THE CORNING OREGOSIAS. TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1904. : fcmim Entered at the Postofflce at Portland, Or., as tiecond-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, with Sunday excepted, per year.. 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per, year 0.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 The Weekly, per year .......: 1.50 The Weekly, 3 months 50 Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday exceDtcd.ISc Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper lo 16 to 30-page paper c 22 to 44-pago paper 3c Foreign ratea double. The OregonJan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to return any manuscript cent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be inclosed Xor this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckvitk Special Agency) New Tork: Rooms 43-40, Tribune Bulldmc. Chicago: Rooms C10-512 Tribune Building. BUT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium annex; Postofflce Xews Co., 21T Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Hend rick, 000-912 Seventeenth et.; Louthan & Jack son. Fifteenth and Lawrence. ' Kansas City Ricksecker Cigar Co., Ninth &nd Walnut. Los Angeles B. F. Gardner, 239 South fiprlngj Oliver & Haines, 203 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, B0 South Third; L. Regelsbugcr, 317 First Avenue South. Now York City L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden W. C. Alden. Postofflce Cigar Store; P. R. Godard; W. G. Kind, 114 25th St. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam. Salt take Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South Street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 746 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter; L. B. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market; Frank Scott, 80 Ellis; N. Wheat ley, 83 Stevenson; Hotel Francis Newa Stand. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. TESTERDATS WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 84 degrees; minimum temperature, 01 degrees. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Showers and cooler, southeasterly winds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1001. " PATENT MTOTENCE OF CniNA. Cold-blooded as the announcement seems that China's denunciation of her treaty with us will make no difference with the operations of the exclusion law, it is nevertheless an unexception able recognition of the patent negligi bility of the Chinese government's de sires. It Is all very well, when there is no stress of actual circumstances, to preach about courtesy to China and the necessity of following the golden rule in our treatment of her; but the fact remains that we shall continue to do with her about as we will; just as the other powers do. This was definitely apparent when a little while ago we sent a hurry-up order to her to sign a commercial treaty with us concerning Mukden and Antung. Imagine our bearing down like this upon Germany or Russia; yet' China made haste to comply, just as she did when the allies marched to Pekin, carried off everything they could lay their hands on, and levied an in demnity which was limited only by the ability to collect. Nothing could more clearly demonstrate the fact that China is living on sufferance, just as Turkey is. Treaty or no treaty, law or no law, we shall keep the Chinese out precisely as suits our.purposes, without even the formality of asking China how it suits her. The reason is that China has no force to compel recognition. All that keeps her from being parceled out tomorrow among the hungry powers is the same mutual jealousy that keeps poor old Turkey from falling to pieces. It is a tremendous warning to our Little Americans who groan every time they see an army or pension appropriation bill or hear of a new naval programme. "We are under obligations to treat Rus sia civilly, for Russia can make re prisals. But when it comes to China we take what we want and give her what we choose, simply because she Is a, nation only in name and as a power is a false alarm. Just such shall we become when Army and Navy are no longer able to enforce our will. TATT ON ANTI-nHTERIAIJSJI. Secretary Taft's recent utterances have stamped him with the unmistak able hallmark of greatness. His testi mony before the Philippine committees in Congress was dominated by a candor which belongs to only the highest na tures. He said that he had to wink at infractions of the law In order to afford the Philippines their necessary shipping facilities. He said that while he viewed government ownership of the Philip pine railroads with misgivings, it had no terrors for him if it came to a choice between Government roads and no roads at all. Now this wise and brave man has spoken the exact truth about anti-imperialism with a precision that should clear up the subject In any mind until now- In undecided attitude toward the problem of Philippine independence. "It will require much time," he says, "per haps several generations, before the people of the Philippine Islands are going to be able to govern themselves as we of this country understand the proposition; the only method to pursue is by education and example." And he avers that it is the duty of the Gov ernment of the United States to retain the islands in its possession, believing that with wise control by this country they will become prosperous and self supporting. But why do the antis continue to agi tate for Independence of the archipel ago? Secretary Taft tells us why. It is not because they have any desire to help the Filipinos, but because they are consumed with a desire "to exhibit what they maintain is a political con sistency on the part of this country." This tenet, academic and wholly un related to actual conditions and needs in the islands, they advocate "in an assumption of virtue." Professing to follow the only righteous path, they nevertheless urge an abandonment which means