THE SUNDAY OREGONLAN, POTtTLAND, NOVEMBER 17, 1901. z he rggomsm Entered at the Fostcffice at Portland, Oregon, as second-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Mall (postage prepaid). In Advance-r Daily, with Sunday, per month $ S3 Daily. Sunday excepted, per year T 00 Daily, with Sunday, per year 0 00 Sunday, per year 2 00 The Weekly, per year 1 BO The "Weekly, 3 months CO To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays excepted. 15c Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays lncluded.200 POSTAGE RATES. United States Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper..... lc 14 to 28-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name or any Individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription or to any business matter should be addressed simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories from individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscript sent to It without solici tation. No stamps should te Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Office, 43, 44, 45. 47. 48, 40 Tribune building, New York City; 4C3 "The Rookery," Chicago; the S. C. Bcckwlth special agency. Eastern representative. For 6ale In San Francisco by L. K. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 233 Sutter street; F. W. Pitts, 100S Market street; J. K. Cooper Co., 746 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale In Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner, 25 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 106 So. Eprlmr street For sale In Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street. For sale In Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 W Scond South street. For sale In Ogden by W. C. Kind, 204 Twenty-fifth street, and by C. H. Myers. On file In the Oregon exhibit at the exposi tion, Charleston, S. C For sale In Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale In Denver, Colo, by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-012 Seventh street. TODAY'S WEATHER. Showers and cool; south to west winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 02; minimum temperature, 45; pre cipitation, 0.23 inch. i i PORTLAND, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17. DRIFT OF THE CENTURY. The drift of the century Is clearly In the direction of the extension of utili tarian civilization through the explora tion and occupation of new lines of diffusion for the world's trade. The leading books of the time are those- de voted to exact information concerning physical features, the undeveloped or unoccupied commercial opportunities in the great continents of Asia, Africa and South America. The leading magazines are full of articles concerning the future of China, "the South Africa of tomor row"; "The Development of Africa," "The Political and Commercial Future of Asia." It is of small consequence who reads "trash" fiction or sentimental verses for moonstruck lovers, but the increasing interest in precise books of history and travel concerning the great unexplolted countries of the globe de notes the drift of the practical, purpose ful brains of our century, which Is sure to be a period distinguished by the reclamation of vast districts of Asia, Africa and South America from their present condition of listless unpro ductiveness and immobility. The ener gies of the century are sure to be en grossed by the commercial exploitation of Asia, Africa and South America, be cause it is the best outlook for men of far-seeing commercial genius and ex ceptional passion for adventure. The beginning of the British Empire in India was made not by a passion for conquest or discovery, but by the English aptitude for trade. An English factory was the first English fort in India; the English trader hired soldiers to protect his line of trade and extend it, and out of this small beginning came the occupation and conquest of what is known today as British India. The Englishman circumvented the Frenchman in the domination of North America and India, because the English man was first of all an eager, far-seeing trader, while the Frenchman was first a military adventurer, soldier, discov erer, voyager, then a missionary, and last of all a trader. The Englishman, whose sole purpose was that of a trader, who fought only to establish and extend the circle of his trade, and did not worry about the extension of the kingdom of Christian souls among painted savages, conquered North America and "froze" the French speed ily out of India. The exploitation of Africa, Asia and South America will be undertaken and accomplished dur ing the present century by Europe by the unleashed, highly equipped forces of trade. " When England's merchants began their trading adventur.es in America and India they were not armed as the trading forces of Europe are today, with the forces of steam and electricity applied to the work of quick commer cial and military transportation, so that their work was comparatively slow, and yet it was fairly well accomplished in less than a century and a half of effort. With the present forces of steam and electricity applied to the problems of quick commercial transpor tation and military defense, we may fairly expect before the present century Is completed to see Asia, Africa and South America, not highly civilized, but at least highly commercialized, In the sense that their great rivers, made nav igable by modern science, will bear on their bosoms fleets of steamers laden with riohes that today are left ungath ered, either for the lack of intelligence or because of distance from remunerat ive markets. In Asia it Is not easy to forecast whether the forces of trade will do their work chiefly through Russia, Great Britain or Germany, for all of these great powers are pushing railway projects to completion, whose