the sun. (new york, n.y.) 1905-08-20 [p...

1
11 THE t St1 SVNDVS2O19O > ± 1 SUNDAY AUGUST 20 1005 Entered Pout Office at New York as Second Clan Malt Matter Sabtcrlptlons by Mail Postpaid DAILY Per SUNDAY Per Year DAILY AND SUNDAY Per Year 8 Postagt toforeign Readers who Intend to the aumme may baveTEIiBiJNmalledtoth at Ibt forcgolm prices Thrafldrrss may Ve citenged at It desired Ordsr throuth your newsdealer or ot TUB Hun 17C Nassau street Published thy Tfieaim Printing and Publlthlni- Atsodatlon atlTO rtatsau street In the Boroufl of Manhattan ffYqrV lt r frtnUlt a wwi naniuertptt tuWtltton irtM to tunt rejecltdartideirtturnid llu- tuHnctt coat stud itanpt for tool purpon Every day Is now a that passes withofltBtfTtlatartd irremediable break in the negotiations for peace The center of interest for the whole civilized world moves for th tlmofronj Portsmouth to Oyster Bay More to the voice and mighty influence of the promoter of architect of the conference the sincere Troth Bussia arid Japan o tie United Stat 9lJBt The New the Orient- A mteaionarjagentbf1 our American Bible Society all Shanghai reports that a very great change Hifecome over the spirit of China as a oonseieiueaco ofithe Japanese victory overRUsaiar jHIa in- formation aimply confirms intelligence to the same effect frogtn manyPriental sources but ho gives some interesting precise facts and draws from ther conclusion wtjictr rqisignj oapti The victory of Japan China soon succeeded by its defeat a great Western and Chri8tiarj0fowe- started Chinamen to inquiring as to- ne causes so extraordinary a mani- festation of and by an Oriental nation which is small relatively to itself eo long the easy prey of Powers Accordingly great numbers of Chinese students havefeen to Japan to learn how at last mastery was attained by a people- of the Orient Of the thousands of students many have returned to China to disseminate the knowledge they ac quired and to propagate in books and newspapers their larger and more en- lightened of Oriental needs and destiny time this report of the agent of the Bible society was written there were as many as Chinese students still in j Qtb j1tWo Ube onlb 1 i i ft b 10 reed tot H r i g l da l y I t 1 i p r 1 1 a i the Pre nj h over ot of CIa n let vie I v DAILY PcrYnr4p 2 00- c 00 3 DAuy ADUMP t I f i i aror us i I 7 3CflIO the t l Idea M ii 7 I I r tao I r i c I r I 75 L > < > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ° As a result of Japanese propa- ganda the Chinese more especially in Pekin but also in thecountry districts to a very considerable estent are getting new ideas of progress but is of prog- ress without Christianity Thermaster- ful of a nation without the aid Is provoking very serious thought far outside of China and In Christendom itself Heathen- Ism is coming to the Sore and Is teach- ing the whole world not merely in the art of war in selfsacrifice in fidelity to br national strength Unquestionably there has been iderable progress Cliristianity in Jape but relatively to whole ulation it is Btill BligKtiThe people Beem o i tek jUfihtl interest ifi our theology seem to produce any radical change in their religious conoaptions and ethically are particularly lolcrani Ing or ihejr seem to- be tadifTereht as i y ri tfes TKe Japanese in this country are not at all influenced In their a by Jhe for Christianity or for the old order of Christians and heathen com- radeship and the heathen dp not seem to take very seriously tjie rellgiou8 change by the QtHecs are rather chanical and civili- zation for their instruction but our Western grandeur and luxury of living proycKeaJittleor4ioadmiration- from them The simple life trated among the Japanese mo re any other country which has yet pushed itself into a prominent place among the Powers of the world jz The missionary of society has reason for misglvlngif herefpre as to thp consequenoeci of Oriental birth BO far as1 tianity Will or hinder the propa- gation of ChrisUapjty Will lt suggests because of its cause tend to induce a feeling that paganism is sufficient to Itself is superior and needs no Chrietianization Ho speaks of Chl nese publications printed in circulated hi chIna as misunderstanding of truth and more or 1 ss contempt on the Christian religion and Its represent stives The demonstration thata pagan ci iU ration of the is superior in prowess to the of tho which is strongest numerically long terrorized the Orient must have a pro- found effect on the history of the world more especially as respects the relative value of religions As this missionary points out Idea new at the Chinese that of progress Christianity has been generated among the Chinese by tho superlative triumph of Japan over Russia and to his mind it is a dangerous idea position On August 2 the managers of tho Lewis and Clark Centennial in Portland Ore wcrd able that the attendance as the turnstiles at tie entrances to tlje fair grounds had the mark In two months and two days 1013551 ttft e grounds jia JJeen a fact of which tho citlzans of the Northwest are proud Buffalos development leon he- r 1 con th pop th dI r te rig W ting proC rTe lat flu threw help t- ot Eat Wet new lento GueC ii t aie E Piton all t J i 2 A t I 3 1 J a profess converIonto 4 they remain r datibrii r our r j lie Bible It as- h z Jap h and 1 leading g 5 Levi Clark t noted by 1 i I- i i M- J MI s ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ° PanAmerican Exposition drawing much more territory- for its patronage attracted only 1203236 visitors in the t o months of its and the Portland show has ex the recordsofthe Omaha Trans Mississippi Exhibition of 1808 which was attended by 011035 persons in its HrSt two months It s out that within a radius of 500 Buffalo there was a population pf 40000000 to draw from and Omaha within a corresponding territory had population of 14000000 Portland counts within a circle of similar radius drawn with tWit i as a center only i 800000 iahabitahtfl Many of these have been ibusy since the opening- of the Lewie and Clark Exposition engaged in agriculture This the attendance on the fair shows a steady increase and before the gates are closed it is expected at least 2760000 persons have the Portland is proud of the so far and confident of the future The special correspondent of the t Paul Dispatch utters this cheer ful sentiment Western rnterprbe the entire West u to be congratulated and If the East Mill Imailne- stbafnothlnrgood can conic out ot Naureth let that section take notice of tbe Stoat succeatful of all American exposltloru Where in the East is it believed that nothing good can come out of the West It must be a region not down on the maps Portland has carried a great enterprise far toward success May she see the end of tho exposition with the some gratification that marked its be- ginning and its progress up to date nfjiBsja rrilV Have National Assem- bly The concerted and resolute agitation- for representative institutions which under grave disabilities and in dpflance df official prohibition Liberals have carried on for many through their provincial din municipal councils has not utterly in vain To a certain NICHOLAS II has heeded their grand remonstrance It is true that only the germ of a Parliament is granted manifesto put forth on Saturday 6y the Czar but by it Russia will be- come articulate Experience leaches that B great nation once endowed with a voice finds a way of making- it obeyed If we inspect the details of the species of constitution outlined in the Czars manifesto and in an accompanying document wo find that many precau- tions have been taken to restrict the projected assembly to purely consulta- tive functions and to shield it from the pressure of public opinion The very name State Council conferred on carr p- int moth that exhibit oft moth ben the son on- t ftra and Ails tie ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ the new of the popularly elected body with the existing Council of the which Is composed exclusively of the sorer eigQs ppointeesran association equiva- lent to the relation of a lower to an upper house bears witness to an anx- ious desire to deprivethe peoples rep- resentatives of a decisive or even pre- ponderant share of the lawmaking power and to confine to the mere tendering of advice may or may not be Their affirmative sug- gestions repelld by the Council of the Empire which is the stronghold- of the organized bureaucracy and if by chance they meet wi h the approval ofthat body they may be by the Czar influenced by a favoriteMinister As regards I he nega- tive restraining authority the popu- lar chamber it is provided that if a Ministerial bill is opposed by a thirds vpto in both the lower npper that particular measure jnuBt be withdrawn but if by tHe sovereign the Bubmit the substance of his proposal in another guise The Russian national not be the outcome of Universal suffrage and of direct election The 412 mem- bers are to be chosen by local electoral colleges analogous to the colleges of Presidential electors in the To a primary man old andpoesess a prop erty qualification Members of the will be exempt from arrest for debt but if charged with a criminal offense they will be amenable to judicial process They ate to ten rubles 15 a day while the is sitting and a mileage allowance Whether public meetings will be permitted dur jng an electoral campaign Booms ful for the right of petition by a previous ukase is not conferred Tn order that the scenes witnessed in the first French National Assembly the Legislative Assembly and the Conven- tion may averted the is denied to the popular chamber Even of its U re- stricted Representatives of the press will be excluded whenever the presiding officer chooses to a session a closed or secret must so de- clare at the request of a Minister who professes to have a question to submit involving a national secret The press of even an open cession must and approved by the pre- siding officer they can be pub- lished It may seem at first sight that such an assembly as we have described would be but the mockery of representative Institutions and should not be sur- prised if advanced Libe als evinced an inclination to boycott Jt They will make a great if they do not the best of it It is a vast improvement on the States General which met at Versailles in 1789 for it is not divided into orders it is elected for five years it is At liberty to discuss the ljudg t and indeed any Ministerial measure and it can require a Minister to appear before it and defend his acts Herein exist in embryo the principles of the of the purse and of Ministerial accountability Unquestionably the Czar manifesto has his subjects an opportunity How they shall use it Is for them and him to determine remains to bo seen whether the Russian people will the full measure of their liberties by evclu tem ten two empower Unit bro rive doubt