9 THE MORNING- OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1903. its VB$oxtian. Entered at the PostoEce at Portland. Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Mail (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, "with Sunday, per month .$0.85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 7.&0 Daily, with Sunday, per year 8.00 Buaday. per year.. 2.00 The Weekly, per year 1.80 The "Weekly, 3 months 80 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted-loc Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper lc If to 80-page paper 2c 12 to 4-page paper ...3o Foreign rates double. . Nfcws or discussion Intended for 'publication in The Oregoniar should be 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 OrelJnlan." The Oregonian 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 -srpose. Eastern Business Ofllce, 43, 44, 45, 47. 48. 4D ITrlbune Building, New York 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 ce Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Butter street; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market street; J, K. Cooper Co.. 740 Market street, near the iWace Hotel; Foster & Orear. Ferry news tahd; Frank Scott. SO Ellis street, and N. ."Wheatley, Sl3 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by ,B. F. Gardner, 350 South Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 205 South Spring street. For sale in Kansas City, Mo., by Blcksecker Wgar Co., Ninth and "Walnut streets. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co.. 817 Dearborn street; Charles MacDonald, 53 iWaahlngton street, and the Auditorium Annex sews stand. For sale In Minneapolis by M. J. Kavanagh, k0 South Third street. For sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam street; McLaughlin Bros., 210 S. 14th trtet. For sale In Ogden by W. G. Kind,. 114 21th treet; James H. Crockwell. 242v 25m street; F. R. Godard and C. H. Myers. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co., 77 "West Second South street. For sale In Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett Jlouie news stand. For sale In Denver, Colo., by Hamilton St Sendrick, 800-012 Seventeenth street: Louthan 4c Jackson Book & Stationery Co., Fifteenth and Lawrence streets. TESTE RDATS "WEATHER Maximum tern jpcrature, 70; minimum temperature, 59; pre cipitation, .12 of an inch. TODAY'S "WEATHER Partly cloudy; north erly winos. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1903 "WE ALL WORK." The people of Finland have been in bard lines in the last two or three years. First the heavy hand of Russia was laid upon them, depriving them of ihelr constitutional rights. Then came s. famine, first in the small grains that they are able to raise in their short season, and again in fish, which is a staple article of food with them. But through all their trials they have pre served their Integrity of purpose. A. 5 "Watch, a Finnish-American, speak ing lately In the Philadelphia Record, Bald: "If a man in Finland asks for bread he is given the opportunity to earn it, never the money to buy 1L It IS this policy, pursued generation after generation, that has made the Finnish people prefer death to begging, as it is understood here." During the sharp pinch of the famine ?ree lodgings were established in ten of the northern bailiwicks of Finland. In these warmth and food could be had Xor the earning. The women and chil dren were taught cookery, knitting and weaving, and the men were provided With work. Everybody works, there being hardly a millionaire in Finland's 2,555,000 inhabitants. Yet in ordinary seasons the people live above want and make no complaint of their lot There is a type of people on the New England coast that resembles in this way the Finnish people at home. As expressed by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps" in her touching story, "A Madonna of the Tubs," "not a drop of pauper blood rolls in the veins of these sturdy bodies." Going through one of the villages of these fisher folk after having- heard pitiful stories of their, poverty, a puz zled philanthropist said: "None of your people seem to be in actual want" "We all work," replied the other sim ply. If any type of poverty is en nobling it may be held to be that which, leaving no margin for luxury, scarcely any for what is known as the comforts oMlfe, depends upon its individual en ergies to supply its needs. Manifestly the only way to Increase the happiness of people of this sturdy, self-respecting type is to increase their opportunities for earning and their skill in new lines of Industry. GREEKS IIEARLNG GIFTS. We cannot share in the feverish anxi ety of certain Republican papers and statesmen to see Senator Gorman, of Maryland, nominated for President. There is something exempiarlly sar donic in Senator Cullom's ardent praise of Gorman for having betrayed the "WI1- son tariff bill to the protected interests. Something much like this Cullom inter view we had already observed in the editorial pages of the New York Trib une, as follows: The extremists who misjudged and misrepre sented his efforts to convert the deficit creat ing "Wilson bill of 1801 Into a practicable piece of tariff legislation have never ceased to charre him with all the accumulated sins of a Con gress majority capable of every folly. The idea of his returning to political power when the men who wrote and inspired the "Wilson pill have long since perished outside the breast works is, and will always be, a thorn In the flesh to the free trade doctrinaires and zealots who had their day and wasted It under the eecond administration of Grover Cleveland. .bui, wis animosity discounted, we can see , no serious obstacle to an acceptance by Demo crats generally of Mr. Gorman's availability a a Presidential candidate. Though ho may hesitate to urge his claims, there are others who will exploit his many titles to Democratic leadership. Virtually the only Democrat who In this generation has shown his capacity to make tne Democratic opposition felt In Con rcss. or to hold It. when a party power, to somff reasonable sense of discipline or responsi bility, he naturally appeals