6 THE MORNING OREGONTAN; TUESDAY, AUGTJSQ2 V2 . 19Q. . : 5 Entered at the Postofflce at Portland. Or-, as. second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br mall (postage prepaid In advance) Daily, -with Sunday, per month $0.85 Dally, with Sunday excepted, per year 7.50 ,Dally, -with Sunday, per years... 9.00 Sunday, per year 2-0 The Weekly, per year 1-50 The Weekly, 3 months 50 Dally, per -week, delivered, Sunday ex cepted - 15c Dally, per -week, delivered, Sunday In- eluded 20c POSTAGE RATES. , United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper upon the folly .that is manifest when . one human being has "become so utterly dependent upon another as to be unable .to sustain the breath of life "when de prived of the accustomed support and companionship. STRONG POINTS OF THE BACKGROUND. Only about one person out of every one hundred in this strenuous world , amounts to anything. The other ninety-nine are useful merely to iurnlsh the background for the successful to appear upon in bold relief. It has been univer sally conceded, we take it, that the background is altogether undesirable; certainly it has had few if any defend ers; but a cogent apology for it, or rather a covert argument for it as de nt rn let I 82 to 44-pase naSer "".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.I'.'. 3c sirable, appears between the lines of Foreign rates, double. The Oregonian dees not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return .nv manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be inclosed for this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beck with Special Agency) New York: rooms 43-50, Tribune Building. Chicago: Roome 510-512 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SALE. Atlantic City, X. J. Taylor & Bailey, news dealers, 23 Leeds Place. Chicazo Auditorium annex; Postofflce News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend rlcki 906-912 Seventeenth street. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Los Amrcles B. F. Gardner. 259 South Spring, and . Harry Draokln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanauch. 50 South Third: L. Reselsbuger. 217 First Avenue South. New Xork Cltr L. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden F. R. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros.. 1612 Farnam; McLaughUn Bros., 210 South 14th; Megeath Stationery Co., 1S0S Farnam. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South street. St. "Louis World's Fair News Co.. Louisi ana News Co.; Joseph Copeland; Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th st.; Geo. L. Ackermann. newsboy. Eighth and Olive sts. San Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sut ter: L. E. Lee. Palace Hotel News btanu; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market: Frank Scott. 80 EIHh? N. Wheatlev. 83 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. ' Washington, D. C. Ed Brinkman. Fourth and Pennsylvania ave; Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem- ' perature, 89 degrees; minimum temperature, 00 degrees. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and cooler; westerly winds. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1904. IS JAPAN IN EXTREMITY? "Writers begin to speculate on the probable exhaustion of Japan by the war. Some who profess knowledge say it Is impossible for her to sustain Very long the financial strain to which she is subjected. But many nations, very poor, have fought long wars, victori ously; and there seems no good reason to suppose that Japan is not at least as well provided with the sinews of war as Russia. From all accounts her finances are in better condition, and the distance of the material resources of Russia from the seat of war, is among the heaviest of handicaps. More than In former times, however, money is first of the nerves of war; and Russian credit thus far is weaker than Japan- But though the war thus far has been a series of almost uninterrupted suc cesses for Japan, a writer in the Chi cago Tribune, - who professes special knowledge he calls himself "An exv- Attache" predicts that the efforts of Japan must soon come to an end, from want of money to support them. Japan is forcing the fighting at a terrible rate; and this writer says that she is doing so because her resources are greatly reduced and she is making every ef fort, at whatever cost of men, to bring the Russians to their knees and get peace at an early date. For if she doesn't force an end of the war soon, he says, she will have to quit fighting for the reason that she will not have wherewithal to keep her armies in the field and her ships afloat. This, however, may be a conjectural assertion, and an exaggerated one. But it is supported by the statement that Japan has mortgaged her customs as security for past loans, that the money now is used up, and that her people cannot carry the added weight of another mite of taxation. She has the men, their spirit is high, and they are ready for any sacrifice, as their constancy and valor abundantly prove. If Japan had money she would surely win; or if they were fighting, at home in resistance to invasion, it would be another sort of contest But to main tain armies, at some distance, in of fensive war, by communication at sea. is a different problem. Japan is putting up such a gallant fight for existence, against a mighty and aggressive adversary, that the 'sympathy of the world is largely with her. Her fighting is splendid; her sac rifices have been great, and it would ba a pity to see such pluck forced to sue cumb to bankruptcy; especially when resistance to the aggressions of a co lossal and despotic power is the cause . and stake