acc dear report foe w mistake however g t r F j dis- regarded iouse assembly wiU as- sembly in ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ tion or by revolution whether the Bx- MAHOFFJ like the HOBBNZOLLBRNB can through a oomt lnatlon of shrewd nose tact foresight and good luck es- cape the the BOURBONS and bring a peaceful transformation- of an Into a constitutional Canada Also About the first bf September Canadas new Tariff Commission will begin work of investigating the tariff of the Dominion with a view to its revision The commission will move from prov- ince to province and probably from place to puce in the various provinces Individually and as representatives of trade organizations and associations- the business men of Canada will be in vited to appear and acquaint the corn the kind of tariff her citieenrj think the Dominion should have The present plan is to devote about three months to the accumulation of evidence and testimony A report with accom- panying recommendations will then be prepared for submission to Parliamen- tat its next session early in 1006 The present belief is that the result will recommendation of a triple set of tariff rates One of these will be a general rate for ordinary day use Another will be a rate whicn can be given in exchange for equivalent advantages offered by other The third will be a maximum be used to penalize any whose tariff may too oppose the of Cana- dian merchandise These may be classed- as the favorite the friendly and the swift kick tariffs While it would be utterly unfair and un true to assume that Canadas new ar- rangement will be influenced by any feeling of malice toward the States it la quite certain that rates will be framed with American com- petition as the most influential factor in their determination When the Liberal party came into power in 1890 it was an antiprotection party But even then Canadas manufacturing in- terests were too powerful to make it safe for the new incumbents to their wishes and system protection has been in operation ever since In view of the very considerable increase in the volume and value of Canadas output of since the last sible to give a comparison of growth which would be of any value An in dication appears in the statistics of Canadian export trade In 1898 when the antiprotection Lib orals came into power the value of manufactured goods exported WAS 9385384 Under the continuance of the fiscal policy really established by the dom of auto c ever cute cut brier Unit igor manufacture its be the can pro- fessedly o > > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Conservative party up to 114224287 in in the fiscal year 1805 they reached 21191353 These figures like those of Canadas popula- tion and production are small in com- parison with our own but their rate of increase during the same term runs us a dose second The manufacturers of Canada with more than 500000000 in vested hi their business believe that they have Interests and a market which are worth protecting Our exports to the Dominion show an unbroken series of annual gains from 52854769 in 1895 to the fiscal year ended June 30 1905 Our imports have increased from 36574327- in 1895 to 62303263 or much less than onehalf of our exports The Canadians believe and perhaps with reason that these sums might and should be or at least be brought nearer How far her new tariff and its attendant conditions may go toward es- tablishing that result it is not yet possi ble to say Canada will not deliberately- and maliciously penalize American mer chandise But the probability is that next year she will adopt a new fiscal system which will increase the entrance fee at her market gates A Proposed Outlet for the Jews If the conference of prominent Jews of this country with Mr WITTK for the purpose of securing social and political rights millions of their race in Russia should result in the practical amelioration of the condition of those people a very decided reduction in the present vast Jewish immigration to America might be brought The Jewish Year Book esti the number of the world eleyah these more than onehalf are in Russia Next to Russia they are most numerous in Au- striaHungary where they are estimated- to be millions but so great has been and is still the Jewish immi- gration to the States from both of those these estimates ought probably to be reduced Jews number in the States now a million and prob country has a Jewish popula- tion not much less than that of Austria Hungary whenthedepletion by the im- migration of the last few years is taken into the At any the Jewish immigration continues at its present volume the will very soon be second Russia in the number of Jews it contains and the persistence of In its discriminations against that race would probably give tho first place- to this country within the present gen- eration Already the Jewish community- In New York is the greatest in any city of the world at least threequarters of a million That is a number equal to more than half of the present total of St Petersburg There are more Jews in the United than in all Europe with the Rus- sia and AustriaHungary Probably there three times on many as are at present in Germany the neat of the now apparently mitigated antiSemitic agitations After Germany and the other European countries we have named are most numerous in Ru mania though there they are not than qf the Jewish popu city of New York In the whole British empire they arc little more third great BourocsOf the prcent vast the for 1 for abut mat Jew Unit Unit abut aunt Unit Rus- sia Stat are abut a than t s f z equal- ized to- gether the six about two Btates pop- ulation more ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Jewish lniinljTiartd ilo Ala obithtry are ahdkfhmt of ailfr mthe tret If the hardships of the Jews are not to Uie States U likely to otjntlnue diminution In even greater volume JeiWahVtewimbhy however is that if the of their rdoe in rightful treat ment by the Government It wilt prefer- to tner ibyolres- UieiBuealan Jews paarUitat his ha h Jewish u motlre spur pose to rid 6f ii taatiy of race as possible vAnteTJcan J wa in conference with Mr Wn a financial Influence capable f of erilng- apowerful pressure and more especially at iiita thto preeaura about the amAlibratib akkadfoirj or it might b said demanded verysud oal change in the dlspo lton may follow The great andBuddnflooa of Jewish immigration to thiS country looked on by the Jetra of older with a degree of mi These Immi- grants are among the number who come hither with Binalloit of money in tHelr and their exodus seems to be too precipitous to be advantageous to elv i unless the Ruaslanpolicy of opprewlng shall continued A prominent Jew sends to us a re- markable suggestion made on the theory that attempts to extort Jlisilpe for Jews from Russia are useless Now that the Zionists themselves have re East Africa and abandoned every as to Palestine1 he writes would offer solution for the Jewish problem The sMcmttllon Russian Jews under the protection and guidance of the Japanese could open a new epoch in commercial history Through their knowledge of Russian Polish German and French and their connections with the Russian Jews in England the United States Canada Australia and South Africa he adds constitute firstrate connect with world comsaerce Japan and ChIno however would have to be consulted fn the matter The OreM Boston machine squeaks in agony The Son JOSUB- QCINCT has up his genealogical- tree and is cowering idthe branches Massachusetts has not risenas one man at the mentloa ttf MxtSs and ETLSS That is too i pHriael She has Unit rna o and one Undo 0 Ht j a 1 the jed hop the To- Te Russia y ud Rumania pihps peat flu a receives atl by of the they bring against the policy has a get the thus wh tt Rtisl n of borrowing money i Ian icle I th tie > ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ leaped like one jumped with as if that i vincible ticket were on the sidewalk Hill Tatnick fromthe tl of Gape Cod to th top of Qreylock exultantJoy boils through the Stafce e lain see Hon rJ wt of them- selves in Gen what each of them would to be we hijlkito oorrs of r Nutmeg philosopher baaiMmMtOini of hls see U Ibis cousIn or country well say that ttie legs of the Put- nam Phalanx are some of the legs in this The Generals quality and preeminent are absolute the handsomest man of the Hon EsKi- BTLES is ss wise as the head of the ticket is beautiful r Their platform Uniform and Re form is toBAtiBfy every best aspiration bflUassa- chusetts It evte ths demand made in thefoUbwingistter To ma EDiroa or T a Sv r Howdw- Ocn Uaas staLl en lobster fohnt we know where BTUts is ofl the Qifrtl n Re Is solid the protection of youag lobMerssoiotleealjVngt- hsal at the same time till never la re wltl- Ictltlrnate lobster fithlnc and lobitet poU crying need of thehoofla ifssMehusftj ls iobstei protection I repeat When Is Gin WILt WhJ Is not the ticket Btua and Itfrua f- T A FBwLia Lobster protection and lobster reform are included in reform den MILES will soon give his this great to the interest in and sympathy lobsters t ho sudden or simulated feeling born 6f the po- litical exigency of the moment The feelings of his nature gb out to footer class When we say that Gen MttKsB favorite poem is the Hon WILUAM LLOYD GARBUONS famous To a Lobster we have said on this delicate and Important subject is understood that the HonMpoit STOREY the Ron Ftstit WARREN the Hon ERVINO WiJistow and three other loading antiimperialists will shortly issue a call for a Miles and Byles mass meeting in Hall A Miles and Byles flag was flung to breeze in last night The Hon CURTIS GUILD Jr is seriously and justly alarmed T A Good Word for Kalabaka THE SUN preeenis its compliments to the worthy Inhabitants of Kalabaka in Theesaly whq cohfi4e to us their hopes for the improvement their by American For the lucid translation 6f the interesting com- munication wUohVre this morning and for the of the names of the esteemed rgnersw Indebted to the kindness lof Mr D N BOTABSI the Greek Consuls New Torki Our inhabit 6ne of the moetwbiderful on the earths surface In the ex- treme north of Greece near the Turkish frontier celebrated in history and ro manbe for the o m e6rd or in the air hese ancient to number of halt a dozen or thereabouts crown stupen- dous crags and almost Inaooesslble by the of approach A crude windlass a rep and a loosenet conUtinloit f teller f doUr l In Bio s lie Her err ar for Ont I v- As Del bro inc a 1 CUm I view p dept sonnet FIELD uU n dent mOat lcd AAnt 5ftl1t1Wf t to ct t i r A 4 f i 01 all ez exposed th nyOth hand- somest or I tot The PUDDL flocLAuguat7 FaC the neighbor- hood abe e r the are wi 4 > ¬ ¬ < ¬ + some ofVtbe sacred edifices A from tho interest of the monasteri the scenery around Kalabaka combine loveliness the vale with thQ sublimity of the isolated