to voters tired of feuds and factionalism as the one strong spirit equal to composing differences and restoring order. Trained to diplomacy, "he stands or should stand In grateful contrast to the self willed and self-centred pilots who have only guided the party to shipwreck. Is there, then, a Republican consplr acy looking to Mr. Gorman's nomina tlon by the Democrats? Maybe so, for certainly there would be no man, not 5yen Bryan, more certain of defeat. The American people do many queer things, at times, but they do not elect their Gormans and Hills, Quays and Platts, to the Presidency. They in trust a modicum of power to these wolves In sheep's clothing, but they draw the line at the Presidency, whlcl has so far been kept for men of honest purpose and high character. And yet, on second thought, perhaps the' Democrats could do no better than to give Gorman the nomination. The empty honor should, in fact, be passed around among: their brainy men, just as the democrats of the First Oregon Dis trict hand out biennially a package of moonlight on the lake to Jim "Weather- ford and Bob Veatch and Dr. Daly. Let Gorman be nominated In 1904, Hill In 1908, Francis in 1912, Harrison in 1916, etc. This is better. It Is a waste of material to run the same man twice in succession. It is twenty-four years since anybody has been nominated by the Democrats for President except Cleveland and Bryan. This is unfair. As the nomination is a mere compli mentary testimonial, It should be passed around. General Killfeather, of Portland, would make as good a run as Gorman, and is better qualified. SOUTH OPPOSES DEPORTATION. Attractive as the proposal to establish the negro In a separate state or states of the Union appears to those who view with apprehension the apparent failure of every other device that has been undertaken, It seems destined to be blocked by no less potent an element In the problem than the South itself, which rises up in dread at the prospect of losing the cheap labor with which its great staple crops are gathered. The Atlanta Constitution, for example, says "the proposition of racial segregation is race bigotry worthy of the dark ages," denies that there is at the South an irrepressible conflict fend deadly Ir reconcilability between the races, and undertakes to say that, to all appear ances, the whites and blacks are get ting along very well together and are mutually prospering. The Louisville Courier-Journal de scribes John Temple Graves' proposal to deport thenegroes of this country as one that has no following among the people. Ex-Governor Northen, of Geor gia, declares that the schemes for de porting the negro are Impossible and absurd,- and that the South could not do without the negro, as he constitutes three-fourths of the farm labor. Gov ernor Northen says: "I have spent all my life among negroes, and I want to live in no country where there are none." This is the feeling of the South ern man of the "old school," the school of "Wade Hamptonwhose dying words were, "God bless all my people, white and black." Governor Northen points out that it would be impossible to get rid of the negro at the Sojuth without disrupting every industry In the whole region; they furnish the great bulk of the labor, and are absolutely essential to the South. As for the indolence of the negro, no man will believe that charge who knows that the agricultural labor of the negro has produced a $600,000,000 cotton crop this year. Richard H. Edmonds, a Southern man, editor of the Manufacturers' Rec ord at Baltimore, rebukes Mr. Graves for his deportation proposal and for his misrepresentation of the Southern In dustrial situation. So far from the South presenting any signs of "halted i development" because "of the shadow of an unsolved problem," Mr. Edmonds shows that the value of this year's cot ton crop Is $600,000,000. Of this cotton the South will consume in its own mills over 2.000,000 bales, and thus add about $200,000,000 to the value of the raw sta ple, and the value of the various cotton seed products will be about $100,000,000, That Is, the South this year will ob tain for cotton products alone about $900,)00,000, and Its other agricultural products will be worth $500,000,000 more. There Is no "halted development" In these figures. . This view is supported by an un prejudiced observer of great ability and wide range of travel, Archibald R. Col quhoun, who belonged to the English public service in India, Slam, Burmah, China, Mashonaland, Central America Siberia, Mongolia, Java, Borneo, the Philippines and Japan. Mr. Colquhoun tmnits tne deportation of the negro even to the Philippines Is absurd. His conclusion is that for good or evil the negro is in the United States to stay and that the negro problem cannot be solved by any such drastic measure as deportation. His own view, derived from the success of the British govern ment in Its treatment of the emancl pated blacks of Jamaica, would be to acknowledge that while the fusion, so cial or otherwise, of the two races is impossible, there Is, nevertheless, no reason -why they cannot live side by side without contempt on the one hand or hatred on the otluer. That is, there Is no obstacle to the American negro living with his white neighbor on terms similar to those of the Mohammedan or the Hindoo with the British. There is no reason why the relations cannot be similar to those prevailing in Jamaica. In Jamaica the freed blacks have great ly Improved In morality and' industry; crime is comparatively rare and trivial. The roads and public works are built by the blacks, many of the overseers and foremen being also men of color. In Jamaica, as In Cape Colony, it Is customary for the Governor to entertain any colored men of standing, and many of the government offices are open to them. There is no restriction in cars, theaters or hotels, and yet there is far less Insolence or lntruslveness on part of the negro. The Jamaican negro has not been taught to consider himself as the equal of the white man, but he la bors under no sense of Injustice because he knows he will be treated according to his deserts if he rises above the level of his