THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, DgCEBER 28, 1902. 8ntere at the -Pqstofflce at Portland, Oregon as second-class matter. CCVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. T Mall -(postage prepaid. In advance) Dally, with Sunday, per month.. 5 S5 Dally, Sunday excepted, per year 1 CO Dally. -Fith Sunday, per year 9 00 Sunday, per year - 2 00 The Weekly, per year.i 1 The Weekly. 3 months 50 To City Subscribers Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday excepted.l3c Dally, per week, delivered. Sunday lncluded.20c POSTAGE RATES. United States. Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper Jc 14 to 2S-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended for publication In The Ortgonlan should be addressed Invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan." not to the name of a-y individual. Letters relating to adver tising, subscription or to any business matter should be addreted simply "The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories Irom Individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. No stamps should be Inclosed for this purpose. Eastern Business Offlce. 43. 44. 45. 47. 48. 40 Tribune building. New Tork City; CiO-11-12 Tribune building, Chicago; the S. C. Beckwlth Special Agency. Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by L. E. Lee. Pal Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Brcs.. 230 Sutter street; F. W. Pitta. 1008 Market street; 3. K. Cooper Co.. 74C Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster & Orear, Ferry news stand: Frank Scott. 80 Ellis street, and N. Wheatley, 513 Mission street. For sale in Los Angeles by B. F. Gardner. 250 South Spring wtreet. and Oliver &. Haines, S05 South Sprlnr street. For sale in Kansas City. Mo., by Rlcksecker Cigar Co.. Ninth and Walnut streets. For .sale in Chicago .by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald. 53 Washington street. For sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street; Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Faraam street. For sale In Salt Lake by the Salt Lake News Co.. 77 West Second South street. For sale in Minneapolis by R. G. Hearsey Co.. 24 Third street South. For sale in Washington. D. C. by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver. Colo., by Hamilton & Xendrlck. OOC-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jacksen Book and Stationery Co.. Fifteenth and Lawrence streets; A. Series. Sixteenth and Curtis streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, with possibly an occasional shower during the fore noon; winds becoming northerly. TESTERDATS WEATH ER Maximum tem perature, 43; minimum temperature. 37; pre cipitation, 0.21 inch. PORTXAXD, SUXDAY, DEC. 28, 1002. THE STATE CONSTITUTION. The annual meeting of the Oregon State Historical Society for 1902. which occurred a few days back, was given over to consideration of the making and the makers of the Oregon state constitu tion. The formal address of the occa sion and the speeches which followed it were reminiscent and personal rather than critical, but nearly every person who spoke gave an estimate of the state constitution. "It has," said Judge John B. McBrlde, the formal speaker of the occasion, "caused less difference of opin ion for the courts than any organic law with which I am acquainted. It has protected for nearly half a century the life, liberty and property of the people." "The framers of the Oregon constitu tion," said Judge R. P. Boise, "were founded in solid moral principles and their minds were set on great questions of liberty and policy. They were men who would not sell honor for the wealth of the Indies. Our constitution has been a godssnd to the people. Although we may Increase in wealth, we need not In crease In extravagance." "In my asso ciation with men," said Judge Geprge H. Wiiliams, "I never saw a body which exhibited more real ability, more solid statesmanship or more complete knowl edge of what a constitution should be than -did the members of the Oregon constitutional convention." "The con stitution of Oregon." said Mr. W. D. Fenton, the president of the day, "Is a model of clear, succinct fundamental law. Attempts of later days to Improve fundamental law by putting Into it stat ute law are mischievous." "For many years," said Governor T. T. Geer, "I nave been persistently opposed to radi cal constitutional revision. I believe in letting well enough alone." This la high praise. Something of its tone may have been drawn from the sentiment of the occasion; but we be. lieve that it reflects pretty fairly the judgment and feeling of the people of Oregon respecting their state constltu Uon. Indeed, we have in the failure of many attempts to modify this constltu tlon a positive assertion of the respect popularly entertained for the work of the pioneer constitution-makers. Even at points where the weight of argument hag clearly supported proposals for change, the people have declined to make it, in the fear, doubtless, that once begun, the work of tearing the consti tution to pieces would not cease until the whole fabric was destroyed. And when It has been suggested from time to time In the State Legislature -that a convention be called to make a new constitution, the popular voice has been emphatic in dissent. The people of Ore gon clearly are satisfied with their con stitution, preferring to suffer such trifling annoyances as are inseparable from its limitations than to risk the dan gers of a new fundamental law. The people clearly have no hopes that a con stitutional convention to be elected at this time would equal the ability, states manship and representative quality of the convention which assembled at Sa lem in 1857. The point is well taken. In 1857 Ore gon was a little community of pioneers with almost no development of the "in terests" which now make such persist ent appeal to the lawmaking and law enforcing powers. There were no polit ical "machines," unless