THE MORNING .OKESONIAN, TUESDAY, APRIL- 25, . 1905. Sntereo" at the Postoffice at Portland. Or., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. INVARIABLT IK ADVANCE. (By Mall or Expreas.) ly and Sunday, per year " and sunaay, six rnoni.ce latly and Sunday, per month -J Jally without sunaay, per year Jally without Sunday, elx months s.o lalJy without Sunday, three months I.vj Daily without Sunday, per month....- .C5 Sunday per year. 2.00 1.00 .60 Sunday, six months Sunday, three months........ BT CARRIER. JaUy without Sunday, per week .. .15 ally per week. Sunda'y included...- " THE "WEEKLY OREGONIAN. (iMued Every Thursday.) "eekly, per year.. ieelcy. e:x months.. 1.60 .75 .50 Cek2v. three months . . . IOW TO REMIT Send postomco money Ser, preo order or personal cheek "on your bank. Stamps, com or cuirat - the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency new Rooms 48-50 Tribune building. -"- igo; Rooms 5X0-512 Tribune building. The Oreconlaa. does not buy poems or utnrirti from individuals and cannot uncer- take to return any manuscript ent to It with out solicitation. No stamps should be In c!oeed for this purpose. KEPT ON SALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postofflce (News Co., 178 Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex. Globe News Depot, 260 aiain I street. Denver Julius Black. Hamilton & Kend- Irlck. 906-012 .Seventeenth street, and Frue- Injff Bros.. 605 Sixteenth street. Des Moines, la-iloses Jacobs, 303 Filth I street. GoldflelcL Nev. C. Malone. Kansas City, Mo. Rlcksecker Cigar Co., iN.nth and Walnut, Los Angeles Harry Drapkln; B. E. Amos, 614 "West Seventh street. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh, 50 South Third. I. Regelsburger, 217 First avenue South. Nw Yorlc CAtr L. Jones & Co., ABior 5Totii naklanif. Cal. W. H. Johnston, tour- I teenjth and Franklin streets. Ogden F. R. Godard ana aieyers a nur- rop, D. i- Boyle. Omaha Barkalow .Bros., iuiz arnn.io. JIageath Stationery Co., 1S08 Farnham. McLaughlin Bros.. 246 South 14U. Phonir. Arlr. The Berryhlll News Co. Sacramento, CaL Sacramento News Co., 429 K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co., 77 West Seccnd street South. Santa Barbara, Cal. S. Smith. San Dieco. CaL J. Dlllard. San Francisco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 746 Market street; Foster & Crear. Ferry News Stand: Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter: u. tu. Lee. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. "W. Pitts. 1O0S Market: Frank Scott. SO Ellis: TVheatlev Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets; Hotel St. Francis News Stand. . St. Louis, Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company, S06 Olive street. Washington, D. C. Ebblt House News Stand. PORTLAND. TUESDAY, APRIL r 15. 1905. "PTBLIC UTILITIES" IN PRACTICE. Government undoubtedly can operate pubTic transportation lines. In some countries it is doing so. In principle there is no difference between govern ment control and operation of munici pal tramways or street lines and con trol and operation of main railroad lines, by the same authority. In many countries governments have extended their functions very far in these directions. In Italy, for example, government controls and operates near ly al1 the railroads. In Belgium and Hungary the conditions are similar; and so to an extent throughout Ger many, In our country the policy is "to beg'n with street-car lines; and many think It will be carried and ought to be carried into effect upon all the rail roads of the country. The "set of the tide" Is certainly in this direction now. It is said to be favored largely by the farmers and other producers, and. by the wage-workers of the country. How far this is true no one yet can say. The motives of these various classes will, however, be found to differ widely, and much revision and, even reversal of opinion is likely to occur among one description and another of these people. The farmers may adhere to the Idea, for the purpose of getting, as they hope and expect, low and uniform rates Tt when they see that the whole na ture and , character of government would be changed by it, they may not. It would follow as a leading and In evltable consequence of this arrange ment that railroad men would be Gov ernment employes not less so when a city "takes over Its carlines than If the higher Government should take control and operation of- the greater railroads. Consequently what is doing now in Italy Is the exact parallel of what was going on a year ago in Hun gary. The railroad workers struck, or quit. But the police and military forces are employed to keep them away from the roads, and to prevent them from inter- fer.'ng in any way with the roads, with the men. or with the operation of tra'ns. All crowds of strikers or their sympathizers are dispersed by the mill tary or police, often with bloodshed. Upon the heat and llame of the exul tation at Chicago over the victory for pubLc ownership the Chicago Tribune essays to sprinkle a little cool and cau ticus counsel. It urges that the owner ship of railroads by a government .lm poses upon it a greater measure of re sponsibility than if the roads belonged to private corporations; that it becomes the duty of the government, which it will perform. If efficient, to see that the roads are operated under all clrcum stances; that while a private company may plead a general strike as an excuse for Its failure to move freight or pas sengers, a state, with its unlimited power, military as well as civil, cannot properly make such; that whatever in terferes with operation of the roads of the state is a blow at its dignity and authority, and may be