K - THE MOBNING OEEGONIAN, MO-NDAST, 'AUGUST 8, 1904. ft- Entered at the Postoffie at Portland, Or., as second-class mattter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By mall (postage prepaid In advance) Daily, with Sunday, per month $0.S5 Dally, -with Sunday excepted, per year 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year w.00 Sunday, per year 2.00 The Weekly, per year 2. The Weekly, 3 months " Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday ex- cepted 15c Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday In- eluded - 20c POSTAGE BATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 20 to 14-page paper lc 10 to 30-page paper -e 82 to 44-page paper...-.-... 3c Foreign rates, double. The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under take to return any manuscript sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. EASTEBK BUSINESS OFFICES. (The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency) New York; rooms 45-50, Tribune Building. Chicago: Booms 510-512 Tribune Building. KEPT ON SAT.K. Atlantic City, N. J Taylor & Bailey, news dealers, 23 Leeds Place. Chicago Auditorium annex; Postofflce News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black, Hamilton & Kend rlck. 000-012 Seventeenth street. TfnTnj City, 31o. Ricks ecker Cigar Co., Ninth and Walnut. Iios Angeles B. T. Gardner, 259 South Spring, and Harry Drapkln. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanangh, .50 South Third; U BegcUburger, 217 First Avenue South. New York City X.. Jones & Co., Astor House. Ogden F. B. Godard. Omaha Barkalow Bros-, 1012 Farnam; McLaughlin Bros., 210 South 14th; Hegeath Stationer' Co., 130S Farnazn. galt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Second South street. St. Iods jWorld's Fair News Co.. Joseph Copoland, Wilson & Wilson, 217 N. 17th st; Geo. L. Ackermann, newsboy. Eighth and Ollvo sts. Ban Francisco J. K. Cooper Co., 740 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros., 236 Sut ter; . E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1008 Market; Frank Scott. 80 Ellis; N. Wheatley. 83 Stevenson;. Hotel Francis News Stand Washington, D. C. Ebbltt House News Stand. ' YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 85 deg.; minimum, 58. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair and continued warm; northwest Triads. V -i POBTIND, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1004. FRUIT OF UNIFORM POLICY. It is a part of the free-trade philoso phy that tariffs on imports are in real ity a burden on exports. That is, they reduce the foreigner's proceeds from his sales to us and by that much impair his ability to buy from us. In theory tills principle is unassailable; but in prac tice the exports ofj the United States are so great as to justify the protec tionist as he points to the record. with pride. Under the Dingley tariff, avow edlyprotectionist and outrageously high and unjust in parts, our exports of manufactures have increased from about $220,000,000 in 1896 to about $440, 000,000 in 1904. , It has been held by free-traders, and plausibly, that our high-tariff policy Is bound to -injure' the export of manufac tures; inasmuch as the heavy duties we collect on raw materials puts an em bargo on manufacturing, as compared with the British, for example, who get their raw materials free. The com plaints as to hides, coal,, iron, etc, are familiar. Curiously enough; however, the record is exactly the other way. "While our total export trade has In creased by some 75 per cent since 1S9G, our export trade In manufactures has increased by 100 per cent. "We lead all other countries as an exporter of do mestic products, while the proportion of manufactured goods to unmanufac tured constantly Increases. As to our total export trade, full figures for the year ended June SO, 1904, are not yet obtainable, but for the eleven months of that year and of preceding years back to 1896 these returns' are given: 1800 S200.500.021l 1901 1S97 250.4S4.5C5 1902 1808 2C1.C53.7S4 1903 1809 300,854.428 1904 ...$378,533,408 ... 371,348.100 ... 373.545.543 ... 410.536.473 O900 393,030,5791 j These are certainly very puzzling re sults from the free-trade standpoint; and it is not strange that in attempting to explain them away the free-trade New York Times falls into a most la mentable predicament. It admits the figures but finds fault with the condi tions they reveal, complaining that our export commerce rests on an illusory basis. This year's figures, "Instead of furnishing an occasion for raising loud, unthinking hurrahs, really give us cause for serious uneasiness." "Why? Simply because "more-than 60 per cent of our exports is made up of agrlcul tural products." This, we are told, is a symptom of National weakness. It is a condition which Involves "not the max imum, but the minimum, of economic ..gain and increase in the National ' wealth." "The nation," our neighbor ' says, "would gain Immensely in the economic sense by a policy which would tend to increase the home consumption of its agricultural products." A moment's reflection would have shown the Times that in an incautious moment It had made a most damaging admission. The policy of building up home manufactures as a wiser form of activity than shipping raw material away and shipping it back in finished form is at the basis of the high-tariff policy and is inconsistent with free- trade philosophy, which adjures every man and nation to pursue its naturally most profitable bent without economic Interference from government. The New Tork Tribune shrewdly picks the Times up on its. admission, and pertl nently says: This has been from the beginning the .primary aim of the protective system.