THE arORTOTG OKEGONIA2T, SA-TUBJAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1905. Entered at the PostoftJce at Portias. Or., u second-class matter. 6UBSCRUTIOX KATES. INVARIABLT IN ADVANCE. (By Mall or express.) Dally aafl Eunday. ptr year Dally and Sunday, alx month! Salty and Sunday, three months Dally and Sunday, per month Dally without Sunday, per year ) Dally without Sunday, alx month...... Dally without Sunday, three months... Dally without Sunday, per month SAay, per year -. zz fiunday. alx months Sunday, three months... oa DT CARIUER. Dally without Sunday, per week.. Dally, per week. Sunday included -a THE WEEKLY OREOONIAN. (Issued Every Thursday.) TVeekly. per year Weekly, six months i2 Weekly, three months HOW TO REMIT Sen d postofnee money crder. expres order or personal check on jour local tank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the seeder's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The 8. C. Beckwlth Special Agescy-New Sork. rooms 43-80 Tribune bulletins. Chi cago, rooms 610-512 Tribune Bulletins. KEPT ON SALE. Cbicaco Auditorium Annex. Postotnce 5ew8 Co.. ITS Dearborn street. Dallas, Tex. Globe News Depot. 200 Main Denver Julius Black. Hamilton 'a rlek. th-812 Seventeenth street; Pratt book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street. Dcs Moines. la. Moses Jacobs. 309 FUtn street. . Goldfletd. Nev. F. Sandstrom; Guy Marsh. Kansaa City, Mo. Itlolcseeker Cigar Co., ninth and Walnut. , Log Angeles Harry Drapkln; B E. Amos. t!4 1Vet Seventh street; Dillard ews Co. MlnneapolIsM. J. Kavanaugfa. 30 South Cleveland, O. James Pushaw. 307 Superior Mr eel . r Tork City L. Jones & Co.. Astor House. . AUantlo City, J. Ell Taylor. 207 Iorth liltnols ave. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston. Fourteenth tud FraakMn streets. . Osden Goddard & Harrop and Meyers & Ilarrop. D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam: -Ma?7MUh Stationery Co.. 1308 Farnam; 240 South Kth. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento New Co., 426 K. utreet. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West fitcond trt South: National News Agenoy. Lonj- Beach B. E. Amos. Shu Prunclsco J. K. Cooper & Co.. 746 Market street; Goldsmith Bros.. 230 Sutter KttC Hotel St Francle News Stand; L. B. Loe. Palace Hotel News Stand; F. W. Pitts. 1S Market; Frank Scott, 80 TJllls; N. Whoatley Movable News Stand, corner Mar ket and Kearney streets ; Foster & Orear, I'errj- Jfewe Stand. St. Louis. Mo. E. T. Jett Book & News Company. MM5 Olive street. Washing-ton, D. C Ebbltt House. Pennsyl vania avenue. 3TOUTLAND. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. TIFE POE AMENDMENT. Under the manipulation of Senator Gorman, who is a past master of tricky poHtics, the negro question has come to the front In Maryland. The Issue is the adoption of a disfranchising amend ment to the state constitution similar to those which have passed in Louisi ana, North "Carolina, Virginia and other Southern States. In Maryland it is known as the Poe amendment. The Democrats advocate its adoption with vigor because, as they forecast the future, the elimination of the negro from politics will give the party of Gorman control of the state for many years. If not forever, most of the negro vote being Republican. The Republic ans oppose the measure, but not heart ily. They dislike to be known as the "nigger" party, for one thing, but there Is a better reason for their Indifference. It Is felt, in fact, that In everything but the actual votes they cast the col ored element are a weakness to the party. With this element eliminated from politics, it 1h fairly likely that the whites of Maryland would divide upon National issues, as they have already in Virginia. The Democrats expect, of course, to hold all of their present strength for ever, and with the Republicans de prived of the colored vote, their control would, as they think, be established In perpetuity. The course of events in other states indicates that the reason ing of the Republicans is better than that of the Democrats. At any rate, the Republicans in Maryland are op posing the Poe amendment with a cer tain languor. This amendment con tains the famous "grandfather" clause. which has enabled the Democrats In so many of the Southern States to defy successfully the Federal Constitution and deprive illiterate negroes of the suffrage without disfranchising Illiter ate whites. It provides that of all per sons who could vote in 1869 the de scendants may still vote. Other men. black and white alike, shall have the right only in case they can explain se Ifcted passages of the state constltu tion to the satisfaction of the election supervisors. Since no negroes could vote in 1869, and since few, if any. will be able to explain the constitution so that Democratic supervisors can un derstand it, though they should speak with the tongues of men and angels, the effect of the Poe amendment will be to disfranchise the negro race In Maryland for years to come. Even when the Republicans get control of elections, as they will a great deal sooner than Mr. Gorman expects, negro expositions of constitutional law will still, one cannot help fearing, be found to lack lucidity. Whatever one may think of the meth ods employed to remove the negro race from Maryland politics, the conse quences will be, bej-ond all doubt, bene Ilclal to both whites and blacks. We shall look for an Immediate revolt within the Democratic party from the rule of the unspeakable Gorman, and a large secession to the Republican ranks. This prophecy is grounded upon the fact that human nature is not different In Maryland