purpose is to absorb and market the trade of Asia. Ultimately Russia ought to dom inate Asia with Its influence, not be cause of its superior material resources, but because of the -great powers of Eu rope Russia Is most Asiatic In racial instinct; Russia understands and han dles the average Asiatic better than Great Britain, Germany or France. This fct Is exhibited In Russia's tact ful dealings with China. Napoleon spoke the truth when he said, "Scratch a Russian and you will find a Tartar," and it is because she is at bottom still largely a Tartar, an Asiatic, that Rus sia makes such astounding progress in China and Persia. In Africa, however, rather than in Asia, will be witnessed the most as tounding commercial progress of the century. Its day of exploration is over, and is to be succeeded by that of ex ploitation in a continent so enormously rich in a vast variety of undeveloped resources that Africa is Justly today defined as "the land of golden oppor tunity." To this country today go the trade forces of commercial Europe and America carrying the railway, the steamboat, the telegraph, the telephone. fhe ice machine, the improved machin ery of agriculture, the Improved weap ons of modern warfare. So rapid has been the march of the forces of trade and commercialism since 1884 in Africa that today steamboats ply the waters of the rivers, railways are being built in every part, commercial companies operate all over Africa, the natives are workers on the railways and in the mines, and "men who chased Stan ley down the Congo are now piloting steamboats up." In the Congo "Valley, where twenty years ago there was not a white resident, there are thousands now engaged In peaceful and lucrative trades and pursuits. Some of the busi ness companies have already made enormous fortunea Gold; diamonds, rubber, palm oil, timber, hides, ivory, copper and coal are included in the vast wealth of Africa. The price of land in Central Africa for agricultural purposes is but 40 cents an acre, and the heart oC Airtea is now but twenty-five days' travel from New York City. Even today the wage of ordinary labor is but 3 cents a day. There areHfty steamboats on the Congo today. A railway line is building across the Sahara, a railway has already been built around the cataracts of the Congo. The British line from the seacoast to Uganda is nearly completed. An eas-and-west 'transcontinental telegraph is in course of construction, and the tele-' phone has reached the far interior. There will be in the near future an im mense demand from Africa for rails and all sorts of railway equipment. The Caucasian caii live on the high grounds of Africa and labor, just as the white man can live and labor on the high ground at the South, who would perish on the bottom lands of the Mississippi, where the negro alone can thrive. Af rica in its exploitation is o be the gold mine of the forces of trade and com mercialism of the century. NO GREAT MATTER, EITHER WAY. Close readers of The Oregonlan have observed in its advertising columns for some time a notice, issued from the proper officers of the state government at Salem, calling attention of voters to a constitutional amendment to be passed upon at next June's election. Decision is to be rendered upon the "initiative and referendum," that dar ling device of populism, and of some optimists who are forever finding some panacea that will in the twinkling of an eye settle all Ills to which politics is heir. Comparatively speaking, the Initiative and referendum both are means of grace. That is to say, compared with free silver or "antl-imperiallsm," the initiative and referendum are power ful engines of progress and reforma tion. The most that can be said against the proposed "reform" is that it Is use less and expensive, and even this is hardly proven. The referendum we al ready have in limited form, and noth ing vicious or revolutionary has been charged against its operation or effects. The initiative Is more visionary, and of doubtful availability. Nearly every election testifies to the superfluous character the referendum tends to assume. For example, consti tutional amendments have just been voted on in a number of states. In Pennsylvania three constitutional amendments were submitted. The vote cast for and against them in Philadel phia is an index of the Interest mani fested in Important constitutional changes. In round numbers the city cast 240,000 votes, while the vote on the first amendment submitted, for and against, was 80,000. On the second amendment the Vote was 70,000, and on the third 52,000. This last amendment was one Intended to open the way for the use of voting machines, a matter that comes home to every voter. Yet only about two voters In nine cared enough about constitution-making to mark on either side of the question propounded on the ballots before them. This is the general experience of Ore gon in matters of legislation that are referred to the people. In June, 1900, the vote cast on the amendments was but a fraction of those cast for mem bers of Congress. Yet this apathy does not in Itself prove that the referendum Is unwise. Our institutions are full of "palladiums" of one sort and another that are maintained not so much for constant use as for Insurance. Trial by jury is a great' nuisance ordinarily, and justly parodied by the librettist's wit; but he would be unwise as well as reckless who should propose Its aboli tion. We try to do without grand 'juries and capital punishment, and hosts of things that seem malapropos the most of the time, but which upon frequent occasion are clearly seen to be the one thing fit to do the required service. The referendum is a necessary device of practical politics, and just how it should be extended is a question of not very pressing expediency. The initiative