THE MOKNDtG OREGONIAU, WEDNESBlY, MAT 11, 1S0. S8f $ (topnmm Entered at the Fostoffice at Portland. Or- aa second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br xaall (postage prepaid In advance) Dally, -with Sunday, per month ... .X0.S5 Xaly, with Sunday excepted, per year 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year a. 00 Sunday, per year ... 2.00 The "Weekly, per year 1.50 The Weekly, S months 50 Sally, per week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted 15c Sally, jer week, delivered, Sunday in cluded 20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-pago paper ..lo 16 to 20-page paper .....2o S2 to 44-page paper 80 Foreign, rates double. The Oregonian does not bay poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be in closed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. O. Beckwith Special Agency) New Tork: Booms 43-40, Tribune Building. Chicago: Rooms 510-012 Tribune Building. KEPT OX SAXE. Chicago Auditorium annex; PostoSce News Co., 217 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rick, 900-912 Seventeenth street. Kansas City Ricksecker Cigar Co, Ninth and Walnut. Los Angelee B. F. Gardner, 259 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third; I. Regeisbuger, 217 First Avenue South. New Tork City I. Jones & Co., Axtor House. Ogdeo F. R. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co.. 130S Farnam. Oklahoma City J. Frank Rice, 105 Broad way. Salt Xake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South street. St. Louis World's Fair News Co, Lousl ana News Co., and Joseph Copeland. San Francisco-. K. Cooper Co., 740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Or ear. Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros.,238 But ter; L. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott, 60 Ellis; N. Wheatley, S3 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ed Brlnkman, Fourth and Pacific Ave., N. W.; Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum 66, minimum 40; precipitation 0.04 Inch. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, -Banner; north west winds. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1905. A SQUARE ANSWER. Congressman Claude Kltchin, In his recent assault upon the President, quoted from Mr. Roosevelt's literary -works in support of his assertion that he had made "vicious, persistent and unwarranted attacks upon Thomas Jef ferson" as "a vacillating, timid, shifty doctrinaire," "Incompetent, ungrateful. Intriguing against "Washington," "se cretly aiding the French," a man "con stitutionally unable to put the proper value on truthfulness, the most incapa ble executive that ever filled the Presi dential chair." Mr. Roosevelt is quot ed as denouncing Madison as "timid, Incapable, a ridiculously incompetent leader for a war with Great Britain," "a man whose feeble administration brought shame and disgrace to Amer ica" In the War of 1812. Mr. Roose velt is quoted as denouncing Monroe as "a figure-head President" whose ad ministration as Secretary of "War under Madison was "a triumph of Imbecility to the last." Congressman Kltchin fur ther quoted Mr. Roosevelt's literary works to prove that In them Presidents Jackson, Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler, Polk, Taylor, Pierce and Buchanan are ail bitterly denounced as utterly un equal, either through ignorance, inca pacity or iniquity, to the high respon sibilities of their great office, and then Congressman Kltchin in conclusion says: "History will mark Theodore Roosevelt out, in unique and shameless solitude, as the relentless defamer of our Nation's Presidents." There is a square answer to all this. Mr. Roosevelt began to write American history and biography when he was not 25 years of age. His historical judg ments may some of them be wrong, but In the most extravagant of them he is supported by high authority. Henry Adams, a writer of great ability and learning, takes the Roosevelt view of the administrations of Jefferson and Madison; the same view of the Inca pacity of Monroe, in his standard his tory of our National political adminis tration from 1S01 to 1S18. Men of equal ability, veracity and learning are di vided today in their estimate of Jef ferson's Intellect and character. George "Washington, who gave Jefferson once his confidence, came to distrust him as a politician. In the matter of Andrew Jackson there are two opinions today among equally able and veracious his torians. Professor George Sumner, of Tale University, a hidebound Democrat, takes the Roosevelt view of both Jack son and "Van Buren. Mr. Roosevelt has ample historical support for his view that "William Henry Harrison and Fill more were small presidents. Daniel "Webster, the great "Whig statesman, had a very small opinion of President Taylor. Henry Clay denounced Presi dent Tyler as "a turncoat." The Roosevelt estimate of Presidents Pierce and Buchanan has ample histor ical support; that is, it has historical support strong enough and able enough to entitle Mr. Roosevelt to his opinion without being justly subject to the charge of being "a relentless defamer" of all our American Presidents. There are American public men concerning whose personal merits and whose pub lic capacity able and intelligent and up right men will always be divided. Are there not two opinions today among able. Intelligent men concerning the statesmanship of "Webster, Clay, . Cal houn, Jefferson Davis, and even Lin coln? Do not able men differ still con cerning the military stature of Lee and Grant and Sherman? Do not men dif fer, even in France, regarding the statesmanship of Napoleon? Some Frenchmen agree with Thiers, some with Talne and some depreciate Napo leon with Lanfrey. The point we seek t6 make is that Mr. Roosevelt as