of the war. Mr. Robert Herrlck's novel "The Com mon Lot" in its latest Installment in the August Atlantic. The story is painfully circumstantial in some of its details, ' suggestive of Ida Tarbell and Lincoln -Steff ens, but it is' a good story for all that The heroine of this story is the wife of an architect who basely altered the specifications of an ostensibly fireproof hotel so as to bring its cost within the desired limit of a grasping owner, and who subsequently became a quasi mur derer by reason of a conflagration which wiped out the mantrap hotel and in it a number of lives. After the storm consequent upon the architect s manly confession in court had blown over, he proposed to' move to another city and begin all over again. But his wife protested, partly because she thought they ought to suffer something for his sin, partly because she preferred to build up right there rather than sneak away, and partly also because -she--wanted her husband to be con tented with the common lot and not strive so desperately for eminence. Some of the pleadings of this high- minded and great-souled woman ought to get a good many women to thinking, and men, too. She realizes what a ter rific strain the modern passion for emi nence imposes on an ambitious man. He wants to see his wife in high social position and his children given every advantage of education and accom plishments. The heroine of Mr. Her rlck's novel thinks the price of all this is too high. She would rather have less of worldly position and more of her husband's companionship. She would rather have her boys quietly and fru gaily brought up by father and mother in the home than on the expensive and showy scale approved by convention. And. when her husband tries to justify himself by appealing to maternal pride she says: "I' am willing to see them start' In life poor, with just what we could do for them. Perhaps, In the world to which they will grow up, things will be different, anyway." Perhaps It will be different! Certain ly it should be different There must come a time when true worth will not seem to consist in the abundance of material things that one possesses, but somewhat more than now in what one is and has done to help men and women along towards character rather than toward wealth or mere bodily comfort; when the breakneck pace that sends many a man to suicide because he can not keep up his desperate undertakings on behalf of wife and children will be viewed with less favor and the quiet. happy life with more. For the great objection which Mr. Herrlck's heroine had to the strife for success was that It tempted a man from the straight path of perfect rectitude. Let us acknowledge a debt to the At lantlc for putting these ideas into its pages, and also for another article In the same issue whose moral is some thing similar. "We allude to George W. Alger's piece on "Unpunished Com mercial jnme, in wnicn mere is a serious study of the pursuit of wealth on a larger scaie DUt ny the same crooked means, not so sensational as the Tarbell and Steffens undertakings. but safer and perhaps truer, and con eluded with these trenchant words "It is high time the criminal courts should recognize the present duty. which the conditions of the times make daily more Imperative, of drawing defi nitely the line which shall distinguish before the eyes of all men the finance which is finance from the finance which is crime." There is no service the At lantlc could undertake, it seems to us, more worthy of its high traditions and more necessary to our National life, than this call of American Ideals iack from the worship of wealth and show to the serene and high simplicity of other days and calmer times. a thing of beauty, exclusively, but as the ready Instrument of progress tney give of their power to light cities, move machinery and furnish employment to hundreds of sober, industrious men. The old has given place to themew, and the hoDe of the pioneer in regard to the future of Oregon City is in the way of fulfillment The falls have given much of their wild beauty to this fulfillment, but it may be added that with scenic beauty of a type that human hands can never deface, and upon which Hu man needs will never lay tribute, the old pioneer town is still bountifully supplied. In the words of George Croly, the Irish author md minister, whose flights of fancy delighted the imag inative and the emotional of a past generation: "There stands magnitude giving the instant impression or a power above man; grandeur that defies decay: antiquity that tells of ages un numbered; beauty that the toucn or time makes only more beautiful; strength imperishable as the globe." The beauty-of this picture may have been marred somewhat by the tribute which utility has laid upon the falls, but the general effect Is still as charm ing as when Nature in her wildest mood dominated the sc2ne. OPENING UP CENTRAL OREGON. Through the enterprise of the O. R, & N. another rich agricultural district is soon to be brought in touch with Port land. Construction of the branch line to Condon will tap one of the finest farming sections in the state, and will place in direct communication with Portland a territory susceptible of sus taining a very large population. The long wagon haul to market has pre vented the development of the coun try, and the big wheat crop, which is promised in that portion of Gilliam County now tributary to the O'. R. & N. will be small In comparison with that which will be harvested as soon as the building of the railroad makes it possi ble for farm products to be marketed. Manager Calvin has been with us but a short time, but he Is making a good start in opening up a new trade field so