mountain and its attractions to travelers of and imagination are not by Mr ALKXIADEB and his seven fellow townsmen BUN will cooperate heartil with the inhabitants of Kalabaka in an lawful measure that promises to en the comfort of visitors to th met oro and Incidentally to promote th prosperity of a most excellent we cannot give our a too elaborate scheme o steel construction around am between these Ourijporat of view may be different but deference to local opinion it seems ious that a system of colossa and escala toremight easily be so overdone as t very object in view Oiv us hoUlsat Kalabaka worthy of fame of ancient Hellas but spare th creaking windlass the swaying rope the container of thrillini bmotlons The subjoined communication from th Grand la official and meantfor publicatio- nrfoTirt or Taa soxSfr I arrtv New about September Seat via Olulli- AusiroAra rto u line alisoM UrrcHiUft American Consul VSHicaJ Srullant Star of Zanzibar draws of Uluourt declares the that he drinks buttermilk to be another base In ventlan Of the enemy UcmpAfi CommtrtU- At1 tt i Tbe favorite vanities of Mr BILL are run and whisky and honey When they caress his gullet and glide like a gentle into his interior they touch lmt smoother than themselves I am In ef the Hespertdss rnr WttuAi BatA More golden apples for the barrel Isit true Is it a parable a fable with oral this tale sent from Iowa Falls la of the Christian QoUUts just founded b the CAnT an enthuslaati golfer who never uses profane language when he makes a mighty swipe at the bat and falls to hit A parable a fable doubtless but full of moral meat for gol- stfck even women who knows To swear is neither brave polite tier wise but its sometimes relieving Meanwhile forward Christian jolter forward the AntiProfane Qolfini JOY IN KALABAKA- terettlhg Cemmnnloatlon to The Man Prea nTMrtyMtlgpt Worthy Citizens o Kemete Thetallan Municipality To nta KDrroa or Tmt SvN SIr The Oree- ewspaper publlthed In Athens topics rn your paper Usa sews that your fellow cutset- r Berger havtag vIsited the Ueleora last year is decided to ilk fron the Greek Governmen conoeaaloa of the locality of the Meteors In t connect these really magnificent and rock Ills by eoloMal bridges and at the same time t build large hotels and parks This greatand productive Idea of Mr Berger as Sued with Joy the hearts of the Inhabitants lattaka to which town belong most of the lie and wehasten to begyou to be pleased It- javey to Ur Bsrgsr our warm thanks assurlni the rocks of the Meteors belong l- irwt pert community of Kalabaka we wit and do all In our power to Influ neeonr Government that Mr Berter may obtalt complete coapfsston Thanking you for publishing the above news remain with the highest consideration the In ablUBUOf Kalabaka L AuxUDia GIOBOI THMCHAK- ISOXiSitornas THBODOSI MAD trsritxtos LiirtDis A TtOKEorotruM- iKAdiaraa Luris Bisiua LBSCTIPI- SKitiurAkxs SrBitos BBNTA- SlP rUlKoa AOIILLBS KABifOCMl- Staxkxla NICOIX JUXBS OONSTNTIH KBRAOA JONAH OBBtucwB- BSiaoc UAka BAKX1UOI4A- SNGoaiAS asoaqiApas- STiTmAtas i MAHDAUJ Lura THBSDOSSIOS KOUBUB aunts ATHANASSIOS KOMUA TaU X ALBLIADBS- CHRISTOS PAKA- Ssrsnos TZBBTO- STnKsDona SEOUL Oisxiaius UOSCODIAS KAiokaarrsAS S K ALBZIADK- SAomisAtaAWASsouiAs DBUBTRICS PBLSKASSISI- ICOtAS tAlMtS BUlL PArFACRXISTOe- XAtUBABAy OtttM July H A Mealbsfteparatlea Frsm Lady Nlcotlae- To Mni BortOR or TBB Sw str It certainly O top Soioklng for onr month a year simply ir InY enjoyment of the new start that Is made t the abstinence period For five 01 Is years ihave tried It and II has been very salt tctnrr lamaay mprcts The Idea of starting with the beloved weed In so many day takes tIle luaury of tobacco the more enjoyable I ha several times stopped drinking aa well ut s 1 am not a regular but unIT a volunteer i lbs II lisa not been so aatlsfactor i fast Another point about smoking why this boi t I smoke bOUt cIgarettes pleases my fancy and can see no harm t either for but every one who doesnt amok- idmtnymen t eMit to remonstrate with me becaui smoke of Turkish tobacco I refer hem to ltd that In Europe the cigarette li- he staadard of smoking with both men and women jut to think because small boys bussd their health by them that alt dtarettcs ough ibeabtllkned- Moeh of this sentiment due It seems to trikelegUlaUan that has been going on for utfswrearsln simon every Legislature agalas- bseeto1 eampables It has been such a teeth Isle fOr Mis rural legislator whose constituent oBW 5ersef plug cut chewing tobacco twefttavea that tbe graft has been fostered t would do ne good to see a logical argument a why an ablcbaillel man should not smoke a IgtrtUe that did not read like a backwoods tern raace lecture IAOTHAQH- NBW Yoag Aug It Aaetker Sabway Complaint To THB Emtoa or TB Sujf r While stand I In the City Hall subway station today a boy alktd past me and showed me a remarkably paw ven for a rounds He disgustedly marked that he Just pat his hand on the rail uardtng the tricks Tht colored gentleman who supposed to clean the nation was weep at the ket boa The other day I had to wait so long for a train t tSP same station that I desired to U down lie benches at the station were so dirty that It rat Impossible I suppose the cars would be In same state of dirtiness did not the passengers nit mete clothes Tht subway ls a rood deal of a fake saw iron AUIH E M UACDOKALD the Japans Eaplayed America Oaaasrst i jf itllag opinion among tbe people of this country American gnnnen have been employed by the paaese In the present war with Russia especially the navy 1 have rood reason to doubt this id have on many occasions denied that such was ecait- I have taken the ground that Japan has no ute need for any gunners ecept Its own The SPUN have ths hlfhesi tiploalve powder la istence sad I believe these guattre la directed their pwa gunners solely Is sot this the trulhl- PATCiooim Aug ti AKIMOTOH H CARMAN Behanks- TOTBRRDno orTHB DK rrr Out In Prnn IVanla Ohio and Indiana the traveler often hears alnmfn sad others leftrtlng to a certain data f ss bohuaka or bobonka KB PON enlighten this part of the woiid on tao lrav ii otih Word Lkrtnan rti towering rocks senti- ment thirty h han commu- nity unreserved approval to mod i11 l eleVators the and etl ul ted l- d evidently Tb I DIY lion It menand very That k AWed Uli or- der Won urn that bibs P 1 L I A D JJ rI GlOM AMUTIOS PArrApjizpou Pox In t tilt totlaeCo howl eI ltta and cl ho smoke cigars exclullrl f 1 Jof ll it t I the the are dIn tie the them with To TIn 01 11 pre ta or b1 I Can- T ts Aur n- tt j f c exagger- ated While Tha majestic rocks doe def st the O o Trk 4 nigh- t murmur noth- ing J LagueI U homily cooae i WI bOols brigade sift s1 seem hat and > tar norms Theta a tat I NWU t > EDITOM of Ts Catholic Priest is perfectly Justified 1 saying that the moUrn of Bartholomew was political rather lbs religious though religion was the basis c parties But history will not but hit out U he contends that Rome was clear c the business Te Deum was sung in Bl Peters a triumphal medal was struck triumphal was on the wi of triumphal oration wa composed by the Papal orator who eaii that on the night of the massacre the star had shone with unwonted brilliancy an the Seine bad rolled ah ampler tide that I might cast forth the foul circuses the sea Jt is Unfortunately true thatth habit o persecution was trauimittod of the Middle Ages and the Inquisition1- Protestantismand to the Churches But presently died out Protestantism noW heartily renounces i and thinks with shame of the burning o Bervettu However I do acou Rations and reproaches e wsScoJM i sign of grace when a representative of tto Church of Innocent TO of of Philip II of IxUto XIV and Dragouades of the Jesuit of the Syfohu shows that he is ashamed persecution QpLDWiK SUITH THE SCOW YACHT i Crrdlt tar Its Jnventlen Attributed ft i Chesapeake Navlgater To TUB Emicm or TH tivtt 8ir Receni discussion by boati of the eoow type Interesting but fall to attribute origin of the boat to the right man or to the right locality This tyPO of yacht which has to suet perfection on the lakes of Minnesota Wisconsin and which brought jntch dl Unction to American yacht clubs of the West originated on Chesapeake Hay tully fort years ago Capt William H Valllant of Oxford J 4 built the first one of these boats and enun- cttted the principle which has guided development of tbls class of craft Valllant was four or Hirekinds ofa genius and every one who knewhim thoroughly absorbed h wa scow my new scow three or tour that he was bin heart ant mind subject was ha on the Idea that speed a must It HU Idea was that the scow was mos available shape and that Be bunt It over the bars surface of the water VaUlants scow developed Into the dead rise boat built on on the Chop or tile Tread Avon practically same IB Western craft teata lifted the from the Cans Hans at Montreal The Western boat 1 built and Is more a mere racer that a ship carpenter who hid worked I Oxford was with limits scow built the first one these racers In I have witnessed on the W lakes as well as In Canadian waters and Larohmont and ar convinced that 40 foot class produced en th eastern shores of Maryland make the next abets o to one of these craftsmen for his Idea an boat Lrwis A liXOKiffD NEW Toss Aug it- Ir To of fllngapere ea Americas Missionaries To THE EDITOR or TIB Sujr Sir In copy of the Singapore Free Pritt received by thin mornings mall I flnda report of ameet large number of Chinese and other memberof the Chine community at Singapore to consider the Uestlon of taking Joint action with Bhaagha American exclusion act The resolutions on these subjects were tabled over here and the Ume Ido not call to mind haying In an- f the reports what was said about the lonarles The report says During the course of the dlMasslen white lute aaa time Ur Yu lick mad a speech la Whle e novel proposition hrtitUn from America he said that he Chinese Christians would support their fetloi- ountrymen by refoajnr to lIsten to American ilMlonarlts whose ChrIstianity dMhot appear t e practicable among their own countrymen rat method would be to tight sby ef American ituloitarles sod tell them to go back to their ow people as their doctrines were not acceptable 1 give tbls as It mar be of Interest to if TIIK 8UKS readers 0 All There is In Oyite Pasty To vies RDRoabr TIll Sex JHr The ludlere- ippdlitlon Oyster Pasty Is to be rnorant wit or contemptuous earelessaeaa rhlrh In all ages conquerors line distorted tnruige of the conquered and which ia the cas- if Stew York was the cattworsucb other mesa ntltu tmnsformstlonsaa that of liromm Mtssje 0 Qramerry Verlettenberf to FUttMkar rack and Achter Kol o ArtaurKlll r In the days when otters and beaversaad musk were a common sicht along thertver bank erUln leading from ladtaa trail whkl 1 now Broadway toward the lartlanUon of New Ltnttcrdm