race. Racial fusion is out of the question, but on his merits he can raise himself In the estimation of the world, white and black. In Jamaica the whites and blacks live together, enjoying the same privileges and to a great extent the same oppor tunities without race fusion and with out race hatred. Mr. Colquhoun would treat the negro frankly as an alien race; would have separate schools spe cially adapted to the wants of the race. "The whole aim and end of alt negro training should be to make every boy or girl a better black, and not a closer Imitation of a white." Mr. Colquhoun's conclusion Is that "the negro cannot be transported; he will not be extermi nated; if left alone, he will retrograde and drag the white race down as well. There remains the single alternative to elevate him, at all costs and in face of every difficulty. ... . , Treat him as a man of alien race, unfitted at present for self-government or the full rights of citizenship, but treat him notwlth standing as a man, not as a tertlum quid between a man and a dog." It has been announced that in certain New England woolen mills the substi tutlon of cotton for wool is to be great ly increased. There is a method of treating" cotton with caustic soda in a process known as' mercerizing, and this makes the cotton fabric look so much like wool that many are deceived by It. Now it is said that these New England mills are to engage largely, in making a cotton cloth for overcoats, and in this cloth, no wool whatever will be used. The reason of thl3 enterprise is the high price of wool caused by the operation of the Dingley tariff law. The exclu sion of foreign wool gives to a few the control of the domesticmarket, and prices recently have been put so high that woolen clothes for moderately poor people have become too expensive, and hence the demand for a cheap cotton substitute. This is not only a, wrong to a great mass of people, but will work to,, the injury of the woolgrowers. "Whenever a substitute for an article is generally adopted its use Is apt to con tinue. And so the protectors of wool will overreach themselves by their de mand for the monopoly of the home market and work themselves Injury. In the meantime the poor are denied the right to buy woolen clothing while the rich can supply themselves from Europe. 110, FOR IRVIXGTOX! Once more racing Is to be attempted at Irvlngton track, ana tnis time, ij. never before In the history of the track, the racing events will be on the square. In undertaking to give a race meeting j and a fat stock show at Irvlngton, the gentlemen who are behind the Multno mah Fair Association have assumed a great task. The history of the Portland racetrack has been besmirched with scandal, but In the face of this the offi cers, all prominent Portland business men of high standing and character. have devoted their time and money to an effort to raise the "sport of kings" out of the slough Into which It was cast How well they have succeeded will be proved by the high class of rac ing that will be seen during the coming five days. Of late years several attempts have been made to revive the sport of racing In Portland, but disaster pursued them, and It was not until a couple of months ago that men who have worked to bring about the meeting took hold of the co lossal task of again bringing racing Into good standing In Portland. Irvlng ton track was In deplorable condition. the buildings and sheds were little short of wrecks. The Multnomah Fair Association was incorporated for $l),000 and it took more than $7000 of this to get the place tenantable. But the money has been well spent, for those who have been In the habit of going to Irvlngton will not recognize the- place, and as It stands' today it is thoroughly up to date and one of the most cosmo poll tan. After this was accomplished, the next thing of importance Was to get a. high class of horses, both runners and har ness, to race at the meeting. There was not sufficient money left in the treasury to hang up big purses, but to the grati fication and pleasing surprise of the officials, they found horsemen willing to bring their horses to Portland as a compliment to the men who were be hind the association. These owners have long known that If racing -could be conducted on the proper plan Portland would be one of the best cities in the Northwest, and they were willing to bring their horses here this Fall and race them just to get the association started. From a horse standpoint, Portland has everything In Its favor. Horsemen know that it Is one of the best wintering quarters in this part of the country. The state Is naturally a horse state, and for lt3 size has some very fast performers. Irving- ton is the ideal spot for racing. The track Is as fast as any In the North west, and If this meeting Is a success next year will see a thirty days' meet ing In Portland. Inside the track Is a splendid steeplchase course, and- It is the hope of the officials of the associa tion that next year will see the Hunt Club, with a splendid clubhouse, quar tered at Irvington. They also hope to have the Driving Club In their fold. Every effort possible will be made to get these two organizations as mem bers of the Multnomah Fair Associa tion. It is the Intention of the associa tion to please the public, and nothing has been left undone that will tend to their comfort A "VANISHING TYPE. There died at Hoqulam, "Wash., a few days ago, at the age of 61 years, a man of familiar name and lineage, who was born and who had passed the entire period of his more than three-score years in the Pacific Northwest Marcus "Whitman "Walker carried In his name a memorial of the missionary era In which he was born, and, In the restless spirit that dominated his movements through life, the pioneer instincts that sent his parents Into the depths of the North American wilderness on their bridal tour In 183S. A representative of the pioneer mis. slonary type, he carried throughout his life a desire to move from place to place, rather than a purpose to settle himself down and accumulate property. In conformity with this desire, which crystallized Into the habit of a lifetime, he moved