a historian is entitled to his opinion, and furthermore, we Insist that he is on trial not as a historian, but as a states man. Suppose all his historical literary Judgments were wrong, what of it? He might be a man of surpassing ability as an executive statesman, even as Napo leon was a peerless soldier, an astute diplomatist and able statesman, despite the fact that his literary taste was so bad that he thought Osslan a great poet. Mr. Roosevelt is not on trial before the American people for the soundness of his historical judgments of Ameri can statesmen, penned when he was 25 years of age, although all these judg ments have eminently respectable sup port, but he is on trial as an executive statesman, as a patriot, an efficient ex- j ecutive and able administrator. From this standpoint the indictment of Con gressman Kltchin, while superficially cunning, is essentially Irrelevant, un just and weak. And this 13 the weak ness, the confessed weakness, of the Democratic political campaign argu ment when they undertake to make the personal issue very prominent in their fight against President Roosevelt's candidacy. They find his public record as President impregnable, so they resort to assailing his personality, as was done'in the case of Jackson and resulted not only in his triumphant re election, but left him so strong that he was able to dictate his successor when he refused nomination for a third term. In this resolve to make Mr. Roosevelt's personality the center of a political campaign the Democracy have made a fatal mistake, for his brilliant personality, rather than his formal, per functory speeches, are Mr. Roosevelt's strongest point. VON BULOW ON CARICATUKE. German caricature has long been rec ognized as the pacemaker of civiliza tion for cogency and point. It Is dis concerting, therefore, to meet with so unappreciative a reference to it as Chancelolr von Bulow is reported to have delivered in the Reichstag, reply ing to the never uninteresting or per functory Herr BebeL The subject was the Russian reverses, and In reply to tha obvious gloating of the socialists over Japanese prowess, and the asser tion of Herr Bebel that popular senti ment In Germany does not sympathize with Berlin's official commiseration with St. Petersburg, the Chancellor ex pressed his regret at the manner in which many of the German newspapers, especially the comic publica tions, have utilized the recent calamities of a neighboring and friendly power as the basis for malevolent, spiteful and ridiculing articles and caricatures, which have affronted human feelings and are lacking in political tact. Here Is a code of caricature -which will gain instant approval of all who have suffered at the hands of the car toon all frauds and humbugs, all hy pocrisy, malfeasance and Incompe tence In high places, all stuffed prophets, four-flushers, renegades and false alarms. The cartoon, If the Chancellor can have his way, will henceforth eschew the malev olent, spiteful and ridiculing, and be come Instead by contrast nothing but benevolent, gracious and encomiastic "What could be more lovely? The ef fectiveness of caricature along these lines must appeal with irresistible force, even to the Teutonic sense of humor. The Chancellor's strong point, how eer, is in his disqualification of the reigning cartoon for Its want of "polit ical tact." Now we all know what po litical tact Is In the Chancellorlan eye. It means coincidence with the admin istration's course. Can we suppose, for example, that those American cartoons which have represented Russ'la as a spider luring the Japanese fly Into her Manchurlan trap would impress "Von Bulow as wanting In political tact? Nay, verily. Neither would a drawing representing "Von Bulow as a giant, standing serene amid a few Insignifi cant buzzing Insects designed to repre sent Bebel and his supporters. The Chancellor has done a good service for the cause of caricature, and we await with impatience the forthcoming Issue of Die Jgend. NO SHORT AND EASY WAY. "What our ancestors were accustomed to think the old-fashioned virtues of personal Industry and self-dependence are obsolete or obsolescent. Govern ment must now do everything for everybody. The citizen is not to do anything for himself, any more. Gov ernment must look out for his health, food, shelter and raiment It must shield him from snares of all kinds except his own delusions, and these it should steadily minister unto and pro mote. It must Inculcate the Idea that a man's resources are not at all In himself, but in government and in so ciety, to be "worked out through poll tics, unions, combinations, clubs and legislation. Formerly there was a notion that it was a good idea to have your boy learn a trade, and with it to learn how to work with patience and industry, so as to support himself and get on in the world, through personal application, to .independence. But this will not do any more. The Idea now is the get-rlch-qulck Idea, through social and po litical agitation. Hard work aforetime was the rule. It Is so 310 longer. There are supposed to be easier ways. For example, light, easy and m agreeable "manual training" is to become one of the functions of the public school. Yet some few persons still remain, fossils of the olden time, of course, who are of the opinion thafif you would have your son a wagon-maker you would better send him to learn at an establishment where they build wagons; and if you wish him to be a boiler-maker, to a shop where boilers are made. They do not suppose your son will get the re sults you desire for him, or anything of real value, by a little dilettante "man ual training" in the public school. Of course it will be said that such things are done In the public schools of certain other cities. The argument