was known at Otter a very simple dnlchatloa Was not Tien- lovens firm known aa Ottenpoor Otter tiaekit- md was there not later on an Otter alley between- he Thompwn Sullivan streetst Now to the redcoated ouMtrs of the Rollanden oyster appeared suffldiatlf dan approxi- mation to otter and pasty seentd rood nouiti substitute for the pretty Dutch dlmlnu lye paatJe a little lanedespite the rsemblaace between past and our sin path ad the German pfad An aaalogous display if scholarly acumenIs In their eroiuUoao Tin Pot referred to by one of our eoatrlbuton of Tuyn Put garden lane That they did twist Paatje Maiden Into Utrtle antI Pat II an omlialon to be thankful for And ill there It In PniuiDKLPBiA Aug II A EsToctat- dvantages te Russia ef rreveitttag Jewish InmlgratU rom n Mtmfn Wolf vf With to Mr ITW In gIving the Jews full liberty In Russia yo- IU prevent immigration to the United States nd thus settle one and for all a problem that intrants the Government of the United States nd mayIn the course of time become a subject f International eontenUon thus by relieving tbs jtuatton you at one stroke win also till Mead hip not only of tile Government but of the entire of the United States You will of court undentaad my stating the ubjecfof ImmUratlon aa being a menace II can ever be a menace If the stream Bows naturally aa It from QUIeT countries OwnershIp ef Reathsra Tiaiber Laaaj From M Burvaw Fonnrv BnU rr NoU Practically all the best timber lands of the South- re now controlled by Urf e ret estate companies pith beadquaners In St Loula afemphls Chstta- ooga and large title Inthe north These com anles are from tw te twenty rears old and were inned by mm who reaUdnc the future valu of- bete lands bought them when the prices were really below their present valuation It U now almost ImpotstUe to buy hardwood In the Mississippi Valley for lea than trotn- I to 17 per acre the price depending upea the catlon asS the nearness to railroads or streams hlch furnish an May outlet for the timber Hay it Bel To nniToii or Tm 8n Sr U Is tug sated In the Nuhua Tittirtph that the Stars and tripes be displayed everywhere throughout the tnlted states when h formal of peace i made by repretentallreiot Russia aad lapin Let ua hope that Old Olery will appear at Its cat at an early day The appearance of our national liar a place In the hope and affections of the world hat would be extended by this set te all classes i both natlont in the controversy la a way this auld not be reached but by a national ipretdoa t our sympathy for them la met ralttortunt sad tjolclnt with them la their rrilef- NIW Toss AUar I Tom r Aj n r the Into r the Church and j not want to Alva ItS rd o tem IlC and the apJ ho built thtlt wilt III e the so light leaSt possible nce would be u lam kfoa but with a bow qf a tronL The dead rite boat tank the principle la are the or Val limits scow or e alIIo at li craft or the to Oh tlOD his Lick a lag In cereal to the published but seen mi made a efanl the aetna NEw 10 efedl toll with rata till I PutJe Otter lan l nand seen out not lan l that III people lots III land Ill and hilto hold guts f k Ifl 1jc o CA rHOLICIW4IDP11XCVTZOI St 4 bS d Come lisa wiIIrecafl giving hi- So water Dcl uare th ago noth development tspt said mer- chants Chinese at The YonEig r the lana family Oyter Par appeal by f Auf 10 > < I NAVY Advantages In the Naval Scribe I Punted Outby a Recruiting omen To rH EDITOR or TUB BusSir1 in your paperof Aug 14 appears a letter under heading The ar atJ d of the Nay signed by Mr Frederlo Grlfflth I feel that I cannot oonsclcntlouitly as sj recruiting officer lt to past mian swered In tact certain statements tnarln by him make It Imperative that i should answer since I have risen from the rank entered the wardroom through the en- listment roll to Ute Mr Grlffltha words It Is true that President Roosevelt 1 working unceasingly Impress on the conn try that the future safety of the United Blnle requires many and formidable naval Vessels to be constructed without delay Who that has watched the war In the Far East soil noted the Important part played by the navy of the can deny that Mr Roosevelt 1s right Yet persons tike Mr Griffith circulating such misleading tall meats as are contained In his letter Part bid fair to undo much of the Pretl dents tireless work Mr Griffith la wrong when he says that enlistment does not commend Itself to am willing to begin low nnd that the Departments statement thnt tho navy great chance for young men to see the worldli a comeon The treat trouble with most of our young men l that they are not satlsflexl to begin low They want to begin on top They know roars In their own minds when they go on board ship thanthe man who Is placed over them and whohas sp nt years In gaining his ex- perience Ttfey do not take kindly to naval discipline must be en forced If we are to have a service worth the name Mypcrsonsl experience has been that no man who least desire to learn nnd to Improve himself In the naval service will ever from officers or enlisted rain oflonger experience Ko shore offers more for the Intelligence Invested than does the navy to the average American boy As the law stands today a boy can enter th service at 17 years reach warrant rank of from llZOO to llSOO a year by the time he Is34 or 2i years of nee secura a commission line three years later and enjoy the rank of full Lieutenant at th From then on his promotion In lust as rapid and he will just an surely reach the grade lof Bear Admiral as other of similar rank thus contradicting Ur Orlffltijs statement that after long years ifdutiful service a man may be given tin rank of Ensign and be allowed to swing his Hammock In the wardroom gangway 1 of our modern vessels he will find a change In the quarters for both man lack the ambition or 40 He to save 130 of that fine Is as careful of his aii he would n bank not counting when lia- a ready to at the of 47 with J4f n In the factory In the store or on railroad As for the world of the mn t Peasant memories of a cruise J made an an a trip we men took trough the Holy Land from Joppa during our was port u ws visited In Ceylon Java Borneo Two agowhile at Yokohama I leased to of ruin our battleships then anchored In hat harbor leave and with traveled Qver a large part of of the who were being the shopping districts In or lounging of the rand can see much of the orld a porthole- I entered the an apprentice at a held numerous serveS on board many ships my twenty years service have yet to meet was not kind ready help the wardroom neasmat s There are no snobs in the UniteS as for the kid lass offlcersr Mr Griffith mentions I would gain the No Mr respecting United States and he well to turn his toward en all young men to give it a fair far less than half that number though the Navy Department baa everal time out to oso HEJmr B BODIE lieutenant United States Navy NATAL BICBUITINO OFFICE No s SPIIIN- OtU OHIO Aug The Trolley In Manila jrytm Manila Sunday Hun Jack llarilng aars ha will wear his uniform all hs Urns aow o he wont have to pay to ride en street TIle sesrepipar rsteinlty are anxiously urtktnr- iltkle LaOn dcat we tide A chino did theCatherinewhetl act the othrr- ay he tried to get oft a ear backward Ptopl IMnf along the car lines are tuft theIr sneala front of housri Mr lion r k u any carromataa while ctttln used to cars cochero got out of Ida camttls cad held Ml other day when he saw a trolIT- r In the distance The car passed the hors ver ov d but the cochero climbed a telephone A motorman lost control of the brake the flt t of the opining of the rar lines and rimhfd sadly down the Rsoolta end nt the Pride of Spain hs watching crowd surged wildly backward idles screamed and Marker ot the Kloskn llntifl cash register rr look he curve the motorman reversed current Ad th ear swurif protesttnrly round unified i couple of times and stopped gala and Marker began to figure on how much fluid ave iued thecompany for If the ear hid eft the trick anddaihed Into his of hutlnrM- An old mujer stopped the rar the other V ind Sited to climb In She had a plr biindl- if stoats and some three pecks of veritable with r and take the whole Jot aboard lint h ear sailed merrily away snd left her encrllr- spestulattng All conductors have received tperUI ln lrue loss not to let Mayor Brown lIe on the foot oarS When an American sees one of the Street r tile Seat time he irish a bit and then looks round to see U any one Is watching him A rill ilno stares at It as though he believes the rivU- raa somewhere Inilde A Chinaman domnt 1 the car at all he stares at the wire abnvr nnl renders what makes the car go A trolley car lint so very different from en omobtle I saw one standing In the mliMI he Eseolta the other day while three mm t n btlr backs ualer It and softly swore M Id D see why It wouldnt run Another word hit been coined irolleyentltl- Illplnos suerlng from It stand In the mllll I be sidewalk and block tilt traffic tooth way Several people nave askS that the trolley rnr- emlBded thOr ot born hut It rrmalnrd n imsrtean lady to remark that the cephyr kiuin rile the Stats Ana paddy nelds were recMar trolley ear breeze just like we have In Ohio Persenal Newt From a Cheerful tee To rDITOn OP StmSlr Our old friend hay fever has arrived thIs year a week hr d- f time lint that JoUyt A NBW TOSS Aug IS A CempMtte- Raatus What Is yo Ides ob hfsben- Bpkralm A plies whir de animals hah dr melon d tails ob a possum and de wlnt o p thicken W winning Power trout bttIou a which nevrthehess I l h concern on or 30 an belle that many ago sail In did sleep In hammocks but it will take time to vlllit one meD Sbould a oun pduotlon to reach one of these higher ho against his If hestlcks During ha d man toNe before retirement his pay wilt averago earnIngs have to be In and have 1IIlm month the remainder of Can the one a ArbIa lid Japan J on In port enH tA a is more part of the world than hauled shout Ins the an to DO one could have received better treatment than have my State 0 o r ttl llhl where be will moreof the itt blue O8rallll bu several coat kid gloves write however hi part In a that will t the taw who have In lnedln that direction The twelve warrant officers Q a the tine each year and tilt rare free their cant the A 1I0Ill beadhe nero clutched hIs lIb Everybody hretiied h I dA R for an or 1 n TIll the Ill Olla I a tff 1 If 1 f tt 7 y AND AMRIC4 His i w in the be Mr grades win out styli Ut thirty an Is lit ge his ii you while an that Persia went was Jspn were seeing or that wee at nd strongly tIme o vj51tons officers tbpn In and trial rather to on only serve law chow be bui have I is- I ISi toss lay hIt place the a yes bOll > ¬ ¬ ¬ > > < < < ° tlC A 1tII 8E ttC 0b h a a d d L D g 01g 01 14 1b i P ill 11al IIIt 11 01 IeU 11tJ 11CI t1B IIIt It tkT4 Inn hIm II 0VI ojal 01 IIC 01Ii b T b I A P D d i 1F 8F IIf t i I I t I II tt I

