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Whoatley, 83 Stevenson; Hotel Francis News Stand. ( Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY' S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 87 deg.; minimum, 53. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and continued warm. Northerly winds. PORTLAND, .THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1904 "SAFE AND SANE." Having- attributed to Theodore Boose velt all sorts of wild, vagarious and dangerous opinions, and hot-headed dispositions, and purposes full of peril -to the peace and liberties of the coun try. Democratic critics now fall foul of his speech, delivered when the commit tee led by Speaker Cannon notified him of his nomination; declaring it a, studied effort at self-effacement, as if he would like to have the country reverse its judgment as to his temperament and nature, and believe him not at all the violent, uproarious, rash, hasty and dangerous man he is. Now in fact all of Mr. Roosevelt's public utterances are in quiet and dig nified tone, as becomes one in the sta tion he occupies. Nothing is farther from his nature than the boisterous in considerateness which it pleases his critics to attribute to him. No Presi dent ever has given more careful or conscientious attention to the problems before him. But he is earnest in his opinions and statements, doesn't mince phrases, and leaves no one in doubt as to what he means. Since that speech is subject of com ment in so many opposition newspapers it may be just as well to look at it again.. It was carefully prepared, of course, as every speech on such occa sion must be. But it wasn't "tame." It carried shafts that find the joints in the Democratic armor, with sure aim. Thus, to Democrats who boast that their party is now "safe and sane," he replies: "Ours is not only sane, but co herent" And, by the boast that their party Is now "safe and sane" they wish it understood that "if triumphant they may be trusted to prove false to every principle which in the last eight years they have laid down as vital." Let us reprint a longer passage here: We are not constrained to keep silent on any vital question; we are divided on no vital ques tion; our polltfy Is continuous, and Is the same for all sections and localities. There Is noth ing experimental about the government we ask the -people to continue in power, for our per formance in the past, our proved governmental efficiency, is a guarantee as to our promises for the future. Our opponents, either openly or eecretly, according to their several tem peraments, now ask the people to trust their present promises in consideration of the fact that they Intend to treat their past promises as null and void. "We know our own minds, and we have kept of the same mind for a suf ficient length of time to give to our policy co herence and canity. This may not be "dangerous to con stitutional liberty," but it is pretty good stuff. In a few slight but incisive strokes it sets out the difference and contrast between the parties. Judge Parker is said to be working on his re sponse, soon to he made, to his nornl nating committee, with as much assidu ity as relief from Jhe interruptions of Importunate politicians will allow him. Doubtless he will try to tell how "safe and sane" his party has become since the day when he stood with it In spite of the fact that it was neither safe nor sane; but there will be nothing in his response more pertinent, pointed "or di rect than these extracts from Mr. Roosevelt's speech, or in other passages that might be as freely quoted. Here is a party which, by its own confessions, has not been "safe and sane" during many years. Tet it makes a virtue now of its professions of sud den though perhaps temporary sanity; Just as that person who quit vicious ways only last week, and confesses it. now sets up as a reformer, professing to be about the highest exemplar of virtue which the world affords. Such professions are common. They are cur rent as copper counters, and about as valuable. In this speech, as in all -his public utterances, Theodore Rooseveit appears as the man he is, to confute the carl catures of malicious and desperate po litical opponents. Tet still it perhaps is to be expected that these peopje, who admit that for many years they have been neither 'safe nor sane,' should profess to think that the candidate who stands against their pretensions is an "unsafe" and "dangerous" man. But do we -go for judgment and wisdom to -persons just escaped frotn the asylum for the insane? "When the Democratic party was su preme in the State of Washington, only a few years ago, did the state dominate the corporations or did the corporations ..dominate the state? This, simple ques tion .is sufficient answer to the state Democratic platform. Turner was bos; his party was In supreme power in the slate; it had the vLegislature and the Governor; it .voted for Bryan'by an Im mense majority. But what did it do for deliverance of the state from the domi nation of corporations? Nothing what ever. It only talked with its mouth. THE FUTURE OF CONTRABAND.. The contraband law of the future must be the resultant of two antago nistic and creditable world tendencies. One is the war instinct and the other is the spirit of peace.' On the one hand are those who deprecate any and all wars, some from "humanitarian and some from commercial considerations. No trader wants war, because he loses more from seizures and prostration in the long run than he makes in spas modic and feverish sales at the outset of hostilities. The commercial world Is. for peace and for limiting the scope of belligerent