is good, if it be granted that one futil ity ought to be excuse for another. "If the enemy is an ass and a fool and a prating coxcomb, is it meet, think you, that we should also, look you, be an ass and a fool and a prating cox comb? in your own conscience, now?" Thus honest, plain-spoken Fluellen. Persons of practical judgment and old fashioned, common-sense Ideas get-very sick of the multifarious and ever-increasing projects of theorists, doctrin aires and airy promoters. They who depend on the state to teach their chil dren trades are doing one of the worst possible things for their children, whether they know it or not There is hut one way to prepare the young for the work of life, and that Is to put them in places where that work is done-, You will get coopers and blacksmiths In that way, and In no other. A BORN ADVENTURER, Henry M. Stanley was a born adven turer In the highest and most heroic sense of the word. He was of the breed of Cllve, whose great work he would have been equal to. He was of the breed of La Salle; he was of the breed of Hastings; he was a man of ardent ambition and dauntless courage,, who recked not of the life he lost If he could win genuine fame. He was not of the type of Livingstone, who was originally a missionary; he was not of the type of Marquette, Jollet, Hennepin or Allouez, for they were priests; he was a born adventurer. He had but a free school education in England; he serves on both sides in our Civil "War; he becomes a newspaper correspondent; bis su perior equipment Is not his pen, which 13 but mediocre, but hl3 conspicuous force of character. The New York Herald knew that If Stanley could not write brilliantly he was a born fighter, a daring, ambitious explorer. So it pinned Its faith on hint and he rang true metal. He was a hard, cold, stern man, a man without sensibility save to an appeal to human justice. In his way he was a great man. Men of his calm courage and utter insensibility to humane, sympa thetic appeal are the kind of men that have extended the boundaries of civili zation. Mungo Park, an amiable, en lightened explorer, failed In his efforts to explore the Niger and lost his life In the attempt, "while Stanley succeeded in his efforts to explore the Congo and followed its sources to the sea. Stanley won because vs was, like Clive, a man of hardlhooc f ambition, of executive ability, wr Park was an amiable man animat y scientific curiosity. Stanley won ause, like Clive, he was a nature rn, daring fighter. And out of t trait grew Stanley's permanent fam He was not an educated man; he w 5 a man of high native ability, of great force of character and of quenchless ambition, and he won where a- man of more learn ing would, have turned back and report ed another story about the "unexplored region of Africa." Stanley was personally not an at tractive man, any more than Welling ton; but he enlarged our knowledge of Central Africa enormously, even as the bulldog "Wellington saved Europe from the jaws of Napoleon. Measured by the practical, far-reaching consequences of his African explorations, Henry M. Stanley Is one of the greatest men of his century. A DANGEROUS PRECEDENT. Every honest soul whose Intellectual equipment Is constituted of three parts sentiment and one part credulity will be pained at the cruel fate that has overtaken Mrs. Bessie Muzinsky, of New York City. This good woman, having fed her mind for some months upon the high thoughts of health maga zines, demonstrated without a doubt to her faith that her nature required no other pabulum than meditation upon the good, the true and the beautiful, with complete abstention from things material, especially the base and im moral concoctions known to a degener ate world as food. "When well advanced upon the path to spiritual perfection, she has been seized upon by the pow ers of this world and removed to a hos pital, where unsympathetic doctors are trying to force food upon her. It Is an other humiliating exhibit in the deprav ity of so-called practical men in refus ing to be guided by the sublimated phil osophy of every unique spiritual guide that comes along. Mrs. Muzinsky's personal humilia tion Is intensified, moreover, by the fate of her family. For the dispatches leave little room for doubt that a prime cause for the Interference that has brought her to grief was the meddle some sympathy of outsiders for her husband and three children whom she had auspiciously started upon the road to holiness. No blame can be attached to the children, who would probably have acquiesced dutifully in the ma ternal programme. But one does not require more than a passing acquaint ance with human nature to make sure that Mr. Muzinsky rebelled at the diet of prayer and meditation set before him three meals a day. Such is the selfish and weak nature of male man that he ever fails to meet those tests of spirit uality and self-sacrifice through which the so-called gentler sex acquits Itself with glory. Such cases have happened here in Portland. One carnally minded busi ness man whose better half had demon strated the moral and religious value of going without breakfast was seen to stop at a Fourth-street restaurant every morning on his way to business and there bestow within his graceless Interior a large and juicy tenderloin, without a semblance of remorse for his base treachery to the domestic com pact Another conscienceless wretch who has been fondly forbidden flesh on the family board brutally scout3 this means of grace by taking at the. Com mercial Club dally a noon luncheon at which his plate may be seen surrounded by large rations of every kind of meat referred to on the bill of fare. From what we know of others of his sex, we make little doubt that Mr. Mu zinsky is himself the heartless betrayer of