, FKIDAY, SKPTEMBBE 9, 1904. m Entered &t th Postoffi at Portland. Or as aecoad-class raattter. KEVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Br mail (pot&ga prepaid In advance) Daily, -with Sunday, pr month. . . ...$0.S5 XtSlr, with Sunday excepted, per rear 7.50 Pally, with Sunday, per year........ 9.00 Esiaday, per year 2.00 Thm weekly, per year. ............... L.B0 The Weekly. S month .50 Daily, per wesk, delivered, Sunday' ex cepted . . 15o CaUjrper -week, delivered, Sunday In- POSTAGE RATER. United States, Canada sad Mexico 20 to 14-pagB paperM..M..M.M....n.le 18 to 80-page pape ........ . .-... 2o 2 to M-pa.se paper. ....-r.. So FcrIgn rates, double. She Orcgonlaa does not buy poems or stories from Individuals, and cannot under tail to return any mn raw-rip t sent to It without solicitation. No stamps should ha inclosed tor this purpose. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICES. (Th 8. C BecJfcwiih Special Agency) Nw Torkt rooms 4S-CQ, Tribuno Building. Chlcaco: Jiooms 510-512 Tribune Building. KEPT OX SATYR. Allan tia City, N. J. Taylor & Bfrilcy. Crtrs dealers. 23 Leeds Place. Chicago Auditorium asnexf PostoSlce 2Jrw Co., 178 Dearborn street. Dearer Julius Black, Hamilton & Kead rick, 906-812 Seventeenth street. Kf Pff City, Mo. Blcksecker Clear Co., 2lnth and Walnut. Los Angeles H. p. Gardner, 259 .South Spring-, and Harry Drapklm Minneapolis M. J. Ka-vanaugh, 60 South Third; L. liegeixburcer, 217 Plrst Avenue South. Mew XorJc Cltr-Li. Jones- & Co, Astor 'House. Ojrden F. R. Oodard. . Qmnhn Ttnrlrfilmr Bros., 1612 Farnanu McLaughlin Br ox., 210 South Kth; cgeath Stationery Co, 1303 Fara&m. Salt Lake Bolt L4k News Co, 77 west Second South street. St. Louie World's Pair News Co, Joseph Ospeland. "Wilson & Wilson. 217 N. 17th St.; Oeo. L. Ackermann, newsboy. Eighth and PUTS sts. Ban Francisco J. K. Cooper Co, 746 Mar ket, near Palace Hotel; Foster & Or ear, 'Terry News Stand; Goldsmith Bros, 236 Sut ter; L. E. Lee, Palace Hotel News Stand; p. w. Pitts, 1008 Market; Frank Scott, 80 -EDis; K. Wheatley, 83 Stevenson; Hotel St Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C Ebbltt House News Stand. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tern perature, 79 dec; minimum, 00. Precipitation, aone. TODAY'S WEATHER Generally fair; winds mostly northerly. PORTLAND, ITUDAX, SEPTEMBER 8. THE DEBT TOR OUB ITAUt There is a difference between a man end a mollusk, and another difference between a man and a wooden Image. It Is to such, difference that we owe the participation of theUnited. States in the Xwis and Clark Exposition. Yesterday Tlie Oregpnlan printed a drawing: of the main Government bund ling:, to be erected, among others, at the Pair grounds. It Is not too much to eay that these buildings and the exhibit -within them will be to our people the greatest of all the attractions of the Pair. The Fair will be highly success ful, and It will owe Its success mainly to the liberal participation of the Gov ernment in it. It was through, one man, one only man, that this recognition and this par ticipation were secured. The Oregoni ans got the cold shoulder. Members of Congress would scarcely talk to them on the subject. In their extremity they went to President Roosevelt for aid. He listened, with interest, called bis sec retary and took notes, and said he would do what he could. As he saw and talked with, one leading man after another, the effect quickly began to be manifest.- The whole detail would make an Interesting statement, but now Is not the time to print it. Again and again the Oregonians went to him with their suggestions and requests. They were always treated with, consideration. "The President said everyttime he would do what he could. And he did it. It was Theodore Roosevelt's concep tion of the history of the country and' Ids knowledge of the West that moved Mm to this interest and kindness. It is not too much to say that had any other man been President of the United States this recognition would not have een obtained. The Northwest owes it wholly to President Roosevelt. No other President has known the "West as Roosevelt knows it. Stiff and prim for mality In the "White House would have forbidden any approach. There have been invertebrates in the "White House, and even wooden images there, and i may be again; but we trust not now again, nor soon. I THE WET BLANKET AGAIN. The so-called independent newspapers "that support Judge Parkerthe New York "World, the Boston Herald, the Brooklyn Eagle, the New York Times have admitted freely that Judge Par ker's speech of acceptance gave his cause a cold chilL Harper's "Weekly calls It "a wet blanket." Others talk of it as "a frost" Pulitzer, of the "World, both through his newspaper and by personal intercession and implora tion, has been trying to Induce Judge Parker to rise to the importance of the occasion and to the height of the argu ment, and write a letter or make a speech that would electrify the people, and win their affection and admiration, as "their leader and teacher, their trib une and advocate." 