the little Lane clique and the -missionary clique could be bo called; there was no criminal class; there were no large business or ganizations, no railroads, no landgrab bers, no self-seekers of any kind. The members of the convention were chosen by neighborhood election entirely free from the motives and methods of con temporary politics, the single purpose being to select good and true men; and in pioneer society, which estimates men by their qualities rather than by outside and artificial standards, the good and true men are easy to Identify. And when the convention came together at Salem there was a common purpose to make an efficient fundamental law. There was no lobby of importunate claimants for special favors; no schem ing corporation lawyers seeking to work "jokers" here and there into the body of the code; no effort to promote apy private ani interested purpose In con nection irith the provisions of the con stitution. The one subject of political f,.rnf associated with the organiza tion of the new state was an ambitious rivalry among men villages oi ine nrniornette Valley for the honors and 3?nf the state capital. rt course, human nature was "not es sentially liferent in 1857 from the pres S ttaft. M contended for what they SLted then abey- do now, but m the pioneer conditions of the country there was nothing that anybody wanted from the state, strange ay It may appear, but good government The spirit of the con stitutional convention was essentially the spirit of the whole community; Its wish was the single one of providing a system of civil government that would protect the life, liberty and property of the people. It must be admitted that In some things the view of the constitution-makers was limited and narrow suitably to the times and conditions. It will not be denied that In some perhaps In many respects changes would be desirable. These concessions?, we believe, are uni versally made. But the instinct with which the people of the state oppose all suggestions of radical constitutional re vision is a sound one. If a constitu tional convention were to meet at this time. It could not fair to be a football between opposing selfish interests). . It would be filled up, not with men chosen for personal and represMitative char acter, but for subserviency to private and mercenary interests. Every great department of private Interest would have- "representation" on. the( floor of the convention, while no member of that body would have the .real authority of one or more political bosses wholly out side the lines of official responsibility. The lobby would be crowded from be ginning to end with the agents of special and private purposes. It would literally be a grafter's harvest. Whatever might come from" It nobody can foretell; but one thing Is certain, namely, that it would not be a code of which half a century later it could be said to bor row the phrase of Judge Boise "It is a godsend to the people." NEGRO LABOR IX THE TROPICS. T. Thomas Fortune, the editor of the New York Age, Is Special Labor Com missioner appointed by the President to visit the Philippines and Hawaii, and Is the ablest negro journalist In the coun try. Mr. Fortune thinks the labor prob lem In Hawaii and the Philippines 'can be solved by the importation of Ameri can negroes. Vice-President Scarbor borough, of Wilberforce University, at Zenia, O., agrees with Mr. Fortune In the opinion that the Southern negro is the best possible labor for our tropical possessions, since our exclusion laws prevent the Importation of Chinese. At the North the negro finds everything against him. He meets boycott, refusal to work by his side and closed doors of labor unions; he meets proscription, dis franchisement, colorphobla, all over the land. In the South an educated negro of refinement must ride in a "Jim Crow" car with the most brutal and filthy creatures of his race; hotels and places of amusement are closed to him, his civil and legal rights are subject to re striction, he is lynched on mere suspi cion of crime. The deportation of eight millions of negroes to Africa or South America, a Quixotic scheme seriously entertained by Abraham Lincoln, is, of course, out of the question, but Mr. For tune and Professor Scarborough think that we should seriously consider the possibility of using our new possessions as an opportunity for the American ne gro. Mr. Fortune once made the saga- clous remark that "the more dark peo ples that we have under our flag the better It will be for those of us who came out of the forge and fire of Ameri can slavery." There is small color prejudice In Eng land, because at a court reception or In the drawlng-rcom entertainments of the highest society you not seldom meet dls tlngulohed representatives of the dark races. The Arab dignitaries are dark, and some of them have a strain of negro blood. The Hindoo and Malay Princes are very dark.'and so are the chief men of Great Britain's native subjects In the Islands of the Pacific. So common In English society are men of color that such a thing as the exclusion of an edu cated, well-behaved, well-bred man from an English' hotel or theater Is unknown, and the same Is true of the watering- places and health resorts of" Continental Europe. Colorphobla exists in America because negro slavery is too recently extinct to permit of the dying out of ancient prejudice and the race hos tility that hns been nursed by the premature endowment of the negro wliii universal suffrage. President Thomas Jefferson Invited Mr. Melbourne, an ed ucated tourist from Europe, to visit him at Monticello, and among those who ac cepted Mr. Jefferson's invitation to meet this negro were Chief Justice Marshall and the famous lawyer and orator, Will lam Wirt. It has always been comparatively easy for Southern men of Intellect and cul ture to tolerate the presence of Intelli gent, educated, well-bred men of color, but colorphobla has its most tenacious life among Americans who belong to the vulgar, snobbish