Mrs. Muzinsky's plan of campaign and the instigator of a domestic revolt which has drawn the attention and aid of outside powers. The precedent thus set up is fraught with grave and In sidious danger; for its only effect will be to encourage insubordination in sensual husbands who have hitherto lacked the spirit to rebel against the more spiritual administration of the head of the family, that is to say, its mistress. If a woman cannot run her own house inher own way, especially the commissariat what are we comirg to? Are doctors to be suffered to in vade the sanctity of home, in order to perpetuate life and thus Insure perma nence for their profession? DO POLITICS PAY? "When a. man of Henry McGinn's wide reading, tremendous energy and im pressive oratorical powers takes him self voluntarily out of a political office to devote himself more assiduously to the practice of his profession. It gives added weight to the misgivings of those who view with regret the tendency of brains and character to eschew public life for the rewards of business or pro fessional life. There can be little doubt that a smaller proportion of men like Clay and "Webster, Crittenden and "Cal houn. Sumner and Benjamin, Benton and Seward, are In Congress today than a generation ago, or that a larger pro portion of gifted minds are attracted by the greater emoluments, leisure and even fame of law, medicine, manufac tures and trade. Time was when a state was proud to send Its most eminent men to the Sen ate of the United States. But the colossal figures of our National life are not In the Senate, still less in the House. Great speakers like Reed and Carlisle got rich and enjoyed life at the New York bar; while the great names of New York and Pennsylvania are not Piatt and Quay, but rather Morgan and Carnegie, Rockefeller and "Wana maker. A man can make money at his own business, but he can rarely make money In politics, except at the ex pense of his self-respect And money has come to be so potent in politics, especially wherever great corporations are involved, that a man must either find ways to support himself through political operations or else have so large a private fortune that he can sport a political ambition something as he might maintain a racing stable or a pleasure yacht All this Is chiefly due to the fact that persons of wealth set the standards of social approval sv that only money or else a certain cheap talent for enter tainment can come up to them. No body Is anybody unless he dresses ex pensively, entertains lavishly, travels largely and patronizes entertainments at which society disports Itself to be ad mired and to be amused. There- is a decreasing welcome in desirable houses for the literary genius who, like Poe or Hawthorne, was sought for the pure enjoyment his artistic nature and Ideals might afford, or for the saintly counsel and Intellectual stimulus cf an Emer son or "Whlttler, or for the pure", sweet woman whose garments are of seasons gone by but from whose presence flows all grace and Inspiration as from the precious vision of the Holy Grail. It Is a part of the Intellectual move ment of the time that the man of inde pendent Initiative and uncompromising fearlessness finds less and less oppor tunity in politics, compared with the man who finds his satisfaction and suc cess as a small component part of a compact and united organization. The man who "takes programme" gets along, while the man who branches out on his own hook finds the door shut In his face. Socialistic effort is supplant ing Individualism. Time was when the soldier grappled his enemy in desperate hand-to-hand encounter. Today he is one of a long line of fellows firing at a distant enemy he cannot see. The cor poration replaces the individual, the department store absorbs the small merchant railroads pass Into mergers and"factories into trusts. All of which may and probably does yield greater economic results, but it Is at the ex pense of individual resource and de cision. The first-class lawyer is hardly to be blamed if he finds the exactions and sacrifices of politics less attractive than the greater freedom and profit of private practice. And now come divers and sundry women of Bayonne, N. J., proposing to get even on the organizers of the "Mar ried Men's Anti-Euchre and Home Preservation Society," of that place, by forming an "Anti-Lodge Club." And why not? Is not the every-nlght-in-the-week lodge man as remiss in his duty as the guardian of the home and its happiness as is the woman who be comes addicted to the social card habit? Let a multitude of wives who have scrimped on everything from patched and threadbare underclothes to postage on letters to home folks in order that initiation fees and lodge dues and as sessments may be paid 'and flowers bought for the biers of deceased mem bers answer. And when this clamor has subsided and there will be a clamor. If even a very small propor tion of these wives "speak up" let wives who have wrestled half the night alone with croupy and colicky and fe verish children while "lodge matters" claimed the devoted attention of their spouses have an Inning. There are two sides to the "home preservation" ques tidn, as the wife, of any chronic "Jiner" can testify If she will. The public awaits developments from Bayonne, on the Jersey shore. The war there prom ises to be a merry one, bristling with facts instead of bayonets. The Oregonian inclines to agree with the Salem Journal, that the proposition for a so-called local option law, to be submitted to the voters in June, will probably carry. The Journal adds these statements, viz: There are indications that some of the liquor dealers ouId prefer It to the present local option law of Oregon. For Instance, under Its provisions, Marion County might