THE MORNING OREQOaiAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER- 7, 1904. Entered at the Postofilce at Portland, Or., as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall (postage prepaid la advance) Sally, with Sunday, per month $..S3 Dally, with Sunday excepted. per year 7.50 Dally, with Sunday, per year.......... 9.00 8unday. per yean 2.00 The Weekly, per year 1.00 The "Weekly, 3 months ; .50 Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday ex cepted ... 15c Dally, per week, delivered, Sunday In cluded 20c POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico 10 to 14-page paper .., le 16 to 30-page paper 2a Z2 to 4 4 -page paper ...... ...... ....... .So Foreign rates, double. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. (The g. C. Beckwlth Special Agency) New Tbrk; rooms 43-50, Tribune building. Chicago: Rooms 510-512 Tribune building. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex; PostofQce 2ews Co., 178 Dearborn street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend rick, 900-912 Seventeenth b treat, and Prue auS Bros., G05 .16th St. Kansas City, Mo. 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PORTLAND, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1904. PORTLAND'S LATEST MONUMENT. It is needless to multiply words In praise of the Thompson monument, un veiled yesterday In the City Park, or In recognition of the public spirit which has prompted its donation to public use. It is a work of art that would confer distinction upon any city In the land. Supremely fortunate in its in spiration, in the rude pedestal in splen did keeping- with its theme, In Its mar velous execution and In its ideal setting of forest and sublime eminence, Mr. MacNeil's creation will take its place among the really notable statues of the world. Portland may Justly be prouder of her beauty and grandeur today than ever before. "What a multitude of thoughts crowd upon the mind In the presence of such a scene as that unveiling! There is the artist's theme striking home upon consciousness the glory and the tragedy of civilization's onward march. There is the sacred realization of what art, in all Its beauty and holiness, means to the awakened mind. There is the emo tion of civic pride, rejoicing In the con course of earnest and active minds, all moved with a common Impulse, and in the added dignity and grace thus im parted to the community life. There Is the secret Joy that wells in the heart at the sight of any supremely beautiful objector at the cadences of all beautiful sounds. There Is the recollection of the donor's desire to do something for his city a desire which Is so often, as in this present instance, bequeathed to those who can better bring It to fruition. It often befalls that the tem ple which David plans must be left for Bolomon to build. Portland is ornamented, from the Bkidmore fountain to the City Park and the Library to the Plaza blocks, with the artistic flowering of the early struggles of her pioneers. The founda tions of these fortunes which are now enlisted in statues and monuments were laid In the hardest and homeliest kind of tolL There was no art In the rude beginnings of those early years. Stephen Skidmore came to Portland a poor and almost a friendless boy. H. W. Corbett slept on the counter in the country store where he began as a clerk his mercantile career. TV. B. Ladd was up at i o'clock in the morning to begin his hard day's work. D. P. Thompson tramped day after day and year after year, carrying his transit over all these Oregon, "Washington and Idaho hills. It seems like a far cry from that hard and homely toll to these Images of beauty which they and those they left behind have reared for the delight and the uplifting of thousands yet to be; and yet not so; for labor and love are near akin. There Is no beauty like that of duty well done. There Is no art so supreme as the art of living true and facing the difficult task with manly resolu tion. The noblest use of a great monu ment is Its reminder of a great life. The hardest granite is ephemeral com pared with a grand achievement Cit ies fall into ruins, columns crumble to decay; but character Is eternal. The gifts of the great are mere Inci dents and ornaments upon careers that were built up through poverty, pa tience and resolution. They are as fres coes on the walls whose foundations are laid deep In the solid rock of toll and sacrifice. The memory of heroic deeds and generous self-denial will be fresh and potent for Inspiration of the race when our children's children shall have spent their earthly day and monu ments of bronze and marble have mold ered into dust CIVIC CO-OPERATION. The meeting at Appleton, Wis., re cently, of 150 officials of the cities of that state In eighth annual convention to consider questions of Importance to the municipalities represented is re garded by the Outlook as an event that Is at once striking and encouraging. The questions presented and discussed took a wide range. They Included the abolition of the contract system, the improvement of the educational system, charter reform and uniform municipal accounting. The Important feature of this meet ing and others of like character that have preceded it is not in the present ment of those new-old questions, bat in the fact that the league of "Wisconsin cities, when it has agreed upon meas ures necessary for Improvement In municipal government, set to work in earnest, methodical way to have their programme carried out Looking to this end, arrangements were made upon this occasion, as in former years, to se cure the legislation agreed upon as necessary to the attainment of the ob- XJects in view at the next sitting of the Legislature at Madison. Wis pons In is by no means alone In supporting "a league of cities," formed for the purpose