treated as trea son. All this the Belgian government. "Rhich owns most of the railways in the kingdom, understood when It used the army to quell a general strike on the roads. The same in Hungary a year ago. The same In Italy now. In Italy." the Tribune continues, "the employes on the roads owned by th state have begun a general strike. In the hope of compelling it to drop a pending bill prescribing the duties of the employes in a way which does not satisfy them. The army is to operate and protect the lines. The railway battalions will do one and the infantry men and cavalrymen the other. The government will not permit itself to be Intimidated by men in its employ. Their right to quit work If the condi tions of employment do not suit them Is not questioned, but if they leave there must be no interference with those who take their places. So. if the United States were to take over-the steam reads, no Interference with their oper ation by strikers would be .permissible. If the" old employes" went out, the Gov- J ernment would have to hire new ones. ! at once and protect -them effectively. It would not negotiate or arbitrate. It would keep the trains moving." In Chicago similarly. If the City of Chicago were to undertake the opera tion of street-car lines, and if by a strike or the threat of one employes should attempt to get higher wages or shorter hours, or to defeat an ordinance they were opposed to. no Council which respected Itself and had popular respect would back down. It would be the duty of the cits' authorities, if there were a strike, to get new motorrrn using po licemen who knew the trade if neces sary and utilize the police force In all ways to keep the lines open. If there were not enough policemen it would be the duty of the authorities to apply to the Governor for assistance In sup pressing the revolt against law and or der. The United States is densely popu lated with politicians and others pos sessed of excessively busy brains, and working at their trade of "reform," in season and out of season, with an al most "quadrumanous activity" to bor row a term from a great Writer who are.anxlous to get all "public utilities" Into municipal or state or national own ership,' In the name of the people. Of course, these gentlemen wish to "boss the job," and they think they have great prospect of success. Per haps their -claim ought not to be dis puted; and, yet in view of what has taken place In Belgium and Hungary, and of what is taking place now in Italy, the noble cause of government ownership may not get at last the en thusiastic support -from our working men that has been expected. . Labor and capital under our present system are equal before the law; but as capital becomes synonymous with gov ernment, labor's only right is obedi ence. The doctrine of public utilities in practice may not be so charming. The "machine," when It starts, will be kept going, and nobody -will be allowed to obstruct it. So perhaps we shall all yet hail it and bless it, as a beneficent des potlsm. YEAST. We are loaded up with all sorts of "modern guff" cpntrary to experience. contrary to common sense, which we have to swallow. It seems that our ancestors knew lit tle or nothing. They were "a poor lot." They supposed they had received some thing from their ancestors, which also is merely fallacious. At last, under the spirit that illuminates the modern j world, we Iearn that all that our an cestors taught us, all they had received I from their ancestors, all the settled ideas of the relations of the individual to society and government, and all con ceptions of government 'itself, are noth ing but useless and exploded and anti quated fashion. Hence in this modern world the Indl yidual is nothing; he can do nothing for himself. Government and society must do it all. There is a modern jar gon that deals with the terms of society and government and public utilities, that includes the whole duties of man even includes his final salvation. Society and government a're organi ing on this new basis. Protest is use less. Attempt to recall the general mind to old Ideals would be useless Individualism is lost except among those who can command great wealth; and they preach a doctrine or pretense of a special regard for the people, that they may rule them further. Pregnant with changes is this time we live in. SOME DETAIL OF THE WAR. In his "Outlook" papers Mr. George Kennan. the well-known traveler, who has no superior as an authority on the conditions of the war in Manchuria presents a great deal of matter of high Interest and value. He states, appar ently -on personal knowledge, that the grand strategy of the Japanese for the first campaign included operations against Vladivostok. "It was the In tention," he says, "to send a strong ex peditionary force by sea to some point north or south of Vladivostok, and to isolate that city by cutting the railroad and establishing a line of investment on the land side, while the combined fleet blockaded the approaches to the harbor by water." He mentions this plan as the main reason why General Nogi made the heroic but unsuccessful effort last August to capture Port Ar thur by storm an effort that was con tinued during five days and that cost the Japanese about 15,000 men General Nogi wishing to make It possible for Admiral Togo to go to Vladivostok. Mr. Kennan states also that "an army of nearly 40,000 men was held in North ern Japan all Summer for the Vladlvo stok expedition, and it was not with drawn from there until it became evi deht that Port Arthur would not fall In time to make operations in the north practicable." This may account for the where abouts all last year of a-northern Jap anese army, aoout wnicn tnere ivas long time much conjecture. "'It has since probably been " sent to Marshal Oyama. Mr. Kennan also has a number'of In teresting statements about the siege of Port Arthur. He says General Nog! did not have four hundred heavy guns there, as reported. "Exclusive of machine guns and quick-firers, which are not of much use in siege operations, I should think," he says, "that two hundred guns would be much nearer the mark." Of the terri ble 11-inch howitzers there were only sixteen.