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1 SUNDAY AUGUST 20 1005

Entered Pout Office at New York as SecondClan Malt Matter

Sabtcrlptlons by Mail PostpaidDAILY Per

SUNDAY Per YearDAILY AND SUNDAY Per Year 8

Postagt toforeignReaders who Intend to the aumme

may baveTEIiBiJNmalledtoth at Ibt forcgolm

prices Thrafldrrss may Ve citenged at It desiredOrdsr throuth your newsdealer or ot TUB Hun 17C

Nassau street

Published thy Tfieaim Printing and Publlthlni-

Atsodatlon atlTO rtatsau street In the Borouflof Manhattan ffYqrV

lt r frtnUlt a wwi naniuertptttuWtltton irtM to tunt rejecltdartideirtturnid llu-

tuHnctt coat stud itanpt for tool purpon

Every day Is now a thatpasses withofltBtfTtlatartd irremediable

break in the negotiations for peace

The center of interest for the whole

civilized world moves for th tlmofronjPortsmouth to Oyster Bay More

to the voice and mighty influence of thepromoter of architect of theconference the sincere Troth

Bussia arid Japan o tieUnited Stat 9lJBt

The New the Orient-A mteaionarjagentbf1 our American

Bible Society all Shanghai reports thata very great change Hifecome over thespirit of China as a oonseieiueaco ofitheJapanese victory overRUsaiar jHIa in-

formation aimply confirms intelligenceto the same effect frogtn manyPrientalsources but ho gives some interestingprecise facts and draws from therconclusion wtjictr rqisignj oaptiThe victory of Japan China

soon succeeded by its defeat agreat Western and Chri8tiarj0fowe-

started Chinamen to inquiring as to-

ne causes so extraordinary a mani-festation of and by an Orientalnation which is small relatively to

itself eo long the easy prey ofPowers Accordingly great

numbers of Chinese students havefeento Japan to learn how at lastmastery was attained by a people-

of the Orient Of the thousands ofstudents many have returned to Chinato disseminate the knowledge they acquired and to propagate in books andnewspapers their larger and more en-

lightened of Oriental needs anddestiny time this report of theagent of the Bible society was writtenthere were as many as Chinesestudents still in

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As a result of Japanese propa-ganda the Chinese more especially inPekin but also in thecountry districtsto a very considerable estent are gettingnew ideas of progress but is of prog-ress without Christianity Thermaster-ful of a nation without theaid Is provoking veryserious thought far outside of Chinaand In Christendom itself Heathen-Ism is coming to the Sore and Is teach-ing the whole world not merelyin the art of warin selfsacrifice in fidelity to

br national strengthUnquestionably there has been

iderable progress Cliristianity inJape but relatively to wholeulation it is Btill BligKtiThepeople Beem o i tek jUfihtl interest ifiour theology

seem to produce any radical change intheir religious conoaptions and ethically

are particularly lolcraniIng or ihejr seem to-

be tadifTereht as i y ri tfes TKeJapanese in this country are not at allinfluenced In their a by Jhe

for Christianity or for theold order of Christians andheathen com-

radeship and the heathen dp notseem to take very seriously tjie rellgiou8change by the QtHecsare ratherchanical and civili-

zation for their instructionbut our Western grandeur and luxuryof living proycKeaJittleor4ioadmiration-from them The simple lifetrated among the Japanese moreany other country which has yet pusheditself into a prominent place among thePowers ofthe world jz

The missionary of societyhas reason for misglvlngif herefpreas to thp consequenoeci ofOriental birth BO far as1tianity Will or hinder the propa-gation of ChrisUapjty Will lt

suggests because of its cause tendto induce a feeling that paganism issufficient to Itself is superior and needsno Chrietianization Ho speaks of Chlnese publications printed incirculated hi chIna as

misunderstanding of truth andmore or 1 ss contempt on

the Christian religion and Its representstives

The demonstration thata pagan ci iU

ration of the is superior in prowessto the of tho whichis strongest numerically longterrorized the Orient must have a pro-found effect on the history of the worldmore especially as respects the relativevalue of religions As this missionarypoints out Idea new atthe Chinese that of progressChristianity has been generated amongthe Chinese by tho superlative triumphof Japan over Russia and to his mindit is a dangerous idea

positionOn August 2 the managers of tho Lewis

and Clark Centennial inPortland Ore wcrd ablethat the attendance as theturnstiles at tie entrances to tlje fairgrounds had the markIn two months and two days 1013551

ttft e grounds jia JJeena fact of which tho citlzans

of the Northwest are proud Buffalos

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PanAmerican Exposition drawingmuch more territory-

for its patronage attracted only 1203236

visitors in the t o months of itsand the Portland show has exthe recordsofthe Omaha Trans

Mississippi Exhibition of 1808 whichwas attended by 011035 persons in itsHrSt two months

It s out that within a radiusof 500 Buffalo there was apopulation pf 40000000 to draw fromand Omaha within a correspondingterritory had population of 14000000

Portland counts within a circle of similarradius drawn with tWit i as a centeronly i 800000 iahabitahtfl Many ofthese have been ibusy since the opening-of the Lewie and Clark Expositionengaged in agriculture This theattendance on the fair shows a

steady increase and before thegates are closed it is expected atleast 2760000 persons havethe Portland is proud of the

so far and confidentof the future The special correspondentof the t Paul Dispatch utters this cheerful sentiment

Western rnterprbe the entire West uto be congratulated and If the East Mill Imailne-stbafnothlnrgood can conic out ot Naureth let

that section take notice of tbe Stoat succeatful

of all American exposltloru

Where in the East is it believed thatnothing good can come out of the WestIt must be a region not down on themaps Portland has carried a greatenterprise far toward success May shesee the end of tho exposition with thesome gratification that marked its be-

ginning and its progress up to date

nfjiBsja rrilV Have National Assem-bly

The concerted and resolute agitation-for representative institutions whichunder grave disabilities and indpflance df official prohibition

Liberals have carried on for manythrough their provincial din

municipal councils has notutterly in vain To a certain

NICHOLAS II has heeded theirgrand remonstrance It is true thatonly the germ of a Parliament is granted

manifesto put forth on Saturday6y the Czar but by it Russia will be-

come articulate Experience leachesthat B great nation once endowed witha voice finds a way of making-

it obeyedIf we inspect the details of the species

of constitution outlined in the Czarsmanifesto and in an accompanyingdocument wo find that many precau-

tions have been taken to restrict theprojected assembly to purely consulta-

tive functions and to shield it from thepressure of public opinion The veryname State Council conferred on

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the newof the popularly elected body with theexisting Council of the whichIs composed exclusively of the sorereigQs ppointeesran association equiva-lent to the relation of a lower to anupper house bears witness to an anx-

ious desire to deprivethe peoples rep-

resentatives of a decisive or even pre-

ponderant share of the lawmakingpower and to confine to the meretendering of advice may or maynot be Their affirmative sug-gestions repelld by the Councilof the Empire which is the stronghold-of the organized bureaucracy and ifby chance they meet wi h theapproval ofthat body they may be

by the Czar influenced by afavoriteMinister As regards I he nega-

tive restraining authority the popu-lar chamber it is provided that if aMinisterial bill is opposed by athirds vpto in both the lowernpper that particular measurejnuBt be withdrawn but ifby tHe sovereign theBubmit the substance of his proposalin another guise

The Russian nationalnot be the outcome of Universal suffrageand of direct election The 412 mem-

bers are to be chosen by local electoralcolleges analogous to the colleges ofPresidential electors in theTo a primary man

old andpoesess a property qualification Members of the

will be exempt from arrest fordebt but if charged with a criminaloffense they will be amenable to judicialprocess They ate to ten rubles

15 a day while the is sittingand a mileage allowance Whetherpublic meetings will be permitted durjng an electoral campaign Boomsful for the right of petitionby a previous ukase is not conferredTn order that the scenes witnessed in thefirst French National Assembly theLegislative Assembly and the Conven-

tion may averted the is deniedto the popular chamber Even

of its U re-

stricted Representatives of the presswill be excluded whenever the presidingofficer chooses to a session aclosed or secret must so de-

clare at the request of a Minister whoprofesses to have a question to submitinvolving a national secret The press

of even an open cession mustand approved by the pre-

siding officer they can be pub-

lishedIt may seem at first sight that such an

assembly as we have described wouldbe but the mockery of representativeInstitutions and should not be sur-

prised if advanced Libe als evinced aninclination to boycott Jt They will makea great if they donot the best of it Itis a vast improvement on the StatesGeneral which met at Versailles in 1789

for it is not divided into orders it iselected for five years it is At liberty todiscuss the ljudg t and indeed anyMinisterial measure and it can requirea Minister to appear before it and defendhis acts Herein exist in embryo theprinciples of the of the purse andof Ministerial accountability

Unquestionably the Czar manifestohas his subjects an opportunityHow they shall use it Is for them andhim to determine remains to bo seenwhether the Russian people will thefull measure of their liberties by evclu

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tion or by revolution whether the Bx-

MAHOFFJ like the HOBBNZOLLBRNBcan through a oomt lnatlon of shrewdnose tact foresight and good luck es-

cape the the BOURBONS andbring a peaceful transformation-of an Into a constitutional

Canada AlsoAbout the first bf September Canadas

new Tariff Commission will beginwork of investigating the tariff of theDominion with a view to its revisionThe commission will move from prov-ince to province and probably fromplace to puce in the various provincesIndividually and as representatives oftrade organizations and associations-the business men of Canada will be invited to appear and acquaint the corn

the kind of tariff hercitieenrj think the Dominion should haveThe present plan is to devote about threemonths to the accumulation of evidenceand testimony A report with accom-panying recommendations will then beprepared for submission to Parliamen-tat its next session early in 1006

The present belief is that the resultwill recommendation of a tripleset of tariff rates One of these will bea general rate for ordinary dayuse Another will be a ratewhicn can be given in exchange forequivalent advantages offered by other

The third will be a maximumbe used to penalize any

whose tariff may toooppose the of Cana-

dian merchandise These may be classed-as the favorite the friendly and the swiftkick tariffs

While it would be utterly unfair and untrue to assume that Canadas new ar-

rangement will be influenced by anyfeeling of malice toward theStates it la quite certain thatrates will be framed with American com-

petition as the most influential factor intheir determination When the Liberalparty came into power in 1890 it was

an antiprotection party Buteven then Canadas manufacturing in-

terests were too powerful to make itsafe for the new incumbents totheir wishes and systemprotection has been in operation eversince In view of the very considerableincrease in the volume and value ofCanadas output ofsince the lastsible to give a comparison of growthwhich would be of any value An indication appears in the statistics ofCanadian export trade

