THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1903. he (Dregmttcm. Entered at the roitoSee at Portland. Oregon as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (post-ace prepaid. In advance) Dally, with 6unday. Pr month........ J3 Xally, Sunday excepted, per year......... 7 M Dally, .th Sunday, per year J . Sunday, per year ? 2 The Weekly, per year... ....... .......... 1 go The Weakly. 3 month 60 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted.150 Daily, per week, delivered. Sunday lneludid.500 POSTAGE RATES. Unite! Btatea. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-psge paper..... J9 1 to Si-pate paper ...33 Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan ihould be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the nsms of at y IndlvlduaL letters relatlne to adver tising, lubacrlptlon or to any business matter should be addressed almply Tner Oregonl." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should be inclosed (or this Purpose. Eastern Business Offlee. 43. 44. 4S. s TTlbtin tintMIn- V. - Ynrtr Clt-! 810-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago: the 8. C. BeckwlOi Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by I E. Ie. ral ace Hotel sews stand; Goldsmith Bros.. S3 Butter stmt: F. W. Pitta. 100S Market street; J. K. Cooper Co.. 718 Market street, near the Falac Hotel: Foster b Orear. Ferry news stand: Frank Bcott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley. 813 Mission street. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 559 South Sprlnr street, and Oliver 4 Haines. SOS South EprlnJ street. For sale In Kansas City. Mo., by Ttlekseektr CI cur Co.. Ninth and 'Walnut streets. For sale In Chlcaco by the P. O. News Co, SIT Dearborn street, and Charles MacDcnald. CS Washington street. For sale In Omaha by BarkaJow Bros.. 161S Farnam street; Meceath Stationery Co, 130S Farnam street. For sale in Ealt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 VTett Second South street. For sale in Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. For rale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton Kendrlck. 600-012 Seventeenth street; Loutban A Jackson Book and Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence streets: A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TO DATS tVEATHEIl-IncreaslnK cloudiness. "Winds shifting to southerly. TESTERDAVS "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 50 dec: minimum temperature. 13 dej:.: no precipitation. PORTLAND, MONDAY, FEDnUAUY 1J. just o.vcn more. Recurring to the subject of the Asso ciated Press, it is admitted by the Portland Labor Press that It knows little of the workings of the association: and as If to put this statement past dispute, it proceeds to say: Four franchises are Issued for ther City of Portland, two morning and two evening, for a radius of SO miles around the city. At one time the Oregonlan held the exclusive privi lege for Oregon and 'Washington. These statements are wholly errone ous. The Associated Press possesses no franchises', and of course Issues none. The Oregonlan has no franchise. A franchise is a privilege of a public nature conferred on an Individual by a grant from government or through operation of law. There Is nothing of this kind In connection with the Asso ciated Press, even in the remotest de gree. There are no "four franchises" of the Associated Press at Portland, nor any franchise of the Associated Press anywhere. One more extract: The Oregonlan Is a good paper, has done much for the state and expended large sums cf money In labor and Improvement, but It Is hi- ennuch now to stand upon Its merits and let others In who are willing to add their energy and money In building up our city ana state. The Qregonlan neither expects nor desires ''to stand on any other basis than its own merits, such as they are or may be. So It has always stood. But it is unwilling to provide news for other newspapers, or to ehare with other newspapers the news facilities It has organized or created, the sources of news that it has developed, the con nections for news that it has established through great effort and heavy ex pense: and it will not do so. The whole field of news is as open to all others as to The Oregonlan, and the same telegraphic rates are open to all. The Oregonlan would be a peculiar and special idiot If It should help others who may want to publish newspapers here to provide and to carry the news they need. They may get .their news as The Oregonlan gets its news- through their own industry and enter prise, and at their own expense. And the telegraph companies will be glad to carry their business, at the same rate's which The Oregonlan paya They are here as common carriers for ail on equal terms. The Oregonlan provides its own news. Other newspapers must provide theirs. The news that a newspaper collects for publication in its columns Is Its own property; the news that any association of newspapers collects for publication in their columns is equally their own property. The news reports of the Associated Press are collected, not for sale, but for publication in the news papers owned or represented by the members of the association. Sale of these reports is not, allowed, because if sold their value would be lost to those who collect them. Once more: The Oregonlan is in the business of gathering news for publl cation in its own columns. It is asso ciated with other newspapers in the same business. But neither The Orego: nlan nor its associates will help to gather and carry news for persons who may desire to start other newspapers, any more than Ladd & Tllton will fur Dish the capital to start an opposition bank. These matters may as well be understood; for this, brushing all fool eries aside, is the ultimate. If3- Oregon Legislature is of an in qulaltlve turn of mind. It might find food for reflection in the sight of that splendid steel ship Alsternlxie now lying a wreck on Sand Island. There is a compulsory pilotage law. in effect at the mouth of the Columbia River, but apparently It is compulsory without compelling so. far as