have a majority for the law, and then there could not be any licenses Issued. In Salem, and many other towns, there would be plenty of saloons running without licenses, and there would be in other places. The specious arguments for the law that It Is only an act to give people the right to vote their sentiments, deceive many. The Prohibitionists are all for the law, and they were never known to be for a genuine local option law. Many people, not Prohibitionists, who have been advocates of local option and believe this bill to be a purely local option measure, will innocently vote for It. In an article published some days ago The Oregonian made the mistake of saying that under the proposed so called option law elections might be called by petition of 10 per cent of the voters of a precinct or county many times, or more than once, In a year. At that time the proposed bill was not be fore The Oregonian. It now has a copy and makes the correction quoting from the third section of the proposed bill: "If petitioned therefor, the first elec tions hereunder shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in. November, 1904, and thereafter only on the first Monday in June of any year." A tract in the Deschutes country, not less than 400,000 acres, an area equal to that of a large county, where 20.000 in habitants will find room, Is to be Irri gated from the Deschutes River, and within a short time will be transmuted from desert lands into fertile fields. The most extensive Irrigation scheme In the United States is now in progress there. "Within two years wonderful develop ment will come of It Of course, the hopgrowers of Oregon, who may vote for prohibition, will not harvest their hop crop this year; and" next year they wll dig up their hop vines and plant the pure, esculent, re freshing turnip in its stead., Oregon doesn't need the hop crop. It produces only three million dollars. It cannot be supposed that the people of a country that votes for eradication tof the drink evil "will go on raising hops. The nomination of Dr. Henry "W. Coe for the State Senate is an excellent one. He Is a man of very unusual activity and energy, has had legislative experi ence in other states, is earnestly de voted to the interests of Oregon, and has shown what he could do by his work for the Lewis and Clark Exposi tion. He will be a very useful mem ber of the Legislature. A San Francisco man has killed him self in Paris because of losses at the gaming table. "We do not know the Mayor of Paris by name, but it is cer tain he should be roundly denounced by the municipal league of that city. If the man left any debts, they should be paid out of the city treasury. In Columbia County the Democrats have declared for the Prohibition can didate for the Legislature, have nomi nated him on their ticket and made him their own. Not that they believe in prohibition, of course; but they must "do something." Boxes, side doors and "ladles' " (?) entrances to saloons should be closed" without fear or favor. Recruiting sta tions of the place "whose steps take hold on hell," no city with a proper re gard for Its reputation for decency should tolerate these adjuncts of "busi ness." THE YELLOW DRAMA. Brooklyn Eagle. In the mere fact of acting there is no harm. Puritanism, has long since receded from Its hostile attitude to the theater an attitude that it took because the drama was pleasant to the general ta3te, Just as was dancing, dining, sports and music. But in the theme and conduct of the play It must be conceded that there is the same chance for evil that there Is In literature, the written word, or In the spoken word of oratory. Indeed, with its enforcement of realism, the potent mis chief of words and Incidents becomes more dangerous. And, although there has always been a drama of silliness and baseness among plays that as a rule re flect only the nobler of human qualities, a realization of its potency for harm, is doubtless keener today than it was in ruder and more unreasoning times, when objection was made less to the theme of the drama than to the fact that it was & drama at all. We have in our town at least one thea ter that during the season about to close has devoted itself almost entirely to plays of crime. More than any of its neigh bor establishments it has the patronage of boys. An hour before the time for opening a crowd of youngsters will be found, headed at the gallery entrance, and Including shavers of 9 or 10 years, smok ing cigarettes with the complacency of veterans, and filled with a hope of a night of thrills. This place of excitement makes a specialty of cheap heroics in which the James boys, the murderer Tracy and oth er offenders e gainst morals and decency are pedestaled for the admiration of the callow and Impressionable. The posters picture forth glaring and evil counte nances, and almost evpry scene appears to require an exhibit of revolvers. Rob bery, ruffianism, assassination, train wrecking and marital unfaith appear to be the stock in trade of the playsmlths who evoke these horrors, and unhealthful agitation of the nerves must be the least of the evils that Is Induced by a study of them. , We have denounced "Camilla" and "Frou-Frou" as evil, because they create a maudlin sympathy for unworthy sub jects, but the play ofgore and gunpowder is a greater evil, for the reason that it addresses itself to unformed minds, and sways, not by logic, but by mere excite ment The boiler-shop drama of noise is bad enough, the musical comedy of Inanity is in a sense yet worse, but the play that lifts paltry thieves and illiterate brigands into conspiculty and excuses their crimes is worst Yellowlsm ha3 come into the drama as it has into Jour nalism, and it works for harm. The production of these plays offers a