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YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 54 deg.; minimum, 42. Precipitation, O.06 Inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and warmer; northwest winds. PORTLAND. SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1904. PROHIBITION AGAIN. No person Is bound In morals, or should be forbidden by law, to abstain from the reasonable and proper use of a thing because some other person may abuse it To attempt such prohibition Is exercise of a meddlesome and tyran nical spirit. Here is the just basis of opposition to all prohibitory liquor laws. The attempt may be disguised by the statement that sale only is to be pro hibited, but this is disingenuous and in sincere. The object is to prevent pur chase and use, by forbidding sale. It proposes to make a crime, by law, that which is no crime in fact; to "regulate" and constrain the citizen as to the hab its of his personal, private and social life. Including those of his table; to sub ject to espionage and intrusion, and even to break open, his house on sus picion of enemies, intermeddlers and fanatics, and in general to Inaugurate and maintain an eternal war against the privacy, peace and liberty of the citizen. Such is the prohibitory law. It as sumes further that the citizen is In competent to direct his own life, amdng his friends or at his table, and that government must do it for him. It as sumes that since now and then some few, of unrestrained appetite, get drunk, liquors therefore ought not to be procurable at all by anybody; and it proposes extreme measures to make it impossible to get them. At present prohibition, rejected some years ago by the people of Oregon by a tremendous majority, Is proposed and urged, in the guise of a drastic local option law. Now, of course, if nobody in a community wants to buy liquors none will be sold there; and "local option" enforces itself. Nobody is go ing to offer any commodity in a place where there Is no demand, or but very slight demand, for it But this bill pro poses that whenever ten per cent of the voters of any county or precinct In the state, or any subdivision thereof, shall file with the County Clerk a peti tion calling for a vote, the County Court must order an election to be held to determine whether prohibition shall be adopted in that county, precinct or subdivision, or not This would enable the prohibitionists to call an election in any precinct every year, or indeed many times each year. But if the elec tion result In favor of prohibition In any precinct or subdivision of a county, no election can be held in that precinct again for at least two years, except an election for the entire county, and when a county has declared for prohibition no election on this question can be held in any precinct of the county there after, until prohibition shall have been defeated subsequently in an election held for the entire county. All these are one-sided provisions. Prohibition, in these ways, by sub divisions, differs not at all in principle from prohibition by the state at large. The fundamental objection to all pro hibitory laws is the assumption that the state must be called in to take charge of the personal conduct of the citizen. It proposes to cut out the principle of in dividual self-government and individual responsibility, and to govern the people after the fashion of the United States in dealing with the Indians that Is, It proposes to surround us all with the limitations of the Indian reservation system, and to put intermeddling, self appointed "reformers," and Informers, in authority and control censors of morals and conduct as the agents of the Government The central idea of personal self government, founded In Nature and confirmed by experience, builds on the development of the Individual man. It puts him on his own responsibility and gives his personality a meaning. It does not regard him as a ward of the Government, but as an Individual, re sponsible man. This idea of self-government, as embodied in our political and social system, follows the method of the highest religious teaching, which also puts man on his own responsibility and makes the appeal to his reason and to his conscience that is, to the person ality of the man the instrument of his moral growth and the agency of his regeneration. In the domain of pri vate morals and personal conduct this is the only right method. The social and political principle of self-government and the religious principle of man's personal accountability, are alike perverted by the sophistical effort to coerce personal conduct through public law, under pretense of promoting mor ality and religion. Man must be shown for himself, through precept and ex perience, what will promote his own personal well-being; and that class of our "reformers" who are continually attempting to effect the regeneration or redemption of mankind by putting j3tatutoryenactmeats into the constitu- s tion of society, instead of helping man f to put amendments into his own con stitution, are as disloyal to the leading principle on which true moral reform must be pushed as to the political Idea of self-government, which also depends on sense of personal responsibility. It is an error Into which men of practical judgment do not fall. The Oregonlan does not question the sincerity of the effort; and yet it must say that among eminent thinkers in either hemisphere prohibition has no advocates. It Is a moral and political mistake, not less mischievous because it is sincere. It Is probable that this prohibition proposal will get a majority in several counties, and no doubt in some whose leading agricultural Interest Is hop growing. These counties should destroy their