-8 THE MOBNIXG OREGONIAtf. MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1903. Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mall (postage prepaid. In advance) Dallr. with Sundar. per month . .$0.85 Daily, Sunday excepted, per year.. .W Dally, with Sunday, per year v.00 Sunday, per year ....-.. 2.00 The Weekly, per year 1-50 The Weekly. 3 months .- 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday exeepted.l3c Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday Ududed.SOc POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and llexlco 30 to 14-page paper c IS to 30-page paper .......2c Z2 to 44-page paper ..........3c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should he addressed Invaria bly "'Editor The Oregonian." not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription, or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." 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 for this J purpose. Eastern Business Offlce, 43. 44, 45, 4T. 48. 43 Tribune building. New Tork City; 510-11-12 Tribune building. Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale In San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Butter street; F. IV. Pitts, 1008 Market street: J, K. Cooper Co., 746 Market street, near the 'Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand; Frank Scott, 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley. 813 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 50 South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines. 05 South Spring street. For sale In Kansas City. Mo., by Rlcksecker Cigar Co Ninth and Walnut streets. For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, C3 Washington street For eale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1G12 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co., 1S03 Farnam street. For sale in Ogden by W. G. Kind. 114 23th street; Jas. H. Crockwell, 242 "23th street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South street. For 6ale in Washington, D. C. by the Ebbett House new stand. For eale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-012 Seventeenth street: Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence streets; A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. YESTERDAY' S WEATHER Maximum tem perature. 73 deg.; minimum temperature, 50 deg ; precipitation, .01 inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers, cooler; westerly winds. PORTLAND, JIOXDAT, JUNE 15, 3003. WHERE THEORY FAILS, AXD WHY. You can postulate nothing: on govern ment or society which will be good for all places, times, peoples and circum stances. On morals you can that is, on higher morals; but on society ,and government, where everything must be adjusted. In some sort at least,- to con ditions of place and time, on the na ture and situation of the people and their general circumstances, you can not. Hence the inquiry why the people of Servia cannot now clear themselves of the imcumbrance of corrupt dynasties and establish a republic, is useless. They know nothing of the principles of popular government, and are Incapable of the Intelligent effort necessary to assert them and of the self-restraint necessary to maintain them. But, no matter what the Intellectual status of a people may be, each and every people is bound by the general conditions of its life or existence, and cannot set up and maintain government on any mere theory, or on principles corresponding with those maintained in another country where the conditions are all essentially different. Measures of government, and even principles of government, must be accommodated to places, times and circumstances, to the nature of peoples and to their historical development. Her economic conditions compel Great Britain to free trade. She has no choice about it The United Kingdom Is the world's greatest workshop. Her peo ple cannot live within themselves. They must have the world's markets. So they must have the least possible re strictions upon Importation of food and of materials. Nor Is the British Empire, great as It Is, great enough for a zollvereln, for "protection" of itself against the world. The interests of the head and heart of the empire are not coincident with those of the distant members. The masses of the British Islands want cheap food, and must have food as cheap as possi ble. Hence they cannot have tariffs put on food supplies from America and Kussla, for protection of the food pro ducers of the United Kingdom and the colonies. It is surprising that Joseph Cham berlain did not see the error in his pro posal for a British and colonial zoll "verein. Equally surprising that Amer icans, disregarding the difference of conditions In the two countries, should say that Great Britain, noting the er ror of her policy of free trade, is about to veer round to the American policy -of protection. Industrial and economic conditions iorce Great Britain to adhere to free trade. We are growing towards it ourselves, and one day shall have It. The unity of the British Empire is to "be maintained chiefly through a policy that will preserve the strength of the .head and heart of the empire. The col onies will continue to And their com pensation In the protecting power and care of the mother country. Even the greatest of them are not able to set up for themselves. Whether they will ever Jbe Is useless speculation. None of them lis now. No theory of government, no pol icy, applied in one country is good for anything In another, because In no two countries will you And the condi tions the same: and government is a human contrivance to meet human twants. Naturally and necessarily, though it always falls short of Ideals, it adjusts itself to the cqndltlons that exist among the people who make or tolerate It. Hence no abstract theory of government Is good anywhere. We have come nearer perhaps in this coun try to such theories than anywhere else; but we have had a great conti nent to bustle In, and have had no powerful neighbors to interfere with us. Like conditions have