1 .THE" MORVIXG OREGOXIAN. THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1903- s snsncRiraoN bates. INVABJABLY IN ADVANCE ' (By MalL) Dally. Sunday Included.' one year.'. $8.00 Dally. Sunday- Included, six months..,. 4.23 E.'ally. Sunday included, three nrcntbs. ;' 2-23 Dally, Sunday Included, one month..'.. -76-Dally. without Sunday, one year. ....... O0 Pally,' without Sunday, atx ffionlhi. ... .2a Dally, without Sunday, three months.. 1.73 Dally, without Sunday, one month. .90 Bund&y,, on ar S-30 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... I SO Sunday and weekly, one year.... -0 BY CAKBXKB. Dally, Sunday Included, one' year 9-00 Dally. Sunday Included, one montii. . . . .79 HOW TO REMJX Band poatoltlce money order, exprefes order or personal check on your local blank. Stamps, coin or eurrsnoy are at the sender's rials. Give pootofllce ad dress In lull. including county and. stats. mttlAUE BATKR. ' . Entered at Portland, Oravoo, JotoBlca as second-Claad Matter. - 10 to 14 Fuis, ..... .....1 oent 16 to 28 ?am. cents SO to 44 Pigo, cents 46. to o Pages... r cents Foreign postage, double rates. 1MFOHTAN1 The postal law are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully prepaid are- not ..forwarded to destination. -EA&mjtN BUSINESS OF1CB. ' The 8. C. Beckwltu boeclal Asenoj New York, rooms 48-60 Tribune building- Chi cago, roams S10-542 Tribune building. HETT ON bALB. . Chicago Auditorium Annex; Pos toffies News Co., 178 dearborn street. bt, Paul, Mian M. St. Marls, Commercial fitatlon. Colorado Springs; Colo. Bell. H. B. Denver Hamilton and Kendriuk. 008-912 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store, fifteenth street; H. P. Hansei 8. Rice. Geo. Carson. " Kansas City, Slav Rlokseeker Clrer Co., Ninth and. Walnut; Toma News Co. Minneapolis M. J. CaWnaueh, M South Third! ' ' Cleveland, O Jamas PusHaW. SOT Su perior street. Washington, D, 0. Ebbltt Bouse, Penn sylvania avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. Ryan's Thoatsr Tlckst Office; Penn News Co. New York City L. Jones at Co.. Astor House: Broadway Theater News Stand; Ar thur Hotallng Wagons; Empire News Stand. Ogden D. L. Boyle; Lost Bros, 114 Twenty-fifth street. Omaha Barkalow Broa, Union Station; aiaeeath Stationery Co. ' . Ies Moines, la. !Mose Jacoba Sacramento, CaU Sacramento News Co., 430 K-strect; Amos News Co. 8a It Lake Moon Book Stationery Co.; Rosenfeld k Hansen; a. W. Jewett, P. O. corner. f.os Angclri. B. B. Amos, manager .ten street wagons. " Pasadena, Cnl. Amos News Co. Snn .lMego B. B. Amoa. . ' Long Beach, CaL B. E. Amos.' Han Jose, Cal. St. James Hotel News Stand. ' .Dallas. Tex. Southwestern News Agent, 844 Main street; also two street wagons. Amurillo, Tex. Tlmmona e Pope. Sun frranclsco Poster as orear; Ferry News Stand;. Hotel St. Fronds News Stand; I Parent; N. Wheatley; Falrmount Hotel; News Stand; Amos News Co.; United News Agents. 14 Eddy street; B. B. Amos, man ager three wagons. ' Oakland. Cal. W: K. Johnson, Fourteenth and 1'ranklln streets; N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; B. K. Amoa, .manager -Ave wagons - ' Uoldfleld, Nor. Louis Follln; a -.B. Hunter. t ." Kurrlra, CaL Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. . PORTLAND. THURSDAY. JAN. . ISO. KEMARKASSLE YAJUANTS. Between men like Wlllett,- of Now Tork', -who on Tuesday last ' In the House denounced .tMe President for having caused -the panic by the course he has pursued towards the trusts and the operators In fr.antlc finance, and Tillman,: of. South Carolina, ' who re cently denounced him for not having gone further and turned on the hand tuffs when ho turned 'on the light, there is a. chasm deep and wide. Wll lett represents tire plungers' of New York, who revel In. high finance; vhlle Tillman represents the Socialist's and Populists o the country, who would have all the rpeculators. and gamblers and brigands of finance thrown Into bastlles, without lail or benefit of clergy. But both these remarkable men, Wlllett and Tillman, are Demo crats. W may fear from their ut terances that Roosevelt could not' please their party whatever he might do. "We want cher,," said Mr.. Wlllett. "We do not want our Chief Executive going ttzp and down the country knocking with his big stick the men who hold the reins' of our great in dustrial and financial institutions." "Why does'1 the President content him self with denouncing the 'infamies of predatory -wealth?" asks Tillman. "After all his taik about these male factors and their villainies, I do' not happen to find a single one of them in prison-' ' . . : '. Perhaps Mrt Wlllett will now take notice that- Mtr. F. Augustus Heinze, one of these eminent men wt?h whom the panic started, end exposure of whose operatioins In copper was Us Immediate cauae', has' bsen indicted for bank frauds, by ovec-certiflcation of checks In vast- amounts in connec tion with promotion of certain of these great Industrial interests which it is complained have been hit with fhe big stick. Perhaps It has. by this time been noticed by Mr. Tillman that juries are slaw to "convict, and do not take orders from the Chief Executive; and, moreover, X'-.a., ven after con viction these malefactors are usually in position to appeal and gtfe bail. Would Mr. Tillman have the Chief Executive orCer the handcuffs put on, notwithstanding? It may be remembered that' the President In his latest message said that "both the condlgon-of the law and the present temptfr of Juries ren der It a task of extreme difficulty to got at the real wrongdoer in any such case, especially by lrujprisonment." This fact men like Mr. Wlllett rejoice In, while men like Mr. Tillman ex plore it. ' Every feature of this business was covered by the President In his recent message. "The -overnment, he said, "must submit to irksome and repeated delay before obtaining a final decision .of the courts upon proceedings Insti tuted, and even