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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1904)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN. THURSDAY, 'APRIL' 21, 190 " U Sta. Entered at tho Postofflce at Portland, Or., as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br mall (postages prepaid In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, -with Sunday excepted, per year.. 7. CO Dally, with Sunday, per year 9.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 The Weekly, per year 1.30 The Weekly. 3 months -CO Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday exceoted.lSc Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper c 10 to 30-page paper ...s. 2c E2 to 44-page paper 3c Foreign rates double. The Orcgonlan does not buy poems or Btories from Individuals, and cannot undertake to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed tor this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckwltli Special Agency) Kew York: Rooms 43-40. Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms C10-512 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SAXJS. 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YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 54 deg.; minimum, 45. Precipitation, 0.48 Inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Probably fair; warm er; westerly winds. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1904. THE DEMOCRATIC FIREFIGHTERS. The Democratic party of Oregon, be holding itself as in a mirror, finds noth ing to condemn hut everything to praise. Such evil and mischief as may "be found abroad are the merest syno nyms for Republicanism; and no good thing exists in all the universe but was called into 'being, is still sustained and consciously looks to be preserved by the Democratic party. In view of the abiding Democratic faith in the com mon people, it is almost incredible that lor so long a time the common people have labored under the prepossession that the Nation's safety lies in the di rection of keeping the Democratic party out of power. But enough of generali ties. Let us come to the grounds, viz: We Insist that but a casual reading of the history of the past and observation of the present conditions should convince the peo ple that the Democratic party is the shield and buckler that must protect popular gov ernment from tho flres of Radicalism on the one side and the grasping greed of the money power upon tho other. We are inconsiderately left In doubt whether a thorough examination of his tory would confirm the Impression gained from a casual reading; but this Is not so striking as the Democratic attitude toward, the fires of Radicalism. Merely a casual reading of the plat forms of 189C and 1900, on the subjects of free silver, free riot, abolition of bank notes, etc., show how thoroughly Radicalism is abhorred of all true Dem ocrats. "With Tom Johnson's aggressive socialism in Ohio and Hill's demand for Government ownership of mines In. New Tork, the resolute Democratic stand against Radicalism is as plain as the reluctance of Mr. Bryan himself to stir up class hatred and disturb the exist ing Democratic harmony. Yet all this is nothing to the signal adaptability of the means the Demo crats offer for extinguishing the flres of Radicalism. In this dread conflagra tion the Democratic party offers itself as a shield and buckler. Now the ser viceability of the shield, the buckler, and especially the shield and buckler combined, in extinguishing flres of all descriptions is attested from a high an tiquity. It is recorded that when Rome was burning the legions at length put out the flres by fanning them with their shields; and Homer relates that ancient Troy was kept from destruction by the noble Hector, who cast into the flames a number of well-oiled leathern buck lers. It Is better that the Democrats should offer to put out the flres of Radicalism with leather and old iron instead of turning on the hose. That is, it is more honest. They will fight the fires of Radicalism just as hard as shields and bucklers will do it. And no harder. TRUE FRIENDS OF THE TICKET. And now it Is said that the Demo crats have hopes of defeating Mr. Lightner for County Commissioner. At flrst they were only going to elect the Sheriff. Then they advanced to the District Attorney. Then they claimed two or three places on the- Senatorial ticket Now they have embraced the Commlssionershlp also, and in a few days more they will announce an as sured victory for Clerk and Coroner. The trouble with the Democrats is they don't know when they have enough. For punishment they are per fect gluttons. At first they figured that by concentrating on one nominee for the State Senate they could beat the Republican low man. But why de feat only one when thej' can just as well defeat all? So there you hare a Senatorial ticket composed of four good men and true, each of which is a bet ter statesman and shiftier vote-getter than any of the rest. Now, it is perfectly clear that this growing comprehensiveness of the Dem ocratic ambition can only work mis chief to the Democratic cause. By spreading themselves out all over crea tion they will fail to accomplish what might be achieved through concentra tion. They want so much they may not get anything. Before they arrive at the feast they resolve to select one thing and make sure of It Once there, how ever, In sight of the festal board, appe tite overcomes discretion and they pick out every dish on the table. "We do not know how this growing Democratic programme will appeal to the Republican majority in this county, but it may at least cause Republicans to reflect upon the questionable wisdom of waiting for the Democrats to select a certain spot on the ticket for special assault and then assisting them to break It down. A blow at one plaoe on the ticket is felt all along the