PART FOUR PAGES 25 TO 32 t ! VOL. XXI. PORTLAND, OKEGQjS, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBEB 14, 1002. NO. 50. SsSSsgi I LAQ EDITORIALS .ON FIVE PROBLEMS ' 3XW! jj il l i 1 j v OF GOVERNMENT By THE PEOPLE BY THE MARQUIS OF CASTELLANE OF UNIVERSAL PEACE By the Princess "Wiszaicwsfca if Foun der and President of the Society for Universal Peace. OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH BY VILLIAM T. STEAD ;XAMINE for a moment the map of that part of the world dominated by ' the Influence of Latin and Anglo- Saxon, or which is "the same thing Christian civilization, and you Will be struck by the fact that it .consists of three groups of nations: those who have, and acknowledge a master; those who believe themselves to be without a mas ter, and those who are without one. In the first category come Russia and Ger many. These two empires are, respective ly, governerd and administered by virtue of authority vested in a single human be ing. The Russians and Germans obey their governments: they command them never: "Vulgum pecus." In the second category stand side by side, notwithstanding that they are sep arated by 1000 leagues of ocean, two re publicsFrance and the United States. Ask a Frenchman or an American if he submits to any constraint other than that which the law, framed by the soyercign reopl-?, imposes, and he will laugh in your face, so obviously foolish does the question seem. Finally, in the .third category, you see the English monarchy, an elaborated, heirarchical system, having at the head a King, an Emperor, even with nominal authority descending in graduated steps through hereditary peers, privileged pro prietors, etc. Yet, like the thoroughbred horses which the country produces, the people are rebellious to all checks and submit in reality to only power that of Opinion So much Is this the case that one is compelled to employ an apparent paradox to describe truthfully the regime. It Is strictly true to say that Great Bri tain is a democratic monarchy, and that the "United States and France arc aristo cratic republics. Let me explain. States, like houses, have their dummy frontages. Here is a state which declares to the world that It is run "by the people, for the people." In reality, it is Ie!iered body and soul to a caste or a class. Another which is fond of parading its c-rmined Kings and Queens before the world would not, as a matter of fact, submit to roya! dictation for a single hour. Thus, England, which but l vHE problems of religion are in the j 1 firmly believe that there is a direct divine guidance of things in this world, and the events of the day, the difficulties thrown in the way of religious develop ment, do not shake my faith. God himself will easily find a way of solving any problems that may occur if 1 we faii to find the way ourselves. . When Christ siept in the bark while the tempest raged. His disciples became alarmed -and called upon Him to save them. It was not what He desired of them, and He re buked them, because it showed how weak was their faith in Him. If allow ourselves to be overcome by a similar unreasonable fear, we shall merit the same rebuke, for it will show that we have forgotten that it is He who rules and guides the world, and not our selves. It is just that we should deplore the evil we see, and, as children of our Heavenly Father, lament that there are so many who do not love Him and seem to oppose His designs, yet it should be with a firm faith in Him and in His power to set all tilings right in their time. I am not of those who always weep and who see only evil in this world. There is also much good, and, perhaps, there is more good than evil. We judge men only from the outside, and who knows whether we always judge rightly? We cannot see into men's thoughts or consciences, and many things they dc which we judge so severely may have their excuse before God. On the other hand, if the liberty of be CRIME A -.HAVE formerly given the reason why I consider Professor Cesare Lombroso's definition of crime to be more exact and to the point than any other. He de clares crime to be an atavism. But why, then, is the criminal atavistic? Why Is it that we, in the midst of our modern civilization, have human beings that do not .seem to have been touched by its ennobling influence and have the ment al qualities of men that lived more than a hundred thousand years ago? Lombroso's theory has answered this question. He says: "The criminal is a de generate; his development has been stop ped." "The protoplasma in the egg, or - the spermatozoe, or sometimes both, have de ttrioated hereditarily; they have been of an Inferior qualty and have been unable to reach a hish development" Lombroso's theory seems to me to be impregnable as long as it occupies itself with facts. Lombroso himself has been a .nost careful observer, and there is not a person living who can cross sword with him unpunished on the territory of facts. It is indisputable that almost all habitual criminals are degenerates. There are also '.numerable anatomical proofs of this toeory. All the signs of degeneration are met vlth In a much larger number of individ u""s among the habitual inmates of pris ens and penitentiaries than among people cf the same race and social position out c?'de of these. It Is very true that there are criminals ithout the stigmata of degeneration, but thIr number is very scarce, and It is also fre that there are, people born with these