keeping pilots on their station off the mouth 0$ the river is concern ea. iast winter, alter bang' lng around the mouth of the Columbia for. a fortnight In search of a pilot, the French bark -Ernest Reyer finally plied up a total wreck on the 'Washington coast, and the British bark Plnmore after a .similar experience was aban doned. and cost the underwriters about 60,000 to reclaim her. In giving a rea. son. for not appointing a certain pilot last 'Winter, one of the commissioners was quoted as saying that the appll ct "was not satisfactory to the other priots." There is a possibility that the reason for the" entrance o the river being left unguarded during one of the worst months of the year may be due to the fact that the weather was "un satisfactory" to the pilots. "Whenever an attempt has been made to locate two of -the pilot commissioners in Portland and one at Astoria, the point has al ways .been raised by the Astorlaxs that this was all wrong, for the majority of the board should be where they 'could have Immediate- supervision over the bar pilota This may be all right In theory, but It Is lame In practice. Reas oning from analogy, the residence of all three of the commissioners in Astoria might be expected to produce a service that would be so satisfactory to the pilots that they would remain inside all the time during bad weather. SECRETARY CORTKLYOU. It Is fourteen years since a new chair was added about the President's offi cial table, for the Secretary of Agri culture. Now the eight already there must make room for yet another in the person of George B. Cortelyou, of New York, Secretary of the Department of Commerce. The creation of the new department has been of doubtful wis dom, leaning as it does toward super fluous bureaucracy and ministering, in some degree designedly, to that pro pensity of business as well as of labor, to trust In Government aid and care for the results that are to be achieved only through Individual perseverance and enterprise. As Congress has taken the step, however, the thing to do is to contemplate the merits of the un dertaking and endeavor to make the most of them. Commerce Is advantageously recog nized by a Cabinet office In other gov ernments, and our similar action has doubtless come about largely from the consciousness that the governmental framework of the Infant republic of farmers is Inadequately planned for L ine vast community or tne present aay. stupendous In manufactures, trade and finance. A decided practical benefit of the act is to relieve at once the over burdened and einbarasaed Treasury Department, whose work is annoylr.gly and expensively behind. The bureaus of the new department will include: Bureau of Corporations, Bureau of La bor, the Llgbthoure and Steamboat In spection, the Bureaus of Navigation and of Standards. Coast and Geodetic Sur- eys and the Immigration Service and the Shipping sCcmmiieion, Bureau of Statistics of the Treasury Department, Bureau of Foreign Commerce of the State Department, Census Bureau and Fish Commlfslon. By the terms of what is known as the Nelson amend ment, authority and power are given to the new Bureau of Corporations to require specified returns Horn large corporations, and provision is made for publicity as to their affairs to a certain extent. Not the least benefit of the new de partment will be the elevation of Sec retary Cortelyou to a place of great responsibility and usefulness. The talent of this man .for dispatching busi ness, his keen insight into men and measures and above all his single ness of purpose and fidelity of soul are such as to Inspire the most sanguine expectation of his administration. The qualities that go to make up great ness have been most conspicuously ex emplified In the smaller places he ha hitherto so ably filled; and he pretty certain to demonstrate anew the truth of the old maxim that the only perfect way to fit oneself for a large, place Is to discharge faithfully the duties of the small. It means much for the Depart ment of Commerce that its course and tradition are first to be formed by so efficient a head. Along the lines It will be directed- by Mr. Cortelyou, it can hardly fall of great usefulness and honor. Fate has been kind to the experiment In intrusting its early years to such hands. -WILL .MAKE RAPID PROGRESS. Arrangements for the Lewis and Clark Exposition will now go Tapldly forward. The director-general will be chosen by the executive committee to day, or at farthest within a few days. as the matter of selecting a general manager for the enterprise is important and may require considerable delibera tion. But a short time will elapse be fore the beginning of work on the site. By June 1 the plan and scope of the Exposition will be ready for the ap proval of the state commission. Mean while the standing committees of .the local company, of which Mr. Corbett is president, will lay out their Work un der the resolution presented by Mr. Wolfe to the directors at their meeting last Friday, and shape themselves for the great task before them. Every thing Indicates a maximum of progress and a minimum of delay. Director Wolfe's resolution provides for permanent and effective organiza tion along sound business lines. All the standing committees are required to submit estimates of their probable ex penditures to the finance committee. which will moke up the budget and submit it with recommendations to the executive committee, final approval resting with the board of directors. No coe expects the budget to be absolutely correct, as there is no guide to follow. but It will be conservative and the final reckoning will show It to be approxi mately correct. To guard against de ficiencies, the executive committee is ordered to create-a reserve fund of be. tween $100,000 and $150,000, which shall be available at all times to meet the obligations of the company. It .will be the pendulum between the estimated In come and the estimated outgo, and it gives assurance from the very outset that the odium of repudiation will nwer rest upon the Lewis and Clark Ex position management. If it cannot be preserved until