from what it Is In other states. Men differ there as elsewhere upon National questions, and It is only the dread of negro domination which iias hitherto held such a large majority of the whites united In a single party. The colored population, on the other hand, will be forced to give up pursu ing the Jack-o'-lantern of political hon ors, and turn their attention and ener gies to other and more profitable mat ters. It Is unjust to blame the negroes, as some newspapers do, fo throwing themselves into politics at the close of the Civil War. The .result has retarded their progress and made them hateful to their white compatriots In the South, but It was not their fault They looked at that time to those mem bers of the white race from the North who came among them as to their counsellors and saviors. Ignorant of public affairs, Ignorant even of those manual arts which a man must know to live, politics, so far as they could Bee, opened the only possible cares to them. The very men who should have saved them from their tragic blunder encouraged them in It and profited with Incredible depravity by their helpless Ineptitude. We all know what came of It Carpet-bag rule, a public finance which wrecked the credit of the South em States and drove them to repudia tion, oclety harried to the Ytrre of dl- solution. No wonder that the whites revolted; no wonder that they pushed their revolt to the extreme of com pletely eliminating from politics the race whose Ijmorant and dissolute rule had brought so many evils upon them. The feeling behind the Poe amendment In Maryland Is the expiring wave of a psychic cataclysm. It Is affected. In sincere and hysterical. No danger Jus tifies It No honest desire for the pub lic advantage promotes it. It Is a trick of the artful Gorman to perpetuate Democratic control of the state: and yet, for all that few will regret to see It adopted, and the hopes of Its orig inators will be blasted by Its results. In Maryland, as elsewhere. It will be an inestimable advantage to the ne groes to retire from politics for a time and cultivate their Intelligence and the arts of manual Industry. Grant that the Republican party in that state have deserted them. If they have. It Is well. It Is well that the negro race should cease to look to any political party as their especial champion. Such cham pionship emphasizes and perpetuates race prejudice. In politics there should be no negro race. Colored men should be, some Democrats and some Repub licans, the same as white men. So far as their color permits they should throw off all singularity, all sense of especial rights or especial wrongs, and mlncle and lose themselves In the tre mendous glory, of being Americans. It Is recorded of one who might have dom inated Kings and governed empires that he put aside his power and lived for years alone in the desert perfect ing himself for the glory of sacrifice. The time has come for the negro race to retire Into the desert and do some long and strenuous thinking. THE PROHIBITION WAR. Prohibition prohibits if it prohibits. There is Coos County. The Oregonian contained yesterday correspondence from Marshfleld that was obviously a faithful chronicle of recent events there In the crusade against the saloons. The saloons In the smaller places In Coos have for the most part been closed. So have they been in Marshfleld, the county seat but "blind pigs" have sprung up everywhere to take their place. The thirsty citizen who knows the ropes has no trouble. The dlvekeeper trembles for one brief hour before the bar of Justice and straightway smilingly re sumes his stand behind the bar of bar leycorn. The reason Coos County went dry was that a large number of citi zens were exasperated by the lawless manner In which the saloons were con ducted, and they concluded to wipe them out If they could. "The temper ance element," says The Oregonian correspondent, "will vote for prohibi tion to do away with the dives, but it will supply Its own needs from the de canter at home." Observe that a proper distinction Is made between "temper ance" and "prohibition." If the saloons would conduct themselves quietly, the temperance element would look upon them as a necessary evil and suffer them to run. As It is, the "dive" has disappeared, and the "blind pig" has taken Its place. But this Is not all. nor the chief part of what The Oregonian desires to point out Says the Marsh field letter; The present dilemma keeps the politician guessing. It will take a diplomat with the art of John Hay to win a nomination next year. The question will not be la he a Re publican or Democrat or Socialist, but la he prohibitionist or antl-prehlbltlenlst? Those whose views are known and these whose ac tivity In the pat has savored of the per nloteus (itrlpe are marked for slaughter. It will be a etaMe of dark horses that get the word "go" next April. The Oregonian has always said that the enactment of the so-called local- option measure last year was but the beginning of long, -bitter and fruitless feuds in the various counties between the extremes on the two sides of this troublesome and never-to-be-settled question. The matter has Just now fairly got into politics. In counties like Coos, all other questions will disappear. What the end will be no man can now foresee. t READY FOR SCHOOL'S OPENING. The absence of friction and delay In the opening of the public schools each year demonstrates the efficiency of the Oregon educational system. During the present month practically all the public schools will opon for the Fall terms, and in almost every Instance the children will be hard at work by 9:3 on the morning of the first