nothing else than "cer tain anarchy, tyranny and. chaos." There Is no escape from these con clusions, because they are the conclu sions of every competent American judge that has studied the question on the ground. Secretary Taft himself went to the Philippines a believer In Philippine Independence. So did Presi dent Schurman, of Cornell; so did Bishop Potter, of New York. But they all came away with the opposite idea. The reason was that when once inter ested in the Filipinos themselves, they became converts to Judge Taft's princi ple of "The Philippines for the Fili pinos," Instead of demanding the Phil ippines for the Pharisaical and irrecon cilable antls. There is no tyranny like the tyranny of intellectual pride and selfishness. Their own theories are so dear to them that the antis will not relax their hold on their preconceived notions, no, not to save the entire archipelago from fall ing into misery and ruin. It is so with purse-proud employers, who would rather see their men and their fami lies starve than yield one jot or tittle of their right to conduct their business in their own way. It Is so with too many union leaders, who are oblivious to the sufferings of strikers' families and idle nonunion men, so long as they can carry their point. One may hope that Judge Taft's authoritative utter ance on the question of Philippine Inde pendence may abate somewhat the con tinued gibes of the antis at every diffi culty encountered "by our American civil and military forces in the Islands. TWO SORTS OF MERGERS. Mr. Hill's long-deferred outgiving on the Harrlman application bears the same note of insincerity that has char acterized all the attempts to justify his distribution of Northern Securities holdings. "When he says that the plan "Is made for the sole purpose of meet ing the demands of the law," he states what every one knows Is not true. What the plan is specifically aimed at Is to give the Harrlman Interests less Northern Pacific than they had before. Mr. Hill himself virtually concedes this when he says that If Harrlman wins the Hill control of Northern Pacific and Burlington will be menaced. Here we come to the uniform plea of the Hill Interests In this matter, thus: The vital Importance of this contention to the Northwest Is manifest. Union Pacific control of the Northern Pacific means the control of that road by menwho have only a secondary Interest In the Northern Pacific country, who have no especially large busi ness Interests in the Northwest and who would naturally run the road as an adjunct to the enterprises and the sections In which they are primarily Interested. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Though the complaint avers In one place that the purpose of the ratable distribution of stock Is to give the Areat Northern con trol of the Northern Pacific, contrary to the pplrlt of the Circuit Court deotalon. evidence Is furnished in another place that the return of Northern Pacific stock asked for will not take this control away from the Great North ern. If It did, and gave control to the Union Pacific, the spirit of the decision would be equally violated, since the Union and North ern Pacific are also parallel and competing lines. Minneapolis Tribune. It appears, therefore, that Harrlman control of the Northern Pacific is re sented because It would be contrary to the spirit of the Supreme Court deci sion, and because Harrlman's prime In terest is in the Union Pacific rather than in the Great Northern or Northern Pacific. Whether this plea Is true or false we shall not now discuss; we shall merely ask where were these fine scru ples when Mr. Hill was acquiring the Northern Pacific, a competing line, and the Burlington, a property in which his Interest was secondary and subordinate to his desire to make the Great North ern pay. If the Hill people are com pelled to- simulate a righteous horror of a proceeding now which they them selves carried out a little while ago with every assumption of self-denying and disinterested service to the people, then Indeed Is their cause In sore ex tremity. Wall street professes to believe that the Northern Securities decision pro scribes only the method and not the principle of Hill's consolidation of the three roads he merged into one. How true this may develop in time Is un certain; but what Is certain Is that jus tice requires a distinction between ac quisition of the Burlington by Great Northern or Northern Pacific and ac quisition of either Great Northern or Northern Pacific by the other. To ac quire a connecting line for greater fa cility In commerce is morally legitimate and tends to conserve If not to stimu late the competitive principle; but to acquire a parallel and competing line Is morally illegitimate, In view of the laws, and Is in restraint of trade as we understand the Supreme Court dis tinctly to affirm. If Mr. Harrlman seeks control of the Northern Pacific, his action is no more defensible than the action of Hill in seeking control of the same road. No body has ever complained on grounds of public policy of Hill's acquisition of the Burlington. No one has complained of Harrlman's acquisition of the South ern Pacjjjolas a connecting line for Union Pacific. No one could have com plained QjJpHiU's acquisition of the Erie for an Eastern connection, If It had been a genuine proceeding Instead of the stockjobbing enterprise It was af terward avowed to have been. We hope to see the courts some day sustain the distinction we have here outlined; whether they do or not, we shall never expect to see that pronounced a crime in Harrlman which Is a virtue in Hill. Where was the sympathy of the Pio neer Press for the downtrodden people when Mr. Hill was so sanctimoniously gathering in the Northern Pacific? What is sauce for the goose Is sauce for the gander. BOODLING DOESN'T PAY. The impulse to kick a man when he is down is accredited as strictly human. The lofty prescience that, when a man gets into trouble, "always knew