of municipal improve ment Iowa has a similar league, as also has California. The power of or ganization of this character is noted In the fact that of twelve measures pre sented by the Iowa League to the Leg Islture or that state- last Winter eleven became laws. The Mayors and Coun cllmen who combined In this effort were practical men; many of them were practical politicians as well, and knew how to go about the work that they .set themselves to do. Equally consci entious effort, urged upon a sentimental basis or along Impracticable lines, would have failed to secure results. But here were men of knowledge and power who were willing to use these forces to bring about conditions that experience and observation had con vinced them would conserve the general welfare. There Is a rebuke In this of the high and mighty and consequently Impracti cable methods by which sentimentalists approach the subject of municipal re form. "Keep municipal elections out of politics," say the sentimental ones. "Make political elements serve our pur poses," say the practical men of the civic reform leagues. The wisdom of the latter course Is witnessed in the enactment of laws that It would have baen Impossible to secure had legislat ors been antagonized by impolitic de mands or disgusted by the sentimental efforts of would-be reformers. HOW TO AVERT A DANGER. -Ex-Premler Mellne, of France, der nounces the American peril. He says it Is in thej direction of the Far East that America is evidently turning Its com mercial ambition. England, he says, will prefer to throw Itself Into the arms of the great American Republic, which is close to her and may render her ser vice. After having seized a portion of the trade of South America, the giant Is now preparing to deprive her of that of the yellow races', which Is the mo3t Important In the world. "The Issue," says M. Mellne, "promises Xo leave to Europe the negroes of the Soudan and the vast regions of Africa, but until that proves profitable poor Europe will have time to stew In her own Juice." All of which depends. There will be no decline in European commerce with Asia unless there Is Increase In the trade of Asia with the United States; and there will be no Increase In our trade with Asia unless our commercial rights and privileges there are looked after with acute discernment and firm resolution here. Any demand we make on China or Russia, Germany, Great Britain or Japan, for treaty rights In China and for the maintenance of treaty rights we already have, or for equal opportunities there for American trade, will not be worth the paper It Is written on unless we have the men and ships and the naval bases necessary to back it up. Speak softly but carry a big stick. That is how you will get the trade of Asia. "We know how the Democrats would do It First, abandon the Phil ippines, Guam and Hawaii, and fix it so we can't operate a fleet In the Pa cific if It comes to a showdown. Next abandon the Panama Canal because we are on the Isthmus only through fraud ulent tenure. Then cut down the Army and Navy so that even poor old China will feel free to defy us with impunity. Pull up the Pacific cable because it costs money, and to spend money is ex travagant Pardon us, says President Parker, for being on earth. In a moment I shall conduct the Nation out of your way. I shall not butt In on the Isthmus, as I recognize it may suit France better to own the canal herself. I shall retire from the Pacific, as I could not as a gentleman stand In Germany's or Great Britain's light I must renounce Hawaii, as I have conscientious scru ples against the possession of non-contiguous territory not Immediately avail able for states. Independence must be given to the Filipinos, in keeping with my party's attitude toward the negro in the South. In this way, I trust, men of Europe, you will find no further cause of complaint If you don't see what you want, ask for it. There will be no American peril If the antls get Into power. M. Mellne should vote for Parker. TURNER'S RAILROAD RECORD. On September 2G The Oregonian print ed some extracts from the official rec ord of the "Washington Constitutional Convention showing the attitude of Geoge Turner on matters pertaining to railroad legislation. The extracts print ed in The Oregonian quoted the page in the "Proceedings "Washington Con stitutional Convention" in which Tur ner's votes and motions, etc, were re corded, and the Information was strictly official and susceptible of proof by the official records. These extracts showed that Turner voted against the adoption of the anti-pass provisions now Incor porated in the state constitution, and moved to strike out the provision after wards adopted which declares that the right of eminent domain shall never be abridged so that the property of cor porations may not be subjected to pub lic use the same as that of individuals. In the face of this official record a Vancouver correspondent of the Spo kane Review states that Judge Turner "denounced as maliciously false the statement In The Portland Oregonian that he worked for the railroads in the constitutional convention," and that "he denounced Tfie Oregonian and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer as printing maliciously false statements which they well knew to be false." The Spokane Review, which Is nearly as shifty on its political feet as Judge Turner, heads the story of the Vancouver correspond ent "Judge Turner Exposes a Lie Falsity of Oregonian Story Is Proven at Vancouver." Now will the Spokane Re view, or Candidate Turner, or some, of the rest of the political turncoats and Jumping Jacks of the State of Wash ington, be good enough to point out wherein The Oregonian "lied" in print ing the official record showing that Turner was working In the Interest of the railroads at the