when past middle life Into the wilds of the Northwestern "Wash ington coast and set himself to a task of homebullding, the requirements of which were primitive in character and abounding In contentment And still In conformity with the restless spirit that prompted him to change and again change his abiding-place, his body was conveyed after death a long distance for burial. As a man of this mold Mar cus "W. "Walker lived a long and blame less life. Simple In his habits, of mod est aspirations, frequently changing his residence, he accomplished little from the ordinary standpoint of thrift or public service, yet his name, as far as It extended, stood and :stlll stands for personal integrity. Such a life may be quoted as a con vincing argument of the subtle power of heredity and early environment over kthe forces In later years that make for what Is called progress. As before said, this man was the product of the pioneer missionary era In the Northwest He was born amid the most primitive sur roundings, of parents who were still full of the migratory impulse and the missionary Idea. Content with little, perforce, since they had left the farthest Western verge of civilization far behind them; controlled by a spirit of rectitude in their dealings with those around them; unsettled, in the sense that they were in constant readiness to move at the behest of circumstances, or In obedience to the stern call of necessity. the lives of these people furnish data by which the simple riddle of the life just ended may be read. And in one such a life is not the record of many an earnest and In Its way useful life rep resenting what is known as the pioneer type written? "We follow the lines of this simple rec ord with a feeling akin to reverence. It is the record of the lives of men and of women who, in quiet unostentatious contented fashion, did what they could, in their way, to, push the bounds of civ ilization on Into the wilderness; lives that, in -the main, were well satisfied with their achievement and did not fret and worry In the attempt, year after year, to make it greater and yet greater. More nearly, perhaps, than any other class of people In the "West ern world have pioneers, of this type, solved the riddle of contentment. The part they played in the drama of civili zation was for many years a leading one. Latterly it has been overshad owed by the energy and enterprise of those through whose efforts the blazed trail has expanded into the railway track, and the packtraln Into the rail way train. But their place Is an hon ored one In the annals of the Pacific Northwest, even as their lives were honorable in the relatively narrow con fines within which they were spent. Representative Hermann's letter on forest reserves, printed on another page this morning, leaves nothing to be ae- sired on the head of perspicuity and discretion. It Is aimed, and we should say well calculated, to pour oil on the troubled waters, so far as the land con troversy affects various groups of Re- publican politicians. Throughout it breathes the spirit of harmony and the glad hand. "We may take "occasion to discuss Mr. Hermann's views more at length anon. For the present It is suf ficient to call attention to the letter and bespeak its general perusal. It is clear that the present reserve policy of the Administration can count on consider able antagonism in the new Congress. It is noticeable that Mr. Hermann is much 'more reserved than Senator Ful ton in reference to the present conduct of the Interior Department, and the self-control no doubt does him credit Controversies of this sort are easy to start but sometimes awkward as. they develop in unexpected directions. A bust of Queen "Victoria and me morial tablets to the late Empress Frederick of Germany and the Duke of Edinburgh, were lately unveiled in the littla parish church of Cralthle, near Balmoral Castle, where the late Queen and her children attended services In the earlier and she alone in the later years of her long reign. King Edward, by whose orders these memorials were placed, caused a number of cairns that his mother had caused to be placed in Cralthle churchyard and about the grounds of Balmoral Cattle In com memoration of trifling but to her im portant family events to be razed, thus inviting, criticism from sentimental people.- It must be admitted by all, however, that the present ruler's trib utes to the dead members of his house take a more dignified and appropriate form than did those placed by the order of his mother in her sad and sorrowful age.. Our average tariff rate on Canadian products coming Into the United States is 49.S3 per cent, or about double the Canadian rate of 24.83 per cent on du tiable goods exported by us to Canada. Yet in the last fiscal year our exports to Canada Increased from $109,000,000 to $123,000,000, while ,our imports from that country Increased only $6,500,000 from $48,076,124 to $54,660,410. This in spite of the fact that since 1900 British imports are favored with a 33 1-3 per cent pref erence. British imports nave mcreasea, but imports from the United States have grown still faster. The one-sided character of this trade is causing much dissatisfaction in Canada, where more reciprocity is wanted. At present the balance in our favor is settled by im ports from England, but the Canadians argue that it would pay us better to get products direct from Canada. An epidemic of eye disease prevails to an alarming extent among the public school children of the poorer districts of Greater New York. A total of 100,000 cases have been examined by the physi cians of the Board of Health, and a hos pital for the exclusive treatment of victims of this disease will be estab lished. Unsanitary conditions breed this disease, and, being contagious, it bids fair to become universal amon the children of the crowded tenement districts. Of all handicaps to endeavor, blindness Is the heaviest, and a munici pality the children of which are threat ened by thousands with this calamity may well bestir Itself to preventive as well as remedial measures looking to its control. The new life of James Madison by Galllard -Hunt holds