stigmata, who arc not criminally Inclined; tut both of these facts only prove that therein crime is also a social factor, and that it Is possible for a degenerated Indi vidual with inherited criminal tendencies to go through life without committing any triminal act, perhaps because he has been b jm and lives in social surroundings where ' ha sees no bad example and no crime is suggested to him, or because he is rich end can gain nothing, by committing a yesterday presented to the world the spectacle of the whole nation doing hom age to its royal house on the occasion of the solemn coronation, is so little guided by the commands of that house that the Queen's order for all coronation robes to be made at home had not the least effect. France, who writes upon all her public buildings for the world to see, "Liberty, Equality and Fraternity," has been busy of late in turning inoffensive men and women from their homes Into the street in order to satisfy the bigotry of a sect. So, again, the American people, who pride themfcelves upon their emancipation from Old World aristocracy, are busy every day creating trusts, which make the Pier pont Morgans, the Armours, the Rocke fellers just as powerful as most of our .Emperors and Kings In Europe. It has arrived at .such a condition that the American people can now do nothing without their consent, or at least nothing in opposition to -their interests or desires. Let us be frank. If the construction of the interoceanic canal is not an accom plished fact; if the gold standard is not replaced by the silver; if so eminent a man as Mr. Roosevelt can speak only in deadly fear of the trusts, it Is because the financial interests Their Highnesses the Kings will not permit It. This much seems inevitable, then: Eng land, despite the nominal and ceremonial deference to the monarchy and aristoc racy, despite her commercialism, is nevertheless- self-governing. She has been so for a century. Chatham, Pitt, Fox, Palm erston, Disrae'i and Gladstone have made the power of opinion triumph over the power of privilege. The money power is not allowed to throw its weight into the scales. If Tecent indications go for much, Mr. Chamberlain has done something to change this fact. I cannot epeak as. to that, but this I do know, that England, once solidly con vinced that the Transvaal War was dic tated by the financial clique, the country would not afford to' its author another day of power. It is difficult for us who live so much under the domination of J capitalism to imagine the jealousy with which a truly self-governing people re OF -RELIGION BY CARDINAL RICHARD, ARCHBISHOP OF lievers is restrained, if they have to sub mit to what seems a persecution, and are unjustlj- treated, it may be permitted by Divine Providence for their own good. When we do cur duty in the midst of dif ficulties, we show that our religion is not an idle word, that it can lead to noble and heroic actions, that our faith is pure and sincere, and that our hope Is strong. I do not think that religion is losing ground. If the number cf believers di minishes, which I do not believe to be the fact, the faith of those who still believe is more pure; they do not need miracles to convince them that a Divine Provi dence guides the world. We see men of talent and genius pub licly pointing out the social advantages of religious belief. Ladies of distinction and members of fashionable society take pleasure in giving religious instruction to children of all classes. There are even cases where the course of events has changed the indifferent Into apostles, and we have seen the enemies of religion be come its defenders. I do not love strife. Religion should ele vate our morality and secure interior peace and happiness. These objects are not attained -in the midst of strife and I contentions. Mutual union and good-will, not war between brethren, should be our motto. There are numerous seekers of knowl edge and men of science who are troubled at some of our social evils. Their reason and intelligence gives them science, but their science does not give them peace. DISEASE SOCiETy ALONE CAN CUKE crime, that he cannot buy for his money. Lombroso's theory has been recognized unconsciously by everyone a long time be fore it was ever advanced. Instinctively man has always painted vice and the vi cious as ugly and unprepossessing In ap pearance. There are still scientists who deny this theory, but their number is get ting very small. . We must then take It for granted that the habitual criminal as a general rule is a degenerate, though he may in a. very fow caises show no sign that we can per ceive. t The logical result of reasoning along this line is then this. The habitual criminal is a degenerate, and the degenerate is an inferior organism, which, on account of hereditary debility, has been unable to develop fully." Up to this point I have been able to In dorse my master and friend in everything. COLONIZING THE POOH AST June, when I advocated in The Ij Oregonian the colonizing of the poor " of the cities on the unoccupied land all over the country, especially in the West, I was not advised of the magnifi cent work. in this line that had been In augurated by the Salvation Army through the wisdom and splendid efforts of Com mander Booth-Tucker, near the geo graphical line between Colorado and Tex as: nor that the experiment was being tried on a small scale in Powers County, Colorado: nor that, through the generos ity of a