is not nearly so necessary. No meas ure that can command a considerable pledged support from voters need ever lack for introduction and advocacy in the Legislature. HOW TO WRITE HISTORY. The late General Peter S. MIchie, for more than thirty years professor of natural and experimental philosophy at West Point, is the author of the latest and best life of General McClellan. General Mlchle was a native of Scot land, was graduated at the head of his class at West Point in 1863. Before the close of the Civil War he was Chief Engineer of the Army of the James, and was brevetted Brigadier-General of Volunteers. He has analyzed the mili tary stature of McClellan with the cold neutrality of an impartial judge. Like his illustrious countryman, Napier, who praised or criticised friend or foe with equal candor, General Mlchle does equal justice to Union or Confederate com mander. He does not hesitate to de nounce McClellan when Incompetent for his work nor withhold enthusiastic praise when he thinks General Lee de served it by the superior ability of his military conduct. From the very out set of his career In West Virginia, Gen eral Michie discovers McClellan's con stitutional timidity and tendency to magnify a molehill in his path until It looked like a mountain. He officially represented the enemy's force before Washington as early as September, 1861, at from 100,000 to 130,000 men, when they were not 40,000 strong until the first week of October. The last week of No vember McClellan reported the enemy at not less than 150,000 strong, when their forces were but 47,000. Between the first of October and the first of December President Lincoln en deavored to get McClellan to advance with his Army and give battle to the enemy, but in vain, To use his own expression: "If something 1b not done soon, the bottom will drop out of the whole ffalr; and i Geueral McClellan did not want to use the Army, I should like to borrow it." General Mlchie's conclusion is that in none of McClelland three campaigns did he manifest any ready adaptation of means to the end in view, or celerity of movement to gain strategical advantage. He holds that McClellan was constitutionally weak in that comprehensive mental grasp and range by which every detail for suc cess has been antecedently studied out and adapted in Its justification to the general 'plan. - Professor Michie finds no illustrative example of decided tactical ability on the part of McClellan. In none of his battles was he Inferior to the enemy In strength on the field of battle; yet in every Instance the enemy reached the point of attack "first with the most men." His salient character istics were his constant tendency to overestimate the enemy, timidity on the eve of battle, and lack of aggressive ness. The surprising thing is that an educated soldier should not have seen clearly how utterly Impossible it was for the Confederate Government to arm and equip armies of the magnitude he assumed it to have, when the United States Government, with all its "bounti ful sources of supply, could do no more. McClellan's constitutional military weakness was so quickly detected by Lee that he took extra-hazardous chances at the opening of the Seven days' Battles, and In so widely sep arating the component parts of his army In the beginning of the Maryland campaign. Unlike Lee, whose heroic presence and personal exposure at the critical period of a battle more than once restored his yielding line, McClel lan never appeared on the fighting line, never was near enough to It to assume timely direction and control in event of disaster. Stated In plain English, Mc Clellan was a vastly overrated man, and by nobody more than by himself, and unfortunately he greatly under rated Lincoln, who was great and mag nanimous enough to forgive him when In the bitterness of defeat he charged "the Administration with having done its best to sacrifice this Army." The man who twenty years after the Civil War could write the following charge of political conspiracy against Lincoln, Stanton and Chase must have been a weak man: "They determined I should not succeed, and certainly carried out their determination only too well, and at a fearful sacrifice of blood and treas ure." The best that this able, astute West Point historian can see In this child of West Point Is that he was an amiable, vain, sanguine person, cursed with the temperament of self-delusion, who was fitted for the duties of a Quartermaster, an Inspector-General, perhaps for those of a Chief of Staff, but utterly incom petent both as a strategist and as a tactician for the command of an army in the field. The Southern Generals opposed to him always explained Mc Clellan as too much of a natural-bom non-combatant to make a good soldier. The truth is that military learning and military training can no more make a man a fighting General than the study of navigation will make a man a bold and competent sailor in the hour of storm or the day of battle. McClellan was nothing but a well-read military student, who proved to be an utterly Incompetent soldier. A RELIC OF SAVAGERY. The apology that Is due the confiding people of San Francisco from Messrs. Jeffries and Ruhlln for having pulled off a fake fight Is not more probable and not less due than Is an apology from each'' of them for not having knocked the other Into kingdom come. That either of the principals remains to cumber the ground Is a fact calling for sovere reprimand if not for legal in quiry. If the patrons of the exhibition were robbed, that is a small affair In comparison with the barbarous charac ter of the exhibition Itself. No one who lays claim to civilization should hold diplomatic relations with the business of beating human beings up with hu man fists. Savage man delights himself in sports of cruelty. They used to gather