the close of the fair It must be used to meet honest debts. If It can be preserved intact until the gates are closed!, bo much the better, for it may be diverted to one of several legitimate ends. No more gratifying use could be made of this fund than to apply It to enlarging the Lewis and Clark Memorial building, towards the cost of which the state commission Is required to appropriate $50,000 and the local company at least $50,000 more. The historical aspect, which will be the underlying feature of the Exposition, will be emphasized by the memorial building, and the larger and more beau tiful the building the more creditable. If $100,000 to $150,000 could be added to the fund available for this purpose, we should have a building that would stand for ages and be an enduring memento of the first centennial of the exploration of Oregon. The chief re sult of San Francisco's unhlstorlcal Midwinter Fair ten years ago was the beautifying of Golden Gate Park with the funds of the fair association. An auspicious sign of the times is the spirit of harmony that marked the In formal meetings of the state commis sioners with the board of directors and the executive committee of the' Port land company. Though the two organ izations are as separate, and distinct as law could make them, their aim is to co-operate In every possible way and there is no doubt that they will work closely together for the best results. The state commission will cave T0,. 000 to spend at Portland, including the 50,000 for the memorial building, and $50,000 more for an Oregon exhibit at St. Louis next year. It Is a little too early to estimate the funds of the Port land company, but there will be ap proximately $500,000 from stock sales and donations, and fully as much more from admissions, concessions, privileges and other sources. "With the Federal Government's appropriation of J2.000.000 and separate state exhibits added, we shall have an exposition costing well Into the seven figures. To these Im mense proportions has grown the mod est "Northwestern Industrial Exposi tion." which the Oregon " Historical Society resolved, at Its meeting in De cember, 1900, to hold in connection with the erection and dedication of a monu ment to Lewis and Clark on the site of Fort Clatsop In 1905. TO REGULATE CRIMPING. It has the air of the providential that while a bill in regulation and restraint of sailor boarding-houses Is pending at Salem, some of the representatives of that active and vigilant profession have furnished in Portland and Vencouver an object lesson in its most objection able line Of effort. The assault upon the Rlversdale seaman, whatever be comes of victim and assailants, will tend to open the eyes of the Legisla ture to the need of some such measure of control as the proposal at Salem embodied The business of shipping sailors Is as legitimate, as that of any employment agent, provided it Is legitimately pur sued. It Is, In fact, more necessary than most If not all other employment agencies, both because of the usually helpless character of' the seamen and because the ship about to sail must have its men without delay at what ever cost. Next week will not do as well for the loaded vessel as for the section bos or the hotel-keeper In search of help. It must get its quota of hands at once, and experience shows that masters and owners are eager to employ an agent who can supply them on short notice, and. that they are also willing to pay well and even handsome ly for the service. Nobody has ever been able to Instil Into poor Jack tar the brains and back bone necessary to take care of him self. If the experiment were to be suc cessful, the Invigorated patient would not long be found before the mast, but at home on land with his head In a comfortable bed at night and his legs under a comfortable table three times a day. As it is, he is the prey of brutality on the ssa nnd the helpless dependent cn other men's Initiative on land. Ills business engagements are the resultant of the- strongest forces operating upon him, and these forces are unfortunately those that commend themselves to a low order of lntelll gencc and a highly developed capacity for wine, women and song, not to men tion the creature comforts that are accounted desirable In the forecastle, All that stands In the way of the sail or's shipping himself Is his own Inca pacity; and hundreds of years of vain expostulation, court discipline, mission ary" labors and, upon occasion, violent contact with marllnsplke afloat and fierce liquors ashore, indicates that this incapacity is insurmountable. Yet it goes without saying that the sailor's business helplessness cannot be permitted. In a humane land, to sub Ject him to the assaults of robbers and cutthroats. There must be law for his protection from physical abuse, and If possible from extortionate- contracts. Shipping agents are evidently Indis pensable, but they" must be governed by the police power of the community, and those who demonstrate their unfit ness by violence and crime must be for bidden to ply their craft. This Is, as we understand It, the purpose of the bill pending at Salem; and It should be enacted without longer delay. The fair name of this port has suffered long enough from these disgraceful manifes tations of crime. The state has a duty here which It cannot with credit neglect. WEBSTER'S IIADIT AS TO DRINK. The Rev. Dr. Edward E. Hale, a famous Unitarian, and the Rev. Dr. Theodore L. Cuyler, a famous Presby terian, have each published "Recollec tions" of very busy and useful lives. These fine old clergymen have both en tered into their 81st year but continue to write with vigor and freshness of style. It is an Interesting fact that both of these clergymen knew Daniel "Webster In his prime, and directly con tradict each other as to the matter of Mr. Webster's intemperate use of alco hoL Rev. Dr. Hale, who was the schoolmate and classmate of Webster's son Edward, who was killed In the Mexican War, has this to say touching the intemperate habits Imputed to Daniel Webster: Between the rears ISIS and 1SS2. when he died. I must have seen blm thousands