a favorable decree may mean an empty victory. More over, to attempt to control these cor porations by lawsuits means to Impose upon both the Department of Justice and the courts an Impossible burden; it Is hot feasible to carry on more than a limited number of such suits." This ought to be a sufficient answer to Hose who express dissatisfaction with the President because he hasn't promptly ordered the handcufis on. The other sort, who think It mere per secution to call any of the "operators" to account, and believe they all ought to have a free 'hand In opportunities' for plunder and . oppression, never again, will find this so -satisfactory a world as they .have h re. -fore en joyed. ... . Land. Commissioner .Ealllnger . will retire from offlce March 1, after re organizing and placing on a business basis the affairs of the General Land Offlce at Washington. His worth as a public official was shown by the Presl- dent's remark that In Balllnger ' he had a $20,000 -man for a $5000 salary- Some difficulty will be experienced In replacing -him with another $20,000 man, although there are plenty of $1000 men Who are willing to take the place at a J500TJ salary.. If the Gov ernment would pay more-$20,000 sal aries to men who were worth that figure, quite a saving would be effected In lopping off the dead timber which now absorbs bo many salaries ranging from ' $2000 up to even more than $5000 per year. BCT STTPPOSK HE SHOULD KB ELECTED Dr. Albert Shaw, of the American Review of Reviews, offers some re marks. . Here are some of them: If the Chicago convention should declare that m Its Judgment, the Presidential electors In the several states ought to cast their ballots for Mr. Roosevelt, and should decline to nominate anybody else, the men nominated as Republi can electoral In . their several states would. If elected, doubtless cast their votes for air. Roosevelt. And It the Republicans should have a majority In tbe electoral- college Mr. Roosevelt would tie declared elected when'the votes were counted In due form.. Under those circumstances It Is not to ha supposed that any man could ' decline to take the oath of offlce Jf In possession of hi phys ical ami mental! powers. Mr. Roosevelt .has not said that ' he would refuse to serve as President It elected. He has merely said that he would not accept a nomination. .' His platform la contained In his last message to Congress. Tf the American people chooss to make him President no acceptance of a nom- inauon would be absolutely necessary. Among the closest personal friends of Mr. Roosevelt is Dr. Albert Shaw. HTDMBRJuFrS PAROUS. The parole, of Hembree Illustrates' the tact that our authorities are disin clined to treat crime as a serlo'us mat ter. Nobody seems to be--responsible for his escape from Justice. The cir cumstantial evidence against him was little short of demonstrative, yet It did not convince the Prosecuting Attorney that he was g-ulUy, The Jury ought to have hanged him unless he was in nocent, yet they convicted him of manslaughter. According to the ver dict the Jury did not know whether to pronounce Hembree guilty or Inno cent; so they split the difference. The Judge who sentenced him did ridt hear the trial, and therefore knew nothing' about him. Everybody worked in the dark-. Now comes his parole, which makes him substantially a free man after a year in the penitentiary.: The Gover-. nor says the statute virtually compels him to grant a parole if the prisoner's conduct in prison has been good, and that he has no right to take anything else into 'consideration. Tet the very law- which the Governor quotes to jus tify himself says in the plainest lan guage that prisoners, "may.be paroled for good conduct by the Governor"; it nowhere says that they must be pa roled. The 'matter is wholly discre tional, with Mr. Chamberlain. No law obliged him to parole Hembree. Nor was .it necessary for him to grant the parole at the end oC Hembree's first year in prison. It could, have- been granted "at any time after" Hembree had served the minimum period of his indeterminate sentence. Again, although the. only lawful ground for -granting the parole was Hembree's conduct while In prison, yet the statute' declaref that the rec ord of the prisoner's conduct' "sball not preclude the Governor from ob taining other Information in regard to said prisoner." It- follows that .Mr. Chamberlain ercs when he says the statute allows him "no discretion if the prisoner's conduct 1n the peniten tiary has been ,god." The "fact Is that it, allows him every discretion. Indeed, It is the main, intent of the law. .that the Go verndr "shall exercise a sound discretion in paroling prison ers.' Nothing Is to be done by ma chine methods, or by routine or in the dark. The parole law is an excellent statute,- or a most pernicious one, ac cording to the way It Is administered: If it is administered blindly and care lessly. It may Injure society .beyond, es timate. If it is administered wisely and -cautiously it may become a stanch pillar of Justice and prove a great reformatory measure. Here, as everywhere else, we are driven to the conclusion that excellence and vicious ness are not so much Inherent in' the laws as in those wh .adml-ister them. RELXKF FOR. TTLXAMOOK.. , The periodical complaint over lack of transportation' facilities between this city and Tillamook is again heard, this time somewhat louder than usual because the population of the thriving coast port has increased end a greater amount of freight is Required. , Ac cording to complaint made before the Manufacturers' Association, as well as through communications received by The Oregonlan, the trouble Is largely due to the fact that Mr. Elmore, who controls the steamers plying there, re gards the Tillamook business as of secondary importance to his cannery trade along the coast. For weeks the docks - in Astoria have . held ' large amounts xf freight shipped from this city for Tillamook merchants. Some of this freight was ordered for the Christmas trade, and may .not reach Its destination before next. Spring. The congestion has become so seri ous that an embargo has been de clared by the O. R: 4, N. Co., which handles the- freight .between Portland and Astoria, and no more will be re ceived until the Astoria docks are cleaned up. The trade of Coos Bay was not regarded as worth cultivat ing until F. P. Baum3jtner, of this city, after a personal canvass of both buyers and sellers at Portland and Coos Bay, . 