Editorial. PORTLAND, OREGON FRIDAY JANUARY 22, 1904 THE OREGON DAILY . ' AN C S. JACKSON Published every evening (except Sunday) at The Journal Building, Fifth HAD THE GAMBLER NO JUSTIFICATION? Trnn HiuHncmishnd vonnr district 1 order to close a. gambling bouse and wlta it Is sued an ultimatum. The order was obeyed and the ultimatum was ignored. This was the first day. The second day both the order and the ultimatum were Ignored and the bouse was opened for business as usual. The v.i- Jin it via Anfo b ca in closed nnd aa near as can be Miaiv yj J 7W . -. . ---, --- . wade out still remain so. " , '."?'. -3 The ultimatum Involved a principle which the gambling fraternity could not have failed to consider dangerous as establishing a precedent. A man loses money in one of the shops in the regular course of play. He makes no claim that the' money was not as fairly, lost as any other money which passed during the same performance from the pockets Of the players Into the till of the dealer. That money really belonged to his wife.' When he confessed the loss she tearfully laid the matter before the district attorney. The gallant heart of that official was touched. He asked by telephone that the money be returned. In response was a declination in language whose force and directness were unmistakable, coupled With 'it, suggestion that the district attorney, in the words of Lew Dock stadter's song, might "go to Helen ; Hunt for.. It." The language, it must be confessed, was totally unparlia mentary; it was coarse, ribald, vile, however direct and forcible and however fully It relieved the overcharged feelings of the head gambler and covered the exigency of the case as presented to him. That It did not set well on-the haughty stomach of the district attorney Is not surprising: That bis gorge should have risen, that he should straight way have called the myrmidons of the sheriff's-office to his assistance, that he should have given Ironclad Instruc tions that the doors of the offending joint should be closed until such time as due reparation had been made, is not surprising. Had he dons less he would have grieved his friends and sank In their esteem. , ; , - . , And yet the head gambler Is not entirely without excuse and Justification, not, be it understood, for the resonant quality of his language, but for his determination to hold within the law, not as it exists on the statute books but as in such cases made and provided by the still higher au-i thority of Mayor Williams' dictum. He had compiled with alt the terms. He paid Into the city treasury in cash the lull amount of his assessment He had squared the city and In consideration thereof he was authorised to ply his trade, to skin and even disembowel whatever suckers came his way and the police department would see that he was protected. There was no written agreement to protect him, but what Is the constitution between friends? The thing was entirely' understood; It had been in working order for months and the head gambler had not only paid the so-called fines to the city, but he had squared the rest of,"the push". newspapers and otherwise.; To say, therefore,: that there , was not some degree of equity on the side of the chief gambler and that he was not justified within temperate limits to resent Interference with the legitimate pursuits of his business is to deny what must be manifest to every unprejudiced mind. While Tlw Journal must commend the generous in stinct which led the district attorney to attempt this act of kindness for the poor woman from whom her wealth had been vicariously ravished, It cannot help at the same time. In the Interest of fairness, to suggest that the mayor in this emergency should be called in to act as arbitrator and to explain why any interference is permitted with a gambler in the 'legitimate pursuit of a trade which the municipality has licensed and which the police have hither to protected with such assiduous and fostering care. ROOSEVELT GETTING NERVOUS. r I HE ACTION of the Democratic ' national commlt I tee In selecting St Louis over Chicago as the - meeting place of the national convention was fol lowed by two radical diverse consequences. In the first place it gave a seriousness to. the presidential candidacy of W, R. Hearst that It had hitherto lacked and in the second place It crystallized and made openly aggressive the Republican opposition to President Roo-jevelt. ' In ap parently throwing to the front a radical candidacy on Jhepemqcratlcjide Jt g are Ihe. opportunity and strength ened the force of the campaign against Roosevelt on the ground of his lack of conservatism and balance In the, ad ministration of public affairs. It gave color and sig nificance to some of his administrative acts to which little popular heed has hitherto been paid and it has provided a way to get under the Roosevelt hide that must make that gifted statesman fairly writhe. , , 4 It is apparent that a large and very Important element of the; Republican party is pursuing the president with sleepless energy; that it cannot be placated and that It will never cease Its efforts to bring about his humiliation and downfall. The very fact that he enjoys a degree of popularity In the West Is being seized upon as ah element to weaken hlB standing with the conservative elements which succeeded in slaughtering Bryan. This propa ganda has been organised in the face of almost absolute harmony in the Republican ranks. It was started at