prevailed no where else in the world. NOT A PROPER RESULT. Referring to the platform adopted by 4he Republicans of the State of Ohio, She Springfield (Mass.) Republican Bays: "The Ohio Republicans adhere to the fifteenth constitutional amend ment, and are prepared to abandon It provided the negro disfranchising states ere cut down proportionately in. thelr xepresentatlon in the electoral college and the lower branch of Congress." The Springfield Republican Is not lavorable to this position, since it is eentimentally .for universal suffrage, jwithout regard to the fitness of the suf SCragist. It says further: jEb lacs u prMte4 by the Ohio cosven- tlon should be clearly understood. It Involres the abandonment of the last of th -war aroesd xaents and the serious impairment of the force of the other two. Just this, and so less than this. Are Northern Republicans ready to se the re sults of the Civil War so largely and so easily set aside I But what were the results the proper results of the Civil War? Preservation of the Union and the abo lition of slavery. On all sides, except by a few faddists, It Is admitted that extension of suffrage indiscriminately, without consideration of fitness for the use or exercise of it, was not a neces sary or legitimate consequence of the Civil War, and that, though at the time it was so considered by the Northern people, or a majority of them, yet It was a very great mistake, which has Injured the country more, far more, than the war. itself. The Northern States could have allowed suffrage without distinction of color had they desired; but to force It on the Southern States, where the negroes were so nu merous and so unprepared for it, was the greatest of all mistakes. ships seek: the cargo. Theorists, confusing the Oriental trade as It actually is with what It may b fifty years from now, are explain ing to the public that the giant steam ers which Mr. Hill Is building for his Seattle line will prove successful in revolutionizing the carrying trade of the Pacific. The fact that it is impos sible for Mr. Hill to secure cargoes for the steamers he Is now operating be tween Puget Sound and the Orient does not seem to weaken the faith of these theorists In his ability to secure freight for steamers four times as great. The Seattle papers, week In and week out. Inform us of the immense business that will be handled as soon as these mam moth freighters are placed in service. It Is certainly easier to get at the facts regarding something that is being done now than it Is to make an accurate forecast of what may h:pen In the future. Therefore we should like to have some of these transportation ex perts explain why Mr. Hill cannot or will not provide full cargoes for the steamers already engaged In the Ori ental trade under traffic arrangements with his roads. The last steamer of Mr. Hill's Seattle line to .clear, the Kaga Mam, was a vessel of 10,000 tons capacity, and she cleared with 2000 tons of flour, 750 tons of wheat and 409 toAs of miscellaneous freight, a total of 3162 tons, or less than one-third of her carrying capacity. Preceding her was the Tosa Maru, a 9000-ton carrier, which cleared with 850 tons of flour and 300 tons of miscella neous freight, a total of 1150 tons, or about one-eighth of the vessel's total carrying capacity. The Northern Pa cific steamers sailing from Tacoma are, to a large extent, under the control of Mr. Hill, as he virtually controls both of the northern roads. Between the sailings or the two Marus mentioned, the Northern Pacific liner Tacoma was cleared from Tacoma. She carried 58S tons of flour and 150 tons of miscella neous cargo. As her capacity Is only about 4000 tons, It will be noticed that, with a total cargo of 733 tons, her per centage of empty space was less than that of the Tosa Maru, but slightly greater than that of the Kaga Maru. The total amount of cargo carried by these three steamers, with a combined carrying capacity of 23,000 tons, was 5045 short tons. The new steamers of Mr. Hill have a capacity of 32,000 tons each. It is needless to state that both the Marus and the Tacoma lost con siderable money for their owners by going out with such light cargoes. What kind of an explanation, then, can Mr. Hill make to their owners, who are in a measure associated with him In the trans-Pacific trade? The newspapers closely affiliated with Mr. Hill, and even the gentleman himself, assert that there will be no difficulty In securing plenty of cargo for his big ships when they come. Why, then, is he withholding freight from the lines now seeking to build, up a trade for which he stands sponsor? In this connection, the fol lowing comment from Friday's Seattle Post-Intelligencer Is Interesting: The question whether big ships pay better than smaller ones was accepted as settled until the building of the Great Northern steamships was projected; and It has been disputed since that time only by the residents of cities whose harbors are too shallow to per mit of large ships plying 4o them. ... It is true that there are many harbors to which vessels of the largest class cannot ply; and thus, with the further Increase In the lxe, draft and tonnage of merchant steamships, the number of ports which can accommodate the modern freight carriers will be still fewer. But this does not mean that the steamships will have to be built smaller to accommodate the shallow harbors; It simply means that the trade which It was once possible to do from shallow harbors will be transferred to the harbors which tre ablo to accommodate the largest and most economically operated ocean carriers. Again does theory secure a hard Jolt from plain fact. While the Great North ern liner Kaga Maru was loading at Seattle, the Portland & Asiatic liner In dravelll, a 7500-ton carrier, was loading at Portland. Her outward cargo con sisted of 4820 tons of flour, 250 tons of wheat, 489,000 feet of lumber and about 500 tons of miscellaneous freight all, In fact, that could be stowed aboard and the 750 tons of wheat shipped on the Kaga Maru were a portion of a