line. A very good way to meet this elective method of Democratlcyhxttack is to double up defenses at tj points men aced. Isn't it a good year to elect a complete ticket, for once, just to show what can be done? He Is not a very good Republican who works hard for the nominees that have a walkover and joins the Democrats In trying to defeat the man who has the hard row to hoe. Only the friend in need is the friend indeed. A VOICE OF THE NEW SOUTH. Henry "Watterson, whose lecture on "Abraham Lincoln" has just been deliv ered in Portland, has for many years been the ablest and most penetrating voice of what Is termed the "New South"; that Is, the South that has turned her back on the broken Idols of a civilization that was hopelessly shat tered by the Image-breaking hand of civil war, and bent her brains and heart bravely to the work of making the best of a new situation. Mr. "Wat terson was, of course, not the only able man at the South who refused to play the part of a morose political Bourbon and bltter-tongued Irreconcilable; but by his position as the Influential editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal he had a great pulpit to preach from and put In circulation his strong political com mon sense and manly eloquence. As a Southern man born and bred, as an ex Confederate he commanded the confi dence and respect of the Old South, and he has never hesitated to speak his mind with a frankness and fearlessness that the Old South would never have tolerated or heeded from a Northern journal. He has never hesitated to set his face against political quackery, whether It was practiced at the North or the South; he has always declined to "play to the galleries" in his public discourse, North or South. Northern men of ability are prone to indulge In this vice of political quack ery more than Southern men, and yet some gifted Southern men, like the late Henry Grady, of Georgia, have been prone to "play to the galleries" in talking to a New England audience; but Watterson has had the courage of his convictions, whether he spoke to Kentucky or Massachusetts. More than twenty-five years ago "Watterson treat ed with just contempt the popular pre tense that the battle of the Civil "War was the battle between a people of Cav allerancestryand a people of Cromwell ian forbears. He shotfed that even in Virginia there were very few families of Cavalier ancestry; that 95 per cent of the people who settled the North and who settled the South were of farmer or artisan ancestry; that the so-called Scotch-Irish who settled Maine, New Hampshire, "Western Penn sylvania, settled Virginia, the Caro linas, Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky and Arkansas. There were a few Hugue nots who settled in New Tork and the Carollnas; a few Swedes who settled in New Jersey; a few Germans who settled In Pennsylvania, and a few Dutch who settled in Manhattan Island, at Albany and along the valley of the Mohawk; but the great fighting forces of the war of the Revolution and of our Civil "War were on both sides. North and South, of Scotch-Irish ancestry. The names of our fighting men In the Revolution betray their origin, as do those of our Civil "War. This stupid historical, sentimental bubble Mr. "Wat terson pricked by saying bluntly that the Northern Yankee and the Southern man were of the same original stuff, tempered and colored, however, by a difference of social and political envi ronment Mr. Watterson's own hero, Lincoln, illustrates his argument If Lincoln had remained all his days in Kentucky, he would hardly have been a more radical anti-slavery man than the slaveholdlng Henry Clay; perhaps he would have been more conservative than Clay. If John C. Calhoun had emigrated with his family in his child hood from South Carolina to Illinois, It Is quite probable that he would have become, like Lincoln, an anti-slavery "Whig. Calhoun was as honest, as able and conscientious a man as Lincoln was, and it is quite probable that un der other than pro-slavery environment he would have been an anti-slavery man. Mr. "Watterson points out, to en force his argument of environment, the fact that the most resolute and unbend ing champions of the South and slavery were Northern born and bred men who did not settle In the South until they had reached manhood. This was true of Sargent S. Prentiss, of John Slidell and of Albert Pike. On the other hand, some of the most resolute champions of the North, whether soldiers or statesmen, were men of Southern birth and breeding, who, after reaching manhood, had en joyed exclusively Northern environ ment Mr. "Watterson more than twenty years ago punctured this nonsense about the quarrel of the South and the North having been nothing but the nat ural hereditary battle between Cavalier and Puritan civilization. He showed that there were few, if -any, Cavaliers even in Virginia; that the Scotch-Irish farmer and artisan ancestry was com mon to both sections. It overflowed from "Western Pennsylvania and Vir ginia into Kentucky, Tennessee, the Carollnas, Georgia and Alabama. The same stock settled up Arkansas. There was Frenph stock in Louisiana, and Oglethorpe settled some Highland stock In Georgia, but the vital fighting force on both sides in the Civil "War was of Scotch-Irish ancestry, farmers and artisans. The South had kept Its stock pure, unmixed with any subse quent stream of immigration; It had retained Its agricultural habits, and for thlB reason its stock was more war like; all its men and boys could shoot straight and ride fairly well. Mr. Watterson did history a service and he took some of the snobbery and conceit out of both sides by bluntly saying that with a mere change of so cial and political environment Lincoln might have been 'holding up the hands of Calhoun or Calhoun throwing up his hat for Lincoln. Mr. Watterson has done other good service. He has de