there was something wrong with him" is a generally accepted attribute of human nature; the man arraigned before the courts as a murderer has a face that according to the popular verdict Is stamped with brutality, though all his lifelong the accused may have been' considered "fine looking." In view of these facts the revelations concerning Senator Burton's character boy and man before he came into prominence as United States Senator from Kansas, and later as a boodler, may be taken with at least a grain of allowance. It must be admitted that the proofs of his guilt, as submitted at his recent trial, were conclusive. Nor was the Judge who rendered sentence able to find any mitigating circum stances. But this will hardly justify the statement, widely published, that the man has been throughout the great er part of his life notably unscrupulous in his dealings with men and In his conduct of affairs. He Is charged, for example, with having been, years ago, when a resident of an Indiana city, "a sharp and unscrupulous man," and with having, upon one of his return visits to that place, "engineered a fake footrace by which his friends lost many hundreds of dollars." Nor are there wanting men who "knew him best" who wonder that he has kept out of the clutches of the law as long as he has. Truly, Mr. Burton stands before the American public in a very unenviable light. As before said, there Is prac tically no doubt of his guilt. The re marks of the Judge before passing sen- -! tence must have seared him as with hot Icon. His career ought to be val uable as a warning; It is worth study lng, not with malevolent purpose or subtle satisfaction, but with the hope that It will clearly demonstrate the fact that It does not pay In any sense. In tho long run, to yield to the temptations that beset men In public life. This man has cast position, honor, good name, the possibility of contin ued usefulness, to the winds. He is reaping the whirlwind. His crime was great enough and its penalty is heavy enough without raking the catalogue of misdeeds, from misdemeanor to crime, and piling up Indictments against him all along'the way. Because he prostituted the opportunities of his high office to his "need of money," it Is hardly fair to assume that he was In his boyhood a hatrack thief; or be cause he closed with a tempting offer to put money in his purse In his hon ored manhood, that he engineered a "fake footrace" In his obscure youth. The truth in his case Is bad enough. Let it suffice. MORE STREET-CARS NEEDED. The street-car accident at Santa Bar bara Sunday, in which five persons were killed outright and a much larger number were more or less seriously In jured, while belonging to the class of preventable disasters, Is one that may happen and doubtless In this Instance did happen In spite of ordinary vigi lance. A very large proportion of the people of all Pacific Coast cities are abroad on the street-cars on Sunday afternoon at this season of the year. Much more than ordinary attention to details is necessary to Insure the safety of the tens of thousands who crowd the cars and hang on wherever it is possi ble to obtain a foothold on these out ing days. The railway companies gen erally realize this fact and assume the added responsibility seriously. Those who ride are often less careful than are those who carry them, and In thelrV eager haste to "get there" or to get home, often exercise very little pru dence, or, as It seems to an observer from the street, as an overcrowded car passes, none at all. While the re sponsibility for the proper equipment of the track and rolling stock and Its careful supervision Is upon the man agers of street railways. Individuals are naturally expected to look out for themselves In matters of boarding and alighting from the cars, riding upon the steps with precarious foothold, etc., as supplemental precautions necessary to secure their safety in transit. Portland has been spared, thus far, serious accidont as a result of over crowding the street-cars, though. In common with other cities, it hfs faced disaster and fatality on street-car lines from other causes. The crowded and. It may be added, overcrowded con dition of the street-cars last Sunday Indicated a recklessness In this matter which might easily contribute to grave disaster. It is plain, however, that there are not cars enough properly to accommo date the traffic on our street railways, either in Winter or Summer. The com panies probably had out their full equipment last Sunday. The men who handled the cars were alert and care ful. All that could be done with this equipment to accommodate the traffic that was offered was done. But the fact remains that the cars were, for manj hours of the day, crowded be yond the limit of comfort by people seemingly reckless of their own safety. The reasonable deduction is that more cars are needed, and that until they are provided people would do well to curb their Impatience and seek recrea tion, fresh air and sunlight by fre quenting parks and 'places adjacent to the city to which, by giving themselves a little more time, they can, with ab solute safety, walk with less discomfort than Is experienced in riding on an overcrowded car. Suburban traffic should be made as comfortable and safe as possible to those who make it profitable by their patronage. Judging from the over crowded cars that were moving In all directions In and out of the city last Sunday, it will require at least a third more cars than are now available for our suburban traffic to meet these sim ple requirements. They should be forthcoming at the earliest possible date. ARREST OF JAPAN'S ADVANCE. Much Is said about the Japanese plan of campaign, but, whatever that, plan may be, it looks as if It must wait upon the reduction of Port Arthur or the permanent bottling up of the Russian fleet In that harbor. The Japanese plan. It Is reported, will be to operate three armies, each nominally number ing 100,000 men. The entire