rich, or belong to the lower classes In point of brains and In telligence. In England the court and the nobility fix the law of social dlstlnc tion, and since the court circle declines to treat color as a bar sinister, the Eng lish people naturally are not colorphob- Ists. Mr. Fortune and Professor Scar borough confess that the present social situation is one of hardship for the ne gro, and think his condition might be a good deal ameliorated if American ne groes should emigrate in large numbers to the Philippines. There are not many negroes in the Philippines today, and those who have gone thither are doing exceedingly well. They have no race prejudice to combat from the native, and when compared with white men of qual attainments they possess the van .tage-ground. The ablest and most sue cessful teacher that our Government has thus far obtained for the Philippines Is an educated American negro, a grad uate, of a Northern college. The" Fill pinos and the Japanese, who hate white people most, receive the colored man with open arms, and are delighted when they see and hear a man of color of su peror ability and attainments. Mr. Fortune and Professor Scarbor ough think our Oriental possessions pre sent a rich field and enlarged oppor tunities to American colored men of edu cation, push and energy. This is true not only of the Philippines, but of Ja pan, Corea, Slam, Java and Ceylon Why should not the educated negro, the capable negro, be able to better not only himself, but the Oriental land of hi adoption? The Filipinos prefer colored men as school-teachers and In other offi clal capacities. The negro would not be a member of an Isolated, experimental negro colony, like Liberia; he would simply be a valuable and indispensable factor In the Philippines. The Chinese are sure to be excluded, and their placea must be taken by labor that is both willing arid able to work in the tropica The Southern negro Is trainedto culti vate sugar cotton and tobacco; he can work under malarial environment that destroys in the white man all capacity for manual labor in the tropica The Filipino is a sharp trader, but he cannot or will not do the labor hitherto performed by the Chinese. Somebody must do it; the American negro Is equal to this kind of work. Why should he not do It? The Fllipino'4hlnks the Amer, ican colored roan Is "a distant relative of theirs," and, above all, he is not a white man. The colored regiments of the Army that have served in the Philip pines have been afforded an opportunity to see and study the country and Its people, and not a few of the best of those negro soldiers propose to stay in the Philippines and-to. start out In life there. The trouble will be- to .get thrifty, energetic negroes to settle in the Philip pines. The Southern negro Is a man of very strong local attachments; the Southern planters will do their best to keep them from going, and of course the Ignorant, thriftless negro riffraff that swarms in cities or belongs to the des perado clara would be worthless as an industrial factor in the Orient. O GROUND FOR XATIONAXj VANITT. David Blspham, who stands in the front rank of men of musical culture and learning, and is an American by birth and breeding, says In the current number of the North American Review that while we are a very energetic, en terprising people, great traders, uni versal money-makers, we have yet to achieve a really great civilization; that we are as grossly utilitarian as were an cient Tyre and Sldon, whose merchant ships traded with all the known world but who contributed nothinsr to" the world's present Inheritance from the past of art, laws, literature or Institu tions. Mr. Bispham points out that America has no original art or literature of its own, and he is right. He admits that we have some fine singers whose whole training had to be obtained in Europe; that we have a few painters of distinction of American birth, like Whistler, whose life is spent In Lon don; that we have a few 'American sculptors, like Crawford and Powers, who lived and died In Rome, but that there Is no fine American art in paint ing or sculpture that Is of native- birth and home nurture in the sense that we speak of English art, or French art. We have no body of great original lit erature, like England or France. There has never been an American musical composer who could write a fine opera, while Germany, if she perished tomor-r row, would leave behind a bequest of opera music and lyrical music that would be as certain of immortality as are the Iliad or any great masterpiece of ancient or modern literature. Mr. Blspham's view that our Ameri can civilization dees not call today for any inordinate- amount of national con ceit is both timely and well taken. We have in a century achieved no large body of original American literature. Outside of Hawthorne arid Foe, the work of our writers has small permanent value. We cannot claim the work of such clever American humorists as Bret Harte and Mark Twain as belonging to the permanent; they are the artists of fleeting moods of speech and action. Of all Cooper's novels, the "Leather Stock ing Tales" alone have any claim to per manent literature. Holmes and Long fellow are both secend-rate poets erected on English models, while Bryant Is an American whispering Wordsworth to our native woods. None of our Amer ican historians compare in ability with Macaulay, Froude or Green. -Emerson said that Bancroft, Preecoit and Motley never rose above the .limestone state In style; marble, which is crystallized lime stone, they never reached. It is Eafe to say that In literature our accoiripllsh- ment has been very small; we publish an enormous number of- books, but of solid, memorable literature of sul gen eris quality Hawthorne is our most re markable product, and foreign critics rank Poe as most noteworthy after him. Men of fine talent for the transient we have in considerable numbers, but such men are not the men of literary genius that create a memorable and