THE MORNING OREGONIAN. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1903. PORTLAND OREGON. Entersd at Portland. OrtfOD. Fostofflce a Second-Claaa Matter. subscript Ion Kates Invariably la Advance. (Br Mail.) Tn.Ur. Sunday Included. w year JS? Dally, Sunday included, six month..-. Dally. Sunday Included, thraa rnonta. Dal y. Sunday Included, ona month.... Dally without Sunday, ona year i Dally, without Sunday, all month ; Dally, without Sunday, thrt month., a o Dally, without Sunday, ona month ?Y Weekly, ona year J Sunday, on year z jri Sunday and Weekly, on ysax. . ow By Carrier.) Daily. Sunday Included, on year Dally. Sunday Included, ona month i Hoar to Remit Send poetoffle money arder. express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency ar at the sender' risk. Olva postoffice ad dreee In full, including county and lata. Postage Kate 1 to 14 pace. 1 cent; 18 to 28 pace. i east; 10 to 44 pace. cante: 4o to SO pace. 4 cent. Foreign pom ace double ratea Eastern Balnees Office The S. C Bck wltb Special Agency New York, rooms 48 BO Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 610-612 Tribune buildlnc. rOBTXAXD, MONDAY. SEPT. 14. 1B0S. LIGHT FROM YAMHJXL. 'Tis a bad habit some have of "meddling with strife belonging- not to them." The Yamhill Reporter feels that It must "get Into the fray" over a certain Sunday school lesson, which was criticised by The Oregonian for Its misconceptions of David and of the God of Israel; and under the head line, "Vicious Slander by The Ore gonian." It proceeds to say: The editor of Th Oregonian does not in dorse the beliefs of any of ths well-known church org animations, but has a particular auid peculiar doctrine of his own held, how ever, by a few other and proceeds to spout some of It for tho benefit of his read ers on last Frtdave Issue under the title. "David and tha Temple." - In th article mentioned The Oregonian writer ridicule tha position taken "In the published notes to tha Sunday School lesson" by a certain author. . . . Ths reprehensible part of the article In tha aforesaid paper 1 Its using ths assault on ths writer of the notes an excuse for a mora subtle, slurring and contemptible attack upon Jehovah of The Scriptures. Its statement that Jehovah was himself a "man of war." and Its Infer ence that he rather delighted In It la not according to facts and his character will 2 so construed only by the one who reads superficially or who wilfully misrepresents he fact. The News Reporter seldom takes ud a -question of this kind, but It becomes dis trusted when a medium with the wide Influ ence of The Oregonian uses that influence to propegate such doctrines among the weak-minded, and to Insult the good Judg ment of the great number of the strong minded people doctrines, too. which are not according to nature. Scripture pr common Sense. It 1 truly to be regretted that The Ore gonian will o often mix truly 'rotten edi torials along with excellent ones. The Oregonian humbly apologizes both to the "weak-minded" and to the "strong-minded." and to the able her ineneutist of Yamhill, who seems to have assumed the guardianship of both. It certainly is an original re mark that "The Oregonian has made a contemptible attack on the Jehovah of the Scriptures." It reminds one of Sydney Smith's witticism about the man who spoke disrespectfully of the equator. All open-minded students of the He brew Scriptures know that Israel's conceptions of Jehovah, or Yahweh, underwent great changes, during the long period of more than one thou sand years, covered by the Old Testa ment writings. The earlier concep tions of Deity, as therein shown, were puerile, crude, anthropomorphic. Je hovah was first conceived as a family God; then as a tribal God bloody and cruel. It was much later, in their theodicy, that he was conceived as the God of the human race, in whose hands rests the moral government of the world. In the development of these conceptions, during the long ages of the history of Israel, appeared those characteristics, mention of some of which is called by our Yamhill critic a "vicious slander by The Ore gonian." Have we a right to read rlth understanding? Then how are ne to escape observation, in the text, of those conceptions of Deity which would require us to believe that God to blundered in the creation of man as to repent and find It necessary to destroy his own work: that he select ed one favored people from the rest of his children, and was Indifferent to or cruel towards all others; that he sanctioned fraud, commanded cruelty and contended for a while In vain with the magic-of other gods; that he wrestled bodily with one patriarch, and ate cakes and veal with another; that he participated in human pas sions, ordered robbery and plunder, commanded his people to slay their enemies, except the women, whom they were to keep for themselves and much more? Of course, the fact is that -among any primitive people, any people In the early stages of their development, the idea or conception of Deity Is but a reflex of their own stage of growth. 