constitutional con vention? All of the "denouncing" that Mr. Tur ner can do between now and the time he tumbles into his political grave In November will not explain away that official record, which is "ton file at the office of the Secretary of State in Olym pla. In the days of the territorial con vention it was no secret that George Turner was a railroad man. It was unnecessary for him to offer an apology for voting down a bill for the abolish ment of the pass evil, one of the best weapons the railroad lobbies have In their fights. His friends and colleagues expected him to stand In and vote it down. That was what he was there for. For the same reason his action in moving to strike out the provision ena bling the state to subject the property and franchise of Incorporated compa nies to public use the same as prop erty of Individuals was not even criti cised at that time, nor would It have been today had Mr. Turner retained possession of that Jewel of consistency. "I am a railroad man and I am proud of It" defiantly shouted the late Sen ator Ed Hamilton on the floor of the Senate at Olympla two years ago. "I am a railroad man, but don't give It away," seems to be the policy of "Wash ington's Democratic candidate for Gov ernor. Perhaps this is the reason that even the anti-railroad men admired and respected Hamilton while many of them have nothing but contempt for Turner. Before Judge Turner and the Spokane Review "expose" any more "lies," it might be well for them to re fresh their memory, regarding' the Tur ner record at more than one session of the State Legislature. That record possesses the. two chief characteristics of the deceased mackerel. LAUNCH OF THE NEBRASKA. The thrill of pride which Seattle and Washington will feel over the launch ing of the battleship N.ebraska today will not end with the state lines. Wash ington and her metropolis were a por tion of that "Old Oregon" whose fame In history grows brighter as the years roll by, and commercial rivalry has never been so great as to eliminate a feeling of pride whenever the rustlers of the new state carved from Oregon accomplish something of special merit. And the building of one of the finest battleships afloat out on the shores of the paciflo Puget Sound 13 an accom plishment of which the entire Pacific Northwest may well be proud. Despite all of the advertising, that has been given the North Pacific States, the effete East still ha3 much to learn of the wonderful country lying out here almost at the gates of the Orient The products of our fields, forests and farms shipped beyond the Rocky Mountains In such enormous quantities have called attention to the prodigality of Nature In this land, but have not entirely re moved the old impression that much of this portion of the Far West Is still practically uncivilized. The building of the Nebraska will do more to remove this Impression than anything else that has happened In re cent years, for $4,000,000 battleships are not built in ports that are not pretty well advanced In the ranks of modern civilization and enterprise. The Ne braska should, and it is to be hoped will, carry the American flag around the world, and will not Infrequently line up for grand review along with other ships of our new Navy that have been built In ports that were old In civiliza tion and Its methods when the region bordering on Elliott Bay was a howl ing wilderness. The completion of this magnificent fighting machine is a high tribute to the enterprise and public spirit of Seattle, and it is doubtful If there Is another city on the American continent where the builders could have received the financial as well as the moral support that has been given the Moran Bros., In this mammoth under taking. In contributing 5100,000 Seattle paid handsomely for the world-wide adver tising which she will receive through the Nebraska. Her returns on that large sum cannot however, be reckoned by the direct benefits throush advertis ing the city, for in addition to the good thus accruing she has made it possible for the Morans to build and equip a plant which would be a credit to any port in the United States, and which will yet bih-e powerful factor in the shipbuilding Interests of the entire country. Portland would be proud to have such a shipbuilding plant on her list of taxable property, but because we are not so fortunate as Seattle In that respect It will not lessen our admira tion for the swift young city that has it and the -congratulations which the Oregonlans will today extend to our neighbors on the north will all bear the stamp of sincerity. The manager of the enormous plant where the Nebraska wa3 constructed appeared before a legislative committee two years ago and testified that money to the extent of hundreds of thousands of dollars had been supplied him by a Seattle bank, and the bank he named is today, and has for many years been, controlled by Portland capital. It will thus be seen that Portland has a finan cial as well as a sentimental reason for rejoicing with Seattle in the big event that is to reach a climax today. The children of "Old Oregon" and the money of "New Oregon" are both as sisting the newcomers of more recent years in making Seattle a wonderful city, and Portland and Oregon are cer tain to shine at least a little In the re flected glory. NEW TELEPHONE RULES. In the Interests of better service, the telephone company has established sev eral new rules for "central" In Its em ploy. Some of them must be observed by subscribers as' well. The sooner the better; far the telephone nowadays has come to play so Important a part In the business, professional and social life of a community that nothing should be disregarded which tends to save time and minimize the annoying delays due in part to the agency that makes con nection and in part to those