wealthy citizen of Cleveland, the Salvation Army had also established a colony near that city. Imagine my delight on reading In the Review of Reviews for November, 1902, a strong advocacy of this same colonization scheme, written by so able a writer and profound a thinker as Albert Shaw, Mr. Shaw expresses also unqualified In dorsement of the work of the Salvation Army and of Commander Booth-Tucker's gard any invasion of their independence, their freedom. In contradistinction to England, Amer ica and France have all the trappings of democracy, all the formulas, but are in reality governed by a class which is es sentially autocratic. With us, the French, this class is designated "The High Fi nance" the Bankery. With you Amer icans the class is known as "Kings" Steel Kings, Oil Kings, Railroad Kings, and I know not what kings. The popular Instinct which has thus labeled them has not gone astray. They are veritable mon archs. They direct your governmental machine, they control your Presidential elections. They forbid or permit the Sen ate to Impose tariffs. They say when and how the Interoceanic canal shall be built, or if at all. They decline to allow the entrance of Cuban sugar. From this too brief review of Christian civilization we are able to see that. Eng land alone is truly self-governing, placing ideas above money. Because she is not oblivious to the advantages of money the credit Is all the greater. And yet, Eng land is an aristocracy! Does this mean that the aristocratic form is superior to the democratic form as a social - organism? Not at all. And It Is Here that my beloved France shows her superiority. This country, which has been the prey of foreigners for a century, which foreign intrigue has manipulated as a Punch and Judy man manipulates his marionettes, is so generous, her soil is so productive and well cultivated, the ambitions of her people so modest, that, distracted as she seems to be, she is still the country in which there are the fewest poor and in which comfort is most gen erally distributed. That is why, admiring as I do the beau tiful lines of the English governmental architecture, astoundeu as I am at the magnificent energy and patriotism of the American people, I should be weak enough, had I to choose my birthplace, to ask that France should take me in. France is the country where the humble are best treated, where the humble are best off. PARIS If they want peace and liberty, let them find them in the ever-living words of Christ, "Love ye one another as I have loved you." Our lives. If shaped according to this principle, will give us patience and accord best with the designs of Divine Provi dence. It will convince our opponents that religion is the purest of gifts, that it Inspires the purest sentiments, and that the doctrines and morals .which it inculcates conduce to the happiness of mankind more efficaciously than abstract science and philosophy. Years ago, when I was still Vicar-General in my native city, Nantes, and while studying and writing the lifeof blessed Frances d'Amboise, a revered saint of our historic vende'e, I selected as my motto the mystic words which were always on her lips: "Faites sur toutes choses que Dieu soit le mieux aime" ("Act above all that God may be loved above all"). The words of the motto, as I explain them, mean that we are to act as perfect Chris tians. We must prove by our lives that our faith is sincere, that our love for our brethren Is real, and that our confidence in God is unlimited. Men will know by cur lives whether our intentions are selfish or generous, wheth er our principles are good or bad. The honest, upright life of each Christian will help to solve many difficult questions. The one great task of religion is to draw men nearer to God, or, as it is expressed in my motto, to make men love God above all things. and I do not understand how any one can help to indorse him. But our paths part when we come to the interpretation of facts. To Lombroso every criminal having been stopped in hie development is atavis tic. Well, here seeme to be a hitch in his logic, as It is going too far to say that every stop of growth is necessarily an atavism. A cessation of growth is an interruption of devolpment at a point that is not the final goal of evolution, and may be com pared to a station on a railroad that once was a terminal station, but that hart now become a way station because evolution has continued and passed it. But th cessation of growth may also take placte at a point that has never been a terminal, and then you cannot speak of atavism, but simply of a malformation. I shall try to make my meaning still belief "that, if a large part of the money now spent In charitable relief in cltle3 were put Into a fund for the systematic transformation of unsuccessful townsfolk into successful members of farm colonies, there would be a great saving of waste human life and waste capital, as well as a great development of agricultural re sources now lying waste." That is what suggested, not knowing that the same thing had been advanced by Commander Booth-Tucker or anybody else. This thought came to me in my ex perience among the city poor, and I shall be gratified if the agitation of the ques tion should become so general that think ing men and capitalists would look into the whole question. I have no doubt that Commander Booth Tuckqr could convince any one who would allow him to furnish the evidence that the plan Is feasible and far