ot times. I must have read thousands of let. ters from him. I have been I know not how often at his house. My father, as I say. was his Intimate friend. Now, It was to me a matter of the utmost personal surprise when I found aTadually crowlnc up In this country the Impression that Mr. weoster was often. not to say generally, overcome with liquor In the latter years ot his life. I like to say. therefore, that In the course of twenty-six years, runnlnr from the time I was 4 years old to the time when I was 30. X never had a dream or thought that he cared anythlnc about wine or Honor certainly I never sup posed that be used It to excess. What Is more, I know that my own father, who lived to the year ISC I. heard snch stories as these with perfect disgust and Indignation. In spite of this observation of Rev. Dr, Hale, who certainly saw a great deal of Webster, that there Is absolutely no ground for the imputation of excessive Indulgence in strong drink, the Rev. Dr. Cuyler says: The simple truth Is that during his visit to England In 1540. he (Webster) was so Hon lxed and feted at public dinners that he brought home some convivial habits, which rather grew' upon him In advancing years. On several occasions be gave evidence that he was somewhat under the Influence of deep pota tlons. I once saw him when his Imperial brain was raked with the cbalnsbot ot alco hol. John Sherman, in his "Memoirs," described a dinner on "Forefathers' day" in Plymouth, Mass., at which he as a young man was present. He had accepted the gift of a ticket for the dinner Iri order to see and hear Web ster. On this occasion Webster sat "with a group of his friends and drank heavi ly. His potations showed In his voice. his color, his whole countenance, but when he rose to make the farewell EDeech of the occasion, there was no lack of dignity in his bearing, no lack of gravity in his thought. It was 'a fine, serious, stately address and the man's -brain at least was riot Intoxi cated. 4 The truth is that Webster was a man of abstemious habits on all occasions save banquets at which he was ex pected to be the leading speaker. He could not rise to the cheap demands of such occasions without stimulants. tor ne was naturauy a. griiv- uuui ui 1 nhiootn-iiiK femnomment. Dr. Hale met I t--.-. 1- vi. r 11.- -H fmir.il him I 11 cysirt lit io iiiiit.tj ( ...... . otrcot-.. -nhe- n-htio. rir rnvler met him only at public banquets and political gatherings', where he was sometimes willingness to tavor inai '""'-vi-oH un h.A.thnl with a oorftlve opinion on any subject t - .. tr 1. .irhi in I niriucmHauic Jvnj -o - ... contention that there should be a means of compelling employes of the state to pay their debts. His bill on the subject . t . , ...ut.. l . ,1 .l 01 BarmsnrauTU I to reach such public officer, as em- - Wdortment of opin ployes at the state Institutions rather " , .leaUh, Japanese textile than persons who hold elective state I or county offices. There Is, however, good reason why money in the treas- ury should not be subject to garnish- ment proceedings. Great annoyance would ensue If the .alary of even" bad debtor employed at state Institutions I were to be garnished in the hands of the State Treasurer. Perhaps an an- swer to this is that if their wages garnished, state employes would pay their debts and there would be no trouble. The question has two sides, and perhapn more, so that It is I not to be wondered at that the Legis- Homer before, but apparently ne- naa iur intnr u ha vine tronli!.. with It. On the Kotten just what the hexameters contain; one hand, the Ita Am nlnt-An T mm 4 lis! If" frfill llnra Jinnl- ... u..r.v.. ...v... ... . on the other, the state should not be subjected to the annoyance of having Its officers made parties to legal pro- rewHmr. Thu dumnnd for a remedy In this class of cases is of long standing and should not be entirely negiectea. If It be against public policy to permit public oincera to be maue parties in garnishment proceedings, might not the remedy be provided in another way by prohibiting the employment of persons j who refuse to contribute a reasonable proportion of their salaries to the pay ment of their debts? Refusal to pay Just debts might well be considered sufficient causj for dismissal. A wrong exists and there should be a remedy. Railroads are maklnir excellent prog- rers In China since the end of the Boxer disturbance?. The German Shan Tung Railroad completed 160 kilometers by. , - ,., .,!, u the end of 1901. The great trunk line from Pekln to Hankow, on the iang- tse. Is making steady progress, and the road from Pekln via Tien Tsln to Nlu Chwans has 901 kilometers in opera- . T inni , 1 . .. rt t.1,..,, 1 una. m c u'J itiii.b, a. iiiuusniiu iu.ira u,. ""t- -...w, was visited by 348 steamers with a carrying capacity of 300,000 tons. The shlDDlr.ir trade of China for the year 1901 amounted to over 45,000,000 tons. riiliauucs uuu -- tnrce limes tne annual enippiiiK irauc 1 , , , . , . . I of the port or London. .Nearly nan tne steamers were under" the British flag; Japan was represented by 66 steamers nnrf r.mrav v,v 41 rvml .viiibI tn ihp best Webh artldeMs retailed at Chung King, in the very heart of China, at from $3 to $4 a ton. The tonnage of I Shanghai in 1901 was 10,781.185 tons, three-fifths as large as that of the port of London, the greatest port in the world. And the commercial and Indus- trial possibilities of China are as yet hardly touched. Tnrtpflnltp rjostrionement without de bate Is a pretty good way to get rid , . ,;. v.. wn. tm of a large number of the bills still re- malnlng upon the calendars of the two houses of the Legislature. There are only fl-e working days left and this I im win nn v. enfflpUnt for pnnlclir. I .i ,i .i Km .....iii.. flnoi """" 1 ;rX Vo iu. action. Oregon is not nearly so badly in neea ot legislation as one migni think It he Judged by the number of bills that have been Introduced. In the last days of a session, -when all Is hurry and excitement and each mem ber wants to get his pet measures through, a few careful members who watch the proceedings closely and seo that no ImnroDer bills are rassd are of great value to the state. Better that a few meritorious measures be defeated than that vicious legislation be passed. Everyon; who has been around the Legislature nas seen tne looDyisi wim an Innocent looking bill that afterward proves to have a graft in it. Such measures consider the last days ot the session their accepted time. Through an error In classifying Sena tor Detioe, of Kentucky, as a Democrat, Instead of a Republican, In the table of new Senators published In The Ore- gonian of February 4. it is made to nnnor that the Tlenubl cans have "'' - . . .. " gainea two eeais in me dei-uui u m - :h takes office Is a Republi- XT i- M,Pr neitt ror tne senate wnicn nn March 4. Mr. Deboe ..on nnrt l aircrertrA hv Mr. MeCrearv. a Democrat. The summary will thus stand: Old Senate 15 Republicans, 10 Democrats, 1 Populist; new Senate 16 Republicans. 