hopyards. Of course, the prohibi tion hopgrower, as a conscientious man, will see his duty and act upon it He will not continue to furnish material for manufacture of "the dark beverage of hell." "Do you pretend to say," demands the prohibitionist, "that the prosperity of the state depends on the liquor business? Do you Dretend to say that the liquor business is so great an inter-- est that destruction of It would seri ously Injure the prosperity of the state?" It is not asserted that -the liquor busi ness is an Interest of so great magni tude, in itself, as to be indispensable to the progress and prosperity of the state. It is widely correlated, however, with other lines of business, and with various agricultural and manufacturing industries. Yet this is not the essential point It Is chiefly the animus of pro hibition, the spirit that makes it, that does Injury to a community. It is the narrow, meddlesome, fanatical and In quisitorial spirit that stands behind prohibition, that so many detest. They want no espionage by officials and spies; they wish to be free from the an noyance and insult of domiciliary visit ation, and from the bitter and ceaseless contention which prevails wherever prohibitory laws prevail. No state can afford to lose this great class, of peo ple; no state can afford to say that it does not want such class to come and live within It This Is one reason why our prohibition states are unprogres sive as Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. The liquor traffic everywhere re quires regulations peculiarly fitted for It So does traffic in many other com modities. Manufacture and sale of liquors are specially adapted, more over, to taxation, and the revenue to the United States and to the states is Immense, Loss of it, were such loss possible, would paralyze government National and municipal, wipe out great manufacturing enterprises, cut off a vast market for agricultural products and seriously hurt the Interests of transportation. But It cannot be sup posed that practical considerations like these will have weight with those who have their fixed idea of prohibition any more than practical considerations had weight with those who got the fixed idea of silver propagandlsm. OUR GOOD BARGAIN AT PANAMA. The dispatches leave little room to doubt thatMr. J. P. Morgan has gone over to Paris to superintend personally the transfer of $40,000,000 from the Gov ernment of the United States to the Panama Canal Company. He is easily the best man for the job, and his selec tion is in keeping with the whole vig orous and businesslike policy of the Administration in advancing the canal project without unncessary delay. Democrats who feel Inclined to sneer at the Administration's choice of the first banker in the land for a banking er rand, instead of a blacksmith or a shoe maker, may with profit reflect upon the act of Grover Cleveland In negotiating the celebrated bond sale to Mr. Morgan In the dark days of 1894. The payment of $40,000,000, even in these days of large transactions, might easily be so badly managed as to cre ate serious disturbance in the money markets of two hemispheres. Under Mr. Morgan's careful handling this peril will be avoided. The safety of the funds will also be secured by the reten tion of their ownership in the United States until the moment of their trans fer In the Bank of France. All these precautions are in line with the policy of care with which the canal negotia tions have been conducted. Although speed has been such as to scandalize the Democrats and canal opponents, yet every step has been taken with circum spection. The United States has in reality driven a very good bargain, and the title obtained Is fortified In advance by the decision of the French courts. What we get for this $40,000,000 Is con siderable. The property turned over In cludes 30,000 acres of land, about 2500 buildings, a quantity of machinery, maps, drawings and records, and a con trolling 'interest in the Panama Rail road Company. But the price paid rep resents mainly the value of the excava tion already accomplished by the com-i pany or its predecessor, the old Panama Company, of which It Is the heir. The Isthmian Canal Comnilsslon, appointed in 1899, estimated the value of the ex cavation work at $27,474,033, the value of the railroad stock at $J5,S50,OO0, and the Value of the maps, drawings and records at $2,000,000. To the total of $36,324,033 the addition of the customary 10 per cent to cover omissions brought the price for the property tip to $40, 000,000. The commission made no allow ance for the buildings, for the land which the company held, or for the machinery, but as the land Is compara tively valueless and as the buildings and machinery are in a rickety condi tion the canal company was satisfied to consider them covered by the 10 per cent set aside for omissions. "With the payment of this $40,000,000, or perhaps more strictly, with the pas sage of title already consummated, the Panama Canai Company will virtually cease to exist It has been bankrupt since 18S9. When the money payable by the United States is received in Paris and distributed among the stockholders, the dissolution of the company must speedily -follow. In spite of the scan dals that have become part of its his tory, the company laid upon the Isth mus of Panama a foundation for canal construction which should be worth considerably more to us than the price we have agreed to pay for it The French surveys and plans will be some what modified by our own engineers, but the main features of the completed canal will embody French ideas. The debt of this country and of the world to De Lesseps, a debt already great through the opening of a connecting waterway