& THE MORNING OBEGONIAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1903. irNK filVtOrt'Vlt'TrVfi' fi4-tV dlVJVUaW-U Satcred at tho Postofflce at Portland, fitton, as second-class matter. HEVTSED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. s By mall (postage prepaid la advance) Daily, "with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year.-.....- 7.60 TJelly, -with Sunday, per year 0.00 Sunday, per year - 2.00 The Weekly, per year 1.50 The "Weekly. 3 months SO 3Uy. per "week, delivered. Sunday excepted..lOc CUy, per week, delivered, Sunday lncluded.20c postage: rates. TJnlted States, Canada and Mexico t0 to linage paper ..... lc 1A to dO-p&ge paper . 2c 2 to 44-page paper ....... ........... ..3c Foreign rates double. 2fews for discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invari ably "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. letters relating to adver tising, subscription, or to any business matter, should be addressed simply "The Oregon Ian." "The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to return any manuscripts sent to It without so licitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office, 43, 44. 45, 47, 4S, 49 Tribune Bulldlnsr, New York City: 010-11-12 Tribune Building; Chicago; the S. C Beckwlth Epedal Agency, Eastern representative.. For aale In San Francisco by D. E. Jee, Palace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 23d Gutter street; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market street; J. K. Cooper Co., 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Fester & Orear, Ferry news atand; Frank Scott. SO Ellis street, and N. Wheatley, 813 Mission street- For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 55 South Spring street, and Oliver &. Haines, 805 South Spring etreet. For sale In Kansas City, Mo., by Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and "Walnut streets. For aale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 17 Dearborn street; Charles MacDonald, 53 Washington street, and the Auditorium Annex zsws stand. For sale In Minneapolis by M. J. Kavanaugh, 0 South Third street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam street; Mcgeath Stationery Co, 1S08 Famam street; McLaughlin Bros., 210 3. Fourtenth street. For sale In Ogden by W. G. Kind, 114 2Stn street, V. C Alden. Postoffice cigar store; F. R. Godard and C H. Myers. For sale In Salt Iake by tho Salt Lake News Co. 77 "West Second South street. For sale In "Washington, D. C, by the Eb bett House news stand, and Ed. Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific avenue. N. "W. For sale In Colorado Springs by C A. Bruner. For sale In Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck, 000-012 17th street; Louthan & Jackson Book &. Stationery Co., 15th and iawrence streets; J. S. Lowe, 1520 17th street, end Julius Black. YESTERDAY'S "WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 05; minimum temperature, 40; pre cipitation. .34 of an inch. TODAY'S "WEATHER Occasional rain; south to "west -winds. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5. THE OLD LAW GOOD ENOUGH. It Is hardly In order for advocates of the new law of assessment and taxa tion to ask audience in Its behalf. If their discernment Is unequal to draft ing a bill for a new system "without giving a thought to the interregnum, "it is presumably unequal also to any trustworthy estimate of the old law's demerits or the new one's advantages. It is perfectly obvious that they knew practically nothing as to what they were doing. Upon their say so it would be rank folly to take their law as it 'etands with the simple amendment au thorizing a levy in January on the as sessment Already made. One of the worst evils of legislation Is the teadetocy to Irresponsible tinker Jug with established customs that work with approximate smoothness and un deniable results. The old law was sat isfactory. It was more than that, it was brilliantly successful. It brought in the money promptly, it reduced the delinquent list to the smallest propor tions ever known. Nobody was com plaining about it There was no de mand from the poor farmer for a chance to pay taxes at some more con venient season. The agitation for its repeal seems to have been due as much as anything to a desire at the State house to simplify bookkeeping. This is a paltry excuse for stirring up the as sessment and taxation . mess nveare now in. If the Governor convenes the Legis lature In special 'session It can do no better than to re-enact the old law with an emergency clause. It is unsafe to take this imperfect act under which procedure at present is impossible and trj to run the finances df the state under its ill-digested provisions. "Who .knows but It contains other defects "which would prove fatal as this one has? Who knows how taxpayers will relish paying taxes In the Spring under the present assessment and again in the Fall under the new assessment? Is the Inconvenience of two. payments in a year worth while for the sake of chronological Joy In the Statehouse and the bestowal of an entire Summer upon the School Board for dividing $50,000,000 valuation by $200,000 taxes and seeing how many mills must be taken? It Is the Joy of officialdom always to have money to meet every kind- of de mand. It Is so much easier to get along this way. It Is so much easier to pay everybody's demand, including the office-holder's salary, than to explain to the claimant and stand him oft. If there is plenty of money, officialdom has no trouble. A full treasury is al "ways the fair guerdon of officialdom and its chief good. COMMON SENSE IN THE SCHOOLS. School Director Richard "Williams, of 'Portland, always a man of Judgment and good sense, in answer to the "guff" that has recently been published about the alleged necessity of making provis ion for extensive playgrounds for the school children of the city (in the rain and mud), makes this statement, which