thousand-ton shipment offered the Indra velll. As it was impossible to secure space on the Portland steamer for more than 250 tons, 500 tons of the remainder were shipped to Seattle from Portland,. and 250 tons from Tacoma to Seattle, It being impossible to get the entire 750 tons to Seattle from Portland in time. On this shipment of 500 tons for the Kaga Maru, the Great Northern ab sorbed the local rate from Portland to Seattle, and also paid the switching charges. In this manner Is the trade from shallow harbors "transferred to the harbors which are able to accommo date the largest and most economically operated ocean carriers." The Indravelll is not as large as some of the liners running to Portland, but, had the Great Northern filled tip the Kaga Maru with the Indravelll's cargo, it would have cost over $10,000 to ab sorb the local rate on that cargo to Seattle. This is the reason why it is always cheaper to bring the ship to the cargo than to take the cargo to the ship. The Portland line operates moderate-sized carriers, which run with full cargoes. The Seattle line operates large carriers that cannot fill one-third of their space, and yet the Portland liner, with a capacity of 7500 tons, carried more than 25 per cent more cargo than the combined cargoes of the last three Puget Sound liners which sailed from Seattle and Tacoma. Steamers will al ways be built to accommodate harbors that will supply them with a profitable business, and at no other port on the Pacific Coast does as much Oriental traffic originate as in the port of Port land. This port not only sends out Its own Oriental ltaersHwlttkfull cargo, but is called on to supply freight for every other trans-Pacific line operating out of California and Washington ports. EXTEND THE SCOPE. The Secretary of the Interior has found it advisable to" promulgate new rules and regulations governing the se lection of Indemnity land upon mineral base. This action was taken as a re sult of recent Investigations brought about by disclosures of Improper prac tices In Oregon, and the purpose is to protect the Government from fraud. The department has become convinced that indemnity selections have fre quently been made upon base which was proven to be mineral, but which was not In fact mineral In character. There were indications that local land officials had been too lax in their re quirements as to proof, and that they had favored those persons who are in terested In the adjudication of mineral base. For this reason, and for the pur pose of simplifying the proceedings, the power of passing upon questions as to the mineral character of land has been taken out of the hands of local land officials and lodged with the depart ment, which formerly had only appel late jurisdiction. Though the Government has undoubt edly been imposed upon by operators In state lieu lands, the Improper prac tices In this branch of public land busi ness are no worse and no more pro nounced than in other classes of land transactions. It is common knowledge that men who live In cities, where they keep their families, where they have well-established business enterprises which require their constant attention, and where they expect to make their homes for years to come such men have not hesitated to fake homesteads In distant parts of the state, and are ready to swear that the land they have received from the Government is their actual residence. Thousands of acres of the public domain have been secured by men who organized military wagon road companies and thereby gained bos session of land without rendering the Government a sufficient return. The Northern Pacific has been permitted an unjust and inequitable -advantage in being permitted to relinquish to the. Government worthless lands within the limits of a forest reserve and to take valuable lands elsewhere in their stead. All these abuses have been known for several years, and thesi or similar abuses will be known for years to come. Yet the existence of any one system off land-grabbing does not Justify the con tinuance of any other system. Two wrongs will not make a right. The de partment has acted wisely In hedging the lieu land business about with more stringent regulations, and it Is to be hoped that the good work will go on until every abuse has been cut off. In the present instance the movement for reform is directed particularly against those, proceedings by which the state, or individuals using the name of the state, seek to have certain school sections relinquished to the Government in order that the state may secure other lands instead, which latter lands are to be sold as the individuals conducting the proceedings may direct. As has often been explained, the state leaves the work of securing lieu land to pri vate enterprise. The men who secure a decision from the Federal Land De partment declaring that certain school sections are mineral In character are permitted to sell this "base" to whom soever may wish to buy. As might be expected, the Secretary of the Interior finds that some of the private lieu land operators have been overzealous in proving the mineral character of land. In addition to this, the state has under taken to relinquish to the Government, as mineral land, certain sections which had already been sold by the state to purchasers In the UBual manner. To correct these two abuses, the Depart ment of the Interior now requires that before any lands can be adjudicated as mineral and other lands taken In their stead, It must be shown that at the time of survey they were known to be most valuable for their mineral de posits, and also that the state has not sold or incumbered them. These regu lations seem to be entirely reasonable. The mere fact that minerals can be found upon land does not furnish suffi cient reason why it should be decreed to belong to the Federal Government, Instead of the state. The rule should be, and evidently Is, that the land shall not only contain minerals, but that it shall be chiefly valuable for its mineral deposits. As the title to school land vests in the