- All the struggle made In this country lor low tariff has been directed toward a larger ex- port on our jart of agricultural products ana a larger purcnase zrom aDroaa oi nanufactured articles. . The South has ."ought for that policy since 1820, and the Democratic party, its tool and agent, has. lent Itself to every successive effort to check this nation's - Industrial development .and to keep It, as far as possible, an ex porter of cotton, grain, oil and other nn- manufactured products. ... Judged by its economical . results, the Dingley tariff has more than Justified Itself. Under It the nation has achieved an extraordinary prosperity. Why should the American voter risk an interruption of that prosperity by Inviting another experiment In tariff leglsla tlon as botched and ruinous as tho Wilson Gorman bill -of 1804? It is just as well that the Tribune guardedly refrains from saying that the Dingley rates are the cause of the situ aiion it contemplates with such satis faction. The truth undoubtedly Is that while high tariffs are coexistent with prosperity they are not the causes of it. When we have reckoned in the influ ences f soil and climate, cheap lands. abundant ores, cheap waiter and rail transportation, free trade between the Bt2es,tJrep6 is o ccruus & -residuum of credit due to Governmental policies; but the salutary element In those poli cies, and especially In our tariff policy, inhejes not in its "protective" charac ter, hut in its approximate consistency throughout the years. We have grown apace under high tariff. We should have growa apace undtr low tariff. The rise of our export .trade owes more to the adoption of the gold standard than to the Dingley laws. If Roosevelt is elected it will be, because the business world, with sound instinct, dreads a change; not because it approves high tariffs on raw materials or the protec tion of cheap jewelry. GROWTH OF COASTWISE TRAFFIC. Three coasting steamers arrived at Portland from California ports yester day, arid two departed from' Portland with full cargoes. For months there have been from five to seven of these vessels in and out of Portland every week. The rapid Increase of Portland's coastwise traffic has been one of the most remarkable features in the growth of our marine business. In some re spects this traffic is less desirable than the ovea-sea commerce, and in others there Is an. advantage in favor of the coasting business. In shipping a cargo of Oregon products to a foreign country we, of course, receive in payment money from which not only the city and state from which the cargo was shipped derive benefits, but the country as a whole profits In degree by the re ceipt of this new capital. Coastwise shipments being more In the nature of Interstate traffic with the capital in volved merely shifting from one state to another, has its limitations In creat ing wealth for the country as a whole. And yet back of the increasing coast wise traffic are fundamental reasons for Its growth and existence which prove it to be more valuable to the im mediate localities in T,'hichfIt originates than Is the foreign traffic "We are shipping to California an immense amount of wheat. The business in this cereal has reached such proportions that it has, temporarily at least, eclipsed our foreign wheat trade. No regret, however, can be expressed over this state of affairs; for the Callfor nians are taking our wheat because they are willing to pay more, for it than we can secure from the foreigners. In lumber, which, Hext to wheat, is the most important asset to be reckoned with in considering our marine traffic, the case is somewhat different, for the reason that it is a commodity thatmore easily feels the effect of overproduction. If the demand for lumber were suffi cient to take an unlimited output on a basis that would net the manufacturer a profit proportionate to that made by the grower of 50-cent wheat, there would be an Immediate increase In our already large production. As matters now stand, we are sell ing the foreigners every foot of lumber that we can force upon them, and are still obliged to turn to our California customers to secure a market for much more than the foreigners will take. It must also be- remembered that while this coastwise traffic may not bring di rect returns in foreign money, there are indirect benefits which cannot escape us. California annually exports wine, fruit, hops, etc., to the value of many millions of dollars. These products, which do bring wealth t direct from a foreign country to our own, are sent out by the men who are buying our lumber, wheat and flour, arid In this manner we receive through our coast ing trade an indirect benefit from the California foreign trade A good many years hence the Pacific Coast will reach a stage of development when its own population will have created a demand for a large share and perhaps all of the products which we now export in such large quantiies. The present rapid In crease In coastwise traffic might not In appropriately be termed the beginning of that end. The producer living In a territory thus provided with an outlet by sea has an advantage even in Interstate traffic which can never be enjoyed by the one dependent entirely on land transporta tion. The sea is an open commercial highway on which the economically built and economically operated relghter of the small capitalist enjoys the same rights and privileges as the crack liners of the big corporations The railway lines of the millionaires are the controlling factors In the estab lishment and regulation of freight rates on land; but at sea the small owners and operators, with their cheap craft, set the pace on rates, and the big fel lows are forced to conform to that pace or drop the business. AS SEEN BT A KIND CRITIC; It takes a woman, and an appreciat ive Oregonlan at that, to see with the kind eyes of personal interest what has been done and what has been left un done upon the Oregon building at the St. Louis Fair, "Why," asks our cor respondent, "L. C O.," in a recent Issue, "was the principal 'label' of the building and what it stands for nailed up back of the building' on the stockade, where