a time -when everybody was ready to accept Roosevelt's unanimous nomination as a matter of course. It, first pur sued devious underground ways. There was only occa sional utcropplngs of the opposition sentiment, but It reached the surface in such plain and unmistakable lan guage that no one was left In doubt that the feeling back of it was Implacable. In the past two months the agitation has been cleverly maintained. Its storm center,- has been Senator Hanna. His relations with the powers back of the movement were well known. They formed a striking part of the instru mentalities which he UBed in the election of McKlnley. There was no secret made of the fact that he had been In "KOTO SAjrjCT." A Vote oa Mr, Oitkl, a Modem Jap anas novelist. ' Ernest W. Clement In the Dial. Japan has recently lost one of its fore most literati in the person of Mr. Osakl, better known by his -tiom de plume of "Koyo Banjln." He shares with Pro fessor Tsubouchi the honor of having Introduced the modern style of novel writing In Japan. The older novels were written in ornate classical style, and were very difficult to understand. But the modern school of fiction writers, following European models, make their rharscters speak in common colloquial. "Koyo" died of cancer of the stomach et the early age of (7 years. He had spent three years In youth in the Impe rial university, but could not graduate, because . "his mind even them being filled with romantic ideas." he could not pans ex ml nation In science. But. It is stated that ".'"the .unscientific answers that he did write astonished the faculty by their literary skill." . , In addition to his proflctency as a novelist he was also an adept in the composition of the 17-sy liable ode known as "halkwat. On his deathbed he, com posed the following lines, to which we INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER " . PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. OFFICIAL, PAPER OF THB CITY OF attorney gave an refused the kingly crown. The story was circumstantial yet, strangely enough, not altogether satisfying. Other people might commit the guileful Mark to Roosevelt, but the agile Ohloan never could be brought definitely to doing it for himself. The uncertainty which has existed still exists in an aggravated form, and the public; and ap parently the president himself, are no nearer- now to knowing precisely where Hanna stands than they ever were.-' , .',.", ',. Meantime the opposition to Roosevelt has grown apace. Each day it has . become more definitely defined, more definitely expressed. The interviews published in the New York Herald leave no doubts not only of strong Op position in New York to Roosevelt, but the specific trans fer of that influence to Hanna and to him alone. It leaves little doubt that every influence will be brought to bear to send unlnstructed delegations from New York and Penn sylvania. Piatt says he is for Roosevelt and there Is noth ing to It but Roosevelt; so does Quay. Yet nobody doubts that both of these supple politicians have always stood in close relations with the very powers which are nov seek ing to encompass Roosevelt's downfall. Piatt himself has little reason to feel kindly toward Roosevelt. His method Of managing things in New York was oftentimes peculiar. He came within an ace of slaughtering Odell for gover nor. Through presidential pressure Odell is now the New York Republican leader, so whatever Piatt may say of his fealty to the Roosevelt cause may reasonably be accepted with grains of allowance. j ' More and mors the opposition to Roosevelt Is coming into the open and daily is that' opposition growing more virulent. That significant little Republican epigram, "Everybody is for Roosevelt and nobody wants him," Is beginning to take on a new flavor. While it is not liter ally true. It has in it enough elements of truth to add bottom to the fight now in progress and which dally grows more Interesting as it grows hotter and more effective. No wonder the to attend meetings and no wonder his cast of thought" as and it becomes easier to flush false friends than to placade opposition or tq make assurance of success doubly sure. . ' - campaign. Incidentally It officially sticks the gaff into the quivering person of ex-Senator Simon and twists the bllt , Two and two being four it should be apparent that the committee favors Mitchell without strings and opposes Simon without equivocation. Furthermore that It throws down the gauntlet to the latter and cheerfully invites a scrimmage.,' :.;" l ' f Simon, on the other hand, announces that he is not a candidate to succeed Mitchell. At the same time he pours hot shot into the followers of that statesman and expresses cynical doubts of the fine official record ; which the Mitchell wing of the Republican party were alleged in the committee's address to have locally made.' He makes' a lone exception in the case of Mayor Williams. His whole reply is neither diplomatic nor conciliatory. If anybody Is looking for war and the incidental slaughter, he stands good and ready. Two and two still being four it is mani fest that though Simon himself will not be a candidate, he Is opposed to Mitchell to tht last ditch." Incidentally and logically be must stand ready to push the fortunes of some other good and aspiring citizen ' who unites ambition to the wherewithal to make the game interesting. People who thirst lomats would whittle the matters in controversy between Japan and