between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, will be Immeas urably Increased by the ditching of the Isthmus of Panama and the joining of the Caribbean and the Pacific on the lines laid down by him. The transfer of the canal to American hands is a recognition of our hegemony In this hemisphere, but It is quite as pertinent in testifying to the passage of financial preponderance from France to the United States. IMAGINARY TIIILIPPrNE DIFFICULTIES. Another curious attempt to straddle the Philippine question Is made by the Chicago Record-Herald in these lines: The sovereignty of the Islands Is actually reposed In the voting population of the United State?, which acta In Its own affairs as a democracy. And while this electorate la very jealous of Its own rights, much alive to Its own Interests, and thoroughly well Informed on the subjects that Immediately concern It. there Is no prospect that It can ever fully compre hend a strange people removed from It by thousands of miles. In other words. If the Filipinos are generally Ignorant from lack of schools; we, their governors, are now and aro destined to be exceptionally ignorant as re gards them from lack of contact and lack of racial sympathy. In a determination to find some fair and just position between the unquali fied, indefinite retention of the Philip pines and the cantankerous mood of the antls, the Record-Herald has fallen into some specious and mischievous fal lacies. The difference sought to be established between the Democracy here at home and a colonial regime in the Philippines does not, as a matter of fact, exist We do not act as a democracy in our "own affairs," but as a representative government The peo ple know just as much about Philip pine administration as they know about the diplomatic, fiscal or military under standings at Washington, and partici pate quite as directly "in them. That is to say, they delegate their powers to men in whom they have confidence and whom they approve or reject at every succeeding election. Governor Taf t was carrying out the will of the American people as directly and faithfully at Ma nila as Secretary Taft is now doing at Washington. There is Infinite confusion about the difficulties of distance, race, etc., Im posed upon us in our Philippine admin istration. What does distance, for ex ample, really sfgnify? We are in close connection with the islands by cable, we are within three weeks of them by steam, and our representatives, civil and military, are there to execute or ders as promptly and effectively as if they were in Alaska or Porto Rico or even in Arizona. How little distance signifies may be gathered from the fact that less than half a century ago Ore gon Territory was administered from Washington when the shortest time It could be reached was six months. But the Filipinos are "a strange peo ple!" Then no tropic races, not English-speaking, can be administered by Great Britain or the United States. Then the whole theory of control of the tropics by effective civilizations must fall to the ground. But this will not occur. The only hope of backward regions like the Philippines, India, Africa and South America lies in their intelligent and just administration by self-governing Northern races, combin ing industrial leadership with the sense of moral accountability. This must be done, as It has been done, in spite of superficial obstacles of language, color and temperament The answer to fears of distance and strangeness is supplied In the present condition of the Philip pines, compared with their unhappy plight under nearly four hundred years of Spanish tyranny-, and native an archy. CAMPAIGN FORECASTS. The Washington correspondent of the New York Evening Post reports that "sagacious Republican leaders, wholly desirous of their party's success pri vately express the opinion that If Par ker should be nominated he will give" Roosevelt a very close run." The cor respondent of the Post, however does not share in the opinion that the Re publican party "may be on the edge of a volcanic eruption just as It was In 1S92." The elements are different today from those that existed In 1S92. Presi dent Roosevelt has a vastly stronger hold upon the public, West and East, than had Benjamin Harrison, and the Democrats could not name today a can didate of the strength with which Mr. Cleveland entered the campaign of 1892. There Is no indication today of a great political overturn which has always been foreshadowed by the steadily growing vigor of the opposition. In 1876, when the Republican party would have been beaten severely had It not been for the presence of Federal bayo nets in South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana, defeat was foreshadowed by Democratic victories in Republican states like Massachusetts In 1874; by the capture of the House of Represent atives by the Democrats. The signs of a great reaction against the Republican party were so many In the elections of 1874 that Republican defeat was freely predicted in the Pres idential campaign of 1876 by the most sagacious Republican leaders of the party In the Empire State. In the Presidential campaign of 1876 the vic tory of Tllden was predicted in New York State by the strongest champions of Hayes, and had there been no "bayo net rule" at the South, Tllden would have won. There were ominous signs of Impending defeat when Blaine was nominated In 18S4. The Democracy had captured the House in 1882, just as they Mad in 1S74, preceding the Presidential election of 1876; the Republicans had lost heavily in the state elections pre ceding the Presidential election of 1SS4, even as they had In 1874. Several of the strongest and ablest leaders of the Republican party were disaffected toward Blaine, like