in the Coliseum to see wild beasts devour each other and hapless captives thrown to feed hungry llonsv Matador, gladiator and toreador belong to an era which we have outgrown, or fancy we have out grown, and among persons of sensibili ties the wholesale slaughter of beasts or birds, when no purpose of human need .or adornment Is. subserved, has come at length to be considered bad form. The' bull-fight is passing away, the cock-fight is under the ban, gentle men would be ashamed to be seen set ting dogs upon each other, and the once chivalrous practice of dueling has lost caste, even in the South. Yet men who would scorn to draw steel or level pistol against their fellow man are free to boast their Interest In a rattling mill with light gloves, not withstanding that the prize-ring is deadlier than the duel, notwithstand ing that pugilism has become the pro fession of thugs and dishonest gamblers. Whether a fight Is on the square or not depends upon which course will pay better. The prize-ring is no place to look for an honest man. The theory of your pugilism crank is that the noble art of self-defense Is a legitimate accomplishment, and that proficiency in It is a mark of creditable superiority. But the fact Is that the prizes of civilized life have long ceased to fall to the clever dodger and hard hitter. The day when a blow, whether from sword or fist, told anything of Its wielder that we need to know has passed with the higher stages of bar barism. There are walks of life where physical prowess that lays its rival low in blood and wounds is the entree to power, pelf and the adoration of woman, but they are lowest walks, and beneath the notice of any man who can enjoy a newspaper or a seat at the opera, or a stroll In the fields, or a good book. Hearts of oak do not wield broadaxe or carry shields today. They grapple with foes of mind and heart. Nothing a man's fist can win for him today Is worth while. His value to so ciety might as well be reckoned by the length of his legs, or the quantity of al cohol which he can carry in his" stomach without staggering. This is only one of the multitudinous tests that come between the higher and the lower nature. It is the brute part of us that leads to brutal sports, as to drunkenness, vice, uncontrolled an ger or incontinence of any sort. There is a higher course in all these things, and he who chooses the lower sella his birthright as an immortal soul for an hour's indulgence of sensuality like that of the brutes who know no higher law. A large, number of deaths In St. Louis within a month, from tetanus, acknowl edged to have been caused by the pres ence of that germ in diphtheria anti- toxin, is not an" impeachment of that remedy for diphtheria. It simply In tensifies the necessity of the utmost care in its preparation. The value of the anti-toxin remedy has been demon strated the world over. The mortality from a disease that practically baffled medical skill previous to the discovery of the counteracting serum has been greatly reduced by Its use. The dis tressing experience at St. Louis cannot change this record, nor will it alarm medical men. It will and should In spire the most jealous care that none but animals whose freedom from dis ease has been subject to the most care ful and satisfactory inquiry shall be used in the cultivation of the serum. It will no doubt, however, inspire in the public mind a repugnance to the use of anti-toxin as a remedy and preventive of diphtheria that it will be difficult for physicians called upon to treat this disease to overcome THB SALT OF TOE STATE. Among recent deaths is that of Henry B. Harrison, ex-Governor of Connecti cut, who has passed away in his 81st year, leaving behind a fine record for superior public talents and unsullied patriotism. Governor Harrison was one of the old guard of the Republican party, for he was a "free soller" before he assisted In the organization of the Republican party in 1856. As early as 1854 he drafted the "personal liberty bill" df Connecticut, which sought to nullify by state law the fugitive slave law. These old-time "free Rollers" are confounded by many people with the impracticable Garrlsonian abolitionists, but they were really the independent voters of their day, who drew from both the Whig and Democratic parties In the East and prepared the way for the new departure, whose momentous victory was the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. These old-time "free sollers" were a remarkable set of men. They were all men of superior Intel lectual ability, and some of them were men of very high talents, learning and culture, like Salmon P. Chase and Charles Francis Adams. There was not a man among them who was not of pure life, of stainless reputation in pub lic and private career. It was a time when both the great political parties, even in New England, crushed free speech, upheld crime, dethroned con science and enthroned commerce. At this time rose up James G. Birney and his little band of the "Liberty Party" men who were the first "free sollers," the first constitutional agitators against the extension of slavery, as distin guished from the destructive abolition ists, who were avowed dlsunionists be cause they believed the Constitution the immovable bedrock of slavery. These old-time "free sollers," men of acute, vigorous' Intellects, of inflexible independence and spotless Integrity, were absolutely fearless and unflinch ing for the right as God gave them light to see the right. No sneers could snuff them out; no weight of public opinion swerve them from their course. Compromise was not in their dictionary nor retreat in their catechism when" the pro-slavery pall of darkness fell upon the land and Harvard College's silver tongued orators and dainty scholars and silver-topped dough-faces directly