Editorial; Page ; -of IE3 Jonraal PORTLAND, OREGON Wednesday, January 20, 1904 THE OREGON DAILY AN C & JACKSON Published every" evening (except OFFICIAL. A CHANCE FOR THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY. BET US joyfully hurl forth the glad tidings that ; nothing la now impossible in Portland. Here we have had for years a bunch of laws on the gam bilng question. The timid non-professional who prayer 1 fully scanned them came to the conclusion that they were simply Ironclad in their ; provisions; the professionals, when they could be brought to deliver an opinion, unani mously coincided 'with this view. As near as anybody could figure the thing out all that was needed wa some duly authorised official to set them in motion. The dis trict attorney on his part reneged on the plea that he did not want to interfere with the action of the city govern ment, . a rather Weak and flabby excuse, it is true, but )as there was no better forthcoming it was perforce ac ? cepted. The city administration upon Its part undertook f to combine In Its own proper person all the attributes of , the ' government, executive,, legislative and judicial. , " therefore if simply set aside such laws as didn't suit it and calmly, asked what the public was going to do about 1U For justification, whenever it 'condescended to Justify, It "pointed jts -triumphant finger to the treasury vaults And exclaimed; 'ir we are debauching the youths of the , city It cannot at least be said that the municipality is not getting- its percentage of the rake off." That was busl '1 liens to, which, of course, morality was purely Incidental. But suddenly there falls a bolt from the blue. In a jnomehfs space of time one of the gambling houses is out of commission. Some one loses an odd hundred or two of ? real money.' It belongs, it appears, to his wife who Is i ald to have saved it at much self-sacrifice. The tender ' heart of the district attorney is touched and he calls up . the gay gambolier by telephone. Then he lays down this dictum, i; "Cough up: or; shut up." The gay gambolier is ? not used to this or of language from any official. He has paidr'hia, e;nuhionthty . fine, under the guise of for- felting hhf hall : bonds, for; the privilege of running his f, rame. He has paid his political assessment to every-party that had hope of winning. He has been liberal, not to ay lavish, to other people who were alleged to have pulls , or who were In a position to influence public opinion. frherefore'he believed he had dona all that could rea sonably be expected of him. " When, therefore, he was suddenly called up by telephone tind.told by an official who had never before Interfered ; with him. that he must immediately make good from his winnings the losses sustained by one devotee of the rame, his gorge rose and he promptly and picturesquely told the district attorney to go to, with & clear specifica tion of the locality to which he fervently consigned him. While he hung up the telephone the district attorney got busy and Erlckson's gambling establishment was closed up tighter than wax. And this Is still the con- ; ditlon of things. The district attorney swears by alt that 7 is holy he will not give in and the head gambler is in the " hospital recuperating. v , But considering all the trouble which this gambling ques . ttonhas caused, the many so-called Insurmountable diffi culties In the way of bringing the establishments within the .. law, Isn't It worthy of note that the whole thing is so easy when it la tackled In the proper spirit and backed by the proper Amount of enthusiasm? Now that, the dis trict attorney has his hand In and his dander up why not i show that there are no strings on him and proceed to I make a good Job of it by closing up every gambling house t In the city? It Is now quite apparent that this could I easily be done and the district attorney having shown his ; strength, now has the opportunity of his life to demon I strata that while there may be strings on others, there j are none on, him. Besides if he wants to make a grand f stand political play where could he find a better oppor tunlty, when the rest of the officials are manifestly per f mlttlng the daily and nightly Infractions of the law? WHERE THE BLAME LARGELY RESTS. MRS. OGDEN GOELETS disgust with the ill-manners of American sight-seers as exhibited at her daughter's wedding, is very amusing, considering the fact that Mrs. Goelet set the example of what might be stigmatized by a far worse name than ill-manners. If Mrs. Goelet did not wish the general public to look Vpon her daughter's wedding as a show enacted for their especial benefit she should not have advertised It so largely. Her daughter's photograph, that of her fiancee, the lists of wedding presents, trousseau, and accounts of the relatives on either side so freely given to the news papers were as much calculated to stimulate curiosity, of a sort, as the same advertising features used for a prom inent actor or a circus. The fashionable wedding Is not a thing calculated to Inspire respect for the participants therein among think ing people. It should have taken Its place long since along .with other happily obsolete heathen customs. 