first army has been landed and has established itself in Northeastern Corea, with Its main base at Chinnampo. The second army will land west of the Talu River and the third army east of NIu Chwang. The landing of an army west of the Yalu River, the Japanese expect, will force the Russians to abandon the fortifications which they have been erecting north of the Yalu River to op pose the crossing of the first army of Japan from Corea. The three great Japanese forces will operate la con junction, the third army swinging east ward from Niu Chwang, seizing or cut ting the railroad and then joining Jn the turning movement against the Rus sian position. The Japanese military authorities be lieve that Russia cannot transport sup plies sufficient to maintain In Man churia a force larger than 300,000 men. The Niu Chwang plan, which involved the landing of an army on the west coast of the Xiiao Tung Gulf and marching It northeast far enough to cut the Russian communications with Port Arthur, will hardly be attempted until Port Arthur has been captured or sealed up. There Is no concealing the fact that the failure of the Japanese Admiral to dispose effectually of the Russian fleet at Port Arthur has stulti fied the Japanese plan of campaign. Admiral Togo cannot destroy the Rus sian fleet at Port Arthur, and until it is destroyed It would be perilous to send a great fleet of . transports full of sol diers up the Gulf of Pechili. The Jap anese delay Is helping Russia. Her forces have grown about 1000 men a day. It Is reported that the Japanese horses are small and weak, and are dying so rapidly of disease that- the field batteries cannot be moved. This may be true. The mortality among the horses of the British army in South Af rica was so" great that, had It not been that Great Britain was able to buy all the horses she needed In the United States, her cavalry and artillery would have been seriously crippled. During the great campaign of October and November, 1863, fought by Grant and Bragg for the permanent posses sion of Chattanooga, the artillery of the Army of the Cumberland was seri ously crippled by the great mortality among the horses. Bragg had block aded the Tennessee River, and the horses and mules died of starvation. When Sherman's corps arrived he lent Thomas all his extra horses, otherwise the artillery of the Army of the Cum berland could not have been moved. The blockade of the river had been broken, but It did not restore the dead artillery horses tollfe. The failure to provide for his cavalry horses in the Russian expedition of Napoleon is named by General Marbot as one of the reasons why Napoleon's victories were always barren of results. The Japan ese have no horses at home of any value, while the Russians can obtain excellent horses from the plains of Mongolia. If the Japanese attempt a movement far from a sea base without transportation animals, they are likely to come to grief. A St Louis Judge, In granting a di vorce to the American wife of a Euro pean nobleman, said, as reported In the dispatches a day or two ago: "It is al ways the way these foreigners treat their American wives. Ambitious moth ers and cultivated daughters traveling abroad are constantly falling into such traps as these. The courts are full of such cases. It seems to me that mothers ought to wake up some time." In this particular case the wife's for tune had been squandered by her titled husband. He had also treated her cru elly. The Judge was justified in warn ing American mothers against encour aging their daughters to marry titles. Many of these alliances have an un happy ending. As a rule the "noble" fortune-hunter possesses few of the qualities which entitle him to the re spect and affection of a refined Ameri can woman. Judging from the Increas ing number of divorces granted In the courts of the United States, American mothers at least a large number of them are not as careful as they should be In cautioning their daughters against .marriages with unworthy American suitors. It is not an uncom mon occurrence nowadays for courts of justice In -the Old World to comment scathingly upon the lax divorce laws of the United States and the frequency with which marriage tles'are severed In this land of moral Ideas and happy homes. The Baltimore Sun sagely sug gests that while American mothers should take to heart the counsel of the St. Louis Judge, they should not be blind to the fact that there are perils at home as well as abroad against which their daughters should be guarded. War against tuberculosis has been begun In St. Louis under the auspices of the Board of Health In the most sys tematic and practical way. Sufferers from this scourge are to be diligently sought out, their sanitary conditions Improved as much as possible, and those connected with them or waiting upon them are to be supplied with full Instructions that, if followed, will ren der them Immune from the disease. This is the first step. It Is necessary to relieve, if possible, and to the ex tent possible, the sufferings of those who have contracted tuberculosis, while putting the forces of prevention in active operation to stop recruiting for the pale host that is steadily march ing on to death. Sanitariums for the curable, or those who have not passed beyond the first stage of the disease, established upon the open-air principle; retreats for the hopelessly afflicted, where their passing can be soothed by kindly ministrations and Intelligent care, and education for the large class who, lacking competent Instruction In regard to threatened danger, will most likely contract the disease from those with whom they assolcate In family or neighborly relations. These are the measures dictated by prudence and In dorsed by science as necessary steps in the campaign against tuberculosis. The Grange, as shown by the efforts of Its organizing officers In Multnomah County, was never more active in the development of rural Interests than now. The "get