day. A new teacher" does not mean confusion and loss of time, as It did when the last generation went to school. Under modern methods of school organization a pupil may remove from one district to another or a teacher may take em ployment In a district in which she is an entire stranger, and each may drop into the work of the new school with perfect ease. Uniformity In course of study and textbooks and completeness of school records have brought about this har monious condition out of what was for merly chaos. The readers, arithmetics. spellers and geographies used In the farthest corner of Malheur County's sagebrush plains are exactly the same as the books used at Fort Stevens, where. In the opposite corner of the state, the children study their lessons within sound of ocean billows and with in sight of vessels of every nation plowing their way through the waters of the Columbia. A child pursuing the work of the first fifth, or eighth grade in Curry County is doing the same work as a child of corresponding grade in far-off Wallowa. Intelligent and pro gresslve teachers have faithfully co operated in the use of a uniform course of study wisely adopted by the state department of education. This harmonious system of organiza tion has been made complete In recent years by the establishment of uniform records for the use of teachers. At the close of each school ear the teacher leaves in the register provided by the state a Tecord of each pupil and of each class. On the opening day of a new Bchool year the "new teacher" may open the last year's register and there find a programme of recitations, to gether with a list of names of pupils in each class, the page of each book at which the class ended its work of the previous year, and the recommendation of the last teacher concerning the. page at which the class should begin, the new year's work. This recommenda tion ls in writing not only as to each class, but as to each pupil, so that If any child needs to review any of his studies the new teacher has informa tion to that effect This Is a system in force not only in city but also in country schools. How different from the educational methods "when we were boys"! The confusion of asking each pupil his name, what class he Is in, how far he has gone in his books, is & thing of the past No more ned a. teacher take a week to get his classes organized and two weeks or more to arrange a programme of recitations. Under the Oregon system of organization each class may have every lesson assigned and a time ap pointed for recitation, within half an hour after the school has been called to order. THE HEROISM OF MR, BROWN. The. worm has turned. We have ex pected It In our secret hearts we have prophesied It: and we ball the long delayed advent of the clrcumvolutory wrljrele with ferocious Joy. The pa tience of the American rich under per secution has been for years a matter of wondering admiration. Sweet and commendable has been the way they have-retired into their marble palaces with their plunder, and. soothed only by ' the feeble consolations of cham pagne and monkey dinners, let conceal ment, like a worm in the bud. feed on their damask cheeks. Patience on a monument smlllnc- at grief has .been a raging Bellona compared with our long- suffering beef-trusters, standard-oilers and timber-thieves. Never in all the history of the world have men been seen to whom the ninth beatitude so aptly and forcibly applied "Blessed aro ye when men shall revile you and per secute you." Delicate maidens like Ida Tarbell, who ought to have been at home darn ing stockings, have reviled these meek and lovable rich men whose only crime. surely the least of all the deadly seven, was to steal. The ribald newspapers have railed at them. Even the courts of Justice, which ought to be the sanc tuaries and refuge of harried virtue. have subnenaed some rich men as wit nesses and actually arrested others. But patience, even the patience of the rich, has its limits. 'Tls a long lane that has no turning. Every dog has hlB day. And that day has come at last Mr. W. W. Brown, of Crook County, has nut his foot down. He has seen enough of this disgraceful business. He thinks the time has come to stop it ana no tyrannical Judge Is going to prevent him from stepping boldly forth to ao his duty. No, Indeed. So, like an armed warrior, like a plumed knight Mr. W. W. Brown, of Crook County, sailed into the lists, flung his gauntlet Into the face of Mr. Heney and pro claimed himself the champion of the wronged arid light-fingered rich. "The Government ought to get after the poor and let the rich go!" was the lofty legend that Mr. Brown, of Crook County, had emblazoned on his banner before he flung it to the breeze created by Judge Bennett's voluble objections. Noble let-end: heroic sentiment There Is only one other recorded in the annals of asinine heartlessness that can com pare with it When in the early days of the French Revolution somebody told a Princess of the wretched and dissolute court that the people were crying in the streets for bread (we beg Mr. Brown's pardon for mentioning a mere Princess in the same paragraph with one of his exalted moral station), "They are?" replied the sweet young thin sr. "why don't they eat cake?" Historians have made much of this re ply of the iTincess. it nas Deen sup nosed to stand for the acme of callous and sordid cruelty; It has been sup posed to be the last word of absolute moral beggary. But Mr. Brown, of Crook County, can double discount the French Princess, The only fault one can find with the motto emblazoned on Mr. Brown's kleptomanlacal banner is that ft is not original. Living