1 ' The love of a man for a maid is doubtless a beautiful thing In some of its manifestations, but that It should be LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE ' "A Despicable Graft." ' Newberg, Or., Jan. 18. To the Editor of The Journal. Under the above heading ' an editorial appears in the Telegram of January 16, 1904. in which It is stated in regard to men who enlisted for 90 days during the Civil war that "It is not a Violent presumption that a considerable percontage of' these 'one-night stands' soldiers stayed qut of the trouble as : long as they conveniently could, or were ; Induced to enlist mainly from pecuniary ' considerations in which possibly the mat ter of a bounty was involved," and that "nowlt Is proposed to confer a further substantial reward of merit upon the three-months veteran, not because they suffered in defense of the flag, but be cause they were fairly dragged into their country's service by the heels." " There were two lots of 90-days men dur ing the Civil war; one called In April, 181. of 75.000, and the other In April. 1864. of 83.000. They were state mtlltla re quisitioned by the general government, "and received no bounty. Tht. first lot were the first volunteers of the war, so could not be said to have been drug in ty the heels,, and the second lot was voluntarily sent by a few of the Northwestern states in excess of their quota under all calls made bv the United Strftei government. Instead of being dragged In by the heels It was supposed -that the high tide of patriotism had been reached when one state OhIol offered and furnished for 100 days during the summer of 14 M. 000 more men than had been sailed for, and it was supposed at that time that the. war would end before, the time for which these men were enlisted would expire. V i " A former sneaker of the house of rep resentatives (Mr. Henderson of Iowa) was colonel of one of the Iowa 100-day regi ments and I, think at last it would be 1 roltry td disallow so. much . of the Tele. INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. Sunday) at The Journal Building, Fifth PAPER OF THE CITY" OF gram's statements as are at variance with the facts as shown by any history Of the war. H. J. MINTHdRN. TXKBAX. HOBBOBS Or WAX. From the New Yor Bun. O, thou cruel god of battles, Russo-Japanesey battles, Stay thy dreadful hand this minute. Ere the scrapping of the nations Takes great spaces in the papers, Filling column after column With the stories of the marcntng. Rattles on the land and ocean. Horse and foot and sailors ngntlng; Serried hosts of Romanoffski Meeting those of Mutsuhlto, Full of vodky and of sake, On the plains of Shldzuoka, By the Mount of Fuslyama, On the Tchernokolunltskl, Vyshkevolotek and Kosmograflgka, Tchurevokokshalslkl, Hluga, Iga, Setsu and Shlkoku; Kouropatkln and his Cossacks On the Jump for Horobumij Samurais of Mtnamoto Chnslng Alexandrovltches. Shlklshimi, ship of shooting;. Punching Petropavlovskn's sides in rBut enough: Oh, god of battles, you can see the deadly terror Of war between two nations Nil mod as Russia and Japan are. Let them rip each other oprn If thoy want to that's their Business; But by thunder, we are peaeerul People raiding of their battles. And our Jaws should not be broken Merely seeking information, btop the fighting; have some pity On the innocent and harmless. Now you blamed old Pullptfioffskl, Stop the row, or pay the damage. Bee? Xo 00m parable feat. Fr"m the Bt. Louis Globe-Democrat. One of Detroit's boodllng aldermen was recently robbed by a burglar. The penalty for an . offense of tht" kind should be something that the burglar can hand down to posterity with' pride. t . . v. ' . ' JOURNAL JNO. P. CARROLL and Yamhill streets, Portland, Oregon. PORTLAND made the occasion of a great public show is surely a deg radation. Men and women of fine sensibilities do not advertise their divine passion to the world and call at tention to it by columns of newspaper twaddle. It is not only Indelicate, it n Indecent that two people about to enter the most sacred of relationships should Invite sev eralhundred people to gaze upon them inside the" church and thousands to comment and stare both before and after the ceremony;' on the outside. '- , A wedding is purely a family matter, or should be, and the time may come when the few intimate friends whose real interest and affection entitle them to be notified of the event will be all that are apprised of the matter be forehand, or expected to-take any Interest in it afterward. THE EVOLUTION IN EDUCATION. THERE was' an idea in the olden time, and It. still obtains to a large extent, that whoever was edu cated ought not to work. Educated men were ashamed to be found doing manual labor. To plow the fields, to work In the shop or on the farm was regarded as beneath the dignity of the educated man. There are' a few who still hold to that belief but It is fast becoming obsolete. " ' Every man, unless he is idiotic or imbecile, is educated to a certain extent. Useful knowledge of any sort Is edu cation. The boy who attends college adds to his education somewhat if he learns anything that wilt be of use to him self or his fellows. If he goes out Into the world at the end of his college course he gets more education of a use ful sort in a shorter time than he got 1q college, . provided he goes to work at something. The education received from books and lectures is a very small part of the game. Dr. Edward K Hale, a graduate of Harvard, has said that you . might take 