Russia down to such a fine point that nothing but Ink would be split in the ultimate show-down. Thus without prospect of world-wide war they saw nothing but to stagnate in the It no thrill. Such ning to notice things. , They see signs of something doing since the issuance of the political manifestoes by the two wings of the Republican party. There Is blood on the face of the moon and raucous sounds startle the ambient air as the factions sharpen their snlckarsnees and get ready to slit the weasanda of those who stand in their way, It is pleasant thus to see brethren dwell together' In peace and harmony and not without interest and instruction to see them trot out their snorting warhorses, furbish up their armor and prepare for the deadly, onslaught which is now Inevitable. Perfectly Independent and tied to neither faction Tht Journal will be in the most admirable position ever oc cupied by an Oregon newspaper to tell the people all about It and to tell It straight. It may be relied upon to do Its level best to carry out that attractive contract to the very letter. , The University of Oregon Is becoming more and more a state university In fact a well as In name. At tht recent meeting of the board of regents all academic work In the university was abolished, so that in future no student will be admitted who has not already passed the twelfth grade In high school work, thus removing the charge that the university was conducted as a high school for a large body of specially favored students who were so situated that they could enjoy these advantages at the expense of all the people of the state. It was high time that this in stitution donned university .garments and laid aside Its high school raiment. V append comments by the editor of the Japan. Mail: Shlnaba akl ' Tsuyu no hlnu ma so Omoshiroki. . 'This Verseiet is an admirable ex ample of Japanese impressionist poetry. rreejy rendered, it reads.. 'Let me die in autumn before the dew dries' words which recall, though they do not ex press, the familiar idea of the dewdrop evanescence of life In Buddhist, eyes, and of the shining" of night pearls on the petals of the autumn flower, the morning glory, the dewdrop slips into the silent sea.' " Just before Osakl's death he urged a group "of his disciples "to co-operate loyally and strfve to rise still higher (a their profession." He also said: "Had I seven lives to live, I would devote all to literature." ... A 98,000.000 Contribution. Walter Wellman, In Philadelphia Press. Mr. Hearst s' trump card, one whleh more than anything else indicates the Napoleonic' character et his campaign, and the one upon which he relies to wlo him ' the game in the Democratic wa tlonal convention. Is the 12,000,000 con tribution which he Is ready to make to the Democratic national campaign fund. JOURNAL 4NO. P. CARROLL and Yamhill streets, Portland, Oregon, PORTLAND conference .with them In New York or that he had been offered their hearty support, backed by- their money in the event he decided to enter the presidential race. ' At the same time It was said of Hanna as of Caesar, thrice he president cannot find time these days of the Holland society in New York face is "sicklied o'er with the pale time verges toward the convention TWO DECLARATIONS OF WAR. HE REPUBLICAN state central committee is unani mously In favor of Senator Mitchell and has , .adopted bis name as the slogan of the coming for hews have had fears that the dip dull routine of news that carries with people are again looking up and begin to his hand, and he wielded it with a sense ef duty which misfit have been religious If it had not been something else. Then you would see Spencer's faca grow dark; the vertical wrinkles in the center Of the forehead stood out a look of steel came Into his eyes, the mouth took on a perverse curve, and he plunged into the strife regardless of everything but the incredible fact thac somebody was holding and maintaining views which were not his. BY WAY OP ZXJjtTBTBATZOV. v ' From, the Washington Post "If we ratify that canal treaty, what are you going to do for Something to talk about?" asked Senator Spooner of Senator Gorman. "Oh!" said Gorman,, "Providence will provide." - "; - - .. - "That" said Spooner, : "reminds me of the man out ln( Wisconsin who went to a revival and was pressed to repent He wavered for a time and finally arose and said: . -'..(.... . , :. "'Friends, I. want to repent and ell how bad I have been, -but I dasn't do it when the grand Jury la In session.' . ".The Lord will forgive,' the revival' 1st shouted. , i. -, " 'Probably He will,' answered the sin ner, 'but He sln't on that grand jury.'" Perkins, the "Outside Man" James Creelman in New York World. When John Fierpont Morgan picked out George W. Perkins to be his partner two years ago America had Just begun to. dominate the markets of the world, and the fulcrum of finance, industry and commerce was supposed to be in the of fice of J. P. Morgan ft Co. The sov ereigns of Europe, prime ministers, cap tains of business in all countries courted Mr. Morgan and with deference, some times with humility, sought his 'opin ions. , Under his leadership the separate and . competing elements of American industry and commerce drew together in vast systems. - competition dwindled or died,1 a fresh doctrine of political econ omy emerged from the delirium of tlje new "prosperity", and parliaments were stirred to passionate debates by threat ened or actual invasions by the "Mor- ganised" forces of the Western hemis phere. . t'.. ; -.. - -..;', v;.