together" spirit seems to have taken renewed life throughout the country, and Isolation as it was known among farmers a few years ago is a thing of the past. This is well. The neighborly spirit represents one of the most valuable forces -for keeping the boys and girls on the farm and for brightening the lives of the gentle, pa tient, hardworked class known to com munity history as "farmers' wives." The Grange is a great promoter of this spirit, and It should be encouraged In Its efforts, and, Indeed, Is being encour aged throughout Multnomah County by the indorsement of many public-spirited citizens. The antics of emotional religionists have again been varied. This time the "Holy Jumpers" have created a dis turbance, choosing Salt Lake City as the base of their operations. Perhaps Creffleld, of the "Holy Rollers," has found his way to the Mormon city, in the hope that the side Issues Incident to his religious enthusiasm will be tol erated where apostles continue the plural-wife system In defiance of the law. If so, he has shown wisdom In substituting jumping for rolling as a feature of his ecstatic religious pro gramme. This, however, is a conces sion to decency which, slight as It is, the boss holy roller, late of Benton County, would not be likely to make. It Is probable, therefore, that we have not gotten rid of him so easily. Devout subjects of "holy Russia" have been to the extremes of joy and woe within a few days in connection with the Easter celebration. Truth to say, they seemed to enjoy one extreme as much as the other, celebrating both with great pomp and magnificence. Now prostrate before the spectacle of the crucified Jesus, and how feasting and making merry over the resurrec tion scene, the people have passed from one "extreme to another and are ready to make war with all their might In the name of peace on earth, good will to men. Human nature In its most ex travagant mood Is an Interesting study, and the presentment at St. Petersburg has been unusually fine. Senator Quay Is said to be seriously 111 at Atlantic City. He Is an old but not an aged man, having lived seventy one years. His strenuous political life has told heavily upon his vital forces, and physicians see as the only basis of hope for his' recovery the necessity of keeping all news from the political world away from him. The spectacle presented by years and Infirmity ba.t tllng against science with human life as the stake Is one to humble pride In human power to achievement and give new meaning to the query so often upon the lips of Abraham Lincoln, "Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" DO WE EAT TOO MUCH? Philadelphia Record. Because Mr. Edison has succeeded In Inventing electric lamps and other Impor tant appliances. It does not follow that he is an authority on matters of hygiene. Hi3 personal experience is of some Importance, as is that of every other observing person, that that he has maintained what he re gards as a fair degree of health under stress of hard work and irregular hours while subjecting himself rigidly and sys tematically to a very limited dietary is evidence that he, at least, does not require the quantity and variety of food consumed by the average man. It does not, how ever, prove, as he assumes, that every other person could flourish on the same measure of nourishment and that all who exceed It Impair their health. It Is probably true that most persons eat more food and of greater variety than la actually required to sustain the body. How far this Is a positive injury to health can be determined only In Individual cases. It is perhaps true that habit regulates the demand for food; that one feels the need of a considerable quantity mainly because ho has Indulged his appetite until it has become abnormal and ceases to be a trust worthy guide. Yet if It be true that peo ple eat too much because eating Is a pleasure, and at some risk to tho health even If it be true, as Mr. Edison asserts, that excessive eating shortens life It would be rash to urgo on all a material diminution of food. For It 13 to be con sidered that for the great majority of men and women eating I3 the chief pleasure of life. Only a comparative few persons, some of them self-centered hypochon driacs, would sacrifice the pleasures of the table In order to maintain a robust health and to prolong life for a few years. People go to the theater and breathe an Impure air for hours, though knowing It to be prejudicial to health; young people, and some not so young, dance to weari ness through the night at the cost of lost sleep, adventurous men undergo great hardships at the price of Impaired vigor, because of their liking for novel experi ences. In short, although the gods make of our pleasant vices Instruments to scourge us, we do not, therefore, choose to live In hygienic virtue. Why, then, should we expect tho world to surrender the most constant and, on the whole, the most general and satisfactory of pleasures that of eating in order to escape some pains and to linger a few years longer In solf-denlal? But for the pleasures of the table, life would be tame to weariness to tho great body of mankind. As age ad vances and tho delights of love and the common round of amusements lose their zest, we depend more and more on gastro nomic entertainment. If a man have a more absorbing passion he can afford to consider only his health and a bare living in order to prolong his life, but to the majority life would not be worth the trou ble If eating should become a mere mat ter of replacing waste tissue. It Is still to be established, however, that great eaters are. not capable of great labor and endurance. Christopher North affirmed thaf'great men have always been great feeders." The Democratic Colossus. Minneapolis Tribune. Struggle as it may, the Democratic party cannot get away from Grover Cleve land. He Is by so much the blygost and strongest man In the party that he will not stay on the shelf, even when put there by