permanent literature. If we turn from literature to states manship, leaving out Franklin, Wash ington, Hamilton and Jefferson, who were the fathers rather than the chil dren of the American experiment, we have Lincoln and Webster, and Webster was a great orator, who turned to Edmund Burke, a far greater statesman, for his soundest political thought. If we turn to jurisprudence there is only one man, Chief Justice Marshall, who deserves to rank with the great English jurists, Mar.sfield, Eldon and Stcwell. The very principles of public law and freedom we organized into our experiment were In herited from England and were defend ed and expounded in our behalf during our colonial struggle by Burke and Fox. The English Revolution of 1688 broke the back of the Puritan ecclesiastical tyranny In New England. George Ill's usurpation of royal absolutism was as great a constitutional outrage to Fox as It was to our cwn Franklin and Ad ams. Nor can it be said that within our pe culiar sphere of utilitarian energy and progress we have exceeded the great peoples of the past, measured by the hp pllances they had to work with and the utter absence of the art of printing, of all knowledge of ihe power of electricity and steam applied to the problem of transportation on land and water, and the economizing and Increase of me chanical power. Given an America to day without the art of printing, with out steam to move cars or boats, with out telegraph or telephones, and how much would she accomplish? And yet the Phoenicians, the great merchants and traders of antiquity, without any of our advantages, In wretched galley.i salted through the Mcnin rrarsean to the coasts of France, founded the great and powerful City of Carthage. The ancient Egyptians in wretched vessels sailed down the Red Sea, doubled the Cape and sailed around to the Mediterranean In the days of Queen Elizabeth, in the sixteenth century, Martin Froblsher sailed as far north as anybody until the recent expedition of Peary. The real explanation of our remark able success as a utilitarian people lies more in adventitious circumstances than In our superior native American energy and hardihood. Our free Institutions from the start unleashed the working iiiergy and ambition of nil classes o society. There were no barriers of rank no walls of circumstance to leap; there was plenty of cheap, fertile land and ample room for all. but, 'even with this great initial advantage, our progress was discouragingly slow until we be gnn to build steamboats and railways. Fulton's steamboat appeared In 1S07, but no steamship crosied the Atlantic from America until 1319, and until the advent of steamboats the navigation of the Mississippi was crippled, because you could take a raft to New Orleans but could not bring her back. Lincoln always sold his flatboat In the city. The Erie Canal was finished in 1825; the rail way began to be extended in 1825; th electric telegraph ;came in 1815, and . the later application of electricity as a mo tive power in transportation In llltiml catlon and mechanical labor we h'ava adopted all this as we dl-i the steam engine and the railway locomotive' from Europe. Ether Js an American dlscovT ery, but chloroform was discovered by an English scientist. France taug"ht us the whole art of making sun pictures. American surgeons, like Dr. McDovfelk and Marlon Sims, have made some. Val uable additions to surgical knowledge, but on the whole Europe has been, our teacher in the matter of important sci entific discovery. We are apt scholars, energetic investigators; that Is aboutall. We are a great people for energy, courage and enterprise, but we need, to be reminded that we inherited enormous advantages from the sudden advent of the application of steam and electricity, which took place before our experi ment had completed fifty years of life. Suppose our Republic should suddenly collapse and sink Into political and so cial decline, as did Greece and Rome what could be said of it? We say that Athens lives today through her art and her literature; we say that Rome lives through the Impress still felt of her genius as a lawgiver, a roadbullder, a soldier and a military engineer. If Eng land perished Shakespeare would be the Immortal head of a splendid literature. Italy has left an Immortal mark in her painting and sculpture; Germany will always live because of what she has done for music. If we should perish today, we ehould leave no more mark than did ancient Tyre of commercial glory, and our political struggles -would form no more heroic story than those of Europe. Let us be modest .for a time yet, and not forget that there are others, SOME ROYAL INTRIGUES. The scandal concerning the wife of the Crown Prince of Saxony only illustrates that human nature is'about the same In the ranks of royalty as it is In common life. It is generally worse. The record of the Kings of modern Europe is not memorable for conjugal fllelity, and the records of the Queens is not much bet ter. Isabella of France. Queen of Ed ward II of England, had Roger Morti mer for her lover, and was privy to the murder of the King. Shakespeare makes Queen Margaret, wife of Henry VI, the mistress of the Duke of Suffolk. Two of the Queens of Henry VIII were sent to the block for adultery, and one of them, Katherine Howard, confessed her guilt Mary Queen of Scots was both an adulteress and a murderess, and George IV charged his wife, Caroline of Brunswick, with adultery, and while her trial was not decisive, her corona tion as Queen of England was refused. The record of France is not better. One of the Queens of France, Elinor of Aqultalnc, was divorced by her hus band for adultery, but her territorial dower was so rich that she promptly secured a second husband In the person of Henry II of England. Isabella of Ba varia. Queen of King Charles the Sim pie, had the Duke of Orleans for a lover. Anne of Austria, Queen of Louis XIII of France, was reported to be the mistress of the famous Cardinal