'With lapse of time these conceptions became higher and purer with Israel. Jewish scholars know how to interpret their own history; but the writers of some of our Christian Sunday school lessons, and their apologists, either 2ave no knowledge of the principles of literary and historical Interpreta tion, or studiously obscure what knowledge they have. The ancestors of all of us once were savages, and their conceptions of De ity necessarily conformed to that con dition. The idea of God. of a God, appears In lowest fetich worship and in all songs and incantations and threnodies, such as we used to hear among our Indians of the Northwest in early times. It appears in the frescoes of Michelangelo in the SIstine Chapel at the Vatican, and In his works in mar ble at Florence. It appears in all the works of great men of all ages in poetry, in painting, in sculpture and In architecture, who' have attempted to portray or to represent their idea of the Infinite. All the crude representa tions of It were seen by our pioneers in the Oregon Country. In the early time. The songs, the dances, the Incanta tions, the rhythmic movement and ehoriamblc dance and flow of words, corresponding with the chorus of the Greek tragedy of which our pioneers however knew nothing, but which, when one studies the matter, show the same animating principle or in spiration, all attest the same religious principle, universal In man. They who quarrel over the infinite manifes tations of It and mistake the husk for the fruit are among our least wise. No mere formula of religion Is good for anything. "The Kingdom of God Is within you." The New York bank statement, which appeared last Saturday, for the fcrct time this season showed a sub stantial increase in loans. As the de posits increased but $13,684,000. while loans expanded $38,351,000. there was for the first time in many" weeks a heavy decrease In the surplus reserve. The reserve Is still above $50,000,000 in excess of legal requirements, and, as the last week's changes were all due to the shipment of money West and South for crop-moving purposes, there is nothing unfavorable in the state ment. It is somewhat remarkable that there has up to this time" been such a light movement of funds from New York. If last week's movement continues, there may be a slight hard ening in the money market, but an other change, will soon follow when the crop-moving money begins on the return flow after the crop is marketed. SACCK FOR BOTH GOOSE AND GANDER. If every Democrat in Oregon who registered as a Republican and made oath to his registry should vote for Taft, there would be 50,000 Taft ma jority In the state. And every Democrat thus registered Is under as strong moral obligation to vote for Taft as any Statement One Republican, of the Legislature is to vote .for Chamber lain; and stronger for solemn oath obligates one and no oath the other. But it "Will be said by Democrats who have registered as Republicans yet won't vote for Taft, that It is the vot ing that counts, not the registration. Then will it not be the voting on Sen ator in the Legislature that counts, not a juggle of pre-election state ments? It seems that every one of our Democratic brethren considers, him self at liberty to change his mind be fore an election to pledge one thing In advance, and then do another when the election comes on but his politi cal opponents are to have no such liberty. You see on one side there is "a moral obligation," on the other, none. There is nothing obligatory for Democrats; everything is obligatory for their opponents. To hell with such a game! WHO SPEAKS FOB UNION lABORt Is or is not union labor in politics? The Portland Federated Trades Coun cil says It (s; the National executive council of the American Federation of Labor says it Is not. "We shall In the future, as we have in the past," declares the executive council, in reso lutions adopted Saturday, "shape our course on a nonpartisan basis. . . . We have so conducted and propose so to conduct our course that the labor movement shall remain as free and Independent from political partisan domination as It has ever been In its history." It is clear, then, that the American Federation of Labor is. not for Bryan or Debs or any other can didate for President, and that it is taking no part In the campaign made by certain labor leaders against Taft. Indeed, these resolutions must be re garded as a distinct official repudia tion of any effort by anybody to In volve union labor in the present cam paign. This Includes the Portland Trades Council. Does the American Federation of Labor or does the Federated Trades Council, a subordinate body, speak for organized labor? What busi ness had the Portland Council to suggest to any of Its members that they vote for anybody or against anybody for President? If the Na tional Council speaks by the card for organized labor, the Portland council Is all -wrong in meddling in politics; if the National body has no right to voice and represent union la bor in this Important matter, then of course the Portland council knows what it Is doing and has a right to make politics Its business. But who will say that the American Federation docs not speak for organized labor? THE 'TARIFF. In his daily speeches Mr. Bryan tells us this: In all tariff legislation In true principle is bet maintained by the Imposition of uch duties as will equal the difference be tween the cot of production at bom and abroad, together with reasonable profit to American industries! This means Just nothing.' Every protectionist, even the extremist, will accept the statement. Who is to de cide what Is reasonable profit? Who is to decide what may be the fair dif ference between wages at home and abroad? The problem presents an In finite number and variety of factors, as well as of differences to be adjusted. Men never will agree upon them. They will agree upon the loose state ment, as presented by Mr. Bryan; but never upon the details in working it out. They can't. It is not a problem of mathematics. The human spirit controls it all. Agree on the Bryan statement, yet you are no nearer the solution than you were before. The formula offers no sure values or defi nite quantities. For in the same con ditions and under the same laws, for equalization of the difference between the cost of production at home and abroad, and of a fair profit for capi tal, some men