even the searching eyes of a lover of Oregon failed to dis cover its full text until the last of a week's-stay at the exposition?" Prob ably because" there was not a woman with an eye to the fitness of things at the elbow of the designer or con tractor to suggest a more appropriate and conspicuous place for the name of the building and for the explanatory announcement, "Oregon ninety-nine years ago." Then, again, why were not rapidly growing Summer vines and quickly blooming annuals, geraniums, etc., found in profusion on the- outer walls and ' grounds to give color and coolness to the picture in July? And why are not the inner walls hung with large . engravings,' pho tographs and paintings of Oregon scenery, industries and modern build ings? For the same reason, perhaps, that the "label" of the state building was not properly placed and the ex planation conveyed by the words "Ore gon ninety-nine years ago" was not made duly conspicuous. As "It. C. O." very truly says, "groups of small, pictures do not attract the eye or engage the interest of the hurrying sightseer." The picture presentation should be "large, imposing, convinc ing." It is not strange .that in- all these discrepancies this generous critic and loyal citizen of Oregon sees painful evidence of a "lack of funds" In the presentment made by the Oregon building at St. Louis. Eastern people interpret its deficiencies less kindly and set Oregonlans down as "slow." The real reason probably lies between these two estimates. , More could have been done with a more liberal allowance, of course. But the blunders pointed out were not due to much to lack of funds as to the failure of those In charge to' make the' best possible showing from the funds that were provided. j There- i a focultyr-a sort of -ekqih sense which all do not possess This faculty finds expression in "putting the best foot forward."' Its province is to make a brave showing in spite of re stricted finances. It artfully conceals evidences of a shortage of resources by making the best of what Is provided. For example, more money was not nec essary In order to make known to every sightseer who passes that way that the Oregon building at St. Louis represents Oregon, not as It is, but as it was ninety-nine years agfe.. Nor would -it have required any greater outlay to put the "label" of the building In ar con spicuous than In an obscure place; nor to have had quickly growing Summer vines running riotously over the' build ing, and such space as was available aflame with the blossoms of nastur tiums and cannas and geraniums set in their cool green leaves. Funds were doubtless "short," but the faculty which o induces its possessor to "put the best lb foot forward" seems to have been ab sent altogether when it came to carry ing out details In and about this Oregon building. To be "slow" in this day and age of the world may not be a crime, but it certainly is to be left behind in the race. There may 'be more reafYlr tue, judged from the basis of utility, in the old farm horse than in the high- stepping racer, but the latter gets there" and attracts attention on the way. This, freely interpreted, is we take- it, the special mission of the great Fair. And a nation, a state, an Indus try or an enterprise that does not these requirements would better, not enter the lists as an exhibitor. It Is not a crime to be "slow," but it is short sighted policy to go among the world's rustlers thus handicapped. PORTLAND A HUMANE SOCIETY. Arrest of a young 'man charged with ill treating a horse and his arraignment in the Municipal Court is a reminder that cruelty to animals Is rare in Port land. In this case the defendant has lived here only a few days. There is in Portland a remarkably widespread and healthy sentiment on the question of kindness to dumb creatures. It is uni versally exerted, and serves to protect our burden-bearing servants no less than the feathered songsters. This sen timent is not of new growth. For more than a generation the Oregon Humane Society,-working eff actively through the public schools In a variety of ways, in stilled into the minds and hearts of Portland youth the doctrine that cru elty to animals is a sift; that theyVmust refrain from It, and whenever in'their power restrain others from committing It. These boys and girls are now men and women, all participants in the city's activities, and recruits are added to their number every day. Thus we have thousands -of self-appointed agents of the Humane Society who by suasion accomplish what an army of uniformed officers could not do. Occa sional exceptions to the rule of kind ness may almost invariably be traced to newcomers. Portland's healthy sentiment in this matter came forcibly to the notice of a humane society missionary from New England about four years ago. He was on a tour of the Pacific Coast and when he arrived here he was astonished to learn upon inquiry that the Oregon Hu mane Society was without a represent atlve. It happened that the president, the vice-president and the secretary were out of town, the latter leaving no assistant or substitute, and the Hu mane Society's police officer having been laid off for lack of funds. The missionary called at The Oregonlan of fice and was rejoiced when he was told that all Portland was a humane society whose limited number of policemen could easily take care of infractions of the law, which did not average two' a month. "This is one city where evi dently my services are not needed," he said, with undisguised pleasure, and he tosk the next train for Seattle. Port land's comparative freedom from cru elty to animals is based, not on stat utes, but ipsts in the heart and con science of the community. ' . JUST REALIZING OUR RESOURCES. A. very large portion of the State of Oregon Is still an undiscovered country. Though Government surveyors have run lines over nearly every township and made plats showing the location of streams, the character