- Each one of these, hpwever, wasset up to do Its best work. Mr. Kennan also makes an interesting re port as to the relative Japanese and Russian strength. General Nogi had about 60,000 men. he sayE, while General Stoessel's force "must have been least 35.000." As these 35,000 men were In immensely strong fortifications, with ammunition that held out until the sur render, most Judges would say that the odds were decidedly on the Russian side. One of the points in the siege that Mr. Kennan has "never been able to understand" is how the Japanese man aged to hold the positions gained by them. "Twice the (Japanese) defensive works in the Panlungshan forts were almost completely destroyed by heavy shells; half a dozen times the Russians attempted to retake them by night as saults; and for many weeks the soldiers who defended them lived with camphor saturated cloths tied over their faces on account of the terrible stench of the un burled bodies that lay all around on the slopes of the hills." "Old Glory" waved over Sunday's baseball game, but, not from the peak of the staff; tha place was reserved for the streamer of a.lo.cal; wholesale firm and the National banner was be- neath. The baseball crowd must .nave been in a tolerant mood, else It would have pulled the advertising ensign down and set the starry emblem there. As a plea of abatement for quashing the Indictment the defendants have set up that-"instructions were given to fly the advertising sign only i and it is also fact that the pole was originally erected for this purpose and is not and never has been the property of the baseball company, and belongs to a down-town business man." ANOTHER DEAL THAT FAILED. Drastic liquidation in the Chicago heat market apparently finished its course yesterday, when the May option. after a violent break of more than cents a bushel, closed weak and wob bly at 92i cents, a decline of about 30 cents a bushel from the high mark scored a few weeks ago. July wheat. resting on a more legitimate basis, lost cents, in sympathy with the weak ness in May. Now that the smoke of the battle Is clearing away and the price of the cereal is sinking to a legitimate figure. warranted by natural conditions, the extended manipulation In prices of the last nine months can be more clearly understood. On August 1, 1S04, the May option appeared on the boards at 93 cents, a slight premium over September wheat. It ran along for a few days without attracting much attention, and then, under the skillful nursing of the bullish speculators, aided by the unre liable and misleading Government crop reports, started on an upward flight that was without parallel In the history of the market, and not until yesterday, nearly nine months after its appearance In the market, did it return to the fig ure from which it started. Alarmist crop reports of August sent it flying up to $1.15 by the middle of the month, but the September "shaking out" process set it back to $1.08, from which figure it again rebounded to $1.18. Since September the price has ranged from SLOS to $1.22 per bushel, the high point being reachod late In February. With such remarkably high prices for May wheat, 'other options and cash wheat were sympathetically affected. and nearly all of the American crop passed out of first hands at the highest average prices that have prevailed since 1891. With the Government reports persist ently bullish and the carefully "cooked" and juggled reports of crop experts mystifying the true situation, the big operators behind the deal cleverly con cealed their intentions until well on toward the turn of the year. In De cember the abnormal "sproad" of 10 cents per bushel between May and July wheat was increased to nearly 15 cents. In January it was 20 cents, and in Feb ruary 30 cents. Under strictly legitimate conditions July wheat should have commanded a slight premium over May. When the differential, became too great, the spec ulators were forced to buy enormous quantities to support the topheavy mar ket which they had created. Collapse could be the one end of this kind of speculation. Loiter, Hutchinson, Dres bach, Phillips and all of the fallen tim ber of the past had failed. Gates and his friends have established no prece dent in- this kind of speculation, al though they are probably out less money than they are accused of losing. The short crop of 1904 was the-strong est factor In the remarkable doal that has just culminated in a crash, but it was far from being short enough to jus tify such high prices as were made by the speculators. The work of these philanthropists has resulted in adding millions to the bank accounts of the American farmers, but it has incident ally demoralized the export flojjr trade of the country, taught Europe to de pend on other countries, for wheat and flour, and left our markets in a nervous condition. fr6m which they will be slow in recovering. JOE JEFFERSON'S DRA3LVTIC TOWER Joseph Jefferson's fame spread be yond his native .land and won laurels in the Old World as well as In the New The general affection in which Joseph Jefferson was held is strong testimony to the worth of the man as well as to admiration of the actor. To the wide spread knowledge