will succeed and others will fail. Many Insist that the condi tions required by the orator exist now. And it Is certain that under any ariff or under none, some will succeed and some will fall; and those who succeed and capture and hold the business will be called monopolists, while those who fail will be victims of something or. other, but never of their own Ineffi ciency or other faults. The only way to give all men an equal show, or a perfectly fair show. Is to abolish all tariffs, to cut off all duties, give nobody protection, wheth er laborer or capitalist. Then the best talents, the highest powers, the greatest Industry and skill, will do the business. Bryan's suggestion is no real departure from the policy of the pro tectionists. It is.' as he defines it, a protectionist policy, not different in principle from that of Cannon, Payne and Dalzell, but keeping open a way to the splitting of hairs on schedules, on wages In this industry and that, on reasonable or unreasonable profits. Short of absolute free trade, so that the tariff laws may help nobody, there Is no principle on which the decision may be made. Should Bryan be elected President, and a Congress with him, and attempt be made to adjust a tariff for "Impo sition of such duties as will equal the difference 'between cost of production at home and abroad, together with reasonable profit to American Indus tries," we should dlsonver at once the charlatanry and futility of the un dertaking. On this formula there could be no possible agreement. Nor would any agreement, if made, have any value whatever. The only principle of tariff is tariff for revenue. But that "will not be adopted by either party. And tariff for revenue only is virtual free trade. Bryan never speaks for tariff for revenue only. He al ways has vague notions of "protec tion" some kind or. degree of protec-, tlon In his mind; and so has his party. Consequently, if they come into power again they will simply shift the incidence of duties, put "the other fellow" on the free list as they did when last in power, and "protect" the special interests that have the pull on them as friends. Never will there be any genuine reform of the tariff upon the principle stated above by Candidate Bryan. IMITATIVE ART. Says the Outlook: "The truth is that the lawyer's ignorance of the law Is something beyond the power of words to describe. We do not even know What the law is. No lawyer today can tell whether we are administering a system of inherent and permanent principles of Justice, or whether we are administering a system of human customs established without regard to any Inherent or permanent principle; whether there are any principles of the. law which are fixed and immut able, or whether they are all shifting and changing." It is Just as in merely mechanical painting and statuary, or In glyptic art, where the workmen do not use the original models, which Indeed they do not possess, but use copies, and then make copies of copies without end each and every successive one losing sight more and more of the original. So lawyers and Judges, try ing to follow precedents, make blun ders, and then others make blunders on their blunders. Is It too much to say that this is the state of the law? Is It not becoming more and more an imitative art, copying blunders? THE OUTLOOK. The Harrlman system has a large force of men at work finishing the Wallowa Railroad, another force at work on the Tillamook line, and more engineers In Central Oregon than have ever been there before. The Oregon Electric is extending Its Valley system, and the United Rail ways have 00 men and 300 teams pushing their road out into Washing ton County. Meanwhile the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern are making final arrangements for handling the heavy traffic that will pour Into Port land as soon as the new North Bank line is completed, next month. The railroad development now actu ally under way and projected for Port land Is of sufficient magnitude to in sure a greater growth in this city within the next two years than we have ever before witnessed In a similar length of time. THE FISH LAW FARCE. The present trouble over the en forcement of our peculiar laws for fish protection is neither surprising nor unexpected. It Is the logical conse quence of the continued assumption by some of our wise men that the Co lumbia River Is exclusively an Oregon possession. In season and out of season The Oregonian has repeatedly called attention to the necessity for uniform fishing laws in the two states, but whenever the Legislature meets, personal interests seem to be shoved far enough to the fore to prevent ac tion that would result in a law that would be satisfactory to both states and at the same time offer some pro tection to the fish. It is folly to as sume that either the cannerymen or the fishermen in Washington are less Interested than the Oregonians in protection of the salmon. But, re gardless of their Interests, they have not yet reached a point of helplessness where they will permit Oregon to make and enforce their fish laws. The Columbia River is the dividing line for the two states for a distance which covers practically all of the fishing territory involved in the pres ent squabble. The legal significance of that dividing line has been repeat edly established by the courts In vari ous cases involving ownership of tide lands and sands forming in the river. If Oregon has no Jurisdiction over cer tain lands which at high tide are cov ered by the Columbia River, we cer tainly have no Jurisdiction over the fish which swim In the waters that are on the Washington side of that legally established boundary line. Seeming impossibility for the lawmakers of the two