12 "prize medal men from Harvard and put them On a sink ing ship and they would all drown through inability to construct a raft." It is quite as true that if you take 13 boys whose education has been received solely from books and lectures and put them Into the world to make a living for themselves, they would all starve to death, no matter how much learning they had acquired or what profession they studied. It is manual training the cultivation of the hand that it may express the ideas of the mind, that is the salva tion of the boy or girl of today. To know about things is not enough; we must know how to use things for our own benefit and the benefit of others. There are two things necessary in education impres sion and expression. You cannot make an Impression un less you Interest your subject and the way to gain in terest is to teach expression. The only method of expres sion hitherto thought necessary was in a little writing and drawing. Why should it stop there? All children will not make a business of .writing and drawing. It Is as necessary for boys and girls to handle and work with metals and wood, to be taught to understand tfie use and construction of machinery, in short to know something of the objects of the world about them and how they can be utilised. This is being done all over the United States. The best public schools everywhere are conceded to he the ones", where kindergarten and manual training school be gin and carry 011 the necessary work of education. The use of pictures to excite self-activity is seen, even in Port land. Children are being taught to observe nature; en couraged to bring to school the curious things they find in the woods or fields. These things are discussed with animation and Interest. Disgrace, humiliation through corporal punishment, nag ging and prohibitions are going out of date. When we get things in their right relations we will not have to suppress bad and restless boys; there will be no need for reform schools. We will begin the forming at the age of three. The overflowing energy of the "bad boy" will be diverted and allowed to express itself in the proper way Instead of an improper one. The worst boy of your neighborhood, the leader of the "gang," is the strongest power for good In it if he is taught to use his energy in the right way. "Crime is the result of misdirected energy." There Is at least this consolation that though the snow falls impetuously in Portland, the thermometer Joyfully clings about as many degrees above zero as It falls below In Central New York. We are not, therefore, needing any sympathy, while we. have much to bestow on our less for tunate neighbors and countrymen. There may perhaps be no connection between the two ideas, but Los Angeles was suffering from a drouth which extended over a period of seven months and there was no sign of a break in it until Hearst started one of his lively saffron-tinted papers there. Is this coming together of the district attorney and the "Terrible Swede" another example of the meeting of the Irresistible force and the immovable body? wousw's tnrioir labzl koyb. Kiss Seudder, Professor at Wellesley, Chosen President of League. Boston Correspondence New York Sun. Miss Viola 8cuddejr, who last evening was chosen president of the first Woman's Union Label league to bo organized In Boston, is a professor Of English literature at Wellesley college and a well-known writer on sociological matters. She was graduated from Smith college In 1884. She is the foun der of the College Settlements associa tion, which maintains three settlements one in New York, one In Philadelphia, and the Dentson house in this -city. In addition to her college duties. Miss Seudder finds time to hold classes at Denlson house, and usually spends her summer vacations at some of the settle ments. Miss Helena Dudley, who was chosen viee-prenldent of the league, was prao tically from the beginning the head worker at the Denlaon house, and is a graduate of Bryn Mawr of the class of '8'J. She has taken an active part in all philanthropic Boston movements. The league voted to send delegates to the Central Labor union and to take an active part In all matters pertaining to the advancement of the unton label. It will work somewhat along the lines ot the Consumers' league, but its scope will be much wider. It will aim to get women, when buying, to ask for such goods as have union labels. The league starts lth a membership of SB. Unsettles One's View. From the Atchison Globe. Occasionally you see a single man who has so much trouble every one wonders If he escaped anything by not getting marrlod. It Would Be- Hard on Them. From the J'bladelphla Record. , If it wasn't t- .the fact that a fool and his money rt e sonn parted, a lot of promoters would have to go to work - f a : Egyptian Railroads Well William TE. Curtis' Cairo Letter in Chi cago Record-Herald. Cairo, Dec 28. We came down from Port Said to Cairo by railroad, a Journey ot six hours. - The first-half was over the tiniest railway you ever saw; a little narrow gauge built by the canal com pany as an aid to construction. Its original purpose was to haul away the dirt that was taken out of the ditch and dump it on the desert; then it was used to transport supplies from one point on the canal to another; and flhally, when Port Bold became a great port of entry for