'Well, Judge Parker has spoken again. A great bunch, of Democratic editors, in the hope of getting the electrifying utterance out of him, gave notice that they would go and see him. They gave him ample time for preparation. One can't reasonably be expected to "come out strong" as a leader and teacher, a tribune and advocate, without proper notice. Such proper notice was given, and they all went to see Judge Parker. He received them and made the speech. Read It, and judge whether on this occasion he has poured forth the animating strains so eagerly desired and expectantly awaited. The Orego nlan might be accused of having a party bias, and doesn't like to say. But we fear this speech, like the one that preceded It, will be regarded by the esteemed "in d pen dent" press as only decorously dulL It will not start the palpitation and thrill through the heart of Democracy, we do venture the opinion No more than heretofore has the tongue of Esopus on this occasln dropped manna for the hungering and thirsting wanderers of the wilderness. Jndge Parker as revealed through his utterances, is a mighty good man, of the unimaginative, plodding1 cort; sol emnly heavy; neither a politician nor a statesman, but merely a commonplace party man, who cannot contribute a note to the canvass that will put spirit into It. Hifi nomination was a reaction to dullness and safety, under the guid ance of -the plutocratic element of the party, from the courageous spirit that uttered itself through Bryan.. .In order now-to get any kind of animation into h jparty hey, will be forced. -tocall. on Bryan, who will put his owia ideas into the campaign, and who may regale the country once more with .his opinions uttered many times alreadyof Judge Parker and of the trick of the -Belmont-Hill syndicate, through which Parker got the nomination. This, also, just before the "convention: I believe that I can prove to every unbiased mind that Judge Parker Is not a fit man to be nominated either by the Democratic party or by any other party that stands for honesty and fair dealing In politics. l am satisfied that -we now have evidence sufficient to convict Judge Parker of absolute unfitness for the nomina tion. The country will Judge whether these utterances by Mr. Bryan are not made prophetic by Jud e Parker's failure. THE ESSENCE OF SOCIALISM. Socialism wishes to be heard. Every opinion, held by a considerable number, has the right. Yesterday The Orego nlan published a long letter, from Dyle, "Washington, written by a Socialist who made an editorial that recently ap peared in these columns an occasion for propagation of his own opinions. To day there is a similar letter from a reader at Colfax. On its own part The Oregonian will say another word. It is useless to dispute on minor mat ters, or to split definitions. Socialism is what its spirit makes it. At bottom it is a protest against inequality of property and. conditions. The Socialist is one who, if he could prevent every other person from being or from becom ing rich or prosperous, or from having more property or better conditions than any one else, would not only accept for himself humble and even meager con ditions of life, but would willingly cut himself off from the hope of acquiring property and of living on the higher plane. To -this end he proposes that the state shall own the fixed and productive cap italall land, factories, workshops. warehouses, machinery, plant, appli ances, railways, ships, etc or, to ex press all in a convenient phrase, the means of production, production ac cording to economic usage being sup posed also to include the distribution and circulation of products. The dis tribution also is to be effected through a scheme of labor, organized and di rected by the state. Each person is to work for what he gets, paying for what he gets in labor time. The object of this scheme is to create equality. As the state Is to own and to direct all the means of production, every individual Is to be cut off from the hope of making money or of build ing up a property of his own. He Is to 'do time" for the state, and to have his dally dole for it. If he have a house to live in, the state wouldn't take it away from him, nor meddle with his little personal belongings; but since he couldn't make anything above his little dally wage, he couldn't keep up his property; he would have nothing to im prove with; all Jiving would quickly fall to a low common level, progress would at once become Impossible, and civilization itself would be lost in the J common degradation. All this is so ob vious that mere statement of it 13 enough. For observe that no man Is to uso wealth for the production of more wealth. He is not to have the means of doing it Private property the little that may be left will soon wear out or otherwise disappear; there will be no "means of renewing it not even the furniture of the house, for the forces tending to equality would reduce air living to a level and to the lowest level. Within ten years the conditions would be Intolerable. 'Howover, if the experi ment were made, it wouldn't last even ten years. Now, it may be understood" what The Oregonian meant when it said that "the social democratic ideal to which we are suppoeed to be tending is a condition of Boclety in which all should possess everything in common and no one any thing for himself." It was not an er roneous statement of the logic of So cialism, as the present correspondent mistakenly supposes. For the state is to possess all theneans of production and distribution; which is to say, all property or wealth which can be used in the production of more property or wealth; which again is to say all prop erty of Teal or actual value; and, as the state is to be the people, the com munity, owning everything through which property or wealth may be re produced, and consequently everything really worth having, the condition will practlcalW- be one in which all, L e., the state, wuld possess everything In com mon and no one anything for himself. Socialism, therefore, runs practically into communism. Do not overlook the fact that in the Socialist programme the state is to own and operate all the means and instru ments of production land, machinery, implements and tools. Yet, curiously, It Is denied that this Is state ownership. The product of the Industry directed by the state will be the property of the community, to be sold to individuals, or distributed among -them, in exchange or payment for labor. Yet, curiously, the ownership of the state is also denied here. No play with words, or play on words, comes to anything in such a matter. The result of the system is that the state becomes the owner, theJ proprietor, the manager, the director owning and directing all productive property; organizing labor and forcing it, if necessary. And certainly it will be necessary, lor man in general has a deep-seated repugnance to labor, and if he can "lie down on" the state he will be very sure todo it So far we have been speaking of what is called productive labor. 