Richeli'eu,"and to have had an affair of the heart with the Duke of Buckingham, the handsome fa vorlte of James I. Dumas Incorporates this historical intrigue In "The Three Guardsmen." ., . Prince William, pf. Orange,.. the Jlbr: ator of Holland, Was divorced from one of the several wi;cs he took because pf her adultery. Queen Joanna of Naples was an adulteress and privy to themur- der of her husband. Queen Christina of Sweden, daughter of the great Guatavus Adolphus, had lovers galore, and caused one of them to be murdered In France by her attendants. Catherine II of Rus sla and the Empress Josephine of France had scandalous passages In their royal lives, while Queen Isabella of Spain In the last century was so licen tious that her people rose in revolt and she lost her throne. The wonder Is, not that some Kings and Queens have had disagreeable pas sages In their married lives, , but that there have not been mere of such scarf dais. Royal marriages are never love matches; they are marriages -of state. policy. Queen Victoria by good fortune loved her husband before marriage, and selected him for a husband, and so' did Queen Victoria's daughter, who married Prince Frederick of Prussia, afterwards Emperor of Germany for three months and the father of Emperor William II William the Conqueror and Edward I of England were happily married, and Edward III loved his wife, Phlllppa of Hainault; but as a rule royal marriages hav ben very mercenary and very un happy. Henry VIII was forced to marry his brother's widow, Katherine of Ara on, who was much elder than himself, when he was but 15. EXTREMITIES OF STARVING SEA MEN. The story of the Australian castaways who, starving on a raft In ml'docean sucked the blood of the stewardess while she slept until she died of weakness,- Is a terrible tale, but there have been many such dreadful scenes following shipwreck. Many years ago an Amer lean vessel foundered at peju The only seaworthy boat was crowded with the survivors of the passengers and the crew. The sea was running so high that It was plain that the overloaded boat would soon be swamped If her load Was not lightened. - The mate said that, with the exception of the seamen necessary to keep the boat afloat, all the men, lnclud lng himself, would have to cast lots' to decide who should be thrown overboard to lighten the boat sufficiently to carry the rest. The first man cn whom the lot fell was a very wealthy young fellow from Philadelphia, He offered the mate a small bag containing a very large amount of money In bills for his life. The mate at once flung him overboard and proceeded with the casting of lots. The men selected were at once thrown overboard by the mate and his crew., After terrible suffering from lack of food and water during eoveral days, the boat was picked up. The mate voluntarily surrendered himself to the authorities, but never suffered any legal punish-, ment An English sea captain cast away' with his crew in an open boat In the Pacific Ocean decided to cast lots as to who Ehould die to save the rest from death by hunger and thirst. The lot fell, on the cabin boy. The captain killed him and his body was eaten. The boat was picked up, and on hlg arrival ,fn London the captain surrendered himself to the law and confessed all Ije had done. He was tried for murder4 con victed and sentenced to death, bkc wa pardoned by the clemency of the crown. De Long and his fellow officers died 6$ starvation side by side without a mbr mur. They were too high-spirited aW fine-bred men to seek to prolon'gillfeby feedlrig on each othen 'InTLietena'nt Strain's' famous expedition across the Isthmus of Darlen in 1851 the party was reduced to starvation, so that they ate toads, various other repulsive reptiles "and vermin." The Czar and Czarina of Russia, the fond but sorely disappointed parents of four daughters, show a magnanimous spirit In a very cordial telegram to the Prince and Princess of Wales congrat ulating them upon the birth of their fourth son. The fates have, under the circumstances, been exceedingly unkind to the imperial couple at St. Petersburg, arid4 over-generous, as It would seem, to their royal cousins in London. There would be some prospect that Russian traditions might yet be Ignored and a woman be made eligible to the throne but -for the fact that there Is any num ber of imperious Grand Dukes to dispute the title of a Czar's daughter to the succession. The gentle Czarina is her self generally conceded to be the power behind the throne, while her austere mother-in-law, the Dowager Empress, ruled the empire In her husband's day only less despotically than does Tsl An, the terrible Dowager Empress of China, It is a fiction of imperial Russia, how ever, that women are not born to rule, and, looking straight, at the history of the empire under two Catherines and Elizabeth, this fiction is raised to the status of a fact, and the demand for "an heir to the throne" continues though four daughters have been born to Nich olas II. The Oregonlan desires to commend the Bostonlans for the liberal recognition of Robin Hood" In their repertory; and the task is the more cheerfully under taken because of the disapproval that was expressed In these columns upon a former occasion when a clientele clam oring for "Robin Hood" was required to hear "Rob Roy" and perhaps something else instead, or else stay at home. It is a duty as well as a pleasure to welcome this sterling company to Portland, for there Is probably no single organization that has contributed so much in the past fifteen years to the enjoyment of the American public. Amusement-lovers have no fonder recollections than those of Mr. Cowles In the armorer's song, Miss Davis in "Oh, Promise Me" arid the legend of the chimes, Mr. Frothlng ham'a inimitable comedy, and, last but not least, dear old Barnabee himself, genial of soul, agile of foot, and, rare among comedians, sweet of voice. It is no wonder that Mr. Barnabee creates enthusiasm wherever he goes. He Is