we find in the Evening Telegram: Pupils do not go to school to play' ho raid. "They go to study and to learn, and 1 they have very little tlmo during school "hours for outdoor recreation. At noon all those living wlthla ten blocks must go home to luncheon, and the 15-mlnute recess -would ot admit of many games, were the grounds v-about each building ever so large. "A great many of tho school children have mora sanitary quarters at tho schools than i-Jn their own homes, and no one has ever v heard of Portland being an unhealthful city Yor -school children. On the contrary, tho pity's death rate shows Portland to be one of tho most healthful l the Union. ""Were the schools of the city to be run In accordance "with the recommendations of the Stat, Board, of Health, a physician "would have to be stationed at every school build ing I think there are many things Port land seeds more than she does additional grounds for school children to play on, tho cost of which would be enormous at the present value of real estate." This is straight common sense, and. the best, therefore, of gooav sense. Most children of the city so home to luncheon or dinner, and the few who remain do not wish, could not be In duced, to play in the rain and mud, In chilly grounds about the school build ings no matter how large the grounds. The problem is to keep warm and dry. Again, the sanitary conditions in and ebout the schoolhouses of the city are in every way better than those about the average--and general run of the A I homes of th people of the city. It Bo4in every modern city. To the sa is sani tation of schoolhouses great attention is paid, and rightly paid. But play grounds, in the rain and mud, are not desirable. Provide all the outside play grounds you may, dtsfethe children will have sense enough to stay In out of the rain. As many fads may be generated on the Board of Health as microbes in the backyard of a wash-house. Parents who provide their children with long coats, rubber shoes and um brellas, to keep them dry while going to school, do not want them to run out and play in the rain and mud, during recess hours. Det us have some com mon sense even a little. HOW TO BEAT TAMMANY. The election in New York City will attract world-wide attention. Its re sult is certain to produce a feeling of depression among right-minded men everywhere and to establish more firmly the base cynicism of the unbe liever and the vicious. Confidence in human nature is something fainter to day than on Monday, and every skep tical critic of the efficacy of popular government will point to McClellan's election as an exhibit in the Incapacity of the masses to achieve and their un willingness to select the best when within reach. Unfortunately, the case for the scoff ers is as strong as they could wish. Everything that decent government could be expected to do has been don& JThe comprehensive and thorough-going reforms introduced by the Low admin istration in every aspect of municipal life would have been simply Incredible at the beginning of the Fusion regime. Honesty has been Introduced into the contracting departments, decency into the police affairs and the awful tene ment abominations have been trans formed. All New York Itnows this, and all New York knows that the rule of Tammany means retrogression in every part of the city's life. Yet the good Is put by and the evil is en throned. A salutary lesson from this demon stration in lamentable miscarriage is to warn us that the moral reformation of the world is not to be achieved through politics. The effort that is put into po litical agitation is often wasted. The effort that counts is that which is de voted to the reclamation of the Indi vidual, and especially to the construc tion of the individual character during the formative period of youth. There is no excuse for the good citizen to neglect his duty as a -voter; but the mistake Is to place all or chiefly the reliance upon that. The man who brings up his boys to be honorable men does more for soci ety .than he who secures a law and order plank In a platform. The woman who rears her girls in maidenly hon esty advances the cause of morality far more than she who leads a womans club pell mell against some notorious political- offense or pffender. It is a striking and suggestive fact that the sensational wickedness of the day is largely perpetrated by young men and women from so-called respectable homes. It is an undeniable symptom of our time that the duty of home training Is being neglected for the more spectacular functions of social and semi-public life. Newspaper appeals to the adult whose inclinations are vicious fall upon stonyground. THE WHEAT SITUATION. The tenacity with which the Ameri can farmer holds his wheat while prices are hovering around the top notch reached since the famous Delter boom Indicates an utter disbelief in the truth of the saying that history repeats it self. Or perhaps they are holding on in the belief that the history of the Deiter year -will be repeated, but that of its successors will be skipped. December wheat in Chicago, after touching 85 cents a few weeks ago, has been stead ily sliding down the scale of prices, making occasional spasmodic recover ies and yesterday closing weak at 7S& cents. May wheat, which followed December up to about 84 cents, has also suffered a relapse, and closed yesterday at cent under the December option. One year ago yesterday the closing price on December wheat was 70 cents, while the May option sold at 72. In November, 1901, the minimum price for December wheat in Chicago was 70 cents and the maximum figure 73 cents. In 1900 quotations for the month rarfged from 69 cents to 74& cents? in 1889, from 65 cents to 70 cents; in 1S9S, from 64 cents to 68 cents. The Letter deal was on at full swing in November, 1897, and during that month the price ranged from 91 cents to $1 per bushel. The American visible supply, as posted on Monday, showed a decrease of 