states to get together on a law which would be of mutual value again suggests that It might be to the . ad vantage of all concerned if the entire fish protection problem were turned over to the Federal Government for solution. This, of course, would take the matter out of local politics, and we might occasionally be able to retain in office a Fish Commissioner or Fish Warden for a few months after he had learned something about the office he was endeavoring to fill. The confidence with which the Ore gon fishermen ar violating the laws, even on their own side of the river, and the apparent willingness of their employers to supply bonds, would in dicate that a vast amount of campaign literature was wasted last June on some fishing laws that are worthless and inoperative. It is needless to state that, under Federal control, such a situation would be almost an impos sibility. Federal contrql of the indus try would carry with it other advan tages, for the National and not the state government would then be obliged to carry on the work of arti ficial propagation, the regulation of fish ladders and other appliances for aiding In maintenance of a permanent supply of salmon. A Fish Warden working under di rect appointment from the Federal Government would have authority to arrest a lawbreaker on either side of the river, and with such power It would be possible to maintain a uni form (Observance of the laws. Mr. McAllister's announcement that he would arrest "all persons caught vio lating the laws either on the Oregon or the Washington side of the river" reads well In print, but, as Oregon cannot make laws for Washington and the Washington laws are different from those of Oregon, an attempted arrest In Washington waters by the Oregon Fish Warden might develop a sequel showing that It is the Fish Warden, Instead of the fisherman, that Is a lawbreaker. The situation is in a bad tangle and the climax may show up our ridicu lous policy of fish protection so effec tually that It will soon be possible to secure legislation that Is of some value, pending success of an effort to bring the entire subject under Fed eral control. A new and unexpected complication has been Introduced into the Indiana campaign by Governor Hanly. who has called an extra session of the Legislature, to convene late this week. It appears that he has taken this step in defiance of the wishes of many Re publican politicians. He has two ob jects in view: The first, additional leg islation whereby he may be enabled to check the work of "night riders" in the southern section of the Hoosler State; second, more legislation regard ing local option In the sale of liquors. Governor Hanly is an aggressive tem perance man. His party is not In ac cord with his radicalism on this re form. Well informed politicians be lieve If He tries to force more rljld legislation at the crisis of the cam paign, the results will be disorganiza tion of Republican voters. It Is cer tain that the Democrats will grasp whatever opportunity the special ses sion affords to make all the mischief possible for the party in power and advance the interests of their own state and National tickets. Mr. Hearst says he was "surprised and humiliated" when Mr. Bryan made a bid for Hearst support by promising to support the Independ ence party man for President In 1912. The Bryan proposition, said Hearst, "showed that he considered me merely a traitor working for some personal advantage or promotion in politics." It is inconceivable how Bryan could have made such a mistake In his esti mate of the Hearst character, as the whole world knows how Mr. Hearst has always shrunk from "personal ad vantage" In anything. As both of these "Bills" are politicians with a "past," the only feature of the inci dent that offers any ground for spec ulation Is Hearst's reason for refusing the tempting bait. It is possible, how ever, that he might have regarded the free-and-easy manner In which Bryan has forgotten free silver, imperialism and a few other Isms as a criterion as to what would happen to the Bryan promise of support four years hence. Senator Ankenys paper at Walla Walla urged Democrats to vote in the primary for Ankeny, saying: It 1 the absolute right of any man. with out regard to party affiliation, to ask for any ticket he may desire to vote and to mark auch names thereon as he approves and to cast that vote today without regard. In the slightest sense, to what he may do on the 8d of next November. Any talk to prevent the elector from exercising this prerogative can be eopsldered In the light of an intimidation. Such exhortation, from whatever source, is nothing less than positively Immoral. It was made quietly In Ore gon, and acted upon in the primaries by great numbers of Democrats who voted for nomination of Republican candidates, with intent to vote against them In the election; but no newspa per in Oregon had the effrontery to urge It openly. A great Are in the San Gabriel for est reserve, in California, .is burning up timber by the square mile, 'and the fire which threatened destruction of the giant redwoods is also still burn ing. The forest reserves... which -are, of course, guarded by Government em ployes, have suffered more than any other timbered region this season, and if some of the energy spent in Wash ington for the purpose of keeping the timber out of the hands of the set tilers were to be devoted to guarding it against fire, the country as a whole would be the gainer. The negligence which permitted the destruction of some of the magnificent California redwoods was but little short of a crime, and the loss is one that can never be repaired. Oregon may yet become a corn grwing state, when experiment has produced the right variety. Then will cease the importation of hog products that now figure largely in the flow of money eastward. A Milton man has a number of stalks that measure 15 feet from tassels to roots, loaded with plump ears, that will be used as a background for an exhibit at the Pen dleton Fair. Seeing is believing. "Let the people rule," shouts Mr. Bryan: What people? All the peo ple? Then what becomes of the Solid South? If there should be no Solid South, what becomes of Bryan? What Bryan wants Is for a part of the peo ple to rule, not all; for the rule of all the people spells the ruin of Democ racy. Possibly Mr. Edison, while he is here, may be able to Invent some de vice to enable the Columbia River fish ermen to catch all the fish in the river and keep the river full of other fish to catch. The Statem'ent-No.