the grand old man of American opera. Kipling was no doubt spared for some good purpose when his terrible Illness in New York a few years ago promised for many days to terminate fatally. Whatever this purpose was, however, it Is clear that It was not that he might become a writer of nolltlco-martial poetry. All doubt in this direction, if any existed, has been changed to cer tainty by the publication of his latest poem protesting against the action of Great Britain and Germany in Venezu ela. Keyed high with indignation, the author blurts through six stanzas of rumble and jingle the purport of which seems to be that British sailors are tired of war and would much prefer to lie on their "banked oars" for a while, rather than join Germany and "help her press tor a aeDt. remaps tnis is poetry; cer tainly It is Kipling's poetry, but we are fain to believe that he was spared when death threatened for some other pur pose than to write- such stuff. To doubt thlB is to arraign divine mercy as short sighted misguided. A Socialistic member of the lower house of the French Chamber of Depu ties' has submitted to that body a bill "which embodies the proposal to abol ish all titles of nobility in France. Sev eral Ineffectual attempts have been made to tax French titles out of exist ence, but this proposition attacks them boldly .as meaningless and, In a republic, absurd. "What prestige do titles of no bility confer In these days?' asks this hold legislator. Let Count Bonl de Cas- tellane, who bought an American Gould with his title tand was enabled thereby to indulge his taste for bric-a-brac to the amount of several hundred thousand 'dollars, answer. French titles have a distinct commercial value In the Amer ican market. To deprive the sham aris tocracy of that realm of titles would be to destroy their stock in trade and break them up in business, so to speak a pro cedure that is distinctly forbidden by republican institutions. It is a fact worth recalling that, had It not been for the fact that GenJral Grant wrote during his last painful sickness his "Memoirs," which earned for him about 5500,000, his widow would not have had any property left to will to her children. Ferdinand Ward, by his embezzlement and forg ery, robbed General Grant of all the money he had lent his sons, who were partners with Ward, and by his crim inal use- of General Grant's name stripped him of every dollar. Then Gen eral Grant, with cancer's fangs already fastened In his 'throat, determined to write a book that would redeem his' lost fortune. He wrote the book; he lived long enough to know that it would bring his wife $400,000, and then he died with resignation. Representative Jones' bill for opening the Colville Indian reservation iooks like another attempt on the part of the Northern Pacific to locate forest reserve scrip. The -bill provides for restoring the surplus Colville land "to the public domain." Northern Pacific 3crlp applies tn th nubile domain. Is there no end to the land greed of that railroad corpora tlon or to the slmpleness of public serv ants who go Innocently do Its bidding? KiplinJS on the Latest War. nnrtvfird Klnllng. In a signed poem In the T.,,irtTi Times of December 22, protests strong ly acalnst the action of Great Britain and t. in vnnzueia.. ine uuera siiia; ft'The banked oars fell an hundred strong. And banked and thrashed and ground, But bitter was tho rowsrs song, As they brought the war boat round. ''Lost night ye sworo our voyage was done. But seaward still we go, , And yo tell us now of a secret vow havo made with an open foe. "Tnero was never a shame In Christendom They laid not to our door; And; ye say we must take the Winter sea And sail with them once more. 1 "Look south the gale is scarce o'er past That stripped and laid us down Wben we stood forth, but they stood fast, f Anil prayed to see us drown, 'The dead they mocked are scarcely cold, ' Our wdunds are bleeding yet; Andye (ell t hat our strength Is sold Tiy hcl them press for a debt. Jn slgh of peace -from the narrow seas i O'er half the world to run .WUb a. cheated crew to league, anew - With the Goth and the shameless Hun.' FIVE-MINUTE BOOK TALKS. Xo. 14 Hood's Whims and Odditlex. "Whims and Oddities, In Prose and Verse: with Forty-two Original Designs by Thomas Hood. First Scries." Of what sort is this little book of about 150 pages. Is indicated plctorially on the title page by the legend "Spring and Fall," under the illustration of a man leaping a fence, who finds himself in the way of pitching inev itably upon the long and pointed horns of a grim-looking ox reposing exactly in the wrong place. Here, then, are a good pun and an equally characteristic drawing. Of both claa3es of work thus represented. Hood wa3 a fertile producer. As regards tho one, in his address to the second edi tionprefatory remarks are three In num berhe eays, with reason as with wit: "I am informed that certain monthly, weekly and very every day critics, have taken great offense at my puns and I can con ceive how some gentlemen with one Idea must be perplexed by a double meaning. To my own notion a pun la an accommo dating word, like a fanner's horse with a pillion for an extra sense to ride behind; It will carry single, however, if required." Of the pictures: "The designer Is quite aware of their defects; but when Raphael has bestowed 7 odd legn upon 4 apostles, and Fuseli ha3 stuck In a great goggle head "without an owner; when Michael Angelo has set on a foot the wrong way, and Hogarth has painted In defiance of all the laws of nature and perspective, he docs hope that his own little enormities may be forgiven that his sketches may look interesting, like Lord Byron's Sleeper, 'with all their errors. " The general character of -the work Is felicitously ex pressed: "It happens to moat persons, in occasional lively moments, to have their little chirping fancies and brain-crochets, that skip out of the ordinary meadow-land of the mind. The author has caught his, and clapped