at the other end of the line; for it must be remem bered that -he who originally calls "cen tral" Is never at fault If to each of the 100,000 persons In Portland who use the telephone there was given the opportunity of making a suggestion for more expeditious service, a valuable list of "dos" and "don'ts" would be forthcoming that every one would read and forget At the risk of meeting a similar fate. The Oregonian ventures to offer two hints, which, If adopted, will eliminate from every con versation at least one question and one answer. Thf wonder is that they have not been in universal use these twenty five years past When you call up any one, whether you are personally acquainted or not, open the conversation with your name: "This is John Smith," and if it is neces sary, add your address and vocation. Speak slowly. It takes far less time to say something once" eo that it may not be misunderstood than to say it twice, not counting the time occupied by your listener's request to repeat When you are called up, open your end of the talk not with "Hello," but with "This is Mr. Smith," or "The Black Coal Com pany," and state specifically the de partment If there are several. Here Is the saving of one question and one an swer. If your maid answers your tele phone, Instruct her to say: "This is Mrs. Smith's residence" on second thought, perhaps she should eay "house." Remember when "central" fells you "line's busy" that one cause for it being busy is waste of words by those who are using It So don't waste words. Every one else Is going to heed this bint and thus each will contribute to the other's comfort and equanimity. Of course after-dinner "visits" over the telephone have come to stay, and no one can put you In Jail for holding the line half an hour or three-quarters until you and Gladys have talked It all over three or four times, and It doesn't mat ter If his lawyer Is waiting to talk to father or the president of her club Is anxious to get a message to mother be fort she starts down town in the morn ing. Don't let go for anybody. Every telephone Is a part of a public utility. Selfish disregard of the privi lege and convenience of others works, In the end, Its own punishment House wives who have occasion to call up the grocer and the meat market six morn ings in the week ought to remember that there are neighbors doing the same thing at the same hour. A written list slow speech and clear enunciation serve the mutual good purpose of saving time and temper, very necessary to domestic peace when the day's duties begin. Re form can be worked by Individual re solve, though telephone - Improvement clubs may expedite It While the average man and woman is not inconsiderate, there Is a tend ency toward "roasting" the impersonal servant "central." When ten tele phones signal at the same Instant, nine must wait We take our place "patient ly in line at the theater box-office, at the paying teller's desk, at the glove counter on bargain days, and In the harber shop, but we can't see "cen tral's" switchboard, therefore we chafe because we must wait our turn and blame "central." A very large share of annoyance can be permanently elim inated by putting Into practice the theory that the telephone Is a com munity Institution. "Don't waste words" Is a good motto to hang over every transmitter, and today Is a good time to begin. Bavaria seems at last to be In a way rid without violence or unseemly ac tionof a line of Insane rulers whose latest representatives were King Lud wlg, who drowned himself with his phy sician in his arms some years ago. In a lake near the royal castle. In which he was detained a prisoner, and his brother, Otto, who has. spent many years In a retreat for the Insane, care fully and affectionately guarded. The kingdom Is peaceful and united, and strong in its slmpllicty. It is governed by a regency, the present ruler being Prince Lultpold, now in his 85th year. It is reported that he is soon to resign, in which event he will be succeeded by his son, Prince Ludwlg, a man of sim ple habits and plain exterior, who i3 past 60 and has a family of sons of great mental and physical vigor. This branch of the family Is entirely free from the taint that has written tragedy upon the records of so many European courts, and Its full accession to the throne" Is only delayed "by the whimper ing life of the mad King. The Bavari ans are too loyal to wish for the demise of their Insane, Imprisoned King, but they will hall the day that ends the regency and seats upon the throne a monarch worthy of their fealty. Lou Dillon will do well to keep In condition, for the star of a new Queen of the turf Is rapidly rising. Sweet Marie, the California mare, won the big Transylvania stakes at Lexington yes terday In the fastest five-heat race ever trotted. After making Tiverton break all previous race records for the first two heats, the wonderful daughter of the great McKInney took the last three heats In an average of 2:07. It has been less than ten years since Altao, a Portland horse, won the fastest heat of the famous Transylvania race in 2:10, but yesterday Tiverton set the mark at 2:04. A year ago Sweet Marie was racing on Oregon and Wash ington tracks with nothing that looked like world's records coming her way. Shades of Maud S., Goldsmith Maid, Flora Temple and all of the rest of the lateral-galted equine wonders 1 Where Is this record-breaking going to cease? Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, whose noble career has just closed, said: There is left on the statute book no trace of any Democratic legislation during the whole period of 32 years except the repeal of the laws Intended to secure honest elec tions. The two administrations of Presi dent Cleveland are remembered by the busi ness men and the laboring men of the coun try only as terrible nightmares. Whatever has been accomplished In this period, which seems to mo the most brilliant period in legislative history of any country In the world, has been accomplished by the Re publican party over Democratic opposition. The failure to secure honest National elec tions and the political and civil rights of the colored people Is tho failure of the Re publican party and the success of Its Dem ocratic antagonist. And yet Judge Parker, In his letter of acceptance, asks: "Shall our Gov ernment stand for equal opportunity or for special privileges? The efforts of vandals to damage the battleship Connectlcut,under construc tion at the New York navy-yard, are as Inexplicable as they have been per sistent That the perpetrators are men skilled in working steel and thoroughly acquainted with the vital spots of the vessel's keel Is apparent The payroll of the Government at the iavy-yard contains many such men, but It is In conceivable that any one of these should thus turn against the hand that feeds him. It Is clear, however, that the holes so artfully drilled In the bat tleship's steel keel and the bolt placed to obstruct her launching were not the work of a novice. It Is hoped that the miscreant will yet be detected and suit ably punished. Recent measurements of depressions In the floor of the Pacific Ocean have disclosed one which is at least 29,000 feet deep. In this great submarine val ley the highest mountain on the sur face of the earth would be completely submerged. NO EVASION HERE. It Is difficult to find tmt tram the Btter ances of ocr oppoaeata what are the real Issues upon which they repose to wage this campaign. It Is Hot safair to say that, bavin? abandoned most of the principles upon which they hava Insisted daring the last eight yers, they bow seem at a loss, both aa-to what It Is that they really be lieve aa3 ae to how flnaly they shall assert their belief la aaythlag. We do set have to guess at er ows eesvietieas, cad then correct the raess If tt seems tiapepu lar. The principles whkh we prefew are those la which we believe with hert suad onl and stresgth. ... The policies we have panned are, these wWeh we earnestly hold as essential to the Nsttloaal welfare and repute. . . . We latesd la the latere to carry ea the freveraaeat 1b the asteway that ws have carried It sa la the pak. THE WEST AND TflE.OPEX DOOR. Chicago TribUse. The people of the Pacific slope fully realize tho Importance of the "open door" in China and the development of Oriental trade. They realize its im portance in their Industrial future. Their business men form associations whoso objects are the study of Orient al trade, and one of the leading uni versities has lately established a col lege devoted to Oriental languages, sea transportation. International law, and cognate studies. ' There is the American-Asiatic Association, com posed of men who direct a large com merce with, the Orient, and there is the Manufacturers and Producers' Asso ciation of California, which has sent a special commissioner to Asia to In vestigate trade conditions. The reason for this intense interest in the Orient is not far to seek. There are already 16 lines of steamships operating between the eastern and wostern shores of the Pacific. New lines are being added and larger ves sels engaged. Among the vessels now under construction for the Oriental trade are the two largest ships ever built in the United States displacing 38,000 tons apiece. Each vessel will carry a cargo equal, to that of a train seven miles long. These fleets are being built because the trans-Pacific trade is increasing by leaps and bounds. From July to October, 1903, Seattle shipped 135 per cent more flour to the Orient than It did the four months of the preceding year. From San Francisco, Tacoma, Portland and Seattle the Increase In the shipments of the same commodity was 76 per cent But It is not tho present but the future trade with the Orient which In terests the Western States most" deep ly. When irrigation ha3 developed them and brought increased wealth and population, their industries are going to Decome diversified. They will pro duce commodities of all kinds for ex port The Panama Canal will bring the European markets nearer to them, but their most natural market will be tho other side of the Pacific, for they will have the advantage of a location nearer to that market by several thou sand miles from their European com petitors. Without the Oriental market it Is doubtful If tho Industries of the West ern States can ever become greatly di versified, for they do not have the proximity to the European markets which the Eastern States enjoy. More over, new industries to compete with older ones need some natural advant ages. The West has' these advantages In the Orient but nowhere else. The open door, like the Monroe Doc trine, should be taken out of politics and made a fundament of the foreign policy of each party and every Admin istration. When its importance Is more fully realized this will happen. But at present while the Republicans are outspokenly for. the principle, the Democrat's seem to regard It as a mat ter of minor importance which it most emphatically Is not A PREMIUM ON TEMPERANCE. Chicago Journal. The practical application of temperance work is shown in a recent statement by Labor Commissioner Carroll D. Wright that 75 per cent of the employers of skilled labor and 60 per cent of the employers of unskilled labor in the United States re quire total abstinence on the part of their employes. Tho attitude of the railway managers of the country has given abstinence It3 great est impetus. Nerly all of the railroads have adopted rules giving preference to men who abstain from the use of Intoxi cating liquors. In addition to this, the American Railway Association, which cov ers 100.000 miles