-V In this supreme hour, when he seemed to be attaining an almost unchal lenged mastery-over the wealth pro ducers and distributors and the money dealers of civilization, Mr. Morgan chose from all the world of brails and expe rience Mr. Perkins 89 years old, Chi cago-born and Chicago-bred to- be his partner, counsellor and most active agent ' '" ' -i'", ',.' And now that Wall street has become, temporarily at least, "a pool of stagnant water;" now that the official investiga tion of the shipbuilding trust has called attention to the important part played by Mr. Perkins in the stupendous enter prises organised under the guardianship of J. P. Morgan ft Co., business men are once more discussing the qualities which led Mr. Morgan to intrust such respon sibilities to so young a man. ij in that light Mr. Perkins may be re garded as the most interesting person in the American business world Just now a profitable subject for investigation and thoughtful contemplation. : ' For - he started his career practically without in fluence and wholly without wealth. Be ginning as an off Ice boy, with nothing but a common school education, and oro- greasing through painful stages of dry, clerkly drudgery, he finds himself to day, at the age of 41 years, with an imperial income and in a. position so great that he is seriously considered as the probable successor of the most pow erful financier In the world, i .- , The secret of Mr. Perkins" swift rise from helpless obscurity to his present commanding position was uttered S00 years before Christ by that cruel but shrewd tyrant of Corinth, Perlander, when he said, "Nothing is impossible to Industry." Bishop Home said the same thing in- another dialect 2,800 years later, "It is better to wear out than to rust OUt" ;w,v- "...-V.V. It is commonly reported that Mr. Per kins has an inoome of at least $800,000 a year.' That of course, is the mere es timate of Wall street Just what he receives as a partner of Mr. Morgan no outsider can say. The system which prevailed in the fljrm when Anthony J. Drexel was alive gave a fixed percen tage of the profits to each partner; but only Mr. Drexel knew what the percen tage of hjs partners was. It is assumed that the same system still obtains with J. P. Morgan ft Co., and that Mr. Per kins receives a Set percentage of the profits for his services. Those who ought to know most about that firm say that its ordinary annual pronts amount to something like M.000, 000, and that its annual earnings dur ing the recent "boom" years have reached $10,000,000 or $20,000,000., A basis for estimating such profits can be found in the business of such a firm as Kuhn, Loeb ft Co. When the late Abraham Wolff died it was found that his one fourth share of he profits of that firm amounted to $800,000. On that basis, Kuhn, Loeb ft Co. must have made nearly $5,000,000 in that year. Weir Informed Wall street men say that J. P. Morgan ft Co. have earned . in the last few years at least twice as much as Kuhn, Loeb ft Co. If Mr. Perkins re ceives ft per cent of $1Q,000,000 his In come would be $600,000. If he received only 1 per cent Jt would amount to $100,000. Those who pretend to know declare, that . when he entered J. P. Morgan ft Co. as a partner Mr. Morgan guaranteed him. a minimum yearly In come of $75,000, In addition to this he has a great salary as second vice-presi dent of. the New York Life Insurance company, not to speak of the earnings derived from his other large business interests. Only last year Mr. Perkins, In bis 1 0th year, expressed" his" idea of "the secret of worldly success when he said: 'Too many young men In this coun try don't want to work hard. They pre-1 fer to take things easy, stay up late at night and lie abed too long in the morn ing. They never can get ahead that way. - Time and conditions may change. but the old rule remains the same, that there is no success without keeping ever lastingly at it".,.;' -,:.V ' "' There is nowhere to be found a more perfect illustration of in Is practical philosophy than Mr. Perkins himself, His capacity for hard, grinding work, his attention to details and his tireless application are wonders in; Wall street, where the ordinary man la accustomed to work at white heat. , "Mr. Morgan has worn out a good many strong men, but at last he has found a man who will outwear him," said a banker who had a conference with Mr. Perkins last week. Mr. Perkins looks the part. He is tall, compact and symmetrical, with a deep chest square shoulders and thick sinewy 'neck. He has a "square" head. broad, full forehead; short strong nose, open-nos trilled; wide, curving Jaws, round, firm cheeks; large, shapely ears, that stand out from the head; a strong but somewhat coarse mouth and a fight ing chin. He has-big brown eyes, open, candid and observing; a short thick brown mustache and well-trlmnfed, wavy hair. : He has the strong .limbs, firm car riage and quick step of a trained ath lete. His every movement reveals en ergy and strength. He stts upright and the look of his eye is singularly direct There is no better listener in Wall street In spite of a certain brusque ness he can hear patiently all that a man has to say, Urging him now and then to get to the rear point Then, with a surprising quickness, he : will strip the matter of non-essentials, sum up the essentials in good, terse English and make an instant