In 1898 when the antiprotection Liborals came into power the value ofmanufactured goods exported WAS

9385384 Under the continuance of thefiscal policy really established by the

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Conservative partyup to 114224287 in in the fiscalyear 1805 they reached 21191353 Thesefigures like those of Canadas popula-tion and production are small in com-

parison with our own but their rate ofincrease during the same term runs us

a dose second The manufacturers of

Canada with more than 500000000 invested hi their business believe thatthey have Interests and a market whichare worth protecting

Our exports to the Dominion show anunbroken series of annual gains from52854769 in 1895 to the

fiscal year ended June 30 1905 Ourimports have increased from 36574327-

in 1895 to 62303263 or much less thanonehalf of our exports The Canadiansbelieve and perhaps with reason thatthese sums might and should be

or at least be brought nearerHow far her new tariff and its

attendant conditions may go toward es-

tablishing that result it is not yet possible to say Canada will not deliberately-and maliciously penalize American merchandise But the probability is thatnext year she will adopt a new fiscalsystem which will increase the entrancefee at her market gates

A Proposed Outlet for the JewsIf the conference of prominent Jews

of this country with Mr WITTK for thepurpose of securing social and politicalrights millions of their racein Russia should result in the practicalamelioration of the condition of thosepeople a very decided reduction in thepresent vast Jewish immigration toAmerica might be broughtThe Jewish Year Book esti

the number of the worldeleyah these more

than onehalf are in Russia Next toRussia they are most numerous in Au-striaHungary where they are estimated-to be millions but so greathas been and is still the Jewish immi-gration to the States from bothof those these estimatesought probably to be reduced Jewsnumber in the States now

a million and probcountry has a Jewish popula-

tion not much less than that of AustriaHungary whenthedepletion by the im-

migration of the last few years is takeninto the

At any the Jewish immigrationcontinues at its present volume the

will very soon be secondRussia in the number of Jews

it contains and the persistence ofIn its discriminations against that

race would probably give tho first place-to this country within the present gen-

eration Already the Jewish community-In New York is the greatest in any cityof the world at least threequarters ofa million That is a number equal tomore than half of the present total

of St Petersburg There aremore Jews in the United than inall Europe with the Rus-

sia and AustriaHungary Probablythere three times on many as areat present in Germany the neat of thenow apparently mitigated antiSemiticagitations After Germany and theother European countries we havenamed are most numerous in Rumania though there they are notthan qf the Jewish popu

city of New York In thewhole British empire they arc little more

thirdgreat BourocsOf the prcent vast

the

for

1

for

abut

mat Jew

Unit

Unitabut

aunt

UnitRus-

sia

Statare

abut a

than

t s f z

equal-ized to-

gether

the six

about two

Btates

pop-

ulation

more

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Jewish lniinljTiartd ilo Ala obithtry are

ahdkfhmt of ailfr mthe tret If thehardships of the Jews are not

to UieStates U likely to otjntlnuediminution In even greatervolume JeiWahVtewimbhy however isthat if the of theirrdoe in rightful treatment by the Government It wilt prefer-to tner ibyolres-

UieiBuealan Jews

paarUitat his ha h Jewishu motlre spur

pose to rid 6f ii taatiy of race aspossible

vAnteTJcan J wa inconference with Mr Wn afinancial Influence capable f of erilng-

apowerful pressure and more especiallyat iiita

thto preeauraabout the amAlibratib akkadfoirj or itmight b said demanded verysud oalchange in the dlspo lton mayfollow

The great andBuddnflooa of Jewishimmigration to thiS country lookedon by the Jetra of older witha degree of mi These Immi-grants are among the number who comehither with Binalloit ofmoney in tHelr and theirexodus seems to be too precipitous tobe advantageous to elv i unlessthe Ruaslanpolicy of opprewlngshall continued

A prominent Jew sends to us a re-

markable suggestion made on the theorythat attempts to extort Jlisilpe forJews from Russia are useless Nowthat the Zionists themselves have re

East Africa and abandoned everyas to Palestine1 he

writes would offer solutionfor the Jewish problem The sMcmttllonRussian Jews under the protection andguidance of the Japanese could opena new epoch in commercial historyThrough their knowledge of RussianPolish German and French and theirconnections with the Russian Jews inEngland the United States CanadaAustralia and South Africa he adds

constitute firstrate connectwith world comsaerce Japan

and ChIno however would have to beconsulted fn the matter

The OreMBoston machine squeaks

in agony The Son JOSUB-QCINCT has up his genealogical-tree and is cowering idthe branchesMassachusetts has not risenas one manat the mentloa ttf MxtSs and ETLSS

That is too i pHriael She has

Unit

rna o

and one

Undo

0 Ht

j a

1

the

jedhop

the

To-Te

Russia y ud Rumania

pihpspeat

flu a receives

atlby

of the they bringagainst thepolicy has a

get the

thus wh tt Rtisl n ofborrowing money i Ian icle

I

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tie

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leaped like onejumped with as if that i

vincible ticket wereon the sidewalk HillTatnick fromthe tl of Gape Cod to thtop of Qreylock exultantJoy boilsthrough the Stafce e lainsee Hon rJ wt of them-selves in Genwhat each of them would to be

we hijlkito oorrs of rNutmeg philosopher

baaiMmMtOini of hls see U

Ibis cousIn or countrywell say that ttie legs of the Put-

nam Phalanx are some of thelegs in this

The Generals quality and preeminentare absolute the handsomestman of the Hon EsKi-

BTLES is ss wise as the head of the ticketis beautiful r

Their platform Uniform and Reform is toBAtiBfy everybest aspiration bflUassa-chusetts It evte thsdemand made in thefoUbwingistter

To ma EDiroa or T a Sv r Howdw-Ocn Uaas staLl en lobster fohnt we knowwhere BTUts is ofl the Qifrtl n Re Is solid

the protection of youag lobMerssoiotleealjVngt-hsal at the same time till never la re wltl-

Ictltlrnate lobster fithlnc and lobitet poUcrying need of thehoofla ifssMehusftj ls iobsteiprotection I repeat When Is Gin WILt WhJIs not the ticket Btua and Itfrua f-

T A FBwLia

Lobster protection and lobster reformare included in reform den MILESwill soon give his this great

to the interest inand sympathy lobsters t ho suddenor simulated feeling born 6f the po-

litical exigency of the moment Thefeelings of his nature gb out tofooter class When we say that

Gen MttKsB favorite poem is the HonWILUAM LLOYD GARBUONS famous

To a Lobster we have saidon this delicate and Important

subjectis understood that the HonMpoit

STOREY the Ron Ftstit WARREN

the Hon ERVINO WiJistow and threeother loading antiimperialists willshortly issue a call for a Miles and Bylesmass meeting in Hall A Milesand Byles flag was flung to breezein last night The HonCURTIS GUILD Jr is seriously andjustly alarmed

T A Good Word for KalabakaTHE SUN preeenis its compliments to

the worthy Inhabitants of Kalabaka inTheesaly whq cohfi4e to us their hopesfor the improvement their

by American For thelucid translation 6f the interesting com-

munication wUohVre this morningand for the of the namesof the esteemed rgnersw Indebtedto the kindness lof Mr D N BOTABSI

the Greek Consuls New TorkiOur inhabit

6ne of the moetwbiderful on theearths surface In the ex-

treme north of Greece near the Turkishfrontier celebrated in history and romanbe for the o m e6rd or

in the air hese ancientto number of halt

a dozen or thereabouts crown stupen-dous crags and almost Inaooesslbleby the of approachA crude windlass a rep and aloosenet conUtinloit fteller

fdoUr l

In Bio s

lieHer err ar

for OntI

v-

As

Del

broinc a 1

CUmI

viewp

dept

sonnet

FIELD

uU

n dent

mOat

lcdAAnt 5ftl1t1Wf t to

ct

t ir A 4 f i 01

all ezexposed

th

nyOth

hand-somest or

I

tot

The

PUDDL flocLAuguat7

FaCthe

neighbor-hood

abe

e

rthe

are

wi 4

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some ofVtbe sacred edifices A

from tho interest of the monasterithe scenery around Kalabaka combineloveliness the vale with thQsublimity of the isolated mountainand its attractions to travelers of

and imagination are notby Mr ALKXIADEB and his

seven fellow townsmenBUN will cooperate heartil

with the inhabitants of Kalabaka in anlawful measure that promises to en

the comfort of visitors to thmet oro and Incidentally to promote thprosperity of a most excellent

we cannot give oura too elaborate scheme o

steel construction around ambetween these

Ourijporat of view may be differentbut deference to local opinionit seems ious that a system of colossa

and escalatoremight easily be so overdone as t

very object in view Oivus hoUlsat Kalabaka worthy offame of ancient Hellas but spare thcreaking windlass the swaying ropethe container of thrillinibmotlons

The subjoined communication from thGrand la official andmeantfor publicatio-

nrfoTirt or Taa soxSfr I arrtvNew about September Seat via Olulli-AusiroAra rto u line

alisoM UrrcHiUft American ConsulVSHicaJ

Srullant Star of Zanzibar draws

of Uluourt declares thethat he drinks buttermilk to be another base Inventlan Of the enemy UcmpAfi CommtrtU-At1 tt iTbe favorite vanities of Mr BILL are run

and whisky and honey Whenthey caress his gullet and glide like a gentle

into his interior they touchlmt smoother than themselves

I am In ef the Hespertdss rnrWttuAi BatA

More golden apples for the barrel

Isit true Is it a parable a fable withoral this tale sent from Iowa Falls la

of the Christian QoUUts just founded bthe CAnT an enthuslaatigolfer who never uses profane languagewhen he makes a mighty swipe at the batand falls to hit A parable a fabledoubtless but full of moral meat for gol-

stfck even womenwho knows To swear is neither bravepolite tier wise but its sometimesrelieving Meanwhile forward Christianjolter forward the AntiProfane Qolfini