passengers, the rails were relald, the track -was ballasted' and diminutive trains were put on hauled by locomo tives that look like toys, but do their business promptly and well. This line runs the entire length of the canal, which is 87 miles, , parallel with the bank, and belongs to the canal com pany. Recently t the Egyptian govern ment has made an arrangement so that the track will be widened to a standard gauge. and hereafter through trains can pe run from one end of Egypt to the other. : Nowadays' passengers between Cairo and points along the canal have to change at Ismalla, the half-way sta tion on Lake Timsah and the chief port of the canaL Rails and Iron ties -are stacked ' upon both sides of the track the ' entire distance between Port Bald and Ismalla and thousands of men are at work on construction. . , , .. . It is comparatively easy to build a railway in this section of Egypt, be cause there are no-rains, no frosts,' no rocks, no grades, no curves and no ob structions but hillocks ef sand. At the same time the drifting of the sand is continuous and compels the railway managers to keep gangs of men con stantly at work shoveling it off the right of way. It is even worse than tne snow In the northern , latitudes of the United States. The Southern Pa cing, Hanta Fe and other railroads in the southwestern territories of our country have similar difficulties. In fact, there is as much resemblance between deserts as there is between peach orchards, and a gentleman from the Death valley of southern' California would feel at home on the Lybian sands, ., The only permanent reward the Khedive Ismail received for the hun dreds of millions of dollars he spent on the canal and for the loss of his throne is the honor of having the little town of ismalla named after him. The present generation remembers his splendor and his extravagance, and there are many people still living who attended the fes tivities he arranged at the opening of tne canal at a cost of $21,000,000. They remember his folly and his sins also, and he will pass into the traditions of the country as the most luxurious and the greatest spendthrift of all the Pharoahs; but, as I tell you, the name of this Utile town Is all the recognition he gets, and L)e Lesseps does not even get that much. All he has is a monument at the end of tne long breakwater which extends into the Mediterranean at the mouth of the canal. It was put there in order to make the current scour Its own channel, and the company has utilized It as a pedestal for a bronse statue of the genius whd converted Africa Into an island and planned and carried out the most important public improvement ever made by men. De Lesseps ex pected a dukedom. Perhaps he would have been gratified If the empire had survived,, but that figure of bronse and a little strip of ribbon indicating the very common distinction of belonging to the French Legion of Honor are the only publlo recognition he ever re ceived. His family enjoys an annuity of ,124,000 from the company in ex change for certain rights and stock which they surrendered. There is a striking moral lesson in the career and the fate of De Lesseps. He was great, but he wasn't square. He was crooked. His whole career was disgraced ' by the use of ' bribes and blackmail. He corrupted everybody he wanted to reach, from , the emperor of France and the sultan of Turxey to the doorkeepers In the palace of the khedtve and the clerks In the chamber of deputies at Paris. The slush fund of the Bues canal was as great as that 01 Panama, and It is the common opin ion that at least one-half of the 3400. 000.000 that it cost was either stolen or wasted or otherwise diverted from an honest purpose. The extravagance and wastefulness of the managers of the company were beyond all precedent At Ismalla we change into a new train ot excellent and comfortablo cars. They are bull t on the English pattern and came from England. They are well kept and are tangible evidence of the good management of the Egyptian rail ways. . They gave us a good dinner for 11.26 In the dining car, well cooked and well served, and the train made 30 miles an hour over a smooth track, which is a great improvement upon what we have recently experienced in Spain, Italy ana Southern Europe. The sleeping car sys tem for long journeys is quite as good, equal to the best in, Europe, although of course - Americans prefer the open Pullmans to the narrow little compart ments they are compelled to occupy over here. And in Egypt the closets into which the sleeping cars are divided are the more objectionable because they, can not be ventilated. The sand stirred np by the rush of the train would suffocate the passengers if it were permitted to enter the car; but everything is closed up, tight and there are double windows. It Is impossible to have anything open. An American lady to whom I was com plaining of this replied that if we should open the window of our sleeping com partment when we went to bed they wouldn't be able to And us In the morn ing, because we would be buried under the sand. As it is. everything is cov ered with a thick coating in a very few moments and the porter has to go about with a brush keeping the seats and the window sills clear. Every time the train stops men with feather dusters go through the first and second class car riages before the new passengers