26S.O00 bushels, and amounted to but 22,106,000 bushels, the smallest at any corresponding period since 1898, when it stood at 17, 000,000 bushels, with an increase of 1,524,000 bushels. The bulls in wheat used the decrease and small proportions of the American visible on Monday as an argument in their favor, but this argument must be accepted with limitations, for in No vember, 1897, -when the December op tion was soaring around $1 per bushel, the visible supply was nearly 27,000,000 bushels, with an Increase of 2,352,000 bushels. This increase was undoubt edly created by the high prices which brought the crop out with a rush, while the small proportions of the visible a year later was due to the cleaning of the bins at the close of the previous season and the refusal of the farmers to dispose of their wheat at the low scale of prices then prevailing. The foreign markets are very slow to respond to the strength of the Amer ican markets, and shipments thus far thls season are far below those of last year at the same date. Stocks on hand in Europe are not large, but they seem to be sufficient to meet all demands so long as other countries are shipping so freely. Hussla, In spite of the war talk and rumors of wheat being with held pending a settlement of the far Eastern troubles, continues to ship to Europe, the United Kingdom 'and the Continent about 4,000,000 bushels of wheat per "week. India until last week had been showing up regularly with about 2,000,000 bushels weekly, and the Argentine still has enough of her record-breaking crop to figure In the totals each week. Last week the Danubian ports shipped 800,000 bushels, and the week previous 1,360,000 bushels. It is thus apparent that Europe is being pretty comfortably fed by other wheat producers besides thosfi living In America. A war of good proportions in the far East or a serious damage to the Argentine crop would undoubtedly maintain present prices and perhaps cause a material advance. The stop page of all American shipments would have the same effect. Some of these contingencies may arise, but until they are In evidence wheat would seem to be selling at pretty full figures com pared with former years. THE NEEDS OF THE NAYX. Secretary Moody, in his Navy esti mates, shows that he is in full sympa thy with President Roosevelt In his en larged Navy Ideas and his belief that our country's present expansion as a world-power cannot be maintained without such, a Navy. Secretary Moody for the year 1904-5 would have us ex pend the sum of $103,000,000 for the sup port and Increase of our war fleet. This Is a large sum of money, but the trqe policy of the United States for Na tional defense is identical "with that of Great Britain. We need for defense to be a great naval power. ,"We do 7pt need a great standing army. "We only need a comparatively small, thoroughly trained, well-armed and disciplined standing Army, behind the curtain of which our volunteer masses can assem ble and through whose Instruction they can be rapidly set up as soldiers. But a modern Navy cannot be rapidly con structed, and the American Navy needs always to be In excess of the demands of peace, because if we wait for war before we enlarge our Navy to meet its emergency, we shall 'fight at unneces sary disadvantage. Senator Hoar in a recent speech in the Senate said: "Our independence in the Revolution was won on the sea." "We had between 40,000 and 50,000 men afloat In our cruisers and privateers. "We captured 16,000 British seamen and 800 British ships, worth more than $10, 000,000. Without the French fleet, which beat off the British fleet, Cornwallls would have been reinforced by Clinton, and but for the French fleet the French reinforcements could not have reached "Washington's lines. A Nelson In command of the British ships would have saved Cornwallls at Yorktown. In the "War of 1812 In eighteen naval engagements between the ships of Great Britain and the United States we won fifteen victories. The Spanish American War was practically won in two naval battles in that of Manila and that of Santiago. The Navy In our Civil War rendered services that were Invaluable. The official records of that service are now In course, of publica tion, and when completed will furnish eloquent and unanswerable testimony In support of the view that without our superior naval resources the Southern Confederacy could have held out long enough to have made us, weary of war, long enough to have made us feel the pressure of financial exhaustion. Gen eral Schofleld testifies that Secretary Stanton told him In February, 18057 that the Government had reached about the end of Its pecuniary resources; that victory was indispensable In the Spring campaign; that wlthout victory the peace-at-any-price party "would prevail. This claim made for the Navy Is not extravagant, for It was the complete blockade of all Confederate ports that made final victory of the Union arms certain. If the Confederacy had been able to export its cotton and other products and at the same time Import supplies and munitions of war freely and without hindrance, the end of tho Civil War would probably have found the South victorious so far as resist ance to conquest is concerned. Suppose Sherman had not known that, when he reached the sea after his march through Georgia he would find a war fleet and suppliesf all sorts in easy reach of his hand, he would not have ventured on that expedition. He could not have rapidly marched from Savannah to Goldsboro If he had not found a base of supplies and a fleet on the Georgia coast, and known that he would find another base of supplies and a fleet awaiting him at Goldsboro. Ifthe Navy under Porter had not "dismounted its great guns and battered down its palisades, Wilmington could not have been taken nor Goldsboro reached by Schofleld In time to give the hand to Sherman. Without the aid of the gun boats Grant could not have been suc cessful In his Vicksburg