nounced lynch law without qualifica tion; he has expressed his detestation of negro burnings and kindred barbari ties; he has denounced the fallacy and the fraud of cheap money In all Its forms; he "has spoken with ringing voice in favor of humanity and strict justice for all colors and conditions of human life. His voice has never been senti mental In Its accents, but It has always proclaimed that equal justice belongs to every man, not as a matter of privi lege, but as a birthright, like the air we breathe, like the right, as Lincoln said, of every man to eat In security f from molestation the bread he has hon estly earned by the sweat of his brow. Admiral Skrydloff, the new commander-in-chief of the Russian fleet in the East, has roughly outlined his plan of campaign in St Petersburg. It is his Intention, he declares, to preserve his ghips jealously "for some great occa sion." Admiral Skrydloff admits he has doubts that the Baltic fleet will arrive in Oriental waters in time to be of any use, for he thinks that the march of events will have rendered Its presence useless even before the ships are ready to sail. From these two statements it Is apparent that the new head of Rus sia's navy in the East gpes to his post convinced of his country's hopeless po sition upon the seas. His doubts re garding the value of the Baltic squad ron are probably based upon his knowl edge of the difficulties that await it on the journey. As a sailor, Admiral Skrydloff Is aware of the almost unsur mountable obstacle that more than 12, 000 knots interpose between Kronstadt and Port Arthur. Admiral Camara abandoned a similar voyage at Suez. The Russian Admiral' attempting It might reach Bizerta, but he would be lucky to get through the canal. When Admiral Skrydloff speaks of reserving his ships for a great occasion he prob ably contemplates a Japanese Invest ment of Port Arthur and the use of his fleet In a final struggle that will decide the fate of the fortress. TWO SOUTHWESTERN STATES. The purpose of the House Republic ans In passing the joint statehood bill admitting Arizona and Oklahoma is transparently partisan. They hope that Republican New Mexico will overcome Democratic Arizona, and that Repub licans so predominate in Oklahoma as to render Impossible any Democratic Representatives or Senators from Its union with Indian Territory. It is impossible to defend this action on high moral grounds; and yet In practice the injustice Is likely to be small. Arizona, for example, is Infi nitely better off as half a state than as no state at all; and It would be diffi cult to show that any material Interest of Its people will be neglected or In jured through the Republicans It will have to put up with at Washington. There must be three or four Repub licans, even In Arizona, physically ca pable of occupying seats at either end of the Capitol and thoughtfully en dowed by their creator with the gift of speech. Nothing is so bad in this world but it might be worse. If the Arizona people will take time and think it over calmly, they will likely discover that this greatly dreaded cloud has 'a lumin ous silver lining. The state will be di vided some day, as others have been. Life is full of awkward place's where we have to take what we can get. Equally In vain seem to us the pro tests of many excellent people against the admission of these territories in any form. The new State of Arizona will have some 320,000 people more than the population of Delaware, Idaho, -Montana, North Dakota, Utah or Wyoming, more. Indeed, than states like Colorado, Florida, Oregon and Rhode Island had In 1880. The population of Oklahoma will reach 700,000, and while these are not all Websters or Llncolns, yet num bers of them are as well qualified for suffrage as the slumdwellers -of New York City or the 907,000 blacks In Mis sissippi's total of 1,500,000. The census, indeed, tells us exactly how this mat ter stands; for It gives us the white males of voting age as follows: Arizona 34.011Indlan Territy. 77,805 New Mexico.... 50,804 Oklahoma ....101,543 Total 85,7151 Total 179,408 Now the fact Is that there are six states in the Union whose white males of voting age are fewer In number than those of the proposed State of Arizona, and thirteen states with fewer than those of the proposed State of Okla homa, thus: Delaware 45.502 Rhode Island.. 124.001 Florida 77.002 South Carolina. 180,375 Idaho 50,328 South Dakota. .107.353 Montana 04.873 Utah t... 05,205 Nevada 14.052 Vermont 108.027 North Dakota. 03,237 Wyomlns 30.2C2 Oregon 131.201 It would be easy to bring an equally hopeful deduction from the statistics of illiteracy, of children in school, of peo ple engaged in various Industries; for in all these things the new states if created will compare favorably with many others that regard themselves as the salt of the earth. There are more white babies In Oklahoma than In Maine, more farmers than In North Dakota. There are ten times the Illiter ate whites In Indiana that there are In Arizona, and fifteen times as many In Missouri as in .Oklahoma. There are more homes In the new State of Okla homa than In all Connecticut or Louisi ana, and there are more domestic ani mals there than In any one of thirty two other states In the Union. But the real test of the dangers feared Is, after all, in the acts that may be committed by Senators and Representatives In Congress Inimical to the, general peace, honor and safety. This is a line of demarcation where all the virtue and wisdom do not fall on the side of the great and wealthy states by any means. If Arizona and Okla homa add to our National eminence among the nations as New York has done with Hill, Murphy and Piatt, or Pennsylvania- with Quay and Penrose, or Maryland with Gorman and Welling ton, or Illinois with Mason, or South Carolina with Tillman, then the East and Middle West and South, at least, will have