'convinced '4he owners of the. Alliance tttat a profitable trade could'be worked up. As a result, two regular steamers - are now engaged and Portland is doing more businses in many lines on Coos Bay than is handled from San Francisco. The Til lamook trade is not as large as that of Coos -Bay. but It is worth attention, and with proper transportation facili ties would, show a large Increase. Mr. Elmore's boats have at intervals in the past had opposition on the route, and at such times they gave a fre quent and satisfactory service at low rates until the opposition ceased. " What is needed is a larger and speedier craft than the Elmore. It should be one that can get over the Tillamook bar in ordinary weather and also come up the river to Port land and avoid the 'unsatisfactory trans-shipment of freight at Astoria. A news item in the papers a few days ago stated that a fleet of fifteen steam schooners "was lying idle at Oakland Creek, San Francisco. Some of these may be or too deep draft for TiftR mook except at high tide, but among the number there are . some which could be used to advantage in tha't trade. It would be impossible, how- ever, to induce the owner of a vessel to place her on the route unless ship pers were willing to enter into an agreement to remain loyal to the new line, regardless of what rates or serv- , ice might be given "by the old line, i which .has so signal failed In .giving I a satisraciory service. The) present service, is In most re spects worse than nei service, " as It fails to give the slightest satisfaction and prevents Inauguration of a line which could offer the facilities needed. WUEH A STRAP 19 NOT -A WRUr. Circuit Judges and District . Attor neys, as well as attorneys generally, should give heed to the decision of the State Supreme Court, handed down Tuesday, reversing the Judgment qf Judge William- Smith, of Baker Coun ty, in the case of two men who. were found guilty of beating a woman with a leather 'strap. Since the two men were found gutlty by a Jury of their peers, twelve men Joining in the ver dict. It may be assumed that the facts are unquestionable, and that the men did beat the woman with a leather strap, as alleged. The two men were Indicted under a statute which .makes it'a felony to beat another with a "cowhide,, whip, stick or. like thing," while In this case the . indictment charged a beating with a "leather strap." .The Indictment was found faulty because it did not allege that a leather strap is like 'a cowhide, whip or stick. . .. ' At first glance it would appear" that District Attorney Lomax was neglect ful. In failing to place In' the indict ment an allegation that a leather strap is like, a cowhide, and that Cir- . cult Judge Smith was careless in per mitting the. case to go to trial upon such a defective complaint, but upon further consideration it' will appear that the fault may have been largely that of the woman, who was probably the principal witness in the case. Al most -certainly it was the fault of the woman, for. have not all faults, from, the tlrrie of Eve, been' properly. attrib utable to woman? Now In this par ticular case It may be 'that, in the ex citement of being beaten, the' woman did not notice whether the leather strap was piade of cowhide or not, and, being unwilling to run the risk of perjury, she did not. swear in the pre liminary examination to any more she knew. 'If the woman could-not swear that the leather strap- was a cowhide, and not a piece of horsehlde. bubkskln, pigskin or sheepskin, of course the District Attorney could not put In' the Indictment the charge that it was a cowhide. There being, too, a very marked difference-' between a leather strap and a cowhide, he could not be- .expected to insert an allega tion that It was like a cowhide. Some of the censure that is due should fall upon the circuit Judge, for not dis missing the Indictment in the ' first place and saving -the time and trouble and cost of an appeal to the Supreme Court. The extent of the censure that is due is a matter upon which opinions will differ. " ' The lesson jot this case Is an impor tant one. In . the future when a woman is beaten by ' two men. who have in .their possession a gun with intent to prevent h?r from-defending herself, the victim- should take partic ular notice of ..the material of which the whip or3trap Is made, and if, in the course1 of the beating, any pt the frayed ends of the instrument of pun ishment should fall to the ground, she should get possession of ' them and carefully preserve them for the use of the District Attorney in preparing the allegations .'of r -the indictment. Dis trict Attorneys should refuse td Indict. men under this statute unless . the women who are beaten can swear positively as to the kind of wip' used upon themf. --. ' .,,'.