less expensive to cities, the state and benevolent people than tho present burdensome plan of car- -rO PROBLEM, either of economics or I tJ of morals, is of such enormous lm- portance to the immediate future of civilization as that of universal peace. No expenditure of the nations is such a drain upon their wealth as that involved by ar mies? nothing so complicates the social problems of the modern world as the mill tarism of the great nations. How are we to meet .this great question", how attain the Ideal of peace, If not of dis armament, at least of reduced armament? If we would put an end to war, uproot secular prejudices and destroy hereditary evil, we must form a new generation by an education founded on peace principles. We must teach men morality, and thus transform the spirit of nations. Thus only may we hope to create a public opinion stronger than armies. The most difficult part of our task re mains still to be accomplished. Not only must we struggle against the evil passions of mankind, but that which Is worse still, human folly, which persists in saying that, so long as mankind exists, so long will wars continue. This humiliating folly stops ail progress and places a barrier against every generous aspiration. We have also to combat the false Idea of pa triotism, which blinds men to every feel ing of justice when the ambition of love or conquest is concerned. Wo have wit nessed the distressing sights of nations counting It a patriotic duty to encourage every evil action committed during war in pursuit of vainglory or self-interest. By education we must substitute a no ble and more enlightened love of country. Patriotism should not degenerate into Na tional arrogance nor into a desire to abaso other countries In order to exalt our own. National fanaticism engenders hatred against other nations, while, on the con trary, all nations should work together in their efforts to civilize humanity. By this means only the union of all nations will, sooner or later, form the federation of the world. We have already accomplished a great work of renovation, and attained a most wonderful measure of success. Diplomats who formerly treated our peace ideals as Idle dreams adopted them in theory- at The Hague conference. They fear to put them Into practical test, but our pacific principles haunt them continually and guide their thoughts to a higher ideal. The day will come when arbitration will be compulsory and the seeds of peace which we have sown will bring forth beneficial and humane results. If the life of man is perishable, that of nations is prolonged over thousands of years, and new ge'nt' rations will arise, among whom truth will rise up and bear fruit. The present moment la arduous, but wo should not lose courage. Do we not labor essentially to prove the problem of the future? We are told that If we. wish to reform school books by diminishing the glory of the great warriors distinguished in history we will inculcate In our young children sentiments contrary to war, and will create a race of men without cour age, a generation without energy or vigor. If we women preach the doctrine of peace it la because we are convinced that by such an education alone can we restore man to his higher nature, his real char acter, of which a false and warlike edu cation has so long deprived him. The world boasts of military courage, but it is not the soldier alone who is brave. He who explores the tropics and the poles, the workman in a dangerous trade, the laborer who leads a life of pa tient toll to provide for his family, and they who In the midst of strife and prej udice preach peace, are they not a!no courageous? Our peaceful education of the coming generation shall not diminish their energy, but we shall render them humane as well as brave. To use the beautiful expression of the Poet King Oscar II, "Love, Harmony and Peace arc the daughters of Heaven." clearer, using the same comparison. Sup pose you have a railroad train, the engine of which Is Insufficiently provided with water and coal. The train will not be able to pull through to its destination, but it may stop on the way at a small station, where there is food and shelter, where the passengers may stay for some time, or procure carriages in which to continue the journey; though not with as much speed and comfort as by train. The train may also run out of water or coal in the mletet of a prairie far from any human dwelling, 'and in that case the po sition of the passengers will, of course, be more uncomfortable than In the former, or it may even meet with an accident, with more or less disastrous results to the passengers. If it is true that the individual passes through all the stages which man has passed in his development toward civili , ing for the unfortunate and the indigent 1 even in our small cities. t Distributed among the very wealthy, it i would not impose any hardship to take 100 families at a time and colonize them on the various available tracts of land to be found in every state and 'territory of the west and southwest. These states could well afford to offer a subsidy to a colo nization company that would organize and superintend the establishment of the homeless people found In every city. If the philanthropist who gives so freely to all charities, who builds libraries, asy lums, hospitals, homes for the aged and Indigent, would give a little time to the investigation of the possibilities in store for these same subjects .of