In a paradise of fenced in Isolation and far from the haunts of poor, if honest men, as ne has for lo, those many years, Mr. Brown does not of course, know, that even In selecting his exalted legend he has been guilty of literary theft or, at least of klepto mania; To set after the poor and let the rich go has been the practice of the United States Government, uniform and Invariable, up to the vers' moment when a President whose name is too great to be mentioned In this connec tion, "broke into the paradise of thieves with the flaming sword of Justice." THE MATTEIt OF DRESS. A dressmakers' convention has been In session In Chicago during the week, wrestling with questions grave and gay, wise and foolish. Now crinoline was under discussion, and again corsets oc cupied the attention of the self-constituted authorities upon dress, and still again the predominating color for the season was airily discussed and dog matically fixed. It was further decreed that the waists of women must be smaller and the hips larger pinching to accomplish the first being a foregone conclusion, and padding recommended in order to attain the second. And finally it was decided that, while dress makers must keep on getting all they can for their services, a radical ad vance In prices at this time would be unwise. The babble upon these and other mat ters of similar Import may be likened to the gabble of geese. Not that dress ing Is an art to be despised; not that It Is beneath the province of common sense to take note of the details that go to make up a comfortable, becoming or truly elegant costume; but because the details in the matter of dress are decided arbitrarily, forgetful of the fact that a style or a predominating color that is becoming to one woman is most unbecoming to another. There are really no arbitrary tules for good dressing, supposing this term to include suitable and becoming dress. Think of making purple the predomi nating color in the costume of a faded, Jaded woman of fashion! Or of con demning a bright young woman to a dowager hue! Or of putting a short woman in crinoline, or a tall, slender woman In clinging skirts, or a wasp waist Into long, tight corsets, or squeezing a plump waist above, wall proportioned hips Into a vise! Waists, we are told, must be smaller. This decree Is little less than appalling, since, as everybody knows, many waists are now compressed to the point that makes a natural gait impossible and causes the old-fashioned grace and beauty of walking to be supplanted by a sort of wiggle that would be ludi crous to behold were It not pitiful in its sugestion of manifold alls, aches and displacements of organs, the normal conditions of which were at one time supposed to be essential to happy, healthful womanhood. The art of dress ing is one that may properly demand the attention of women and of men as well. In point of fact it does claim a large share of attention from both. But for a few extremists to get to gether and solemnly promulgate rules which all women who desire to be well dressed must follow or be relegated to the ranks of the ill-dressed, is at once silly and absurd. Let us be thankful. however, that out of all this confusion of tongues and assumption of author ity the hoopsklrt did not emerre tri- umphant And let us hope that women who compress their waists and extend their hips abnormally will "get wise" to the principles of race suicide and thus thwart the blind impulse of Nature that too often leads to the perpetuation of the unfit An Interesting item in the report of the Methodist Conference now in ses sion at Albany Is the record of the transfer of Rev. I. D. Driver from the effective to the superannuated list of ministers of the Methodist body. The name of this pioneer minister Is charac teristic of his endeavor. For more than a generation Dr. Driver has driven home, so to speak, the truth as he saw it in. politics, temperance and religion in the various communities to which. If not called, he has at least been sent Forceful, earnest even dogmatic, there was never any doubt as to which side he was on In any controversy. He now, at more than four-score years. Is classed as "Ineffective" the strangest of all terms to apply to him and Is re tired a warhorse who hereafter will scent the battle from afar. Weaker men have protested with quavering voices and quivering lips against such a sanction by the conference of the decree of Nature that declares the preacher "old and Ineffective," but as far as reported. Dr. Driver accepted the inevitable without whimpering, reserv ing to himself, no doubt, the right to speak when the spirit moves him upon any question of creed, politics or re ligion. He is one of the type of men that can be retired, but not arbitrarily 6llenced. According to estimates of the Sun, the Jews in New York now constitute nearly, if not quite, a quarter of the whole population of the city, and make up by far the most numerous single community of their race gathered to gether In t,he" history of mankind. The Sun finds them pushing forward In trade and In the professions more than anj other race: their children crowding the schools, and a majority of the pu pils attaining the highest rank scholas tically of their race; and In the colleges and universities of the city more nu merous proportionately than In the pop ulation as a whole. At present they are divided politically, and no attempt has been made to concentrate their political strength; but should this be done, and asserted 'simply as a race, their power, as the Sun says truly, might be dangerously provocative. Therefore the warnings of Dr. Funk and Dr. Singer against