of the 200,000 miles of rail roads in the country, and which has ap proximately 1,200,000 men within its sphere of Influence, has adopted a rule prohibiting the use of Intoxicants by its employes while on duty. The falling oft in numbers of some of the leading temperance organizations and the cessation of the old-fashioned appeal to sentiment In temperance reform possess a peculiar significance in view of these facts, as showing that theory has given way to practice in the treatment of the drink habit. Thus by placing a premium on absti nence, the business and industrial inter ests of the country appear to have ac complished more In a decade for the cause of temperance than the moral crusaders Have been able to accomplish in 50 years. Democrats on tho Trusts. The National Democratic platform of 1501 offers nothing new nothing helpful or even suggestive. It denounces "rebates and discrimination by transportation com panies," but fails to state that the Elklns law was passed by a Republican Congress for the very purpose of preventing re bates and discriminations. It declares that "a private monopoly Is Indefensible and Intolerable," but falls to state that under the Republican administration such monopolies have been brought before the courts and suppressed. It demands an enlargement of the powers of the Inter state Commerce Commission, but fails to state that a Republican Congress has ex tended the powers of such Commission for the production of testimony, and that a Republican Attorney-General has acted under such law. It demands "a strict en forcement of the existing civil and crim inal statutes against all such trusts, com binations, and monopolies." but It fails to set forth the many Instances where Republican administrations have enforced the existing laws. It demands the -enactment of further legislation to effectu ally suppress trusts, but falls to state that a Republican Congress has enacted a law under which all information neces sary for such legislation can be and is being obtained. The Democratic candidate for the Pres idency has said that trusts have multi plied in number and increased in power because "of the failure of officials charged with the duty of enforcing the law to take the necessary procedure to procure the Judgments of the courts in the appropri ate Jurisdictions," thus wilfully Ignoring the long list of successful prosecutions which have been conducted by the ex ecutive officers of this Administration. Wisdom's Goal. By the Emperor of Japan. The water placed in goblet bowl or cup, changes its form to its receptacle. And so our plastic souls take various shapes and characters of good or ill, to fit the good or evil in the friends we choose. Therefore, let your special love be given to those whose strength of char acter may prove the whip that drives you ever to fair Wisdom's goaL Translated from the Japanese. Might Be Specific. San Francisco CalL Judge Parker has cxpressd his trust In a "navy of respectable, but not men acing proportions." Let .him confer with tlje Russian Admiralty it he would, be more specific. Fairbanks a Vote-Getter. New Tork Tribune. Senator Fairbanks Is now" demon strating to the Nation what Indlaniana have known for" a long time that he is a great campaigner and vote-getter. Tagg art's Famous Siege. 1 Sioux City Journal. Taggart's operations in the vicinity of the Davis bar! may eventually be included in the "Famous Sieges of His tory." A Frank Admission. Springfield Union. The Democratic party may be "safe, and sane," but on Its own admission It hasn't "been out of the asylttta long. THE DECADENT NATION AND' THE MUSICAL NEIGHBOR. New Tork Sun. Judge Parker's letter of acceptance has been received patiently or apathetically by the general public It has made no Re publican gooseflesh. It hasn't stung or quickened the poor old Democratic cor pus. Yet not in vain was that letter writ ten. It has kindled ecstasy In one fond bosom. From the music-room of our neighbor the Times come songs and chants and anthems, hymning reverently that grand, sweet song. Here are some pas sage's from Monday's service: It is a letter to be read not once, but many time, The Toter will be repaid. It stirs. It moves. It Inspires, It gives the needed forward Impulse. Only a nation with a pronifcate carelesaneis jof the future, a nation already decadent, could ran to give heed to these words of magistral wisdom. It he (Roosevelt) Is elected. Judge Parker's lctttr ought to be the Bible of his faith, his dally guide and counsellor throughout his term of ofnee. Tuesday the high lyric rapture contin ues, but it is blended with a note of pain and rage, a sound of sobbing, a bitterness against the Infidels. A voice oracular has pealed; a hero's banner Is unfurled, and nobody cares a rap, a continental, a cam paign text-book. The Tuesday service celebrates the letter as "a warning, a strong voice through the darkness and storm, telling of peril and how to escape it" It Is also "a first-class test of the people." Yet some, many or most people are dull and unequal to the test: "W'e pity the dullness that dos not see that It Is a great paper, an eloquent, sobering and saving appeal to the American people no longer to permit themselves to be fooled and misled. Will the people get sober? Will the peo ple consent to be saved? Will the people stop being fooled and misled? Judge Parker would be elected President by a hundred majority in the Electoral College. If every voter In the United States would read with close -attention and openmindednesa his letter of acceptance. It is all very well to say that tho voters "will be repaid" for reading the stirring. moving and inspiring letter not once, but many times. Why not pay the voters to read it once? Could the uemocratlc cam paign moneys be expended more fruit fully? Even then the