them up in paper and print, like grasshoppers in a cage. Tho judicious reader will look upon the trifling creatures accordingly; and not expect from them the flights of poetical winged horseo"; and the final words of the third address are of the genuine Hood variety: "Having parted with so many qf my vagaries, I am doubt ful whether the next November may not find me sobered down into a political econ omist." Has the gentle reader lived through a London November or experi mented In re'ading "the dismal science"? I know 'tis affected by some that Hood's humor was the forced art of a clever man making money to boll the pot, and a good deal has been said about the true Hood being the man "who sang the song of the shirt." Now there Is no trace that I can find of a want of enjoyment, not to say spontaneity. In his process of funmaklng, on the part of thl3 prince among punsters, humorists and wits. His astonishing ver satility appears in the strong contrasts presented by his work. Why not let the matter rest there, it being granted that this gifted author would find a better mar ket for hlg lighter than for his graver productions? It would be superfluous to say that the enjoyment of Hood's "Whims and Oddi ties" is enhanced by the reader's ac quaintance with the best English literature of the period and antecedent to It. Evi dence abounds, moreover, that the author was very widely read, and his utmost abandon is that of the scholar. Somebody has said, or might have said, or ought to have said, that he made the pun classical. Making moral reflections aloft on the cross of St. Paul's Cathedral, he sees people liKe emmets below, and recognizes his aunt among them, for a whimsical reason: And there's my aunt. I know her by her waist. So long and thin. And so pinch'd in. Just In the pismire taste. On this speculative height he "looks over London's naked nose," sitting "above the ball"; and sees the Thames "a tidy ken nel." The careful piece of work, "A Val entine," presents many temptations tc quote. Let this lachrymose question suf fice: Will not tears of woe . Water thy spirits, with remorse adjunct. When thou dost pause and think of the defunct? Please to Ring the Belle" speaks best for Itself: I. I'll tell you a story that's not In Tom Moore: Young Love likes to knock at a pretty girl's door; So he call'd upon Lucy 'twas Just ten o'clock Like a spruce single man, with a smart double knock. II. Now a handmaid, whatever her flngera bo at. Will run like a puss when she hears a rat-tat; So Lucy ran up and In two s'econds more Had questlon'd the stramter and answer'd the door. III. The meeting was bliss, but the parting was woe: For the moment will come when such comers must go; So she klss'd him, and whisper' d poor, inno cent thing The next time-you come, love, , pray come with a ring." The ballad of "Falthlee3 Sally Brown" will be recalled by the stanza relating how, after tho return of her 3allor sweet heart, who had been taken away by a press gang two years before, finding that "she'd got another Ben, wnose Christian name was John." he lamented thus: O Sally Brown! O Sally Brown t How could you serve me so? I've met with many a breeie before. But never such a blow! The sad catastrophe: His death, which happen'd In his berth. At forty-odd befell: i They went and told the sexton, and The sexton toll'd the bell. 'TIs at Margate Where the maiden flirts, and the widow comes Llko the ocean to cast her weeds. There too The tumbling billows llko leapfrog came, Each over the other's back. Tho following is perfectly in the Hudi braetlc view: Neither can man be known by feature Or form, because so like a creature. That some grave men could never shape Which is the aped and which the ape, Nor by his gait, nor by his height. Nor yet because he's bjack or white, But rational for so we call The only Cooking Animal! Tho only one who brings his bit Of dinner to the pot or spit. For where's the Hon e'er was hasty, To put his ven'son In a pasty? Ergo, by logic, we repute, That he who cooks Is not a brute But Equus brutum est. which means. If a horse had sense he'd boll his beans, Nay, no one but a horse would forago On naked oats instead of porridge. Which proves, if brutes and Scotchmen vary. The difference la culinary. A successful essay In the Spenserian stanza, "The Irish Schoolmaster," is an abiding feast to the appreciative. I will quote one stanza. What could be funnier than the college gown being used ail a scarecrow, and the use of such dignified verse and language In the transmission of humorous ideas? But tnis is one of the leading charms of Hood as a writer. The boys are at their sports after school, But careful Dominie, with ceaseless thrift. Now changeth ferula for rural hoe; But. first of all, with tender hand doth shift His college gown, because of solar glow. And hangs It on a bush, to scare the crow; Meanwhile, he plants in earth the dappled bean. Or trains the young potatoes all a-row. Or plucks the fragrant leek for pottage green. With that crisp, curly herb, called is-ale In Aberdeen. The volume authorized edition, E. Mox on. Son & Co., London ends with "Fancy Portraits," Introducing grotesque carica tures of literary men, which remind me that Tom Hood'a career included a" period of service in tho establishment of an en graver. He was born Jn 17SS and died in 1S45. In 1S21 he adopted literature as a pro fession, taking a chair in the office of a London magazine. "Whims and Oddities" was his first volume. Dedicating it io the reviewers he wrote: What Is a modem poet's fate? To write his thoughts upon a slate; The critic spits on what is, done, Gives it a wlpe.and all" is gone. As if. the versatile and genial Hood could ever be forgotten. HENRY G. TAYLOR. 