'But there is still much labor in the world that Is im portant and indispensable though not productive in the economic sense. There 13 all the labor that consists In render ing services where no material thing results or is worked into more desirable form. There is the labor often abso lutely necessary-that consists in doing services that many or all require the labor of the physician, the professor, the magistrate, the schoolmaster, the policeman, the soldier, the domestic ser vant, or, as he or she will be called in the Socialist community, the domestic help not to speak of the labor that merely ministers to amusement There, too, is the higher labor of the man of letters, of the artist, of the man of sci ence, so far as he is an original inves tigator. How is all this labor to be or ganized under collectivism, and partic ularly how much is it to be paid com paratively with productive labor, and with" what? "With goods out of the state warehouse? .Many readers of The Oregonian per haps most of them may think It sur prising that this journal should deem it worth while to deal with this subject in a serious way, or at alL But Social ism Is a theory that is urging its claims or doctrines; it has a candidate for the Presidency, for whom, even in Oregon, ' .several thousand votes .grill bo thrown, while his aggregate for the country may exceed the vote3 thrown for the Prohibition candidate. Our own Social ists do not" clearly define their position. They scarcely know what they want, or to what their theory would lead. One must go to the books of their philoso phers and text-writers for statements and definitions. Socialism, let us re peat, is based on the assumption that the state should take possession of the means of production and should direct distribution, in the interest of equality allowing no private enterprise, since, if any were allowed. Inequality would enter from that side. The individual is to work under direction of the state, "doing time," in a condition lying somewhere between slavery and penal ism. Of course it is impossible. "RACE SUICIDE AND PEACE." A consideration of race suicide that was completely overlooked In the dis cussion that followed the President's criticism of the diminishing size of modern families was lately brought for ward by the Saturday Evening Post as worthy of taking Into account ' Taking as a basis of Its presentment that the present war In Asia Is the direct out growth of expansion made necessary by the overcrowded territory of Japan, It is argued that, from the simple stand point of economy, a constantly Increas ing population is not to be desired. "Expanding Russia," says the Post "has come into collision with exnandmsr Japan. One or the other must elve way, and Kurokl's artrument with Kuropatkln is to decide which It shall DC- Japan is under the pressure of an economic necessity. Her present facili ties for maintaining her growing pop ulation are not adequate to their com mon, urgent needs. She is sacrificing thousands of her people In orflpr tn make room for additional thousands yet to oe. bne must have room. She Is fighting for very life not the life that is comprehended in a stationary or lessening population, but the life that looks to a limitless increase of neonl with abundant space for their mainte nance. Pursuing this suMect.. it Js askd why France has changed from the most restless, aggressive, ambitious power in Europe to the moat neaeefiii and contented, and the answer given is: because her people are not increaslne- and the land that is enough for one generation will be enough for the next Lrermany, on the other hand, is a mm. ace to the peace of the world henansA her swarming population Is constantly pressing upon her cramped boundaries seeding an outlet for its energies as a means of life itself." Vjf? As long as nations exhibit with nrirto the returns of the periodical census that shows a large increase in population me menace or war will shadow what -we call the congested centers of na tional lire, it is not only that breath ing room Is necessary and onrmrtimirv to make a living essentiaL Civiii'znMnn will not stop at this, but urges upon every intelligent citizen or subteet de mands that must be met in order to make life worth the living. This is what we call "progress " and from th view above taken the price that must oe paid for keeping step with it peace fully is found in the wise limitation of population. "Enough people, but not fin Tnnnv,f should be the desire of every nation, me watchword of Drudence in pvwv famllyf The prayer "Give me neither poverty nor riches" is one that may be applied here. A rovsterine. dam omits half-fed, ill-plad family is not a desira ble possession. Neither Is a childless house in which an excess of plenty Is found. This question mav well enn. sldered an important one in Its bear ing upon the peace of ovprprnwflpfl countries. Summing up, the Post de clares that if there were a little more race suicide in Germany the tk Europe would be on a much more sta ble foundation and "there would be more activity around Mr. Carnegie's peace paiace at The Hague." THE SPIRIT OF SECTIONALISM. , Amid the rebel yell and to thf Rtrai'nq of "Dixie," Mr. Clark Howell rises at the Democratic editorial protest against sectionalism. It is like w wno chooses to ignore the clan- nisnness or nis race and blame all oth ers for regarding him clannish. J-here Is no sectional issue in hio country except as it is raiser? w v. South. There Is no race issue in this country except as It is raised by the aouin. Jin the North we divide on mih. He questions; in the South there