of his character the publication of his autobiography but a few years ago contributed. It is a most natural self-revelation. At the end of the book, in summing up his notes on his art. he refers to the many suggestions with which unknown admirers favored him, In the way of realistic additions to the scenes so wejl known to his admirers, but which he rejected, saying that the actor must not be natural, but must always appear to be so. In other words, the actor must stay faithfully by the ancient maxim the highest art lies in concealing art. As Jefferson's scenes pass before memory that seems the dominant feat ure of them all; not only the exceeding naturalness, but the reticence, the lack of exaggeration in the leading part True, for many years Joseph Jefferson did not-create a new part. His reper toire was small. But the public never tired of "Bob Acres," and, above all, of "Rip Van Winkle." The latter he abso lutely created. In the former part he stood comparison with many famous actors of the past. A great gift-Jefferson had in the aryt of setting the key to the whole piece, in playing In that key, in holding in reserve through the earlier scenes the dramatic power needed for the cHmax. In comedy he had the rare power of compelling laughter, but of never step ping over the border line between fun and absurdity. One laughed with him but never at him. He tells of an interview with Mrs, Stowe. at her request, .after she had seen "Rip Van Winkle." She remarked on the parallel with "King Lear," and asked why he had never been tempted to essay that drama the test of a great actor's art. Jefferson says he replied that he should never think of such trial. And yet there was hardly irtcon sequence in the .novelist's suggestion Jofferson saw. and made his audiences feel, the tragedy in meaner lives. One other gift he had, and that a rare one of rising superior to all setting of vulgarity and commonness in the grad and tier ot l'fc m which his characters were set. The humanity, as he showed It, common to. us all, made his theater world kin with Caleb Plummer and Asa Trenchard. and no less with poor old Rip. Some who read these lines have seen him in all these parts. Some in but ope. Be it many or.. one. the recollec tion is surely kindly as It Is admiring. His stage career lasted long .and he took part in the great development of the American stage an art In which our leading actors of today fear no comparison with those on the other side of the Atlantic who Inherit and practice the traditions of 300 years. Little argument Is needed to support the assertion, made a few days ago by the Oregon Superintendent of Public Instruction, J. H. Ackerman, that the Oregon system of state uniformity in the selection of public-school text-books is -better than the Washington system of county uniformity. In Oregon the same books are used throughout the state. In Washington each county se lects its own books. Families frequent ly move from one county to another; also teachers. In such cases the value of the uniform system is apparent, for the child or the teacher finds in the new county the same books he used in his former place of abode; besides, 'the courses of study are the same, and there is no waste of time In getting In touch with new surroundings. An Oregon teacher may feel at home in any school in the state. Many housewives will buy fish from soiled hands, but not lace; sauerkraut, but not flowers; cabbage, but not milli nery. Many will take food from fiithy markets. but fly at the hired girl for not keeping clean the kitchen sink. Many will purchase sausage from men In fetid, gruesome clothes and -be in sulted If a clerk- wearing a flyspeck tries to sell them ribbon.. Many will patronize markets which have no hot water for cleaning up and excoriate the cook lady at home for using cold dish water. But these Inconsistencies are now to be shown forth. The School of Domestic Science has secured appoint ment of a market inspector.- Success be with her. Portland has needed her a long time. Let all the housewives listen. They will hear much to learn. A labor era in which absence of strikes and lockouts is promised has pened in New Tork City. The benefits of the adjustment thus far are in sight only to members of the building trades. Shades of Sam Parks, the building trades boodler, and of the big white horse that bore him, while under con iction for sins against labor, at the head of a monster labor parade in New York some two years ago! Who would have thought that harmony would have come out of Inharmony and concilia tlon out of stubbornness so soon? The early settlement of. the differences be-. tween contractors and laborers after the demise of the arch agitator and boodler seems to disprove the statement that "the evil that men do lives after them." "Deeds, not bones, should be cher ished," says a correspondent in yester day's Oregonian. In commenting on the gruesome search for the- remains of John Paul Jones and their transfer over seas. But so strong is the delusion that the human body bereft of life does contain more than senseless clay that men and women will never lose rever ence, perhaps, for the inanimate dust The deeds of John Paul Jones will be honored while the Nation for which he valiantly fought endures: they will not be honored the less because ofJthe'de sire to Identify -his body and to return the handful of crumbling bones to this country for final sepulture. The act is intended to honor, not "his bones," but the "deeds done in the body." A point is made of the fact that the jury in the Nan Patterson, murder trial Is composed, with but two exceptions of married men. It Is further said that Miss Patterson is highly pleased