the threatened union for a movement to attempt the forcing from office of State Librarian Dewey for alleged discrimination against the Jews are heartily seconded by others as well as the Sun. who recognize the danger of race discrim ination. Tbe Tacoma Ledger Justly remarks that Tacoma has had a large share In the work of advertising the Lewis and Clark Exposition. It makes this fur ther comment: The "unanimous verdict of visitors ta the Ex position Is that Taeoeta Is the best advertised of all the cltiM there represented. The Ira pmlon created by the advertising of this cltr Is a most favorable one. Everybody admires enterprise, loyalty and pride In one heme city aad the Tacoma spirit displayed at Port land has been admirable throughout. It only remains to bring the campaign to a splendid dlraax with this week's demonstration. Tacoma has wen thousands of arm friends and wltl gain thousands of permanent residents as a result of the efforta made at Portland In be half of and by the able repreieauUves of thto city. Tacoma had a day last June that was highly successful, and bad another this week that was made interesting as dhly Tacoma can make things interesting. Tacoma is entitled to have said for it all the Ledger says. Venezuela Is evidently making vigor ous and heroic preparation to repel the ruthless French - Invader. She has "placed orders for eight field batteries and four mountain batteries, the latter of four guns each." President Castro wants it understood that he is not going to be trifled with. If any French bat tleshlp comes fooling around Caracas, the President will turn one of those invincible field guns against her and blow her out of the water. And If the worst comes to the worst he can fall back on the Monroe Doctrine perhaps. It happens that the snappy little PresU dent of Venezuela doesn't stand very high In this country, and President Roosevelt would hardly worry a great deal about anything that might happen, provided the French had no Idea of ter ritorial acquisition. It may happen this time that Venezuela will .have to pay her Just obligations to France. Contrary to the accepted belief, pau perism does not always take the vim and courage out of men. We are told of two aged paupers in a New Jersej almshouse falling upon each other with kitchen knives anil fighting to a finish. Both were covered with wounds when the end came, and, bleeding profusely, were borne to their cots, where they He with little chance of recovery. Both belligerents were more than 70 years old and both had been paupers a long time. The incident will puzzle sociolo gists, since the spirit shown- Is In dlrct-t opposition to the generally Accepted idea that all that tends to make men aggressive is destroyed by removing from them the responsibility and the burden of self-support Representative Dalzell has been from one end of the continent to the other, and he reports that there is a general demand "that there be no interference with the tariff." Mr. Dalzell is a great admirer and constant reader of the Sa lem Statesman. "Many years ago," he says in a note of high commendation to that able advocate of stand pattery, "I read a copy of your excellent Jour nal, with such pleasing results that I have read no other since." So we do not wonder that the Pennsylvania Con gressman has gauged accurately the sentiment of the Nation at large. Mr. Brown, of Crook .County, makes a vehement appeal for the downtrodden and misused rich. Mr. Brown Is sure of a responsive heart throb or two if he will underscore his remarks and mail a copy to one John D. Rockefeller. Judge Parker seems to think that it was the Republican campaign fund that defeated him last November. The Judge's notion as to the power of money in elections is something extraordinary. If publicity will cure the evils which have attached themselves to life Insur ance, there Js well-grounded hope for return to healthy conditions. Mr. Rockefeller received the American Press Humorists at his Ohio home. Mr. Rockefeller will -'have his little Joke. 0REG0NJ)Z0NR At tho Livestock Show. Thero are horses fine and dandy, and the man is mighty lucky Who is privileged to seo the thorough breds from old Kentucky, Stalwart stallions from the East and Western ponies proud and prancing. Now, of course, on points and pedigree a horse may be entrancing: But my taste Is not for horses I may lack the cultivation. For I cannot feel the thrill and do not know the exultation. What I want to see partlc'lar la the bux om Baby Bunting Pig from down In Southern Oregon and. that Is what I'm hunting. Maybe you prefer the lowing, sleek and unassuming cattle That are out for premium money and are bound to win the battle. There are heifers here from everywhere, that give us milk and butter. And we cannot praise- them high enough that's something I should utter. Ob. the little calves are calflsh, and the bullocks they are bully. And the cows are fine but kindly try to understand me fully: For the thing that brings me here, con cerning which I long have wondered. Is the pig from Southern Oregon that weighs eleven hundred.