is no division, there Is only one ndrtv iinri it Is for gold or silver just as the Demo cratic platform pronounces. Tn th North we have views on nubUn mo tions; in the South there Is no ques tion Dut me "nigger." President Roosevelt appointed rn Crum to be Collector of the Port of Charleston. This and all other ap pointments of colored men in nfiw made by him do not exceed in mo ment, or In numbers the similar ap pointments by either Cleveland or Mc Klnley. Nobody thought anvthlnir of it but the South. Nobody made any issue of It but the South. President Roosevelt sat at Umnh r5t Booker Washington. He treated him with ordinary Courtesy as the repre sentative, of lO.MO.OOO blacks in the United States. The act is In accord with custom in the United States every where but In the South, and in every court of the Old World. Nowhere was any russ made about it but in the South; nowhere was the rare brought forward but in the South v0f we hear protest of sectionalism. The Northern man may not fniirrar h social customs of the North when ho 'la in the South, if he is wise and consid erate, he will not discuss Booker Wash. ington in polite society or associate wnn negroes south of Mason and Dix on s une. JBut how about the Northern man when he is at home in th TMv.fh Do not expect the- Southern -man leave his provincial notions south of the Ohio and Potomac when he North, but merely ask him if the North ern man at the North shall follow th social customs of the North at the North; and the answer Is, No. The an swer Is that the social standards of h South must be the standard of a Re publican and a Northern President in the white House. Not content with in sisting upon peculiar standards for It self, It Insists that that peculiar stand ard shall be the National standard. Yet we hear complaint of sectionalism. "All the South asks," says Mr. How ell, "Is to deal with this question as Its conscience and judgment dictates." No, Mr. Howell, that Is not all the fcoutn asks, it also asks that other shall deal with this 'question, not ac cording to their conscience and iudsr- ment, but according to the conscience and judgment oSthe South. The stand ard at .Washington must be the stand ard of Mississippi or else the race Issue has been imposed upon the South. The ia.uonai policy toward the negro must De tne South's policy. In society, in edu cation and in politics. "All the South asks Is to be let- alone' is an old cry; and the answer Is- the ams today that was made by Sumner in 1854 "The South must let us alone." Then it was tne offensive tactics of slavery that drove the North to resentment now It Is the offensive tactics of dictation along other lines the demand -that the southern point of view be enthroned not only at the South, but at the North. Does It ever occur to men like Clark Howell, who is justly the pride of the South in brains, culture and character, that when the Democratic party enters the PresidentiaUstruggle with the Solid South to begin with, trusting to a few Northern States for the small comple ment needed, it has put up an exhibit in sectionalism that should debar it from ever speaking of sectionalism? It has been the hope of good citizens, South and North, that fair and generous treatment of the South would Introduce a fairer spirit there and eliminate sec tional lines. The negro, disfranchised, ostracised, burned to death, has been left to his fate. The Federal troops, sent there to Protect him in his right to vote, have been withdrawn; the Fourteenth Amendment has been flouted and the Nation has acquiesced. Elections have become a farce and human rights a ffstly joke, yet the Nation makes no sign. But wherein does sectionalism- as a Southern or Democratic resource yield any indication of abatement? Where is the Southern State that di vided on other ground than the "nig ger" from the time of the benevolent Hayes to the rule of the martyred Mc- -aanieyT Through all these years the South maintained Its solidity. It is not satisfied with being let alone. It must come .North with Its peculiar political and social theories, and whoever nur- sues his natural way in transgression of tne southern code is accused of raising "the race issue." Observe that Mr. Howell promises: "Eliminate the race question as a polit ical issue, and you have put the cap stone on the pyramid- of National unity." Now the political l$sue except as the South makes it so; for nowhere but in the bouth is "the nigger" the sole basis of political action. If we eliminate the race question as the South eliminates ir, therefore, we shall talk of nothing else. And the only wav in whinh the South will be satisfied for us to elimi nate it is for us to eliminate thonegro enureiy as a human beincr. National Unity, as Mr. Howell pnnnolvie if a Northernsubmisslon to Southern stand ards. This is not union, It Is terrorism. Figures recently published show an enormous Increase In the output of coca leaves, from which the alkaloid called cocaine Is manufactured. These leaves come from Peru, and exports of them from that country have more than aoupied in five years. The bulk last year aggregated in weight something like 1,300,000 pounds. While of great value as a local anesthetic in surgery, cocaine has become the physical, mental and moral undoing of thousands. Many 01 its victims, like those of opium, are conscious of the element that the drucr has been in their undoing, but, being its utter slaves, they do not seek nor de sire ireedom from its baleful power. Others do not know even the name of the destroyer, it haying been smuggled upon "them as an inprredlent In some pernicious compound theeffect of which is to allay pain and give the consuming disease undisputed right of way. Tem porary rener is secured, the nostrum becomes a favorite medicine, and either the cocaine habit Is formed or the ner vous system is wrecked. Perhaps the promoters of the local outdoor sanitarium