campaign. The naval capture of New Orleans was one of the very greatest events of the war, since It opened the Mississippi to our arms Its whole length in April, 1862; for it was onljby the stupidity of Hal leck that Vicksburg and Port Hudson were not easily taken in June, 1862. The victory of Mobile Bay closed that port to the enemy; the aid of the gun boats on the Cumberland and Tennes see Rivers made Fort Donelson an easy mark for a military expedition. With out its vast superiority In gunboat ser vice, our Government could never have cut the Confederacy in two in July, 1863, and kept it divided through its complete water control of the Missis sippi from Memphis to New Orleans. Without its vast superiority in naval resources our Government could not have blockaded the Southern ports and prevented the South from exporting cotton and importing arms and muni tions of war. With anything like equal naval resources the South could have destroyed our blockade. The havoc made by the Merrimac, the ram Arkan sas, the Ironclad Tennessee, shows what the South could have done had her naval resources of defense and at tack been nearly equal to our own. An agricultural people, the South could easily have raised all its food and all it needed for successful defense was an unceasing supply of arms and muni tions of "war from abroad, which could have been purchased by the sale of cot ton. But our naval blockade of her ports prevented the South exporting its cotton or buying military supplies until the advance of our armies by land en abled the Army to give the hand to the Navy and occupy the seaports, as was done at New Orleans, Savannah, Charleston, "Wilmington and Mobile. It is not extravagant today to say that without our overpowering Navy to establish and maintain the blockade, the Southern Confederacy certainly would not have been conquered as early as April, 1865. If the South could have supplied her manufacturing ne cessities as easily as she could her ag ricultural, she could certainly have held out, for she had men enough for a ) defensive war, but she was not a man ufacturing people; she had no navy, her ports were shut up by our Navy, she could not supply rapidly enough her arms and munitions of war. The weakest side of the Confederacy was Its naval side; while, relatively speak ing, our naval side was our strongest side. It will always be so. We shall never be a nation seeking conquest We shall never seek to vindicate our cause other than England does, viz., by our naval strength at home and abroad. We need, as England needs, the best ships In the world, and enough of them. We are deficient In the number of nec essary ships, and what we have afloat are of such varying types lhat we could not assemble from all qf them today a homogeneous fleet with a speed gauge equal to that of a German fleet that could easily be assembled by order of the Kaiser. The Commonwealth of Australia has at length selected the site of Its capi tal, accepting the recommendation of the commission appointed last year to report upon the merits of the varIous localities. The commission recommend ed Tumut, a village near the River Murray, midway between Melbourne and Sydney, and the Federal House of Representatives, after a sharp contest between rival cities, has ratified Its choice. There is to be a Federal dis trict, inclosing- the Federal capital, and this if is proposed to give an area of 1000 square miles, or ten times the area originally given to the District of Co lumbia, the Hous of Representatives so decides, making the River Murray the southern and the1 River Murrum bldgee its northern boundary. The large area contemplated has the merit of "bringing: the Federal territory in touch with Victoria. This;' it appears, is an objection to it, in the opinion of the people of New South "Wales, who object to the surrender to the common wealth of so large a part of their own area. Tumut, as the capital of a great federation, which occupies a vast con tinent, will need to' be built "from the ground up," as no buildings for public purposes now exist The only advan tage It has over Washington City when first constituted our Federal capital Is that It is not a marsh, or the next thing to it Tumut has, on the xcon trary, a rather dry site, with a de lightful, Invigorating and healthful cli mate. - The pestilential fly has an accom plice, it appears, in the more silent but fully as perniciously active domestic cockroach. In a recent issue of Medi cine Is presented a paper by Dr. Rosa Engelmann, who discusses the agency of cockroaches in spreading typhoid epidemics. Insects, It is declared, play a large part In the dissemination of disease. Kitasato and other Japanese scientists have found that fleas, bed bugs and flies 'are active factors in spreading the plague. As the cock roach is omnipresent his role, as re spects disease, If any, must be Import ant Miss Engelmann in 1902 made an Investigation of a house epidemic of typhoid In Chicago. The disease was raging In a high-class apartment In one of the best neighborhoods, where many cases had occurred. Near It was a like apartment-hottse where no cases oc curred. The cause of the presence of the fever in the one house and not In the other was simply, it Is urged, that the one was infested with cockroaches while the other was not. The vermin had access to the water used in' culi nary operations, and contaminated It with germs obtained from some source. It is not altogether creditable to the great State of Texas that In the pres ent development of sanitary science yellow -fever has gained a foothold there and maintains It Cuba's exam ple ought to Inspire the Lone Star State with resolution to adopt the sim ple measures necessary to secure Im munity from the yellow plague. At the recent session of the American Public Health Association in Washingibn General Sternberg, the eminent surgeon and bacteriologist, expressed surprise that yellow fever should be permitted to