no cause of complaint. The man the farmers of the Southwest send to Congress will be the equal In patriot Ism of Cockran and In statesmanship of Hearst They will make their cities as pure as Philadelphia, Minneapolis and St Louis, and they will value the elective franchise as highly as it Is val ued in Delaware and Rhode Island. And when the Nation calls for men to bear its arms against a foreign foe, they will stand as firm as the Seventy-first New York in Cuba or the Massachusetts dudes in Porto Rico. The American Grocer estimates the total retail drink bill of the United States in the last fiscal year at 51,451, 633,379, or $160,000,000 more than the an nual average of the last five years. The average outlay for stimulants was $90.75 per family of five, or $18.15 per Individ ual. In twenty-three years the aver age quantity of stimulating beverages, notably alcoholic beverages, used has grown from 10.50 gallons to 19. 9S gal lons per citizen. Coffee, too has grown from 8.25 pounds per citizen In 18S1 to 10.79 pounds In 1903. Tea, however Is less used. As one-fourth of the popula tion uses alcoholic beverages, the aver age annual outlay of "drinkers" is $62.16 a large sum for tho Indulgence of a dangerous appetite. The propor tion of coffee to alcoholic drinks is as $2.61 to $15.54. The use of spirits stead ily Increases, being 1.46 gallons per cit izen in 1903, against 1.12 gallons between 1S94 and 1900. Prosperity seems to pro mote the use of stimulants. The cost of alcoholic drinks In 1903 was $1,242,943, 118; of coffee, $156,690,261; of tea, $45, 000,000; of cocoa, $7,000,000. As regards volume, the order Is different: Coffee, 1,566,902,614 gallons; beer, 1,449.879,952 gallons; tea, 450,000,000 gallons; spirits and wines, 157,130,628 gallons. The total alcoholic drink bill was $727,042,245 for beer, whisky (exclusive of that used In art) $417,915,513, wines $97,955360. The t Government's revenues from spirituous and malt liquors was $179,501,328 an average tax of $11.20 per family. "It is gratifying," says the Grocer, "to note that the milder stimulants are most In favor, but unfortunately represent a to tal business and exert an Influence in comparably less than that involved in the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages." It was not until the election of 1832, when Jackson was chosen a second time, that conventions were held for the nomination of candidates. In Sep tember, 1830, a National Convention of anti-Masons was held at Philadelphia, at which delegates from ten states and one territory were present It was then voted to hold a second National Con vention In Baltimore on the 26th of September, 1831, to be composed of dele gates chosen of people holding anti Masonic views, equaling In number the representatives in both houses of Con gress from each state, for the purpose of making nominations for the offices of President and Vice-President. The convention met and nominated William Wirt, of Maryland, for President The next National Convention was held in Baltimore on December 12, 1S31, when Henry Clay was nominated as the can didate of the National Republican or anti-Jackson party. Six states were un represented in this convention. It adopted no resolutions, but issued an address to the people -severely criticis ing the Jackson Administration. By recommendation of this convention a National Assembly of young men met at Washington in May, 1S32, and adopt ed a series of resolutions, the flrst plat form ever adopted by a National Con vention. The Democrats also met In convention for the same election May 21, 1832. Every state but Missouri was represented. The two-thirds rule was adopted, and Martin Van Buren was nominated for Vice-President Jackson was renominated for President by ac clamation. The Interest of the French people In the success of Russia In the present war is very intelligible, apart from the Russo-French alliance, when It Is con sidered how much French money is in vested in Russia. According to the re port of our Consul at Frankfort, Ger many the French hold $1,158,000,000 of Russian government bonds, the value of which would be greatly impaired by defeat In the Far East The recent panic at Paris gave holders of Russian securities a foretaste of the disaster that would follow Russia's exhaustion. Besides government bonds, the French have $169,000,000 Invested In Industrial, banking, mercantile and other enter prises in Russia, all of which would be Injured by national misfortune, the to tal of French Interests in Russia amounting to $1,334,800,000. For years Russia has been paying interest on her borrowings out of the sums borrowed. This cannot be kept up If defeat causes Russia's prestige to be seriously Im paired. Germany also has a large in terest In, Russia's solvency, .the hold ings of Russian bonds In the Fatherland being very considerable, though by no means equal to those of France. These Investments represent Influences that may some time be enlisted to bring the war to a close, If It promises to last very long. The military correspondent of the London Times thinks the Japanese are about to commit a great blunder by an invasion of Manchuria with Harbin as Its destination. It will not be easy to credit this assumption that Japan will be guilty of so serious a mistake In strategy, and the fact that Japan keeps pounding away at Port Arthur would, justify the conclusion that she seeks by its capture to secure control of the Llao Tung Peninsula and to use her sea power to the best advantage. Holding Port Arthur and the Corean Peninsula, Japan might possibly resist the impact of the Russian army of assault and In vasion, but to attempt to push an army to Harbin, which is some 400 miles dis tant from either Wlju, on the Corean Peninsula, or Nlu Chwang, would mean an abandonment of the advantage of a near marine base for a long line of dif ficult land