undertakings to the preju dice of neutral commerce. There are those who hold, on the other hand, that it is better for war to be short and decisive and over with than to be shorn of Its terrors and long drawn out Of this theory the chief ex ponent is, Captain Alfred Mahan. It is his conviction that all efforts to miti gate the severity of naval warfare are ill-advised, Inasmuch as their net result to the combataiits who are sustained by receipt of contraband foodstuffs and other materials Is to prolong the war and postpone the return of peace' and prosperity. Those who agree with Cap tain Mahan also share with him a cer tain contempt for the theorists who on humanitarian grounds would reduce war to the status of a lawn fete or a Sunday school picnic. An Interesting study of the problems of contraband is supplied by Professor T. J. Lawrence, lecturer on interna tional law at the British Naval College at Greenwich, In a book which has just appeared and which presumably em bodies a series of his lectures. In this book Professor Lawrence enumerates various things which are unquestion ably contraband, and then deals with some which are In dispute. Amoffg these are foodstuffs. The author seems disposed to agree with Japan in holding that provisions destined for naval or military use by a belligerent are con traband. But he emphatically rejects the doctrine of Russia that they are contraband when destined for the use of persons not In the military or naval service of a belligerent. Russia did not accept that doctrine twenty years ago. Speaking for Britain, Professor Lawrence says: "It is a matter of life and death for us to prevent any change in international law which shall make the food of the civilian population un doubtedly contraband, and if agree ments and protests will not do It, force must" There is little room for doubt that the view adhered to by Professor Lawrence Is certain to prevail over the theory of Captain Mahan. That is, philanthropy and commercialism will win the day over virility. Chief agent In this out come is the change in British opinion and practice. Our own National view has coincided with Japan's, for in mod ern wars our interest has been to have our foodstuff cargoes exempt from cap ture. Great Britain refused to agree to that contention, at The Hague, be cause her interest has seemed to lie In the direction of great freedom for a belligerent She might be glad some day, for example, if at war -with France, to starve "Prance to terms by preventing cargoes of food stuffs from reaching French ports, just as she did In the case of the Boers in South Africa a practice, by the way, which Is supported by an un broken line of British legal decisions. Professor Lawrence's book Indicates that in the light of the recent seizures of merchantmen by Russia, the Brit ish view will be that Great Britain has more to gain by free ingress of food stuffs to her ports in time of war than she can possibly gain in a hypothetical war with some Continental foe. How is this pacific view of contra band ,to be imposed upon the nations? Professor" Lawrence indicates what seems to The Oregonian the true an swer. He Is of opinion that if it should come to that, Britain would not stand alone. "Our kinsmen of the United States," he declares, "are with us heart and soul In the doctrine that foodstuffs are not contraband unless destined for uune u&e, anu iney are prepared to enforce it at all risks." To this com mon conclusion the two governments of Great Britain and the United States will some day, we believe, come; and if It takes the shock of battle to enforce this demand of peace upon the unruly passions and practices of war, then in that' conflict the English and American fleets and arms will sta"nd side by side and stand triumphantly. Every inter ference with British ships and Ameri can cargoes ventured by Russia only hastens the day when across the path of the bear that walks like a man a Hon and eagle shall stand In the name of liberty and progress to teach him that conquest abroad Is not to be based upon despotism at home. The world Is very busy these days In the pursuits of peace, unruly boys who want to fight must get off the street and not Inter rupt traffic. HIGH PRICES FOR HIGH-CLASS HORSES. onward Silver, 2:05, a 9-year-old stallion, was sold at Lexington last week to Baron FranchettI, of Florence, Italy, for $21,000. The price paid Is cer tainly encouraging for breeders of fast horses and disproves the oft-repeated statement that the automobile rage is affecting the horsebreeding industry Oregon just at present has no horse sufficiently developed to command" $21, 000, but within the confines of the state is some of the beat equine blood on earth. There were good, square race meetings in Portland and other North Pacific cities twelve or fifteen years ago, and the opportunities they offered bona fide breeders of good horses were such that a number of wonderful per- lormers were developed on these tracks Some of the best of these performers found their way beyond the Rockies. and on the parlor tracks of the grand circuit met and vanquished the fastest horses then on the turf. Crooked racing, however, damaged the industry, and Oregon is no longer famous in the East as a breeder of fast horses. That honest racing will be pat ronized and that the industry Is not dead is eyldenced by the big crowds that attended the Irvlngton Park races last year. The managers this year are the same as last, and if they receive the public support to which they are entitled it will do much to restore the breeding and racing business to tfie Im portant position it held before crooked racing ruined it There