that Madison might fairly share a little of the glory for the purchase of Louisiana. It is to his credit that for twenty years before the purchase he had been a strenuous advocate of safeguarding the interests of the United States In Mississippi River navigation and In the frontier generally. He had strongly opposed diplomatic settlements with European powers which cut the West off from the Gulf. Madison, too, as Jefferson's Sec retary of State, doubtless had some In fluence upon the decision to accept the Louisiana purchase, the greatest act of Jefferson's Presidential life. The presence of 10,000 people, "chiefly Americans," at the formal opening of a new $50,000 bullring at Juarez, Mexico, near the Texan border, last Sunday, Is a disgrace to the American name. To make this American holiday on Mexican soil, six bulls were tortured and slain and a number of horses were killed by the maddened creatures before they were finally dispatched. Truly, the In stinct of savagery, the leading force of which Is cruelty, lies close to the sur face of civilization. The grave and prolonged illness of Rev. Dr. Wise, of Portland, is the occa sion of much regret and solicitude on the part of hundreds in the Pacific Northwest who have come to know him not only as a cdnsecrated preacher and masterly pulpit orator, but as an en thusiastic devotee of everything good and true In community life. His recov ery seems assured now, and will be the occasion of general rejoicing. If Parks Is thrown out of the Kansas City convention, organized labor will receive, as it will deserve, the encomi ums of all fair-minded men everywhere. But suppose he Isn't thrown out will the unions accept with equal relish the comment elicited by surrender to a very dangerous and discredited leader? To De Witte has been Intrusted no less Important task than approaching European financiers with a view to loans for the Russian government. This is hardly the job the Czar would pick out for a discredited man. A machinery building of the Standard Oil Company burned at Jersey -City Sunday, loss $60,000. The sad occurrence is mitigated, however, by the fact that turpentine was yesterday marked up 2 cents a gallon. SUNDRY DRAMATIC TOPICS. Porpoxe of Lljffct Comedy. t A. W. Plnero. I have long hoped that the time would arrive when an English dramatist might find himself free to put intb the hands of the public the text of his play simul taneously with its representation upon the ! stage. Interesting as might be the publi cation of a play subsequent to Its with drawal from the boards of a theater, it has seemed to me that the Interest would be considerably enhanced If the -play could be read at the moment when it first solicited the attention of the playgoer, the consideration of the critic Such a course, I haye felt, were it adopted as a custom, might dignify at once tho calling of; the actor, the craft of the play wright It would, by documentary evi dence, when the play was found to pos sess some Intrinsic value, enable the manager to defend his Judgment, while it would always apportion fairly to actor and author their Just share of credit or of blame. It would also offer conclusive testimony as to the condition of theatrical work In this country. , It will hardly be denied that there ex ists in certain places the impression that an English play Is a haphazard concoc tion of the author, the actor and the manager; that the manuscript of a drama, could It ever be dragged, soiled and dog-eared, from the prompter shelf, would reveal Itself as a dissolute-looking, formless thing, mercilessly scarred by the managerial blue pencil and Illumi nated by those innumerable Interpolations with which the desperate actors have helped to lift the poor material Into tem porary unhealthy popularity. . . . It chances that the first work which I find myself able to present under these altered conditions is one which in its designs Is a comic play which essays to touch with a hand not too heavy some of the surface faults and follies of the hour. It lays bare no horrid social wound, It wrangles over no vital problem of Inex tricable perplexity. If an unsightly cica trice appears to be momentarily exposed, It will be found upon examination to be comparatively the merest freckle; if any question be raised, it Is only the old. often asked question Can the depths be sounded of Ignorance, of vulgarity of mind, of vanity and of self-seeking. . . . Even at a 'time when the bent of the dramatic taste is, we are assured, delib erately severe, there may be some to whom the spectacle' of the mimic cas li gation of the lighter faults of humanity may prove entertaining nay, more, to certain simple minds, instructive. There may be still those who consider that the follies, even the vices of the age may be chastised as effectually by a sounding blow from the hollow bladder of the jest er as by the fierce application of the knout; that a moral need not Invariably be enforced with the sententiousness of the sermon or the assertiveness of the tract . . . Adumbration of the Baconian. Craze. Written 25 years before It broke out. Water Savage Landor. There Is as great a difference between Shakespeare and Bacon as between an American forest and a London timber yard. In the timber yard the materials are sawed and squared and set across; in the forest we have the natural form of the tree, all Its growth, all Its branches, all Its leaves, all the mosses that grow about it all the birds and Insects that in habit it; now deep shadows absorbing the whole wilderness, now bright burst ing glades1, with exuberant grass and flowers and fruitage; now untroubled skies, now terrific thunderstorms: every where multiformity, everywhere Immen sity. Bacon was immeasurably a less wise man than Shakespeare, and not a wiser writer, for he knew his fellow man only as he saw him in the street and in the court, which Indeed Is but? a dirtier street and a narrower; Shakespeare, who also know him there, knew him everywhere else, both as he was and as he might bo. In bo wide and untrodden a creation as that of Shakespeare's, can we wonder or complain that-sometimes we are bewlld ered and entangled