Conkling, Edmunds and Curtis. The leaders of the "Inde pendent vote" In New York State, who had supported Garfield heartily, were bitterly opposed to Blaine. Defeat was in the air In 1884, for dis satisfaction with the candidate includ ed not only Republican partisans, but Republican civil service reformers and "Independents," or free lances, like Carl Schurz. So defeat was in the air for Cleveland in 1SS8; the previous state elections showed the drift of the time was against his re-election. So de feat was in the air for Harrison In 1892. The state elections of -18J50 had gone against the Republicans; the Democrats had captured the House and displaced Speaker Reed with a Southern Demo crat So the elections of 1894 pointed to Democratic defeat in 1896, for the Republicans captured the House and were victorious in the state elections. There are none of the signs of coming woe this year that were In evidence In 1892. Then the Democrats had elected in the preceding state elections the Gov ernors in ten Northern States, including New York, Pennsylvania, Massachu setts, Iowa, Michigan. Wisconsin, New Jersey and Oregon. Today the Demo crats have Governors in the Northern States of Rhode Island Nevada, Mon tana and Oregon. In Rhode Island and Oregon the election of Democrats was due to exceptional local causes, which signify nothing as to the result of the Presidential ballot The United States Senate on the day of Mr. Cleveland's nomination in 1S92 contained 47 Republicans out of a mem bership of S8. Today It contains 57 Re publicans out of a membership of 90. Such Northern States as Illinois, Indi ana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Wisconsin had one or more Democratic Senators. Today these great states are not represented by a single Democratic Senator. In the House of Representa tives the Democrats In 1892 had 235 members to 88 Republicans; today the Republicans have a majority of about 34. The Democrats were strongly in the majority in the Congress preced ing each of their great contests of 1876, 18S4 and 1892. The Democrats went into the Presidential contest of 1892 in full possession of the outworks of the cita del.. Today they are in possession of nothing of particular importance except p. very bad reputation obtained In the National campaigns of 1896 and 1900. Nothing favors the Democratic candi date today, whether he be Parker or some other equally able and respecta ble candidate. There Is no real division of opinion in the Republican party, as there was In 18S4, when Blaine was seriously dis trusted by eminent Republicans of all shades of opinion. There Is no real di vision of the Republican party, as there was In 1892, when Harrison was bitter ly hated by the Republican leaders In New York State, bitterly hated by Quay in Pennsylvania and bitterly hated by Speaker Tom Reed. There Is no spe cific hostility of the labor vote for the Republican party, as there was In 1892. On the contrary, the most powerful leaders of the labor party are friendly to the nomination and election of Presi dent Roosevelt in 1904 because they learned to trust him in his action of forcing the matter of the great anthra cite coal strike of Pennsylvania to arbi tration and settlement. The "Independ ent" vote of New York State, which Is at least 50,000 strong, a vote that can not be bought or terrorized by either party, Is not a unit tdday for either party. The New York Eveplng Post "has always detested and fought David B. Hill. If It believed that Judge Parker stood for the political tool or fool of David B. Hill, we think the Post would pre fer Roosevelt, whom It does not rate as the tool or fool of any corrupt poli tician. Roosevelt was for many years a leader of the Republican "independ ents" and civil service reformers. His zeal was so conspicuous that at the Na tional Convention of 1884 he not only opposed Blaine, but he opposed Arthur and voted for Edmunds. His sincerity was so clear that President Cleveland has always spoken of Roosevelt's atti tude as one worthy of all respect These facts illustrate that Roosevelt will en counter no division of Republican unanimity such as Blaine met In 1884 or Harrison in 1892. There is not a Re publican of any influence today who Is not for Roosevelt There is no "labor" crusade against the Republican party as responsible for "tariff barons," as in 1892. The only possible doubt about Roosevelt's success in New York State grows out of the fact that New York, outside the "independent" vote Is a Democratic state. In 1890 the Demo crats carried 23 out of the 3i Congres sional districts of the state. ' If the "In dependent" vote soes for Roosevelt he will isarry New York, bub even if It does not he will be elected President The Oregonlan believes that the city authorities are making a serious mis take in so highly estimating the value of the desired street railway franchise Into the Peninsular district A coterie of our flne-theoried statesmen, running wildly on about public utilities and other pressing topics like the thingness of the near and the whichness of the was, have built up a stupendous fab ric of great value in street franchises. Portland's street franchises will un doubtedly have great value some day; some of them have an appreciable value now, and the people's right in them should be conserved. But the proposed franchise to University Park has little If any value, and will not have much for twenty-five years. What Portland needs now Is to encourage the invest ment of capital, not to scare it Into hiding or departure by heavy burdens. If some certain stocks of goods were assessed at nearer their true valuation, the city would not have to levy for Its support a tax upon suburban develop ment. "The present