invade any part of the United States successfully, when It Is, so easy to ex clude it "Somebody is responsible," he said. Either the Federal or the local hearth officers are Inefficient, or negligent it would seem, "or the first cases would have been Isolated and rendered harmless to the rest of the community. General Sternberg re ferred to "our endemic filth disease," typhoid fever, as causing unnecessarily thousands of deaths yearly, and esti mated the victims of consumption at 150,000 a year. Whoever finds time hanging heavy on his hands takes a fall out of the school teachers. The teachers of Portland are a faithful, hardworking set of women, and earn their money better than most of those do who conspire to make their lives a burden. The children are well taught and the time of the teachers Is not to be consumed In fuss and flub dub. They have enough to do in train ing your obstreperous children, gentle reafler, without serving also as doctor, nurse and all-round entertainers. There are no better schools in the country than the public schools of Portland, and It Istlme to protect them from the busybodles and quidnuncs. Colonel Godfrey, of Walla Walla, having called the attention of the Board on XSeographlc Names tt the varying ways of spelling the explorer Clark's name, Chairman Gannett replied that the Board has already corrected the name, of the Lewis and Clark River, but to alter the spelling of the names of Lewis and Clarke County, Montana, and Clarke County, Washington, legis lation by the states would be neces sary. The death of Postal Clerk Southwlck from injuries received In the railroad wreck on the Southern Pacific Sunday again calls attention to the risks run by these members of the postal service. The mail cars are, as a rule, of flimsier construction than the others, and when a. collision occurs they rarely escape de struction. Solution of the-tangle of the statutes, as to taxation, may well be left to Govr ernor Chamberlain. He is well quali fied to decide what the emergency is. When he says he "questions whether an exhausted treasury Is as much to be dreaded as a special session of the Leg islature," he will find sympathizers, not a few. Best of all the results of the recent elections Is the elimination, of that pest iferous socialist politician and dema gogue, Tom L. Johnson, of Ohio. The tremendous vote by which he was beaten indicates, however, that he was more annoying as an agitator than dangerous as a political leader. Most people will remember that There was a young lady of Niger. Who -went for a rldo on a tiger; Coming back from the ride The girl "was Inside, And a smile on tho face of the tiger. Tammany Is also smiling. Greatest of all triumphs of the recent elections Is that of Senator Hanna, of Ohio. No man has been more violently 'or malignantly assailed; but the people of Ohio, who "know' him, are all at his back. If the people In Panama had spent half as much energy In digging as they have In fighting, they might now pos sess half a dozen parallel canals. ' - CATHOLICISM IN AMERICA. Catholic Messenger. The 13 provinces Into which the Catholic Church Is divided in the United States contain each an archdiocese, subject to an archbishop, and several dioceses ruled by bishops, In all numbering ES. The 100 prel ates, together with the 11 coadjutors, or auxiliaries, appointed to assist some of them, are designated by tho pope, to whom they are nominated by a ballot of the bishops of the province, and another of the clergy of the vacant diocese. There is no room for intermediation or interfer ence by the state, or by any ,. outside agency. As things are arranged at pres ent the choice of bishops can be made promptly; in fact In the more Important archdioceses coadjutors are usually ap pointed with the right of succession, so that the administration may - continue without" interruption. At the head of this hierarchy as primate Is the cardinal, and, to expedite business with the central gov ernment an apostolic delegate. There are 9743 clergymen subject in all things to the immediate jurisdiction of the bishops; and subject to them also. In all that concerns parochial ministration, 3225 members of religious communities In holy orders. These 12.SGS priests minister to 11,259,710 members, who worship in 7005 churches and 3S73 chapels. There Is no lack of candidates for the ministry, 33S2 actually preparing to be secular priests and 1931 religious In the seven universi ties and 71 seminaries. There are 162 col leges for males and 643 academies for fe males. These schools are maintained in great part by 5000 men, not in holy orders, but dwelling in community, usually called brothers; and 50,000 women, tho nuns or sisters, who also"" aid the clergy In tho schools and charitable institutions, con ducting, with proper lay assistance, 3978 parish schools with 963,683 pupils, and 923 institutions with 1,113,031 inmates. Not least in importance are tho laity" who support pastors, churches, schools and other Institutions, and who devote time as well as money, working aS mem bers of charitable, benevolent, social and literary associations. Besides "the many pious sodalities or confraternities, some of which exist in every parish, there are at least 20 great National organizations of men and women, growing in numbers and efficiency every year,, and in order to work still more efficiently, all the societies of men, numbering fully 2,000,000, are form ing a federation which will bo perfected In another year. Intellectually, Catholics are beginning to I show the results of the training given In uieir parocmai scnoois ana mgner aca demic Institutions, In which a religious and moral as well as mental education Is impartedj In number and efficiency these schools are bound to grow every year. In January. 