people may be dull, un worthy, unsobered and unsaved. They seem to care little for strong voices in the darkness and storm. Ephralm is op pressed and broken in Judgment, and he seems to be glad of it The Nation is profligately careless and already deca dent But no matter what may be the popular deafriess to the grand, sweet song, the music-room will not cease to vibrate with the Intellectual motion and emotion stirred, moved, inspired. ORIENTAL INFLUENCE ON AMERICA Chicago Chronicle. A great deal has been said of the growing power of Japan and of the pos sibilities that may follow if Its suc cess shall continue until the close of the war. The subject is looked at chiefly from political and commercial points of view, but there are other things to be considered which are of no less Importance. The last three year3 , have brought the East and West into very close rela tion. America especially has been act ively Interested In every movement, whether in India, In China, or Japan, that has taken place in the Far East It is but reasonable' to suppose that in the changes that are to come she will reap advantages in many ways, and not the least perhaps by the infusion of new thought and new ideals. William R. Alger said years ago: "America, in her hasty and incompetent contempt for the dotage, fails to appro priate the wisdom of the Orient More of their humanity, leisure, meditation, reverence, aspiration, mystic depth of Intuition, will do us as much good as more of our science, Ingenuity, Inde pendence and enterprise will do them." Rev. Heber Newton has Btrong faith that the East is to bo an enormous help to the Western world. The qualities which the Western world lacks, he says, "the Eastern world holds in cx cess. What we may reasonably expect Is that the .East will help us in many ways to better conditions for the rell gious life. Our occupation amid externa1 activities keeps us aloof from the deep Inner life of tho spirit" Dr. Hillls, who seems to wish to get us near to the Far East as he can with out leaving the American coast, says the West has become the gateway of the Orient, and "the next great revival, ethical and religious, may begin on the Pacific Slope." He might also have add ed that the revival would probably prove as advantageous to us as to for eigners. We who have sent missionaries to the East for so long may yet reap oenent to ourselves from the Orientals. We may find they have as much, even In the matter of religion, to give us as we to give them, not in the form of tenets and doctrines, but that which makes for spirituality, reverence and aspiration. Overabundance of Qualifying Phrases New York Sun. Truth bids us sav that there is lttMi more spunk In Judge Parker's letter of acceptance tnan in any preceedlng doc ument of his composition since the campaign begun. A little more, but not much. It is easier to read than its nro- decessors, because Mr. Parker himself or some useful friend, has edited away the overabundance of qualifying phrases and modifying words with which the excellent gentleman has been accustomed in his political manifestoes to ballast both sides so impartially that when you get to the end of one of his complicated sentences you do not know whether tweedledum or tweedle dee has the plurality. Caught With the Goods. Johnstown Republican. JJn the second Cleveland Administra tion the farmers could not sell their products because the idle wageworkers had no money to buy. The savings bank deposits were $1,748,000,000 in 1894, but now are $3,000,000,000. The savings bank deposits in New York State increased $55,000,000 from June 30, 1903, to June 30, 1904. There are more savings bank deposits In New York and New England than there were In the whole country In 1894. If protection is "a robbery," as the Dem ocratic platform says, the goods are found on the people. A Second Hague Conference. New Yorlc Evening Post In acceding to" the request of the Interparliamentary Union that he in vite the nations to a second Hague conference, President Roosevelt has taken a step worthy of all jjralse. It may be Impossible to reassemble the peace congress soon Russia and Jap an could scarcely send representatives at present and the unsettled questions may not be disposed of even when tho delegates do .find themselvM at Tho Hague: but the President has, at arty rate, snown nis nearty good will, and. by so much, officially committed the United States to disapproval of war. t AH In the Family. ' Chicago News. "Oh. of course you know it all," sneered old Roxly. ''When I was your age I thought I knew it all, too; but now I have reached the conclusion that I know nothing." "Right you are, dad," replied Roxly, Jr.,- I reached the same conclusion about you a. long time ago." Will Telegraph. Chicago News. Judge Parker will not make speeches. If he has anything to say he will telegraph. NOTE ANDC0MMENT. r It's a case of "O Central." A lucky Friday to the Nebraska! A merchant in Vancouver, B. C, Is ad vertising "frostproof nightshirts." We hope the statue of Chief Multnomah comesylthln the W. C T. U. drapery reg ulations. Cows have now been barred from the streets in s Chehalis. Probably In too much danger from automobiles. For the sake of the comnoslnsr-rooms of the United States, we hope the Japs will push on from Bentsiaputze. After a man loses E00O on n. mi-A-thtnsr footrace, It must be hard for even him to sympathize fully with himself. The most melancholy thing about this season of the year is that the Jokes about cold drafts from the radiator are due. California Chinese have now a society of Native Sons of the Golden West and golden complexion, they might have added. It gives one a distinct shock to read that Max Heinrich is to marry Anna Held, "the German philanthropist student and musician." However, it Is another Anna Held. The tourist