for consumptives are moving as rapidly In the direction of this object as is. practicable, under the circumstances, but it no doubt seems to a pale, waiting host who feel that they have not a day to lose if thev would escape the Insidious advances of "the great white plague." that these medical and sanitary scientists are not moving at all. There are obstacles in the way of this movement, no doubt. which only those in touch with the ef fort understand. The chief of these Is money or the lack of it Yet relatively a small sum is necessary to carry out the simple plans for outdoor life that arebelieved to be a rational and reason ably certain cure for tuberculosis In Its earlier and middle stages. It may be hoped that whatever the obstacles that are retarding this movement, they will be speedily overcome and the ooen-air sanitarium become a reality instead of a dream long deferred. Three prizes $3000. $2000 and $1000 are offered by the University of Chi cago for the best monographs .upon 'The German Element in the United States, "With Special Reference to Its Political, Moral, Social .and Educational Influence." One monograph will be se lected for publication by a first-class publishing-house, and will be profusely illustrated. Half of the net proceeds from the sale of the book are to gb -to the author, In addition to the cash prize. Further, the donors aim to stim ulate research upon topics germane to the general subject, as, for example, German Music In America." "Influ ence of the German Kindergarten," and so on. Payment will be made for such essays, if found suitable for publica tion. An excellent opportunity is thus offered to students of German-Amer ican affairs to obtain valuable prizes. Judge Parker finds that It costs more to carry on the Government now than it did In former years. No doubt; and it will cost still more, years hence, than it costs now,. The boy's clothes will not fit the man. Perhaps it is discoveries like these that make Judge Parker's oratory so impressive and so edifying to the "independent" press the New York World, Harper's Weekly and the rest TRUE POLICY FOR THE PHILIPPINES. To have gone fnsfter than -we have already gone In gtfvlnff the inlanders a constantly Increasing measure of self- government would have been disas trous. At the present moment to give political independence .to the Islands ivonld result In the immediate loss of civil rights, personal liberty and pub lic order as regards the mass ' of, the Filipinos, for the majority of the islanders have been given these great boons by us, and only keep them be cause we vigilantly safeguard and guarantee them. To withdraw our Gov ernment from the islands at this time would mean to the average native the loss of his barely won civil freedom. We have established In the islands a Government by Americans assisted by Filipinos. "We are steadily striving to transform this into self-government by the Filipinos assisted hr Ameri cans. President Roosevelt 1 RETURN OF TBB NATIVE. ' New York ArArican. Henry James, the greatest American man of letters that the men of letters of the world know, arrived yesterday on the Kaiser Wllhelm 1L David Munro, ed itor of the North American Review, for which Henry James wrote the "Ambassa dors," conducted him to the Players' Club In Gramercy Park. There Henry James was inaccessible to the ordinary people, and consented to be inaccessible. He IsSadmlrable and re served. John Drew shook his hand and In vited him to see Robert Reld working at his window for the church that H. H. Rogers has built In Connecticut but Henry James could not go to Robert Reid's studio in Washington Square'. He had to take, at 4:S0 o'clock, the boat that goes to Atlantic Highlands. He is not as on sees him in the por traits that are printed of him. He has no beard. He has the air of a bishop. But his head Is a marvel to the phrenogollats. His forehead Is the front of a Greek tem ple. "I am glad to be In America again," he said to John Drew and others. "It 13 as I felt that It was, but more startling. am dazzled a little. I have been away from her so long! You excuse me, don't you? I am glad that I am to stay here and work for a time." "You are Idolized here," he was told. "I hope that you flatter," he replied. My work is not to provoke so much In terest It Is as I can make it that Is all. How clear the air Is here! And how studiously you have made at the 'Players' an atmosphere which Is not of New York!" This had the sound of an epigram and several persons shuddered; for epigrams are not in vogue at the "Players" when they are not made by the popular mem bers there. But Henry James suppressed sighs of his appreciation of the shudder. His clear eyes were unreadable. 1 He said: "I aim not in my natural element you know. One must take time to get one's bearings. There, I talk as If I were a ship captain." Mr. James' most recent expression of dissent from popular opinion Is In the rouowlng lines that no wroto for an Eng lish newspaper: "The falling birth rate shows that the pooplo are beginning to think for them selves. It is the ultimate, satisfactory so lution of all our social troubles and labor difficulties. Large families to the work ing classes are an Inexpressible burden. and the overstocked labor market leads to poverty, degeneracy and crime. The falling birth rate Is the best news of out time." Crokedness Was Known. William Allen White In McCluro's. For nearly ten years a number of Con gressmen and a few citizens have known that there was crookedness in the Post office Department During McKlnloy's first term it was whispered among poli ticians all over the country that there were some profitable pickings for some one In the Postoffice Department When the Cuban Postal scandal -was: nroheil politicians all over the land winked and sam tne reiiows were getting too greedy and bold. Clocks and typewriters and cash registers and mail-box