are hundreds of undeveloped .horses of great speed in the state, and they cannot be developed otherwise than through honestly con ducted race meetings. The Increase of a fraction df a second In the speed of ,a horse frequently adds a. largevsum to his value, and the only recognized method for gauging that speed is by the official timekeeper's report of an actual contest at au honestly conducted race meeting. Onward Silver, as his name Indicates, is a son of the great Onward, but the mere fact that he was bred in the pur ple would not have enabled him to command $21,000 had it not been accom panied by the official knowledge that he could trot a mile in 2:05. There is not very much Onward blood in Oregon and Washington, but there is plenty which for both -speed and stamina is equally as good. Old Altamont has passed on to the horse heaven, if there Is such a place, but long before he died he proved his merit, and for three years was In the front rank as the king of all sires of extreme speed, with six performers in the charmed circle of the 2:10 list, while Onward had but two. No more sensational performers ever went down the grand circuit than, the Oregon horses Klamath, Altao, Chehalis, Doc Sperry, Ella T. and Alameda, and there is still plenty of the same blood which courses through the veins of these one time stars-of the equine world. Then there is a coming band of the great Mc- Kinney's progeny, and not a few of the mighty Wilkes family, as well as others perhaps equally meritorious. All of this royal equine blood is here, and it only awaits development to en hance the value of the animals In whose veins It runs. There Is not only a growing market for high-class horses abroad, but the increasing wealth of our own people also offers an oppor tunity for disposing of the best animals to good advantage. To command a good price, however, a horse must have a record for speed, and the only legiti mate speed records that are recognized by horse purchasers are those which ,are made at honestly conducted race meet ings. ON THE FIDELITY OF FAIRBANKS. At a time when no less than two vet eran Democrats of western Oregon have announced their Intention to transfer their allegiance to the Repub lican party and an equal number of lifelong Republicans at Esopus have declared a purpose to vote for Judge Parker, it is gratifying to note that the decision of one noted man, hitherto in doubt, has at last fallen In unambig uous terms. We allude to the Hon. Charles Warren Fairbanks, of Indiana. Mr. Fairbanks has long been recog nized as one of the most judicial-minded of men, and misgivings have arisen as to his choice between the strenuous and the dictatorial moods. Since Judge Parker was nominated at St. Louis, if we remember aright, Mr. Fairbanks has uttered no word of comment on the Democratic nominee. An expectant land waited In suspenders. What would he say? Yesterday he spoke, and this is what he said: The charges made against President Roosevelt in the Democratic platform find an irrefutable answer in his splendid ad ministration, never surpassed in all the his tory of the Republic and never equaled by the party that seeks to discredit it The disapproval of the Democratic platform is plain. Mr. Fairbanks com prehends it and rejects. All doubt is set at rest In another place in the same speech of acceptance Mr. Fair banks says During the ' last three years President Roosevelt has been confronted with large and serious questions. These he has met and solved with high wisdom and courage. There is no equivocation in these ut terances. Mr. Fairbanks is solid for Roosevelt. He is unreservedly out for the man with the "splendid administra tion, never surpassed in all the history of the Republic." We are justified in predicting that on' the eighth day of November Mr. Fairbanks will march firmly up to the polls and mark his bal lot for Theodore Roosevelt Yesterday, altogether, was an eventful day. It ap prised Mr. Fairbanks of his own nomi nation, It apprised a waiting and doubt ing committee that he would accept that nomination, and It established once and for all Mr. Fairbanks candid and disinterested choice for President May we venture also to hope that the remainder of the National ticket com mends itself equally to his favorable notice? CUNARD SUBSIDY MADE PLAIN. At every port visited by the Mer chant Marine Commission, which has just taken its departure from Portland, mention has been made of the heavy subsidies which Great Britain pays her merchant marine. Details of the terms and conditions of these subsidies are never mentioned, and this omission nat urally confuses the mind of one un familiar with the situation. Just at this time those who are making a great effort to foist a ship subsidy on the American people have a great deal to say about the new Cunard liners' which are being constructed under govern ment supervision. A news Item in yes terday's Oregonian stated - that the House of Commons at an all-night ses sion discussed a measure -"to provide money for the agreement entered into between the government and the Cunard Steamship Company," and that "after considerable opposition to a resolution authorizing the government to raise $13,000,OQfl to be employed in the build ing of new Cunard line steamships the resolution was adopted by a majority of seventy-nine." The importance of this item hinges on the "agreement" mentioned. This agreement, which was entered into by the British government and the Cunard Steamship Company in August, 1903, provides that the government will lend or will Indorse & loan not to exceed $13,000,000, in return for which the Cunard Steamship Company Is to build