problem that is not easy to be solved. We have resented any other censorship of the drama than it has had from the pul pit the press and public opinion. Even when the cancan was introduced in our theaters, It was declared to be so little worse than the usual ballet that It had its run, just as, later, we had a run of personal exposure In "The Clemencea Case." If it were sure that the play which is an incentive to the vicious and criminal career would have as brief a success as did the drama of suggestion and revelation, we might be comforted, but as a mater of fact, It is one of the most persistent forms of the drama. It is at least as old as Harrison Alnsworth. Plays that have for their heroes the vul gar knaves of the police courts do no harm .to the thinking, because they so offend a( civilized taste that the thinking stay away from them, but It cannot be possible that they exert other than an unwholesome influence on boys who see in crime only the glory that comes of an exhibition of address and courage. Like many other evils that surround us, we must look tc see this one reformed only by. the slow and expensive processes of education. Doubtless it Is better to endure the evil play than to endure the official tyranny that, might be invoked to end it One thing the Gerry Society can do to offset its harm, however, and that is to prevent children of, school age from at tending Its performances in school hours. An Old Quarrel. Atchison Globe. The order closing the World's Fair on Sunday was nonsense. No sensible man doubts that the people would be better off at the World's Fair on Sunday than in doggeries, or at beer picnics. The order closing the Fair on Sunday was issued to please possibly one-tenth of the people; certainly no more than that Tha notion that a man may not amuse himself as he sees fit on Sunday, providing he does not interfere with the rights of others, is "un fair, narrow-minded and ridiculous. The theory in this country is that we all work during the week. On Sunday wo want diversion and recreation, and we are en titled to It, so long as our diversions and recreations do not interfere with the rights of others, or become obnoxious to common decency. The one man In a hun dred who believes in the old Puritan Sun day has long controlled his 99 neighbors. "Why is it? The one man says to the 99: "You ought to be ashamed of yourselves; you do not love tho memory of your moth ers: you are setting a bad example to children; you are not promoting moral progress; you are against the home." All these statements are utterly foolish and untrue, but the one man always bluffs tho 99. and has his way. Why do not the 99 'men assert themselves, and resent the in timation that they are opposed to decency and moral progress? The Wrecker. Philadelphia Ledger. Mr. Bryan Is not a good loser; nor Is ho an attractive figure as a declared wrecker and defamer of the party which gave him Its highest honors, and which he twice led to ignominious defeat Having failed to rule, he is now evidently resolved to ruin it But, though he may not know it, he is doing tho party and the , country more valuable service than he ever ren dered either by separating himself as far as possible from the real Democracy. Well rid of Bryan and Bryanlsm the .par ty may rise on the stepping stone of its dead self to a new career of distinction and usefulness as an aggressive party in opposition. Home Without a Kitchen. Harper's Bazar. The fact that many new flats are equipped only with "kitchenettes" Instead of kitchens Is illuminating. Are we com ing to home without a kitchen? Some sections of our city populations have come to it already. Tet food and nutrition re main, inexorably, the basis of life. The restaurant cannot replace home-made and wholesome meals. Children never yet were reared in vigor and health on res taurant food, whose combination of cheap materials and exaggerated seasoning is trying even to adult digestions. The kitchenette is a mistake in social eco nomics. Planning a Bolt. Philadelphia Press. There is little doubt that Bryan and Hearst have a complete understanding, and that Bryan's extreme utterances are in harmony with their common policy. If they cannot handle tho Democracy their aim appears to be to create a party of their own of the most radical socialis tic character, and all .nelr movements point In that direction. Bryan's speech means a bolt and Hearst's acts can have no other Intelligent interpretation. If there was any chance of Democratic suc cess before -this development destroys it Pattlson. Boston Herald. Ex-Govemor Pattlson, who is one of the Democratic delegates at large from Pennsylvania, has been reckoned a dark horse in every Presidential campaign for the last dozen years. He seems to be quite out of, the running this time. Penn sylvania Isn't a particularly promising I Democratic pasture. - PENSIONS UP TO DATE. ' The Pension Bureau at "Washington has recently attempted to estimate the amount paid out by the Government In pensions since the system was began. The follow ing figures by wars have been compiled: Revolutionary "War (estl mated) $ 70,000,000.00 War of IS12 on account of sorvlco without regard to disability 45.1S3.107.22 Indian wars (on account of service without regard to disability 0,234,414. 53 War with Mexico (on ac count of service without regard to disability 33,453,300. 01 War Jf the Rebellion .... 2.878.2-10.400.17 War With Spain 5,473.238.31 Antral tntnt lfTihiirmntH la pensions $3,038,023,500.18 J Pensioners upon the rolls last July were divided among the various branches of the service and as. between survivors and their dependents as" follows: Revolutionary "War Widows 2; daugh ters, 3. War of 1S13 Survivors, 1; widows, 1115. Indian wars Survivors, 1565; widows', 3169. Mexican "War Survivors, 5964; widows, 7910. Service after March 4. 