with the personnel of the Jury, and refer ence is made to the fact that in her two previous trials married -men largely predominated among the talesmen These statements, If they mean any thing, beyond a vague insinuation, are not complimentary to the loyalty of American husbands. They contain, on the contrary, a suggestion that is little less than an insult to this class of men They are, in this respect, on a par with the request of the uxorious Johann Hoch that he be tried before a-jury of his own countrymen. Delcasse. at the head of the Foreign Office, is the only member of the French Ministry whose name is familiar to English-speaking people. He has di rected French policy during a very crit ical period. While France's ally has been engaged In a terrible war, Delcasse has preserved French neutrality with out serious oftense to either combatant. He has brought about good feeling be tween France and Britain, and has guided his country through the Moroc can crisis without bluster or loss of prestige- Delcasse appears to be at once a strong man and a diplomat, and his determination to stay In office is of European moment. The Puritanical zealot objected to "bear baiting," not because it was cru elty to the bear, but because it was sport for the onlookers. By a parallel line of reasoning, numerous papers are congratulating Augustus Heinze on his victory in the Minnie Healy case. They are pleased that Heinze won not be cause they know or care whether or not he was in the right, but because by his winning. Standard Oil received a very severe Jolt. Nothing could do more to create a bad impression of the Fair in the minds of visitors than the group of liquor shops licensed about its main entrance. It is a serious mistake. The Common Council ought to revoke these licenses and refund the money. The Equltable's general agents seem determined to stay with the Alexander faction until Hyde comes off his lofty perch. The tales that go with this par ticular Hyde are not pleasant reading for the policy-holders. Matches and petroleum are the prin cipal articles mentioned 'for an increased war tax in Russia. This opens up pos sibilities for a revival of the old Jokes about the hired girl and the kitchen Are. The public mind has been loaded up with claptraps about "public utilities," till now a great lot of people are going in to get what they think and say has been promised them. It's too bad that dog-hating Mr. Sam uel is absent in New Tork, else the dog-eatfng Igorrotes mght be persuad ed to tarry and help Portland's rose j gardens Any unknown port on the Asiatic coast would find, it a good advertising scheme to Invite Rojestvensky to make his headquarters there. Nature's kindliness Is shown by the fact that she made wheat an article of food as well as of speculation. NOTE ANDCOMMENT. - Exit Joseph Jefferson. If wc were in the habit of answering matrimonial on patent medicine adver tisements, we should be Inclined to avoid those saying "all communications will be regarded as sacredly confidential." In another day or two the '-'heavy fir ing" zone will have been broadened to Chefoo. An effort to follow Rojcstvensky's course supplies a painless way of learning what the small boy calls -joggraphy. Nan Patterson fainted in court yester day. She is af nervous as a Russian Admiral. Earthmiakfis have recentlv alarmed In dia, Ecuador and England, but the people are shaking down again. We confess that we- never could under stand fully the attitude of Henry James, who recently passed through Portland without saying that Mount Hood was a nice mountain. In the Bpoklover's Maga zine, however, James Douglas has made the whole thing clear. "Chilled by a sense of alienation," he says. "Mr. Henry James darkens the windows of his soul with filmy arabesques of frosty ambiguity." We have ordered a set of filmy arabesques of frosty ambiguity for our soul windows. They must be great things in hot weather. One can almost hear the half-opened rosebud say to Its sl&ter. "is it hot enough for you?" Washington;? ball team is" managed' by a man named Stahl, and the team has been named the "Stahlwarts." The In dianapolis Star remarks that before the season is over the team may be known as the "Stahl-warts." . Correspondents in the Orient are justly indignant that Togo and Rojostvonsky will not disclose the locality of their rendezvous. Castro of Venezuela says he challenges fate. He should learn that fate doos not fight duels, but stabs In the back. Some ingenious writer declares the rea son golf players do not swear. Is that the golfing vocabulary is enough of Itself to work pft any amount of spleen. Niblick and brassy, foozle and stimie, he holds equivalent to a dozen words that the mod est editor must represent by dashes. The reasoning Is based on false premises, we fear; the writer states that golfers do not swear, merely to display his ingenuity In supplying an explanation. One and a half million dollars Is all that a Milwaukee bankor was able to get away with. Still a man must have prac tice to get his hand in even Into other people's pockets. The greenest things In town at present are the telegraph poles, which look some thing like Gargantuan asparagus. - Who owns The bones Ot John Paul Janes? It is about time 'that some member of the Jones family came forward to claim the alcohol-preserved remains of the illus trious "pirate." Dr. Chapman thinks that Shakespeare missed a whole lot by not waiting to be born in the Roosevelt regime, so that a real hero could have been put Into tho Shakespearean drama. On tho whole, our opinion Is that Shakespeare was wise in being born when he was. He managed to pick up a few passable heroes. a3 things were, and he