is confident, however, that there will be a new chairman of the committee, and ha adds that President Roosevelt and Gov ernor Crane are close personal friends. There has also been some talk to the effect that Roosevelt's campaign would be managed by Senator Cjuay. This gos sip undoubtedly has its origin in the fact that Senator Quay personally wrote the resolution adopted by the Pennsylvania Republican state convention Indorsing Roosevelt, that state being the pioneer In advocating Mr. Roosevelt's nomination in 1904. Mr. Quay has fcr some time been con vinced that Roosevelt would necessarily be the candidate of the party two years hence, and there Is a perfect understand lng between him and Senator Piatt, of New York, upon this point Mr. Quay, ;dnce his victory In securing the nomina' tlon of Judge Pennypacker as the Repub Ucan Gubernatorial candidate In Penn sylvania, has been supreme In the party organization In that state, and he Is now the chairman of the state committee. Even if he should not be the chairman of the National committee, he will undoubtedly be a potent factor in the campaign which President Roosevelt will make for re election. Foreign Notes ot Interest. It is said that tho flint which forms the substratum of London U nothing but petri fied sponges. An examination of the fos sil spor.ge or flint shows Its structure. Several Kruger sovereigns, the last Is sued by tho ex-President of the Transvaal, and struck In his train near Machadodorp In 1900, are now on view In Lausanne. John Philip Sousa has sent to King Ed ward a copy of his march. "Imperial Ed ward," beautifully illuminated upon vel lum In antlaue fashion and Inclosed in a gold-mounted morocco case. The statue of tho late Governor Roswell P. Flower Is to be unveiled In Watertown on Labor day, September 1. The statue Is the work of St Gaudens, one of the world's most famous sculptors. Ernest Seton-Thompson has completed- his now home at Cos Cob. Tho land was originally part of an Indian reservation, and much of its picturesque wildness Is said to have been retained. Father Hartmann, the young Austrian monk who composed In his monastery cell an oration which European critics pro nounce a masterpiece, has been feted in Rome and St. Petersburg, and is now the lion of the hour la Vienna. Sir George White, who would. In the or dinary course, have been retired from the British Army thl3 month, has been given an extension, and will retain the Govern orship and the Commander-ln-Chlefshlp at Gibraltar until July 6, 1305. Fourteen advertisements offering re wards amounting In the aggregate to 33 for the recovery of lost jewelry, includ lng 10 diamond brooches, appeared recent ly In. one London newspaper. Rev. Peter C. Torko, of San Francisco, who Is considered one of the best-known Gaelic scholars In America, said the other day that there were 500,000 people In this country who were able to speak Gaelic, and that there were as many more who were studying that tongue. The announcement that King Oscar of Sweden Is wrltnig his memoirs hardly comes as a surprise, for the reason that he has so frequently and so successfully ventured into literature that ho might rea sonably be expected to try his hand at state chronicles and personal remlnls cences. William Blair, of River Edge, N. J., celebrated his 90th birthday on July 4. He was an Intimate friend of General -Wlnfield Jbcott for whom he made a hammock to be used on his trip to Mexico, and paid Commodoro Vanderbilt 25 cents to row him across the Hudson whon the latter was a ferryman. Song. Arthur O'Shaughnessy. Has Summer come without the rose, Or left th bird behind? -Is the blue chanred above thee, O world I or am I blind? Will you change every flower that grows. Or only change this spot. Where she who said, 1 love thee. Now says, I love thee not? "The skies aeem'd true above theo. The rose true on the tree; The bird seem'd true the Summer through. But all proved false to me. World! Is there one good thing In you, Life, love or death or what? Since Hps that sang, I lovo thee. Have said. I love thee not? I think the evn'B kiss will scarce fall Into one flower's gold cup; I think the bird will miss me. And give the Summer up. O. sweet place! desolate In tail ' Wild graea. have you forgot How her lips loved to kiss me, Now that they kiss me not? Be false or fair above nve. Come back with, any face. Summer! do I care what you do? Tou cannot change one place The jrraas, the leaves, the earth, the dew, The grave I make the spot Here, where ehe used to love me. Hero, where aha lores bib not NOTE AND COMMENT. Tracy rests from his labors. Time moves faster than the 1905 Fair. Lewis and Clark board: "You'll have to hurry." Easier lies the head that wears the crown. If the Democratic party has no Issue, what is it doing with all of them? And the coronation came off just the same as if Whitclaw Reid had been there. When Hanna says trusts are here to stay, it moat be a great satisfaction to- him. The Coos Bay Railroad shows us that it Is a wise railroad that knows its own promoters. Slang Is defended because It alda flu ency of speech. Why then condemn swearing? We don't believe they are so busy fight ing down in Panama, else where should we get all these hats? Colonel