or, indirectly helped catch fugitive slaves in the streets of Boston and re turn them to bondage. These old-time "free sollers" were wise in their time. They never mobbed the officers of the law, nor did they seriously attempt to answer Webster's unanswerable argu ment for the constitutionality of the fugitive slave law. But by simple agi tation against the extension of the moral enormity 'and anachronism of slavery they created an atmosphere in which the law soon became as obso lete as are prohibition statutes or "re construction" legislation against an overwhelmingly hostile public senti ment. Webster was right as a lawyer in his view that the fugitive slave law was only the re-enactment of what the law had already granted the slave holder, but he did not foresee that the enforcement of this constitutional stat ute would raise a tumult of agitation which would utterly wreck his own party and upon the foundation of its hulk build a far nobler vessel, whose spars, sails, rigging and pilot would all be furnished by this little "free soil" party which Webster derided and sin cerely repudiated. Webster was able, honest and sincere in his action; he hoped first to save the Union, and, second, he hoped to save the Whig party. But he was not a man of popular sympathies or appre henslveness; his ear was never very close to the ground, or he would have foreseen the tempest that followed his action. He did the worst thing possi ble, meaning to do the best thing. If Webster and Clay had simply stood fast, the Whig party would have had several years of life; but the compro mise contained all the seeds of the trou bles that followed the slave rescue riots, the Kansas and Nebraska war. Or if Webster had followed the advice of some of his friends among the "free 5 oilers" and put himself at their head or he had formerly voted for the Wll mot Proviso he, and not Seward, Chase and Greeley, would have been Its most conspicuous leader. Webster's failure to forecast the direful effect of his "compromise" destroyed the Whig party, and out of its wreck was built the Republican party. The steadfast "free sollers," who had followed their flag of constitutional agitation against the extension of a confessed social evil Into new territory, had Anally come Into possession of the fruits of their long years of patient watching and waiting for 'victory. How much influence for gooti these old-time "free sollers," whose voices were never silent when anybody sought to gild the crime of slavery with the brilliant rhetoric of immoral excuse, exerted against the organized, aggressive pro-slavery prop aganda; how much they had to do with making the Nation welcome the rise of the Republican party, it Is not easy to determine. From 1840 to 1854 the "free soil" party stood for the only constitu tional opposition to slavery. As late as 1852, in a total of over 3,000,000 votes cast, the "free sollers" obtained but 156,000, but four years later the Re publican party, under the flag which the "free sollers" had carried since 1840, polled over 1,341,000 votes. The party which Webster had de clined to lead, the party which his- "compromise" was framed to stifle, had become the favorite child of .victory. The great majority of these old "free sollers," like Governor Harrison of Con necticut, lived to see the wildest dreams of their pure and ingenuous youth be come the enthusiastic faith of the Na tion, which at last made 'these dreams the blessed deeds of our later day. They lived long enough to see the flickering cause of 1840 at last radiant as a rain bow with blending colors of complete and various victory. Not to every man worthy to be the Moses of a cause is it vouchsafed even to see "the promised land," much less enter it in life. But these, real fighters of the first consti tutional Insurrection against the exten sion of slavery lived to see the damned spot of darkness sponged oft the coun try's cheek, lived to see slavery through the rude legislation of the bayonet torn up, root and branch, and the face of the Nation firmly and forever set for free dom. These old "free sollers," like all men who lead in exceptional times that try men's souls, would not shine In the politics of the present generation. Such men never follow politics as a Vocation; they lead "forlorn hopes" in the battle for reform. They ceaselessly ring the fire bell which will, not suffer political scoundrels soundly to sleep. They never pack caucuses for purely personal ends; never angle for office or distribute pat ronage where it will do them the most good. But it is this sort of men, un puchasable and unterrifled amid the world's rottenness and riot, that always saves the state in its worst need; for it is this old-fashioned type that fights for the honor and life of the state with tongue on the sidewalk, with vote at the ballot-box, and. If need be, with bayonets in battle. If President Roosevelt adheres to his determination to consult the records of the War Department rather than the wishes of personal friends of aspirants for promotion or appointment in the Army, he will prove the strongest man who has occupied the White House for at least a generation. The political pull Is Inferior in influence to the military pull at Washington, and when the two combine it is an exceptionally strong Executive who does not yield to the demand of the combination, to the det riment of the military service and the Injustice to soldiers who have fairly won promotion. The records of the War Department are much more trust worthy for military purposes than the family record, even though the latter may furnish the name of a Grantj a Blaine or a Harrison. The Consldlnes, father and sons, are a tender-hearted lot. Witness the lach rymose display made by the three of them at the trial, now In progress at Seattle, a few days ago. Poor