- ' - . . A HISTORIC PARAIXJSt. The trust organs In 'New Tork are In raptures over a "historical parailel" between .this country and the Spain of Philip II,' which, a correspondent of the Evening Post has constructed with great labor. . Spain at that time was under "political despotism, religious despotism, -commercial despotism; the hands of the ' government were on every branch of Industry," with the result that the country swarmed with beggars. The inference drawn-by the . Jubilant Wall-street press is. that Mr. Roosevelt's policy of enforcing the law will produce similar results here. The above historical parallel is one Of those disingenuous tricks to which shallow brains resort in the hope that ignorant people will be misled by them. What semblance of religious despotism has Mr. Roosevelt trie'd to impose on the country? .Not even his most virulent enemies accuse him of anything of the sort. Y.et religious despotism lies at the root of Spain's perennial troubles. As for political despotism, to talk about such a thing in this country proves that a man is either crazy or crafty. Probably the' Evening Post's correspondent Is both. Commercial despotism, again, . is the one' thing above all. others from which Mr. Roosevelt is endeavoring to liber ate us. The. trusts and syndicates see the' chains breaking which they have riveted upon the trade of the Nation; hence their tears. ' v. ..We could cite them to a much more accurate historical parallel,, were, it worth while. We could point to me dieval Germany harried and plundered by the-robber barons." There Industry was paralyzed,- the people dying In' misery, the fields wasted by fire,- and the cities harried with -the sword, while bands of peasants frenzied by hunger ranged the country, seeking vainly Tor food.-' This state of things was the result of haying no strong central government to enforce the laws. Every baron was a law unto himself, just as every trust was in the United States until Mr. Roosevelt In tervened and stayed their ravening hands. The' condition of 'Gerrrfany under the robber barons bears a genu ine likeness to that of the United -States under the rule of the pirate trusts. Just as governmental weak ness produced anarchy there, so it will here. So It has already here, to a de gree; and If we escape the full horrors of such a condition It will be only because Mr. Roosevelt has, 'foreseen the future and taken measures to avert the impending evils. . A new chapter is about to be added to the spectacular story .of the life of F. Augustus Heinze! The Federal grand jury In New Tork seems to have succeeded where the Standard Oil crowd failed, and a very serious Indictment hangs over the head of the Montana plunger who will live ' In financial history as the only man who ever made Rogers, Rockefeller et aL dance while : ho 1 racked the -whip. Heinze has a very plausible explana tion to make for his .certification -of checks which were worthless, but he cannot make It In a Montana court room before a Heinze judge. The en vironment In which the ex-Napoleon of the copper world Is now living Is, for him, about as healthy as that of the wounded wolf ' that falls in the chase, only to be -torn to pieces by the ravenous pack with which It had been running. - With old Massachusetts proposing' t-o establish a forest reserve system by purchasing waste lands now in the control of private -owners, the resi dents of this state should realize the Importance of conservation of" timber resources. Here in Oregon, one of the chief ends, accomplished by forest re serves is retention -of ownership In the Government, thereby preventing a monopoly ol timber which would have resulted inevitably If the remain ing timber lands were placed orr sale. In Massachusetts the purpose "is to buy up waste lands and plant them to forest tfes as a practical demonstra tion to lumbermen of the benefits -of that system of maintaining a supply. If It Is profitable to grow forest trees in a state as thickly settled as Massa chusetts, surely It will . be . profitable to preserve the waste mountain lands of Oregon so that Nature may again clothe them with giant pines, spruce and firs. ' In Qson jt' jB unnecessary to plant forest trees. Wherever fire or the ax has denuded the hills, the trees are reproduced by natural prp cesses. The question in Oregon Is whether the . Umber, when grown, shall belong to' Weyerliauser or the people. Of- course. James Hamilton Lewis, whose- reputation for gallantry is not even secondary to his solicitude for his whiskers, did not really mean that all women were liars when they were on the witness stand. The remark with which he is credited, and which Is said to have raised a storm 'In -Illinois, was undoubtedly meant In a Pickwickian sense only. Besides, the ladies should remember that so close a student of human nature as Robert Emmet Burke, the big chief of the Illinois Democrats, has ' expressed fears that the gallant Colonel James Hamilton Lewis would not make a good candidate for- Governor because he "would be regarded as a jest." Certainly no one, not even a lady, could take offense at a jest, especially when it- was as harmless and daintily perfumed and groomed as the Inimita ble Lewis. A Seattle real estate man, testifying at Olympia, before the Railroa'd com mission, stated that real estate values in tldelapde had decreased 25 per cent since. June, 1906. If Mr. Harrlman would -test the market by offering for sale some of the choice tideland gold bricks that were handeM him w.hen he was seeking terminal facilities at the Queen' City," he would regard the- ex pert's estimate of the decrease a3 ex ceedingly mild. In Portland real es tate values are higher than they were in June, 1906, and no choice property can ba purchased at a lower figure than - prevailed before tl.e recent financial slump. Portland property Xalues were not forced to the unrea sonable heights attained . In Seattle, and there was tccordlngly less liabil ity of a decline. ' Stuyvesant Fish is still expressing confidence' that he will .win In the fight for control of the Illinois Central Meanwhile Mr. Harrlman, the party of the second part, is following the example of Br'er Rabbit, who "Jes kep on sayin' nuffin'." Mr". Fish bases his victory on scouring a majority of the stock, exclusive of about .one-third of the Issue, which is tied up by lnjunc tion, because it is owned by the Union Pacific. If Mr. Fish should win in the present - controversy, Mr. Harrlman would probably sell