communications. Of course. If Harbin falls, Vladivostok cannot hold out; but even should Harbin fall, the Russians would only have to fall back to some point east of Lake Baikal and organize a succession of fresh armies. The chances are, however, that the Jap anese would find Harbin a Moscow and be obliged to withdraw In ruinous de feat The directors of the Open-AIr Sana torium for Consumptives, to be estab lished on some eminence near Portland, are now ready to receive subscriptions. All necessary legal steps have been taken to acquire property and the di rectors will select officers at an early day. It Is proposed to raise $5000 for the flrst building. When $3000 Is subscribed the work will proceed. The sanatorium commends Itself to every lover of his race. Its mission Is to aid patients in the early stages of tuberculosis, to fur nish a comfortable abode for those toward whom the hand of death Is stretched, and to protect those In health from contact with the dread disease. The very high personal and profes sional character of the men and women who have volunteered to manage the institution Is sufficient guarantee of skillful supervision and economical and honest administration. Subscriptions may be made by mail or in person to Mr. A. L. Mills, Dr. Wood3 Hutchin son or Dr. Andrew C. Smith. In no form of charitable endeavor has Port land ever been found wanting, and The Oregonian has no doubt that the fund needed for the sanatorium will speed ily be subscribed. The Burlington & Qulncy affair has turned out a Frankenstein whose mischievous activ ities have nowhere had more deplorable con sequences than for its authors. New Tork Evening- Post. Frankenstein was the student, not his contrivance. It is a pity the Post Itself made this error, for now we shall be de prived of the fine exhibit In scorn It would have given In showing up the un pardonable offender. Attention is called to the article on direct primaries reprinted in another column from the Chicago Tribune. The conservative and prudent policy of the Tribune lends to this utterance a weight of Influence that cannot be dis regarded. It .discusses the objections to direct primaries along lines that must have occurred to all thoughtful men. The flrst number of the Blnghamton (N. Y.) Press Is Issued with every pros pect of continuing success. Willis Sharpe Kilmer, the publisher, is a man equally prominent in newspaper circles and In other business affairs, and the combination of editorial and business ability In the proprietor should insure for the Pres3 a permanent success. OBJECTIONS TO DIRECT PRIMARIES Chicago Tribune. The peripatetic picnics which have been chasing the Gubernatorial candidates of Illinois from county to county for the last three months have massed their conservative political sagacity against that dangerous and oven seditious Inno vation, the direct primary. Any direct primary law passed by the Hllnol3 State Legislature would probably contain the provision that all state primaries should be held on the same day. Thl3 provision would not only bo a repudiation of the wisdom of our forefathers, but would amount to a confiscation of property without due process of law. The gentle men who are always among those pres ent at the peripatetic picnics would find their means of livelihood suddenly with drawn from them. Today they form one of the most Industrious and contented elements in the whole population. They move across the Illinois scrub with as much expedition and &s much enthusiasm as the soldiers showed in the Philippines. The Central Committee of each county fixes tho day on which that county shall elect delegates to tho State Convention. There are seldom any unfortunate coin cidences. The political picnicker, hiring himself out to one of the candidates and securing the concession of a political pink lemonade stand, Is able in the course of tho campaign to visit almost every county in the state and to assist the natives in choosing their political bev erages. Sometimes tho picnickers are the only people who know just when con vention day Is coming. Tho natives are kept in Ignorance until suddenly the bell for tho last call Is rung. This prevents tho natives from ruining their business by an excessive attention to politics. It also assists the picnickers to become the vocal chords for tho hesitating voice of the people. If primaries were held throughout the state on tho same day the people, except In some one county where the picnickers might congregate, would have no imported vocal chords and would experience great difficulty In uttering their sentiments. The People Instead of the Boss. Shoulder to shoulder with the picnick ers who believe that a consolidation of primaries would restrict employment and deprive the people of a great deal of ambulatory political wisdom stand the city machine politicians who believe that If the peoplo voted for candidates In stead of for delegates there would bo no opportunity for the machine to Instruct the party in its choice of leaders. There would be no convention. There would be no chance- to give the delegates an edu cation In political principles. The people would do all the nominating themselves. In the Sixth Ward In the last election the will of the people in the nomination of a Republican candidate for Alderman was frustrated by tho superior intelligence of Mr. Jamleson and of Mr. Braden. Read ers of the Tribune will remember that when the Republican primaries were held in the Sixth ward the Tribune warned the voters against sending delegates to the ward convention unlnstructed. The Tribune's apprehensions received full justification from subsequent events. The unlnstructed delegates went to the con vention and wero completer overcome by the thought waves emanating from the organization. In primary districts whero the people had produced their own thought waves and had given