who wrote to the Newport (R. I.) Herald about the view from Port land, with Rainier, Hood, St Helens and the sublime Shasta In sight, is the kind we want out here. A Texas paper says: As sovereign-remedy for boll weevil a Corpus Christ! man Is seeking some liquid In which cigarette suckers may be dissolved. He hopes by this means to create a demand for other wise useless persons. One strange result of the war In Man churia is that it has made the London skeleton market slump. A trade paper notes that the Boer war sent first-class skeletons down to 517.50, and a further decrease In jrlce Is now regarded as in evitable. We hope the Peace Congress will pause to consider the feelings of skel eton bears should war be abolished or even the present war ended prematurely. La Grande points with Rooseveltian pride to a 15-year-old cat which has added 300 kittens to the Nation. Supposing a fair percentage of the kittens have emu lated their mother In bornlng four litters of five kittens each a year, the La Grande cat's descendants must be up In the mil lions, more cats", indeed, than there are in tne country, and as for the mice and rats destroyed by them, they are as the sands of the seashore. Commenting upon the advice given to Radcllffe College girls by the dean, the Baltimore Herald offers an explanation of the point which puzzled us yesterday, -lie dean's advice, it may be recalled, was to "stand up straight, don't look at the. boys, and keep your shoes tied." Tho Herald sees In the part relating to shoes an ingenious hint not to have any strings out Take care of the shoestrings, in other words, and the others will take care of themselves. One of Simeon Ford's latest stories is about a Pennsylvania school, says the Boston Record. A young lady with phil anthropic motives was teaching a dozen or two little ones In the mining district. "Now, where did I tell you the Savior was born?" she asked one morning. "Allentown," shrieked a grimy 12-year-old. 'Why, what do you mean, Johnnie? I told you he was born in Bethlehem." "Well," replied Johnnie, "I knowed 'twus some place on de Lehigh Valley Rail road." The ."ice-cream social" In the "church parlors" may not be absolutely the best form of entertainment devised by an in-' ventive people, but it has Its good points, and they are brought Into unusual relief by comparison with the amusement de scribed In the following paragraph from the New York Press: The "gosling gatherium" means a midnight mipper served by a hlgh-prlcod caterer, who will arrange a table In ellpUcal form, so that CO diners may be seated comfortably. The inner part of the ellipse will be a shallow pool of water. In which 00 downy little geese hatched about two weeks will swim about. Each bird will have a allken necklace in a combination of colors, which will correspond with the colors worn In the corsages of the women at ithe table. The fun will be for each woman to catch the gosling wearing her colors, and to use lta fluffy back in lieu of a napkin. She may wipe the drops of mayon naise from her cherry Hps, or fleck off the dew of the champagne from her chin, and then set the little goose free. The first Instinct of the bird, laden even .with the most Infinitesimal burden, will be to dive, flap the webbed feet and plunge the flat bill Into the young feath ers, and so restore, them to their prlsUne freshness. Nothjas more shockingly funny could be Imagined. There Is quite a serious .difference of opinion as to whether the "gos 'llng gatherium" Is quite .as appropriate as Ihe "awlmmlng napkin." At all events, the grabbing of the little goosles was to have been kept a profound secret, but when the Lehra let the public. In on their dinner to Mighty Atom, and other dogs of high degree, the story of the gooseleta was bound to leak out. Oh, the poor geese wo mean goslings. WEX. J. OUT OF THE GINGER JAR. "Is dey any mention of 'possum la de Bible!" "Go 'long, man! You do'n't s'poee dey bad all de good things In dem days, docs you?" At lanta Constitution. Small Margie What is a glacial period. Uncle Bob? Uncle Bob It's the kind Boston girls use In punctuating their love-letters. Chicago Dally News. Mrs. Nodd The cook refuses to get up ear lier than 7. Todd Ask her if she won't do It for a couple of days, until I can rearrange my business. Brooklyn Lite. Buxley Wu- aeronauts tell us that a wom an's voice can be distinctly heard at an altitude of 3520 yards. Trimble Great Caesar! It must have, been my wife! Town and Country. Madge In what way is she such a clever glrli Marjorie Well, she always knows how many times she can safely refuse' a fellow's proposal without losing him altogether. Judge. He Is It true that you are engaged to the angel? The Actress No, Indeed. If I were, you can bet your last dollar I wouldn't allow blm to waste his money cn this o'A show, Puck. Cholly I did think of going In for politico, but I was afwald I wouldn't know Just- how to treat my Infewiaha, don't y know. Peppery Your Inferiors? Oh, you wouldn't be likely to meet any of them. Philadelphia Press. Burly Party Are yoa aware, sir, that you deliberately placed your umbrella In my ear last evening? Little Blfterton Very careless of me. I'm sure! I -wondered what became of It, and Would It be too much trouble to asJc you to return it? TIt-BtU. Instructor (at night school) What are the chief curses of American civilization? Shaggy Haired Pupil 'Boat the same as the Xagllsh, only we use 'em more freely in our common talk than they do. You don't expect me. to blurt 'em out do yoa? Chicago Trlbuae. "I've had dealings with a good many show people." said the mistress of. the theatrical boardlng-hocee, "bst I never met a sae?e Im pudent man than that acrobat who caaae yes terday.'" "Yes;" said the eosseeHaa, "sosae acrobats are freek. asd seseja.iiit.' ' PkiIH phia Ledger.