-. There are sheep, both shorn and shaggy. that are very fine to look at. Sheep as good as any shepherd ever prooked his shepherd's crook at. And they give us wool for woolens, give us warmth of robe and blanket Oh, the sheep Is very useful; let us love It; lot us thank It But to me the sight (where Is It? I have road about its coming. And It thrills me with ecstatic thrill and sets my heart to thrumming), Oh, the sight of all the circus ls the 'leven-hundred plggcr, That was grown In Southern Oregon and still Is growing, bigger! Newport. R, L, must travel fast to keep up with Stockton, Cal. Just now Stock ton has a long lead. The other day a fond pair of parents gave their charm ing daughter a dinner party, celebrat ing the brooking of hor engagement The daughter. It is said, appeared In what was to have been her wedding gown and announced the happy culmination of her betrothal. The bridegroom-not-to-be wa3 Invited, but he was prevented from at tending because of a previous engage ment The other girl objected. If "Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell," what sort of vocal exercise will she perform when The alleged descendants of the Polish patriot win their suit against the United States Government for 510G, 250.000? They claim that the Government granted Kosciusko, In recognition of his services In the war for American Inde pendence, a plot of ground upon which a considerable part of Chicago is built There Is no doubt that certain parts of Chicago are owned by the Poles. In Chicago disaster follows disas ter. Scarcely is the strike settled when a whole menagerie of microbes, cultivated for bacteriological pur poses, escapes and runs at large over the city. While the Health Depart ment was moving its effects from one building to another the get-away was made. We are told that various and vigorous schlzomycetes, schlzo phyta and micrococci, not to speak of the deadly streptococci, are wander intr at will about Chicago, seeking Whom they may devour. These es caped disease germs Include specimens of hay fever, diphtheria, cholera mor bus and delirium tremens. It is to be hoped that the entire police force of Chicago will be detailed forthwith to round up and corral these bati5 tcria. particularly the d- t How can any Chlcagoan even a teetotaler and a prohibitionist escape infection when there Is a group of d. t mi crobes chasing around town? Think of the predicament of a virtuous tee totaler having to explain to his wife (hie) how he got 'cm! She never would believe that he hadn't Imbibed. Kings and Chariots. In days of old, when knights were bold And kings in kingly chariots rolled. They used to ride those kings they had In manner, most exceeding mad; For what did mighty monarchs care For common people, cheap as air? They drove their chariots where they cared. No matter how the public fared; And when they cut a subject down Twas one less Hubject for the crown; They plunged along, and gave no heed. There was no limit to their speed By statute set, those days, for, pshaw! The king himself was all the law. But now, although there Is a law. Our kings In chariots - say, "Oh, pshaw! Who cares for common folks, who can't Own autos of their own? We shan't Lot vulgar laws restrain us. No!" So on and on these monarchs go. Fives times as fast as any king Could run hl3 chariot, by JIng! And so these rulers run us down, Whether in country or in town, And never stop to say, beg Pardon for cutting off your leg." They speed ahead, and never car . For common people, cheap as air. In -days of old, when knights were bold. This kingly business got so old That .people wearied, so they took Some knives that had a naughty look. Some snickersnees and other things And went to cutting down the kings. Oho! those people didn't care For common kings, as cheap as air! They never said, "Excuse me. Sire, For rudely making you expire." They went ahead, and never stopped. But chopped and chopped and chopped and chopped. And now but any one can find The moral,, if he isn't blind. ROBERTUS LOVE. Xlvqd and Died Together. (London Mail.) Two brothers, the oldest inhabitants of Long Eaton, died one morning within an hour of each other. Their names were Thomas Maltby. aged 90. and Jabez Malt by, aged 9S. They wero partners as lace manufacturers, and had lived In Long Eaton the whole of their lives. Logic Le Rlre. The Argumentative Man But my. dear fellow. I tell you it's Impossible' for the moon to be inhabited. When It is full It Is all right but when It wanes down to a little crescent where the deuce would all, the people go to? CHINESE VIEW OFTHE BOYCOTT Ctilnese Free Press (San Francisco). An occasional review of the difference between the merchants of China and the United States Government will tend to partially clear the fog from the minds of American statesmen, stump speakers and editors, though In the cases of the last named the effort will Indubitably bo fruit less. The columns of the newsDaDers are laden with reports of meetings of differ ent bodies, fraternal, political, quasi-social, economic and, in some instances, religious. Each of these reports con tains speeches and savin cs by members of their organizations whose Kift"bf ora tor, exceeds their power of reasoning, and ready-made and well-worn sophistries and nau-truths are tirelessly reiterated with nerve-gratlnjr vehemence. No dear, lucid. and concise statement of the trouble be tween one class of Chinese neonle and the American Government can be found in any of the publications. Shallow prophe-.: cles of what will happen if Chinese mer chants are permitted to come to this country, unmoleste.1 bv cruel and nnliwr department regulations. In order to attend to Dusiness to which they have been In vited by the insincere complainers them selves, are proclaimed In every form of phrase which words will lend themselves to. . Tirades of abuse are indulged In; vituperation. Invective, and Insult are heaped upon the character of the Chinese people and the Chinese nation. And all for what? Because some poor dovil of a coollo in' the guise of a merchant once In a remote while succeeds In evading a sleeping subofnclal not often sleeping, however, but very much awake, with palm