JOY IN KALABAKA-

terettlhg Cemmnnloatlon to The Man

Prea nTMrtyMtlgpt Worthy Citizens oKemete Thetallan Municipality

To nta KDrroa or Tmt SvN SIr The Oree-ewspaper publlthed In Athens topics

rn your paper Usa sews that your fellow cutset-r Berger havtag vIsited the Ueleora last yearis decided to ilk fron the Greek Governmen

conoeaaloa of the locality of the Meteors Int connect these really magnificent and rock

Ills by eoloMal bridges and at the same time tbuild large hotels and parks

This greatand productive Idea of Mr Bergeras Sued with Joy the hearts of the Inhabitants

lattaka to which town belong most of the lieand wehasten to begyou to be pleased It-

javey to Ur Bsrgsr our warm thanks assurlnithe rocks of the Meteors belong l-

irwt pert community of Kalabaka we witand do all In our power to Influ

neeonr Government that Mr Berter may obtaltcomplete coapfsstonThanking you for publishing the above news

remain with the highest consideration the InablUBUOf Kalabaka

L AuxUDia GIOBOI THMCHAK-ISOXiSitornas THBODOSI MAD

trsritxtos LiirtDis A TtOKEorotruM-iKAdiaraa Luris Bisiua LBSCTIPI-

SKitiurAkxs SrBitos BBNTA-SlP rUlKoa AOIILLBS KABifOCMl-Staxkxla NICOIX JUXBS OONSTNTIH KBRAOA

JONAHOBBtucwB-

BSiaoc UAkaBAKX1UOI4A-SNGoaiASasoaqiApas-STiTmAtasi MAHDAUJ

Lura

THBSDOSSIOS KOUBUBaunts

ATHANASSIOS KOMUATaU

X ALBLIADBS-

CHRISTOS PAKA-Ssrsnos TZBBTO-STnKsDona SEOUL

Oisxiaius UOSCODIASKAiokaarrsAS S K ALBZIADK-

SAomisAtaAWASsouiAs DBUBTRICS PBLSKASSISI-

ICOtAS tAlMtS BUlL PArFACRXISTOe-XAtUBABAy OtttM July H

A Mealbsfteparatlea Frsm Lady Nlcotlae-

To Mni BortOR or TBB Sw str It certainlyO top Soioklng for onr month a year simply

ir InY enjoyment of the new start that Is madet the abstinence period For five 01

Is years ihave tried It and II has been very salttctnrr lamaay mprcts The Idea of starting

with the beloved weed In so many daytakes tIle luaury of tobacco the more enjoyable

I ha several times stopped drinking aa wellut s 1 am not a regular but unIT a volunteeri lbs II lisa not been so aatlsfactori fastAnother point about smoking why this

boi t I smoke bOUt cIgarettespleases my fancy and can see no harm

t either for but every one who doesnt amok-idmtnymen t

eMit to remonstrate with me becauismoke of Turkish tobacco I refer

hem to ltd that In Europe the cigarette li-

he staadard of smoking with both men and womenjut to think because small boysbussd their health by them that alt dtarettcs oughibeabtllkned-

Moeh of this sentiment due It seems totrikelegUlaUan that has been going on forutfswrearsln simon every Legislature agalas-bseeto1 eampables It has been such a teethIsle fOr Mis rural legislator whose constituent

oBW 5ersef plug cut chewing tobaccotwefttavea that tbe graft has been fosteredt would do ne good to see a logical argument a

why an ablcbaillel man should not smoke aIgtrtUe that did not read like a backwoods ternraace lecture IAOTHAQH-

NBW Yoag Aug It

Aaetker Sabway ComplaintTo THB Emtoa or TB Sujf r While standI In the City Hall subway station today a boy

alktd past me and showed me a remarkablypaw ven for a rounds He disgustedly

marked that he Just pat his hand on the railuardtng the tricks Tht colored gentleman whosupposed to clean the nation was weep at the

ket boaThe other day I had to wait so long for a train

t tSP same station that I desired to U downlie benches at the station were so dirty that Itrat Impossible I suppose the cars would be In

same state of dirtiness did not the passengersnit mete clothesTht subway ls a rood deal of a fakesaw iron AUIH E M UACDOKALD

the Japans Eaplayed AmericaOaaasrst i

jfitllag opinion among tbe people of this country

American gnnnen have been employed by thepaaese In the present war with Russia especially

the navy 1 have rood reason to doubt thisid have on many occasions denied that such wasecait-I have taken the ground that Japan has no ute

need for any gunners ecept Its own TheSPUN have ths hlfhesi tiploalve powder laistence sad I believe these guattre la directedtheir pwa gunners solely Is sot this the trulhl-

PATCiooim Aug ti AKIMOTOH H CARMAN

Behanks-TOTBRRDno orTHB DK rrr Out In PrnnIVanla Ohio and Indiana the traveler often hears

alnmfn sad others leftrtlng to a certain dataf ss bohuaka or bobonkaKB PON enlighten this part of the woiid on taolrav ii otih Word Lkrtnan

rtitowering

rockssenti-

mentthirty

h

han

commu-nity unreservedapproval tomod i11 l

eleVators

the

andetl ulted

l-d

evidently

Tb

I

DIY lion

It

menand

very

Thatk

AWed

Uli or-

der

Won

urn thatbibs

P1

L I

ADJJrI

GlOM AMUTIOS PArrApjizpou

Pox

Int

tilt totlaeCohowl

eI ltta andcl

ho smoke cigars exclullrlf1 Jof ll it

t

I thethe

are

dIn

tie

thethem with

To TIn 01 11 pre

ta

or

b1

I

Can-T

ts Aur n-

tt j f c

exagger-

ated

While Tha

majestic rocks

doe

def st the

O oTrk

4

nigh-t

murmur noth-ing

J

LagueI

U

homily cooae

iWI

bOols brigade

sifts1 seem

hat

and

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tar

norms Theta a

tat

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NWUt

>

EDITOM of TsCatholic Priest is perfectly Justified 1

saying that the moUrn ofBartholomew was political rather lbs

religious though religion was the basis c

parties But history will not but hitout U he contends that Rome was clear c

the business Te Deum was sung in Bl

Peters a triumphal medal was strucktriumphal was on the wiof triumphal oration wacomposed by the Papal orator who eaii

that on the night of the massacre the starhad shone with unwonted brilliancy anthe Seine bad rolled ah ampler tide that I

might cast forth the foul circusesthe sea

Jt is Unfortunately true thatth habit opersecution was trauimittodof the Middle Ages and the Inquisition1-Protestantismand to theChurches But presently died outProtestantism noW heartily renounces iand thinks with shame of the burning oBervettu

However I do acouRations and reproaches e wsScoJM i

sign of grace when a representative of ttoChurch of Innocent TO ofof Philip II of IxUto XIV andDragouades of the Jesuit of the Syfohushows that he is ashamed persecution

QpLDWiK SUITH

THE SCOW YACHT i

Crrdlt tar Its Jnventlen Attributed ft i

Chesapeake NavlgaterTo TUB Emicm or TH tivtt 8ir Receni

discussion byboati of the eoow type Interesting but fallto attribute origin of theboat to the right man or to the right localityThis tyPO of yacht which has to suetperfection on the lakes of MinnesotaWisconsin and which brought jntch dlUnction to American yacht clubs of the Westoriginated on Chesapeake Hay tully fortyears ago

Capt William H Valllant of Oxford J 4built the first one of these boats and enun-cttted the principle which has guideddevelopment of tbls class of craftValllant was four or Hirekinds ofa geniusand every one who knewhimthoroughly absorbed h wa scow

my new scow three or tourthat he was bin heart ant

mind subject was haon the Idea that speed a must

ItHU Idea was that the scow was mos

available shape and that Be bunt

It over the barssurface of the water

VaUlants scow developed Into thedead rise boat built on

on the Chopor tile Tread Avon practically same

IB Western craft teatalifted the from the CansHans at Montreal The Western boat 1

built and Is more a mere racer

that a ship carpenter who hid worked IOxford was withlimits scow built the first one these racersIn

I have witnessed on the Wlakes as well as In Canadian waters and

Larohmont and arconvinced that

40 foot class produced en theastern shores of Maryland

make the next abetso to one of these craftsmen for his Idea an

boat Lrwis A liXOKiffDNEW Toss Aug it-

Ir To of fllngapere ea AmericasMissionaries

To THE EDITOR or TIB Sujr Sir Incopy of the Singapore Free Pritt received bythin mornings mall I flnda report of ameet

large number of Chineseand other memberof the Chine

community at Singapore to consider theUestlon of taking Joint action with Bhaagha

Americanexclusion act

The resolutions on these subjects weretabled over here and the Ume

Ido not call to mind haying In an-

f the reports what was said about thelonarles The report says

During the course of the dlMasslen white luteaaa time Ur Yu lick mad a speech la Whle

e novel propositionhrtitUn from America he said thathe Chinese Christians would support their fetloi-ountrymen by refoajnr to lIsten to American

ilMlonarlts whose ChrIstianity dMhot appear te practicable among their own countrymenrat method would be to tight sby ef Americanituloitarles sod tell them to go back to their owpeople as their doctrines were not acceptable

1 give tbls as It mar be of Interest toif TIIK 8UKS readers 0

All There is In Oyite PastyTo vies RDRoabr TIll Sex JHr The ludlere-

ippdlitlon Oyster Pasty Is to bernorant wit or contemptuous earelessaeaarhlrh In all ages conquerors line distortedtnruige of the conquered and which ia the cas-if Stew York was the cattworsucb other mesantltu tmnsformstlonsaa that of liromm Mtssje0 Qramerry Verlettenberf to FUttMkarrack and Achter Kol o ArtaurKlll r

In the days when otters and beaversaad muskwere a common sicht along thertver bank

erUln leading from ladtaa trail whkl1 now Broadway toward the lartlanUon of NewLtnttcrdm was known at Otter

a very simple dnlchatloa Was not Tien-lovens firm known aa Ottenpoor Otter tiaekit-md was there not later on an Otter alley between-he Thompwn Sullivan streetst