1902, there were 3S35 parochial schools. In January, 1903, there were 3978, an Increase of 143. One salutary Influence these schools have already exerted, and will exert still more strongly. Is manifest In the tendency of many denominations to Imitate to some extent the Catholic system. It Is chiefly in social matters that tho Catholic Church will show Its influence. Under Its fostering care come nearly one half of tho vast number of Immigrants dally arriving In our ports; under the same care are the great-jcajorlty of work ingmen who worship in" any church, f$r, no matter how prosperous some of 'its members may be, this church never de sists from serving the laborer and the poor. These two facts speak volumes for the solution of the problems raised by socialism, anarchy and the Irritable rela tions of capital and labor. Respect for authority, regard for personal and pro prietary rights, close union of pastor with people, and habitual submission to law Inculcated In the church, home and school, among so many employers and employed, must necessarily make for social tranquil lity and Industrial peace. Catholic work lngmcn are numerous enough to-influence the'sentlment of all the labor unions of the United States. The private schools and charitable Institutions which Catho lics support with results as favorable as those of the state, and often superior, for one-half and even one-third of the expense incurred by the state, are an object-lesson In civic economy which must ultimately assert Itself In our sociology. The Confederate Rosters. St Louis Globe-Democrat The Government at Washington In obe dience to an act of the recent Congress, is compiling the names of the men who at any time were in the military service of the Jeff Davis regimo,. Fifteen states contributed to the armies of the Confed eracy, which means that all the slave states did this except Delaware. Dela ware did not secede, nor did Maryland, Kentucky, or Missouri. West Virginia, which comprised the loyal portion of the Old Dominion, broke away from the par ent state early In the war and was erect od .by Congress Into a separate, common wealth In 1S63. All the Governors, of course, of the states represented In the Confederate armies are giving assistance to the Fed eral authoritigs In the work of making lists of the soldiers of the lost cause. At best the compilation will be incomplete. Manyyof the muster sheets at Richmond were destroyed when the grand collapse came, in April and Hay, 1S63. Nor did the rolls at that capital ever approach completeness. Many of the names of the Confederate regiments were akes. A considerable number of regiments on that sldo were crdlted to Missouri, a stats which refused by an immense majority to secede, and which rejected and de nounced the Confederacy and all its works. But tho authorities in Jefferson City, like those In Frankfort, Annapolis and Charleston, W. Va.,jire giving attention to the tracing out of the names of the wearers of tho gray from their respective states. To a largo degree tho Inquisition will be vain. In thousands of cases men passed across the lines into the Confed eracy without leaving any trace behind them. Their names do not figure on ajiy record which the state has ever acquired. The estimates of the number of Mlssourl ans In the armies of the Confederacy vary from 25,000 to 35,000. Only a small por tion of these will ever yield to any search which can be prosecuted on this sldo of Jordan. Though In tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of Instances there will be no "Present!" at this general and final roll call of the warriors of the Con federacy, the muster will undoubtedly re veal that the armies of Jefferson Davis were very much larger in the aggregate than they were popularly supposed to be. Lament for Astrophel. Matthew Royden. " You knew who know not Astrophel? That I should live to say I kneW And have not In possession still! Things known permit me to renew. Of him you know his merit such I cannot say you hear too much. "Within theso -woods of Areadj- He chief delight and pleasure took; ' And on the mountain Partheny, "Upon tho crystal, liquid brook, Tho 'muses met him every day Taught him to sing, and write, and say. "When he descended down the mount His personage seemed most divine; A thousand graves one might count m Upon his lovely, cheerful eyno. To hear him speak, to see him smile, Tou were In Paradise the while. A sweet, attractive kind of grace; . A full assurance given by looks; Continual comfort In a face; The lineaments of gospol books; I trow that countenance cannot lie "Whose thoughts aro legible in the eye. Above all others this is he "Who erst approved In his song That love and honor might agree. And that puro love will do no wrong. . Sweet saints, lt"Ms no sin or blame To love a man of virtuous name. Did never love so sweetly breathe. In any mortal breast before; - Did never muse Inspire beneath A poet's brain with, liner store. Ho -wrote ofMove "with high conceit. And beauty reared above her height. PEOPLE WHO OUGHT TO BE IN JAIL Collier's Weekly. Is making millions at the expense of honor a profitable occupation, In the minds of financiers who are now being tried at the moral bar? To form a vast combina tion, knowing It to be so watered as to be unsafe and to bargain for your own gains at the expense of those who trust you what Is tho name for that?