his own consent. Moreover, he Is so singularly strong and popular out yide the party that the shrewdest poli ticians In it think they can afford to Ignore Democratic opposition to him. The votes for Bryan make it pretty clear that nearly all Domocrats can be de pended on to vote the party ticket Why, then, say the shrewd New York poli ticians, should not the party nominate the man for whom the Democrats must vote, whether they like It or not, if he will attract a fair show of the great free vote among Republicans and between the two parties. The Democrats have broken away from this logic over and over again; but they are dragged back to It by an Irresistible force. We believe that all the soberer ele ments of the party, which have gotten the organization and expect to control the convention, are secretly for Cleveland. Every effort for Parker, for Olney, for Gray, Is half paralyzed by the reservation that tho movers would rather have Cleve land. Only small potato politicians like Hill and Gorman are serious in the effort to make any other man the party's can didate. We believe that even Tammany, under the leadership of Murphy, is sin cere in its belief that Mr. Cleveland should be nominated. Under the influence of tho Hearst scare. Hill brought the New York Democracy into a reluctant and half-hearted union upon Parker. Mr. Cleveland gave this movement his hearty and earnest support Gorman threw his waning Influence In its favor, and the whole National Democratic machine rallied about it But the move ment had no vitality, and it broke down In two or three days. The New York Domocrats, outside of Hill's personal fol lowers, have no real faith in Parker. They came so powerfully to the support of Murphy that he was able to force abandonment of the plan to Instruct for Parker. Now the decision is to send an Instructed delegation from New York, like that from New Jersey. If this means anything, it means Cleveland. Roosevelt and the Supreme Court. St Louis Globe-Democrat It was said by the Democrats at the time of the appointment of Justice Holmes on the Supreme Bench that he was se lected because he promised to take the President's side In the trust coses then pending. He took the opposite side, how ever, in the Northern Securities case, and will. It may be presumed, hold that side In all the other suits coming before the court In which the same principle Is in volved. The Democrats charged after the case was decided that the President was angry at the Judge for his position, and that he had removed him from his cir cle of acquaintances. The circumstance that the Judge has Just been entertained at the White Houso shows that this story Is just as erroneous as wa3 the other. Tho Democrats who started the tale about Roosevelt's "packing" of the Supreme Court In the trust case are just as far astray as those were who declared that Grant did this on a critical occasion a third of a century ago in the greenback Instance. The Democrats are having bad luck In their attempts tc discredit Presi dent Roosevelt South Might Not Be Solid. Nashville (Tenn.) American. We believe it lsan Injustice to the South to say that It would give such a man as Hearst its solid electoral vote. The Battlefield. (Tudor Jenks In the April Century.) A desert place whore grew no kindly herb; A waste of sand whero splintered rocks lay dead. Where rivulets flowed not nor flowers swayed And smiting rays fell from the sun o'erhead. One lonely figure', robed In ashen gray, Whose patient eyes saw nothing, seeing all; Nor marked the shadows slow-revolving course. The flush of dawn, the purple darkness' fall. There rode no hosts led on by warrior kings; No trumpets sang; there waved no banners tray; No fierce assaults nor routed quick retreats. But silent hours wore out the night, the day. Alone against a world tho leader stood Alone where ages met the parting ways. To guide aright whoever seeks the light. To shame from wrong with level, loving gaze. There was the battle waged, the victory won. That conquered conquerors, that high above All greatness, glory, power, and all law Forever fixed the empery of love. There triumphed he, our conqueror and King, Who won for us, and made all earth his prize; Who gave his life for victory over death. Who fell that mankind evermore should rise.' SAXE VIEW OF KISHINEF. Brooklyn Eagle. Too much weight should not be attached to the publication in Russia of "proclama tions" calling upon the orthodox subjects of the Czar to destroy tho Jews. These proclamations are the work of fanatics, who are well aware that the government has made ample provision to prevent a repetition of the violence that resulted last year In the massacre at Kishinef. Whatever may have been the responsibili ty of the authorities at St Petersburg for that outrage, and we must assume that it was an indirect and not a direct responsibility, there can be no doubt that the government Is now alive to the danger of any domestic disturbance that would create abroad popular opinion adverse to Russia. The demand for further massa cre has been promptly met by the govern ment with a warning to the newspapers that nothing calculated to inflame re ligious prejudices must be published any where In the empire. This will have the effect of localizing the efforts of the agi tators who are endeavoring in Injure the administration by driving the Anti-Semites to extremes. It Is a mistake to suppose that the military system of Russia is so taxed by the demands of the Eastern situation that the suppression of internal disorder would be a difficult task. The Provincial authorities In Bessarabia and In other sections where feeling against the Jews is strongest are abundantly equipped with all the physical force re quired to control any turbulence that Is likely to arise. The government at St Petersburg is entitled to fair treatment at the hands of American newspapers which are discussing its present relation to the Jewish question. The civil disa bilities