of the soli and tho presence of timber wealth, and though public roads traverse the state In every direction and postoffices are located In the most thinly settled parts of the Interior, yet.lt may be said with little semblance of exaggeration that nearly half of the state Is practically unknpwn. The "discoveries" we have mado in the past few years Indicate in some measure the extent of our lack of knowledge of the real- Oregon In the valleyvs between the Coast Range and Cascade Mountains, and In a few valleys in Eastern Oregon, where the railroad has gone, we have learned the possibilities of; the country as an agricultural region. The same may be said of the coast district around Tilla mook and Coos Bays. But what of the rest of the state? Though the immense forests of unsurpassed timber lay be fore our eyes for half a- century, It is only within the last five or six years that we have "discovered" their value. The waters of the Deschutes, the Mai heur, they Umatilla and the Klamath have been flowing in their channels all these years and we have known what Eastern Oregon soil will do when water has been put upon It, but it is only very recently that we have been brought to realize the enormous value of those streams as the source of sup ply for Irrigation systems. - Though we have known of its existence for half century and more, the Deschutes coun try has really just been discovered. In Wsetern Oregon the mountain streams have been ,splashing and dasBing, try ing to attract the attention of the peo pie who came here from the other side of the Rocky Mountains to make their homes and develop the resources of the country, but it is only In the last few weeks that we have "discovered" the real value of these magnificent water powers In every annual edition of The Ore gonlan and of other papers throughout the state the story of Oregon's almost unlimited natural wealth has been told and retold. The facts have been set forth in full detail by men familiar with their subjects, yet even, the men who wrote the stories of Oregon's In dustrlal resources had but slight aoore elation of the real significance of the Information they placed before the world. Men who lived upon the border of the most valuable forests and hunted deer through their shaded retreats have grown old without exercising their right to take timber claims or home steads. Tired business men have left their desks in shop and bank and fac tory to spend a season fishing hr the rushing waters of a mountain stream but -they did not see in that display of unharnessed power the fulfillment of the needs of the future. We of Oregon have been missing opportunities until Eastern capitalists have bought our' timber lands, secured control of our ater powers and begun the. develop ment of our Irrigation enterprises. ' But the opportunities are not all gone. There are timber lands that may be had for a small part of their future alue. water powers whose future util ity Is unforeseen by tbelrowners, arid wastes that are yet awaiting the appro prIator,,of available water. There are rich mineral deposits yet unfound and fertile fields yet unplowed.N In West ern Oregon electric lines will make small farms much more valuable, and In Eastern Oregon the extension of rail roads will build new towns and fac tories and open up new agricultural regions. The changes which have taken lace in the last ten years are but the eglnning of a development which will surpass the most sanguine expectations of our most optimistic people. The fut ure has riches In store for him who can see and appreciate the real value of things, and who will seize the oppor tunity when it Is offered. Today thou sands of our people are looking with regret upon the ' opportunities they missed in timber lands, arid lands and water powers? How many will be say ing a decade, hence, "If I- had only known!" & Fifteen thousand landseekers who meet-pwere "disappointed in the rush for the Rosebud reservation lands have moved farmer west and will endeavor to se cure claims In the Devil's Lake coun try, and an Italian steamship company Is working out a plan to colonize Texas with, farmers from the Mediterranean. No Oregonlan who has ever visited Texas or Dakota Is likely to get mixed up In a rush for any lands that those states have to offer the Intending set tler. Good Oregon land Is not so plenti ful at low prices or no prices as it once was, but there are many thousand acres hat will compare favorably with the Texas or Dakota land, and which can still be had without much greater phys ical, mental or financial outlay'than Is necessary in the acquirement of a claim by the "rush" method, which Is fol lowed whenever the Government holds land Ipttery. For being thus over looked, however, Oregon may find some consolation in the thought that perhaps she might not like the kind of citizens who are niBhing Into Dakota and Texas. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer still re fuse to explain why all mention of Portland was omitted when it printed an extended article on Pacific Coast wheat trade. Instead it flounders around in a maze of misrepresentation and wild statements which it puts out in an endeavor to obscure the real point at issae. The Bureau of Statistics, in its official figures, showed that Port land during the, fiscal year ending June 30, 1904. shipped more than twice as much wheat as all Puget Sound ports combined, and within a few bushels of the total amount shipped by all ports In California and Washington. The fig ures also showed that Portland was the only port on the Pacific Coast that made a gain In flour exports for the year. Under such circumstances The Oregonlan thought that an article on Pacific Coast wheat trade was Incom plete without at least a slight mention of Portland. We would still be pleased to have the P.