state at the time of sur vey. It is very properly provided that knowledge of the mineral character of the land shall exist at that time In order to defeat the state's title. The title to land should be open to as little uncer tainty as possible, and a time should be fixed at which the mineral character of land must be discovered in order to pre vent the Btate from acquiring title. Otherwise endless controversy and trou ble must result. It is also proper that after the state has once exercised an act of ownership over school land, it should not be permitted to deny its ownership and try" to relinquish the land to the Federal Government. Either the Federal Government or some per son claiming under it might consist ently be heard to assert that certain lands have not passed to the state, al though the state claims ownership, but after the state has once exercised con trol by selling the land as its own, it cannot without duplicity undertake to deny its title. Right here Is the root of all the trou ble over the lieu land business in Ore gon. Men have undertaken to prove land to be mineral when It is not so in fact, and the state has sold lieu land selected, upon base which was after word found to be invalid. The state has also undertaken to use as base, lands which had already been sold In place. There Is plenty of room for legit imate operations in lieu lands, and the state can well afford to encourage such operations by private parties, for lieu land is worth more than school land in place. If the operators had been more careful and had not Involved the Btate In so much inconsistency, there would never have been anything but com mendation for their efforts. There Is reason to believe that 'through their greed they have killed the goose that laid them golden eggs. In its work of checking abuses, the Department of the Interior should not stop with a few operators In lieu lands, but should extend its efforts to the throttling of large corporations, that have been permitted to grab large areas of valuable public lands. There is reason to believe that the wardship of "inferior races" under the Government of the United States will soon be a thing of the past. In many directions there are signs of progress. Here are our Umatilla Indians. They rent their lands to white men, and, while the tenants are tolling In the fields, the Indian landlords are gam bling or "blowing" their money Into other amusements In Pendletoh and Walla Walla. The Indians are rack renters, too; and It Is a pretty bad case of absentee landlordism. Here truly 13 a hopeful sign of a solid civilization. Other indicia are noted In the Philip pine Islands. The native women are suing officers and men of the United States Army for breach of promise of marriage, laying their damages at heavy sums; and some of them have reported the delinquents to President Roosevelt, whose well-known opinions oh family matters will, the plaintiffs evidently believe, bring the unfaithful fellows up to the altar or tq a court martial. The evidence of advancement of civilization among th.e wards of the Nation is cumulative, and on the whole satisfactory. Mr. Thomas E. Heenan, the United States Consul at Odessa, In his report of the KIshlnef affair to the State De partment, asserts that "the reason the slaughter began In the day time and was not continued at night was that' the murderers were too busily engaged after dark In ravishing Jewish girls and women." Mr. Heenan Is described by the New York Sun as a person who "has long been known to us as a man of discretion and sobriety of judgment." It is clear from Consul Heenan's report that the KIshlnef affair was an awful crime against humanity, which is with out parallel In Europe since the sack of Magdeburg by Tilly In the Thirty Years' War. Terrible massacres were wrought by the assassins, who were tools of the French terrorists of 1792-94; but these, miscreants only murdered they did not ravish women. We must go back to Tilly and the seventeenth century to find a parallel for the hor rors of KIshlnef. The Russian peas antry in savagery are not a whit bet ter than the Turks in their treatment of those for whom they feel a religious and a racial hate. In Russia, in Servia, In Bulgaria, the Christian peasantry are as brutal and ferocious when their passions are aroused as the Turk, whether soldier or civilian. Announcement comes from salt water that a road, after ten years' delay, is to be built at once from Ilwncn tn North Head lighthouse. This cannot neip but prove an added pleasure for the 10,000 Summer residents of North Beach. Few of them have ever taken the trail to the bold headland overlook ing the ocean and commanding the en trance to the Columbia. Driving ought to be more popular than ever this sea son. There Is the stretch of beach for twenty miles, so level and smooth- that a man blindfolded can walk the entire distance without so much as stubbing his toe. Then, at the southern end of the flat sand, a roadway bordered by some of the tallest timber in the State of Washington and a wealth of green shrubbery and ferns, leads to the new highway. Here is variety of scenic at tractions hard to match anywhere. The Chronicle, Call and Examiner, morning papers of San Francisco, and the Bulletin and Post, evening papers, give notice that. In consequence of the Increased cost of white paper and other expenses of publication, they are obliged to advance their subscription rates. The morning papers advance their rates from 65 cents to 75 cents a month; the evening papers in propor tion. Subscription rates of San Fran cisco papers have always been too low. The city Is not large enough to Justify the low prices. Charges of the after noon papers of Portland are too low, both for subscription and advertise ments. In San Francisco all advertis ing rates are much higher than In Port land. There are some heights- that can be attained by festal decoration in New York that can be duplicated by no other city in the world. This Is the illu mination by electricity of its "sky scrapers." The effect of this Illumina tion during the recent celebration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the city was magnificent beyond de scription. In attempting to forecast the growth and 'magnificence of the great metropolis in the next 250 years, as Judged by the same period in the past, "imagination's utmost stretch in wonder dies away." In the words of Mayor Low, the fascinating story of the country's material growth and de velopment can there be read In epit ome. A pioneer newspaper of Oregon was the Jacksonville .Sentinel. It was started In the early '50s, and had a career of about twenty-five years. W. G. T'Vault, an original character In the early history of Oregon, was Its first editor. B. F. Dowell was long time Its editor and publisher. For a number of years D.