his benevo lence through colonization on God's broad acres, we are sure that the Booth-Tuckers could command all they need to carry out their merciful plans for the relief of the congested districts, where squalor, crime IN THE COGNTRU WHAT is the most pressing problem which is at once economical, so cial, political and religious? An swer: The unequal distribution of wealth, which is brought out into, strong relief by the rapid growth of enormous fortunes. The billionaire is the most conspicuous, and, from some points of view, at once the most menaclnc and the most hopeful portent of the 20th century. At the be ginning of the 19th century, millionaires were rare; bUilionalres unknown. At the beginning of "the 20th century millionaires are as plentiful as mushrooms and billion aires dominate -the situation. Take, for example, Mr. Rockefeller, of the Standard Oil trust. I know nothing of Mr. Rockefeller personally. I only se lect him because from time to time I read in the American papers estimates which may be more or less fanciful or more or less accurate of the fortune which he has amassed. It is constantly stated that the Oil King's capital is underestimated at $500,000,000. It may be more; It may- be less. But $500,000,000 is a good, round sum, and, as there is nothing personal In my speculations, the precise, sum does not exactly matter. Taking the Rockefeller fortune at $500, 000,000 today, what will it amount to in 50 years' time? To answer that question ac curately is .impossible, for no one knows what prodisries of achievement are yet latent In the Rookefeller brain. But, leav ing that out of account, and supposing that the Rockefeller millions are put out to usury at 5 per cent compound Interest, and both interest and capital allowed to accumulate year by year for 50 years. In that case in 1052 Mr. Rockefeller will be the owner of a gigantic fortune of $5,733. 000,000. which at 5 per cent would yield him an anual income of $256,000,000. In 1900 the total sum paid in wages and salaries to the 5,719,1S7 persons employed in the manufacturing Industries of" the THE a THREEFOLD question Is given me to answer: "What do women want? Is it greater legal recogni tion, emincipatlon from drudgery, or suf frage?" To begin with our first clause greater legal recognition: Women certainly de sire equality with men In the law's Inter pretation of right and relation. Why should this ever have been denied them? Are they less human than the men whom they bring into the world? Are they les:-? entitled to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness"? That women should be held to' bear children In whom they have no legal right, and expected to earn money which will never be theirs, Is a doctrine which could only prevail when the mothers of men were held in absolute tutelage, as creatures who had not the intelligence necessary for the training of youth, nor for the care of property. Shall we next consider the emancipa tion from drudgery? This last appears to be an unkind word to apply to the offices which are essential to life and home com fort. Everything that has growth needs cherlshlng-verything that belongs in space needs place and order. The chem ical inventions are doing much to dimin ish the necessity of household labor. Suffrage is conceded to them fully in some states, partially In others, but even with its present limitations it is exer cised and justly esteemed. America has surely led the world in its treatment of our sex. Whit more is left for us to de sire or demand? It would be a mistake to suppose that freedom once obtained is sure to maintain itself. The tendencies to excess and deficiency which are inher ent in human activity be likely to engen der combination of tyranny and slavery. zation, then the embryo must pass ' through successive phases, every one of ; which must represent a distinct type of : development that has actually oxisted. Now, If development stops at any of , these distinct types, then it is a clear case of atavism; but If it stops between two distinct passes at a. time when it does not resemble a complete being that has actually existed. It Is an amorphlsm. which is by no means identical with tin atavism. According to Lombroso, the Incontest ably stopped development that represents the habitual criminal Is an atavism, and this, I believe. Is not sufficiently proved. I call It an amorphism, for this rea son, that the habitual criminal does not correspond to any known or probable or j admissible ancestral type. The idea of I primitive man as an unconscious crim inal cannot be defended. and disease reap annually a rich harvest in every city in this Union. Convince these people that somebody cares for them and their Immortal souls, and that, if they will take advantage of a plain business opportunity to secure for themselves a home and a chance to pro vide a comfortable living for their fam ilies, schools, churches and places of in nocent amusement will follow them; and It would not be possible to provide for the half who would apply for membership in such colonics. The very spirit of independence that in spired the American colonists would stim ulate these who would join such an en terprise, and if they felt that there was capital behind them that would keep them until they had time enough to pay for their homes, they would be happy and self-respecting. If the press all over the country would take up and advocate the proposition that the wealthy people of