fasteners were being dumped Into country postof- flces too lavishl v fnr the men tyhn "Hr business In politics" not to be morally certain that there was a "rake-off in It" as the phrase goes for some one. Gen erally speaKing, when a man has ad vanced far enough in masonry of politics 10 De x-ostmaster or a town of 10,000, he knows that when a typewriter that he doesn't need and didn't nrrfer sont n him from Washington, and a cash regis ter mat no never tnougnt of needing is dumped upon him, and a lot of useless rural -delivery recinter hnnw nm un signed to him, and when the service has 10 pay du per cent more than the current price for repainting the mailboxes which he has not asked to have repainted the Postmaster, wen nlnntr In tho i iff- nf politics, knows Chat some one Is stealing. So, during McKInley's entire administra tion, Republican politicians of high and low degree, seeing the way things were going in their local postoffices, had their Idea abOUt the condition of th Intra nt Washington and, being loyal party men, .wpt sun. j.c was supposed to be a breach of faith for a Republican to crv "aton thief" On a fellow Rennhltenn nr fnr n Democrat to stop the peculations of a fel low Democrat And when the thief is the man above you It takes considerable moral courage to say anything about it The iew .r-oaimasiera who did aay anything about the stealing found out to their sor row that silence is golden. Form of a Battle Prayer. New York Sun. To the Editor of The Sun Sir: TVe nf. en read In history of Generals praying 10 wa lor success, Dut l do not remem ber to have ever seen a prayer suitable for use on such an occasion. T nm rna who personally does not believe In war, although my sympathies are with the Japanese In the present conflict, but I am wining to submit a prayer that I have mado for use in any armj': "O God, wo who are about to plunge into battle pray theo that thou wilt be with us and so direct our guns that wo may mow down tho enemv like rhnfr May we kill hundreds outright and malm many more, thereby causing gloom and aesperation to settle upon tho hearts and me neartnstones or our enemies. O thou God of Battles, enahin its make many widows and orphans; let there be hundreds of homes desolated; let there be devoted son3 left to mourn the fathers that we shall kill; let there be distracted wives and mothers to cry un ceasingly at the loss oS the light o their homes and the support of their declining years. "O God. If there be cnod men nn hn other sido who pray to theo for suc cess, turn thou their prayers to empty words. "Let It be given to us to sink more shlna and to cause more misery than our ene my, with all his striving, can do; and" this we ask for the sake of Christ who labored to bring ooaco and cood will to earth. Amen." CHARLES BATTEL!. LOOMIS. Torrlngford, Conn., September 3. A "Popular' Champion. Daily Olympian. In.lSS6 and 1900 Georce Turner muldn'f vote with tho party1 that espoused sound money. Mr. Turner never permits him self to get on the unpopular side. He is What the Walla Walla Statesman termc him a champion of "popular" rights. Preparations. Christ Church M. S. (About 1600). Yet If His Majesty, our soyerelgn lord, Should of his own accord Friendly himself Invite, ' And say, "I'll bo your euest tomorrow night." How should we stir ourselves, call and com mand All hands to work! "Let no man idle stand!, 1 "Set me fine Spanish tables la the hall: See they be fitted all; " Let there be room to eat And order taken that there want no meat See every scone- and candlestick made bright That witnout tapers tney may give- a light Look to tho presence: are the carpets ' spread. The dazle o'er the head. The cushions In the chairs. And all the candles lighted on the stairs? Perfume tno cnamocrs, and In any cas Let each man give attendance In his place!" Thus, if a king were coming, would we do; Ana 'twere gooa reason, too; For 'tis a duteous thing To show all honour td an earthly klnir. And after all our travail and our cost. So ho be pleased, to think no labour lost. But at the coming of tho King of Heaven All's set at six and seven; We wallow in our sin; Christ cannot find a chamber In the inn. We entertain him always like a stranger. And, as at first still lodge him In the man- TREASURER PEABODY'S HUMOR. New York Press. So far ihe Presidential campaign" has moved In a deadly dull rut of serious ness, cheered by no flash of humor from either side. Save for Mr. John Sharp Williams' pitiful five-column, "satire" at White Sulphur Springs, wherein the satire waa so successfully concealed that expe ditions of exploration to Its labyrinthlan depths return haggard and baffled, hither to no one has tried to lift the campaign from the slough of melancholy. All this is to change now.. There has burst across the Democratic sky the flamo of a natural-born humorist He Is Mr. George .poster Peabody, the treasurer of the Nattjnal Committee, who has perpe trated the following gigantic jest upon the voters f the country: At the next National election over 14,000, 000 votes will be cast "and the task of presenting to this vast electorate She various issues of the campaign and the records- of the respective candidates is one which involves the expenditure of a large .sum of money. " Unlike Its well-intrenched antagonist, the Democratic party has no favored or protected interests to whom it may turn for a campaign fund. Its reliance for the necessary funds must be upon, patriotic citizens, who believe that the 'cause of constitutional, economic and- honest gov ernment and the Just and equal enforce ment of the law are involved In this cam paign. The committee appeals for such contributions as each citizen may be'able and willing to make. Mr. Peabody's enormous joke has the high merit of being addressed to the com monest intelligence. Hardly a schoolboy who can read the dally newspapers will fall to see the point of it