decision, if a de cision lies with htm. , No detail is too small for his consideration Indeed, at tention to details is one of , his most telling qualities and no scheme Is too great or complicated for. his swift com prehension. yv;i'.:-i"' ,;, Ask a Wall street man what Mr. Peri kins does In the business of J. P. Mor gan ft Co., and he will say, "Perkins is the outside man of the firm; Morgan and Steele are the Inside men." , ' The genesis and environments of Mr. Perkins' development reveal the qualities which induced Mr. Morgan to place him so high In his ministry.. He was bom In Chicago January ti; 1862, nine years before the great fire re duced that elty to ashes, (, His father was the Chicago agent of the New York Life Insurance company, a man of industry and integrity, but not conspicuous In nny way.' The boy received his education in the public schools. Iq 1877 he entered his father's office ss an office boy. That of the J. P. Morgan Firm was a time of stress and fierce endeavor. The community -was in the thick of the struggle to rebuild Chicago, an achieve' ment so rapid and so vast as to aston lsh the world. 1 The boy's surroundings' were eleatrlo with energy. He saw a multitude of men ruined in a day rise again to wealth and power by sheer puick andwork. He became a bookkeeper of the office and by 1881 he was cashier. Mr. Perkins was then It years old. He was known by his associates as a furious but sys tematic worker. . He used neither tobacco nor intoxicating drinks. He wasted no time in frivolous amusements. His one thought wss work, work, work. ' The restless energy and ambition to renas cent Chicago entered his soul. On all sides he saw evidence that ' Industry; courage and perseverance ' were, bound to win in the end. And In spite of his work he exercised his body snd kept it strong and healthy. -Then came a change in Mr. Perkins Id u ties. ; He became a solicitor for the raew York Life Insurance company. All through the West he went studying men and persuading them. Even then he be gan to show the tact and plausibility which have distinguished him in his present position. Not only could he in duce men to take insurance policies, but he Had the rare faculty of instructing other agents how to do it That was no easy task in a time when the Insur ance solicitor, was the butt Of ridicule from one end Of the country to the other. In 1886, when 28 years old, he was in spector of the western agencies, of his company. . Business ; grew so rapidly under his stimulating influence that 10 1888 n was promoted to be superintend ent of the entire Western department The veteran officers of the company were amased by the way In which the company's interests : were " enlarged wherever ; Mr. r Perkins energetic snd minute methods were applied.' In 1892, at the age of SO years, he was elected third vice-president In that year he came to the home office in New York and took entire charge "of the agency department President Beers had been forced out of the company and Presi dent McCall was in control. "We have a wonderful man in Per kins," he said. ' "None of the other com panies has - such a man, and none of them can get such a man." J- The agency department was the life of the company, and Mr. Perkins was the life of the agency department As the tens of millions rolled in he began to deal with the tens of millions going, out with loans and investments. He be came second vice-president and chair man of the finance committee. In all the company's service there was no such worker. His knowledge of accounts, his power of concentration, his tact in deal ing with men trained by his experience as an Insurance solicitor his enormous capacity, for work and natural resource fulness developed in drilling agents and Inventing devices to Increase the com pany's businessall this enabled him to turn from one task to an entirely differ ent one with an ease that surprised his seniors. . . , And there is this important thing to be remembered about Mr. Perkins he never left to others what he could pos sibly do himself. '.. Now came a new test of his abilities. The man trained in the strenuous, rough and ready school of Chicago life, was to be pitted against the trained diplomacy of the chancelleries of Europe. - Germany had practically shut out the New York lif insurance, companies. Every imagin able device was employed to Induce the Germans to remove the official ban. Law yers and diplomats failed lgnominlously. An American schoolmate of the emperor was sent He was simply laughed out of Berlin, ' Every emissary to the Ger man government was snubbed. In this crisis Mr. Perkins, then 85 years old. was sent abroad. His mission resulted in the appointment of a distinguished German commission, which visited the United States and recommended that the New York . Insurance company be permitted to re-enter and do business in Germany. He also settled similar troubles with Austria and Switzerland.' This feat of diplomacy attracted widespread atten tion. Vi -: v ',.'' . In that same year Mr. Perkins negoti ated a Russian Joan of $10,000,000, the first foreign loan ever negotiated in this country. He also negotiated the $20,000,000 German loan. The great financiers of Europe and America began to study Mr. Perkins. President McKlnley sought him. and frequently expressed his admiration of the youngmans many-sided ability."" Two years ago Mr. Morgan Invited Mr. Perkins to become his partner. ' The Steel trust, the Northern