- M. C. Gault, now editor of the Hlllsboro Independent and member of the Legislature for Washington County, directed It. It ceased publication a good many years ago; but there Is a new Jacksonville Sentinel, started recently by Charles Meserve. It Is a local weekly, carries proofs of Industry, and revives memo ries of the old Jacksonville Sentinel. A touch of sarcasm was unwittingly added to the shocking details of the tragedy in the palace in Belgrade when Colonel Maschln, leader of the assassins and cousin of Queen Draga, interfered to prevent the younger officers from hurling the bodies of the murdered rulers out of the window, saying, "That would be barbarous." It would. Indeed, have been a pity to give color of bar barism to the scene enacted In the pal ace that night,, since the very essence of a refined civilization was unmistak ably In the rest of the bloody pro gramme. The fourth volume of the Jewish En cyclopedia, Just Issued, contains an ex haustive, history of the Dreyfus case. It is a complete exposure of the con spiracy of injustice and Infamy which has made this case perhaps the best known "cause celebre" of modern times. The writer of this elaborate article rightly say3 that the case should be, as It has been, "a lesson to the whole world of the danger of letting re ligious prejudice interfere with the sacred prerogative of justice." It was at first reported that the mur dered King of Servia showed the spirit of a man before his assassins; and, though he bore a detestable character, he was commended by the world for this last display of courage. But It turns out that in the last act he was a craven wretch. However, this in no way relieves his assassins of the odium of their act. The whole world should Insist on their punishment THE ASSASSIN OF LINCOLN. Whea sad. Hevr BeetM's Body Was Recognized fey His Half-Brothers. A witness to the Identification of the body of John Wilkes Booth by his half brothers, Edwin and Junius Brutus, has been talked with In New York. He Is Frank Oakes Rose, an -actor and stage manager, and at the time of the exhuma tion of the body for Its final burial, he was a member of Ford's stock company In Baltimore'. William E. Burton the come dian, one morning seized his arm and rushed with him to a high fence opposite the stage door, which they scaled, and dropping down found two army fflcers. the two" Booths, Stage Manager Thomas A. Hall. Manager Ford, and eaveral more persons. All were presently admitted to the undertaker's rooms, which were dimly lighted, and in the center, on undertaker's horses, rested a coffin which bore the marks of long confinement In the ground: I got near the head, close to Edwin Booth. "I can Identify my brother. John Wilkes Booth, by a gold-plugged tooth on the right side of his Jaw, next to the eye tooth." said Edwin Booth, and the coffin was then opened. The remains of a man evidently long dead wens disclosed. Edwin Booth and the under taker examined the skull, and found the gold plugged tooth Just as tho former had de scribed. AH the teeth were fine, white and strong, and the Jaw was unmistakably that of the Booth family; even I could see that, who did not know John Booth personally. The body was shod with a riding boot on one foot and a slipper on the other. Burton then spoke up: "That boot looks like a pair John used to wear when we went skating," he said. "If It Is one of the pair, thero will be a hole In the heel made by the screw of the skate." The boot was examined and the screw hole found. There was no doubt In the mind of anybody present that the body was that of John Wilkes Booth, and we then filed out I have never at any time since heard one of those then present express the slightest doubt as to the completeness of the Identification. Once I had the misfortune to refer to that day to Edwin" Booth, and I shall never forget It. I was engaged to play Horatio to his Hamlet, and as we stood in the wings I asked him If he remembered me. He said he did not, and I stupidly told him where we had first met. His face underwent a horrible change. Then he said slowly: "Oh, yes; that was a sad oc casion. Rose!" After a long pause, he added: VI am as well acquainted with you now as I ever was with my brother John. He was so peculiar I never seemed to know him.- GORMAN AND BAILEY. Boston Herald. Somebody appears to think that the fact that Senator Bailey, of Texas, prefers Senator Gorman, of Maryland, as the Democratic candidate for the next Presi dency Is of sufficient importance to be telegraphed through the land. The two men have both a certain superiority in their respective ways, but are very unlike each other. Bailey Is, brilliant and cap able in debate, but fatally deficient in eound judgment. There has seldom been a worse fiasco than he made as a leader of the Democrats ln the National House of Representatives. The manner In which Tom Reed wound him arounu his finger there was very much like slaughtering an innocent. Bailey has capacity enough to admire Gorman's superiority in qualities in which the Texas Senator is himself de ficient, but he has not sufficient discretion to see that Gorman is about the last man to make a successful run for the Presi dency. Gorman's own judgment Is good better than his honesty, we are inclined to think; It Is