Yet it also must have caused convulsive laughter In the National headquarters before It was passed Into general circulation Mr. Pea body himself must have enjoyed a quiet chuckle over It as he framed it Being a director or a large holder In a dozen cor porations, all of which ha. can call on for contributions, he could relish his own suggestion that the Democratic party was starting a campaign on behalf of the trusts with a war chest no better filled than was Mr. Bryan's in tho first battle. Perhaps he passed it on through the National Executive Committee's suite to Mr. Patrick Henry McCarren, the imme diate representative there of the Standard Oil and Gas trusts, where It was wel comed with a quiet snicker, and then turned over to Colonel James M. Guffey, of Pennsylvania, also heavily Interested In Standard Oil and the leading spirit In a score of Pennsylvania corporations. It should have raised a great guffaw in the office occupied by Mr. James Smith, Jr., who has had a finger In nearly every trust pie in that nursery of trust3, New Jersey. It ought to have caused explosive laughter in the. private room of Mr. John R. McLoan, of Ohio, one of tho most no torious corruptlonlsts in the democratic party. It could not have failed to burst buttons oft! the waistcoat of Mr. William F. Sheehan, the "Blue-Eyed," the hero of many a raid on the treasuries of the street railway corporations, whose "handy man" ho has been since the days that Buffalo got too hot to hold him. And when it got the final seal of ap proval from the Big Chief himself, the peerless leader, whose list of corporations in which he is a dominant factor kills a page of .the Corporation Directory, it must have been with a shrill cackle of delight from Mr. August Belmont Bel mont of the Interborough & Manhattan, always cheerful givers; Belmont of the Louisville & Nashville, which should be able to raise- all by Itself a bigger fund than Mr. Bryan had in both his cam paigns; Belmont of a scoro of trust com panies, and banking and mining , com panies, so many that their enumeration would tire the reader! What a giggle it must raise, this huge joke of Mr. Peabody, when It greets the eye of Mr; McCord Meyer, of tho Sugar Trust, who, as chairman of the Demo cratic State Comimttee, is passing around tho hat with success and whoso election was applauded by the chief Parker organ as guaranteeing the biggest campaign fund in. the party's history! Mr. Have meyer, who no doubt has already written the fat check which he said under oath it is his habit to give In the campaign, can read it with a smirk. Mr. "Jim" Hill, who has "come out for Parker,'" and who Is .still nursing his wrath against Presi dent Roosevelt for smashing the Northern Securities merger it was hardly neces sary to send him the "piteous appeal" of Treasurer Peabody, but he can have a laugh at It, too. Mr. Thomas F. Ryan, whose street railway concern never falls to come up handsomely In an emergency like this, as MnTerome once sensational ly demonstrated how can he fall to be tickled by the excellent humor of the worthy Mr. Peabody? We might go on until election day with the list of those who cannot fail to be exhilarated by the wit of the treasurer. We have not mentioned the loading mem bers of the Constitutional Club, who should bo willing to part with a small percentage each of tho fat fees they get from corporations for their able efforts to beat the Constitution and-all laws hos tile to their predatory clients. The Pea body circular everywhere will excite as much hilarity as if Mr. Andrew Carnegie should send forth a pathetic appeal for 10-cent contributions from the people for the purpose of building a library or as If Mr. John D. Rockefeller should ask for a popular 5-cent subscription to pension superannuated Standard Oil directors, or 11 Air. unanes m. Schwab should Invite the common stockholders- of the Steel Trust to fund a movement for the relief of tho organizers of tho Shipbuilding Trust An Odd Decoying Scheme. Baltimore Herald. Mrs. Robert J. Rurdette was talking one day about the white ribbon that Is the sign of total abstinence. "There are some persons," said Mrs. Burdette, "who don't wear the whlto rib bon with sincerity! They wear it per haps about as hypocritically as It was worn by an employe of a certain brewer. "This employe, after years of dissipa tion, appeared ono day at the brewery with the white ribbon on his breast Nothing was said to him, and he wore the ribbon for some months. Then, one day, the head of the firm, happening to notice the man's badge, approached him. " 'Why, Frank,' he said, 'It Is strange to see you, a brewer," wearing the white ribbo'n. " Tt dpes look strange,, sir,' the man admltte'd. " 'Well,' said the brewer, 'why do you do It?" " 'It is like this,' said the "workman. T wear tho ribbon because It makes men like to tempt me, and when I'm tempted I succumb, sir.' " Ballad of the End-Seat Hog. Chlcaso Jfews. -The car you've waited for so long Comes whizzing down the .street; In haste you step aboard." but lo! A dragon guards he'eeat. , Stolid, absorbed, indifferent. . Unyielding aa a log, He sprawto across and bars the way The end-scat hog. Tou balance on the footboard low. You cling unto the bar, . f And, wondering, view the vacant rows Of seats within the car, n . Until your blood is in a flame, ' - - Your brain Is in a fog And you abhor this animal, - Tho end-seat hog. Vainly. In desperation grim, . Your way you try to squeeze Beyond his large, protruding feet Hl9 hard 'and bulbous knees. Till, when you smash his bulging toes," This greedy beast to Jog, He scowls and grunts In deepest Ire The end-seat hog. And so, while dally traffic rolls And throngs go on their way. This human traction problem greets The public day by day. Therefore the general verdict la No manger e'er held dog-. So stupid and so eelnsb as The end-seat hog, ' , NOTE -AND COMMENT., :s Sorry He Became a Printer. A kid who began feeding a press jta a Seattle printshop and was fired at the end of the. third week, made his way down to Portland, and got a similar job in ono of the local shops. Saturday he com pleted two weeks work, and applied to the office for a raise. . "How long have you been working here?" asked the boss. . "Two weeks," answered the kid. "Well," said the boss, "to put It plainly. I "don't think- you're worth a cent more than youre getting." "I quit right here," rejoined the kid, with considerable profane emphasis. 