extended and fingers hooked await ing the dropping of coin to induce a seem ing somnolence. And It one coolie shall gain entrance to this country by such craft or bribery, verily "the bars have been let down" and hordes of Mongolians, unnumbered as the sands on the floor of the sea they have just crossed, pour into this stricken country. The trade of China is urgently solicited by the American people. The people of China are not permitted to come to this country to do the trading. The people of America in the first Instance Invited, urged and provided means to transport Chinese laborers hither. Later, the latter class was found objectionable. A law was passed the exclusion law by the Americans, forbidding the objectionable class from landing in this country, but granting the right to do so to a more favored class the traders among them. By Illegal practices of subordinate offi cials, the traders were so hampered by expense, delays and ill treatment, often barbarous, that their rights as defined by the same law were nullified to the extent of practical prohibition. Appeals were made by the traders and the representa tives of China at the seat of government without avail. Having no other recourse, and to avoid the illegal exactions of money, loss of time by imprisonments to satisfy "the law's delay," and brutal and cruel personal Inflictions, tho traders con cluded to make no further attempts to transact business with the people who held their own law in so light esteem, and withdrew all commercial intercourse with them. These are the causes which led up to the boycott of American goods by the traders of China. The effect of the boy cott is becoming apparent. Already, be fore the refusal to longer trade with the American people has fairly become opera tive, a manifest lessening of the restric tions heretofore ruthlessly practiced is ap parent. Attorneys at the port of San Francisco complain that the local Chinese Bureau now land applicants, coolie or exempt, with but the form of investiga tion, and that their legal practice suffers thereby: that writs of habeas corpus are becoming an almost unknown method of procedure; that the vile Detention Shed is now empty of steamship prisoners; that the Department of Commerce and Labor has reached the point of insanity In its desire to "make a case" with the Ameri can manufacturers and merchants whose trade has been curtailed. If the mere threat of withdrawal of trade (for the boycott Is little more than a threat as yet) has produced so remark able a reversion of Chinese Bureau meth ods at San Francisco (under instructions from Washington without doubt), there Is fair ground to assume that when the movement of the traders of China shall approach positive action, the pressure of the commercial and the moneyed interests of the United States will force a nullifica tion of whatever new Exclusion Law may be enacted but not In the same di rection as hitherto. And It is not out of place for the traders and the higher or ders of the Chinese nation to express a pity for the American people who will shamelessly permit their laws to be made shuttlecocks and to be tossed at will be tween the battledores of commercial in terest and official greed. The 'Chinese merchants hold no objec tion to the presrent Exclusion Law prop erly carried out They refuse to sanction its present mal-adminlatratlon. They de cline to be held prisoners In the "custody" (as Commissioner North with unconscious wisdom puts It) of steamship companies In detention sheds; they object to being starved in these death-Inviting dens; they refuse to be Impoverished by grasping at torneys and grafting officials, high and low. They repel with Indignation the hu. initiation, the robbery, and the brutallty they have hitherto suffered. To all this they enter their earnest protest and regis ter a lasting "kick." Literal. Tales. . .Hardupp Have you a five-dollar bill you don't know what to do with? Smyke Yes. here Is one. Hardupp Thanks but I say, this is a counterfeit! Smyke Well, you asked me for one I didn't know what to do with. In tho Soap. Fliegende Blatter. 'Here, waiter, there are two files in this soup." "Most likely twins, sir." Pioneers. Now York Sun. Strike through the forest to tho clearing, strike! , Blaze the slow trail through tangled hush and brier. O pioneers, take prairie, gulch and pike. And swing the blows that tingle and in spire! Cut greatly onward to tha real desire. Put all your man in toll. And if you take the jungle fierce with Are, Soon shall you out upon the placid soil Beyond tho huge turmoil I The lassoing branches of the sapling willows. The lariat ropes of clinging Ivy strands Shall be burst through, as when a sea of billows Strikes the breakwaters and spreads up the sands! On. pioneers, to unmanned seas and lands: The world love pulls you over With all the. tug of huge and grappling hands Arid all the grip o love! Strike on. earth lover! Forever still a rover! Reach out! The earth Is stale where over human I Wring off the rime of ages, cut the oldt Be Adam and Eve. O man and woman. Start a new world with vigor that wilt hold And set your lusty children starward goaled They cannot fling too high. Let for their sake the mighty earth he rolled All naked to the broad, inspiring skyl There live, and greatly die I Huge waters through primordial gulches pour. Vast peaks lift through the clouda a sword of snow. 1 There lie full valleys and tfie roaring-shore Man only there is lacking! Tet him go! There-start the race that shall stretch out and grow And make the whole world over! Strike axes, pioneers! Hew blow on. blow, Tou vanguard of humanity! Earth lover. Forever