so very good that we find it Impossible to believe that he docs not see what an Unpopular candidate he would be for his party. He Is not the kind of a man to be dazzled Into the belief that he can be elected, but very likely he does not object to the advertising which such a candidacy, prospective and present, would afford him. Our word for It, Gorman will not resign his seat In the Senate to accept It, however. He knows the difference be tween, a bird in the hand and a bird in the bush too well for that. "Peltlns" and Pence. Washington Evening Star. Although it Is '-somewhat- eiribarrasslng to form new habits of spelling from time to time to keep abreast of the ortho graphic fashions, there is reason to re joice over the xece.nt decision of the Gov ernmental Board on geographic names regarding the speJUpg of the name of the capital of China. As doubtless has been noted In the news columns, henceforth this word Is to be spelled "Peking," the final "g," which was officially cut off by a decision of the board In 1S97, having been restored to its historic and honored-of-scholars position, to use a Celectlal ex pression. The proofs piled up before the board that the "g" belongs on the name appear to have been overwhelming. It Is unfortunate that they were not adduced or heeded before tho vote of 1897 removed the "g," so that there need not have been this hiatus of six years of curtailed "Pe kln." Save for perhaps In one instance of an obstinate sinologue, who refused to permit the proofreaders at the Govern ment Printing Office to follow the "style" of the Board of Geographical Names In publishing his official reports, the Gov ernment documents relating to China which have appeared throughout this pe riod. Including all concerning the great Boxer outbreak, are g-less. However, there is consolation in the fact that the average reader of Intelligence will be able in the future. In looking over old Gov ernment reports If any ever do to read "Peking" for "Pekln." and to accept calmly the sudden return to the "g." Perhaps this six years' war for the res toration of the "g" to its own will have been profitable In demonstrating that not even a government board can lightly dis pose of the claims of terminal letters and It may have Its Influence In the future In making for more assurance in the geog raphic and orthographic promulgations of the government. "Peking" forever! Squeezes. Hazel Green Herald. A certain weekly wakes up Its delin quent subsrlbers in this lively fashion: "It is eald that a man who squeezes a dollar never squeezes his wife. A glance at our subscription book leads us to be lieve that many women In this section are not having their ribs cracked. Como in and settle and show that all's right at home." A glance at our subscription list wll Fhow that there are more women around Hazel Green who have not been squeezed In the last two or three years than any other part of the state. Fate ot the Funny Mas. He' came to my cottage, a desolate wight. And his footsteps would falter and lag. And I said: "Now dismiss him at once from my sight. For the fellov Is clearly a vag." But, "Pity my sorrows." he brokenly said, "And drop a few tears if you can. For one from whom hope and ambition have fled, A grief-stricken humorist man. "Oh, once, I knew hope," so he wearily spoke, "And my thoughts were with humoc- aglow. It was I who invented the maiden aunt Joke And the mother-in-law bonmot. But the wit has been worked by the humorous gang Till it's dry as a toper at morn. And the Jokes that ere now would explode with a bang Are held by the people In scorn. "The Joke on the plumber, that Noah first made. Is dead as a porpoise or sprat. And the bill of .the iceman Is laid In the shade, And the coal Joke Is deucedly flat. The bloomer "girl blossomed and bloomed for awhile. And her costumes made humorists gay. But the mention no longer produces a smile. For her bloomers have faded away. "Oh. bury me where the alfalfa grows dank In a ohestnut's lugubrious shade. Fdr I and my wit have grown equally rank. And the Joke they call living Is played; And I long for a rest." Then his troubled voice broke. And our teats fell together like dew. For he sadly recalled things he'd labeled & Joke. And I I remember them, too. A. J. "Waterboue, In N ew York Times. ROOSEVELT, "THE STRENUOUS." Testimonial from Joaraal Net t AmOBK His Admirers. New Tork Sun. There will not be much public Interest In the discussion of the question whether the Hon. Marcus Alonzo Hanna or tho Hon. Matthew Stanley Quay would prove the more trusty and efficient per son as chairman of the Republican Na tional committee and .chief engineer of the campaign next year. This Is now a mere problem of com parative anatomy rather than a question of practical importance. Quay has his points' ot excellence, and Hanna his his. Both are veterans. Both have under taken large contracts in their time, and carried the same to a successful conclu sion. Each of them has his own methods and his own accumulation of experience In handlins the ftyins-pan. If the choice were limited to high-grade experts of the second class and the old school, a competition between Hanna and Quay would wake the snakes. In the evolution of the art of political management, however, there has arisen a master to whom either Quay or Hmna might profitably go for instruction in the higher branches. Ho has put them both Into tho second clas3. He Is unquestion ably In the first class of contempora neous American campaign managers, and is there all by himself. The most astonishing thing about the sudden rise of the Hon. Theodore Roose velt to acknowledged supremacy In prac tical politics Is the circumstance that only eighteen months ago he was popu larly supposed to be so Innocent and untutored In this respect, as to need a guardian. When he invited the Hon. Hen ry C. Payne, of Wisconsin, to a seat In his Cabinet, everybody hailed that ap pointment as the filling of a conspicu ous void In the establishment. "Now the President's political Interests will be taken care of," people