'You can take your job to hades, and I blank sorry now I ever learned the printing business." Titles of 'Novels- Among the books recently published .ap pear two with unusual titles "The Letter H" and "The Letter D." .Passing over the fact that these "two letters frequently appear with a dash after them, Indi cating a tropical warmth of language, 'It Is now likely, In view of the slavish man ner In which novelists copy titles', that we shall have books labeled with the re maining 2i letters. If the fad extends to numbers it will be interminable. "Tho Number One" may let loose an avalanche of books running into the millions. Made, to Be Smashed. Some captious persons have ex pressed the oplnlqn that the Creator erred In making the darker-hued races that oc cupy so much of the earth's surface. Such criticism is hasty. God didn't waste the time he spent over the "brown broth er" any more than man wastes the time spent in making clay pigeons. Both, prod ucts while away civilization's idle hours In being shot at . Ready to Use. From reading several current novels we have come to the conclusion that the ex perienced novelist no longer goes in search of local color: he takes It with him. Another Definition. International law Is something by which a nation justifies Its own acts and damns those of others. J Defined. knot-hole in Newport A seaboard. the Atlantic Turn that slot machine to the 'wall. To the oyster, September must appear o ho-r-rld month. Vermont supplies the syrup for the Re publican hot calces. Presently the football reporter will bo vying with tKa war correspondent It's the red spider that's In the hops at this stage: the red snakes come later. In Russia there Is rejoicing that the army Is "out of danger." That is funny enough. It's as hard to pin Kuropatkln down to a point on the map as to do tho same thing with a flea. According to a New York Magistrate, a man cannot be disorderly In a saloon. No, he merely raises; a rough house. Senator Depew says that England is about to abandon free trade. She might put a tariff on chestnuts to start with. Sniff How can you tell this is a Demo cratic paper? ' Biff It never mentions the Trustswlth out using a capital T. W,hilc the Sheriff was watching his twin babies, four 'prisoners escaped from She boygan County Jail. What matter, so long as they didn't wake the kids? A local restaurant man has been de clared insane. He bought up the visible supply of monthly magazines. Puzzle: Which was cause and which effect? In some ways royalty can do things oa. the cheap. The Crown: Prince of Ger many, whose engagement has been an nounced, cost his future father-in-low very little In gas, as the royal courtship apparently began and ended In the same week. When these 'matters arc pretty well fixed up beforehand, there's a vast saving effected in candy and such things. Tw6 hundred Democratic editors visited Esopus yesterday. Now look out for countlcssparagraphs on this plan: "Tho Trusts must be curbed, or this country will be dominated by the heart less plutocrat. As we remarked to Judge ' Parker on our recent visit to Rose mount " "The failure of the Republican Admin istration to erect a Federal building in Dead Ox Flat should make every loyal Dead Oxer vote for Parker. As we said to the Judge when we visited Rose mount " "Judge Parker, by virtue of his genial manners, would bo an Ideal President for the President, as chief mixer of the Na tion, must be a man of open and friendly disposition. Judge Parker fulfils the re quirements, as we .can say from personal experience, having closely observed him when we visited his charming home at Rosemount" . WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. lira. "Windyclty I hear that Mrs; Packer Is quite a collector. "What Is her fad? Mrs. Lakeside Husbands. Smart Set. "My face Iff my fortune, sir." she said. "Well."' he replied, "poverty Is no disgrace, but It's awfully Inconvenient at times." Chicago Dally News. Nell She Intends to be married very quietly; In fact, lfa a secret. Belle How do you know? Nell All the girls are talking about It. Phila delphia Public Ledger. She True happiness Is found m pursuing something not In catohing It. He If you had ever pursued the last car at night you wouldn't eay that. Chicago Journal. First Moth It's no wonder you are troubled with Indigestion after eating so much. Second Moth I know, but It was such a fashionable overcoat. Town and Country. Bridget Is It thrue, mum, the master's give up drlnkln'? Mistress Yes, but why do you ask? Bridget Nuthln', mum, only the cloves be gotn faster than lver. PIck-Me-Up. "I made a thousand miles in ten minutes once. Gues9 that was going some." "Get down to facts." "I played another traveling man for a mileage book and won." Detroit Free Press. "I tiupposc you have spent a great deal of money for pictures." "Heape of It," answered Mr. Cumror. "What Is tho most expensive picture in your collection?" "Photograph of a titled son-in-law to put In ttho family album." Washington Star. "Mr. Scrapem," said the hostess to an ama teur violinist at an evening gathering, "you play the violin, do you not?" "Yes; after a fashion, you know," was the modest reply. "How nice!" murmured half the company. "Did you bring your Violin with your "No. I did not." "How nice!" "murmured the other half of the comcany la fervent unison. Gal veston News