the stock which is tied up by Injunction, to John Doe or Richard Roe, and they - would then vote It as they saw fit. ... Mr. Fish has much work cut out for him before he regains .control of the road from which he was ejected by Mr; Harrl man. ' ' ' George Dixon, colored pugilist. who, during his sporting career, "fought 212 battles arid won most of them," .died Monday in the alcoholic ward of Belleyue Hospital without money and without' friends. It is briefly recorded of him that he went the. way, through dissipation and final disappointment of all pugilists - and died at- the- early age of 37 years. Text Is given and sermon preached in this brief record. It is the summing up In a few words of all that there Is to say of a life lived upon the lower levels of humanity the stereotyped record of- men of his class and pro fession. Poultry is to he, and is,. fast becdm lng, one of the greatest matters of in terest and sources of wealth to the people of Oregon. It is sure to beat many interests and industries that have . been more pretentious. This week the finest exhibit of poultry ever seen In -Oregon is at- East Alder, and Grand avenue, in Portland. It is the exhibit . of the Oregon ' State Poultry Association., It is worth your while. city man, country man, fo see it. Re malnder of the .week. If there Is to b- n open trial of the Waymire case, the court ought to sit In the Armory. Even then the- crowd would lack room. One of the old buildings at the .fair' grounds might be better still. The people want to. know about that dastardly- attatk upon the Mayor and want to. be pres ent at his-vindication. Everybody who goes among the people, out in the country arid round about, returns with -.the report that the people are for Roosevelt, and if they ean't get- him,, are for Bryan. Question now Is ' whether -Mr. Bourne, who supported Bryan afore time, wiy support Bryan again, if Roosevelt should not be "in It" for the "second elective term." To sa.ve valuable time, let the City Council make a merger of streetcar fender and crematory legislation and do something before next New Tear's. All things considered, Mr. Heinze ought to have been satisfied with his victories in Montana. The colony of ex-officers of National banks at Leavenworth is soon to be increased. fexPAXSION CRT FOR DEMOCRACY "Party Must Affirm Wisdom of Historic Pellclea; Retain Philippine.". Brooklyn Easle, Dem. There was a matter In the Bryan plat form and In the Parker candidacy of 1904 which the Eagle would now renew to attention: It relates to the. Philippine situation. The Eagle having accomplished or originated tha nomination of Judge "Parker, said what it could fo? his- elec tion, but out of a sense of courtesy and fidelity, kept silence 'on a subject about which it would" not keep silence again. The subject, as ' said, Is the relation of the -United States to Its Philippine de pendencies. The Eagle believes in retain ing and ruling them. . It will support no candidate in the future who believes otherwise. The people of the United States have never given up any poses- sforus they have obtained by war or pur chase, and probably never will" give up any such possessions. .If the" Eagle is a Democrat, democracy signifies 'expansion. If democracy signifies anti-expansion, the Eagle la not a Democrat. We might not be so Insistent upon more debatable pro positions, but we regard the maintenance by the United States of Its dependencies to be vital, and the .future debatabillty of that proposition we will- never concede. There are thousands and .hundreds of thousands of men who regard themselves to be Democrats, and who agree with the Eagle on this head. The Democratic party, under Thomas Jefferson, acquired the vast territory known as the Louisiana purchase. That acquisition was opposed by the Federalist of that day, and the Federalists were overthrown. The Demo cratic party afterward acquired large pieces, of territory on the line of the Pacific, and they have been retained. These enlargements came by expansions. One of. the expansions came by war. As aald, both have been retained. They mtide our Republic continental. By other ex pansions extra continental dependencies have come to us and them we hold In the interest of civilization, as we' did the ojhers. . If an anti-Bryan Democrat be selected at Denver for candidate; if he be placed on a truly Democratic platform; If part of that truly Democratic platform shall affirm the expansion 'of the. last 20 years to. be admUable . and ' unchangeable, oer- manent and: benign, the result' to be as"! hallowed as .the 'expansions 'Jefferson, Madison. Jackson and Polk effected, then the reunion of the . party can be' accom plished. Those Who were and still are wrong must give way and. Sway to those who are right on this head. If the errbr- Ists will not do this, the custodians of historic Democratic principles will find room and welcome and vindication in other fields' and oiher forces, and will dq so without . doubt or misgiving. A PHASE OP PROHIBITIO'V. Men Whe Vete Prohibition, I'ae Liquors Themselves, Springfield -(Mass.) Republican. President E. J. Curley, of the Distillers' Security Company, says that prohibitory laws do not diminish consumption of whisky; their only effect is to change the channels and methods of distribution. Mr. Curler's company should certainly be In possession of facts throwing light upon the question which "he raises. It Is an extended owner of whisky distilling plants, and when the liquor traffic Is forced by prohibition to operate below the surface. If it operates at all. It quite naturally deals In distilled . spirits more than in the bulkier malted intoxicants.. Thus -the distilling companies might gain through prohibition at the expense of the brewing .companies, but in any case they are especially In a position to know certainly of what Mr. Curley speaks. If what he' says is. true, the public should have the