10 Democrats; Republi can gain, one. t- ..i.onn nr lfiTt- raoontH- hi. . j . . .., ,, n,,'i,.., acted by the Australian Panlament. every adult woman will be permitted to vote at the Federal elections in 1901. In New Zealand women have voted since 1S33, and In South Australia since 1S94. In Australia. Of the 1.S27.0G0 VOt- ers 973,000 will be males and 854.000 fe males. In Victoria the women will be able to cast. If they choose, 10,000 more votes than the men. In the great city of Sydney the women will have a ma- tnrltv nf 20.000. and In Melbourne 26.000. The only Ruspisai troops for whose fighting qualities the Turks have any respect are these of the Imperial Guard. The Turkish army is far better than it was twenty-five years ago, and It was good enough then If It had been well supplied with able, scientifically trained commanders. The Turks repulsed all cumiuuHuci.. . ' . the frontal attacks of Skobeleff at Plevna, where the great military engl- neer. General Todleben, turned the po- sltlnn ot the Turks by his skillful opera- tlons. Every one will agree that Oregon can get along splendidly with two less normal schools. The only question upon which there- is disagreement Is, "Which two?" In his annual message the new Governor was emphatic in his demand that two normal, schools be discontinued. Cannot the Legislature find a way to pass up to the Governor the question: "Which two?" The Gov ernor raised the question let him an swer it. Resignation of offlce that last device of the sorely pressed Federal office holder is not always allowed to cover on enforced retreat- Peremptory die missal is sometimes used In the prem ises with telling effect. ainch the Hauler Tank. Modern Society. "Mary, my love, things are so beastly bad, don't you think you might have a try at making your own clothes?" "Oh, George, pet. I don't think I'm clev er enough for that, but I'll tell you what; I'll have a. try at making yours."" HOMER, HORACE AND MR. CARNEGIE New York Commercial Advertiser. Tf Mr ramrele cossceses one trait - ... - which more than any other endears nun to the heart of the public It Is his cheerful whatsoever. Jot long ago 00 . b."-t. out lone Interviews about the Philippines - 0nl and International politics In general, Everybody knows that he is an expert on the subject of iron and libraries. Avnen .u.anil.. tnni-1irntff1 ns Lord RCCtOr Of a . ..1 thoTcnrM nrnHiir.t rinn!i.h ecca and the commercial conflict of Europe with America, on Thursday evening, over at tne ate-vena Institute In Hoboken. he turned with easy versatinty to the of Hme 'c critl- J It wln come ao a surprise to many of re to learn that Mr. Carnegie has ever betowed his valuable time upon reaams what be casually aiyin """" "ll' 5aa"' . Vday. ago he had picked nt random and that It proved to be Homer. Now Mr. Camegte had read & SSSeE . 1 a was disappointed. He got no ciuormnu rom nm.r . all. To ouote him further: "When I read of Achilles, praying for the success of h!o country's encmlm because hU own schemes went wrong, it. was too , h,n,,h ,h nntinUe heroes unon whom the - have been feeding their studentd for centuries." . Th! of course. Is the end of Homer. Carnegie locutus est, causa 'flnlta est. It may be permitted us, however, to con sider Mr. Carnegie's dictum somewhat more fully In order the better to under stand the general principle which un derlies It In all Its ramincations. uomei represents Achilles as turning against his own comrades ana to be put aside and to be no more read. But ShakcsDeare also has represented rvirtnlnnus as dolnz Dreciselv the mm a thing. Hence It behooves us nil to fight ehy of Shakespeare, or. at any rate, to view him with suspicion. More-er if we push thU principle a little further. It will Jntf rfere. rva.her' ser,ously wUh the study of nistory. A history of Germany, for In- etance. edited on the Carnegie plan, would blot out all mention of the career of ai- lcnsteln. American history would have to suiiprrri) lue cuiauuc Ul xicucuiii aiiiuiu. , ... . ., , . Th. other faults and errors and crimes whlch mortal man Is liable to commit and of whose record all human history, whether it be annallstlc or quasi-fictitious. Jtuet literature mane no raen- .. ...... .nl IIHSn ... . J JW V. U O .J4.MU.V ...... " . . inE., curiously enough, another "pagan" onco. discussed this question of Achilles and of Homer, though In a somewhat different spirit from that which Inspired the Scotch f,, Hacc 'of his lnimifahi PnistiM h. tpii n friend that during, his leisure hours at Praeneste ho has been re-reading Homer precisely, you see. like Mr. Carnegie. Horace even completes the parallel by dwelling on MlJiL0' Homer, In this one narrative, has worked out for us with wonderful vividness and In a consreto form the terrible effects of un. restrained ambition, self-indulgence, wrath and lust. And he adds that this story Ih. re,aUt"' .1 raoral le,ff,on' lauBh' moro effectively than any philosopher, stfch as chr.a,ppua an(1 cranr, CQuW 'tea, U v,y any araount of abstract ethical inatruc- tlon. Here we see. saya Horace, how the wickedness of a single man can bring de- siruction to a nost ot innocent persons. and ho ends with the famous sentence. "Whatever the Klngn do In their folly, or thJa tne