said. "He can attend to the duties of his office and make occassional speeches with entire tran qullty. Payne is on deck. Payne won't let him do anything fo61lsh. The Postmaster-General knows the game, and he's there to play It." In less than one year and one-half we perceive an astounding spectacle the President running his own exalted office, making occasional speeches at the rate of 263 in 65 days, running his political campaign for the nomination with un precedented energy and supreme con tempt for the academic rules of pro cedure, and in addition to all his other occupations, actually turning around to pound Payne into a heartier perform ance of the special detail duties of the latter's department. What need of a Hanna or a Quay, any more than of a Payne? If the Hon. Theodore Roosevelt wins the Republican- nomination for President In 1901, It will have been his own personal achievement. Whoever Is nominally at the head of the campaign organization-will be there because Mr. Roosevelt puts him there. But In reality the sole manager of the canvass for Mr. Roosevelt's election will wear Mr. Roosevelt'3 hat, precisely as the sole manager of the prelim inary canvass for nomination has con tinuously worn Mr. Roosevelt's trousers. Substantially the same thing may be said In advance concerning the genesis of the platform on which Mr. Roosevelt, if nominated, will run. Seventy, Every Inch a. Judge. New York World. As the month of June came In Asso ciate Justice Harlan, of the United States Supreme- Court, completed hie 70th year. He has served 26 years on the bench. Under the law he may. If he chooses, re tire on full pay. Writing a decision on this subject, with the full court ot hl3 finely preserved faculties concurring, he chooses not to do so. At 70 Justice Harlan walks from Wash ington to the Chevy Chase Club, a good seven miles, to play his frequent game of golf. He seldom rides to or from the sessions of the court. There are neither kinks In his muscles nor cobwebs In his understanding. That healthful exercise which golf and much walking afford to his body, wrestlings with the higher legal problems give to his active brain. Justice Harlan is the Grand'OId Man of the Supreme Court and a grand examplar of what sane living will do for tne joints and the judgment. Cockran, tho Hessian. St. Louis Globe Democrat It is probable that, subject to this limi tation of his lack of Influence one way or the other, Bourke Cochran's advocacy of the Republican candidate In' 1S96 drove away some votes from the ticket. Subject to the same concession, his hostility to the Republicans In 1900 aided them. Cockran was, while he was In public life, the best preserved specimen of the Hessian in poli tics which the country had seen in some years. He had been tor and against Tam many, for and aglnst Cleveland, for and against the Republican party, for and against Bryan. He has been on at least two sides of every issue having that many sides which has arisen since he landed in Castle Garden the first time. The papers which want to have the ex-President nom inated should take particular pains to keep Cockran's pro-Cleveland prediction out of their columns. American Traditions. New Orleans Times-Democrat. "To be as good as our fathers we must needs be better." The Confederate soldier did his whole duty and did It well. The work he left unfinished must be carried forward by those who follow him. This may best be done by the new South's cherishing the Ideals of the old, and conserving Into the future the ennobling spirit of the past. Honoring as we do the heroism Illustrated alike in peace and in war by the Confederate soldier, and mind ful of the lessons taught by the conflict, tho Southern people, with high hope and clear courage, set their faces toward the future toward the dawn of a brighter and better day. Once we had the South; now we have the whole country. The pos sesion is one that puts a stout and glad heart Into every one who calls himself an American. The Bad With the Good. Philadelphia Press. Visitor Why don't you open your win dows and let in some freah air? Flatman Because . as sure as we do we'll let In some stale air that cornetlst next door starts playing about this time o'nlght. The Barefoot Boy. J. C Stewart in Boston Journal. The barefoot boy is coming, and right now he has the blues. Because his cautious mother will not let him shed his shoes. v Hea anxious for the freedom of the barefoot boy at? dawn, "Who does not have to bother with the foot wear girls put on. He wants to wa'de In water every morning when he goes y To school with other youngsters, and get mud between bis toes. The barefoot boy is coming, and, ere long, he will be here. With feet as tough and. dirty as they could be made, I fear. He'll have stone bruises on them and will oft be walking lame. And yet you may be certain he'll be happy just the same. He'll stub a toe quite' often, yet a little thing like that Won't feaxe him for a minute. He'll he Johnny at th bat! The barefoot boy Is coming, and If you wens . once a boy You know- that when we see him we will find, him full of Joy. He will not mind the bruises! Has not every youngster paid In Injured feet full value for the chance he got to wade? He will not mind mosqultcs, nor for brier scratches care; And he will s-aeer at stockings when his sun burned feet are bare. X0TE AND COMMENT. Mr. Brownell Is waiting for the light nings to strike. The Shamrock IU probably suits Sir Thomas to. a. "T." The Port of Portland will resume tha hide-and-seek game this afternon. The aweet girl graduate holds the cen ter of the stage at the present time. The open season for commencement exercises and street fairs Is now on. The cloudburst is simply another ex ample of Oregon's overflowing prosperity. There Is to be an Oratorical contest at Eugene this week. Look out for after squalls. For a country so small, Servia has as much bottled-up energy as a South American republic The reason thev call It a standlne army In Servia is probably because there isn't room lor It to sit down. Mr. Cleveland says he doesn's want to be a college president. Grover wants something a little more real. A man named Beer fell 90 feet at Oregon City Saturday and escaped un hurt. A person with a name like that could pretty near do anything and remain uninjured. Mr. Schwab has announced that the Bethlehem Steel Company only made i2,000,000 during the year. Even this amount of money would keep some of us in cigars. W. S. Gilbert, formerly of Gilbert and Sullivan comic-opera fame, wrote as fol lows to a London newspaper recently: "There is a line In your Issue of May 15 that must have sent a thrill of joy through many a worthy home.