the Nation con United States was, in round numbers, $2,735,000,000. The Rockefeller fortune in 1952 will, therefore, be more than double as much as the whole wage bill of 1900 in all the factories and workshops of the United States. His revenue will be more than three-quarters of a million a day. The German empire maintains the strongest army in the world at an annual cost of Jlfo.000,000. Great Britain main tains the strongest navy in the world at an annual cost of ?155,COO,000. Mr. Rocke feller's personal income in 1952 will oe very nearly equal to defraying the cost of the strongest army In the world and the strongest navy in the world. Does any one believe that any state, let r.lcno a state based upon the principles of democ racy, will allow the accumulation of such a gigantic fund of treasure in the hands of a single citizen? What, then, are the alternatives before us? First Mr. Rockefeller may divide his fortune or give it away, or his fortune may take to itself ings and !! away, in which case the operation of . tural economic causes will have removed the danger now Imminent on the near hori zon. Second Mr. Rockefeller may become strong enough. In combination with other billionaires, to dominate the democracy, overawe the Legislature and make the Executive his tool. In that case, while the form of the Republic might survive, as It did under the Roman Empire, all j power would be centered in the hands ; of the billionaire, and we should be living under the autocratic rule of the plutoc racy. Third The democracy has become alarmed, and by legislation and taxation, by progressive income tax and death du ties, or by the simple process of direct appropriation, transfer the Rockefeller billions to the National exchequer. The second possibility I dismiss as un WOM AM PROBLEM BY JULIA vTARD 'HOWE Suffrage has the third place In the ques tion with which I am now concerned. It would be useless to ignore the division of opinion In this regard which exists among intelligent women today. Many of us ear nestly desire it, and, speaking of myself, I find in its advocates of both sexes a truer and deeper understanding of prin ciples than is shown by its opponents. While I recognize this difference, I feel assured that these very remonstrants against suffrage desire all that it is pretty sure to bring with it. Suffrage with us is the seal of citizenship, and this, with Its rights and duties, is a boon which must be desired by all who know its value. Set ting aside the protection which it insures to the individual, it is to be sought for the public good. It surely is not saying too much to say that the especial endowments of woman hood would bring into the arena of po litical action new and precious influences in behalf of good morals and worthy sen timents. The wisdom of the fireside should have its place in the councils of the Nation. I should do great injustice to the pres ent time if I were to speak of these de siderata as boons entirely withheld from the women of today. Legal recognition has been granted them In most of our states, largely through the efforts of lead ing sliffragists. The sewing machine is the advance guard of an army of inven tions which will lighten the burden of household toll. It might always be possible for the en franchised sex to lapse into Its old pas sivity before the more self-assertive force of the opposite sex. In view of this. It Is j important that women should study to maintain the conditions of their new en- By Dr. Max Nordau What we know from the savage of to day and from the development of the child excludes all possibility of this idea. Every child has sociable instincts, cries when left to itself and quiets down when any one comes. The child is egotistic, but still capable of altruistic feelings and smf.il sacrifices. The savage, as we know him today, is an impulsive being, "a slave of his In stincts, but he is by no means unsociable, as most habitual criminals are. On the contrary, he is very sociable, in fact, much more so than civilized man, and if expelled or taken away from his tribe and compelled to live alone his life will only be short. He is neither Individualist nor anarch ist; he Is a strong traditionalist, and in variably submits to public opinion in his tribe. He commits no crime against any mem- BY MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN tribute to a trust fund to be used in get ting the poor of the city "back to the land." the railroads would provide trans portation almost, if not .altogether, gra tuitously, and the Government and the corporations who own such large tracts of land would make the land so cheap that the colonists could get It at a nom inal price In less than the 10 years al lowed colonists to pay for their land and original supplies; many hundreds, if not thousands, would apply for membership, and before the dawning of 1001 we should hear of prosperous people building up communities in desolate wastes, of the shortened dockets of the criminal courts, and of fewer names on the mortality lists. In any event, let some scheme be de vised by which the multitudes congregat ed in all the cities can be taken to the country, where they can eavn their bread by the sweat of their brows, as God In tended they should do, and thus be saved for usefulness to their country and to the world. thinkable. The first Is, of course, the most desirable. But If it fails us, then the third becomes inevitable. The beemnster' sees without alarm