-Oners, too, can think of a thing or two they would like to have Mr. Edison do for them. "Poor old Linn County," says the Brownsville Times, "cannot muster enough energy to provide a suitable exhibit at the State Fair." What! Is all the energy of Politicians Milt" Mil ler and Sam Garland going to waste? The primary law needs amendment at least to the extent of stopping wholesale baby kissing by the candi dates that much for sanitary rea sons. The State of Washington discovers It has big interest in the Columbia River In salmon. It has far bigger In ters t in commerce. Judge Galloway was mistaken by a waitress In Albany for a preacher. Wouldn't that make a real preacher envious? The Independence League has put up its electoral ticket in Oregon. That's four votes. If everybody plays fair. Governor Mead should have visited Oregon before the primary campaign and seen some of the Oregon politi cians. Maine fires another opening gun to day. But don't look upon it as con clusive. The campaign Isn't over. It is probably better for girls to be shot by repulsed suitors than to marry them. . Editor Geer aays Oregon oould give Taft 20,000 majority If not a speech were made. Better no speeches, then. BRYAN AKD THE NEGRO. Studied Evasiveness of the Candidate, and the Reason. Brooklyn Eagle, Ind. Dem. Mr. Bryan hopes to derive advantage at the polls because of the dismissal "without honor" of the battalion sta tioned at Brownsville. He has more than once been questioned on that subject. To any and all overtures for an opinion-he has responded by de claring that he has had and will have nothing to say about It, This, though he claims to be the heir of Roosevelt, who dismissed the troops. To repeat, there's a reason. Should he Indorse the dismissal he would for feit the ballot box advantage he ex pects to derive. On the other hand, should he denounce the President, there Is not a Southern state In which he would not have to pay dearly for such denunciation on election day. For Southern opinions concerning what -happened at Brownsville are neither divided nor negative, uney are, on the contrary, unanimous and posi tive. So Mr. Bryan stations himself midway between the horns of thlB di lemma, lest, stirring, he be impaled on one of them. His preference is for the safety of silence. Other questions have been asked. Several Southern newspapers have been wondering whether Mr. Bryan, In the event of his election, would do anything calculated to alter the politi cal' conditions by which the negro is confronted. They are not captious. They do not question Mr. Bryan for the purpose of embarrassing him. It v. . .!, .,,. tn xrontA the condi tions they refer to, and they were not invoked witnout tremennous mi. Their anxiety for an answer corre- been of no service' to them. Mr. Bryan will not tell them what mey want. iu ii... is between the horns, in the safety of silence. In this he exercises a privilege to which others are entitled, others who do not happen to be running for office. They have a right to repel the inqui sitive, but Mr. Bryan is a candidate for the Presidency. Moreover, the ne gro question, so called, is losing its sectional aspect It took 6000 of the tin..i. .tat, militia n Gatlina- gun company and the combined efforts of the police and fire departments two days to restore oraer in oiiimSi.u, where the mob did not discriminate .... h. Innnoont and the Kuilty. It ran amuck. It exacted penaltlts from those who had committed no - . t , n,oa -ariid wanton and merciless. It did not draw the line at murder. Comparisons have been Instituted. . i' 1. 1 vqh-b and Courier after saying that the white man's rage was kindled by a little fire in Spring- j..ia,.a that tha Northern mob cannot and does not endure half of what the potential eoumern otouduoio l.w ......a nlmftv .V.rv H fl V . T tlfi At- lanta Constitution reminds us that human passions are not sectional and that cause and effect are not varied by position. The Mobile Register says a Southern mob goes sirer mo b"". w... oil nnerrnp. ionic alike to in flamed Northerners, who will not tol- . utinn ti-Vi U in the South ert&ie buiujj5i."., " --- the white and the black work side by side. tVilnirn will Mr. Bryan take Into account. He will talk of the tariff and of trusts. He will become eloquent with "equal rights to all" as his theme and he will appeal to the emotions when asking. "Shall the Peo ple Rule?" But he becomes a sphinx when Brownsville Is mentioned, and ,i, n ftllnslnn to the ne win iMituiiu . . t Fifteenth Amendment. His solicitude has well denned limitations, jmu VI. ..minathv nrt hl ChamDlOn- shlp. He has no use for any bread not politically outterea ana. no - pouse only sucn : . . .,(v... vtitt s,wn welfare latea to cun"'""" - He is as thrifty, politically, as he , . . ' . ,innnAi.iw - vIiati he sougm uu ue utiati. -- framed a last win ana wbtamcui. GUIDE TO THE HEADQUARTERS How Country Voters May Find the Dough Rooms In New YorK. w Jones in New Tork American. For the benefit of voters visiting New York, and especially for the benefit of those visiting New Tork for the purpose niini T).mnrrjits. we Rive a brief guide to the National committee headquarters. ,..'