Tom was so choked by sobs that he found It difficult to tell how very necessary It was for hla brother to shoot Mere dith in order to save his own life; poor John was visibly affected at his broth er's recital of his one-time peril, and the father, not to be outdone In display of tender emotions, was "moved to tears." A woman's tears have proverb ial power over a jury having, It is al leged, caused the acquittal of many a man for whom the rope dangled or the penitentiary yawned. It remains to be seen whether the tears of men have a like potency. The third successive year of notable prosperity In American shipping is re ported by the United States Commis sioner of Navigation. Under it Ameri can tonnage has attained practically the maximum of 1861. The figures of the last-named year, compared with those of 1901, show an increase in coast ing trade vessels from 2,704,544 tons to 4,5S2,6o3 tons (two-thirds of this increase being on the Great Lakes); a decrease in foreign-trade vessels from 2,496,894 tons to 879,595 tons, and a decrease In whaling and fishing vessels from 338,375 tons to 61,940 tona These figures are suggestive as showing the trend of our industries as well as the growth of our commerce and the ability of our ship ping interests to take care of them selves. It is believed that President Roose velt, In his forthcoming message to Congress, will present an earnest re quest for legislation to compel trusts and great industrial combinations to change their attitude toward the public. The President desires, for one thing, to safeguard the Interests of investors by requiring great companies like the United States Steel Corporation, that does an interstate business, to make known all the essential facts as to the intrinsic value of their securities. This is desired as a basis for judgment as to the extent of stock inflation and data for prices to consumers. The President believes that many remedies lie in pub licity. In dealing with great aggrega tions of capital this is found generally true. The people of Zatapa County Tex., have been reduced to the verge of fam ine by drouth. Of course, the great State of Texas Is able to take care of her own, and will do so. In evfdence of this fact, Governor Skyers sent a check for $500 to be used in the purchase of provisions for these baplesg citizens of his state, as soon as apprised of their needs, and systematic relief measures will at once be organized for their ben efit. These people are industrious and .frugal, but the climate of Southern Texas Is against them. In a country where there Is "no chance to raise any kind of food" Industry and frugality do not count. All freight records on the Great Lakes have been broken this season, during which time 9,500,000 bushels of wheat have passed through the Sault Ste. Marie Canal. This stupendous bulk Is only a small part of the great freight total. This traffic shows extraordinary productiveness and an enormous de mand, and It Is still pouring through the canal In undiminished volume. Prosperity will continue as long as these two factors remain unchecked, and there Is certainly no sign of abatement in either, while the signs of continued growth are abundant. The cost of strikes and lockouts for the twenty years ending December 31, 1900, is computed by Carroll D. Wright, United States Commissioner of Statis tics, at $468,968,581. This sum, enor mous as it Is, is not all, nor yet the greater part, of the cost of these con tests. In bitterness and heartburning; In spite and hatred, the contention in the labor world that is thus represent ed 'is of far greater magnitude, and has a much wider scope than the finan cial loss represented by these figures. Every man designated for service on the organizing committees for raising the fund for the Lewis and Clark Cen tennial Is expected to be present at the rooms of the Chamber of Commerce, 246 Washington street, tomorrow (Monday) evening at 8 o'clock. The Irish plan of putting Kruger In Parliament is about as feasible 'as the scheme of the authorities in the opera of "Mikado" -When they took Ko Ko from the County Jail and made him Lord High Executioner. A FALLACY GONE WRONG. Man does not live to produce wealth; he produces wealth to live. And social phenomena are so closely bound up in turning Nature's raw materials that the process Is typical of all social life. "All men are created equal." It Is dinned Into our ears as youngsters by the school teacher, and as voters by the poli tician. We are told, for a corollary to this principle, that all thlng3 are pro duced by the community as a whole, and by equal units of the community In equal measure. "All things are due to labor, therefore, to labor are all things due. ' A second corollary, more Insidious in Its fallacy. Is that all persons are capable of equal enjoyment; that as poor and rich are equally human, luxuries, thererore, are symbolical ot injustice and cruelty. But It Is false that all persons have the same capacity for enjoyment, just as false as that all persons have the same capacity for work. If It were true, all men would have the same likes and dis likes, and there would be no variety of choice. All men would be attracted to the samo woman. Everybody would rellsn shrimp salad, iced cream or bananas In equal degree. Nobody would find more pleasure than another In a horse, a yacnt or a bicycle. Nor Is it true that all wealth Is produced by members of a com munity In equal proportion. If this were true, the organizer of an Industry would have no more brains or efficiency than Its humblest workman; there would be no need of leaders of labor, for all men would be on the same level of Intelli gence. But a third and greater fallacy perme ates the thought of the day. Disappoint ed ambition, failure of poor men to gain the dream of their youth, is