facts in. substantiation. There is of coarse no sort of question that prohibition has never yet succeeded In . achieving its . professed end of com plete, or anything like, a complete, .sup pression of the sale and .use of alcoholic intoxicants. Many of those who sup port that . policy are more or less moderate drinkers' and have rro intention of cutting themselves off from the usual supplies. They advocate prohibition either in hypocrisy or an honest desire, to abolish the temptation offered by the open saloon and perhaps to force upon others habits which they will not. -follow themselves. If prohibition .were to be made really and completely effective, the vote of this 'class of its supporters might be Interesting' to watch. We -do not anticipate that much will' come from the -proposed 'amendment to the National law making-it possible for the authori ties of. a prohibition state to halt and confiscate shipments of liquor at the borders, no matter to whom consigned; for it would be made difficult to pick out easily from the mass of express and freight packages entering the state those which contained intoxicating liquor. But so far as that Is possible it is desira ble to the end that .those Who: In hypoc risy vote for prohibition may also have what .they voted for. American Girls Buy Titles: I) Wore. . . Chicago Record-Herald. . Eva Bryant Mackay. Sait- Francisco, to Don Ferdinando Oolonna, Prince Castigliano. divorced. Edith L. Collins, New Tork, - to Count Czaykowskl, divorced. ' " . Bessie Curtis, New Tork, to Marquis de Talleyrand-Perlgord, Duo da Dlno, divorced. May Caroline Cuyler. Morrlstown, N. J., to Sir Philip Grey-Egerton, divorced. Anna Gould, New, Tork, to Count de Castellane, divorced. ' . ' Alice - Heinse. New Orleans," to reigning prince of Monaco, separated. Helen Morton, New Tork,. to Count Boson de Talleyrand-Perlgord, divorced. Anne Held, New Tork, to Sir Arthur Aylmer, divorced. Adele Sampson, New Tork, to Due de Dlno, divorced. Clara Ward, Detroit, to Prince de Chlmay, divorced. Cbnsuelo Vanderbilt, New Tqrk, to Duke of Marlborough, separated.' Wllhelmlna Wlnans. "Baltimore, to Sir Merrik Burrell, divorcedi Miss Wheeler, Philadelphia, ,to Count Poppenheim, divorced. ' . a raw SQUIBS. The Dentist Now, Johnny, - brace ap. It'll be all over In a minute Boy Yes, but aee. taina- of that min ute! Puck. "Tommle, how do yon make' a triangle ?" " "Pull one side , out of a sauare and .slue the loose ends."-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Phil. O. So&her Don't . worry, old man. Chickens always come home to roost, you know.. . Dlscourae-ea jrriene res arter tney have laid their evgs In some ether fellow's barn. Judg. t . "Now, then, children." '.said the teacher, "what Is it we want most in this world to make us perfectly happy?" De things we ain't cot!" shouted the bright boy In the back seat."? Philadel phia Press. . "I met Dunkey today for the first time In years. He hasn't changed much. "Oh. he hasn't changed at all.- but he doesn't seem to realise It." ' "How do you' mean?" "Oh, he's forever talking about 'what a fool he used to be.' ' Philadelphia Press. The IjSdy So you are an old soldier? How thrilling! Tell me what is the nar rowest escape you ever had. The- Swatty Well, mum. oncet ' I was transferred from a regiment Jest two days before it. wux ordered to the "Fillerpeens! Cleveland Leader. The -Assyrian was scratching some hiero glyphics on a brick. "What you writing?" asked his chum. "Hanged. If I know." re sponded the engraver, "but I guess some of those Aseyriotogtsts of the twentieth century can ' translate It all rlaht" Phila delphia Public Ledger. POOR PAT IX UNITED STATES ARMY Private Soldiera Receive Less Money Today Tha 40 Years Ago.' Brooklyn Standard-Union. Interesting facts and figures upon which the of fleers of the Army and the War Department base their claims are given -In a circular Just compiled by Captain Johnson Hagood. of the Coast -Artillery Corps, at the direction df the department. Among other tilings. Cap tain Ha-good showa'that the private. Corporals and Sergeants receive less money tod-ay than they did 40 years ago. For the line 6f tho Army It la shown that the base pay for a prtvate Is $13 a'month. Frotn-lS64 to 1171-the pay of a private was $16. In the Engineer Corps, however, the private now receives $17 a month, while a first-class private In the Hos pital Corps receives 118 a month. At the end of the third year the private in the Infantry, Cavalry and Field Ar tillery receives $14 a month, and the compensation increases to $22. which la given at the end of the 25th year of service. After the 30th, and until tha 35th year of service, $23 Is given. Small additional monthly- pay Is given to the men in the various grades for high' qualification In target practice, foreign service, for certificates of mer it, for distinguished service and for extra duty not pt a military character. What the Government allows the sol dier in addition to his pay and what the enlisted man must pay for Is also shown. Th'e allowance consists of clothing, rations, lodging, medieal ' at tention and medical supplies. The al lowance for clothing, it is stated, amounts to an average of $54.43 a man, sufficient for the average man, and in cludes all the" uniform the soldier wears. He la not provided with hand kerchiefs, towels or toilet articles, such as soap, brushes and razors. All alter ations to. uniforms, must be made at. the soldier's expense, to be deducted from his monthly pay. It la stated that nearly all uniforms must be altered before used, and no provision Is made for repairing, pressing or cleaning clothing or repairing shoes. Rations,, furnished to the soidien are valued at about 20 cents a day, and the purchase of additional food is another source of expense to the land fighters. From tills statement It would ap pear that the average private has little or nothing left of his monthly