trust-breeding tariff law." Thug a Democratic paper of Ore gon. But it Is not forgotten, nor will It be forgotten, that when the Democratic party had its Innings and Grover Cleve land was President, It enacted so iniqui tous a tariff law, a tariff law so op pressive to the country, so "trust breeding" in its Intents and conse quences, that President Cleveland re fused to sign It, and declared it "an "act of perfidy and dishonor." That bill be came a law 'without his signature, and the Democratic party was turned down upon it, with an emphasis that has lasted these ten years and Is not likely to be forgotten for another twenty. The Democratic party is trust-ridden; hence the call for Parker, Wall street's candidate. Parker is presented as the man for the trusts, against Roosevelt, who has worried them. The- duly authorized committee will start out this morning to solicit funds for entertainment of the National Grange. We have so often commended this enterprise, and elaborated upon its possibilities of benefit to Portland and the entire Pacific Northwest, that it should suffice at this time to urge upon all the most prompt and hearty co-operation. Let us make the response to this meritorious appeal one to reflect credit not so much upon Portland's lib erality as upon its business common sense. The subscriptions to this fund will be a good investment The release of the two Japanese ser vants who were taken on an American newspaper dispatch-boat doubtless fol lows the discovery by Russia that they were innocent menials and not the spies they were feared to be. The responsi bility for their presence in Russian waters rests entirely, therefore, upon the correspondents, who took them in. Perhaps the warning will not be lost upon Japanese soldiers who might be Inclined to ship as servants In disguise. There is no man on the Republican ticket In Multnomah who is not worthy as any other man and every other man on It So there Is no reason, if one be lieves In the Republican party, why he should not support allthe Republican candidates. At Walla Walla they propose Hearst and Turner. That would be fine. Turner after Hearst! Is this what Turner has contended for? Is It for this that he j has abased and debased himself,7 STATE OWNERSHIP IN AUSTRALIA Minneapolis Tribune. It will be remembered that most of the colonies of Australia suffered a dis astrous financial panic some years ago as the result of over-extension of credit for railway building and other purposes. It will be remembered also that this panic was worst In New South Wales, where over-building of railroads by the state under pressure of public demand and their extravagant operation at the bidding of labor unions to furnish em ployment for everybody at high wages had exhausted capital and strained credit most seriously. Since the creation of the common wealth, all the ctates of Australia have been slowly struggling back out of panic conditions by retrenchment In the public service and economy In operation of pub lice Industries. New South Wales, It appears, is still In worst case of all, be cause there the hold upon government of the Socialist element that demands spend ing of public money for the benefit of the working classes Is hardest to break. After all economics, there was a deficit of $2,000,000 in the state railroads of New South Wales last year, and the rapid In crease in the number of state and mu nicipal employes is regarded. In the words of a recent letter, as "a serious menace to sound finance.-" It appears that the principle of state industry has been extended also to muni cipal transportation In New South Wales, with similar results. The City of Syd ney has taken possession of the tram ways, as it Is proposed that Chicago shall take possession of street-car lines. Some "of the results are highly satis factory. Electricity has been Installed everywhere. The lines have been liber ally extended in the suburbs and the service Is said to be excellent But the financial results are disappointing, in spito of a- reduction of working expenses per mile of over 60 per cent Extensions have been made and ser vice has been Improved; not for business reasons, but to meet demand for bring ing new residence property Into the mar ket and to increase employment for la bor. The municipal government of Syd ney Is entirely In the hands of the labor organizations, which dictate the man agement of the car lines. The fiscal result Is a deficiency of $100,000 In the earning of interest last year, while no provision has been made for a sinking fund. Of course, the property of the city will have to bo taxed to make up the deficit In Interest, and ultimately to pay the enormous principal of the debt cre ated to Install the system. At the other extreme we find the old fashioned cable system of Melbourne In the neighboring state of Victoria. This Is owned by a private company, whose franchise has twelve years more to run. The service is not as good as in Sydney. The company hesitates to install elec tricity on so short a franchise, and has left to subsidiary companies the booming of suburban property by unprofitable lines. Nevertheless the company paid 15 per cent dividend last year, after pay ing all Its Interest and setting aside $123,000 for resorve and renewals. The happy mean of the best service that can be given without running behind finan cially may be found In Melbourne when this franchise empires; either In a new franchise more favorable to the city or In more prudent municipal operation than that of Sydney. Wall Street's Candidate. Woodburn Independent Tho sincerity of the Democratic party of Oregon is certainly to be questioned. The platform, In the face of President Roosevelt's antagonistic attitude toward the trusts, says: "The Republican party, entrenched behind the corporations and trusts of this country, not only refuses to abide by tho will of the people, but at tempts to nullify and destroy -the laws enacted in the past for the protection of popular government and the privileges in cident thereto." What did Grover Cleve land do, when he was President to throt tle the capitalistic combines? He is today a Wall-street pet His choice for Presi dent Is another Wall-street sympathizer Judge Parker. Hearst has fought the trusts. In his papers and in the courts, but we find the Oregon State Democratic Convention throwing Hearst down and electing a Parker delegation! The action of this body belles the words in a plat form Issued only for cyclonic purposes. Dying for One's Country. Now Bedford, Mass., Standard. President Roosevelt makes a natural and reasonable comment when he notes that the men killed on the Missouri, while they were fitting themselves to fight effectively in case of need, "died for their country as much as If their ship had been in action against the en emy." The criticism of all such observa tions Is that they seem to imply that a man who dies In any other way than as a member of the Army or Navy does not die for his country. Take; for instance, the case of tho diver who risked his life and lost it the other day in a work of great public utility. Didn't he die for his country? He died In the performance of duty, at any rate, and why Is not that for the country as much as dying In a gun turret? Or those other divers who came near death in trying to retcue the comrade. Why was not theirs a de'ed with the element of patriotism, In that It was for a noble end? Or Is there a distinction between dying for one's coun try and dying for humanity, and, if so, which is the superior? The Primary Law Vindicates Itself. St Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press. The primary law has again more than vindicated itself and proved Its popular ity. It Is not without defects, but tho defects are rather in tho nature of omis sions than of unfortunate arrangements. Its popularity Is shown In the heavy per centage of votes polled and Its value is shown in the judiciousness Xvlth which the voters exercised their choice. There are probably few who would not like to make some substitutions in the tickets, but on neither ticket except in one or two cases where there was no contest have tho voters selected any distinctly vicious candidates. The Assembly tickets are particularly satis factory, and In the various aldermanic contests the fittest men, all things considered, seem to have won. From A to 2. Frank Roe Batchelder, In the Smart Set A -wondrous thing, the alphabet. As doubtless jou'll agree, No honey from the B we get, No -water from the C. The J has never built a nest; , No pod enfolds the P; And there Is nothing to suggest A beyond the D. No oyster has the It to sell; " No pupil has the I; , No house adjoins the modest Ij; No question asks the Y. The X Is never crce3; and O " From debt Is wholly free; And cockney H you'd only know By Its apostrophe. No type Is measured by the M; No sugar spoils the T; No Dutchman fashions dykes to stem The Inrush of the Z. No lambkin tags behind the U; The U no wool has she; No Chinaman upbraids the Q. No Scottish tears sheds E. The F is sharp, if not acute; And A Is flat, it's true; While G and N and K dispute The ownership of Gnu, New, Knew. The S Its $ counts for naught; But W, to me Suggests that for these r farcies I ought To get a doublo "X. U, "" DANGER IN GREAT WEALTH. Baltimore Sun. Mr. Andrew Carnegie has founded free libraries In the United States and in Great Britain. He has endowed an In stitution for scientific research in Wash ington. He has given many millions of dollars to establish a technical school in Pittsburg. He has donated $10,000,000 to promote university education in Scotland. Many more benefactions oould be set down to his credit if space permitted. It is a matter of record that a few years ago he offered to buy Independence for the Flhponos, a transaction which, he estimated, would cost him $20,000,000 the amount Uncle Sam paid to Spain for a clear title to the archipelago. That Mr. Carnegie is an all-around philanthropist Is indisputable. And there is no end to his philanthrophy. He is ever on the alert for opportunities to make a hole in his capital to reduce his surplus. If we may believe our esteemed contemporary, the Boston Advertiser, Mr. Carnegie, rather than "disgrace himself by dying rich," Is even willing to finance a Presidential campaign. A day or two ago the Adver tiser, which Is a straight-out Republican Journal, published the following dispatch from its Washington correspondent: Andrew Carnegie has sent word to President Roosevelt that he need not worry over the rumors that the moneyed Interests of Wall street are not disposed to chip In to the Re publican campaign fund. The founder of li braries says he stands ready to contribute any reasonable sum up to $1,000,000, If neccesary, to offset any defections by the rich Wall-street men. It Is respectfully submitted to Mr. Car negie that there are grave doubts con cerning the propriety of any scheme of philanthrophy which draws party lines. His libraries are open to Democrats and Republicans alike. His Institution for scientific research encourages genius without respect to political distinction. The young men for whom he has es tablished a technical training school may acquire knowledge at Mr. Carnegie's ex pense, regardless of their views on the tariff. Imperialism, constitutional con struction and the race question. Why should the Scot-American multimillion aire be less liberal when It comes to en dowing a Presidential compalgn? Shall