Securities trust Shipbuilding . trust these were some of the financial immensities that had to be dealt with., Mr. Perkins hesi tated. The New York Lire insurance company ; begged him not to desert its Interests.' . Finally Mr. Perkins - ended the ' matter by dividing his days the mornings to the life insurance company and the afternoons to J, P. Morgan and oompany. Under that arrangement he became Mr. Morgan's partner. Today be is chairman of the finance committee of the New York Life Insurance company; chairman of the finance committee of the United States Steel corporation, a director of the Northern Securities com pany, and o many other giant corpora tions. . There is no cheerier, brisker or more approachable man in financial circles than "Perkins." as Mr. Morgan calls him. He IS not what Is ordinarily known as a "Wall street man.", He deals with money problems from the banking rather than the speculative standpoint and does not mix with the brokers. . ' "' 7 In spite of his surroundings, which have seared and dried up so many men, Mr. Perkins has managed to preserve his humanities. -He dresses well and modestly, owns and drives fast horses, helps his Old friends, finds time to serve his city as When he headed the com mittee appointed fy Governor Roose velt to save the Hudson river palisades from destruction has his residence at Riverside, at, the northern extremity of New York City, spends his eveninge usually with his wife and children in a comfortable house; always adorned pro fusely with flowers, and remains, not withstanding his responsibilities, a young man in body and mind. i 4 His skill as a. diplomat pussies the older men of Wall street. It is not so long since Russell Sage's lawyers applied tn open court for the right to Intervene as a co-sultor In the suit of Mrs. Hodge against the United States Steel corpora tion. - Mr. Sage was supposed to have been angered by llltreatment In. some underwriting schema. ; His intervention In the Hodge suit ' was regarded s an set of revenge. It ' was one thing to face Mr. Hodge In court, but it was an other thing to face Mr. Sage. There was a moment of tremendous excitement In "the street", when Mr. Sage's action was announced. Within a few minutes Mr. Perkins was seen, to dart from the office f J. P. Morgan ft Co., hurry through the street and enter the office of Mr. Sage. After sn hour and a half he' emerged. . Within 10. minutes Mr. Sage told the newspaper, men that his lawyers had misunderstood his instruc tions, arid the application made in open court was withdrawn. ' : f ' So.' too. when John W. Gates cornered Louisville ft Nashville stock. ; The cry of the victims was heard on all sides. Japan's People, Eager for .VVaj With Russia, Show Patience in Waiting on Diplomacy . Ellsa R. Skidmore's Toklo Letter In Chi cago Tribune. , , . ' The real greatness of the Japanese people, - their patience, their self-control, their intelligent confidence in and respect for their rulers, has never been so mani fest! to: those who- have- known them longest as during this year of broken faith and aggression on, the part of Rus sia. Nothing has been done by Jingoes or light-headed partisans to impair the dignity of Japan's attitude or courteous patlence-i-a patience tnat is wearing to a last fine Shred, however :. The contemptuous . discourtesy with which Russia has treated the protests and communications of the Japanese gov ernment, the acts' of aggression in Corea, and reoccupatlon In Manchuria In the midst of the negotiations, the weeks that go by without any reply being made to the ministerial notes, '. have but added,, however, to the deep-seated hostility, the innate hatred of Russia. v , ,, , ' . . Beyond all acts in Manchuria and Co res, the Japanese people feel that their sacred emperor has been treated dis courteously by the Russian, ruler, who bas turned such questions of International policy over to a subordinate, transferring negotiations from the foreign office at St Petersburg by Admiral Alexleff at Port AfthWi'i;':-;::'': The Inspired editorials In. the "Novo Krai, Admiral Alexleff's organ at Port Arthur, have been at times bo remarkable that they might be Justly taken as casus belli alone. Their translation In Japan ese newspapers has Inflamed the, younger men of the progressive party f to , hold meetings and pass resolutions and send a, committee to the premier's residence to acquaint htm with their attitude. The whole nation, from nobles and col-, lege professors to th least coolie, , is alive to the situation, and believes that all courteous and peaceful modes having failed, its only recourse Is an appeal to arms to check the omnivorous power and assert the binding force of treaties. The czarina's Itlnees and the absence of the czar from St Petersburg, have been given as reasons for neglecting to answer the notes of the Japanese government but notes from other governments have received prompt attention, and negotia tions over Balkan : affairs progressed while the affairs of Japan were put aside. While delaying the answer, Russia In creased her garrisons and defenses - In Manchuria. Thirteen regiments, came down from Siberia during the six weeks since Japan's protest was made, and she has Increased her fleet in Aslatlo waters by two more battleships. 'We are not confronted by an honorable enemy, why wait? Why continue to treat treachery with courtesy r asks one Japanese.