escaped having to read a lot of balderdash about boxing-lessons and bear bunts. Sun shining on the hills and strawber rJes Phinlntr on the bill-of-faro who wouldn't be cpntented? A Chicago woman, it was brought out in divorce proceedings, used to call her hus band "Schnlckelfrltz." To unaccustomed cars Schnlckelfrltz sounds more like an endearing term that young lovers would use than an expression of the less fervid love of mature and married life. Northern British Columbia Indians are now reported to be affected by the rellglou revival which swept north (In a Pullman) from Portland. No matter how ardent the religious Indians may become, there is yet one insuperable obstacle in the way of their conducting a revival on the approved modern method In their villages there are no red-light districts Into which the church members and Sunday school pupils may parade. Will it be known in history as the Roose velt era? WEX J. ODD BITS OF OREGON LIFE. Don't Be Stuck Up, Ves. Freewaler Times. Ves White bought a brand new team, harness and wagon this week, and now he won't speak to anybody. The wholo layout is a fine one. though, and ho almost has a reason for not noticing any one, out millionaires and editors. Maybe He's Been There. Irrlgon Irrigator. Over in Prinevillc there Is a lady named Prose running a restaurant. Her doughnutb are said to equal -blank verse and her hash is a poem. We'd like to metor. Let's Hope They're Knd-Scat Hogs. Enterprise Chiefjtain. Two fat hogs were missed from a hogpen recently In Paradise. Some body had bettor look out, there are breakers ahead. None Left to Chloroform. Pittsburg Post. "Shall we chloroform the old folks of the next generation?" asked the sage of Plunkville. "If cigarettes an tight lacln keep their present holts on the respective sexes," retorted the Pohlck philosopher, "there ain't goln to be no old folks In- the next generation." PartlaJ Believer. ' Chicago News. "Do you believe the teachings of the Scriptures?" asked the good woman, as she handed the tramp a generous hunk of home-grown pie. "Yes, ma'am," answered the hobo, "all but dat part erbout a feller earnin his bread by dc sweat of his brow." One More Great Conflict. Boston Globe. To Admiral Lord Charles Beresford It seems altogether probable that the Jap- RusS conflict will be the last of the big wars. Apparently he hasn't read about the 'Venezuelan scheme for Invading the United States by way of New Orleans -and the. Mississippi Valley. x ROOSEVELT AND Why the Great OrRHnlzer Has Been Treasury The President's "Holland" In Philadelphia Press. New York. When there came last Summer strong Intimation that the Sec retary of the Treasury, Mr. Shaw, even though he were renominated, for that of fice by President Roosevelt, would not re main in the Treasury Department more than 12 months, it was thought worth while by some of the President's friends In this city to ask him whether it might not be tvlso to nominate Henry C. Frlck as Secretary Shaw's successor. Probably some kind of intimation roached the Pres ident that Mr. Fxick's name had been mentioned by many high financiers in this city in such connection with, the succes sion as would enable the President to feel assured that Mr. Frlck's nomination would be warmly approved. Six months after there was that spon taneous, although semi-confidential, sug gestion of Mr. Frick in connection with that office, there comes a report from Washington and another from Pittsburg that Justify the impression that the Presi dent had heard of this "view and had. through personal acquaintance and through knowledge of Mr. Frlck's career. looked upon the suggestion as a most expedient one. There was only one criti cism ventured here, and that was one which President Roosevelt probably would not have heeded. A more timid President than he would certainly have regarded the criticism as sufficient. It arose from Mr. Frlck's Identification with the greatest of Amorlcart industrial trusts, although by no means as yet a monopoly, the United States Steel Cor poration. Those here who know Mr. Frick best feel sure that he could not be coaxed by any kind of temptation to enter public lifo. although no other office than that of Secretary of the Treasury would prob ably in the slightest appeal to him. He undoubtedly knows what many Wall Street bankers are not aware of, what Mr. Morgan has persisted in being ignor ant of. namely, that the truly successful Secretary of the Treasury In the broader sense must be an expert politician, ria need not be a managing political tacti cian. He need not know how to' organize caucuses or to direct campaign commit tees in the technique of party organiza tions. But-he must understand the rela tion of Government financing, national banks, the tariff and internal taxation to that higher politics which is not of a partisan character. John Sherman under stood that, and so at an earlier time did Albert Gallatin and Hamilton. It has been one of the best of the achievements of Secretary Shaw that he, too, knew of that relation, unacknowledged Inm any statute, but which still may make or un make parties so far as national successes are concerned. It is said of Mr. Frick that had he chosen to enter politics he would have decome a masterly organiaor, matching the technical successes of Governor Til- den or of Mark Hanna, but that he never could have become a supreme per suader through the pure force of personal Influence, a moral persuader as Thurlow Weed was. For very much the same gift of organ ization, the same power to build up a machine that works perfectly in all Us parts and Is controlled to obedience by a single mind. Is necessary In politics, as it is In building up corporate