and operate two large-size steamers capable of maintaining a minimum av erage ocean speed of 25 knots per hour. This loan is payable in twenty years, and bears 2 per cent Interest a rate which is equivalent to about 4 per cent in this country. These vessels are to be built under the supervision of British naval officers, and the requirements as to speed and equipment are so strict that great difficulty was experienced in finding builders who were willing to submit bids, even with the knowledge that the government and the Cunard people expected to pay high 'prices for 'the work. When these steamers are completed the. government will pay a subsidy of $750,000 per year, in return for which the vessels -must carry the malls, em ploy naval reserve men as seamen and officers, and will naturally have their freight and passenger space limited by peculiar construction that will admit of the; almost instantaneous transforma tion of the vessels Into cruisers. These two big cruisers, which, aside from the mail subsidy, are costing the British government nothing except the guaran tee of a loan, will be the finest and: fastest, in the world, and their cost of maintenance, including insurance, re pairs, wages, and other incidentals, is all pald'by the Cunard" line. Built ex- clusively for abnormally high speed, the great bunker space necessary, together with that, reserved for the fighting equipment, will leave room for but little else but mails ttnd passengers, and for strictly commercial purposes the "new flyers will be of small consequence. This Is strictly in line with- the Brit ish and German policy of subsidies, and Jj is not, even in a renjote degree. In keeping- with any subsidy bilL yet drafted for the American people. The ocean carriers that handle the commerce of the world are the tramp steamers and the sailing vessels, and neither of these classes of carriers receives any subsi dies from the .British or the German government. We of the Pacific Coast are asked to support a subsidy scheme on the pretext that our ships must Come in competition with subsidized fleets of Great Britain and Germany, when, as a matter of fact, neither of these coun tries pays-any subsidy to its commerce-carriers which circle the globe and wbloh have carried to foreign mar kets millions of tons of Pacific Coast products at rates so low that we were unable to meet them with our own ships. In the new Cunarders the British gov ernment will have two of the fastest cruisers afloat, and the subsidy paid is undoubtedly smaller than the cost of maintaining even a single cruiser of similar size, speed and equipment, were It not used in time of peace for the pas senger service. Portland's trade with the Orient la seriously injured at this time by the. action of Mr. R. P. Schwerin, manager of the, Harriman steamship lines. Mr. Schwerin Is, or pretends to be, fright ened over the possibilities of seizure of some of his ships; and for some Teason not yet made public, refuses to follow the example of rival lines and place war insurance on them and send them about their business. His arbitrary and unreasonable attitude would be in a measure excusable if other ports in di rect competition with this city were also prevented from carrying on trade with Japan. Unfortunately for Port land's shipping prestige, but perhaps fortunately for her shippers, there Is a little more enterprise displayed by the Puget Sound steamship managers, and for the past three days they have been soliciting traffic in Portland and have picked up so much business that they are already negotiating for extra steamers with which to handle It. In strange contrast to the fear expressed by Mr. Schwerin is the statement of Manager Studley, of Seattle's Oriental line, who says: "So far as our company is concerned, we do not propose to stop handling freight forthe Orient because of the war. If the Pacific Mail, the Oc cidental & Oriental and the Portland & Asiatic companies care to stop handling supplies to the Far East, we will en deavor to take care of all their trade that comes this way." The matter has reached such an acute stage that It would seem eminently proper for the Chamber of Commerce to take It up with the Government. Mr. Schwerin apparently Is not so familiar with the steamship business as his rivals on the north, and will accordingly be unable to act until the American Government secures a clearer knowledge of Rus sia's intentions regarding neutral freight in neutral ships. It Is unfortu nate for Portland that our commercial destiny at this time Is in the 'hands of San Francisco instead of Portland men. The Lewis and Clark Corporation, In the selection of Director-General Goode for president, has undoubtedly chosen the best possible solution of the prob lem on Its hands. Mr. Goode's fitness for the place has been abundantly at tested by his admirable and efficient administration of the director-general ship. While the presidency was pre paring- for him he has been gathering the equipment for the presidency, in work, in study, In observation at St Louis. Given a successful director- general, ana tnere could be no more promising arrangement than the union of that office and the office of president The combination of these two positions In one person has been successfully utilized at San Francisco. Omaha and now at St. Louis. Probably some meas ure of the disappointment at Buffalo was due to the failure to combine them, We think the board has done well in electing Mr. Goode president, but It would have been a serious mistake not to have availed itself of Mr. I. N. Fleischner's knowledge, experience and administrative ability on the new and