- I refer to the line In an article headed A Naval Battle. in which I am referred to as the iate W. S. Gilbert.' I am always sorry to spoil sport, but common candor compels me to admit (reluctantly) that I am still alive." The Rock Island crowd was the sub ject of conversation one day last week In the brokerage office where Henry Clews does business and makes speeches, says the New York Times. Mr. Clews had the floor. "I don't think tfie Big Four is taking any interest In the market," said he, "unless all signs fall. Leeds Is down at Hot Springs, Va., taking a rest. Reld Is touring the West In a private train. J. H. Moore Is away on a yachting cruise. Judge Moore is generally driving in the park " "And their friends are walk ing!" Interrupted some one in the crowd. Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish has such an as sured place in society that she does not hesitate to tell of her husband's early struggles with the world. In fact, she Is rather fond of doing so. While In Nice last Spring she related at a dinner party how Mr. Fish worked his way up to the presidency of the Illinois Central Rail road. A German Princeling who was among the guests remarked, with just the trace of a sneer: "I had always heard that your husband came from a fine fam ily." Mrs. Fish met this thrust with per fect good nature. "Oh yes, he does. But, you see, in America It Is not a disgrace to work. How much better It would be If those conditions prevailed In Europe. We In America would be spared so many titled nonentities." President Diaz, of Mexico, plays the role of "benevolent despot" whenever in his judgment circumstances warrant. At one time his son-in-law became entangled with a rather disreputable club, the repu tation of which became so unsavory that Diaz determined to break it up. One even ing he Invited his son-in-law to dinner, and though the younger man ventured to hint at another engagement, the Presi dent would take no excuse. He even had his son-in-law play billiards with him for an hour or so. Finally Diaz was called to the telephone, where he listened to a re port, after which he said: "I have just been In conversation with the Chief of Po lice, who has raided that questionable re sort which you have been frequenting. All your companions were arrested, as. you would have been had you not been dining here. Good-night." A naval officer recently returned from China tells an extraordinary story about a derelict which has been floating around the Eastern sea. The Fannie Kerr is a four-masted bark of 2426 tons, built of steel. She left Newcastle In April, 1902, with a cargo of coal for San Francisco. She rounded the Horn safely, but her cargo caught fire In the South Pacific, and after trying for more than a month to ex tinguish the flames, the ship became so hot that the captain and crew abandoned her on June 6 and took to their boats. They landed at Kauai, an Island of the Ha waiian group, made their way to Hono lulu, where the captain made his report and the crew was discharged. On March 10 last the captain of the steamship Heathdene. bound from Yokohama for Formosa, sighted a vessel adrift, from which smoke seemed to arise. Steaming toward her, he discovered that she was the long-mlsslng Fannie Kerr, which had been gradually drifting westward several thousand miles for nearly nine months, with her cargo still on fire. PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHS-HS "Well, I declare! Another Turkish atro city." "Rug. cigarette or massacre?" Puck. Mae What is your ideal of a man? Ethel One who is clever enough to make money, and foolish enough to spend It freely. Life. A hired man's revenge. The cornerstone for going to do with it. The kid What! A 'ole penny all in once! Tell you what, guv'nor, I'll .toes' yer double or quits for it. Pick-Me-Up. They came to a place where the workmen 'were repairing the sewer, and he sniffed the air. "By George!" he exclaimed, "this makes me think ct my gasoline automobile. Chi cago Evening Post. "You could ell him a captain of Industry, couldn't you" "You could, but you wouldn't do it If you were wise at least not to his face. He thinks he's at least a colonel of industry." Chicago Evening Post. Ernie Yes; they eloped la an automobile. Ethel And her father was standing right in the roadway. Ernie Did he Intercept them? Ethel No; he was glad they didn't run over him. Chicago Dally News. "Things are wrong." remarked the observer of events and things, "when a reputable phy sician has to pay money for a certificate to practice, and a 14-year-old girl with a new piano- doesn't." Yonkers Statesman. The time to talk "Oh, yes, she's always be ing Invited ont to musicals. She's a great one to keep the conversational ball a-rolllng." -'Great talker, eh?" "Oh, no. she sings on the slightest provocation." Philadelphia Press. "How was Ethelinda's graduation essay?" "Beautiful," answered the proud mother. "We spared no expense in ribbons to bind It, and I have no hesitation in saying it was the most becoming essay la the class." Washlngtos Star. Hlller What Is the matter between Grimes and Miss Wllker. I hear that they parted In anger Just as they were about to be mar ried? Marks Oh, no; there was no anger about It. Just as the ceremony was to begin. Miss Wllker discovered that Grimes wore gloves that were bought of a man who refused to quit work out ot sympathy with'th strik ing street sweepers. Boston Transcript.