Now to the redcoated ouMtrs of the Rollandenoyster appeared suffldiatlf dan approxi-mation to otter and pasty seentd rood

nouiti substitute for the pretty Dutch dlmlnulye paatJe a little lanedespite thersemblaace between past and our sin pathad the German pfad An aaalogous displayif scholarly acumenIs In their eroiuUoao

Tin Pot referred to by one of our eoatrlbutonof Tuyn Put garden lane That they didtwist Paatje Maiden Into

Utrtle antI Pat II an omlialon to be thankful forAnd ill there It InPniuiDKLPBiA Aug II A EsToctat-

dvantages te Russia ef rreveitttag JewishInmlgratU

rom n Mtmfn Wolf vf Withto Mr ITW

In gIving the Jews full liberty In Russia yo-

IU prevent immigration to the United Statesnd thus settle one and for all a problem thatintrants the Government of the United Statesnd mayIn the course of time become a subjectf International eontenUon thus by relieving tbsjtuatton you at one stroke win also till Meadhip not only of tile Government but of the entire

of the United StatesYou will of court undentaad my stating the

ubjecfof ImmUratlon aa being a menace II canever be a menace If the stream Bows naturally aa It

from QUIeT countries

OwnershIp ef Reathsra Tiaiber LaaajFrom M Burvaw Fonnrv BnU rr NoU

Practically all the best timber lands of the South-re now controlled by Urf e ret estate companiespith beadquaners In St Loula afemphls Chstta-ooga and large title Inthe north These comanles are from tw te twenty rears old and wereinned by mm who reaUdnc the future valu of-

bete lands bought them when the prices werereally below their present valuationIt U now almost ImpotstUe to buy hardwood

In the Mississippi Valley for lea than trotn-I to 17 per acre the price depending upea thecatlon asS the nearness to railroads or streams

hlch furnish an May outlet for the timber

Hay it BelTo nniToii or Tm 8n Sr U Is tug

sated In the Nuhua Tittirtph that the Stars andtripes be displayed everywhere throughout thetnlted states when h formal of peacei made by repretentallreiot Russia aad lapinLet ua hope that Old Olery will appear at Its

cat at an early dayThe appearance of our national liar

a place In the hope and affections of the worldhat would be extended by this set te all classesi both natlont in the controversy la a way thisauld not be reached but by a national ipretdoat our sympathy for them la met ralttortunt sadtjolclnt with them la their rrilef-NIW Toss AUar

I

Tom r Ajn

rthe

Into

rthe Church

and

jnot want to

Alva ItS

rd o tem

IlC

and

theapJ

ho

built thtlt wilt III e the

so light leaSt possible ncewould be u

lam kfoa butwith a bow qf a tronLThe dead rite boattank

the principle laare the or Vallimits scow or

ealIIo

at li craft ortheto Oh tlOD

his

Lick

a

lag

In cereal to the

publishedbut seen

mi

made a efanl the

aetna

NEw 10

efedl tollwith

ratatill

I

PutJe Otterlan l

nand

seen

outnot lan l

that

III

people

lots

III

land

Ill

and hiltohold

guts

f k Ifl 1jc o

CA rHOLICIW4IDP11XCVTZOI

St

4

bS d

Come

lisa

wiIIrecafl

giving

hi-So water Dcl

uare

th ago

nothdevelopment tspt

said

mer-chants

Chinese

at

The

YonEigr

the

lana

family

Oyter Par

appeal by

f

Auf 10

>

<

I NAVY

Advantages In the Naval Scribe I

Punted Outby a Recruiting omenTo rH EDITOR or TUB BusSir1 in

your paperof Aug 14 appears a letter underheading The ar atJ d of the Nay

signed by Mr Frederlo GrlfflthI feel that I cannot oonsclcntlouitly as sj

recruiting officer lt to past mianswered In tact certain statements tnarlnby him make It Imperative that i shouldanswer since I have risen from the rank

entered the wardroom through the en-

listment roll to Ute Mr Grlffltha wordsIt Is true that President Roosevelt 1

working unceasingly Impress on the conntry that the future safety of the United Blnlerequires many and formidable naval Vesselsto be constructed without delay Who thathas watched the war In the Far East soilnoted the Important part played by the navyof the can deny that MrRoosevelt 1s right Yet persons tike Mr

Griffith circulating such misleading tallmeats as are contained In his letterPart bid fair to undo much of the Pretldents tireless work

Mr Griffith la wrong when he says thatenlistment does not commend Itself to am

willing to begin low nndthat the Departments statement thnt thonavy great chance for young men

to see the worldli a comeon The treattrouble with most of our young men l thatthey are not satlsflexl to begin low Theywant to begin on top They know roars In

their own minds when they go on boardship thanthe man who Is placed over themand whohas sp nt years In gaining his ex-

perience Ttfey do not take kindly to navaldiscipline must be en

forced If we are to have a service worth thename

Mypcrsonsl experience has been that noman who least desire to learn nndto Improve himself In the naval service willever from officers or enlistedrain oflonger experience

Ko shore offers more for theIntelligence Invested than does the navy tothe average American boy

As the law stands today a boy can enterth service at 17 years reach warrant rank

of from llZOO to llSOO a yearby the time he Is34 or 2i years of nee securaa commission line three years laterand enjoy the rank of full Lieutenant at th

From then on his promotion In

lust as rapid and he will just an surely reachthe grade lof Bear Admiral as other

of similar rank thus contradictingUr Orlffltijs statement that after long yearsifdutiful service a man may be given tinrank of Ensign and be allowed to swing hisHammock In the wardroom gangway 1

of our modern vessels he will find achange In the quarters for both

man lack the ambition or

40 He to save 130 of thatfine Is as careful of his aii he would

n bank not counting when lia-

a ready to at the of 47 with J4f n

In the factory In the store or onrailroad

As for the world of the mn tPeasant memories of a cruise J made an an

a trip we men tooktrough the Holy Land from Joppa during

our was portu ws visited In

Ceylon Java Borneo

Two agowhile at Yokohama Ileased to ofruin our battleships then anchored In

hat harbor leave and withtraveled Qver a large part of

of the who were beingthe shopping districts In

or lounging of therand can see much of the

orld a porthole-I entered the an apprentice ata held numerous

serveS on board many ships mytwenty years service have yet to meet

was not kind readyhelp the wardroom

neasmats There are no snobs in theUniteS as for the kidlass offlcersr Mr Griffith mentions I wouldgain the

No Mrrespecting United States and he

well to turn his toward enall young men to give it a fair

far less than half that numberthough the Navy Department baa

everal time out tooso HEJmr B BODIE

lieutenant United States NavyNATAL BICBUITINO OFFICE No s SPIIIN-

OtU OHIO Aug

The Trolley In Manilajrytm Manila Sunday Hun

Jack llarilng aars ha will wear his uniform all

hs Urns aow o he wont have to pay to ride enstreet

TIle sesrepipar rsteinlty are anxiously urtktnr-iltkle LaOn dcat we tide

A chino did theCatherinewhetl act the othrr-ay he tried to get oft a ear backward

Ptopl IMnf along the car lines are tuft theIr

sneala front of housri Mr lionr k u any carromataa while ctttln used to

cars

cochero got out of Ida camttls cad held Ml

other day when he saw a trolIT-

r In the distance The car passed the hors

ver ov d but the cochero climbed a telephone

A motorman lost control of the brake the flt tof the opining of the rar lines and rimhfd

sadly down the Rsoolta end nt the Pride of Spain

hs watching crowd surged wildly backwardidles screamed and Marker ot the Kloskn llntifl

cash register rr look

he curve the motorman reversed current

Ad th ear swurif protesttnrly round unifiedi couple of times and stoppedgala and Marker began to figure on how muchfluid ave iued thecompany for If the ear hideft the trick anddaihed Into his of hutlnrM-

An old mujer stopped the rar the other V

ind Sited to climb In She had a plr biindl-

if stoats and some three pecks of veritable with

r and take the whole Jot aboard lint

h ear sailed merrily away snd left her encrllr-spestulattng

All conductors have received tperUI ln lrue

loss not to let Mayor Brown lIe on the foot

oarSWhen an American sees one of the Street r

tile Seat time he irish a bit and then looks

round to see U any one Is watching him A rillilno stares at It as though he believes the rivU-

raa somewhere Inilde A Chinaman domnt1 the car at all he stares at the wire abnvr nnl

renders what makes the car go

A trolley car lint so very different from en

omobtle I saw one standing In the mliMIhe Eseolta the other day while three mm t n

btlr backs ualer It and softly swore M IdD see why It wouldnt run

Another word hit been coined irolleyentltl-

Illplnos suerlng from It stand In the mllll I

be sidewalk and block tilt traffic tooth way

Several people nave askS that the trolley rnr-

emlBded thOr ot born hut It rrmalnrd n

imsrtean lady to remark that the cephyr kiuinrile the Stats Ana paddy nelds were recMar

trolley ear breeze just like we have In Ohio

Persenal Newt From a Cheerful teeTo rDITOn OP StmSlr Our old friend

hay fever has arrived thIs year a week hr d-

f time lint that JoUyt A

NBW TOSS Aug IS

A CempMtte-

Raatus What Is yo Ides ob hfsben-Bpkralm A plies whir de animals hah dr

melon d tails ob a possum and de wlnt o p

thicken

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winning Power

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which nevrthehess

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concern on

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belle that many ago sailIn did sleep In hammocksbut it will take time to vlllitone

meDSbould a oun

pduotlon to reach one of these higherho against his

If hestlcks Duringha d mantoNe before retirement his pay wilt averago

earnIngshave to be In and have 1IIlm

month the remainder of Can

the one

a

ArbIalid Japan J on In port

enH tA

ais

more part of the world than

hauled shout

Insthe antoDO one could have received better treatmentthan have my

State

0 o r ttl llhl where be willmoreof the itt

blue O8rallll bu severalcoat kid gloves

write howeverhi part In a that willt the taw who have

In lnedln that directionThe twelve warrant officers Q

a the tine each year and

tilt rare

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their cant

the

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