people. fcave to iuffer .. T rCally looks as thouch there mlcht be something after all In Homer upon which I even the most modern students could be "fed" to their advantage: for Homer seems to contain a practical philosophy of life which possibly has eaped the notice of Mr. Carnegie. At any rate, Horace tnougnt so; ana Horace Is Just as modern I as any human man In Pittsburg or In Glasgow In this our 20th century. Perhaps. ,h's devotion to Homeric study, the gj?0' ,vf!2J!l!!, m,e?.w "l"- we venture to commend to Mr. Carnegie's notice a casual perusal of the epiatlc to wmca wo nave referred. The Private- Claim Raid Kansas City Journal. It is to be hoDed that the Senate, nml If not the Senate, then the President, .will maKe a firm stand against the represen. tauves wno are trying to raid the treas ury with bills for claims, most of which would be outlawed by any respectable statuto of limitations 'and many of which bear upon their faces the evidence of their I """" twu-uio privaw I claims vrrre rtncicA hv iha tTn,,ait I cummuice ot tne wnoie. tmoay. They were opposed by Mr. Payne, chairman of the committee on ways and means; by Mr. Cannon, chairman of thn rnmmlttA committee of the whole. Friday. They I Mr. Cannon, chairman of the committee on appropriations, and by other Republi- iuii icuucjs, uui wiu raiucrs, wno were both Democrats and Republicans, and ware led by Mr. Richardson, of Tennessee, the nominal Democratic leader, were too many for- the opposcrs, and they wero defeated. Tha defenders of the treasury I are not likely to have any better success when the time comes for the House finally to Qn lheje Wlfc A comb!natlo ot Republican, and Democratls members for "log-rolling" purposes Is notoriously hard to beat- Each Individual In It Is actuated by selfish motives to help tho rccuruiriis ui uuiie ui um bill and of theirs. It Is In this way that the worst river and harbor steals are put through: and the "private claims" steals now being attempted will doubtless be successfully made unless the benate or the President has the courage to prevent Venezuela' Ultlmntntn. Chicago Evening Post There la perhaps something amusing in tho presentation by Venezuela, penniless, bankrupt, helpless, ot an ultimatum to the powerful allies, but the situation Is not as paradoxical ns It .ooks at first sight. Minister Bowen has the better of tne argument, and one with c ylllzatlon. right nnd decency Is a majority, it Is m?raated too. that the position he his taken as tho representative of Venezuela indorsed by all of the "unallled" clalm- ant nations. Including the United States. There is jiot mo ininicst aanger, wo Imagine, of our Government entangling Itself with any antl-alllanceicomblnatlon. and a good deal of the preaching and moralizing on that subject Is sheer waste of effort. But there Is nothing to re strain this country, one of Venezuela's creditors, from disapproving the arrange ment proposed by Great Britain nnd Ger many. The fact that several European power entertain similar views does not make tnem our nines. uiuin tvm mnniiv nf interest Is not an entangling. formal union of the sort forbidden by our Interest and tradition. SomethlnK Nerr In Cheeky Raids. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Ohlectlon is raised to the application ot tho State Department tor an appropriation . , , I-.. nn,t M..la. nfHitarq tp enaoio uipiuumnu uu v. to pay the expense returning to America of such of our citizens as find themselves abroad without any money In Ihelr pock ets. It would certainly lead to numerous amplications for the benefits of the pro-. posed fund if it should be established If, a certain class ot adventurers tounu tiicy could go to Europe with Just enough money to pay the outward passage and have a ' "high old time" In London and Paris, and then get free transportation back to their native lano. THE PEACEFUL CONTINENT. Chicago Inter Ocean. The geologists long ago discovered that North America, as a land structure, must be regarded as older than Europe- Recent discoveries of the remains of primeval man In the Southwest Indicate an earlier development of the arts of civilization upon this continent than In Europe. In ISM Richard Wetherlll, of Mancos. Colo., thought that something of value might be found by digging under the stone houses of the vanished race who dwelt In the cliff caves of the Southwestern can yons. He did not find the treasures he soughr, but he did find that another and different race had lived In these caves long before the cliff-dwellers. Subsequent researches, and notably those of an expedition from the American Museum of Natural History, which has Just returned, leave practically no doubt that these American cave-dweller3 lived In glacial times- They were either con temporaries of the cave-dwellers ot the Seine and Thames Valleys, whom Haeckel dates 270.0CO years ago, or lived even far ther back. Judged by their weapons, the American cave-dwellers were much older than the European. The latter had spears and ar rows with points ot bone nnd stone. In weapons the Americans had advanced no farther than the throwing stick. Wheth er this lack of development of weapons Is to be taken as a sign of much earlier date. or resulted from social conditions that made weapons unnecessary, la uncertain. It Is certain, however, that the American cave-dweller was far ahead of .the Eu ropean In the Industries and arts. The American cave-aweuer was Detter dressed than the European. He was able to preserve from decay the bodies o tho dead In a manner equal to the art of the ancient Egyptian, though by a different nrocess. He could make pottery, an art ot which no trace has been found among the remains of paleolithic man in turope. Judced bv the remains of his clothing, his basketry, and his pottery, he was far ahead of the European cave-dweller in nrtlstlc taste. From these facts the Inference may De drawn that the North American Continent was then in a social condition similar in certain ways to the present. It would irrm tn "have been a land of peace and industry, rather than ot war. Its people had not felt the necessity