are admitted. Crude petroleum, which has been used so successfully on the roads between Philadelphia and Atlantic City to keep down the sand, and in other parts of our country where there has been simi lar trouble, has never been tried in tWVISTMBHT THAT PAH). A Bit of Panama Speculation Waloa Was Blchly Bewarded. The New York World prints a page article under the caption, "Panama Rev olution. Stock Gambling Plan to Make Millions." The article says: "The World gathered these facts from a man who took an active part' In the events described. Tne greatest care was taken to substantiate all of the state ments here given. Facts gathered from one source were submitted to others, usually those with' Interests antagonis tic to the original Informants, and a 'ompleio check was made, by th World, as far as It could possibly be done, to verify all of Its Information: "These facts ""show that the Panama revolution was fostered and promoted in many wajrs by a syndicate of New York and Paris brokers, who had formed sn Immense pool for speculating in the khares and other securities of the Pan Managed by the English Egypt, and I suppose that It would be useless. There is too much. You can't oil the whole desert in that way, and there is nothing but sand as far as you can see, and as deep as you can dig down Into the earth. . v ; . The Egyptian railways mostly belong to tne government, xne total system on the 1st of last January was 1,173 miles, of which 1,893 miles belong to the state and 180 miles to private com panies. Most of the private roads are narrow-gauge spurs and feeders which connect the sugar mills and other manu factories with, the publlo roads. Two thirds of the railway tracks are in lower Egypt. With Cairo as a focus, they spread out like a fan through the coun try drained by the delta of the Nile. Alexandria, the- greatest seaport of Egypt, is the extreme terminus to the westward and Port Bald, the mouth of the Sues canal," marks the western edge of the fan. ,Frm Cairo track runs southward along the bank of the Nile for several hundred miles, and is gradu ally being extended toward the interior of Africa. Before the ' end of another year It will be possible to reach Khar tum without changing cars. Indeed, there is now but a small gap between Assouan at the first cataract and Wady Halfa at the second cataract of the Nile, This gap is covered by boats, but will soon be filled by - rail. There are sev eral short" branches and feeders along the trunk line, which are gradually be ing extended and. increased In number. For military purposes, as well as for civilization and trade, It Is the intention of the government ' to push the railway up into the 'Sudan country as fast as possible, and before many years tourists can go from the Mediterranean to the heart ot the dark continent upon a train de luxe, with sleeping and dining cars. The Egyptian railways are economical ly managed by English officials, al though most of the subordinate employes are natives. It has been frequently proposed to lease the track to private corporations, and a proposition of this kind is now pending before the govern ment. But . no change Is likely to be made because Lord Cromer, the British agent, who is really the king of Egypt, in his latest report takes very strong ground against the leasing, and declares his opinion to be "decidedly averse to the transfer of the Egyptian railways to a private company." This would seem to settle it, because whatever Lord Cro mer says is final. Under the treaties with the creditor nations of Egypt only 43 per cent of the gross receipts of the railways can be applied to operating expenses. This has been recently increased to 50 per cent, and has enabled the managers to make Improvements that are much appreciated by the public and to reduce the rates of fare, which are now lower than those of any railway in Europe. The result has been natural. The passenger traffic and receipts have rapidly Increased. A similar reduction is promised in freight rates, which the managers expect will be followed by similar results. Last year 13,039,673 passengers were carried, an Increase of more than 8,000,000 dur ing the previous five years, and the net receipts were 31,222,261, a slight Increase from the previous year. There Is a fine railway station at Cairo, and when we rolled Into it at mid night the train was surrounded by what one would suppose was a mob of luna tics, while In reality they were only por ters, hotel runners and railway officials who were there to assist us to the hotel omnibuses that were waiting on the out side. I never was able to understand why it is. but the common people among the oriental races are always yelling at somebody. It is so in China and Japan, In India and Turkey. If one man wishes to communicate an idea to another he shouts at the top of his voice, and when he has nothing in particular to say he screams as loud as he can on general principles, simply to contribute his share to the hubbub. Hence public places, like railway stations, In Egypt and the ori ental countries, will give you an Idea of what Babal must have been, particularly when the natives attempt to address strangers in foreign languages. The population of Cairo Is so cosmo politan that most of the railway porters, hotel servants, hack drivers, donkey boys and people about the streets who come in