of the Jews are numerous, grevl ous, and, we think, not likely to be re moved In the immediate future. But to charge that the Russian government, which continues to Inflict these disabilities. Is in leaguo or sympathy with the anarchs who are striving to complicate matter by. slaughtering Jews Is to charge that the government Is lacking In common sense as well as in common humanity. Voting Machine Gains Favor. Chicago Record-Herald. The test of a voting machine In the 14th precinct of the Twenty-fifth Ward proved a great success. One hundred and sixty six voters entered the booth, but as there was no effective contest for the Aldercnan Ic office some of them neglected to vote for Alderman at all. Of the 142 who did so vote 11 cast blank ballots. Five of these 11 moved the Democratic "party" knob, although no Democratic candidate was running, and six voted blanks, ap parently with deliberate purpose. At least, If their eyes were'open, they cannot have failed to know what they were doing. The total vote for each candidate and for each referendum proposition was known within 3 minutes of the time the polls closed. The totals were accurate and sure beyond any need of a recount. If machines had been In use in every vot ing precinct of the city the results for the whole city would have been known much earlier than they were, and the fig ures for the two or three wards In which the voting was very close would now be settled so definitely that the candidates In those wards would be certain today of their fate, without the suspense of wait ing for the official returns, or possibly for the outcome of a contest No criticism can be made of the machine except that it permitted the blank votes to to bo cast. The makers of tho machine will doubtless know how to remedy this defect. If defect It can bo called, so that hereafter the columns that are not in use can be locked off from the rest of the ma chine. That Is a mere detail. Tho State Board of Voting Machine Com missioners has already certified three .kinds of machines as meeting all require ments of the law. Chicago can adopt any one of them, or possibly still others, when ever the proposition is approved by the voters on referendum. The cash saving In the expenses of hold ing elections Is not the least of the argu ments for the innovation. Russia in Manchuria. Review of Reviews. In short Russia is a highly civilized and Christian nation. Her expansion into Siberia and Turkestan has been for the good of those countries. Her mission has been to establish order, to develop the re sources of tho country, and to look after tho general well-being of both the native population and of the new settlers that have crowded in. It should be noted, also, that tho Asiatic provinces of Russia have been acquired by less bloodshed than those of almost any other European power, and that In their subsequent relations with tho natives the Russians have been pecu liarly fbrtunato in establishing good feel ing. . . . Our own opinion, frequently expressed In these pages, has long been that Russia Is in Manchuria for purposes of upbuilding and civilization, and will permanently remain. It is true that cer tain gentlemen holding civil and mllltary ofllces under the United States Govern ment were recently quoted as expressing strong predilections In favor of the Jap anese cause. Such remarks were not In compatible with the strictest observance of neutrality by our Government; but they were irritating and inappropriate. Paradox of the Russian Empire." Springfield, (Mass.) Republican. Russia In the past has never been the equal of some of the Western countries in wealth, finance, Industry, agriculture, education and culture. Yet, somehow, she has come up. Somewhow, with her crude organization and general poverty, sho has borne the successive economic and political shocks of great wars. Some how, as her territorial march to the Pa cific has proved, she has shown an in contestable superiority in force to the Asiatics with whom she has .come in con tactexcept possibly the Japanese. Even the warlike Turk has succumbed before her. If wars are the drastic tests of a nation's economic soundness and political coherency and national fiber, then has not Russia successfully met them from tho time of Ivan the Terrible to the pres ent day? a Facts About Japan. The World's Work. The empire includes 3000 islands, stretch ing nearly 2000 miles. Area, 151,153 square miles as largo as the North Atlantic States. Coal the chief wealth 9,000,000 tons mined in 1001. Textile production increased from ?9, 000,000 worth In 1SS6 to JS6.O00.00O worth in 10O1. The population In 1900, 44,S05,jd7. Day laborers receive 20 cents a day, women servants 84 cents a month; men servants, 51.36 a month; women farm la borers, 53.50; men farm laborers, $15.96. Four hundred and eighty daily papers. War. (Florence Earle Coates, In April Llpplncott'a Magazine.) In the beginning was I bom, With man, from out the dust; And presently, from Earth uptorn, Came Cruelty and Lust. Alway, tho vassals of my will. They twain go with me still. Where'er my flashing sword they see. Where'er they scent my breath. Quickly they follow after me, Bringing despair and death; Tet still the mighty wear, with pride, My liveries, crimson-dyed. Once long ago, in ages gone. When man seemed as the brute, I looked with dread to wisdom's dawn, And virtue's ripening fruit; Now sages wreathe my brow with bays. And poets chant my praise. And once. In little Bethlehem Once only, not again Peace Wore a royal diadem; But I could trust to men, And crucified upon a tree, Peace is a memory I NOTE AND COMMENT. Ye Wily Editor. If we cannot get ads in New Denver we are sure of fresh eggs. The hens fly over the fence to roll on our lawn, and we have a nest set out back of the water barrel. New Denver (B. C.) Ledge. Yakima undertakers will bury you for 1 cent Send a stamp. This time Davenport won't be drawing on the old barn door. Pretty soon we shall be envying