-I. explain why all refer ence to Portland was omitted from Its article on the Pacific Coast wheat trade. It is difficult to decide whether the extreme heat of Summer or the extreme cold of Winter is the more severe on an army in the field. One Is Inclined at this time to decide that the heat is harder to endure than cold under stren uous conditions of war. It seems, in deed, that nothing could Impose i greater tax upon human endurance than tolling with artillery under. burning sun and scorched by a "kamsln wind." But, recalling the bitter suffer ing of Russian troops in crossing Lake Baikal a few months ago, and reflecting upon the suffering of the French army during its retreat from Moscow In the early years of the past century, It must be admitted that fighting In 120 degrees of heat Is not more fatal to troops than beating through deep snowdrifts against bitter winds when the thermom '"peter registers 50 degrees below zero, The conditions in either case are prac tically Insupportable for any length of vtlme, and, contemplating them from a safe distance, each seems worse than the other. The Haytlan Republic, where the music of the revolutionist "sings on and Is never still," is apparently getting ready for another spasm. The rate of exchange is up to 600 per cent, and President Nord in a public address few days ago accused the foreign pop ulatlon of plotting against him with a view to overthrowing his government, He also stated that he would take strong measures to defend himself and made a threatening reference to "what happened In Haytl In 1S04." Details of the present grievances of the Haytlati monarch are not given, but there are very few pages In Haytlan history but would have shown brighter had the ad vice or example of the "foreign popu latlon" been followed. The twenty-ninth annual review of the Commercial News, San Francisco; old reliable shipping and trade paper, Is at hand, and, as usual, is a highly creditable publication. Editor Bates is quite complimentary In the numerous pages he devotes to Portland, and makes special notice of the work of the Port of Portland and the Lewis and Clark Fair. Henry Gassawav Davis. , Democratic noriiinee for- Vice-President, will be hailed as the greatest of American in venters' if he can demonstrate to the country that the National card game as played at Elklns, W. Va., can be made of sufficient Interest to be Indulged In every night and nobody quit loser. Henry Koch, housepainter, spectator at an accident in one of Chicago' streets, Impulsively rescues a policeman overcome by gas and pays for this life with his own. In such circumstances Andrew. Carnegie's hero fund is hardly a topic ior newspaper jest. , Denominational Co-Operation. Unnlncott's. 'My dear," said "Mias Flagstaff to her country beau, "I thought I ought to tell you beforehand that I'm a somnambulist.- xou mieat not liKe to- marry a woman who '-" But the impatient Mr. McCoy cut short her remarks, saying: "That makes no difference, Caroline- none In the world. I'm a Methodist, you know, and ,1 can go with, you to your church in tho morning and you can go j with mat to ray-church at eight; ROOT THE STRONGEST MAN. Republicans Confident He Will Run for Governor of New York. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Aug. 6. Notwithstanding his dec lination. New York Republicans are con fident that Ellhu Root will eventually ac cept the nomination for Governor, and make therace in the interest of the Re publican party at large, as well as the Republican party of New York. By "many New Yorkers, Root's nomination is deemed necessary If Roosevelt Is to carry the state In November. It Is recognized that New York Is go ing to be close, and that the very best man In the Republican ranks must be put at the head of the Republican slate ticket If the party -would win. That man, beyond any shadow of doubt, Is Ellhu Root. . Root Is head and shoulders above all other New York Republicans, not ex cepting Governor Odell, who would like still another term at Albany. , It Is perhaps natural that Root should not want to run for Governor. When ho retired from the office of Secretary of War ne announced his intention of going back to hlslaw practice, which had suf fered while he wa3 in- the Cabinet He wanted to return to his chosen profession. and make money. He made none whilo ho was in the Cabinet, and he would mako none as Governor of New York. One of the Big Guns. It has been explained by some who pre tend to know that Root declined the nomination in New York-because ho is representing James J. Hill. There Is probably no, foundation for that, at least so far as sentiment is concerned. Root as attorney for one of the great1 com panies that constituted the Northern Se curities Company has not embarrassed the Administration, and the fact that he had held such position as a lawyer would not detract from his power as a politician should he consent to run for Governor. jttoot js not a small politician. Nor Is he a small-caliber lawyer. William J. Youngs, who was at one time private secretary - to Theodora Roosevelt, when the latter was Governor or rew York, has some views on Root and the New York situation, which are of interest. -New York Republicans," says Youngs, 'regard Root's nomination as essential to Republican success. I know that Presi dent Roosevelt is very anxious that Mr. Root shall be the candidate for Governor, The President wants to carry New York. although he can be elected without it- Mr. Root is undeniably the strongest Re publican in the state, and Governor Odell realizes this. He, as manager of the Re publican campaign, wants the strongest man that can be nominated, and he recog nizes that Mr. Root is that man. Gov ernor Odell also recognizes that It would be fatal to him to again be the Republican candidate, and let the state fall Into the hands of the Democrats." Depew Slated for Retirement. In connection with the story that Root is slated for the nomination for Gov ernor comes ,an interesting tale to the effect that Senator Piatt and Senator Depew are to