atttl a rover. X IN TOMORROWS 1 OREGONIAN Additional to the most comprehen sive telegraphic news of any -Pa-slflc Coast newspaper, the Surfday Oregonian tomorrow will contain: THE MAKING OF A SUCCESSFUL HUSBAND This Is the first of a series of let ters" from a middle-aged man -f the world to his son who Is about to embark on the sea of matrimony. Their broad- humor and unconven tional! ty. coupled with ready sound advice, commend them alike to those who have "been there" and those who are starting on the jour ney. TWO PORTLAND FATHERS OF DISTINGUISHED SONS There reside In Portland the fath ers of George de Forest Brush and Thomas Walker, two painters who have won fame and fortune in the world of art. A contributor throws sidelights on their personality and points out fine specimens of the work on exhibition at the Lewis and Clark Fair. WILD ANIMALS THAT ROCKEFELLER KNOWS No dry zoological treatise, but a very human story of bears, ante lope, moose, elk and buffalo, which a brother of the oil king keeps in seml-caplvlty. He talks entertain ingly about his charges from ac tual observation and experience, and deals in no romances intended for children's books and the lecture platform. AUTO-TILTING AS AN UP-TO-DATE SPORT A unique story, 'vell Illustrated, telling how Detroit girls engage in land tournaments for amusement and recreation. Contests Involve physical danger and call for great nerve and skill. OBADIAH OLDWAY COMES TO THE FAIR The Pioneer Philosopher of Hoaxr vllle has visited the Lewis and Clark Exposition. His first letter I3 devoted to telling how he and "Hannah" reached the city. WHERE SUNLIGHT IS A LUXURY Nowhere Is the light of day so inacesslble as In the down-town district of New York. A corre spondent writes concerning the favored few who work In the upper stories of skyscrapers and look down from high places on the Modern Babylon. GUARDING THE PUBLIC FROM SWINDLERS A Washington correspondent sets forth what Postmaster - General Cortelyou is doing with his all powerful "fraud order," to blast the schemes of bunco men and get-rich-qulck concerns. NATIVE TROOPS AS PHILIPPINE POLICE Frederic J. Haskin writes from Manila telling why brigandage still exists and describes Samar as yet a howling wilderness. FITZSIMMONS LETS OUT SOME SECRETS The ex-champion makes public some queer facts In connection with the Corbett and the Sharkey fights that have never got into the news papers. TWO PAGES OF LIVE SPORTING NEWS The Sunday Orcgonian's sporting department covers the local. North west. Eastern and foreign sporting news. Two pages of live matter are printed every week. Last Sun day the Oregonian covered the football prospects of every college In the Northwest, Illustrated with photographs of captains, coaches and managers. Football and other sports of the season will be reported by experts. MEN FROM EVERY CLIME VISIT THE FAIR Almost every nationality of the world Is represented at the Lewis and Clark Exposition. An Illus trated article pictures some of the quaint visitors who add life and color to the Dream City. TREASURES OF ART AT THE EXPOSITION ' Madame Anne von Rydingsvard. the well-known art critic who has spent several months at the' Ex position, concludes her articles on the art museum with an illustrated article on the landscapes, art photo graphs and miniatures. A PAGE OF WINNERS AT THE LIVESTOCK SHOW Readers of the Sunday Oregonian will be interested in seeing photo graphs of some of the winners of prizes at the Ex'posltion livestock show. The best herds of the United States are represented and the fact that Oregon has carried off so many prizes should be a matter of state pride. PORTLAND DOTTED WITH NEW BUILDINGS . In every section of the city new buildings are rising. Business blofjks, warehouses and residences are tax ing the strength of contractors and carpenters. The building movement and the activity In real estate is reported and Illustrated in The Sun day Oregonian From Behind the Bars. Lend-a-Hand (Oregon Prison Paper), The least the Judge says is the soonest m-onded. . . There is always more or les3 bunco about prison rumors. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make the Jury believe he was thirsty. - "That's a good one Is a phrase that never originated in a prison barber shop. Exercise Is a good thing, but there are times when you don't want to let your tongue get too much of It A prison wit says that those who serve more than one term in prison are doing life on the "Installment plan." When the barber gets mad the razors are always dull when the waiter gets hot the soup Is always cold, and when the shirts don't fit the tailor Is a hum bug. Music has a beautiful language, but If the man with the harmonica wants to get out, and go down on the "Suwanee River." we know a good many of the boys In his immediate vicinity who would be gladly willing to contribute towards buy ing a railroad ticket. His Credentials. Toronto Mail and Empire. Dr. Beadon. a former rector in Eltham. Kent England, one Sunday preached from the text "Who Art Thou?" After reading it he made a pause for the con gregation to reflect upon the words, when a man In a military dress, who at tho Instant was marching very sedately up the middle aisle of the church, supposing It a question addressed to him. replied: "I am, sir, an officer of the Sixteenth Regiment of Foot, on a recruiting party here, and having brought my wife and family with me. I am come to church because I wished to be acquainted with the neighboring clergy and other peo ple." Thl3 ao deranged the divine and astonished the congregation that the sermon, was concluded with considerable difficulty.