contact with the publlo are familiar with a few words of a dozen . different languages, and are shrewd enough to pick the people to whom these languages belong from a crowd of any size. Every language and dialect of Europe, Asia and Africa is spoken upon the streets and In the bazaars of Cairo, and no mat ter where he comes from, a stranger can not stroll along the busy squares upon which the principal hotels are located without being addressed in his own tongue. This phenomenon is manifested at the railway stations more notably than elsewhere, and timid people are likely to be started by having a "half naked Arab rush up to them and yell In their ear, "I splk Anglls; lve me your bag," and similar' greetings; but "it is only necessary to wait for a man with a seml-milltary uniform who has the name of your hotel embroidered In gilt letters on his cap and coat collar. He will oome, sooner or later. It's his business, Point out your luggage to htm, do as he tells you, and you will come through all right. , There are no better hotels than those you find In Cairo, and there are several grades of them, with charges to suit purses of all sizes. If you want to see everything that is going on you must stop at Shepheards. for that Is the fo cus of all the excitement and the scene of everything that happens; or at the Continental, which stands in the next block. If you would like to be consid ered a bowling swell you can go to the Savoy, the favorite stopping place of princes and lords and other titled people who come to Egypt for th? winter; ot If you prefer quiet elegance and retirement the country residences of the late Khe dive Ismail, In the center of a beautiful park on the other side of the Nile, is used as a hotel and Is known as the Oheziheh palace. There you will meet the most formal and exclusive set and youf bills will be made out accordingly. People ot modest means can find several comfortable hotels with moderate prices and Innumerable boardlnghouses whose rates range from 38 a week upward, - ama Canal company. This syndicate fur nished (100,000, which was used by the revolutionary party in Panama to perfect the revolution. Of this money 18.000 was used to bribe the Colombian troops and get them to leave the isthmus. "The agent or chief reliance of this speculative syndicate was Philippe Bu-nau-Varllla, the present minister of the Panama republic to the United States. A leading member of the syndicate was Minister Vartlla's brother, Maurice Va rllla, editor of the Matin,. a Paris news paper. Shares of the Panama Canal compnny when the brokers took hold of the revolutionary projeet were selling at 71 on the Paris bourse. Yesterday they were selling at 118. The profits of the syndics to at the present prices are estimated at 14,000,000." ' Proper War Puaa. - v, From the .Washington Post. Japan is diverting her educational fund to war purposes. The original de sign of tnV fund was to teach the young Japanese idea how to shoot. And Still They Say Hanna's Warm Heart Throbs for Roosevelt : - " Walter Wellman's Washington Instter in .-.- Chicago Record-Herald. Persistent efforts are being made by certain people who do not like President Roosevelt to Induce Senator Hanna to come out openly as a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination. Some of these efforts have their origin in that part generally spoken of as Wall street- for it is now generally known that: not all by any means of the influential lead ers In the financial district are opposed to Mr. Roosevelt and others spring from the yearnings of politicians who think they eould get on better with Mr. Hanna as the leader of the party than they are able to get on with Mr. Roosevelt Dur ing the last week evidence has multiplied ot the existence of these petty plots to de feat the president by coaxing Mr. Hanna to permit his name to be used. At the same time there is an abundance of evi dence that Mr. Hanna has no intention of doing anything" of the sort The movement in favor of Hanna and against the president Is not a tenth part as formidable as some - people think It Is. But even if It were all they believe it to be, it would not be formidable enough to upset the calm and well-balanced Judg. ment of the Ohio -senator or to induce him to launch, his little bark on the stormy sea of presidential ambition. In formation of the most trustworthy char acter received here indicates that Mr. Hanna is not tempted; he is. In fact, much annored at these persistent and by no means unselfish efforts to get him into trouble; to his intimates he speaks ef one's fool friends as being the greatest enemies a public man can have. But as long as newspapers can be found' to seize on every little rumor and mag nify it into a development of prime im portance, as long as human nature re tains its well-nigh universal aspect of suspiciousness, it probably will be neces sary for those who sincerely try to give the public correct information concern ing public activities to deny about once a fortnight, from now till the meeting of the national Republican convention, that any such thing as a Hanna boom worthy the name has actual life and being. In this connection I feel that I am doing Senator Hanna and the cause of truth a service by revealing a conver sation which took place In this city dur ing the meeting ot the national Republi can committee