industrial or ganizations, or which Is so finely exempli fied in the wonderfully detailed and yet supremely simple organization of the bank of which Mr..Stillman is president, and especially of the Treasury Depart FOLK CLOSES UNDAY SALOONS Saloons In St. Loua ami Kansas City were closed la?t Sunday. Chicago Tribune. Governor Folk, of Missouri, believes laws ought to bo either enforced or re pealed. Missouri has a law requiring saloons to be closed on Sunday. Conse quently, on orders from the Governor, the Police Commissioners have ordered the saloons of St. Louis to keep closed. Mis souri has' laws forbidding unnecessary labor on Sunday. People can bathe, get shines and shaves, buy newspapers and clarars. and lay in supplies of food Satur day night. Consequently, bathrooms, shoe shining "parlors." barber shops, news stands, cigar stands, grocery stores and restaurants must not be open on. Sunday. If past experience in American cities sig nifies, enforcement will end speedily. All Governor Folk's resources will scarcely suffice to keep the city" in the narrow path. That Jaws ought to be either enforced or repealed sounds well. But there are laws which cannot be ropealed and can not be enforced. The Sunday law cannot be repealed. The people of the rural dis tricts of Missouri, who are the majority, will-not permit a word of the law forbid ding Sunday labor to be changed. Most of them are sincerely in favor or tne oa- fashloned. church-going Sunday. The peo ple of the cities, on the other hand, are well night a unit against putting m op eration a law which, if enforced, as Its frnmers 50 or more years aso Intended it should be, would interfere with their hab its and comfort, and they cannot he maue to obey for more than one or two Sun- days. There Is an irrepressible conflict be tween the law of the state and the public sentiment of the cities, and neither will yield to the other. So what does it avail for Govornor Folk to say to the St. Louis Police Commissioners that they should enforce to tho letter, without discrimina tion, the law which forbids Sunday work "othor than the household offices of dally necessity and other works of necessity and mercy" until it shall have been re pealed? Helfcs Bring High Prices. New York Times. April 17. One of the highest prices ever brought by an autograph letter of Abraham Lin coln was paid yesterday at the Anderson auction-rooms, at 3 West Twenty-ninth street. Tho letter was purchased for 3110 by the old bookdoa! r. George D. Smith. The letter was written on July 25. JSW, to a soldier who had deserted and asked President Lincoln for a pardon. Lincoln writes that he. will grant it if the Colonel of the regiment will take the deserter back in the ranks. The oricinal oil portrait of the poet John Keats, painted by Joseph Severn, one of j of last Sunday, for both the man and tho his most Intimate friends, occasioned j woman protest that they are In complete spirited' bidding. George D. Smith got it , harmony religiously. It is therefore only for $700. The portrait was incased fn an ! the intermixture of races which meets old gilt frame. Sevarn painted it for I wth 'disfavor, and at present that senti George Keats, a brother of the poet, and i ment is as strong and general among George Keats brought it to this country in ISIS. The portrait was owned by John Gilmer Speed about 20 years ago. It Is from this little painting that most-of the engravings of Keats have been made. All the Same, However. Washington Post. "Mr. Bryan is the bright lodestar that leads us," on," said an orator in St. Louis, and the intelligent compositor on the Globe-Democrat; who was Imbued with the political principles of tho paper, promptly made It "lobster" instead of lodestar." The Iowa Democrats, Cedar Rapids Gazette. Bryan need, not make a grdat specialty of hunting for Parker Democrats In Iowa unless, as a scientist, he desires to pre serve a specimen of the vanishing species. He would never make a living by hunting' them as a matter of commerce. HENRY C. FRICK Suggested lor Secretary o the Attitude Towards Him. ment, as that machinery was organized by Alexander Hamilton. It seems to be an unwritten law. prob- -ably because of the political relation of the Treasury Department to the people, . that no active New York banker shall " be called to the Treasury Department. It Is true that Daniel Manning was Cleveland's first and General Falrchlkl his second Secretary of the Treasury- But Mr. Manning was a focal banker until after his service as Secretary of the Treasury, and General Fai-chlld had been Attorney-General of New York, an able and often brilliant chief legal officer of the state, not haiving much to do with finance, excepting Incidentally, until after he entered the Treasury Department. Mr. Frick is now In a considerable sense a New York banker, and It was due in part to the sagacious counsel, the often marvelous foresight, his peculiar sensi tiveness to financial temperature so that he seemed to be able to foretell coming squalls in storm, that led to the earnost suggestion of him as probably the best selection President Roosevelt could make when the time came for him to name a successor to Secretary Shaw. Mr. Frick Is one ot those who under stands that even within the tima of the present generation the United States will pass more jspeedily from a billion-dollar to a two billion-dollar country than it did from a half-billion budget to the day when Speaker Reed said proudly, "This is a billion-dollar country." Many men are strangely moved by great figures. Mr. Frick. in his Intercourse with business men of New York, has often mado it clear that he looks upon figuros as purely rela tive. The mere