close at hand that both Portland and Gilliam. County cannot do otherwise than profit greatly by its development The statement that the road from Ar lington to Condon will be speedily rushed to completion is the most Im portant commercial announcement that has been made this year. As the line from Arlington to Condon was under consideration when Mr. Harrlman de elded to extend the Columbia Southern, and was a part of the Harrlman plan for the general development of the en tire Central Oregon country, it is now a certainty that the latter road will be speedily pushed south from its present terminus at Shaniko. The resources of this new country, now about to be opened, are eo many and varied that their development will offer great op portunitles to thousands of settlers. New cities and towns will spring up along these branch lines, and will pros per as the resources of the country are turned to practical use. All of this new traffic, like that which was ere ated when the railroads first offered an outlet for the products of the Inland Empire, will find its way to market through Portland. The results of diversified farming In the "Willamette "Valley show conclu sively that even that locality, from an agricultural standpoint the oldest in Oregon, has not yet reached its limit as a wealth producer. In Central Oregon we have a field for exploitation in many United States by growing other crops with which ,the pauper labor of India and' the Argentine cannot compete, and there is no Incentive to continue grow ing wheat simply for the purpose of maintaining a. prestige that once was ours. Similar conditions confront us in the shlpowning business. Before the vast possibilities for internal develop ment and Industrial exploitation . on land were fully understood, the ship owners of the United States were as prominent In the shipping trade of the world as our wheatgrowers were In the grain trade. The shipowner in a meas ure abandoned the field. not as a bank rupt or to starve, but because he could make more money out of something else while the cheap sailors of foreign, coun tries, less fortunately situated, were forced to remain in the business. The farmer, quick to, discover that re turns of $50 per acre from diversified farming were preferable to $25 per acre from wheat, left to the growers of the Argentine and India the business of supplying the world with cheap wheat. This country has not been a loser by abandoning wheatgrowlng for some-' thing better, or by turning its freight over to ships that could handle It at the least possible cost However, if It is necessary that our prestige in either of these Industries should be maintained, the wheat industry In which thousands are interested, should be given prefer ence over the shlpowning business in which but comparatively few are en gaged. If the wealthy shipowners are to be subsidized to enable them to com pete with the foreigners, by all means subsidize the less-fortunate farmer in order that he can compete with the cheap labor of the Old "World In grow ing wheat W. R; HEARST'S DOOM IS SEALED EFFORT TO CONVICT BENSON. The old town of "La Fayette,- for many years the center of pioneer life of the West Side counties, has of lata years been in the clutch of chronic dull ness. Recently a fire broke out in the night in the business district, and. being without equipment of any sort for fighting flames, this part of the old town was practically destroyed. Now arose the croak of superstition hinting of yet darker things In store. Some years ago a 'worthless fellow was exe cuted for a most atrocious murder committed In the town. The evidence of his guilt was conclusive to the jury, though it was purely circumstantial His mother, as mothers will and do, be lieved in his innocence. Perhaps in her youth she had been a reader of Mrs. ID D. E. N. Southworth's novels, the plot In more thanone of which turned upon a mother's curse In cases like that In which her son was Involved. Be this as It may, this distracted mother cursed the town wherein her son was tried, convicted and executed, and added in her wrath a prophecy that it would be three times burned and would perish from the earth. The fires have materl alized. But now to discredit the omen of disaster, so formidable to the timid and the superstitious, energy and en terprise have come to the fore and buildings under construction and in contemplation show that the town has taken a new lease of life. This Is grat ifying. The site of La Fayette is one of great ; beauty, and the farming region round about is unsurpassed in fertility. The sons and daughters of "old Yam hill," native and adopted, are widely scattered, but wherever they are they will hear with pleasure the announce ment that La Fayette has been infused with new life, and that the late fire that was lamented as a calamity is likely to prove the index to a new prosperity. The Siberian Railroad is not yet com pleted around Lake Baikal, and steamer transport through the lake Is necessary. It is a severe Interruption of business making transfers necessary from cars to boats and from boats to cars; and, Tammany Will Defeat Editor's Ambi tion to Remain in Congress. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Aug. L Tammany has marked William R. Hearst for slaughter. The young New York editor, undismayed by his defeat at St. Louis', etill regards him self as a Presidential possibility and hopes to retain his position in Congress until 190S, believing it will , tend to keep him before the public Hearst however, through his New York paper, has been severely criticising Leader Murphy, of Tammany Hall, and Mayor McClellan, of New York, and Tam many will not permit this. Therefore the decree has gone forth that Hearst must not be renominated- and if Tam many can prevent it he will be snowed under. To save himself Hearst Is making a combination with Bill Devery, but Tam many has heretofore controlled Hearst's district, ana wiui mat organization against him, Hearst Is probably lost Roosevelt' Better Understood. Congressman Hull, of Iowa, vice-chair man or tne KepuDiican -congressional Committee, after a conference with the President today, was asked what he thought of the attempt of the Democratic papers to make the personality of Pres ident Roosevelt ' the real Issue of the campaign. "The Republicans welcome that Issue," said he. "An lesue of that kind will be the best thing we can have in, the West, while in the East nothing can be lost by pointing out the abilities, courage and wisdom of the President The fact is that -many men who did not like him a year or two years ago have changed their minds about him upon closer Investiga tion. I speak more particularly of Wall street and the money centers of the East These men have found that the President did his duty and did it fearless ly, and that his action has been for the best intersets of the . country. The shak ing out of watered stock has tended to business conservatism and that is be ginning to be more appreciated each day." INVITES CERTAIN GUESTS. OIney, Mr. and Mrs. Wall and ex- President Cleveland Favored. ESOPUS, N. Y., August 1. Judge- Parker's Invitation to Richard Olney, of Massachusetts, to visit Rosemount has been accepted, and Mr. Olney Is expected within a fortnight Thursday has been fixed for the visit of Edward C. "Wall, of Wisconsin, and Mrs. Wall. They are on the way to Europe. It is understood here that ex-President Grover Cleveland has been Invited to spend day at Rosemount on his way home from New Hampshire, where .he Is spending the Summer. The large number of letters received at Rosemount from gold and silver Demo crats are very gratifying to Judge Par ker. He has also received many letters from Republicans who declare they will support him. Judge Parker says that he has so little experience in receiving political letters that he cannot say whether the mail he gets indicates any great political realign ment but he thinks not A great pro portion of the mail of this character comes from the South, but the letters from Indiana are numerous. National Democratic Chairman Tag- gart Is keeping In constant communica tion with Judge Parker, but it was stated tonight that, if he has decided on the personnel of the executive and finance committees of the National committee, he has not advised Judge Parker of his se lections. Until after the notification cere monies, Judge Parker will receive very few visitors. Department of the Interior Sends Special Agent to San Francisco. OREGONLAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Aug., L The Government Is go ing to make a determined stand In Its attempt to prosecute the principals in the Benson-Hyde-DImpnd land ring in San Francisco, when the case comes up the middle of this month. Notwithstand ing the set-back which the prosecution received by the decision of Judge La combe, of New York, who held the In dictment failed to charge Benson with any crime against the United States, the Government will insist before the San Francisco court that crime against the General Government is charged and suffi ciently shown In the several counts of the indictment To strengthen the Government's case, Assistant Attorney-General A B. Pugh, who worked up the evidence against Ben son and others, Is to leave for San Fran cisco In a few days to be present at the hearing. He will carry with him a copy of Judge Lacombe's decision and a mass of evidence and authorities to show the fallacy of that ruling. Secretary Hitchcock, it is understood, has instructed the department authori ties to use the utmost efforts to have Benson and his associates held for trial, and It Is under his Instructions that Pugh goes to San Francisco to make what may be the last stand against the land ring. Pugh refuses to discuss his mission or to. comment in any way upon Judge La combe's decision. V DEBT OF THE NATION. Report for July Shows a Notable In crease The Figures. WASHINGTON. Aug. 1. The monthly statement of the public debt shows that at the close of business July 31, vm. the debt, less cash In the Treasury, amounted to $9S0,7S1,413, which is an in crease for the month of $13,549,639. This increase Is accounted for by the decrease of $14,945,662 in the amount of cash bal ance in the Treasury as comparea witn last month. The debt is recapitulated as follows: Interest-bearing debt $ 895,157,540 Dftht nn -which interest has ceased 1.SS1.120 Debt bearing no interest 3S7.S24.321 Total $1,284,862,992 This amount does not Include $1,103,578,- 968 in certificates and Treasury notes out standing, which are offset by an equal amount of cash on hand-held for their re demption. The cash in the Treasury Is classified as follows: Reserve fund $ 150.000.000 Trust fund 1,003,728,969 General fund In' National bank depositories- 112,642,766 In treasury of Philippine Islands 7,316.937 Total $1,393,829,075 Asrainst which there are demand liabil ties outstanding amounting to $1,094,747,945, which leaves a cash balance on hand of $304,051,579. BIG GOVERNMENT DEFICIT. mnrdnvpr thp lnk is frnpn nr more rcBpCuLa Ui "ie "lu"et"-e "than half the year. This lake, a moun- Valley, and this new country is today as near a virgin field as the Valley was forty years ago. What Its development will mean for Portland and for the State of Oregon can be estimated by comparing the progress that has been made in the Willamette Valley. The comparison will