their dele gates specific instructions it appeared that the popular choice for Alderman was Holland. Tho unlnstructed delegates, being relieved of all obligations to the people, voted for RIngor. Ringer was nominated. Under a direct primary system this defeat of the vl3hes nf tho people could not have been accomplished. What Kind of Change Is Coming? Down on the South Side there is a Direct Primary Club, which for some years has carried its primary district agrinst Mr. Jamleson mainly on. the di rect primary issue. Thi3 club is in line with the general direct primary move ment which seems to be headed In Illi nois toward the accomplishment of two reforms. First In certain elections, o. g those for Alderman, the Republican or Democrat who goes to 'the primaries shall vote not for convention delegates but directly for party candidates. Second, the primaries for any given election shall all take place on the same day. Are these reforms practicable? Here Is a question which must be Included In any forecast of Illinois political weather. It is on the horizon in a shape already as large as a man's hand, and It seems likely to grow. Tho present Guberna torial campaign has proved the absurdity of making the county conventions a kind of grand circuit for political touts. Re cent Chicago elections have proved with equal force the equal absurdity of sup posing that ward conventions supplement the wisdom of the peoplo with anything but Intrigue and chicanery. The people are likely to demand a change. Just what that change will be and Just haw far it will go cannot be foreseen until the discussion of it ha3 become more clearly crystallized. But this at least is certain: The people are making up their minds that neither by tho device of stringing county conventions through half tho calendar of election year nor by the dovlce of herding irresponsible dele gates in conventions of any kind shall the popular choice of candidates be turned into a Constitutional fiction. Judicial Lobbyists. Boston Advertiser. Judges of the New York courts have demonstrated their ability to play the part of lobbyists when the occasion demands. The bill to pension all members of the judiciary when they have reached 70 or have been compelled to retire at the age of 65 owing to physical disability, has passed. The Judges suspended sittings of court In order to buttonhole Assembly men and Senators Such an unjudicial and undignified practice would be a vindica tion of professional ethics In this state. Yet in New York those who were the most active In lobbying are complimented as shrewd men. Hearst In Kansas. Kansas City Star. The Heartst forces have been utterly routed in the Wichita convention. There are always some men in politics who can be approached through the methods em ployed by Hearst, but they are neither numerous enough nor influential enough In Kansas to control a party In that state. And when It comes to importing boomers to take charge of a convention Kansas draws the line. If there Is one place on earth where the politicians want to run their own affairs It Is Kansas. Dirge of the Unpronounceables. Wallace Irwin. I can't pronounco his Russian name. But hlB deeds full well I know. The general who bled for fame Before his country's altar flame And fell at So-and-So; Tet I will praise, whate'er befall lt Brave What's-HIs-Name of What-You-Calllt. Ho led his troops to You-Know-Where. Twelve versts along the border. "Brave Umpty-TJmp. the Jap. stands there Get ready for to do and dare!" Out poured his fearless order. Then Death descended like a mallet Round What's-HIs-Name of What-You-Calllt. The hordes of Umpty-TJmp stood pat. All ready for the hablc. Till General Something, fierce and fat. Stood rorth and thundered, "Thls-and-Thatl" In pure but forceful Slavic. Just then a dreadful cannon ball It Struck What's-HIs-Name of What-You-Calllt. 'They burled noble What's-HIs-Name Far leagues from war's percussion. And on his tomb they chiseled "Fame" And Something Else. (It Is a shame I never studied Russian.) His deed Is done, but after all it la not forgot at What-TQu-CalUt. . COL. WATTERSON ON HEARST. Louisville Courier-Journal. It was safe to assume that the nomi nation could not be bought, like a bill of goods, directly out of hand but in case it could be, as the result of mori bund party conditions an election was out of the question. In the end, Mr. Hearst would have both the outlay and the discredit for his pains, Under the circumstances surrounding him, there fore, what would a sane man, having a fortune and a seat in Congress, but no record in public life that might be clealy called his own, proceed to do to give his unusual opportunities their best fruition? Assuredly, he would not an nounce himself a candidate for Presi dent of the United States?, and, Instead of taking the field himself, sent out a body of fiscal agents to buy up tho va rious state delegations to the National Convention. He would not make pub lic proclamation of his purpose. He would not put his bar'l on exhibition. Such things indicate the workings of an unsound mind, if not a depraved na ture, and those who knew the father and mother of this young man, refuse to believe the son of George and Phebe Hearst Is pervert. Yet In pursuing these phantoms of a disordered fancy, he de liberately invokes tho rays of a search light Into matters, which, however de fensible may be the facts, cannot be explained without that which a sensi tive and sane man would regard in many ways humiliating. There is bound to be a screw loose somewhere. The Hearst newspapers, in spite of their, grotesque features, havo been conducted with a certain logical, if rep rehensible force. They preach a cer tain consistent gospel and sometimes they preach it with eloquence and pow er. Unfortunately for Mr. Hearst's pretentions, this gospel Is not Democ racy. It is Socialism. How much