In the exuberance of fertility? Dry-brained men upon the Con tinent the trifling wits of the theater. accurate, however, and expert calculat ors, tell us that his beauties are balanced bv his faults. The poetical opposition puffing for popularity, cry . cheerily against them. His faults are balanced by his beauties; when, In reality, ajl the faults that ever were committed In poetry could be but as air to earth. If we could welrh them against one single thought or Image, such as almost every scene exhib its in everv drama of this unnvaiea genius. Story of George Ade. George Ade is a sensitive man. Some years ago the late Blff" Hall included In the column gossip that he wrote for an Eastern dramatic weekly a joke that was attributed to Mr. Ade. "I understand. George," some one was said to have re marked to him. "that all the bright men come from Indiana." "They do," was Ade's alleged reply, "and the brighter thev are the quicker they come." The quip was quoted far and wide, both in serious and In comic papers. But In Indiana, and especially near the dear old farm where the master ot the modern fable spent his guileless, barefoot boy hood. It created no laughter. Even In In dlanapolls, that Important If not bustling center of the Indiana commonweaitn, only a few persons with a sense of humor consented to snlckerT and then not in pub lic There were editorials In the papers, and letters from correspondents, remarks from the State Historical Society, and a few words from best friends. Something was said about the "bird that befouls Its nest," and altogether it made Mr. Ade very uncomfortable, very unhappy, and somewhat unkind In his remarks to those jwho referred to the joke as being "bully coou. It took him Several months. In fact. to deny the story and to prove that he never, never, never said any sucn tmng, The Shakespearean Revivals. Chicago Inter Ocean. According to present prospects there will be very few important Shakes pear ean revivals In this country during the coming season. So far as we can learn now, the list will Include only these plays "As You Like It," by Miss Crosman. "Midsummer Night's Dream," by Mr. Goodwin. "Twelfth Night" by Miss Allen. "Hamlet." by Mr. Sothern. "Othello" (possibly), by Mr. Lackaye "Taming of the Shrew" and "Merchant of Venice." by Mr. Skinner and Miss Rohan. The most that can be said for this prospect is that It is an Improvement over last season a aeciuea improvement. JBut conslderthe sad state of an English-speak lng Nation of 70,000,000 people which does not see some of Its eminent players In "Lear." or "Macbeth." or "Richard III' at least once a year. The play-goers of Germany fare vastly better than that Notoriously Bad Loser. Minneapolis Tribune. Wc cannot understand why so much bad fuss should be made over the petty question of a fourth-class Postmaster In Delaware. It Is true that the person who has lost a postoffice Is a woman, and women are notoriously bad losers. In whatever game they play. But why should big newspapers devote columns of solemn editorial to tho subject, and why should high department officials think it needful to defend their routine action at portentous length? This looks ,Zlke the beginning of Mr. Gorman's olever cam paign of pin pricks to exasperate the President, and provoke him to make some fatal break. We observe that all the anti Roosevelt papers, whether their motive Is political or financial, have taken up the cry. It seems rather a pity that the new Civil Service Commissioner, who thinks to win his spurs In this teapot tempest should be credited to Minnesota. THE FASHION OCTOPUS. Chicago Tribune. "They" have said that women's sleeves shall bulge near the elbow Instead of near tho waist But who are "they.'v "They" are "it" But how did they come to be It? In the happy days before trusts were organized "they" became "it" by Inheriting or con quering a position-among the elite. Today I "they" become "It" by organizing a trust, holding a convention, and Issuing an nouncements. Let this process go a little bit further and fashion, which used to be capriciously controlled by les grandes dames for their own diversion, will be ar bitrarily controlled by the dressmakers for their own emolument. There was some flexibility about . the old system. There might be .rival grandes dames. There might be parties and fac tions within the parties. There might be slight deviations and aberrations from the normal as a fashion worked Its way down from Rue Easy to West Three Hundred and Forty-sixth street The percolation of a fashion through excessive social strata was extremely gradual and quite automatic Each stratum got It from the stratum Just above. The only thing one was sure of and what else, after all, could one want to be sure of ? was that i the person who originated the fashion was one of the indubitable great ones of the earth. Dressmakers were to be regarded more or less as intermediaries. The orig inators were thrones, dominions, princi palities and powers, or, at any rate, their female consorts. Hamlet and his breed still exercised their prerogative to be glasses of fashion and molds of form. The modern organization of Industry Is bringing a change which strikes chill fear to the heart of every true Jeffersonlan Democrat and of every true Thackeryan snob. The dressmakers are forming close associations which reach common agree ments and establish common policies. A few years from now the International As sociation of Dressmakers, meeting at Rio Janeiro, will order sleeves to bulge un der the armpit No dressmaker in the world will then allow a sleeve to bulge anywhere else. All the old sleeves will be thrown away. Millions and millions of new sleevesWlll be made. And the purses of the dressmakers will bulge all over. If anybody thinks that this prophecy Is entirely caused by a jaundiced mind's eye, let him observe the autocratic ut terances of the dressmakers' convention now sitting In Chicago. It Is true that these utterances are mainly phonographic reproductions of utterances already made In Paris. Nevertheless, they are utter ances. They go. - - Fashions have ceased, in a degree, to percolate. They have