- 'Better risk all now, and quick, than to swallow more Insults." A pessimist cries: "What csn Japan doT England ties our hands, and Mr. Balfour babbles of peace, peace, peace, snd the United States says nothing. What can Japan do alone against so great and unscrupulous a power, with two more unscrupulous allies ready to help nerr A panic was Imminent. Mr. Perkins went to see Mr. Gates. What he said to the rough gambler who swaggered and bragged of his power to smash those who had always treated him with scorn. no outsider knows. But the next morn ing it was announced : that' Mr. Gates had turned the whole matter .over to J, P. Morgan ft Co. for settlement "What Is your rule of life, Mr. Per kins 7" said one of his friends. "Hard work snd strict sttentlon to business." he replied.- "It Is the only safe road to success." Yet to see this man in the street one would take him for a good-looking, ath letic clerk, without a care in the world. He is a living proof that hard work does not kill, a man that is, If the man has found the right work, - -r- - UU5S Of XEAIiTK. (From Poor Richard's Almanack, 1741 The author, Benjamin 'Franklin, was born January 17. 1706. "Franklin day" will be-celebrated , by the Ladles aux iliary of the Baltimore Typographical union on Monday.) -.- f, Eat and drink such an exact quantity as the constitution of any body allows of, in reference to the services of the mind. -A- . -i,'"-:v: " v ,;,'. '.'-" . '. i'-i- '".;,m They that study much ought not to eat as much as those that work hard, their digestion being not so good, i . The exact quantity and quality being found out is to be kept to constantly. - Excess In all other things whatever, as well ss In meat and drink, is also to be avoided.,;. ';-,;.'. v"; ' , Youth, age and sick require a differ ent quantity. ' ' ; , And so do those of contrary com plexions; for tnat which Is too much for a phlegmatic man, is not sufficient for a choleric. , , The measure of food ought to be (as much, as possibly may be; exactly pro portionable to the quality and condition of the stomach, because the stomach di gests it . f v-, ' The quantity is sufficient the stomach Can perfectly concoct and digest, and It rufflceth the due nourishment of . the body,- - A greater quantity of some things may be eaten than of others, some being of lighter digestion than, others. The difficulty, lies in finding out an exact measure; but eat for necessity, not pleasure; for lust knows not where necessity ends. , Wouldst thou enjoy a long life, a healthy body, and a vigorous mind, and be acquainted also with the wonderful works of God, labor in the first place to bring thy appetite to- reason. BJeVTAJTS OFimOV 01 BOXAA WZUUI Washington Cor. Brooklyn Eagle. There was an Interesting little inci dent in the banquet room of the Shore ham on Tuesday, . in which two well known Democrats figured. .The Hearst people saw that the drift of sentiment was setting in against them strongly, and a hurried call was sent for William J: Bryan to come to the hotel and throw his Influence in favor of the selection of Chicago as the meeting place for the na tional convention. When Bryan arrived he crowded Into the room and was sodh Jammed in a crowd of Missourians, chief among them being Mayor Rolla Wells of, St Louis and. National Committeeman Stone. " - Several month ago Bryan devoted two Issues of the Commoner to a bitter roast of Wells,-flaying him in the most merci less fashion and accusing, him of cor rupt methods in the election which made him mayor. Tho .two men had never met Senator Stone took advantage of the blockade in the banquet hall to In troduce Mr. Bryan to Mr. Wells. The former flushed a little at hearing Wells' name mentioned, 'and was unable to completely . control his dislike for , the man. He said., rather, sarcastically: "Wells. Wells7 Seems to me ' I have heard that, name before.". "You have taken In it vain enough to know it by this time, replied the St. l.ouls mayor, who was plainly nettled. Shafting Wells by the hand, he said: 'Well. I hope you are not as bad as 1 have painted you," Chins talks bravely, but the whole court would run to.Shansl again If a single Russian regiment crossed the border. What can Japan do7" ' , With business at a standstill, capital lying idle in the banks, and all activities paralyzed by the political uncertainties, the merchants cry out that this state of indecision Is as disastrous to them as war Itself. Bonds are depressed In for . eign markets, marine Insurance has , risen, and every contract has a war clause. The coal mine owners In Kin shin, the southern island, who have had a large,' trade with Port Arthur and Dalny, being now forbidden to sell to Russians, are suddenly confronted with bankruptcy as their stock on hand In-, , creases. But it la said that their pat riotism Is magnificent in the face of such a-test and they are a shining ex- : ample to the American firms in the East ;. who have been selling and smuggling arms into the Philippines; and to the English firms found sending arms to the ' revolting tribesmen of the India fron tier via the Persian gulf, and to the tribes in Somaliland now at war " with the British expedition. v :'.;,:: :V'.'', ' The Japanese people are roused to the situation.. The priests In the temples discuss a the question,, professors, ' teachers, and students from the highest university to the least primary school are alive to the burning question.' The "seven professors" who memorallsed the r government and argued the necessity of