statement that the United States Steel Corporation is a billion-dollar trust, so-called. Is a stupendous aggrega tion of figures to the average man. Not ,o to Mr. Frick. He has often pointed out that there is nothing more amazing, be cause of swiftness of aggrandizatlon. than the growth of the United States as a whole. The swift development of fixed capital, that is, the capital that produces and therefore is wealth-creating, is spoken of by mm as far outmatching the increase in currency, even in gold, which has been both absolutely and relatively ' of onormous proportions In the past ten years. To men in New York who havf met him he seems to have something of the fabled power of the alchemist, for he often points out where latent resources are and how they can be best developed. That gift Is In reality that for which af an earlier time there was superstlUo-! searching, so that it is often said that Mr. Frick is one of those who knows where to find the true philosopher's stone. m President Roosevelt, wh", many think, is the 2th certi'ry's answer to Shakespeare's Hamlet, was especially irit pressed. first of all. with Mr. Frick's knowledge, both general and detailed; sec ondly, with Iiis almost intuitive processes of reasoning, resembling in that respect somewhat Roosevelt's own intellectual processes, and especially with Mr. Frlck's ability to secure results. Results and the action that secure them these arc to a man of Roosevelt's temperament and in tellect the chief thing, provided this ac tivity bo tempered by the moral sense. But the President is not 10 nave -ir. Frick in his Cabinet, although there Is no doubt that he may at any time have such advantage as comes from private or even confidential communication with him upon subjects of which Mr. Frlok has knowledge. To many here tnis seems a pity. These two men with Mr. Hay would typify the modem spirit of the United States. They would represent that pro digious growth which has already made New xork the 'second city of the world in International trade, exporting today even more than London exports. RELIGION AS BAR TO MARRIAGE New York Sun. Even the rabbi of the relatively liberal Fifth-Avenue Temple Emanu-El discoun tenances "the intermarriage ot races." or of Jews with Christians. "A tnvided houee on religion invites disaster." ha saM In his last Sunday's sermon; but the' preservation of the race purity of the Jews seemed to be uppermost in his mind. Relatively such intermarriages are few In this country at the present time, much fewer apparently than when the number of Jews was s-mall. The only country from which we have statistics showing a largo percentage of Jewish intermar riages at the present time is New South Wale, where the Jewish population I relative small and where many innova tions, social and political, have taken place. In all the roun tries where the Jew$ are many, including, besides the United States. Russia and Austria, mixed marriages are rare, and in New York they are fewer proportionately now when the Jewish population is 75A.00O than they were when its number was not a tenth as The Roman Catholic Church discounte nances marriages between Its membars and the dteciples of any other religious faith, and when they are permitted its prlests exact a stipulation that children born of the union, shall be reared in its religion: but mere race difference is no dlnqualiftcation in its eyes. In the Epis copal Church, in Canada more espe cially, there was started not long ago a movement, on religious grounds purely, against Intermarriages, or marriage with members of other denominations or j (7hrjstjHns. The Ve5tminstcr Confession expressed the same sentiment In admon ishing Christians of their duty to "marry only in the Lord." not to marry "infidels, papists, or other idolators." or "with such as are notoriously wicked in their life or maintain damnable hereries." Dr. Silverman takes the ground that harmony in religion and not "romantic love" merely should be the basis of mar riage. "If two intend to marry," he says, "and there is a difference of religion be tween them, there l? only one thing to' do to lay aside the romantic aspect of the case and agree on the religion they shall follow after their marriage." That, as we have suggested, is the Roman Catholic doctrine, and practically it was originally tho doctrine of the old Pro testantism; as expressed in the Westmin ster Confession, marriage should be only wlth "such as profess the true reformed religion." If it was obeyed the unbap tlzed half of the population of' the United States would bo restricted to marriage be tween themselves. , The question of a diversity of religion, however, does not enter into the proposed marriage to which 30 much Jewish oppo- itlon is expressed, and on which partltcu- larlv Dr. Silverman founded his sermon ' Chriptians as among Jews. Tho marriage quoetion, therefore. Is taking on a new phase now that the Jew ish population of this country is becom ing numerous, and promises to be even tually the greatest aggregation of that race in the world. Very Much Like Byron: It is related In the life of Lord Byron that he once made a present of a Bible to his publisher, the first John Murray. The recipient was proud of the gift, as proceeding from so famous a man. and used to sh6w it to his friends, until one day some one more curious than the oth ers turned the pages of the book and dis covered that Byron had altered the word. "Now Barabbas was a robber" to "Now Barabbas was a publisher." The story is recalled in a little volume of "A Publish er's Confessions," which contains a num ber of heartfelt papers contributed not long since by one of the orofesslon to the Boston TranscrlDt.