pay w4ien thse expenses are deducted, a situation which can have no other ef fect than to niake Army service unat tractive to the vast majority of the young men. The Regular Army, whose authorized strength is 63112. should be plaeed upjon a better basis. It should be the best in the world. While the bulk of the .fighting done in "the event of a war would be done by volunteer forces, yet the nucleus of the Nation's fighters- should be a ' picked body of trained men. Such a force cannot be secured and retained by small pay, such as the law rfbw provides. In view Qf. the existing situation. It Is not sur prising that the actual strength of the Army Is now 20.000 less than iti au thorized, figures. Unless the service be made more attractive by an increase in the rate of pay. It . will "continue to lack recruits and remain in its present disorganized condition. Congress should not postpone the -consideration of the matter. It demands prompt attention. - Bank Depositors Not Losers. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. With the exception of one bank in California whose funds were dishonestly managed, depositors throughout the united states have lost nothing in prm cipal or interest. A few banks have sus pended, some of which have resumed. In those that wind up their affairs' deposi tors will probably be paid In full.. As far as depositors are concerned, the financial flurry of 1007 has not been disastrous, as was the panic of 1857, in which' many lost all the money they had In bank and large share of the bank notes in their safes, and pockets. As soon as .currency payments are "fully resumed depositors can check out money as freely as usual, though to draw more than they need would ba inadvisable. The banks have protected their depositors ' success fully, and are entitled to confidence ac cordingly.- This record of essential solvency will be valuable to the banks and ought to be instructive to depositors. Excited runs hereafter ' will be unlikely, and the ir responsible talk abous the credit of banks will be dismissed with other mischievous gossip. Recent lessons make clear the distinction between financial stringency and blind panic. Money Is in varying de mand in the business world. Sometimes it is tight, but that is no reason why de positors 'Should get scared and make a rush for funds for which they have no immediate use. They will lose nothing In 1WJ. Their considerate appreciation ot the fact Is in order. Habitual Standard OH Duplicity. New Tork Journal, of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin (Ind.). It Is by Illegal advantages In trans portation of crude petroleum and re fined. all that the Standard Oil monop oly has been built up and so estab lished and intrenched that It can now get along without the discrimination and keep competition down, with- Its pipe lines. Its effective organization and Its accumulated capital. It has got beyond the need of some of Its crafty, and unscrupulous methods, but It has not overcome the habit of dupli city wlren It comes to facing penalties' for past misdoing. The Landls fine, if It should ever be collected, would not be a mere penalty for certain ship ments between a polnt'close to Chicago and a point close to St. -Louis over, one railroad, but retribution for a consist ent course of iniquity in securing spe cial rates for transportation which en abled it to slap competition wherever It raised its head. Grip Cases at tha National Capital. Washington (D. C.) Dispatch to the Philadelphia North American. ' Twenty thousand people at Washing ton, D. C., are down with the grip, ac cording to statistics compiled by offi cials who have been looking Into the unprecedented epidemic of this disease that now preavlls. The doctors are worked almost to death. Long lines of persons ' wait -for their prescriptions and druggists are reaping .a harvest. Everybody is liable' to fall victim to the -serins, which, supposed to have been Imported from Russia, bite the plutocrat and the pauper with demo-' cratlc impartiality. Washington, D. Ci, is a good town for grip, but it never knew anything like the present epidemic. Nobody is immune. The estimate of 20,000 cases,' well developed. Is probably moderate. Offices, stores and shops, are semi deserted. The new year came in to greet a bigger proportion of hopeless Incompetents than Washington, D. C, has known in two decades. Preference of Science Over Cash. Hartford (Conn.) Courant. . . It will be remembered that the great Agassis discovered the Calumet & Hecla deposit on the shores of Lake Superior, but said he was too busy to develop, it. He has. received much credit for this superb illustration ef his preference for science over cash-. But, as be passed the word along to his son-, who became immensely rich from the hint, it seems as if the direction- which his Indifference took was also deserving of attention and com mendation, far levidently, wto'tle he pre ferred science to riches, he. also pre ferred, his son to other folks and P"t htm wise at the psychological moment. Thus the family has both money and fame, and nobody begrudges it elthwr. mi.? aNDREW LANG, the poet and eminent literary critic, is not al ways so well dressed as his intimate-friends would like, and It is even said that he Is indifferent as to what he ought to wear. He usually stuffs his coat pockets with magazines, newspapers, etc., until he resembles a walking news stand. The other day he qrdered a fash ionable London tailor to make him a suit of clothes and an overcoat, and the knight of the needle exerted himaelf to please so celebrated a customer. A week passed. Then Lang visited the tailor, and it was noticed that the poet's face had -a querulous expression. '.'My clothes still seem to be unsuit able," complained Lang, "and my friends . won't believe that this xult Is new. What Is the matter with it?" The aristocratic tailor compassionately surveyed his customer. All of Lang's pockets were filled nearly to tbe bursting point with choice assortments of litera ture. 