be retired, and that Gov ernor Odell and ex-Governor Black, who nominated Roosevelt at Chicago, are to be sent to the Senate at the expiration of the terms of the sitting Senators. Just how much truth Is back of this story re mains to be found out. Odell wants to remain la politics, and if he can't hold onto the Governorship, the Senatorshlp is the next best thing within his reach. Senator DeDews term ex pires on March 3 next, at a convenient time If Odell desires to make the race for the Senate, for his own term as Governor expires next January. Depew has not been a success as a Senator, and It is hardly probable he can have another term. Odell In tho Senate with Piatt for four years, until Piatt's term expires In 1909, would not get along altogether harmoni ously, but Piatt Is getting very old and quite feeble; ho Is not active and ener getic, and would have to depend much upon his colleague, and in this way Odell as junior Senator, would forge to the front, and take precedence over his col league, as he has succeeded him In the leadership of the Republican organization in New York. Of course Odell Is looking ahead to the Presidency, and if he cannot retain the trovernorsnip, no would, oe almost as prominent as Senator, and would probably stand as good a chance in 190S as if he entered the field from Albany. It Is speculating a long way ahead to discuss Black as a successor of Senator Piatt, but If Piatt, at the end of his present term, concludes he has had enough of politics, and makes way for some younger man, jiiacx toi proDaDiy stand as much show as any other. But five years works wondera in New York politics. It is useless to discuss what may happen so far in the future. Present talk of Black is merely a pleasantry for whlllng away Summer hours. Democratic Committee. Gathering. NEW YORK, Aug. 7. Democrats from different sections of the country began leathering today in anticipation of the meeting of the Executive Committee to morrow morning and the notification of Judce Parker of his nomination on Wed nesday. Timothy E. Ryan, member of the Executive Committee from Wiscon sin. was among the early arrivals. He told Chairman Taggart that his state was debatable ground and expressed the opin ion that tho Republican factions could not be brought together. "W. S. Cowherd, chairman of the Con gresslonal Committee, came over from "Washington to consult with the Demo cratic National managers regarding con certed action for both President and Con gress. Among other arrivals were J, Browne, member of the National Com mittee from Florida, and Representative Claude E. Swanson, of Virginia. Opening Republican Headquarters. NEW YORK, Aug. 7, The Republican headquarters will be formally opened to morrow by Chairman CortelyOu and such members of the Executive Committee as may be in the city. There will be no cere mony, but the members of the committee will begin the campaign at once. Senator T. B. Scott, of West Virginia, arrived to night and other members will be here tomorrow. Hay Dines With President. WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. Secretary Hal dlne with the President at the Whito xiouso luuuy. ne remamea mere until 11 o'clock. N . To America. y George Henry Boker. What, cringe to Europe! Band it all In one. Stilt Its decrepit strength, renew Its age. Wipe out Its debts, contract a loan to wage Its vena.1 battles ana, by you bright sun, Our Goa is talste, and liberty undone, If slaves have power to win your heritage! Look ca your country, God's appointed stage, Where man's vast mind Its boundless course shall run: . For that It was your stormy coast Re spread A fear in vvlrter; girded you about With granite hills, and made-you strong and dread. Let him who fears before the foemen shout, Or gives an inch before a vein has bled, . Turn ca' himself, and let the traitor out AUGUST- BELMONT SULKS. Piqued by His Failure to Get National Chairmanship, He Refuses to Col lect Campaign Funds. ' Philadelphia Press. New York, Aug. 1. Word has been seat to the managers of the Democratic Presidential campaign that there will be no large contributions to the Parker and Davis campaign funds from Wall street and the allied financial Interests until after Judge Parker has written and pub llsned his letter of acceptance. The Dem ocratic managers have been notified by August Belmont, it is said on good au thority, that he will not assist In gather ing campaign funds. It Is understood that the attitude of Mr. Belmont Is that he will contribute his share when the time conies, but that he will he responsible for no oher contri butions and need not be expected to do any active work in the campaign. This action is ascribed to pique on Mr. Bel mont's part. He wanted to be chairman of the National Committed; but the com mittee elected Thomas Taggart, of Indi ana. It Is said by Mr. Belmont's friends that tho Democratic managers wished him to underwrite the Democratic cam paign and "that he refused after he had been denied the place he desired. The plan was to make him treasurer. He re fused to take this "place and so far as Is known has not withdrawn that refusal. What the Democratic managers say about Mr. Belmont's position is that he has "laid flown." QNLY A FEW OF THEM LEFT. Chicago Chronicle. The late Governor Pattlson of Penn sylvania adhered to the last to tho party which calls Itself Democratic and takes In . vain the names -of great American Democrats. Ho clung to it for what It had been and refused to believe that its masses had proved recreant to all Demo cratic principles. Himself ardently devoted to those prin ciples, ha could not bring himself to see that tho dominating forces of the party had become utterly undemocratic and were using the organization for purposes that were evil and wholly at variance wltn the principles to which he was so strongly attached and which had ani mated the party in its better days. He could not help knowing that the party