1 K0TE AND COMMENT. Good morning! Going to church? When a young woman has an engaging smile, the young admirer may take. cour age. The man who .takes measures to put himself In the front rank f requentiy. finds himself short. Some of tho young men arc now pon dering whether it Is absence or presents that makes the heart grow fonder. Those Poles who burned Uncle Sam's mail for fuel must have been terribly un lettered. Still, it was hardly polite. (Bos ton joke.) The chief sculptor of the St. Louis fair has resigned- in anger. In otner woras, ne gave the directors the marble heart as a proof of his ability. The young fellows (and older ones as well) should be careful about crowding the doors of elevators. Many a woman feels Injured because she is compelled to stand in a. crush of men while going to the 'steenth floor of a big building, and her feelings are not a particle soothed when some bumptious youth with more 111 manners than brains makes her squeeze by him to get ouL But then the ladles should remember that most men's heads are simply knots tied by the Creator to keep them from raveling out. Miles M. O'Brien, ex-president of tho Board of Education, dropped into the of fices of the Guardian Trust Company the other day to have a chat with Bird S. Coler. In the course of the conversation ho re lated one of his experiences while visit ing a West Side grammar school. He asked a number of questions of tho vari ous pupils to test their knowledge of the branches taught. Of one of tho small boys in the arithmetic class he asked: "If your father should give your mother $3 today, and 56 tomorrow, and 54 50 tho next day, what would be the result?" The boy, who was at the bottom of tho class, replied: "She would throw a fit." A little lass In this city, whose tender life is guided by a spirit of exemplary piety, had a very merry Christmas. The day seemed to develop for her a new joy every minute, and when at last- the fair head and its shaking curl3 sought the pillow, she was In a state of blissful exu berance. Finally her mother told her it was time to go to sleep. The hint was taken and little girlie climbed out of her crib and knelt by it - with closed eyes. After her prayer had reached Its accus tomed end she got up and started to kiss her mother good-night. A thought struck her, and she gravely resumed her place at the crlbslde. "I'm much obliged, God," she whispered, "for my merry Christmas, and I hope you've had thesame. Amen." Many of today's sermons will speak of faith as the saving force In the world. It were well if more people took this les- to heart. If the friend would only have faith In his friend, if the father would only have faith In his child, the lover faith in his beloved. Suspicion, half hearted trust, jealousy these are the things that take the bloom off life. So many long for the happiness of the little child. The little one trusts Implicitly, and Us Joy bears no tinge of evil-thinking. And the pity of it all Is that faith is usu ally the true feeling' to cherish. Perhaps it Is a proof of natural, sinfulness that faith and Its divine quality are so little compatible with ordinary life. We sus pect because we know ourselves, and the punishment is heavy. Yet there are thoso who have learned to trust, and to these Is given a boon that brings with it un told happiness and contentment. Although It was reported that Mr. Pol- light's Injury was due to falling off the car, the real story is this: Mr. Polllght had got on a Morrison-street car at B:15 and pre-empted a seat In the rear. Three minutes later some ladles embarked, and Mr. Polllght, seeing that tnere was no room for them to sit down, wearily arose and tendered his seat to one of the new passengers, ane accepted wun mu.nH.3, and the car rumbled on up Morrison while Mr. Polllght swayed on the end or a strap. Finally more people got on, and Mr. Polllght retired to the platform. At Sixteenth street' the conductor called him and said: "Lady wants to speaK to you, sir." Mr. Polllght Jammed himself Into" the car, and the lady to whom he had yielded his seat said quietly: "Here is your seat. I am much obliged to you." That is why Mr. Polllght had to seek air on the back platform, and why he fell off. E. M. Holland tells the following story In the New York Times: "I was playing years ago the part of the Judge In 'Tho Danltes,' before noso putty was Invented, and the following In cident happened to me at that time. All others who claim It are impostors. Look for the signature on the label. "To make the Judge's nose blossom properly I found that dough was the most effective material, - and kept a sup ply of flour on hand. But one night 1 found myself out of flour, so I sent a boy to get some in a hurry. I made up as usual and' began to play. The night was warm, the Judge worked hard, and at the end of the first act a large white crack appeared on one side of his nose. There was no time to remake the nose, so I painted out the crack and went on again. More cracks appeared, more paint wa3 applied, and all the time the nose seemed to grow larger and larger. By the last act It was as full of cracks as the side of Pelee, and so big I couldn't see around it. "The boy had bought self-raising flour.' Old Kesro Mnmniy. Atlanta Constitution. Crossed thd last dim river-ended now the way; Faithful In life's Winter, and singing in its May I Love that still was loyal-love that nothing craves Hands that rocked Life's cradle and wreathed with flowers Its graves. Stormy days or sunny. Knowing not to roam Till that "Good-bye. honey Mammy's gwlne home!" Tolling, ever faithful; by those hands caressed. Childhood left Us playthings climbing to her breast: And the old. sweet songs she sang In twilight shadows deep. "Sing us all to slee?, mammy sing us all to sleeri!" In Life's storm or splendor. Knowing not to roam Till that farewell tender "Mammy's gwine homo!" And I think somewhere the angels far from this world of sighs. Let the first light of heaven dawn on the dying eyes: And they said there, of the angels, as they felt the shadows creep: "They are singing you to sleep, mammy; they are singing you to sleep!" And the Lord he will deliver. And to the lives that roam Comes that echo d'er Death's river- "ilammy's safe at home!"