this war with Russia are immortalized In the yes of the Studenta . ;t i The young men have anti-Russian so cieties and are more vehement than the . progressives and the opposition parties in parliament who clamor for war and the impeachment of the slowly negotiat ing ministers. ' .;..., . :: , The tlng-a-ling of the newsboy's hand bell as he runs rapidly through the streets with extra editions is frequent and the coolie who pulls the Jinrlklsha will turn and explain to his psssenger; "Russia make more bobbery." :,-'' Crowds flock to the theatre, where a dramatisation , of- Tolstoi's "Resurrec tion" is being played and note carefuKy that presentation of Russian morals and society as painted by Russia's greatest snd most mercilessly - truthful artist Those who have seen "Resurrection". discuss Russian Justice and legal pro cedure and the prison system with great fervor. . ; . . : . ;i I : . At the School for Foreign Languages the students of Russian outnumber ell other classes, and the text books in the city were almost exhausted by the sud den demand when the school opened this fall. The Japanese schoolboy, al ways eager for the military drill which is a part of the dally exercises. Is now " keener, than ever, and from the railway track between Toklo and Yokohama one sees several country schoolhouset in whose playgrounds the youngsters are smartly marching and countermarching. 'They will go to Manchuria some time," says a Japanese passenger, noting the foreigner's interests the boy's volu- -tlons. - - , vrBMxxa top inn scobs. ow jntoh KaakM . Amply Betomed VV..':'sj Svil tO ViLr; ;"',-,,-, .''.;' -From the San Francisco. Bulletin. VDutch Hank"- had. fallen Into the bands of the crimps at San Fraitelsca and been shanghaied. He woke- up to find himself on board the ship Lawrence, bound for Sydney. The officers were the hardest drivers" on the Paolflo coast and Hank's life was that of a dog until he reached Sydney and promptly - deserted.,- Night snd - dsy he swore ven geance on the crimps and when he re turned to 8aa Francisco he- found a chance to get even with Drumm, , the man - who had shanghaied him. Hs learned .that Drumm and three of his assistants had drugged a couple of sall- rs and were going to put them aboard steamer that night He got his chum Jack to lend a hand and they waited for the crimps In the shadow of some freight cars. "Hank" tells the reet of the story in this way: "Along about midnight the bunch bove in sight the four of 'era towing along a brace of overloaded tars with the liquor Slopping from their gunwales. , "We waited till the bunch of 'em were deep in the shadow, then we pulled our guns and says quiet and sarcastto like: M Csi vta tn iTAii i a wkA Inkk.H Akia --" " - jvtts scan luuuoil, 'Wlltt lIMfJ i tm haveIn towT Are you a-fobbingTt iuvbo wir tailors r t , ."They stood stll), trying to make out what we was up to and the helpless sail ors fell to the ground. - " Bill, says Jack to me. keeping his pistols pointed at Drumm's hangers-on, 'if I don't think these fellers are the crimpers we're reading so much about in the newspapers snd these two poor sail or men are being crimped. , Here's an-, other, rompln'. outrageous scandal.' " 'Jim, you're right," says I. 'Let's search 'em for evidence and then ship 'em on to congress to see what con gress'U do with 'em.' v "So Jack held em covered at hands up and I went through their Jeans. Eight dollars, two pistols and four sheath knives was all I could dig up. Then we lined 'em up and made 'em shoulder the two doped tare and trundle 'em down to the wharf, where we'd had a boat in. waiting all the while. . . "Cuss! I guess they're cursing yet Butwe shoved 'em along at the pistol points with Jabs in the ribs, and, you &et we kept 'em moving. We made 'em climb into the boat with their brace of doped, crimped men and pull off to where that captain was waiting for me in the stream for the six able-bodied seamen I'd promised him to make up his crew. . "After, we got 'era alongside the ship it was useless for 'em to kick any longer. For the captain was waiting for us. mighty anxious to get his complement and slip away. " 'Heave 'em up, Hank,' he shouted. ' ' " 'Some of them seem to be demurring a bit about taking passage for congress, 1 cap'n,' I said. ., ' "Demurring ber blamed. I'll give 'em afl the demurrage they want in good time. Here, Jack,' he shouted to his first mate. Help get those silly lub bers aboard, and don't -waste any time doln' it D'ye hear?, And you bet Jack didn't It would have done your heart good to -See the way he handled 'em. I knew those' four crimpers were up against the real .thing as soon' as Jack started to do business, with 'em. They tried to explain they were being crimped, but he shut off their wind with whack- . Ing biffs, and when they came to they were en deck and the ship was under ( way. .-'-'.. -'.v. ,-4'yv-'' 'ti- '' "I got my money from the cap'n snd ' squared accounts with those crimpers st the same time, so I've no kick coming." Boa Bora oa January 18 Saofc Yes. From the Louisville Courier-Journal. ' A 'fifth son wss bor yesterday to Mr. and Mrs.- William Leroy. - Their other children were born . . January 15, 1900, George M. Leroy. January II, 1901, P. Ashfon Leroy. January IS, 1902. peter Leroy. January 16, , 1903, Alexander Golds borough Leroy. V ' ' -. The Leroys live In Owen county. Mrs. Leroy was a Blue Grass belle, being a member of the noted Hardin famljy. 1 tl r '.'. I i - r'