.. The rooms snd entrances are lettered In the order in which they are to be found In the Hoffman House corridor. A. Public entrance for Dollar Demo- B. Public entrance for more expensive Democrats. X. Secret entrance for Thomas Ryan, r. iaai. fur M-Knlfers' Club, fur nished with files of Louisville Courier T..n.l anA Vis York World. D. Cage containing main Southern contributions to campaign iuna-i calf from Texas, 1 Hongkong gander from E (locked). Lumber room, piled with slightly shopworn planus, euun a silver. Immediate government ownership of railroads, etc., etc. F. Faro Lick Bprlngs Club Room. Roulette wheels for accommodation of visitors above the Dollar Democrat ciass. G and H. Reception rooms with liquid 1 tnl.nillnp nn t Hhll ttWR. uneei tut " t -" . I. Press bureau, tenanted by Colonel Watterson and 10.000 tumultuous aajec tlves. , j.8enator Culberson s room, equipped with phonographs for testing would-be orators. , K. Safe containing the dollar contri buted by a genuine Democrat. Not iu Position to Attack. New York Evening Mail. Mr. Bryan Is e6topped by his own plat form from making any point against "Re publican extravagance." although he es sayed It at the Minnesota State Fair. It Is true his platform attempts the point, and denounces the "great and growing laereaae In the number of office-holders." Yet the same platform pronounces for a scheme of internal im provements in roads and waterways whose cost would be measured by the hundreds of millions, at least. The plat form would also .load new duties, of in spection, etc., on the Federal Govern ment, and these duties imply more "office-holders." Mr. Bryan is. in no position, .personally, to make his point. He Is on record for Government ownership of the railroads, a scheme that would add 1.672.074 office-holders to the payrolls of the Nation and the states. Whatever capital he can make over the Republican policy of maintaining a real Navy and an Army of 60,000 men, instead of 2S.OO0. Mr. Bryan Is welcome to. Let him go out to the Pacific Coast and repeat his Minneapolis speech there. Include Coal and MUk. Chattanooga Times. If we are really going to quit trusting people and adopt the policy of bolstering human weaknesses by statutory enact ments and taxing the honest to make good the defalcations of the looters, why stop at banking? Why not make the honest coal ajaler supply the deficiencies of his "short weight" competitor, and apply the same rule to the groceryman, the butcher and the drygoods emporiums? Auto-Speedlna; Federal Judre Fined. Philadelphia Dispatch. United States Court Judge James B. Holland, of Conshohoeken, Pa., was caught in the net set by Fallsington township officials for auto violators and fined $10 and costs by 'Squire Woolaton. Judge Holland paid the fin without protest. rt ORIGIN OF THE ROOSEVELT POLICY Careful and Candid History of the Movement Leading Up to Effective Demand for Public Control of Private Highways Complete Answer to the Democratic Assertion That the President Has "Stolen" Bryan's Policies and Principles. From the Outlook, September 5. THE Democratic friends of Mr. Bryan and the Republican enemies of Mr. Roosevelt have so often said that Mr. Roosevelt borrowed his policies from Mr. Bryan that they have come to be lieve that this is true; For the Information- of readers who wish to know the truth we give here a condensed chapter of recent American history. Something like 40 years ago Senator Booth.- of California, put the railway problem In a sentence (we quote from memory): "Formerly the means of transportation-were poor, but the high ways were free; now the meana of transportation are admirable, but the highways are private property." How to have the highways administered as private property for the public welfare is the railway problem of the Tfnlted States. At first the states took it up. State Legislatures attempted to regulate.rall way rates. State railway commissions were appointed; some with authority, some without OriS of the earliest of these commission's was that of Massa chusetts In 1869. The legislation was experimental, often crude, sometimes partiaUy effective, sometimes wholW disastrous. But the principle, legisla tive regulation of the public highways for the public benefit, was gradually getting itself established In the Ameri can mind, and in time this public con viction reached Congress. In 1887 the Reagan-Cullum bill was enacted. It forbade discrimination and provided for an Interstate Railway Commission. Mr. Reagan was a Democrat from Texas. Mr. CuIIum was a Republican from Illi nois. The bill was thus not sectional; it was not partisan; it was the expres sion of a National conviction adopted after 25 years of public agitation. At the time of Its adoption Mr. Bryan was a young man 27 years of age, practic ing law in Illinois; Mr. Roosevelt, two years his senior, had Just been defeated as the Republican candidate for the Mayoralty of New York Cty. Neither of them was a National figure; neither of them had been heard by the Ameri can people on the railway problem. The Reagan-Cullom bill, like all com promise, was an inadequate measure. The coifrts. construing it strictly, made It by their interpretations still more Inadequate. The railway managers In sisted on regarding the highways - as private property to be operated for private profit. To give favored rates to favored shippers was the common, al most the universal, custom. The pro teetants were few and the