last month. At that time, it will be remembered, the news papers were filled with stories of th Hanna boom. Then, as now, all sorts of efforts were making to stir up trouble between President RooBevelt and the Ohio senator. When the talk reached its height a number of Republi can senators took occasion one night, during a lull , in the Innocent game of cards thoy were playing together, to speak to Mr. Hanna on the subject I know who these senators were, but am -not at liberty to give their, names. One after another of them briefly reviewed the conditions the popularity of Presi dent Roosevelt with the rank and file of the people throughout the country, the general feeling that he had taken up a most difficult task on the death, ot McKlnley. and that he had done well with it; the predominant sentiment that he was fairly entitled to a chance to go before the people and to secure from them, It he could, an expression ot their approval of his work. These opinions were expressed by the senators, not in MABSKAZ.X. HELD. Something About the Oreat Merchant as Possible Homines, From the Detroit Journal. In Marshall Field, the great Chicago merchant, a section of the Democracy hopes to secure a vice-presidential if not a presidential candidate, who will secure for them the support of the busi ness men of the country. Field is a man of a modest, retiring disposition, who has persistently kept out of poli tics in the past. As the greatest im porter in the United States he would naturally like to see the tariff modified considerably. In Britain, Germany, Aus tria, Russia, China, Japan, and India, he has factories turning out the goods that will later appear in his Immense stores in Chicago. He is wholesaler, retailer, and manufacturer, manufacturing his goods where they can - be made most cheaply and Selling them in the dearest market. Field has also a controlling interest in the Pullman Palace Car company is one of the governing powers of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul railway; he has probably 310,000,000 Invested in the Baltimore & Ohio system, and ha Is one of the leading stockholders in the United States Steel corporation. He owns millions of dollars' worth of' real es tate in all parts of Chicago; ha holds many strips of rich mining land in our own upper peninsula., and he Is finan cially interested in many of the largest banks of the country. And withal, he Is one of the least , known men in the country. " -. Tempting as the offer of a nomination might be, his friends say it is not very likely that hewould accept-it for it would mean gtving Into other hands the great business he has personally built up. He delights in hard work, and to that and his economical nature is due in great part the enormous success he has attained. He was 21 years of age when he came to Chicago, and in four years he became a member of the firm and gradually rose to be the head. His fortune is estimated at from 1100,000,000 to 1200,000,000, and he has made it all himself. ' ,, Marshall Field has been liberal In his support of public enterprises, and the University of Chicago alone has re ceived from him 3400,000 In land and cash. The only time he . is known to have departed from his rule of making his donations quietly was when he gave his name to the Field Columbian mu seum, with a gift of 31,000,000 to the endowment fund. He is now 70 years of age, but his step is as light and his brain as active as at 60. What Hoes a Paper Owe Its Besdersf From the Outlook. a What does a journal like The Outlook owe in the way of Justice and fair play to those who differ with It in matters of public .Importance? It owes it to itself to present fairly and with reason able fullness the views which it contro verts; it owes it undoubtedly to its op ponents to correct any accidental mis representation of fact concerning them; it owes it to the readers to give a Judicial presentation of both sides of a controverted point under discussion. But all this does not mean that it is to devote otial space to both sides of a question, that it is to open its columns without restriction to general debate, nor that It is to satisfy to the full the argumentative propensities of every body. To do this would be to abandon once and for all the, , re ins of editorial direction, to-, hand over to others the control of the paper. If such an ab. surdity Is imaginable, it would not only imply a complete surrender of all the available ' Space to dissenting friends, but it would maket necessary a council of conciliation among those frlinds for a proportionate division among them of the Inadequate pages. ' We doubt If this would suit the dissenters; we know It would drive away- tbe readers, - criticism of Mr. Hanna, and in a purely conversational rather than In a preach- . ing way. Finally, Mr. Hanna himself spoke. .' . "I know all that to be true Just as well as you do." he said, "and I will go further. if any combination were formed to .take the nomination away from President Roosevelt and tne peo ple thought he had not been fairly treated, the Republican party, would be defeated at the polls as sure as fate."' t . , . V . . . .If. thll oiiice Hearing Air. rimiua -umno statement the senators present have had no further anxiety as to Mr. Hanna's attitude. They read of the e' leged efforts of Hanna boomers, and of suspicious circumstances