had been misled, but he refused to doubt that its rank and file wero still sound of mind and heart and would glad ly respond if summoned to return from their wanderings by leaders of tho right stamp. He went to St. Louis to aid In restoring the party to true and .able Democratic leadership and thoroughly imbued with the hope and belief that the efforts of himself and others would be. c?owned with success. Tnere is reason to oeiicve tnat his labors at St. Louis in a cause which wa3 really hopeless hastened the end of a life capable of great usefulness to the country. Mr. Pattlson rendered distinguished services in his own state. A man of high character and resolution, he attempted to rescue the state from the political cor- nmtlnn lnn whlnt. - V.o gallon Tn fVila work he made the local Democratic party useful. He became its candidate for Gov ernor and was elected. The people wished for reform and responded to the appeal embodied In his candidacy regardless of their party affiliations. Had the party sustained him it prob ably would have become a permanent power for good in tho state. But it did not sustain him and it passed Into an ap parently hopeless minority. It was com posed of such antagonistic groups and the most powerful of these were actuated by such unworthy motives that It could not be made a power for good. xet so Diinaaa was vsovernor jratuson by his attachment to tho party name, so ' confident was ho that the name was truly expressive of the esssential character ot the party, that he still held fast to the organization and sacrificed his lire m a struggle to make the party what he imag ined it to be. There are still many Democrats of the old school men who hold fast to the Democratic party that is because they labor under the delusion that it Is tho Democratic party that was men who dream of purifying it and harmonizing It and making it a power for good under a truly Democratic leadership. But the number of these Is steadily di minishing. One after another they are freeing themselves from their delusion and abandoning the hopeless task of as similatinjr Irreconcilable opposltes for the most part bad and transmuting them into a homogeneous party with singleness or purpose "and capacity for the accomplish ment of good ends. The day is not remote when the last of them will leave the Democratic party to disintegrate from its own violent antago nisms and its Incurable moral rottenness. Soon there will not bo a grain of the Pattlson salt left to stay the progress of decomposition. 'SWIMMERS GO INSANE, Started on a Long Race From Brook- lyn Bridge. NEW YORK, Aug. 7. Clifford Baxter, a civil engineer, and Captain John En- right, of the South Beach llfesaving sta tion, started on a swimming contest from Brooklyn bridge to the Iron pier at Coney Island todav and both were taken out of the water temporarily crazed, after swim ming for seven hours, and when witnm a mile of their goal. The distance is esti mated at 13 miles. Baxter passed Enright at Norton s Point when both men wero nearly ex hausted. Enright 'Soon afterward declared that some one was holding him back and began to rave. He was taken from the water. . A brother of Enright, seeing that Bax ter might finish, became excited and jumped overboard. He caught Baxter and Baxter's crew fought him oft with an oar. By this time Baxter developed a delusion that a devilfish was towing him and that ho was starving to death and his friends dragged him from the water. Satan Was a Delegate. New York Press. Some of the Prohibitionists profess to bo much distressed to learn that the brew ers of Indianapolis contributed liberally to the expenses of the National Conven tion of the party recently held in that city. But so far we have not heard of the Rev. Dr. Swallow or his chairman of committee handing back the amount of tho contributions. Nor have any apolo gies been offered by the Prohibitionist National Committee for accepting the aid of the brewers. In the assault on the Army canteen the liquor Interests and the Prohibitionists were In close alliance, and the connection seems to have been en tirely satisfactory to both parties, else tho brewers would not have voluntarily helped finance the Prohibitionist cam paign or the Prohibitionist party have accepted- of help from such a quarter. The Prohibitionist organ, TheVoice, now that the fact of the brewers contribu tion has become known to the general public, thinks that the money ought to be handed back, basing Its opinion, how ever, not on. any" high grounds of prin ciple, but ortithe fact that a knowledge of such contributions "is liable to create much trouble and misunderstanding In the heat of a campaign. It is quite appar ent that when the good people met to gether at Indianapolis, "Satan came also." . t A Widow Bird. i. Percy Bysshe Shelley. A widow bird eat mourning for her love Upon a wintry boughj The frozen wind, erection, above, The freezing stream below! There was no leaf upon the forest bare, Jfo flower upon the ground, And llttlo motion in the air fc N iEscept the ralU-wheel's eound. - ; NOTE ANDJ0MMENT. : The, English are in IHassa. That In terpolated "h" must have betrayed the defenders. d Portland's cops will now be able to handle prisoners with gloves and club 'em at the same time. Chicago has just held an. "old settlers picnic." Presumably anyone who has lived there more than 10 "years is, an old settler. ' Bishop Potter,, who is trying to Investi gate the saloon evil, has been censored by the W. C. T. TJ. It is wonderful how many people think they have proprietary rights In the strait and narrow way. The, announcement that Henry Gassa way Davis is an ardent lover ot poker should bring him a large number of votes, but the further announcement that he plays for "love" only, should take them away again. The London Dally Graphic probably didn't mean exactly what it said In this itemi , A tram car was overturned at Birmingham last -evening. Fortunately, the