Mr. Hearsthas to do with tho actual edit ing, the thinking and the writing, ' no body can tell because nobody is per mitted to know Mr. Hearst He is per sonally a stranger on the floor of the House of which he is a member. He is personally a stranger to the social life and in the busy marts of the city which he calls his home. He has no official training in public affairs; no visible aptitude for political Intercourse; no distinct individuality outside his check book. That such a man should propose himself for President of the United States and spend great sums of money in the work of organizing a campaign resting solely upon money, can be if not the shrewd advertising scheme of a Barnum or a Munyon the emanation of a distempered mind. Such a bubblo was bound to burst Every one must see that It has burst The Courier-Journal, which has only good will, certainly no ill will, for Mr. Hearst, was not at the outset impressed by a movement of whose impendency it had been long advised, and, as it has progressed, we have seen no reason to change our opinion with regard to it It never had any real vitality. At one time it looked as though by the aid of Mr. Hearst's money, Mr. Bryan might be able to secure a third of the convention. The most sanguine friends of tho Ne braskan began to realize that this hope is now quite dissipated. If Mr. Hearst'3 name goes before the convention and he gets more than a hundred votes we shall be greatly surprised. A vote for Mr. Hearst Implies too much and will prove too retroactive to tempt many even of the more insensible and mercenary of those who are In politics for what they expect of its emoluments; because no one can give an intelligent reason why ho favors such an aspirant for such a place except that he has his money in his pocket Hill's Egregious Altruism. New York Globe. Mr. Hill thus discloses himself as a Northwestern patriot of tho purest quality, and shows that thought of mak ing money for himself and his stock holders was a motive in his mind sub ordinate to a larger altruistic one. What ever may be true concerning other largo operators, Mr. Hill Is free from guile and greed, and is a humble worker In the vineyard of Northwestern advantage. The spectacle of such extraordinary un selfishness In such an unexpected quarter Is calculated to move even the most cynical. Now that the Northwest is in formed that Mr. Hill Is a veritable Horatius at the bridge, and that if he Is overthrown Harriman and his allies will sack the region, doubtless tho good peoples thereof will abate their anti-Hill prejudices and join with him In creating a public opinion which may reach and control the courts. He has identified their cause with his own, and if they permit the railroad properties which ho has sought to band together for their w'elfare to fall Into other and ravening hands, it cannot be said hereafter he did not give due warning. How to Honor Jefferson. Chicago Chronicle. The best way to have celebrated Jeffer son's birthday here and elsewhere was to have encouraged orators whose minds and hearts are full of the subject to say what every Democrat In the country knows to be the truth, that tho best, the quickest and the surest way to restore the Democratic party In its integrity is to call to Its leadership the one man. who, as a candidate, would put an end to the miserable cowardice which has stricken the party like a plague. Grover Cleveland Is the strongest Democrat in the country today because he stands for something. A party that nominates him must stand for something. Ho would rally to tho Democratic standard every real Democrat In the land and a million of Independent Republicans besides. What Is of even more Importance, he would drlvo off forever the small mercenary and disreputable factionlsts whose impotent threats appear to have made nearly every other Democrat in the country speechless. Burton and the Senate,, Hartford Times. Two days, at the most. Is a sufficient tlmo for him to hand In his resignation. If he delays action he should bo expelled without further ceremony. If the Kan sas man is too dullmlnded to perceive his own duty in his present situation, he should have no further consideration from the members of the body wtibse honor he has abused. a Bryan's Unlucky Number. Boston Herald. Bryan will begin to think that $50,800 Is his unlucky number. He twice tried to obtain a position that carries that sal ary and failed. The Tiger. William Blake. Tiger. Tiger, burning bright. In the forests of the night. What Immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? In what distant deeps or fikles Burned the Arc of thine eyes? On what wings dare he aspire? What the hand dare seize the Are? And what shoulder, and what art. Could twist the sinews of thy heart? And when thy heart began to beat. What dread band formed thy dread feet? What the hammer? what the chain? In what furnace was thy brain? What the anvil? What dread grasp Dare Its deadly terrors clasp? When the stars threw down their epear3, And watered heaven with their tears. Did He smile His work to see? Did He who made the lamb make thee? Tiger. Tiger, burning bright. In the forests of the night, . What Immortal hand or eye Dare frama thy fearful symmetry? "" NOTE AND COMMENT. Smoot gets a J. A. R. from the D. A. R. The wireless telegraph systems seem to be tripping most all the governments. Quite a number of citizens will discover they have business at Vaughn and Twenty-third today. Japan will have to capture Port Arthur outright If she wants to attract any at tention in Portland today. There may be forgiveness for the man that murders or steals, but none for the man that call a dog "a canine." Joe Chamberlain was greeted with cries of "pig tail" by the Irish party. It is a point on which the honorable members are authorities. They were having a lovers' quarrel. "You are false," she hissed; "false