fall only from the fact that Central Oregon will show a much more rapid growth than was made in the Willamette Valley when it was first supplied with transportation facilities. tain basin, Is one of the large fresh water bodies of the world. It is 360. miles long, from southwest to north east, and from twenty to fifty-five miles In breadth. Its shores everywhere are precipitous mountain walls. To build a railroad around It Is a heavy under- taking. But till the railroad around Its shores shall be completed, the interrup tion of the traffic over the Siberian Railroad will offer very serious ob struction. In an emergency like the present, under the pressure of war in Manchuria, it Is one of Russia's most difficult problems. THE PITY OF IT. Mdst pitiful is the death, or the man ner of the death of Mrs. Xiucinda Bry ant, an aged and honored woman' of Albany, at her home In the suburbs of that city recently. Since the death of her husband, more than a year ago, she had been oppressed with loneliness the bitterness of which it .is difficult for younger persons and those less depend ent to comprehend, and finally she ended all by self-destruction. Regret is for the manner, not the fact, of her death. There are many in stances on record in which the death of one person is hastened by that of an other with whom he or she has walked closely for many years. Almost any one of our older communities has fur nished an example of this kind. In the wider community a familiar example is that of Phoebe Cary, who followed her sister Alice, "sweet singer of the Great West," to the grave in a few months As explained by the biographer and close friend of the sisters, Mary Clem mer Ames, "Through nearly all their lives Phoebe had materially, intellect ually and spiritually depended upon Alice. She sank and died because she could not live on in a world where her sister was not" If this could be true and was true of a woman who was resourceful and philo sophical and but 47 years of age, who can wonder at the going out In, utter loneliness that obscured all other feel ings of an "aged woman who found, life not worth living when deprived of the companionship upon which she had de fended absolutely for more than fifty years? The pity of such a condition appeals to us and forbids discourse WnXAMETTE FAIXS. The falls "of the Willamette" at Ore gon City are not as they appeared to the eyes of a past generation. Har nessed .to the car of progress, the wild monotone of waters has taken on the subdued tone of industry. Curbed and turned aside on the west shore to make room for a channel through which the products of the Valley may pass un- vexed to the sea; cribbed on the east bank by similar devices of commerce and Industry, the falls have paid trlb ute of their scenic beauty and wild grandeur to stern, uncompromising utility. "The beauty of the falls is gone," it is said, but In its place stands usefulness, the full scope of which can scarcely as yet be more than conjec tured. True, the waters of the Willam ette as they go tumbling and swirling and sweeping over the rocks, still keep up a show of boisterous, untamed glee, but it is only a show, since much of the tremendous power in which of old they reveled has been harnessed and is being driven like any slave to do the bidding of man. Years ago pioneers, with a long, wist ful glance into the future, proudly des ignated Oregon City, then quiet even to dullness and devoid of enterprise, the. "Lowell of the Pacific" A vainglorious title this seemed to be, when but one or two modest flouring mills and a sin gle gristmill alone made good its as sumption. And when a Winter flood came and swept even these prestiges of future greatness away, the title seemed an empty one indeed. A generation has passed on, and now another note Is heard. It is not of wailing, though it has a faintly plaintive sound. The scenic beauty of the falls has been de stroyed by the unsightly harness that industry and enterprise have laid upon them. Thus runs the half plaintive, half boastful story. A. familiar adage declares senten tlously: "You cannot eat your cake and have it, too." The falls of the Wil lamette were beautiful in the untamed grandeur with which Nature had in vested them In a far-off formative era of the world. They were useful, also. though only a suggestion of usefulness lay in their wild uproar. Beauty and utility met upon their brink one day and the former surrendered much of her heritage. The falls are no longer MORE LOST PRESTIGE. American crop experts have been shading their estimates on the dimen sions of the wheat crop of 1904 until they now place it at approximately 600,- 000,000 bushels, or 37,000,000 bushels less than the estimated yield last year. From last year's crop this country shipped but 120,000,000 bushels, the smallest amount that has been sent for eign since 1890. That year, with a crop of but 399,000,000 bushels, we shipped 102,000,000 bushels, and a year later with a crop of 611,000,000 bushels we shipped 225,605,000 bushels. If our crop of 637,- 000,000 bushels admitted of shipments of only 120,000,000 bushels, it Is obvious that the 600,000,000-bushel crop of 1904 will have a surplus of but 83.000.000 A great deal Is s"ald these days about the Immense subsidies through which Great Britain has built up her mer chant marine. -This talk, however, like all the talk about shipping subsidies. Is, when It Is not selfishly Inspired by de signs on the Treasury, put forth by those who have no knowledge whatever of what they are talking about On another page of today's Issue we print the latest report on aids to British ship ping, made to the House of Commons by a commission appointed for the pur pose. The report shows that the only aid extended by Great Britain to ships consists of the payments made for car rying malls In mall steamers. There is no precedent In British practice for the bushels for export, the smallest amount I Government benefactions to sailing that has been exported in thirty years. For more than a quarter of a century this country has been one of the great est factors in regulating the wheat trade of the world. It has been more than twenty years since dur wheat crop exceeded. 