only passenger was a woman. So. frequent have thefts of bicycles by Kaffirs become In Pretoria that the gov ernment has authorized a municipal by law providing that natives' bicycles shall be painted yellow. And these are the un civilized Kaffirs that had to be displaced by Chinese! Bishop Potter was present at the open ing of a saloon In New York last week, and took part in the religious exercises on that occasion. The saloon sells all the usual alcoholic liquors. In a room par titioned off from the bar is a soda fount ain, where beer also may be obtained. .Women are allowed in this room, but not in the bar. Just how this enterprise will boost tho temperance cause does not ap pear clear at this distance. For 13 hours, says an Associated Press; correspondent, the Russians fought liko madmen, and. during all that time they did not see a single Japanese soldier. The future Napier is going to be hard up for "purple patches" in war histories. The fighting of invisible foemen can offer no compensation for tho lack of charging squadrons, flashing swords and bristling bayonets all jumbled "up together in full view of tho man on a convenient hillock. An item in the Victoria Colonist con cerning malls for Pitcalrn Island- brings to the public attention the little Island where the descendants of the Bounty's mutineers still make their home. Regu lar malls, of course, are unknown to the people of Pitcalrn, as they have to de pend on visiting passing vessels. A man-of-war usually takes their letters once a year, and the Colonist announces that a mall will be dispatched by H. M. S. Shearwater, which will leave Victoria about October 1. The Islanders seem to prefer reading-matter of a religious char acter to any other. Many a quarrel between man and wife arises from trivial causes, and causes a lasting estrangement Before marriage there Is usually less bitter argument and obstinate decision. It" was probably a lucky thing, howeverr for a couple in Halifax (Yorkshire) that they fell out before marriage. They were In a cab, along with the best man and tho brides maid, on the way to the church, when a dispute arose as to which of them I should open the door of the cab. The bride held one view and the groom an other. So excited did the argument become- thafthe bridegroom refused to en ter the church, and went home a bach elor. A Southern writer tells this story In Harper's Weekly of a negro preacher's version of the parable of the Good Sa maritan: There was a traveler on a lonely road, said the preacher, who was set upon by thieves, robbed and left wounded and helpless by the wayside. As he lay there, various persons passed him, but none offered to assist him. Presently, however, a poor Samaritan came by, and, taking pity on the wounded man's plight, helped him on his mule and took him to an inn, where he ordered food and drink and raiment for the man, directing the Innkeeper to send the bill to him. "And dis am a true story, breth'ren," concluded the preacher; "for de inn am standin' dere yet, and In de do'way am standin de skel'ton ob de innkeeper, waifln fer de Good Samaritan to come back an' pay de bill." Who would expect to find a critic of American manners in Fiji? Here is what "Ola" has to say In the Fiji Times: Did any one else wonder with Ola wnere "the scandal" came "in In the Report o Miss' Alice Roosevelt attending race, meetings and being photographed in the act (1) of handing over money to a bookmaker, and (2) displaying her winnings to a Member of Congress? In! Suva, it Is a sign of caste to "wager" and "win" It you can. From the pillars of jhe church to the newest-hatched butterflies of society, all our 77 "put their little bit on" quite openly, and with no side glances to see who's looking. The old buffer who gets his 500 a year pockets his five bob dividend froml the tote (totalizator, a betting machine) with an Impassive face but an inword chortle, andl "Daughter" clutches the 15 shillings sween with quite open radiance. And why not? I From this Is appears that society inj Fiji Is limited to the Seventy-seven. New-! port, even if the Four Hundred were re duced by half, would appear to have more, elastic regulations. Or is It that there; are only 77 white people In the Islands? WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. 1 M Proprietor How Us that new salesman doing? Floorwalker Great. "Why, he could sell a box of writing paper to a man who couldn't write his name. Philadelphia Bulletin. He I hope the fact that life led a gay life and been out nights a great deal won't make any difference. "Indeed. It does. If I accepted you, you might reform." Life. "But have you any expectations, young man?" "Of course, I have. Three- rich Girls want to marry me, but I'm going to give your girl the first chance." Cleveland Plain .Dealer. Towne It's funny you don't know that man over there. That's Braggs. Browne I never heard of him. Towne Evidently you've never been within range of his voice, then. Philadel phia Prass. Ajax had just defled the lightning. "I wouldn't do it," he 'said, "but Mrs. Ajax gets nervous every time there's a storm." And women haven't changed much since. Chicago News. "Do you think that elections are as honest as they used to be?" "No," answered Senator Sorghum. "I can't say I ao. A lot of people get paid for votes nowadays and then don't deliver the goods." Washington Star. Bookie So y'see. If the 'orsa starts at 15 to 1 you get 15 quid, 10 to 1 you get 10 quid, S to 1 Ave. D'ysee? ThA Innocent Oh, yes. I see, perfectly. But what do I get It the horsa starts at 1 o'clock exactly? Illustrated Bits. "Open your mouth a little wider, please said the dentist, "My friend, replied the professor, with some Impatience, "I can't open niy mouth any wider. But I; can extend It vertically a little more. If you insist upon It," For nothing1 Jars the prpfesspra nerves worse than the use of slipshod -English. Chi caga JTribnne - A x " . ... - . v