begun. In a de gree, to- flood all social strata at the same time. The two main causes ot this are newspapers and fashion conventions. The newspapers merely announce. The fash Ion conventions go further. They formu late. Admit that one or two tentacles have already been developed by the young fashion octopus. The South Affnlnst Bryan. New York Commercial Advertiser. It is no secret that the South never liked Bryan. Southern Democrats voted for him In two National campaigns be cause they had to vote for the party s nominee In order to keep the South in Democratic control, but they had a deep dislike to Bryan and his principles. It Is not surprising, therefore, to hear that the South Is solid against him now, but It Is somewhat surprising to hear also that It is solid for Gorman. Senator Clay, of Georeia. said, speaking for Southern Democrats: We have talked the subject over anions our selves, and we have about concluded that Senator ' Gorman Is not only the strongest man In the party we can nominate, but w believe there la an excellent opportunity of electing him. His Democracy, his ability as a leader, and his safe views on all the Important questions which will figure In the coming- cam palgn will stafmp him as the strongest man we have In our party today. This estimate of Senator Gorman Is not confined to Georgia, but extends from Maryland all down through Virginia. West Virginia, North and South Carolina. Florida. Alabama. Tennessee, Mis sissippi. Texas and Louisiana. As for Bryan, Senator Clay's observa tions about him are scarcely decorous He says he does "hot wish to be profane," but he will stop at nothing short of pro fanlty in expressing his opinion of him, calling him a "dead card" and saying that the party "has sufficient common sense and business tact to discourage all further attempt to play him off on prosperous and progressive country." There will be a disturbance In Nebraska when those observations reach the office of the Commoner. An Unqualified Denial. Early in August last The Oregonian wrote Will H. Thompson, author of "The Hleh Tide at Gettysburg-." a letter In quiring whether the New Orleans Times Democrat was correct In Its statement that two stanzas In that remarkable poem were not written by Mr. Thompson, but added by an unknown hand. Mr. Thomp son, who has but lately returned from an absence of more than five weeks, replies as follows: Seattle, "Wash.. Sept IS, 1003. The New Or leans Times-Democrat seems to have kicked up a lively mess In regard to the "High Tide at Gettysburg," manufactured out of whole cloth, every particle of the material out of which the fuss comes. The fact Is that I have never Intimated to any human being that I was not the author of any line or word In the poem, nor did Mr Charles A. Dana In his lecture refer to this poem saying Jhat It wa unfortunate that Its author was unknown No cart of the Times-Democrat's criticism ever came of anything but sheer Invention by the Times-Democrat's writer. I can only Imagine his- reason for stating that the author did not write the two last stanzas in the poem referred to upon the theory that the wish was father to the thougnt. He Is evidently one of the unreconstructed rebels, who Is no: willing to adroit that any rebel soldier would bo willing to stand a3 author fit the sentiments expressed In the two stanzas referred to, and therefore has Invented a theory of his own and put It forth as fact. WILL. H. THOMPSON. The Coliseum by Moonlight. Lord Byron. The stars 'are forth, the moon above the tops Of the snow-shining mountains. Beautiful! I linger yet with Nature, for the night Hath been to roe a more familiar face Than that of man: and In her starry shade Of dim and solitary lowliness 1 learned the) language of another world. I do remember me. that In my youth. When 1 was wandering upon such a night I stood within the Coliseum's wall. mm the- chiof relics of almlirhty Rome: The trees which grew along the broken arches Waved dark in the blue midnight; and the stars Shone through the rents of ruin; from afar The watch-dog bayed beyond the Tiber, and More near, from out the Caesars' palace came The owl's cry. and. Interruptedly. Of distant sentinels the fitful song Begun and died upon the gentle wind. Some cypresses beyond the time-worn breach Appeared to skirt the horizon, yet they stood. Within a bowshot wnere tne uaesars awelt. And dwell the tuneless birds of night, amlds A grove which springs through leveled battle ments, And twines Ha roots with the Imperial hearths Ivy usurps the laurel's place of growth But the gUdiators' bloody Circus stands, A noble wreck in ruinous perfection. While Caesar's chambers and the Augustan halls Grovel on earth and Indistinct decay And thou didst shine, thou rolling moon, upon All this, and cast a wide and tender light Which softened down the hoar austerity Of rusged desolation, and tilled up. As 'twere anew, the gaps of centuries. Leaving that beautiful which still was so, And making that which was not, till the plact Became religion, and the heart ran o'er . "With silent worship of the great of old! The dead, but sceptered sovereigns, who still rule Our snlrlts. from their urns. ?0TE AND COMMENT. "Central" at St Paul must have had quite an enjoyable time hearing Chaun cey Olcottf make love- to Mrs. Mollneux by telephone, but It Is reasonable to ex pect Mr. Olcott's tones to be somewhat acid., when he next asks for "long distance." "Jewels From the Diamond. Brooklyn was out for blood, from the drop "of the flag and played pennant b3ll all through the game, says the New York Press. Strang stabbed for a station and purloined a perch. Kling's hurl to nail him at the far turn was so wild that he made third on the misplay. A marvelous heave to the mat by Slgle. after swallow ing Sheckard's starseeker, held Sammy on third. Strang scored, however, on a daz zling double by Dobbs. Dobbs was nabbed at third by Tinker, though, on Doyle's dancer the locust-lifter roosting on the choice and Dahlen was massacred by Currlc and Chance. The Harlequins still wore their swatting togs in the second round. It was evident they contemplated slaughtering Currle early in