the extent to which his industrious insects store up the honey crop of a whole coun tryside in a few hives. He sees with the utmost satisfaction the conversion of mill Ions of cells into billions. The vast ac cumulation cf the sweets of field and grove goes on unchecked all Summer, But Autumn comes. In olden days, before the apiarian learned the true science of beekeeping, he incontinently smothered his industrious workers and appropriated the combs. Nowadays he has grown at once more humane and less wasteful. He would scorn to slay a single bee. He re lieves them of their superfluous store, but carefully reserves for them sufficient honey to keep thetn through the Winter. What the modern beekeeper does to his bees society will do to its billionaires. When Autumn comes, as come it will, the public will say to the billionaire: "Friend, we would not despoil you of one red cent that you call your own which you can show us is needful for your personal com forts or your luxury. All the money you can spend, wisely or unwisely, is yours to dispose of. But the enormous residue which you cannot spend, and which you can only administer through hired serv antsthat residue which enables you to overshadow the Republic and exercise a dangerous influence in the commonwealth that residue we shall transfer from your control to the control of the elected rep resentatives of the people. Business will be carried on at the old stand by tho same old hands, only instead of the net revenue of $280,000,000 per annum passing Into your private account. $250,000,000 thereof will be diverted into the National Treasury to be used for the amelioration of the condition of the peoole. With the remaining $30,000,000 per annum you must contrive to subsist the best you can. Many better men have supported a use ful existence on less." i largement and to understand fully the du ties implied in their relation to society. The first result of emancipation, either In men or in women, is always likely to be an over-individualism. Self-development and self-assertion iippear to be the first of personal obligations. When these have had their day. the so cial instinct of the race reasserts itself. j and the family, in an extended sense, be- come-s tne paramount odjcci oi interest. I think that our women have passed through this necessary first experience, and are now entering upon a further and better stage of progress. In this Last, co operation is sought for an object far be yond mere personal advantage, viz., the common ood. What do woman want? We ask tliat our brothers should not go back from the advance which they, as well as we, have made. Coeducation is one point In this advance. Our society has attained an elevation at which young men and young women can stand side by side in the college, as they may sit sido by side in the church. Our women stu dents have done nothing to lower tho grade of scholarship in the institutions which have admitted them to full fellow ship with their brothers. They have dona something to improve the moral and so cial tone of these Institutions. In their behalf we should not abate one jot of our claim to the ground which wo have gained, not through the ascendancy of physical force, but by the victory of principles which we believe to have their place In the eternal order. Finally, let m.'ii and women alike keep in view the fact that the continuance of a power de pends upon its rifrht use. (Copyright. 1902. by W. R. Hearst.) ber of his tribe without being severely punished for it. and therefore he neither steals nor murders, except outside of it. He Is exactly like civilized man in thi3 respect, as long as nations of the civ Hzed world think themselves justified in committing murder and thefts after a declaration of war. We can therefore not call the savage a habitual criminal. On the contrary he is profoundly superstitioufly tied down by his respect for traditional custom. We are justified in believing the samo of primitive man. He certainly did not live alone; he was a sociable being, just as the savage of today, whiie the crim inal Is just the opposite. He does not care for public opinion; he knows no dif ference between enemy and friend. He is absolutely different from man at any stage of his development, and crime can therefore not be defined as an atavism. To my opinion the habitual criminal is a being whose development has been stopped between two stations two dis tinct types. KIs debility is to be con sidered a minus habeus, a disease, and a very dangerous disease at that. He Is a parat-ite on society. The unpremeditated crime, especially when committed in the heat of passion, is a psychic storm, evidently disastrous in its results, comparable to a hailstorm or an earthquake, and will only disap pear when education has taught man the secret of mastering his passions, no mat ter how great the provocation. The real willfully committed, unpardon able crime must also some time become a thing of the past. It is in most cases a result of the injustice of social condi tions, and the only reliable remedy against it shall only then have been found when society shall have found a plan to realize perfect co-operation that will give equal chances to all and put an end to the supprtsslon of the weak by the strong and assure even the weakest at the least the minimum of the things necessary to the comfort of life. The doctrine that leads toward the real ization of this ideal goal it) called socialism. A 1 v