it be said of him that in politics the Universal Benefactor was a mere parti san, just like the ordinary run of mor tals? Perish the thought! Mr. Carnegie must be saved from a folly which would topple him off his pedestal and reduce him to the level of a vulgar political pro moter. If, In his desire to die poor, Mr. Car negie decides to enrich the campaign ches,t of an aspirant for exalted politi cal honors, let him do the square thing and the tactful thing and open his purse to all parties and all candidates. Then it never could be said of him that he Is a narrow-minded, prejudiced man, who could see only one side of a political question. He accumulated an Immense fortune largely through the operations of the protective tariff system, and nat urally he feels grateful to the Republi can party, which permitted him. to ex tract enormous profits from, his Iron and steel business-. It may be true that ho owes his party a substantial return for its kindness to him and that a check for a million dollars would be a reasonable expression of his gratitude. But Mr. Carnegie should reflect that the Democrats of the United- States, who constitute more than half of the white population of the country; the Prohibitionists, the Populists, the Socialists and various other political sects were taxed to the same extent as the Republicans to put Into, his purse the hundreds of millions of dollars with which It Is now bulging. Mr. Carnegie's gratitude for past favors, if it has a logical foundation, cannot rightly exclude from Its operations the 15,000,000 American voters of all shades of party faith who, In the capacity of consumers of his products, transferred from their pockets to his the bounty which our tariff laws extort from the public If Mr. Carnegie is going to be a politi cal philanthrophist he must not be a bigoted, hidebound partisan. His treas ury must be open to all parties or to none. He must finance the "outs" as well as the "Ins." He must send checks to the Democratic, Populist and Prohibition campaign committees as well as to the Republican managers. Thus he would prove himself a political philanthrophist of broad gauge and without reproach. He should get financially into all the party bandwagons, and not limit him self to a front seat In the Republican chariot He should provide fodder for the Democratic donkey whenever he pitches hay into the stall of the Republi can elephant Then he will make him self solid with all the voters and poli ticians In tho land. He will be on the winning side, whichever candidate may receive a majority of the votes. Tho doors of the White House will swing open to admit the man who made his "money talk" for all tho aspirants to the Presidency, and thus contributed to the purification and elevation of Ameri can politics. Furthermore and finally, if Mr. Carnegie really wants to die in a "dead broke" condition, hero Is his op portunity to qualify himself for tho almshouse. Mexico and the Paper Trust. Springfield, Mass., Republican. Mexico also has a paper manufacturers trust and as well a customs tariff to as sist It in making monopoly prices. The Mexican publishers have appealed to the government to reduce or abolish tho duty on Imported paper. They have no diffi culty In discerning a relationship between tho tariff and the trust "In so far at least as concerns the efforts of the trust to lift prices and keep them lifted. i Robert Burns. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. I see amid the fields of Ayr A ploughman, who. In foul and fair, Sings at his task. So clear, wc know not If It Is Tho laverock's 6ong we hear, or his. Nor care to ask. For him the ploughing of those fields A more ethereal harvest yields Than sheaves of grain; Songs flush with purple bloom the rye, The plover's call, th curlew's cry, Sing In hla brain. Touched by his hand, the wayside weed Becomes a flower; the lowliest reed Beside the stream Is clothed with beauty; gorse and grass And heather, where bis footsteps pass, The brighter seem. He oings of love, whose flame Illumes The darkness of lone cottage rooms; He feels the force, The treacherous undertow and stress, Of wayward passions, and no less The keen remorse. At moments, wrestling with his fate, His voice Is harsh, but not with hate; The brushwood, hung Above the tavern door, lets fall Its bitter leaf, its drop of gall Upon his tongue. But still the music of his song Rises o'er all, elate and strong; Its master-chords Are Manhood, Freedom, Brotherhood, It3 discords but an Interlude Between the words. And then to die so young, and leave Unfinished what he might achieve! Tet better sure Is this, than wandering up and down An old' man In a country town, Infirm and poor. For now he haunts his native land As an Immortal youth; his hand "" Guides every plough; He sits beside each Ingle-nook, His voice Is In each rushing brook. Each rustling bough. Hte presence haunts this room tonight, A form of mingled mist and light From that far coast. Welcome beneath this roof of mine' Welcome! this vacant chair Is thine, Pear guest and gnostl NOTE AND COMMENT. S'pose It's All Right. G. G. Boydsun came in from Juniper Moun tain Sunday. He will lamb on the Rim. Lakevlew Herald. Walk, you East-Sider walk. The Japs sink, but don't shrink. "Meet me at St Louis, Louis." Ex-Chief of Police Robertson gets an other deal. Young-Mait-Afraid-of-HIs-Shadow Is In the city jail. Ho should bo scared to death In such a shady place. The wireless system used" aboard the Russian vessels Is known as the Popoff. Their mines seem to be built under the same patent A mouse started a panic in a Philadel phia theater, but ono of the actors sur prised the people so much by making a joke that they forgot to stampede. In Copenhagen