1S61 General laws: Army invalids, 264,139; array widows, 86, 866; navy invalids, 4112; navy widows, 2221; army nurses, 624,1 Act June 27, 1S90: Army invalids, 427.711; army widows, 156,- 249; navy invalids, 16,010; navy wldowsr 6992. War with Spain General laws: Army In valids, S7SS; army widows, 3488; navy In valids, 402; navy widows, 174. Grand total, 996,545. This year's pension bill aggregated $133, 150,100, of which $136,800,000 is for pension payments directly and the balance for ad ministrative purposes. He Was From Missouri. Chicago Inter Ocean. President E. H. Harriman, railroad mag nate and president of the New York World's Fair Commission, has passed through an experience in St Louis which ought to teach him that fame, after all, is but a fleeting shadow. .He was sauntering around the New York State building of the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition on Thursday, waiting to be called to a banquet at which he was either to preside or to" occupy the chair of a distinguished guest when a. watch man ordered him to "clear out!" These were the precise words, "Cle: out!" And they were spoken In the voice of one who evidently felt that it was his to com mand. "I am Mr. Harriman" tho railroad magnate began. "Don't know any Mr. Harriman," re plied the watchman. "I'm from New York," the distinguished man explained. "I'm. from Missouri," replied the watch man. "Hike!" And Mr. Harriman deemed it the wisest plan to "hike." So he "hiked." Mr. Harriman was not so wrapped up, it seems, in a sense of his own importance as to misunderstand what the watchman meant when he said he was from Mis souri. It meant a lot of things, even to a railroad magnate. It meant, first of all, that being from Missouri, the watchman would have to be "shown," and under ae circumstances It might have been an im possible thing for Mr. Harriman to "show" him with full satisfaction. He took the more sensible course and "hiked." It' saved a lot of bother, and the temporary humiliation it involved was no doubt more than compensated for by the feeling that if he had not "hiked" when ordered he would have been "hoisted." Such is Missouri, and such, 'alas. Is fame! Savageries of Civilization. Pittsburg Dispatch. When the Berlin conference adjourned the highest hope was presented that Chris tian civilization would adopt the Chris tian, civilized method of dealing with be nighted and weak people of savage re gions. It Is true that this Interval of humane enlightenment was short-lived. Only a year or two elapsed before Eng land, France and Germany were grabbing African territory right and left But it was supposed until recently that the Con go Free State was preserved to human ity. Now the evidences are accumulating that the savageries of civilization along the Congo "Valley are more horrible than any of the other manifestations of civil ized oppression. Consider the Boys. Atchison Globe. Treat a boy with the same considera tion and politeness you would treat a grown person. Every man has recol lections of unfairness and inconsidera tlon to which he was subjected when he was a boy. Bring up the subject and every man will relate wrongs of his youth which cut him deeply, and which never ceased to rankle In his bosom. No doubt some of the meanness in men got its start in the bad blood germinated In their youth. His Hallucinations. Nashville American. Mr. Bryan is not a man of weak mind, but he suggests a mind lacking in proper balance. He seems to be one of those. In the language of Macaulay, whose "imag ination exercises a despotic power. It turns the clouds into gigantic shape's and the winds into doleful voices. The belief which springs from it is more absolute and undoubtlng than any which can be derived from evidence." Plain Truth of It. Omaha Bee. It was plain that the New York plat form did not Bult Colonel Bryan even before he said so. But when It comes down to brass tacks the New York plat form was not framed with any Idea that it would be calculated to suit Colonel Bryan. 9 1 Republican Asset. Milwaukee Sentinel. Mr. Bryan evidently means to justify tho current definition of himself as a "valuable Republican asset" Falling to rule his party, he will ruin it if he can. Cursed With Wealth. Atchison Globe. Speaking of the misfortune of riches there is the woman who is a good'eook! but who is rich enough to engage a hired girl, who is a poor one. Only One. Springfield (Mas3.) Republican. It may be cruel to say so, but about the only man In sight who seems capable of meeting the Bryan test of a candidate is Mr. Bryan himself. Green Grow the Rashes O! Robert Burns. Green grots- the rashes O, Green grow the rashes O; N The sweetest hours that e'er I spend Are spent aznang the lasses O. There's naught but care on ev'ry han.. In every hour that passes O; What signifies the life o man. An' 'twere na for the lasses 0 The warMy race may riches chase, An riches still may fly them O; A' though at last they catch them fast, Their hearts can ne'er enjoy them O. Gle me a canny hour at e'en, -Oly arms about my dearie O, An' warly cares an warly men May a gae tapsalteerle O! , For you sae douce, ye sneer at this; Ye're naught but senseless asses O! The wisest man the warl e'er saw He dearly lo'ed the lasses O. Auld Nature swears, the lovely dears Her noblest work she classes O: , Her prenUce han' she tried on man. An' then sha made the lasses O. - Ji0TB'ADCOHMENT. "Dr. Livingstone, I presume." ' It's kind of risky to be- a sheep around about Lakevlew. Dean looks with approval oa a fast life. It meets him half-way. Astoria will hava its relic back, as a Portlander wickedly observed, to com plete the set Sf a girl with "melting brown eyes" knows how to use