'What can you expect, sir," asked the tailor, "when you make an express wagon of yourself? That suit-was only meant to wear. Since the nublicatinn of "Coniston." nearly two years ago, Winston Churchill has been at work on a new novel the title or subject of which has not yet. by his request, been divulged. His publish ers, the Macrhlllans. slate that the new book will possibly appear about April or May. Marie Corelll holds the English book market as the "best seller.'' Her "Tem poral Power" old 150,000 copies, and "The Sorrows of Satai" are somewhat 'mitigated by a' sale of 52,000. Here is a chance for undistinguished writers. Outing offers a prize of $1,000 for the best novel by one who has never done such a deed before. Address:. Outinc; Publishing Co., Book Dept., Deposit, N. T., before May 8. 19W. An American novelist of the younger set (it wouldn't be fair to. give hla name) ' not very long ago succumbed to the en treaties he received to prepare selections from his shorter stories, to be read at a select gathering of suburbanites In an In diana town. But, alas! he had not cal culated on the fact that. Indiana has authors of her own to whom the natives are somewhat ' partial, and the young author In question had dared to make In one pf his stories what he was pleased to designate as a- "funny illusion" to Booth Tarklngton, whq. by the way, Is an Indianapolis-' man. This was more than the audience could stand, and the remaining readings were received with t. hilling, silence. The unhappy young author sat In the second front seat, looking pale and sad, when he was aroused frorn his lethargy by a tall, determined woman, who had a decided air about her. "Ebtcuse me. sir," she snapped, "at the opening of the readings, 'knowing you to be. the author of them, I took the liberty of picking up your handkerchief .which you dropped, intending to keep it as a souvenir. Allow me now, sir, to return your handkerchief to you. Good night." H. G. Wells has at last' come to the slowly arrived conclusfon that literature as such is doomed and that what he calls "Journalism" or newspaper work Is tak ing Its place. "Journalism does not pre tend to Immortality, and literature does." complains Mr.vWell. "Journalism deals with current reality in terms of current thought, and it appeals Immediately to living and acting readers. In my opinion this Is exactly what the novelist does. What- is the typist, the city clerk, or the, self-educated workingman to make of. Ben Jonson or 'The Faerie Queene'? He has not the capacity to deal with these subjeets. He asks for Intellectual bread, and you give him a fosslll Presently when the working classes come to us to know what they shall read we shall teH them to read journalism, the. book of the hour, .the day, and the week, then they may get rid of the terrible irony of the present day. Literature or classics are things of. the past. We no longer produce them. The industry has died out." see Upton -Sinclair's new novel, "The Metropolis." commences In the current number ef the American magazine. . The Century Company has finished its deservedly admired edition of Ibsen's works, prepared by William Archer. The engagement of Miss Sara Lindsey Coleman of Ashevllle to William Sidney Porter of New York, known to literary fame as O. Henry, is announced. Miss Coleman is a young literary woman and comes from one of the oldest families in the South. . She is the daughter of the late Colonel ThaddeuB Coleman, who served-with distinction In the Confederate army and won renown In laying out the route of -the old Western North Carolina Railway, now the Southern, through the Blue Ridge Mountains, which- is said to have been one of the greatest engineer ing feats ever achieved. An Interesting example ef the manner In which modern research is contributing to Biblical Investigation a mass of ma terial hitherto scarcely regarded as sources for . knowledge of the Bible Is found in . the new work of Dr. Oskar Dahnhardt, of which the first has Just been Issued by the house of B. G. Teub ner .of "Leipzig and Berlin, under the title, "Natursagen: Eine Bammlung naturdeutender Sagen, Marchen, Fabeln uhd Legenden." The present volume Is specially devoted to "Sagen sum Alten Testament." The author, who, as is seen by such books as his. "Naturgeschicht liche Volksmarcben" and "Deutsches Marchenbuch," is a veteran student of folklore; and in his new publication,-he has, with the assistance of a score or more of helpers, of whom 15 are men tioned on the title page, ransacked the saying's and stories of a'l peoples for ma terials illustrative or explanatory of the Old Testament. ' s The Prix Goncourt, of 5009 francs, has fallen this year to Emlle Moselly (Emtio Chenin .In real life), a professor at Or leans, and author of "L'Aube fratemelle" and "Jean des brebls ou le livre de la misere." e e s Miss Mateet Howe, now visiting In this city. Is the daughter of Editor Howe, of the Atchison Globe newspaper. Father and daughter recently enjoyed a trip 'round the world and Mr. Howe has since recorded his Impressions In two volumes. In the current number of the, Indepen dent, Miss Mateel Howe has a brightly written article entitled "How an Amer ican Girl Made up With tha JBngltsh " Japan is coming into the limelight Just .now in literatureno less than . four books being announced simultaneously on the subject: "Shinto, the Ancient Re ligion of Japan," by W. O. Aston; "Old and New Japan," by Clive Holland; "Human Bullets." by .T. Sakurai. and "Life in Japan," by Masujl Mlyakawa. A medical book that Is-certain to cause wrangling is "The Conquest of Cancer," by p. W. Salceby, M. D. It is-described as giving "a plan of campaign being an account of the principles and practice hitherto of the treatment of malignant growths by specific or cancrotoxla ferments."