an electrical machine has been installed for the purpose of thrashing men convicted of wife-beating. Denmark is fully abreast of tho times. In Wales there Is a village which ap pears In railway timetables as Llanfalr P. G. Its name In full Is: Llanfalrpwll gwynghnghllgogerhchwyrndrobwllllandlsll logogogoch. A woman In Paris makes a specialty of renting out automobiles for elopements. She furnishes a fast machine and a trust worthy chauffeur. Probably she- supplies scented gasoline, also. The Southern Pacific detectives declare that they are on tho trail of the Copley bandits. Pretty soon they'll be quite homesick If taken off a trail to which they have been so long accustomed. t Rockercllers Bible class will be greatly edified by learning from Lyman J. Gage that great individual wealth Is not rob bery. The boys will now be able to go ahead and "emulate their teacher with clear consciences. If Hill Is "It," - And Brayn's "Nit," And Parker does the running; Can Willie Hearst Drop back from first. And for V.-P. go gunning? Irrlgon Irrigator. Ask Brisbane. The following dispatch, from St Peters burg should prove a valuable suggestion for Cyrus Townsend Brady: "Apraxin, author of blood and thunder novels, turned the war into a literary quarry that promises to make him a rich man if peace is long delayed. Apraxin Is writing a novel in daily installments In which the war bulletins are cleverly interwoven. Tho hero is on tho staff of Viceroy Alexleff, tho heroine is a prisoner on Admiral Togo's flagship; she risks her life daily several times by informing her swain of the Japs moves. Of course Togo in forms the heroine of all his intensions and permits her to use his megaphone." Ex-Senator Mason, of Illinois, was seated with a party of friends In a Wash ington cafe one evening when the circle was joined by the son of a big Western capitalist whose main aim in life seemed to bo a continuous jubilee, says the Troy Times. Ho was of that class inelegantly known -as "butters In," and it was soon evident that his presence was distasteful to the Senator. "My old man doesn't put up a cent for me," said the young man, displaying a fat roll of greenbacks. "I'm, on my own resources." "How do you manage It?" asked ono of the party. "You must havo some sort of a 'snap.' " "This Is my 'snap,' " and the gay spendthrift, impressively touching his head. "And there's not a softer 'snap' In the world," assented Senator Mason. Repartee as practiced by dignified solons In the New York Legislature takes on somewhat of a Bowery complexion at times.. One day last week the Houso was considering a certain measure, when Mr. Cook, of Erie, said courteously: "Tho gentleman who has spoken In opposition to this bill is a plnhead." He referred to Mr. Cox, of Buffalo, who In his politest manner replied: "Tho gentleman who favors this bill," of course referring to Mr. Cook, "has a vacuum where his brains ought to be." Whereupon As semblyman Lynch hastened to observe cordially: "Mr. Speaker, It gives mo great pleasure to find that, for the first occasion since I have served In the Legis lature -with them, I can agree with both Mr. Cox and Mr. Cook. I agiee with what Mr. Cook said about Mr. Cox, and I indorso what Mr. Cox said about Mr. Cook." Then the bill was passed. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. "Colonel, did jou ever know the office to seek the man?" "YeSj. sir an' It stumbled over him an' hurt Itself." Atlanta Constitu tion. Her Father Tou expect me to support Julia indefinitely. Her Husband Well, I hope you may stand from under very gradually, sir.-. Puck. Young Doctor He has discovered over 80 different germs. Old Doctor I shouldn't think that would bo as hard as naming them. Cleveland Leader. "You're a broker, are you not, Mr. Stocks?" "Yes. I'm broker now than I was last month, but next month I'll be brokest" Princeton Tiger. "13 your husband an Inventor?" "I should say he Is. You ought to hear some of the ex cuses he Invents when he comes home late at night." Chicago Journal. "It 'pears," said Unlcle Eben, "dat success Is sumpln' what you alius has to work hand foh an' what some other feller gets by jest beln lucky." Washington Star. "Nobody Is ever so badly off that somebody else is not In a worse condition." "I don't know about that. Look at the Emperor of Corea." Chicago Record-Herald. An Atchison man hasn't a tooth In his head, but eats as well as anybody. "How do you manage It?" he was asked. "I have corns on my gums," he replied. Atchison Globe. , Sara Just think of the dumber of American girls who go tuft-hunting abroad! They who return as Countesses are so few! Jack And those who don't are countless. Princeton Tiger. Then he cursed her. "You will eat your heart!" he cried. She shivered. But in tho next moment she was angry with herself. "I am a vegotarianl" she said, with serene confidence. Puck. "Dai's lots o' folks," said Uncle Eben, "dat doesn 'predate de value of money. Soma shows t by glttln rid of it careless, an' some by holdln' on so hand dat dey doesn' git no benefit fum It." Washington Star. "Yes," said the dentist, "to Insure painless extraction you'll have to take gas, and that'a 50 cents extra." "Oh," said the farmer, "I guess the old way'U be the best; never mind no gas." "You're a brave man." "Ohl it ain't me that's got the tooth; It's my wife." Philadelphia Ledger. An Irishman and an Englishman were re counting feats of physical prowess. The Eng lishman, by way of showing his strength, said that he was accustomed to swim across the Thames three times before breakfast every morning. "Well," said the Irishman, "that may be all right, but It do seem to me that your clothes would.be on the wrong side of tha JL river all the time3" New York Times,