Hawkins thinks only the Lewis and Clark board should choose the site. What and run the risk of not getting any site? Bryan has not been offered the leader ship of the Democratic party, but he has refused It He must be In a hurry; for fear it will not be offered. Although Bryan would not make him self King, he would be the power behind the throne. If this doesn't smack of Im perialism, we don't know what does. Another boy has been playing with matches and is now In that elyslum where abide the man who thawed the dynamite and the fool who rocked the boat Attorney-General Knox had a fiat-fight with some trust sympathizers. He wouldn't have succeeded so well it he had stopped to get out an injunction. Wonder if what the Czar of Russia, said to the Emperor of Germany was any thing like what the Governor of North Carolina said to th Governor of South Carolina? The 1905 Fair board perhaps has great admiration for Lewis and Clark, who first explored fair sites In this country. Do we need men like Lewis and Clark to ex plore the country all over again? The government forces of Haytl are said to be much agitated by the arrival of a quantity of contraband or warfrom the United States which the rebels have secured. It consists of ping pong balls. The good people of the United States who denied reciprocity to Cuba now see the result of their selfishness in the Cuban loan. The final outcome is an nexation. They will pay for their failure to give reciprocity by having to give free trade. Are we getting ready to postpone the Lewis and Clark Fair until 1906? If so, Portland may hold the celebration that year with as much propriety as the other. Lewis and Clark spent the Winter of 1505-$ at Fort Clatsop, near Astoria, and left that place late In March, 1S06. On April 3, l06.Captaln Clark discovered the site ot Portland. Ho came up the TVlliametto , River to a place where It was 500 yards wide. Many people believe this piaca was where the Steel Bridge now Is. Sen timent at Portland might, therefore, be served better to hold the fair in 1906 rath er than in 1905. LONDON. Aug. 9. (By a belated corre spondent) King Edward was crowned today, but like a bridegroom at a wed ding, he was the little potatoes of tho ceremonies. The Duchesses of Portland. Westminster and Marlborough and their diamonds commanded all the attention. The Duchess of Westminster had a dia mond the eizo of a hen's egg, which so blinded the Archbishop of Canterbury that he almost made a contretemps in crowning His Majesty. All the ladles of distinction struggled to outshine each other. They had on all kinds of rich finery and there was so much of it that His Majesty could get a peep out only once in a while. He recognized, how ever, that it was an affair of the ladles, and looked pleased although bored. Lady Chesterfield's coronet was too large for her head at first, but during tho exercises her head swelled until there f was a perfect fit The Duchess of Marlborough (nee Van derbilt) showed much aristocratic taste, although the other blue-blooded ladles whispered disdainfully about her behind their fans. The coronation was marred by the fact that the Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strcllts stood Just one-half an Inch to the left of the spot she occupied when Victoria was crowned. She was In hysterics about it afterward. Another blemish occurred when all the peeresses put on their coronets. The whis per, "Is it on straight?" became so loud that It greatly disturbed the aged Arch bishop of Canterbury. Such confusion was never seen. The only peeress who did not contribute to the confusion was Lady Strafford, who didn't care whether her coronet was on straight or not She is said to believe in woman suffrage. Old Bobs was there and received much honor. He was glad he was alive, for It reminded him of the days when he was a hero. Lord Kitchener was there, too. but he was so afraid he would say something for publication that he didn't look liko a hero at all. The only peers who went forward to pay homage to the King were the Duke of Norfolk and the Earl of Shrewsbury,, who have the best calves In the kingdom. Tour correspondent cannot find any body who saw the King crowned, but Is assured on good authority that the event took place. . -U, Uncle Allen. "No," observed Uncle Allen Sparks, "I don't allow myself to worry about any thing these days. When prices are as high as they are now a man can't afford to go around beefing." To Perilla. Robert Herrlck. r Ah. my Perlllat dost thou grieve to ee Me! day by day. to steal away from thee? Age calls me hence, and my gray hairs bid come. And haste away to mine eternal home; Twill not be long. Perilla, after this That I must give thee the supremest kiss. Dead when I am. first cast in salt, and bring Part of the cream from that religious spring. With which, Perilla, wash my hands and feet; That done, then wind me In that very aheet Which wrapp'd thy smooth limbs when thou didst Implore The gods' protection, but the night before; Follow me weeping to my turf, and there Let fall a primrose, and with It a tear. Then lastly, let some weekly strewlngs be Devoted to the memory of me; Then shall my ghost not walk about, but keep i Still in the cool and silent shades ot sleep.