500,000,000 bushels, and as far back as 1881 -we exported more wheat than was sent out last year. As a steadily-increasing amount of new land has been put to wneat-grpwmg every year since the railroads got west of the Mis sissippi. It Is apparent that each year has also .witnessed the withdrawal of former wheat lands and the substitution of more profitable crops. This fact, to gether with the Increasing demands of home consumption, Is responsible for the shrinkage in the exportable surplus, which in a very short time will disap pear entirely. The Indifference of the foreign countries formerly so dependent on us for wheat Is reflected In market Quotations in Liverpool, several cents per bushel lower than In .some of the Amerioan markets. This is easily ex plained by the official figures on weekly shipments which show India to be send ing out an average of more than 2,000,000 bushels per week, with the Argentine and Russia shipping about the same. These are the countries that are respon sible for low-priced wheat, and until they reach the limit of their production or suffer a period of bad crops, they will be trade antagonists in this branch of business with which the United States cannot cope to very good advantage. In this gradual withdrawal of the United. States from her prominent place in the wheat-exporting countries of the world, there are points of resemblance to our abandonment of the business of shlpowning. We are making more money out of the rich lands, of the vessels which our subsidy grafters are so anxious to see adopted in this coun try. The storm king is not more a re specter of shrines than of persons. The most sacred emblem in Russia, the 'Iversky Mother Goddess," was the sport and prey of a hurricane at Mos cow the other day, and the priests In charge of it were pitched about the streets regardless of their frantic struggles and Invocations. The Image Is supposed by the Ignorant, creed-rid den peasantry to possess supernatural powers, and the manner In which if was knocked about is regarded as an omen of evil to the empire. The Image was recovered, but the dread of disaster still remains to haunt and harass the masses already tired of the war and depressed by the repeated reverses of the army. Notification of Candidate Davis. NEW YORK, Aug. 1. Secretary Wood son, of the Democratic National Commit tee, today sent a telegram to jnairman John S. Williams, and other members of the committee to notify Henry G. Davis of his nomination as Vice-President to meet at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., Autrust 17. The arrangements for the notification are in charge of John T. Mc- Graw, member of the National Commit tee, for that state. Coolidge at National Headquarters. NEW YORK, Aug. L National Repub lican headquarters In the Metropolitan Life building will be ready for formal opening Wednesday, when Chairman Cortelyou is expected to return here. Tne quarters were today occupied by Assist ant Secretary Coolidge. ATTITUDE TOWARD RUSSIA. Finnish Alliance Grieves Over De struction of Rights. NEW YORK, Aug. L The Finnish Na tional Alliance of the United States has issued a public declaration concerning Finland's attitude toward Russia, In which they say: "We regard it as our duty to assure the American people and the entire civilized world that there is not a respectable man or woman in Finland, excepting for tune-seekers, who does not grieve In de spair over the downtearing of her most sacred human and cix'll rights, the ruin of her educational institutions, and the de struction of her peaceable system of civil government, for which has been substi tuted a state of lawlessness and despotism. 'We are aware that the Finnish people, in spite of all means of -compulsion, still regard, in accordance with the declaration of their representative oody, tne nussian military ordinance, enacted through force ful methods, as Illegal and unlawful. And, even though some sort of representative body might be convened by compulsory ways and means, as is the intention at present, for the purpose of approving all these violations or tnera, we sua Know that the Finnish people, as long as tne present conditions prevail, can neither be nor are they In such a condition as to be come responsible in any manner ror tne actions of this prospective congress." Falling Off in Receipts From Customs and Internal Revenue. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. The com paratlve statement of the Government receipts and expenditures ior tne month of July, 1904, shows a deticit or $17,407,728, as against a dencit or $,- 776,613 for July last year. The large deficit is accounted for by a falling off in the receipts from customs and In ternal revenue and Increased expendi tures on civil and miscellaneous and war and NaVy accounts. The total col lections for the month of July were $46,786,387, as follows: Customs, $19,453,749; decrease, as compared with July 1903, $3,662,755. Internal revenues, $20,234,004; de crease, $725,739.