In Wall street and among the politicians, without a tremor of alarm. They place implicit faith Irt Mr, Hanna himself. They know that as long as publlo sentiment, and more particularly Republican sentl-" ment, remains as it Is today, Mr. Hanna Will make no eftortto get the nomina tion and he knows he could not get it if he tried. Above and 7beyond this, the men who are close to Mr. Hanna, and who know his mind and his char-, acter. feel perfectly sure that what is generally called the presidential bee has never started buzzing in his bonnet Ambition' never has taken possession of him and clouded his Judgment. He dis tinctly is not crazy to be president In fact, his Intimate friends know that he feels if by any chance he were to be elected president, the labor and respon sibility of the office would kill him with in a year; and Mr. Hanna Is not eager to- commit suicide for ambition's sake. Moreover, he Is earnest in his desire tor Republican success, nd he feels kindly enough toward President Roosevelt. There Is only one emergency In which there is the slightest possibility that Mr. Hanna would become a candidate for the nomination, and even that might not move him. This Is that through some accident or misfortune or sudden and complete change in publlo sentiment it should become imperative that the pres ident retire and resign all claims to a chance to go before the people. Such a thing is barely possible, but it is such tor Hanna nor any other sane, man spends any time in serious consideration of it. Of one thjng the country may feel sure: Mr. Hanna. will not seek or scramble for a presidential nomination, and it is a serious question with him whether or not he would accept it If it were to come unasked. If one could believe all he reads in the newspapers which, unfortunately, he cannot he- would expect to see bitter war break out between President Roose velt and Senator Hanna at almost any moment It has been widely published that President Roosevelt recently said: "When 8enator Hanna cornea back from Ohio I am going to smoke him out; I am going to make film either fish or out bait" Of course this story is without the slightest foundation. I was told au thoritatively at the White House today that the president not only never uttered these words, but never said anything re sembling them or warranting any such construction. It may be true that some months ago President Roosevelt was a bit worried about what Hanna was go ing to do, but he is not so worried any more. Advice to the Lovelorn; BT BXATBXOX TAIXrAX Portland, Or., Jan. 18, 1904. Dear Miss Fairfax: If for the first time, at a dance or a party, a young man asks per mission to see a young girl home, and she Is not sure whether her. father and mother would like his attentions to their daughter, what should she do, accept his attention and discover afterwards the parents' objections or ascertain first their preferences and act accordingly? X. It would depend upon the age of the young people and the character of the young man. There is surely no harm In a young girl accepting such attention from a proper young man before obtain ing her parents' consent, but, of course. It would prove her to.be a loving and dutiful daughter if she made us of her parents' wisdom and advice In all such relations. However, a little self-reliance in a young woman is not without advantages. THE JtroOX'g HPOKX." From the Cincinnati Times-Star., -All the members of the bar who aU tended the banquet tq Judge Dan Wright accuse Judge Outcalt of springing with out notice upon the dignified assemblage a composition which Justifies the belief on their part that he sometimes flirts with the poetic muse. : Every guest at the meeting has asked for a copy of the same. It follows: You take a cat by the tail And whirl him round and round. And hurl him out Into the air, Out into space profound; He through the yielding atmosphere Will many whirls complete, But when he strikes Upon the ground He'll land upon his feet. Fate takes a man. Just like a cat, And with more force than grace. It whirls him wriggling round and 1 round, ' And hurls him Into space; And those that tall upon the back, Or land upon the head. Fate lets,: them He there where they fall ' ; They're Just as good asdead. But some there be that, like the cat ' Whirl round and round and round, And so gyrating off through space Until they strike the ground; , . But when at last the ground and they. Do really come to meet. You'll always tlnd them right Side up 1 They land upon their feet And such a man walks off erect. Triumphant and elate. And with courage in his heart He shukes his flat at fate; Then Fate with a benignant smile Upon, his face outspread, Puts forth a soft caressing hand And pats him on the head. And. he's Fate's darling from that day, His triumph is complete; Fate loves the man who whirls and , whirls But tends upon his feet. That man, whate'er his ups and downs, la never wholly spurned Whose perpcndloularlty t Is never overturned, ' Befleotlons of a Bachelor. . ' From the New York Press. Any woman can look passably young to a man she is not married to. - Molasses catches more files than"Vtn. gar, and flattery more women than truth. it manes a noy sick, who Is worrying over whether he is going to make his football team, to hear his mother brag how he Is trying to be number one lit his class. ' 1