of developing weapons, as their successors did. ana as the European cavc-uweiiers um. incy uo nnt s-im to have been compelled to strug- irl rnntlnuallv with wild animals and with onel another In order to live. They had either time or temperament or doiu fnr th nrts of neace. Tt this as It mav. the fact remains tnai the oldest specimens of tho works of peace have been found in America. While lhA snvnpps that Inhabited what Is now modern Europe were cutting one anoth er's throats on every possmie occasion thpse early Americans had managea to find out how to live together without any TtrnnrdInarv amount ot nomicme. Though possibly earlier than the corre sponding European peoples in ume. mc were Immensely aneaa oi mem u .n-i-mttnn an enuired bv the absence ot war. Pprhans thev were too culturea to lasi. for they passed away and ages of war followed. But the conditions inai en abled them to develop Industrial rather than military skill have been reproduced In modern times. North America is today the peaceful continent above all others. It3 people have proved that they can fight 33 well as others, on occasion, but they have also been able In greater num bers than any others to live together with little use of arms. tf mnv ho that the dancer mat inreui. ens tne American pewm ' v their predecessors SOO.000 years ago or so seem to have succumbed. They may be come too peaceful, cultured, and weak to stand up against aggressive neisnuui. The point, in view of certain recent ten worthy of consideration. However, for the present North America Is. ns It must have Deen men, lire- v.a refill continent, and. there fore, destined to surpass Europe, as it did then. In the arts of peace. The Knlser mid lllfilier Criticism. New York Evening Post. Emperor William's open patronage of some of the most radical of the higher critics of the Bible Is a vof rather of his versatility than ot his caution. Eyen In Germany they are a little shy of seeing the indebtedness of the Old Testament to Assyrian and Egyptian Ideas laid bare. In theological circles In this country tho name of Professor Delltszch has been one with which to affright the timid. There you see what you are coming to with your audacious Inquiries-turning the book of Daniel Into a Chaldean myth, and making out Jahavch to be a Babylonian concep tion! American theological students still go to Germany, however, on fellowships, though they are expected to return with out the smell of heretical learning upon their garments. Can Men Worlt Top HnrdT rinrlnnatl Enaulrcr. President Eliot, of Harvard. Is of the opinion that no man can work too hard. T3,ihi -Prnfessor Eliot has never tried It. Let him go to the country some day tnVe note of some farmer who has gone forth with his hoe at sunrise every morning and worked till sunset, and is , j "w" t K and I bowed, broken and .umatlc at and dies In the : 50s j. Iwtaj the farm he has paid for with hard work to some oun PaI1 feller" who has captured nis aausuier with a horse and buggy A Beresfortl Eplcrnm. New York Sun. rra,--Artm!ral Lord Charles Beresford. C B.. produced on weanesaay nigm a. maxim of wisdom which we beg leave to Qonarate from the rest of his remarks to the pilgrims. "Batiiesnips aiv wi-upci than war." Was there ever delivered a n- nr shorter sDeech In favor of ade quate appropriations for the United States Navy for additional seo power aa a saw guard of peace? All Seem to Think Alike, lsvllle Courier-Journal. When Democrats criticised President Roosevelt's appointment of Addlcks' man Byrne they were denounced by Roosevelt partisans as actuated by "malice." Now that a Republican commmee ima m.nrlerl the relectlon of this nomination. it n-miirt seem that Democrats are not alone In their crime ol lese-majesie. ui.. over Its motive. "If I Were Kind." Francois Villon. Whilom, when Alexander reigned. A man that high Dlomede?. Before tho nmr-eror wns arraigned. Bound hand and feet, like as one sees A thief. A skimmer of the sas. Of those that course It far and nlsh He "was, and so, as one of these They brought him to do doomed to 'die. Tho Emperor bespoke him thus: "Why art thou a sea plunderer?" The other one. nowlw tlmotous. "Why dost thou call me a. plunderer, slrT Is It perchance because I oar Upon so mean a bark the sea? Could I but arm me with thy gear I would be Emperor like to the. "What woulds't thou have? From some fate That uses m with uesji.ic As I on nowise can abate. Arises this, my evil pllsht. Ixt me nnd -favor In thy sight And have In mind the common law: In penury Is little rlfsht: Necessity knows no man s law. Whereas the Emperor to his. suit . Had harkened. much be wondered. "And I thy fortune will commute From bad to good." tu n!m he said. And did. Thenceforward Diomcd Wronsed none, but was a true man, aye. Thus have I In Valerius read, ) Of Kome styled greatest In his Oiy. if God had granted me to find A kins of like great-heartedness. That had fair Fate to me assigned. Stooped I thenceforward to exceas Or 11U I would myself confess Worthy to die by Are at stake. Necessity makes folks transgress. And want drives wolves from the brake. NOTE AND COMMENT. Who sent the Infernal old comic thins. anyhow? Anyhow, the Legislature has stopped ona- Drain on the treasury. Some think that Morgan's long speeches for the canal delay it more than the rail road obstructionists. Don't eamble on early settlement ot tho Watcrbury strike. It's one of those things. that are not wound up in a hurry. Latest reports, on unimpeachable testi mony, show that no less than 17 different men are to be elected Senator the last night of the session. Tes, and with sev eral counties yet to hear from. Magnum, O. T., has soma blue laws which would do honor even to Connecti cut. Even the electric light plant does not run on Sunday because the manager was notified to keep It shut down under penalty of prosecution for violating the Sunday law. Causing the electric light plant to shut down Saturday night at 12 o'clock nnd remain shut down until Mon day morning Is rather Inconvenient, and attempts are being made to have the law modified. The genus of editor that can