- No number of technical schools founded, by the exe cutor of such a deal can clear his record, any more than mawkish moralizing and fofmded colleges can cleanse the life of a man who has conspired against the law, with tho aid of bribery, to crush competi tors. It la depressing to have a smirch on financiers who have heretofore seemed faithful to tftelr trusts. If they were In such dire want of a few millions moie, why did they not say so, and let us help thera out. Instead of giving another blow to our confldenco in them and In human nature? "With millionaires willing to be sharpers. In order to get more millions; with politicians stealing from the people. In city, state and Nation, and habitually using men, women and children as mere pawnsinaprlvategame to capture wealth; with yellow papers plunging their readers into dirt and danger for business and cir culation the love of money may fairly bo called a sickness In our country. Unhap pily we cannot call these reeking instances exceptions. Other departments in the Gov ernment are only less eaten with corrup tion than tho Postoffice. Little cities have their rings, as well as big ones. The more that Is learned about corporate methods, the more universal seems the willingness to trick the public Corruption, caused by the opportunity which all have In this country for worldly progress and by tho desire for fast advancement. Is undeniable and vast. Leaders In business enterprise are among the least excusable when they Juggle, for they are men who have had opportunity to acquire understanding which should forbid dishonest gain. "These men," said Judge Grosscup, "bring noth ing to Humanity but suffering, and leave nothing to mankind but disgrace." To send one of them to jail would do more good than the punishment of a dozen walking delegates or gambling kings. Gentlemen of the Old School. Baltimore American. Every generation has its.illusionsL One quite popular at present ii the "old-time gentlemen," something greatly superior to anything that Is seen nowadays, tho nearest approach to whom, Iongo inter vals, is the finest gentleman that can now be produced. As a matter of fact, a gentleman is confined to no age or race. He combines certain qualities which, appearing In any individual, make him ts gentleman. The grouping together of 'these qualities Is rare, and It, there fore, occurs that gentlemen are not as numerous as some persona Imagine. There aro numbers of them, however, and thoy are quite as fine asy the gentlemen There were gentlemen in those old days, and proportionately they were aa numerous as the gentlemen of todaj-. Were thip not so, there would be a dimin ution In the supply of to'day. But those who ofteaest use the term of "the fine, old gentlemen before the war" have a Bort of technical person In their minds. They doubtless remember the genbine ar ticle, as they must have often eome In contact with them, but his unaltruistlc virtues did not challenge special notice, or they have faded from the memory- A more swaggering and roysterlng fine gen tleman Is In their mind's eye, and that type has today degenerated into some thing else. These men were gentle in their man ners, and often In their feelings; but the world of today wisely refuses to recog nize this variety as the typical fine gen tleman. They used to drink and swear and gamble with little intermission. They were the embodiment of hospitality In Its most captivating form, and glorious to excess, and they rarely paid their debts. Some managed to cajole their tradesmen, while others resorted to devices little short of fraudulent. The hospitality and tho gentility usually continued till death, and their families were left with nothing to live upon. The same things happen now, though not so often, as tradesmen have acquired the unpleasant habit of making their customers pay their debts. Where Babies Are Welcome. The World Today. The Osage country Is a land where baby may always be sure of a large wel come. For one reason, he has an earn ing capacity from the day he Is born which Is often quite as great as his father's. One of the next things after naming the little pappoose is to go to Pawhuska, the capital of their nation, and have Us name put upon the payroll. Once every threo months Uncle Sam pays up the Interest on tho money which he holds in trust for them, and the amount paid to each Indian varies from time to time according to how many have gone to the Happy Hunting Ground and how many wee ones have como to take their places since last payday. The latest little arrival at the newest-built wigwam re ceives just as much as does the oldest grandfather or the most athletic "war rior." So that when Chief Look Out not long ago had the happiness to be blessed with twins, he was not only eligible to the usual congratulations due a new father, but at the samo time, unlike most new fathers, he found his estate increased by the snug little sum of $23,000. For, until the children reach the age of 18, their In comes are paid to their parents. Dowie's Farewell. Now York Sun. Peace be -with you Damn your papers, They cut only t Yellow capers. ly ., Peace be -with you , Damn reporters, . -'' .They're a lot of - " Smoking sportcrs. Peace be with you Damn your manners When you Jeer at Dowlo banners. Peace be with you Damn your preachers, They are good-for- Nothing creatures. Peace be with you Damn, your livers. You're a bunch of ; Stingy givers. Peace bo -with you , Damn your morals. They're as red as Eastem corals. Peace be with you - Damn your churches .' They're the devil's J Roosting perches. ' f Peace bo with yon , s Damn your bodies, V Soaking In a - Tide of toddies. Ppace be with you (Damn your riches In the pockets Of your breeches. Peace bo with you Damn your fashion, , ;" Giggling girls and Dudes a-mashln. Peace be with you Damn your drinking And your vicious , "Ways of thinking. t Peace be with you Damn your virtue. It Is never going A- To hurt you. Peace be with you Damn your city, -,' It's not worth Elijah's pity. Peace be with you .," Damn your guyln', 4 f ' A. I am going v Sack to Zlon. - NOTE AND C0MMEN7. Songs for the Million. "When the curtain falls at the end of tho play Everything's straightened and every one's gay; The hero has married the girl that he loves. The chorus girls cooing like turtle doves; The villain's confounded, and clapt Into Jail, With never a partner to go on his ball; The heir that was missing has turned up at last. , And finds in hi millions redress for the past; In short, there- is never a tear or a frown To be een on the stage when the curtain goes down. But the curtain that falls for all some day Comes down In a very different way; It waits not