the game. Gessler singled and raced to third when Jordan duplicated his performance with the cudgel. Jacklltsch gave up the ghost at first. Tinker aiding. but the out was as good as If it had been an Intentional sacrifice, for Gessler patted the pan while the fielders were busy with the hickory hefter. Schmidt trained a glassy eye on Currle and feazed the slab- master for a nook. Jordan jotted on Strang's bunt, for which Currle made a gallant effort. Schmidt was nipped at third because Currle was more successful with Sheckard's attempt and hurled the hide to Casey in grandstand style. Dobbs was an easy vlctim'for the twlstmelster, too, as he went out from the box to first A Human FncUInjsr-Houne. Stories concerning the feats of Dr. H. L. Bonner, of Marlon, O., as an eater have savored so strongly of Munchausen, the classic prevaricator, that the Sentinel (Parkersburg) has been loath to believe them. Inquiry into the case has convinced it beyond a doubt that the most amazing of these reports are literally true, and that in Dr. Bonner Ohio can boast of a man who can stow away more food at a single sitting than any other man living. A correspondent writes as follows con cerning this great eater: It is strictly, though we can hardly say painfully, true that Dr. Bonner has been known to eat 25 pounds of grapes be tween meals of an afternoon, and thinks no more of treating himself to a whole bunch of bananas when he feels that way. or incidentally making away with a crata of strawberries or a basket of peaches. than an ordinary person would think of taking two bites at a cherry- 'And when the doctor really gets down to business at a regular meal his bill of fare generally runs about as follows: One five-pound steak smothered in onions. "Four dozen hard-boiled eggs. "Eighteen boiled potatoes. "A quart can of tomatoes. "Two or three pies, and from six to nine glasses of milk fill in the chinks. Often when the doctor comes home late of a Winter night after a long, hard drive he will take a few light 'refreshments' be fore retiring, in the shape of a four-pound steak, 56 hard-boiled eggs, three and a half pumpkin pies, and aVallon of milk; and we have it as the direct testimony of a personal friend that Dr. Bonner never had the nightmare In his life. "The same friend tells us of a chance acquaintance of" the doctor who happened to meet him on the street one day about noon and Invited him Into a restaurant to luncheon. The doctor suggested that It hatt better be a 'Dutch treat,' but his new friend objected to that and asked what he would have. The doctor said that If it was 'all Jhe same' he would take a five pound steak smothered in mushrooms to begin with, and after that he wouldn't mind having three dozen fried eggs, a can or two of tomatoes, a dozen cucum bers, and such little side dishes as there were on the bill. "The acquaintance thought tho doctor was putting up a bluff, but he ordered two five-pound steaks, the eggs and the other things on the list After the order was served the friend engaged In conversation with a gentleman passing by and turned his back to the table, whereupon the doc tor, just for a joke, cleared off everything, so that when his host was ready for his meaL there was nothing left but the tooth picks. The host's remarks on this occa sion are discreetly left to the imagination. "It would be wholly unjust to Dr. Bon ner to close this account of his extraordi nary achievements at the table without stating in all seriousness that he Is by no means a glutton or a man who cares to pose as a great eater. On the contrary, he Is a refined gentleman, a graduate of Ed inburgh College, a lover of art and litera ture, and a successful and highly respect ed physician. Nature seems to have en dowed him with an abnormal capacity for food, and he only cats what he craves and what he needs, as other men do. He is a well-proportioned man. his weight being 220 pounds and his age 63 years." PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS "I see that old Closefist has begun to wear glasses." "Yes I think he's Injured his eye sight looking out for No. 1." Puck. "I met Kernel Kalmuck a month ago and he was drunk, and I just met him up the street and he's drunk again." "No. not again, yet "Houston. Post. Sklda-Dld your friend. Chcstcrlus McRanter the tragedian, enjoy his vacat,on17uSo;1 can't say as to whether he enjoyed It or not, but the public did. Boston Journal. Angry Father-Toung man. you are sitting up too late with my daughter. Last night I heard you kissing her. Caperton-W ell. sir. some one has got to.-Detrolt Free Press. The Philosopher-My boy. If you smoke these vile cigarettes you will never learn to save rrK- Twn,. whiz, mister! I've got a hundred 'and fifty coupon" now.-Phlladelphia Bulletin. Maud (at the party)-There's Irene over In the corner, talking to Cholly Slympatc. She has to do something to kill time. Mabel-Is that Why she looks daggers at the clock every faw minutes ?-Chlcago Tribune. Mrs. Jones Your husband is still very rend of you. I suppose? Mrs. Brown Oh, yes. b.ut still he isn't satisfied, so he stays away from home all he can. Absence, you know, makes the heart grow fonder. Boston Transcript. Tou really think Hartrox Is a liar?" "The biggest ever. If I knew he was telling the unvarnished truth I couldn't believe him. New York Press. A That's Jones' daughter with him. She's Just about to be married. B Who's the lucky man? A Jones. Boston Globe. "I can't imagine anything worse than a man who never had an opinion of his own." "Un less it's a man who has lots of opinions that I he thinks are his own." Philadelphia Press. Sioiklns What do you know about uunng37 Is his reputation for veracity good? Tlmkins Well, all I know about Billings is that he Is the father of a baby that Is Just beginning to say things. Chicago News. Tommy Do you believe In transmigration, pop? Pop Sometimes. Tommy Well, from the way I love peanuts I must have been an elephant once. Chicago News. Mrs. Greene I knew somebody was coming. I dropped a dlahcloth only ten minutes ago. Mrs. Gay Thanks. When I know you are coming to my. house, I drop everything. Bos ton Transcript.