still sling Ink with breezy emphasis Is going the way of the dodo, but specimens are still found. Mr. Baysc, of the Belleville (Kan.) Telescope, is one ot them. A paper in a neighboring town criticised the gentleman who represents Mr. Bayse's district In tho Legislature. The editor began his reply thiswise: "From time Immemorial It has been customary for ants and fleas and files and fools, scoundrels and scalawags and skunks. Januses, Jackasses and Ju dases, lizards, leeches and lice to assail mankind In general, and their superiors in particular. The attack last week," etc There Is not a single newspaper man. regularly employed on the Salt Lake Evening News. This is no reflection on the newsgatherers of that publication, but a simple fact. All of them aro married. It has been Just about a year since the News inaugurated a new policy. At tho time it had on Its local force three frolic somo bachelors Eugene Lewis, W. 3. Watson and Hugo Wells. One day tho edict went forth that every reporter on the paper had to get married or walk the, plank. When the story was printed in tha Tribune it was denied by the editor of tho New3 and treated as a Joke. The three re porters also took It as a joke. Now their places are filled by married men. John Mitchell told a story recently In the, Clover Club, of Philadelphia, which was of H certain grim humor. Mr. Mitchell was In his first suit of evening dress. He was talking about the seriousness of life, and his story bore out his view. He said there were- two sisters, seamstresses, who lived In a little room and earned their bread by sewing. They were young and pretty, but seldom laughed: they never wore comely clothes; they did nothing but sit In a stooped attitude, sewing all day and a good part of the evening. One night when she was quite worn out with labor the) younger said to the older sister: "Oh. dear! I wish we were both dead!" The older sister's mouth took on a grim smile as she returned: "Be still and work hard. Business before pleasure." Reed and McKInler. Washington special to the New York Ban-t- t?.i hart convictions about money and 'finance, and he had no sort of pa-- tlence with those men in puDiic me wnoau convictions disagreed with his or who seemed to lack all conviction. While ha got along tolerably wen win jt-resiaent McKinlev. on eeneral grounds he early distrusted his stability as a friend of tho gold standard, even after tne ciecuon ot 1S96 and the following Inauguration. Tha chiefs subject for legislation for that ses sion. In his opinion, was the money ques tion. He was Speaker, holding in his hands, under rules prepared lor tne pur pose ot transacting business, the power to advance to law any policy ndopted by the Administration. Mr. Reed did not find the inaugural address of the President easily convertible Into a dm mat wouiu, unequlvocally establish the gold standard and banish all fear of free silver coinage. To get at the purpose of the President he made an eany visit . w mo m.a House, and In a day or two ne repemeu. his call, staying rather longer on tno second call than on the first' To a newspaper man wno asuea iuc news about the objects of these visits, he explained, with on injunction of se crecy that Is now raised: "The fact is, I made my first trip because, having looked for the President's policy In his message, and not finding it, I wanted to have It from him directly. I was with the Presi dent an hour, and when I got back to my room and attempted to make an Inventory of what I had brougnt wun me. i iuuuii n.t t hnfl nnthlne but a recollection ot having been talked to for about 50 mlnte by a most araiaDie gentleman. "" me nothing about any policy whatever. My second call was made with the deter mination to ao some uuwus Well. I talked and McKInley talkedr and when I came away I had reached the con clusion that I should never know tha money policy of the President, and that It would never De Known iu v."s'i McKInley could not tell what It was. and If the Almighty knew It, he could not bo expected to communicate It to Congress In a special message." Tlicy Walked Into the Dltcn. Cincinnati Enquirer, n i. nil rlcht. of course, for the allied powers to object to being put In a hole by Minister Bowen. but they should havo gone about the Venezuelan business with their eyes open. They deliberately walked Into the excavation, and this wakens their present objections. They have, at least. learned mat an tne uiyiumaia uu nw. live In the Eastern Hemisphere. rLEASAXTRIES OF 1MRAGRAIMIERS lie Dut poverty Is no disgrace. She I'a-m, no; but mere aro m iutjiw w, it, either. Judge. Dolly-Oraclous. did Mrs. de Styles retuie to belong to the "100"? Folly Yes; sne waniea to belong to the "3W It wouia seem mora like a bargain that way. Baltimore Herald. Ttrl-m When Baxter says he would like to be a better man. I'm afraid he deceives him self. Griggs That's all right. He'd rather cheat himself than cheat nobody at all. Boston Transcript. Phrapper (after his tenth miss) Oh. hang the blrdst Keeper Sorry, sir. but vre ain't got no strlrz: but If you likes to let me have tbe gun I'll shoot 'em for you. Glasgow Evening Times. "Now. Johnny." said the teacher, who had been describing a warship to the class, "how Is the deck dlvldedr' "A deck Is divided, replied the bright boy. "Into spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs." Philadelphia rres. Ida So you belong to an anti-swearing league Have you accomplished much good? May Yes. Indeed. Ahy. wa have persuaded some of the South Water street teamsters to say "Oh. fudge!" when their teams tangio up. Chicago Dally News. "This Is what I cr.ll a gilt-edge Invest ment." said the persuatlve agent. "Yes." answers Farmer Corntossel. "but that's Just how It wan with the sold brick I bought. Tho edges were fine, but the Inside was a delu sion and a snare." Washington Star. This town." said "the Western boomer, "was rractlcally built In a. day. Wa do things In a hurry out here." "No daubt.' re plied the man from the East., "but I. am mora Interested In receiving some assurance that It will not disappear In a day."-Chlcago Erea ng Post. J