smaller executive board. This has been done, and President Goode will now have the benefit of an executive board whose combined business ability will guarantee a successful administration for him and splendid results for the Exposition. The board, besides Mr. Goode and Mr. Flelschner, consists of Messrs. T. B. Wilcox, W. D. Fenton, A. L. Mills, Paul Wesslnger and John C. Alnsworth. A Democratic paper of Oregon tells us that the Republican party, through its National Administration, has been- mighty extravagant It has appropri ated lots of money. Yes; and Oregon got a lot of It Half a million for the Lewis and Clark Fair, big money for rivers and harbors, heavy appropria tions for postal service, public build ings, pensions and what not Perhaps our1 Democratic paper of Oregon thinks these appropriations ought not to have been made; but It will not dare to say so. It Is just talking through its hat He who wants appfopriations for Ore gon has no right to complain that the t6tal for the United States Is large; for Oregon gets more than her just share. There Is a lot of rubbish In this talk about extravagance and economy, which the authors of It since they want everything that can possibly be got for their own state ought to be ashamed to utter. But who ever knew one of these cheap skates to be ashamed? The "great battle of the campaign" Is again "imminent" in Manchuria, and many predictions will be falsified Kuropatkln extricates his forces and withdraws northward, as he has done twice before when correspondents had warned the world to hold Its breath Until reliable news comes that the ar mies are actually engaged. It is as well to be chary of heeding overmuch the barkers of the Oriental sldeshqw. Should Kuropatkln execute another "strategic movement to the rear," the only question will be, How long' can he keep backing? Another estimable pioneer woman has ended life's journey, with the death of Mrs. Adelaide Bloch, who was burled yesterday. For forty years she has led here in Portland- a blameless and useful life, and her passing, though not sur prising at the end' of Tfi.busy years, is mourned by all who knew her. HIS ANNUAL LITTLE STUNT. : New York Evening Sun. -I It really seems every Summer about this time, as if the Rev. Dr. Parkhurst fears he will be forgotten in his retreat i in Switzerland unless he burns a little red fire and explodes a giant cracker be- ! fore he takes possession of his easeful stateroom in the outgoing steamship. It is the reverend gentleman's Fourth of July celebration, his annual orgy of rhet oric and "bust" of civic zeal. The doctor was almost stumped for something to rail at this year. The lid Is on pretty tight and he is the prophet who has been confounded His text "Can the Ethiopian Change?Hls Skin, or the Leopard His Spots?" had to be tossed into the waste-paper basket The leo pard's spots were being painted out by the swash of the McAdoo brush, and the Ethiopian was undergoing a visible bleaching at the hands of. the machine Mayor. For rhetorical treatment the . doctor would have preferred the omissions of self-conscious, canting, afraid-of-lts- shadow reform administration. A Tam many administration that makes war on the vicious element in the organization take3 the doctor's breath away. The campaign is so vigorous and unrelenting that he prudently refrains from slurring the motives of the Mayor and his Police Commissioner. He Is obliged to admlf that the poolroom evil Is being pulled up root and branch; and he might rejoice over It, but he takes the good deed calm ly. McAdoo Is a tolerably efficient man, his reverence jrrants. but what about the excise question? The doctor has been pending a few nights poking about the back rooms of saloons in Harlem and downtown quite In the old style; and he calls upon Mr. McAdoo to "get busy" about excise violations. "For five months," he cries, "the Commissioner has practically let the matter go Its way. The load Is a heavy one, and he has lain down under It" Mr. McAdoo might re join "One thing at a time!" but that would never satisfy our clerical scold. Mr. Low, he says, "made no effort to stand up to his oath of office In the matr ter of excise, and we are sorry to see a Tammany administration following his example. This is not claiming that our excise statutes, in the form In which they now exist, are the best possible, but they are statutes, and so long as they are. it Is no more criminal In a saloonkeeper to vio late them than it is for a Police Commis sioner not to do his best to enforce them." Does Mr. McAdoo understand that If his best does not fit the doctor's definition. he is a miserable lawbreaker? We fancy that the worthy man's Ideal of a state of bliss would be a government In which he was keeper of morals, policeman, judge, turnkey and executioner with the press muzzled and editors serving time In the dark cell. He would have no weak hu man nature In his community, and the worst would be like the best his own best Discovery of Molybdenum. . Pittsburg Dispatch. Oregon Is somewhat excited over the preparations about completed to ship molybdenum, found in extensive depos its in Union County, In that state. The ore is called molybdenite, but the metal occurs In other combinations. Its name As from the Greek and means lead, but i. w u. amcr-wniie metai, msing oniy at high temperature. Canada has been pluming itself for some time because largo beds of molybdenite exist around Rossland, in British Columbia. Its uses are extended, and if Oregon can now supply what may grow to be an American demand Canada once again must tone down Its exuberance. The metal has recently been made applicable to the production