the moment when things are right To wrap us In never-ending night. But drops at the time we most are fain To play out our play and recalls are vain. Just as the heroine lifts her eyes. Just as w thrill with a glad surprise, Just as -we feel the play's delight. The curtain falls In long, long night. Practical Training. The collece ct Journalism should have a shooting gallery for pupils from South Caro lina. New York Mall and Express. Panama Is talking through its hat Dowle left New York at an opportune moment Diaz should remember a President Isn't really great until he Is assassinated. Reception committees In the other world work overtime on Kentucky election days. The Kentucky fuedists are losing their grip. Captain Ewen was missed 12 times. One good thing about Mount Hood it never wants to tell us what dreams it has when It smokes. New York's Acorns have reached the first stage necessary in becoming oaks: they have been burled. What Is an Isthmus? A neck of land almost entirely sur rounded by United States ships of war. Central America resembles a quarrel some chain gang. The component peo ples can't get at outsiders, so they fight among themselves. It Is' an easy matter In New York to work up sufficient enthusiasm -'to "turn the rascals out," but quite another thing to have them kept out When the corpse comes to life at a wake, as was recently the case In New York, there Is fortunately an eapelleut reason for continuing the rejoicings. The Importance attached to the city election by New York will be understood when It Is announced that almost as many people gathered'around the bulletin boards as on the night of a big prizefight Chinese officials plead a headache when they desire to avoid meeting the dear Dowager Empress, and this in spite of the fact that she has one of the best cures known for that ailment In the form of a simple surgical operation on the neck. I'm sure not to know "What they do In the play; And the name of the show I'm sure not to know. For you see when I go I must sit beside May, So I'm sure not to know "What they do In the play. From enthusiastically advocating the "no breakfast" Idea most of those who live by selling pseudo-medical advice, dono up In cheap magazines, to cranks and dys peptic imbeciles, have turnetf"XOtne n-meals-a-day plan. The same pictures that were formerly labeled "Eat no breakfast and have muscle like this" are now la beled: "Eat five solid meals a day and be a modern Hercules." Some days ago the Kansas City Star published a very entertaining story of the adventures of a somnambulist in one of the hotels. With the introductory remark that circumstantial evidence should always be' taken with caution, the Star went on to tell that room 109 In the hotel was occupied by two men, and room 111, next door, was occupied by a man and his wife. During the night one of the men in room 100 got out of bed, and, still asleep, walked out of the window, falling on a roof sev eral feet below. Without waking, he climbed Into room HI and into bed with the sleeping couple there. Presently the man In 100 missed his friend, and roused the house. Eventually the somnambulist was discovered with his two astounded bedfellows. All this formed a very pretty text for the Star's talk of circumstantial evidence. But the occupants of room HI now come, forward and deny tho whole story, being, Indeed, very mad at having such an unsought-for visitor forced into such close companionship. WEX J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. perCy i aw wondah why Miss "Wlnsom la aw always out when I call. Jack Oh, that girl was born under a lucky star. Chicago News. "This changes the complexion of things." remarked the facetious drug clerk as ho picked up a box of facopowder. Philadel phia Record. Mrs. Knlcker So she is a good house keeper? Mrs.Bocker Yes; she says she hates to think that her ancestors aro dust. Philadelphia Telegraph. "Don't you ever get to feeling nervous for fear your husband may fall In love -with his typewriter lady?" "Oh, no; not at all. She's my mother." Chicago Record-Herald. Being asked which he -would, be likely to choose In caso of an emergency, the devil or tho deep sea, Brother Dickey replied briefly, "I can't swim!" Atlanta Consti tution. Young "Wife How fortunate I am. in pos sessing a husband -who alwayB stays at home In tho evening! Boston Frfend Yes; your husband never -was much addicted to pleas ure. Chicago Journal. Mr. Pepper I don't believe there -was a dry eye in the house when tho curtain went down on the third act. Mrs. Pepper" No; but there seemed to be tho usua.l number of dry throats. New Yorker. "What is It that "worries her so much?" "The approach of the social season has made her suddenly awaro of her short sightedness In letting her neck get tanned last Summer." Chicago Post. "You look like a regular beer guzzler. Don't your thoughts ever rise above beer?" "Yes, mum? I often t'lnk of do 15-cent drinks. But wot's de' uso when a gent ain't got de price?" Kansas City Journal. "I didn't know Miss Passay was Interested In municipal matters." "She Jsn't either." "Well. I saw her pay 50 cents yesterday for a book on the 'Best Methods of Filtration.' " "Yes, poor old girl. She thought it was Flirtation.' " Philadelphia Press. "Dear, dear, dear!" said Dante as ho viewed the scenes In the Infernal regions; "It seems to mo you have enlarged your establishment considerably since I was here before I" "We have," said his satanlc ma jesty. "We got along very comfortably until they Invented the telephone and then I found It necessary to build an annex." San Francisco Bulletin. "Why don't you try to make some amends for your past life?" "I do try," answered Meandering Mike, "but It's kind o hard. When I tell people dat I'm tryln to bo honest an' Industrious dey hunts up de worst Job on de ranch an offers It to me. But If I owns up -at de start to beln' a tramp, dey hands out de victuals without a murmur." Washington Star.