popularly held to be the fault of a bad social sys tem; whereas the fault almost always rests in the individual. Zealous youth fol lowed by dispirited middle age Is not necessarily due to Morgan or Carnegie. Our educational system gives plastic youth false Impressions, wrong notions ot what it can do, and aspirations which It never can meet. Morgan or Carnegie probably do not bear down, an aspiring young me chanic or lawyer any more than they bear down a young poet who desires to be a Milton or a young painter who desires to be an Angelo. The common advice to a youth to hitch his ambition to a star ends In great disappointment, and often in strenuous indictment of our social system. These three errors are the life of a great part of the present discontent. They aro the substance, more or loss, of haran gues of labor leaders and inciters of the public mind. Thegood things of this world, Indeed are monopolized by the few. But so are the brains. It may be unfortunate that good things' and brains go together, but It must be so, ever has been so, and ever will be so. The socialist sees the effect, but Ignores the cause. He does not tell how exceptional recompense can be taken away frcra the exceptional few. To do this the multitude must dispense with the direction of the few, the strongest, the moat intellectual. The evils of our in dustrial system are to be condemned, but they are not always condemned in the right spirit. It Is often said that the source of all power Is the multitude. This is not true. The real source Is the minority. With out direction by the minority, the major ity could not do anything that calls for complicated effort. In industry there would be no great enterprises, no prog ress. In government there would be no great acts of policy or statesmanship. Neither would there be popular crazes without a quick-witted few to formulate them. Several years ago a mass of citi zens did not know what they wanted un til a Bryan gave expression to their dumbness. If all men were alike In their Intellectual cravings, as they are in their physical needs, unequal distribution of wealth might cause unhapplness. Up to a cer tain physiological point, that is, until de mands of nature for food and shelter are satisfied, all men are Inherently the same. But as to that part of wealth not classed as necessaries, wants of men are as varied as there are men. Physical man has one desire, physiological man an In finite variety. Imagination and intellect are the most varied things In the world, and they give rise to all kinds of desires. To say, therefore, that all persons enjoy things In the game way or In equal de gree Is not only false, but manifestly absurd. Luxury exists apart from the material thing itself. It is a creation of the mind. It depends on habits of thought, breed ing, culture and methods of life. To a healthy person a pound of chocolate candy might be a luxury; to a dispeptlc or sick person, nausea. A commercial newspaper Is a luxury to a business man and a bore to his wife; a mode paper is Just the reverse. A Latin or Greek text is the dryest kind of stuff to a person who cannot read it, but a most positive enjoyment to a scholar. A vase may be a luxury to one person and hardly worth looking at to another. A man with a fine house finds luxury in its rich furnish ings; not In a physical way, but in a way which satisfies his senses, by recalling as sociations in his life or his study. Queen Victoria took great pleasure in a large collection of relics, which King Edward cleared away. An apartment on a sleeping-car on wheels is a luxury, but any where else would be a close box. If poor people like beautiful mansions, the City Hall is the finest building in the city. The luxury exists, however. In an intellectual gratification. It is a subtle creation of the mind, apart from material enjoyment. Desire for wealth Is as subtle as the gratification It affords. Intellect and Imagination give desire its power. Pri vation is felt only when the imagination Is vivid or the conviction is strong that wealth Is attainable. Gold in Alaska, Si beria and the moon excite respectively lessening desire. The riches of Croesus or Aladdin's lamp arouse no envy. An automobile, fine pictures or costly bric-a-brac are craved only as wc feel we can own the one or the other, and the value of each Is separate from the power to satisfy bodily craving. To the ordinary man, wealth Is the name of something indefinite, which docs not worry him or assume shape until he thinks it is attainable. This belief and Imagination react upon each other. When one is weak the other may be strong. Both stimulate the powers of talent or genius. But the average man Is moved by these motives in very small degree, until they are artificially aroused in him. They are aroused by politicians, socialists and in great part by labor organizers. The chief doctrine of these "friends" of the people Is that as all men are equal and as wealth is produced equally by all. deficient talents may be overcome by legislation. Desire is stimulated In men for wealth who would not otherwise even hope to get it. Socialism offers the ap parent means. This way not only are unhapplness and disappointment multi plied, but an unreasoning, impracticable temper. This neither helps the dispute nor remedies the evil, but encrusts the evil. Herein we are victims of a fallacy, of a grevious fallacy gone wrong. SLINGS AND ARROWS No 3Iorc Pull. (The Secretary of War and tha President have decided to abolish pull In the Army. News Dispatch.) Oh, Mlahael J. Mulcahy, straight descended from the sod. And whose father earns hla living with the meek and lowly hod; Do you thirst to wear the shoulder straps and bear a tinseled sword. And taste the many pleasures no Lieutenant can afford? Then read up on Upton's tactics, memorize