of high class steel. Molybdenum steel tools, it Is said, possess the quality of cuttintr ribbons with ease from steel bars, will cut steel bars as readily when red-hot as 'when cold, and when once tempered will retain Its temper under all cir cumstances. Molybdenum has been successfully tested In France and Ger many for armor plate, for crucibles, for coating cartridges for rapid-fire guns, for manufacture of heavy artillery and the manufacture of jewelry. As a lu bricator for diminishing friction in machinery and preventing- hot boxes It probably has no equal. The Canadian Manufacturer asserts that the valuable deposits can now be worked so as to supply the world's de mands, and that the metal will domi nate In the production of armor plates, cannon, marine and other machinery These are large statements, but molyb denum may occupy the center of the metal stage soon, and when it does It ought to go Into court and have Its name changed. Philomath College. . Corvallls Gazette. Material is being hau.ed on the grounds for the erection of two large wings to the main building of Philomath College. Ac tual work will probably not bo begun be fore early Fall, but matters are taking shape and all things are being done so that wtten the work actually begins it Will be done In a very short time. The main building when completed will be three stories high and 104 feet long and GO feet wide. This will give ample room for present needs so far as needed classrooms are concerned. The two wings, one on the east and the other on the west side, will be each three stories high, 60 feet long and 32 feet wide. Tho tower will be worked over and the whole covered with a mansard roof. J. R. Parker, the efficient manager. has already jBecured 54000 with which to commence the work and Is going East to secure funds with which to erect a boys' dormitory. The board of directors Is also planning to erect several neat little cottages to rent, the funds there for accruing as Interest from permanent college funds. The Sagacious Inspector. Pendleton Tribune. The Postoffice Inspector now requires the Pendleton papers to make a deposit for the ensuing month's postage. Ap proximately the amount of the postage paid per month by each paper must be paid in advance to the local officials for fear of bankruptcy. The Tribune and East Oregonian have been mailing papers at the Pendleton office, for the last quar ter of a century and never failed to pay their postage every month, but their credit is now all in and they must dig. Both papers are considered on the ragged edge of financial doubt and they must step up to the little window and plank down their coin or Uncle Sam will cast their daily sheets out for the hobo to sleep In, for kindling to floating sparks or to litter the streets with their dis credited honor and fallen pride. 'Tls a pity that Pendleton newspapers are such .irresponsible institutions that a Postoffice Inspector finds it necessary to protect his record tor penetration and punctuality In business. Great Writing at Eugene. Eugene Register. After taxing his feeble mental pow ers to the verge of brain fever, the Guard's editorial fourflush futility es says to launch forth on the world a gem of thought, tho wonderfully bril liant finality of which is that Stiles failed of election, owing to too much Gllstrap. . ' I Did But Look. Thomas Otway. I did but look and love awhile, i Twas but for one half hour:' Then to resist I had no will. And now I have no power. To sigh, and wish, Is all ray ease: Sighs, which do heat Impart Enough to melt the coldest Ice, Yet cannot warm, your heart Ol would your pity give, my heart . One corner of your breast, V.; 'Twould learn of yours the winning, art, , And quickly steal the rest! THESOUfa AND ITS PARTY, Chicago- Chronicle. Already tho political forecasters are preparing; and publishing their bulle tins and as usual the one fixed condi tion the one datum laid down as cer tain, and immutable by the weather prophets of both parties Is "the solid South." i Every forecaster assumes the Soutn as ar solid section. Not one of them assumes any other section to be solid. They count on sure Republican states, such as Pennsylvania, Vermont and Iowa, and they find these in all sec tions except "the solid South." The states classed as doubtful are in New England, the "Middle" States, in those known as the "border slave states," in the Middle West and in the A Far West There Is no ciouDtiui siaie in "the solid South." How are we to account for this re markable phenomenon this political factor which has been as fixed as the .geometrical pi for a quarter of a cen tury? Why is the South solid? Not because the people of the "solid South" party are agreed upon any principle or pol icy of a broad. National character, such as a tariff policy, a monetary policy or a colonial policy. The Democratic party in the Southern states Is not united upon any such thing. Men who call themselves Democrats in the South do not know what Democracy meant when the Democratic party was Demo cratic. The older ones have forgotten and the younger ones never knew. The South Is solid on only one thing, and that is the negro with two d's and two g's. Democracy Is Identified In the minds of Southern white men with the "lost cause" and the hope of re gaining it The "lost cause" is essentially the cause of slavery. Its adherents do not now say slavery, but they say what comes to the same thing. They say that tho three anti-slavery amend ments must be repealed, or nullified If they cannot be repealed. They say in substance that this must be done in order that the "nigger" and every ona is a "nigger" -who has a drop