protests were futile. The result was inevitable. The favored shippers crowded their un fortunate competitors to the wall. A small advantage In freights was suffi cient to give its possessor a practical monopoly. The rich grew richer If the poor did not grow poorer. Multi-millionaires appeared in increasing num bers, and with rapidly-increasing wealth during all thle period of In creasing railway development under private corporate control. Wrote James Bryce In 1888: "The most remarkable phenomenon of the laet 25 years has been the appearance not only of those few colossal millionaires who fill the public eye? but of many millionaires of the second order, men with fortunes ranging from $5,000,000 to $16,000,000." In a single graphic sentence he por trayed the social peril: "No spot in Europe conveys an equal impression of the lust of the eyes and the prtde of life, of boundless wealth and a bound less desire for enjoyment, as does the Ocean Drive at Newport on an after noon in August." In another equally significant sentence he Indicated the political perils: "The influence of money is one -of the dangers which the people have always to guard against, for it assails not merely the Legisla tures but the party machinery, and Its methods are as momentous as they are insidious." e In his famou "cross of gold" speech before the Democratic Convention in 1896 Mr. Bryan effectively expressed the popular discontent and the popular apprehension. But hie diagnosis of the cause of the plutocrats' power was the gold standard; the remedy which he prescribed was free silver. The railway problem received from him scant atten tion. In his letter of acceptance all that he had to say about It wag the following: The right of th United States Govern ment to refculate interstate commerce can not be questioned, and the necessity for the vigorous exercise of that right Is becoming more and more imperative. The Interests of the whole people require such an en largement Of the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission as will enable It to prevent discrimination between persons and places, and protect patrons from unreason able charges. , This statement was entirely correct, but it was only a statement of what both parties stood for In previous legis lation, In state and Nation. No empha sis was laid by Mr. Bryan uppn railway rate regulation; no special measures were proposed. The country's danger, as Mr. Bryan caw it, was in the cur rency; the remedy for the peril was free silver. "In the presence of this overshadowing issue," said he, "differ ences of opinion on minor questions must be laid aside." For ,the " three months of the Presidential campaign, the country studied this problem as it had never before studied an economic problem. By a decisive vote it rejected both Mr. Bryan's diagnosis and his rem edy. Four years later he sought and obtained a rehearing. He had nothing more to say on the railway problem in 1900 than .In 1896. "In 1896 he regarded the currency question as the paramount issue. In 1900 he declared the colonial question to be the paramount issue. "No other question," he said, "can ap proach It In importance: no other ques tion demands such immediate consider ation." The country did not agree with him. His interpretation of tho coun try's needs was rejected even more de cisively than before. A year later (September, 1901), by the tragic death of Mr. McKlnley. Mr. Roosevelt was made President of the United States, and less than a year after his inauguration (August 23, 1902), by his famous speech at Provi dence, R. I., noted as a home of corpor ations, he began his public campaign in favor- of legislative control of the "great corporations commonly called trusts," and especially of those which are charged with the administration of the Nation's highways. By that cam paign, continued in a aeries of speeches delivered in Boston, Fitchburg, Wheel ing, Cincinnati, and other cities, he fo cused public attention on this problem. Backed by the public opinion which r.e had not created, but which he had in terpreted and made definite and so ef fective, he won from a reluctant Con gress new legislation for the regula tion of railway rates. Supported by officials in hearty sympathy with him, he enforced laws which had long lain as s dead letter, both against combina tions in restraint of trade and against the well-nigh universal practice of giv ing special rates to specially favored skippers. And by this triple process the vigorous enforcement of existing laws the enactment of new legislation and the arousing and focusing of public opinion he hag driven the practice of giving rebates and favored rates t ithei out of existence or Into nlding like other criminal violatlona of public law and disregard of public welfare. Meanwhile occurred tha Presidential election of 1904. In this election Mr. Roosevelt represented the demand for a Federal Railway Commission with pow er to prescribe rates; Mr. Parker repre sented opposition to that demand: and Mr. Bryan gave Mr. Parker his support. After his candidate was overwhelming ly defeated, Mr. Bryan left the country for a trip around the world. Return ing in 1906. he found the whole coun try converted to the Importance of making the public highways serve the public interests; the opposition was re duced to a numerically insignificant minority. Now . for the first time tMd Mr. Bryan address himself seriously to the railway problem. In so doing he accepted Mr. Roosevelt's diagnosis, but not Mr. Roosevelt's proposed remedy. He tardily recognized the importance of the raiiway problem, but he rejected Government regulation of railway rates. In lieu thereof he proposed Government ownership. And he found his proposal