- Miscellaneous, $7, 06S.632; Increase. $3,563,367. The expenditures for July, i04, ag gregated $64,194,115, and included: War, $18,484,284; increase, $530,000. Naval. $12,163,653; increase. $4,6S4,C00. There was an increase in the Inter est payment of $901,000 accounted for hy the fact that last year the July in terest was anticipated to a .large extent NOTE AND COMMENT, The Roosevelt kids are at the Fair. Parker had better put nis grana- daughter to work right away. The full name o'f Joseph Conrad,, the author of "Talk,"1 "Romance and otner books, Is Joseph Conrad Korzenlowski. He has always- been a man of letters- Long after the "great battle of tho campaign" has been fought in .Man churia, the correspondents, from sheer force of habit, will be describing It -as imminent The Japanese have occupied. Nlu- chwang, also New - Chwang. and Nlu-Chwang. xNow If they will passman ordinance giving the city one name In? stead of half a dozen, their victory will' not have been In vain. What with "1905" in letters of fire in one direction and in the other the. renovated Perkins cow glowing in the radiance of its own electric light, the old burg begins to look ready for the Fair. Ernest Thompson Seton owns some land around his Connecticut home at Cos -Cob. It is not cultivated land, nor Is it- civilized. In the language of the apostle of woodgraft, it is "untamed land." How dangerous. This is how Judge Parker became famous, according to the Illustrated London . News : "When he learned that the gold standard -was not in the party "platform," he telegraphed In the most Incisive terms that, if he were elected President, he would put It there. Too bad of Fate to make Kipling, the ideal campaign poet, an English- man. He would have enjoyed himself far more working for the Republican committee than in trying to arouse his countrymen from their Indifference to protection. Admiral Sterling, who commands the squadron In Asiatic waters, recently received telegraphic orders signed Morton." In acknowledging their receipt by cable Admiral Sterling added "Who is Morton?" Cabinet changes are not instantly known in the Far East Sir Alfred Harmsworth, who pub lishes the 1-cent Daily Mail, has been assured by a competitor that the Dalai Lama is a 1-cent Thibetan morning paper, and the British mission is being opposed by its staff of reporters, as the owners fear Harmsworth's entry on the same field. This is a good ex ample of British humor. It shows, however, that Harmsworth, who is a. sort of soft-pedal Hearst, is becoming a very prominent figure, and that in" the course of time he may be found in the running for party leadership. Here is an old one dished up in new form by the Sporting Times, more fre quently called the Pink 'Un: The high-born dame was breaking in a new footman stupid, but honest. In her brougham, about to make a round of visits, she found she had forgotten her bits of pasteboard. So she sent tho lout back with orders to bring some of her cards that were on the mantlepiece in her boudoir, and put them in his pocket. Here and there she dropped one, and some times a couple, until at last she told Jeames to leave three. "Can't do it, mum." "How's that?" "I've only got two left the ace of spades and the seven of clubs!' INSURGENTS FOR THE SOUTH. Cotton-Raising States Are in Need of Laborers. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Frank P. Sargent, Commissioner-General of Im migration, had a conference today wiui the representatives of a big transpor tation company regarding the coming to this country of emigrants to take up lands in the South, particularly In Texas. A scarcity of labor, in the South, particularly in the cotton-rais- lntr states, has Induced some or tne trans-Atlantic lines to Investigate the matter of diverting a part or the emi gration to the cotton-growing states. Mr. Sarsrent said mat tne imnugra. tlon Bureau had nothing to- do with the n.art of the country Into which immi grants should go, but said he had heard of the proposal to estaousn a. stftamshin line between Italy and New Orleans, the Idea being to supply Ital ian Immigrants for the agricultural re gions of the South. The conference he had today relates to the establishment in Texas of colonies of Italian farmers. Matters sartorial are always treated In an interesting manner by the Tailor and Cutter, a London publication that annually tears to tatters the clothing of members of Parliament and the pictured clothing in the Royal Acad emy portraits. Having just got over the spasm brought on by the ignorance of Academicians on its pet subject, the Tailor and Cutter proceeds to discuss the new fad of creasing trouers down the seams instead of back and front What does it matter?" asks the Tailor and Cutter. "London is not liKe Aus tin, Texas, where a shop displays this sign: No town ever Is built up by offer of subsidies. Still less can a state or na tion be built up that way. The keys to development and progress are in dustry and production. To tax one In dustry, or line of Industries, to build up another, Is socialism at Its rankest, without any of the redeeming features. If it will not pay us to build and sail ships, let us do something else that will pay; and In time we shall come to marine industry, too. Judge Parker evidently thinks the Democratic platform is like the plat form of a railroad car-rmade to "get in" on, and not to stand on. Pretty soon the familiar sign "Passengers not allowed to stand on this platform" will have Its counterpart "JJemocrats not expected to stand on this platform." Panama Has a Protest. WASHINGTON. August 1. Senor Obal Mn tho PiHinraa Minister, called at tne State Department today and made a for mal protest against the construction Klven the canal treaty by tne executive officers of the Isthmian Canal Commis sion. There is trouble growing out of the location of the PostofHces In the canal strip, under