as as the bottom of a strawberry box." Both knew the last word had been said. Admiral Skrydloff says that his visiting cards bear two addresses Port Arthur and Vladivostok. He will try to bo at home In whichever piace the Japs call. Why wouldn't it be a good thing for the Rus sians to place a whistling buoy over each of their mines? Seattle Poat-Intelllgencer. Skrydloff might try Hearst as a whis tling boy. Russia had a fine squadron at Port Ar thur. She has a fine squadron in the Bal tic. If sho sends the latter abroad, the past tense will have to be employed twice. At last the police had found a clew. "You may expect an arrest within 24 hours," they said. However, they had In mind the circumstance that 24 hours occur every day. There Is something smug about Carno gle's statement that his "hero fund" is now his "favorite philanthropy." It sounds something like a man's talking about hl3 favorite food. Rena Johnson died a few days ago in Sioux Falls, as the result of a piece of bologna lodging in her throat. Pretty hard luck that a girl friendly enough to eat bologna should bo choked by It. After one Senator had been gloriously vindicated and another sent to Jail, tho latter made moan, says the New York World. "I acknowledge my error," he ad mitted. "There can be no doubt that I hired the wrong lawyers." Having thrown a bomb, an anarchist was asked to give a reason for hl3 act "The bomb was about to explode," he ex plained. "Would you expect me to hold It and lose my fingers?" Manifestly the an archistic mind Is not wholly wanting In logic. , The most derided poet should tako heart. The worso he is, the more likely Is he to be quoted in Congress by a member who has to deliver a eulogy of some departed colleague. And the de spised poet's words, desiccated In the Congressional Record, may outlive tho "purple - patches" of those whose horns are exalted by the critics. Prince Pu Lun is making a good start in his study of America. Soon after land ing In San Francisco, his anxious host took him behind the scenes at tho theater where Anna Held was playing. Pu In stantly bocamo an admirer of th6 plump and pulchritudinous show girl, and we may presume that his illustrious course across the continent will be heralded by the popping of champagne and marked by "dead soldiers." When Pu goes home he will Include in his book a chapter on the American girl, based on his experiences behind the scenes. "The American Girl," he will say, "in the evening dresses In pink tights and paint She drinks nothing but fizz and is very fond of Princes and other lobsters." And Pu will probably be no more astray than some American travelers that havo descanted upon Jap anese women after ten minutes talk with a geisha. Tho Gem, which sparkles In the town of Granite, in the County of Grant, appeared last week printed on wall paper of chasto design. Faithless trains failed to bring sufficient white paper for the Gem's use. and the resourceful editor bought up the town's stock of wall paper. As but one side of tho paper was used, the. green and gold and silver flowers and scrolls shone In undiminished splendor, so that the sub scriber might obtain the news of the day from his Gem and then use it to decorate his room. Tho purchase of a few extra copies would have provided enough paper for tho wais of the best room in the house. There might be an Idea in this for publishers. Announce that the Dally Whirligig will bo printed on wall paper of exclusive design, and that a subscrip tion for thre months will furnish material enough to cover the walls of an ordinary house. No wastel Follow the war and beautify your homo! Look at our pic tures and turn their faces to tho wall! But one would bo In a dilemma If it be camo necessary to consult the files. A hole would havo to be scraped through the wall from the opposite side, or the appearance of the room must be ruined. On second thought therefore, it seems advisable to buy newspapers and wall paper from separate firms. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. "This tusk." said the Jersey commuter, "I dug up in my garden. It's all of four feet long. Remarkable, Isn't it?" "Yes. It's very probably the bill of a prehistoric mosquito." Philadelphia Ledger. Deacon Jones In that better land I fully be lieve there will be no classes, but all will be on the same level. Mrs. NIf tie Mercy. Don't you think that would be perfectly disgusting? Nobody to look down upon? Boston Transcript. Sho (bored) No, Mr. Lytely, I can never love you. I honor and respect you. I am sure you would make some other woman a good hus band. I He Well er give me a letter of recommendation to my next place? Tlt-Blts. "Pshaw!" she exclaimed, impatiently, "I'm sure we'll miss the flrst act. "We've waited a good many minutes for that mother of mine." "Hours, I should say," he retorted, rather crossly. "Ours? Oh. George!" she cried, and laid her blushing cheek upon his shirt front. Philadelphia Press. "That was a splendid back fall you made In your death scene last night." re marked a young member of the company to the eminent tragedian. The latter looked at the flatterer with a suspicious glare, "res," he said, "and I'd like to lay my hands on the blithering Idiot who soaped the stage floor." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Have you ever heard Brown tell about the time he got half way up Mont Blanc with one of his little nephews and no guldo?" asked one man of another. "How long ago did he tell you about It?" was the evasive reply. ".Last October, when he'd Just got home," safd the flrst man "Well," said the other. "In the Ave months since then he has climbed the rest of the way, succored a fainting guide and sus tained a snowstorm on the summit, accumu lated two benumbed strangers on the way down, and guided tho whole party to tho foot, where a group of frantic relatives wera waiting." Tlt-Bltr