so instantly and over whelmingly rejected by the people that . he did not think it worth his while to take a vote, even of his own party, upon the proposal. It Is evident from this history that Mr. Bryan can lay no Just claim to be the originator of what is popularly known as the Roosevelt policy. He is not the author of Government owner ship; that is borrowed from Europe. Nor of the Railway Commission; that was adopted by Jlasseehusetts when he was a Doy s years oi age. ivor oi me notion that plutocracy Is one of the great perils of democracy; that was pointed out by Mr. Bryce three years before Mr. Bryan was in public life at all, and, it can hardly be necessary to say, by more than one economist and moralist long before Mr. Bryce. In 1896 Mr. Bryan thought the power of the plutocracy came from the gold standard and the remedy was free li ver; In 1900 he thought the paramount Issue before the Amertcan people was immediate self-government for the Fil lDlnos before they had any preparation for self-government; In 1906 he thought the remedy for railway Inequalities was Government ownership. Mr. Roosevelt was not the first to se, but he was the first to make the publlo see, that the paramount issue is not what Mr Cleveland thought it to be, the tariff, nor what Mr. Bryan thought It to be in 1896, the currency, nor what Mr. Bryan declared it to be in. 1900, colonial administration, but the problem how to make privately-owned railways serve the public welfare; he wag not the first to see, but he was the first to make the public see, that no adequate remedy for favoritism in railway ad ministration Is afforded by leaving the individual shipper to appeal to the courts, that the only remedy is to cre ate machinery by which the great rail way corporations can be controlled by a greater corporation, namely, the Gov ernment: he was not the first to see, but he was the first to make the public see, that this is primarily a Federal, not a state, problem. And by making the people see these truths Mr. Roosevelt has' not created, but he has developed, focused and made efficient a before vague, undefined and inefficient public sentiment in favor of a Just and equal administration of the National high ways as a public trust a sentiment which, once having been aroused, fash ioned and directed to a definite end and by definite means, will never be wholly lost by the American people. It should be added that Mr. Taft, In his Detroit speech In 1895, the year before Mr. Bryan's first candidacy, laid down the fundamental principles which are embodied in the Roosevelt policy; that he has been one of Mr. Roosevelt's trusted legal advisers; that on him Mr, Roosevelt has in no small measure de pended for counsel In his endeavor to. secure a railway rate regulation law that would be both constitutional and practically efficient; that the principle that the Constitution Invests complete control of interstate commerce in the National Government has never been more clearly and vigorously stated than by Mr. Taft; that the policy of exercis ing this control has had no more reso lute defender than Mr. Taft; and that thus It may truly be said that the Roosevelt policy Is not less truly a Taft policy. It Is difficult to see. in view of the history of the past, how, even by a spirit of accommodation, it can properlv be called a Bryan policy. The -Whole Thing; la Here. . Governor Hughes at Youngstown. Ohio. The Republican party makes appeal to public confidence as the most Important po litical agency for conservation and for progress. By virtue of its achievement!. Its leadership snd its alms it stands forth as an efficient Instrument for strong and capable administration, as a safeguard ' of stability and of the prosperity which depends upon stability, and as an unrivalled power for th correction of abuses, it stands In striking contrast to th record of vacillation and ineptitude presented by th chief opposing party. That opposing party proffsrs a can didacy which is at one a monument and a guldepost. It memorialise the fallacies and unsafe policies we are asked to forget, and It points the way to business uncer tainty and to the Impaalrment of th confi dence which Is the security of Industry and trad. ' m Lincoln aa a Landlord. Boston Herald. As to the latest charge brought against Abraham Lincoln, that he was once ac- .1 1.. aniravori In thn mm Vlt 1R I fl PHS and dispensed intoxicating liquors at retail. an exhaustive searcn oi autnormes his career, including Hay and Nlcolay, shows that the only basis for the allega tion is that in his early career Mr. Lin coln opened a tavern in Sangamon County, Illinois, and set forth In detail the prices he should be permitted to charge for liquors, wines, lodging and meals. Before beginning actual business, however, Landlord Lincoln disposed of his tavern and resumed rall-splittlng. This history seems to let Lincoln out by a close shave. ' Aa It Seemed to Him. ' From Judge. A man who Intended to take up a homestead claim, but did not know how to do it, sought information of a friend about It. "Mike." said he, "you've taken up a homestead, and I want to know what you had to do 'to prove up and earn your title to the land." "Well. Jerry. I don't know the law. word for word, concernig homesteadlng, but it seemed to me like this: The Gov ernment is willing to bet ye 160 acres of land agin $14 that ye can't live on it five years without starving to death." Rabies-Infected Physician Now Safe. . Chicago Dispatch. Dr. A. Lagorio, of the Pasteur Insti tute of Chicago, who has been taking treatment for an infection of rabies ob tained by a scratch on his hand in his laboratory, has been declared out of danger. Dr. Lagorio was Infected 12 days ago.