tho commission's orders, but the most serious matter or discoro De- tween the people or ranama ana tne commission Is the hitter's location of a new customs port near the t-ity or Panama. The people of Panama contend that the commission s assertion of a claim to cus toms jurisdiction over outlying Islands and harbors will surely result In the total diversion of trade from Panama and will impoverish that government through the loss of customs revenues. The agitation In Panama started with the retail shopkeepers, who feared that they would lose the lucrative business or supplying the vast army or laoorers ana officers who are to construct tne canai. The controversy has extended rapidly and the situation in Panama now Is stated to be really precarious from a political point of view. Actlner Secretary of State Loomls takes the view that the matter Is not one for treatment by the State Department, ex cept as an Intermediary, and will reserve action until the commission returns to Washington. , . Controller of Treasury's Report. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. The month- iv comparative circulation statement Issued by the Controller or tne xreas rv shows that at the close of bus! ness Julye 30, 1904, the total outstand ing circulation of National bank-notes was $450,206,888. an increase for the vear of $32,860,401, and tor tne montn of $971,793. The amount of circulation hnsed on United Staes bonds was $415, 025.156. an increase for the year or $37,418,330, and for the month of $2,- 265,707. The circulation securea Dy lawful money amounted to $35,181,732, a decrease for the year of $4,557,929, and for the month of $1,293,914. The amount of United States bonds on deposit to secure circulating note3 was $417,958,690. and tho amount of United States and other bonds on de posit to secure public deposits at ffa tlonal banks was jiia.tn ,oau. Falling Off in Mintage. WASHINGTON. Aug. 1. The monthly statement Issued by the Director of the Mint shows that the only coinage ex ecuted at the United States Mints during July was $455,519 in subsidiary coins and $1,284,000 In Philippine pesos. Tnis railing- off Is due to the annual settlements and recounts which occur at the close of each fiscal year. Governor's Name Was Refused. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Postmaster General Payne said today that an ap plication to give the name "Vardman to a postomco in Mississippi, in honor of the Governor of that state, had been received through the Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General, and that the ap plication had been refused. Succeeds Admiral Converse. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Commander N. B. Mason has been appointed Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Depart ment. to succeed Rear-Admiral Converse, who today assumed the duties of Chief of the Bureau of Navigation. Wants to Be Retired. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Captain A B. Speyers, U. S. N., has applied for .re tlreme STAND IN OUR BARREL WHILE WE PRESS YOUR TROUSERS FOR 15 CENTS. And with that the Tailor and Cutter dismisses the matter from its overbur dened mind. Kuropatkin is not the only Russian humorist. Sakharoff has a style tnat is wasted on official dispatches. The world sh6uld have the benefit of tal ents that are now devoted to the pleas ing of a blase oligarchy. What could be more delightful than tnis toucn from Sakharoff's report on the fighting at Ta Tche Klao, "The evacuation or our position was a complete surprise to the Japanese." Seldom is the abil ity to devise and execute a practical joke combined with the power to de scribe It, as in the case of Sakharoff. How he must have chuckled when he abandoned a strong position and thought of the unnecesaary prepara tions being made by the Japanese for its capture. And then the comical cli max the Japanese dashing up the heights to find nothing. 'What a sur prise for them! Hoaxed again, b'gosh! PLAN OF REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN Nine Men Will Have Entire Charge East and West. CHICAGO, Aug. 1. The Republican campaign, which Is to be opened on Sep tember 15, is to be centralized, full charge west of the Allegheny Mountains being In the hands of five men. while four will attend to the work In the East The plan of centralizing Supervision was agreed on today at the National headquarters in a conference between Chairman Cortelyou. Secretary Dover, Frank O. Lowden, of Illinois; Harry S. New, of Indiana; D. W. Vulvane, of Kansas, and R. B. Schneider, of Nebraska. It wag decided to divide the country west of the Alleghanies Into five sections, each of which will be in charge of one member of the executive committee. Hith erto there have been bureaus of labor, nationalities and clubs, but these now will be looked after by the executive commit tee. Represent Interior Department. DENVER, Aug. l.-Charles F. Martin, secretary of the National Livestock As sociation, today received a telegram from Washington announcing that Secretary James Wilson, of the Department of the Interior; Glfford H. Pinchot and F H. Vewell would arrive In Denver Wednes day morning, to attend the conference of the Government Special Land Commis sion, and the stockmen of the West, on August 3, 4 and 5. President F. G. Hagenbarth, of the as sociation; Governor Heber M. Wells and Jesse M Smith, president of the Utah Woolgrowors" Association, will arrive Tuesday night California and Arizona delegations are also expected. Senator Vest Losing Strength. SWEET SPRINGS, Mo., Aug. 1. Ex Senator Vest's condition today is not quite so good as yesterday. He is losing strength perceptibly, although he still takes nourishment