the Art of War; For the chance to rise awaits you as it never did before. The cup of opportunity la at your elbow, full; For know the War Department has at last abolished pull. Oh, A. deVere Van Astor, who are In tha swellest zcz, Tou must mourn for the commission which you stand no chance to get. If you're pining for brass buttons, you must wear them on your yacht. On the list of new appointments you will And your name Is net. Papa's name is good for millions, and position. don't you know. But with Messrs. Root and Roosevelt, papa's letters do not go. Tou must let your high ambition to be called "Lef tenant" lag. For our worthy War Department has at last abolished drag. Oh, William Henry Thompson, gently nurtured only son Of some influential Senator, who's strong In Washington. Tou must put youf expectations full rcgetfully away. And take up with the Idea that you'll have to work some day. Tou would like to be a Major, with a gold- laeed uniform. And calmly walk abroad and take society by storm. But, although you think their action Is devoid of common sense. Know that Mpssrs. Root and Roosevelt havo abolished Influence. , Oh, gentle politician, you whose counsels hold such sway Tn the making of appointments, all of you have had your dsy. No more Army Quartermasters who have con tracts to award. Which are fat for speculation, will owe to you their sword. No mere defeated candidates who've been d- nled the joys Of office will be satisfied with straps for their dear boys. It's a mighty Innovation in the Army, Heaven knows. But it comes from Root and Roosevelt, and you can bet It goes. Repartee In Constantinople. "Your Highness," said the American en gineer, "I have completed the fortress, and I assure you that no French battle ship will ever be able to raze lu My bill Is 5t67U 02. Please pay at the desk." "But," said the Sultan, angrily, "the fortress fell of its own weight yesterday. Then," pursued the engineer, "my promise that no French warship will ever be able to destroy It is fulfilled. My bill remains the same. Please pay tho waiter." "Look at here," thundered the Sultan, "I hired you for an engineer. I can get plonty of eon Sultan engineers In Europe." Which rejoinder shows that wrath does not always dull the wire edge of wit. Asleep nt the Switch. I patiently stood in tho telephone booth. And shouted again and again. But although I politely appealed for a switch, I politely appealed all In vain. At last a strange murmur came over the phone, A sort of a guttural, which Convinced me I might as well give up the quest. For the girl was Asleep at the Switch. In pro Shows His Hand. It was one of the nights when Othello was sitting up with Desdamona after the family went to bed, and he got down to the slip just as the last gondola was pulling out for his hotel. Imagine his chagrin and horror when he saw that It was crowded to the guards. He was about to turn back and make a few re marks appropriate to the occasion when Iago, who was sitting on tho after deck and ,, smoking a large black perfecto, caught sight of him. "Come on Othello," he shouted, "there is always room for one Moor." It was frcm that time that Othello's suspicions of the black-hearted villain be gan to be aroused. 3Yo Complaint. Ralnln', ralnln. ralnln. All tho dreary day. Still we ain't complalnln, "Cause the skies is gray. If the sun was shlntn' All the livelong time. We would all be plnln' Fur a rainy clime. Everything looks newer When the clouds go 'way. Skies Is all the bluer. When they've Just been gray. Tronble In the Local Room. "Tho train was wrecked," said the rail road reporter, "because the conductor made a bad brake." "Look at here," interposed the police reporter," that makes my head light." "A man who would talk like that," cut in the sporting reporter, "ought to bo fired." "When are you fellows going to stop railing at one another?" inquired the ho tel reporter. "I was going to butt In with that ex press purpose," called the bulldog re porter from across the room. "I was going to say," muttered the re ligious reporter, "that this Journal will be hot" But just then the city editor Interrupt ed the conversation on the ground that It disturbed his train of thought. Ye Gallery God. Te Crltlok may writo with satirical Fenne, An pick quite to Pieces ye Plays; He may saye It b Rotten again and again, Yt he knowes It will live but a Daye; He may say ye Construction Is notably weak. Yt ye Lines ar-s ye veriest Rotte. Its Faults with ye keenest of Eyes he may seek. And declare It Is Lacking In Plotte. And yt though ye Player ye Crltlck much fears; When he makes to ye People his Nodde, He knows ye play "goes" as soon as he hears Ye Voice of ye Gallery God. Te Crltlck may say yt ye Playe Is a Blrde. Tt ye Partes are most strikingly drawn. Tt ye Lines are ye Brightest he ever has heard, - Tt ye drama is grandly putte on. He may Are Bouquets at ye Author full oft. Awl say yt ye Players are great, Tet ye Player looks up to ye Gallerye Loft, And listens to hear of his Fate. For he knows yt ye Play Is a failure forsooth. Before he tenn minutes has trod On ye Stage if ho hear not a Sound from ye Touth Who Is known as ye Gallery God. J. J. MONTAGUE. Sacrament. Who holds the untouched Hp-J of her he loves More sacred than the sacramental wine. The smile ot these sweet eyes that droop ot shine As blessed bread who honestly removes All taint of earthlness and oft reproves His eagerness to win. lest more divine Be her sweet state alone he bultds a shrine Whose sure foundations year b7 year shaP prove Ilia right to worship. Tho he never guess AH he has bullded, to this holy place She, too. will steal to -rest and oft to pray Half to her God, half to her happiness. And grow to be as pure In heart and face As Is his angel reverenced each day. Nora Barnhart la the Independent.