of Afri can blood in his veins may be robbed not only of all political rights, but of all opportunity to rise above the status of a menial. In other words, they say in sub stance, by word and deed, that all negroes must be held In an inferior and servile condition wholly irrespec tive of their individual merits, and that to this end they must be denied equal rights before the law. In still other words, "the solid South" is in a state of chronic insur rection against the constitution and the laws of the United States. What is to be said of a party whose largest single Ingredient is this "solid South," whose character is such that it attracts to Itself, and has attracted to itself ever since the surrender of the Confederate armies, all who hope to regain the lost cause of slavery by nullification of the constitution and the laws? Is such a party fit to be trusted by liberty-loving men who respect the constitution and hope for the establish ment of equal, Impartial justice for all, Irrespective of race, creed or birth place? To ask this question is to answer it Nearly 30,000 on Strike in Chicago. Chicago Correspondence New York Sun. A fair estimate of the men who went out yesterday at the stockyards, according to the statements of the various officers, is as follows: Car-workers, lcera and cleaners 2,000 Sheet-metalworkers and canworkers. liOO 300 400 75 4S0 130 400 Steamllttera and helpers. Carpenters Machinists Firemen Engineers Electrical workers Coopers . i 3Q0 Blacksmiths and helpers. 223 400 Welithmasters. checkers. shlDnlnc cletfcs. .fainters zoo Livestock handlers. 600 400 '250 Elevator men and oilers. Soapmakera Glueworkertf 250 Halrsplnnere and halrfinlshers 175 Horseshoe rs 100 Stablemen 12; Total 7.510 Previously on strike, butcher workmen. .22,000 Grand total 29,510 Signs- of Degeneracy. Chicago Chronicle. Professor Starr, of the University of Chicago, includes among the symptoms of degeneracy the following: Parting the hair in the middle or on the right side, baldness, gray hairs before the age of 45, a stub nose, bat ears, small lobes on the ears, a reepding Chin, protruding lips, cross eyes, left-handedness, fondness for jewelry for the hand by men, red hair, the teeth far apart, pigeon toes and knock knees. Unless Professor Starr means to ay that the entire human .family Is de generating his remarks appear to be fully as sensational as any that have been re ported from the university in the past, which is saying a great deal. The colossal brain of Socrates was sheltered under a bald head, the godlike physiognomy of John Milton was crowned with hair parted In the middle and Thomas Jefferson had red hair. Perhaps the professor's lec ture was designed to relieve the tedium of a Summer day. It Works Both Ways. New York Press. If Judge. Parker takes the advice of one of his Court of Appeals associates and stays behind the bench for refuge from annoying questions, the approaching visit of the .committee on notification to Esopus will be robbed of tho uncommon Interest which attaches to It, since for the first time It was expected to draw something out of the candidate not known before Its call. For If It was a violation of the proprieties for a Judge to discuss politics In public before a nomination it will be equally improper for the same Judge to discuss the supreme issues of a heated political campaign until after the election. Left a Handkerchief There. Sunset Magazine. She went to a store where she'd traded be fore. And left a handkerchief there; She gayly wont wheeling or autompbllng, And left a handkerchief there. For this sweet little maldon was minus a pocket. And even a chain for her hanky to lock it; So wherever she went, like the trail of a rocket, She left a handkerchief there. If she went to the park for a stroll about dark. She left a handkerchief there; And e'en at prayer meeting, she left as her groetlng A dear llttlo handkerchief there. Oh, her trail, It Was strewn, as buds are dewbeaded. With hankys she left, and with hankys she needed, For whenever she went, she always suc ceeded In leaving a handkerchief there. She died, as we must, and over her dust Though she'd left a handkerchief there Her parents both wept for the maiden who slept They wept in their handkerchiefs there. And' "Oh." cried her mother, "I know I shall find her; She'sjiertain to leave me one little reminder: All the way through the mist I will find them behind her, The handkerchiefs she has left there." Oh, maidens, dear maidens, just keep on . a-dropplng Your handkerchiefs ever in calling or shop ping. Like seeds that you're sowing for reaping or cropping, 1 Mayhap in the future we'U know where you're stopping s 'By hand . V -Kerchiefs- that. j Xou leave there. - NOTE AND COMMENT.. r , . . Judge Parker's brother says he is anx ious to-keep out of the public gaze. Then why did he leave Seattle for Astoria? Another 20,000 Japs have been added to the boneyard. And if there are any more left, let 'em hide: the correspondents are warming up to their work. "Simple Points in Cookery" Is the cap tion of an article in tho New York Trib une. A limited experience leads us to believe that there are no simple points In cookery. Professor Starr, of Chicago University, is going to the Interior of China in search of white people. The purfosh is hasty: he shouldnt abandon Chicago without an other canvass. The School Board of New Brunswick. N. J., with commendable care for the public morality, is said to have forbidden the study of botany In the schools on ac count of the polygamous habits of flow ers. . x Ernest Thompson Seton has christened his little girl Ann Seton Thompson Seton. If his repugnance, for