those Russians frozen in Lake Baikal. Even in their Summer gauziness women seem to measure the same around. Now and then a man gets so badly rat tled that his brains never stop jingling. Judge Parker says nothing, but the rasp of a'saw seems to echo from his vicinity. With President Parker in view, the Dem ocratic party Is minding its p's and pos sibly Its q's. Thirty handsome, buxom, well-to-do wid ows In Mllwaukle! Enough to make one turn Mormon. Even the crooks must smile to learn that a bunch of cockfighters were pulled In PInkerton's barn. Soon tho Manchurians will experience the last horrors of war: Russia Is about to Introduce military automobiles. The American Bishop of Hush I3 under arrest, but he need expect no sympathy from this Nation of breakfast-food eaters. The cocktails In the Kootenay Saloon, San don, do not carry any lead or zinc New Denver (B. C.) Ledge. Is this a knock or a boost? A Brooklyn family was recently In creased by twins. The landlord raised the rent 51 for each child. It looks as If popper has been whipsawed. A woman In Oregon City ha3 applied for a divorce because her husband compelled her to grub stumps. The reluctance of the modern woman to support her hus band is one of the most ominous signs of the times. It Is cheering to observe that the Rus sians have already selected the place where they will "deliver their crushing blow" to the Japanese. All we arc wait ing for now Is the announcement of excur sion rates on the Siberian Railway. The Board of Geographic Names should confine Its attention to new names and let the old ones go. What possible benefit could there be in changing Cle Elum to Clealum, as has been attempted? It would be better to change Seattle to Sealth, or some of the wild ways in which that old city's name Is spelled. Within a week or so The Americans have killed a "large" number of Cottas. The British have killed 300 Thibetans. The Dutch have killed 500 Achlnese. The Germans have killed 300 Herreros. Pretty soon the whole world will bo civ ilized. That is an apt suggestion made by the Brooklyn Eagle that falling Judge Par ker, the Democrats should nominate Ar thur Brisbane, the man behind the Hearst boom. If Hearst be considered worthy, much more should Brisbane. The only troublo Is that Brisbane seems to have brains, whatever may be thought of the way he uses them. Suppose a Japanese traveler should have witnessed Alderman Reinberg's campaign in Chicago, and have seen that candidate give flowers to all the churches In his ward, as well as a buttonhole to every res ident? Wouldn't he have thought Chicago tho home of a custom prettier even than any in his own Flowery Kingdom! The stranger might even have gone so far a3 to commend tho custom of America to his own countrymen at election time, little knowing that flowers took the place of beer on this occasion merely becauso Al derman Reinberg Is a florist by trade. The only good poetry is one-sided poetry. The poet must be hopelessly prejudiced, or he cannot write dope that Is worth read ing. Milton on the Piedmontese and Will lam Watson on the Boers or the Ameri cans are examples. Occasionally, however, tho result is comical. Edith Thomas comes out flat-footed in favor of Russia, saying, among other things: For lol thou hadst Peace In thy heart; her altar with honors had drest; Thy Prince, as her servant, had sought In her name through the East and the West; The Nations responded, confirming their faith with pledges and prayers. Thine was the sword In aheath thy bo3om no knowledge of perfidy bears; Covertly struck thy foe, ere yet was the watchword, "War!" Shame upon Japan for striking a coun try with Peace in her heart and less than half a million soldiers on her debatablo borders! WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. Tom Are you on the water wagon now? Dick No; but my milkman I3. Town Topics. "Weren't you happier when you were poor?" "Yes; but I'd rather be envied than snubbed." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Tommy-When was the Reign of Terror, Pa? Pa Last week, when the cook acted as If she was going to leave. Detroit Tribune. Mrs. Wlggs Cook has only broken one dls'i today, dear. Mr. Wlggs That'a better. Haw did that happen? Mrs. WIgss It was the hut one. Scraps. Office Boy I've got th toothache. Bookkeep erPooh! I've got rheumatism In both knees, a stiff neck and a headache. Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. Lady Caller But I thought children were net tolerated In these apartments? Hostess Ah, but you see, we named the baby after the Janitor. Town Topics. Larry I eent Maude a snake In alcohol fcr a Joke. Harry What did she do? Larry Ofc. she returned It In the same spirit In which It waa sent. Princeton Tiger. "Burroughs seems to consider himself tha 'glass of fashion.' " "Now that you mention It, there must be something glass about him. He's 00 easily broke." Philadelphia Ledger. "So you object to your colleague quotlns Shakespeare?" "Certainly," answered Scnatcr Sorghum. "Why should he advertise Shake speare? It ain't business." Washington Star. Mr. Sloman It's so strange that wo have no national flower. We certainly should havo one. Miss Walto (significantly) Yes; I think, the orange blossom would be nice. Philadel phia Press. Mistress We might have some spaghetti for lunch. Cook We have none in the houso. Mistress I thought I ordered some only last week. Cook You did, but tho coachman used 'em to clean his pipe. Cleveland Lead er. The Lady Dear me! How Is It when you big boys start fighting that poor little quiet fellow always gets hit? Tommy Tough Why, mum. we aro playing de Russians an' de Japs, an we make believe he's a Corean. Philadelphia Ledger. "Vacation? No, Indeed!" exclaimed Dr. Price-Price. "I can't afford to take one now. There are quite a number of ray patients who require constant nursing." "Oh! come now," replied the hard-headed man, "you'ro rich enough to let them get well." Phila delphia Public Ledger,