them sh'e becomes a regular smelter. Lhassa will be awakened from the sleep of centuries by the alarm-clock of civilization the machine gun. Even in one of those peek-a-bco shirt waists, a gin with really red hair can't look cobl on a Summer's day. Kuropatkln must be feeling blue. Tha Japanese "nave not been lured into cap turing a big town for several days. Two La Grande boys are said to have spent a pleasant April in killing 122 squir rels; a couple- of gophers and a badger. "It's a 'eavenly morning; let's go and kill something." -. The health officers of Boston set. an official limit to the number of bugs that may bo sold In one glass of milk. One hundred million Is tho number and dealers that sell more will be prose cuted. A woman in New York read so many "health" magazines that sho became crazy, and resolved to abstain from all food. The idea was all right and tha woman escaped tho ills that flesh la heir to by dying. The boomers of microbes point with pride to the statement that in five years almost one-third of tha members of New York's street cleaning department have fallen victims to tuberculosis as the re sult of snuffing up the dust sent a-fiying by the brooms. The Heppner Times, says a watchful contemporary, reports that a woman on Butter Creek placed a bucket of cream in the well. During the night a frog fell in and, to keep his head above, water, he began kicking vigorously. When tho woman arrived in the morning she found the frog sitting on a pat of butter, wash ing, his feet in tho buttermilk. Mayor Williams received a circular from a Southern sanitarium, a few days ago. He read of tha loyely valley in which the establishment was placed, tha circular winding up a burst of descrip tion by saying this lovely valley was a "rosy dimple on the cheek of creation." Then Mayor Williams had to give it up. Now that Earnest Terah Hooley has come within the scope of the law, he is ilkcly to be soaked for fair. After his "bankruptcy" he lived in splendor although the shareholders in his com panies were not equally fortunate. Pro moters have privileges In Great Britain, but when one of them oversteps the dead line he stands a good chance of getting punished for the offenses of the rest A worthy traveler on the path of riches used to advertise from Macomb, Neb., that he would Impart the secret of gain ing love for 25 cents one quarter. His letter In response to a remittance was full of. sound advice, such as the edi torial page of the New York Journal frequently hands out, but it ended with "Yours' for suckers." This unkind term InationNrankled in the breasts of several swains to such an extent that they had a fraud order issued by the Postoffice Department against the friend of suckers. It seems hard that a man who In a small way follows Mr. Hearst and Presi dent Roosevelt in the elevation of the trite should be deprived of the use of the mails, even if he did send his letters with a disturbing admission of his alms. "I saw 'Hamlet' played by and adapted for Malays at Singapore," says a corre spondent of the Sydney Bulletin; "It was sung instead of spoken, and mostly to English tunes. Hamlet addressed the Ghost to the tune of 'Her Golden Hair,' and killed Polonlus to 'Listen to the Band.' Polonius addressed his son to That's English. You Know,' and with tho king and queen, sang 'Mary Was a Housemaid' to other'words. The ghost scene included three ghosts, two clowns, and a bpttle of whisky." The Malays have hit upon the right thing to do. Managers in this country complain that the public taste is such that Shakespeare Is a dead one so far as money-making Is concerned. The fault lies with the managers themselves. Let them popu larize Shakespeare in the way Indicated by tho untutored Asiatics, althouga it might not be necessary to introduce too much of the clown, slap-stick and whisky features. But good, lively music would be" a great addition. Juliet might sing, "If You Ain't Got No Money, You Needn't Come Around," and the part of Othello would prove a winner if taken by a good black-face comedian. It is un necessary, however, to enlarge upon a scheme possessing such obvious advant ages. WEX. J. OUT OFTHE GINGER JAR. Tactful?" "Very. She lives as far Beyond her income of S50 a week almost women could 11 e beyond an Income of $100 a week." Puck. There are only two kinds of children your own perfect little cherubs and the Ill-behaved brats ownedby other people. Town Topics. Church I see a New York man ha3 dis covered a new object in the sky. Flatbush, Gracious! Can't it be the lid? Yonkers Statesman. She What Is your business? He I'm an in spector of ruins. She How romantic! He Well, hardly. I'm -an insurance adjuster. Cleveland Leader. In Ave minutes a woman can clean up a man's room In such a way that It will take him five weeks to find out where she put things New Yorker. "I don't know whether she has shaken him or promised to marry him." "Why?" "He has stopped buying extravagant presents for her." Philadelphia Ledger. Bill It is said that the Indian banyan tree has at times sheltered as" many as 7000 persons. Jill The Mormons should adopt it as a family tree. Yonkers Statesman. "Who is that awfully freckled girl over there in the corner?" "Why. that's Mlas Bullion, the great helres3." "Aren't her freckles be coming?" Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Artist I spent several weeks on that picture. The Critic Well, I've spent nearly as much time as thafon it myself. What In the world is It? Yonkers Statesman. "Ha!" exclaimed the villain between cig arette puffs, "I'll follow you to the ends of the earth!" "Oh no, you won't," calmly re joined the golden-bewigged heroine. "Why won't- I?" queried the vUlaln. "Because," answered her ladyship, 'T not going there. See?" Chicago News.