the name Thomp son, and his fondness for the name Seton continues to increase, his next child will probably be Seton to the n-th power. Andrew Lang proposes that the books of dead authors .be boosted by advertis ing, and that the public be deluded Into the belief that the authors are "live ones" by skilfully written interviews. As the first author to be thus treated we would suggest Andrew Lang. Now that the. life-preservers aboard the Grand Republic, owned by the company that lost the Slocum, have been tested and- found useless, Isn't it time that the responsible officials were set afloat with a string of preservers around their necks? If they managed to keep the life-preserv-ers from dragging them to the bottom, tfie officials might then be turned adrift in a. "lifeboat" with a hole in the bottom and unencumbered with oars. In addition to hailing from the farm. Judge Parker has the Inestimable privi lege of having been born in a small wooden house, as we learn from a pic ture in the Review of Reviews. When the birthplace of a Great Man is pic tured, it is Invariably a small, bleak house. A mansion never figures in such pictures. Therefore it begins to look as if Judge Parker had some claim on great ness more real than the dispatch of tele gram. Persuasive are the ways of the ad writer. Here is how a certain liquor is eulogized: "Its rejuvenating and mildly exhilarat ing properties make it a valuable tonic and home remedy." Sounds like a boost for ginger ale or sweet cider, but when the reader gets down to the name he finds that It Is an Irish aqua vltae, of which two sips will produce the mild exhilaration that ex presses Itself in the beating of a police man. News that the Irish societies of Chicago Intend to sue the Park Board of that city unless the name of the new ourang outang Is changed from Mary Dooly to something else shows all the public at tention is not devoted ' to the packing strike. If the. suit is Instituted- it should provide amusement for the Summec months, and If the. owner of the name, as the party most affected by the suit, is given an opportunity to testify there should bo a bigger crowd present in court than watched the "automatic trio" being tried. . The Park .Board, in the event of Its being mulcted in damages, will have to designate its pets by numbers, or be soaked by other societies. The "American invaders" lost heavily yesterday, when the. Duchess of Marl borough and Mrs. Arthur Paget were In jured, one being thrown from "her horse and the other falling down an elevator shaft. Mrs. Arthur Paget, who is ever In the forefront of the battle, was unlucky enough to break her leg, and will be ab sent for a while from the society she is said to adorn so highly. Apparently It will soon bo impossible to throw a Lon don society woman downstairs wlthut Injuring an American, and the presence of so many compatriots must render It galling to the woman whom a Countess is showing high life at the very modest charge of 10 guineas a week. "Rustic poets do not always find rhymes come easily and naturally," says tho London Globe. Its remark being prompted by this epitaph from a country district: Hero lies the body of William Bee; This waa him. this was he, A. B. C. D. E. F, G. The rhymes are perfect, and It Is pos sible for the reader to throw any expres sion Into the syllables of the last line. It Is not such a bad Idea, and would save 'campaign poets much labor. The samo line would do for Republican and Demo crat alike, each giving his own emphasis to the letters: Is Roosevelt, the man for me? A. B. C, D. E. F, Gee! Do I think the samo of Fairbanks, too? K, L, M. N, O, P, Q. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. Ted Did you ever know one of those get-rich, quick schemes to pan out? Ned Tom's did. He eloped with a millionaire's daughter. Town Topics. Unsophisticated Visitor By the way, why do you call this the "Pike"? Guard (tired of answering 'the question) Because It feeds on gudgeons, suckers and small fry. Chicago Trib une. Mrs. Jawworker So you are going to leave me, Bridget; haven't I treated you like one of the family? Bridget Indade. ye have, mum, an Ol've shtood It as long as Ol'm going to! Smart Set. First Baggageman Look out! Better not toss that trunk. Second Baggageman Why not? It Isn't marked "Handle with care." First Baggageman That's the reason why. It may be a decoy. Chicago Tribune. Gusher I notice that an Indiana scientist haa lately produced living creatures by the use of a solution o alcohol and other materials. Lusher Humph! That's nothing. lAlone that years ago. Baltimore American. Young Come, now, own up; don't you And It a little harder to get around than you did Ave or ten years ago? Elder Not a bit, I as sure you. I have noticed, however, that they make stairs steeper than they used to, but that, of course, is andther matter. Boston Transcript. SummerResorter But how can you guaran tee fresh vegetables when you don't know what kind of weather you are going to have? Land lordBecause I run my establishment on scien tific principles. I leave nothing to chance, you know: I feed my boarders on nothing but canned goods, which can be depended upon, weather or no. Boston Transcript. Benedict Come In. old fellow, and smoke a cigar while I dress, and I'll go down, town with you. Bachelor (hesitatingly) I I don't think your wife cares for me to call at your' house. I'll 'wait at the corner for you. Benedjct Non sense; come in. She isn't here. Bachelor She's not at home, then? Benedict Yes, she's at home, but ehe's out In the back yard talking to a neighbor over the fence, and she won't be in for the next three hours. Plck-Me-TJpV