. , ,.,-..,., , .i,....L.;.Ti3fS P??ff?55S?!-irrt,f'j?'"' ,' nw " t J " I .iaiiWMiWijiiniuuiiWin'iyn'Wi'winiiiu'-ni ' 2' a member of the Presidenta cabinet; he ought to wit next to the prcsHidunt in the council chamber. Receiving 1i5h nomination from a national conven tion and h'lH commission from the people, lie is able to furnish the highest possible proof that he enjoys public respect and confidence, and the President should avail himself of the wisdom and discretion of such an ml visor. While the respon sibility for action rests upon the occupant of the White HouHO he is entitled to, and of course de sires, all the light possible before deciding on any question. Congress can by law impose upon the Vice President the'duty of giving such assistance to his chief, or the President can of his own volition establish the precedent and it would in all proba bility be obsorved'by his successors. Many public men have avoided the second place on the ticket for fear it would relegate them to obscurity; some of Colonel Roosevelt's friends objected to his nomination on that ground. A cabinet position has generally been considered more desirable than the Vice-Presidency, but the lattor in dignity and importance is, in fact, only second to the presidency, and the occupant de serves the promineilco and prestige which would come from more intimate ollicial association with the Executive. 1A The Value of Truth. IV J1 . . . a t vyiiu ui oiiu musu inioresung uuu instructive essays on "The Value of Truth" was written by p, Albort B. Dod, who, years ago, lilled the chair of mathematics at Princeton, and died in 1845. Mr. tti T.T i 1 i 1I...1 j 1. 1 .V .( J.UU puiuieu out tuat tne nappincss 01 man was . intended to bo dorived chiefly from his own in ternal disposition. External circumstances arc but secondary and inferior souroes of enjoyment or suffering, and in the heart itself is hid the se cret fountain which refreshes or saddens us with its sweet or bitter water. Mr. Bod cited the fact that there were hearts 1 "so filled with knowledge, so strengthened by love, so thoroughly fortified by acquiesonco that S although the darts of anguish struck upon those hearts, thoy could not fix or rankle there." So, too, it may be said there are many beings upon whom misfortune lias made its worst visitation, j beings who have never known what it is to spend one moment tree irom physical pain, and yet who f. carry their cross without a murmur. r v On the other hand, as Mr. Dod pointed out, " wo can concoivo of a heart so weak that it can withstand tho presence of no external evil so ignorant that in tho blank and solitude of things' it is robbed of all 011 joy men t so depraved that " in the midst of all cxtornal advantages it is preyed upon by hatred, malice, envy and all disturbing passions." Mr. Dod's conclusions are worthy of careful study, lie said: "The obvious tendency of virtue, in whatever degree it be cultivated, is to produce hanniness : unci f vice, by an equally obvious and indissoluble connec tion, is the parent of misery. The man who clisolmv j his reason, or violates his conscience, in his search after happiness, grasps at a irood at the cxnnHo f the very appetite which is to relish it. To injure his r luwm iiuuirc is to waste and weav away his only capability of happiness. If we take the constitution 01 man to pieces, as we would a watch or other piece of mechanism, to ascertain the object for which it was constructed, we see evident marks in every part The Commoner. that virtue was the end for which its Maker designed it. And if we then inquire further how this end is to be gained, that is, how men are to become virtu ous, we find equally strong reasons for concluding that it can only be through a belief of the truth. The essence of virtue consists in its principle; and every moral principle has its root in truth. Error may be productive of some partial and transient good, as when a crying child is stilled, or a refractory one frightened into obedience, by a belief in some nursery fiction; but no one doubts that this trivial good is purchased at a lamentable sacrifice. Every honest man knows that whenever he uses deception and falsehood to promote even a good end, he is sacrific ing the law of reason to the dictates of a low and (short-lighted policy, and that he gains his end only as he would gain the sword which he should purchase with the loss of the arm that is to wield it. Truth is the only agency by which a principle of good can be implanted and nourished in our own hearts, or in others. It is ,as inseparable from virtue as virtue itself is from happiness. Jn all our modes of educa tion and our attempts to improve the character of individuals or communities, we proceed upon this principle. We never think of working a permanent good in any other way than by instilling the truth; nor do we ever dream that error would answer our purpose equally well, if we could only succeed in making it pass for truth. Any man would spurn the shameless effrontery of the scorncr who should tell him that the good of society and of its individual members would be equally well promoted by teach ing them to lie and steal and murder, provided we could only persuade them that these things were right. That men can be elevated in their moral character, or in any way benefited by being taught to receive error as truth, is as monstrous an absurdity and as palpable a contradiction to all the lessons of experience as can be conceived. Man is so made as to be swayed to good only by the truth. His moral nature cannot respond to any other influence." R- 1 Questionable Appointments. The recent appointment of Justice Harlan's son to the Attorney-Generalship of Porto Rico and the appointment of Justice McKeuua's son to the ofliee of Inspector-General of Volunteers aret to say the least, very unfortunate. It is not neces sary to discuss the general fitness of the .appointees for the positions which they expect to fill. It is sufficient to say that there were others equally qualified against whom no objections could be urged. The fact that the Supreme Court is now considering the most important question submitted to it in recent years-r-if not in a century; the fact that the Administration is relying upon a favorable decision to support its imperialistic plans; and the fact that the appointees are sons of Judges whose opinions may determine the position of the court these facts should have been sufficient to prevent tho consideration of .their names for appointment at this time. ' Suppose the case was being tried before a jury instead of a Supreme Court, and suppose one of tho parties in the suit had given lucrative posi tions to the sons of two of the jurors after the jury was impanelled and before the verdict was render ed, could he have escaped prosecution for contempt of court? A juror whoso son had already received such an appointment would be challenged for cause and tho giving of such an appointment dur ing tho trial could not but impress an impartial court and tho public at large as an. attempt to iu ilueuco the jury. Is there any vital difference between the mind of a judge and the mind of a juror? Can human nature and family ties bo dis regarded in tho one case more than in the other? To view tho subject from another standpoint, would the republican national committee1 have been willing to have these appointments made during .the campaign? If not, why not? Tt is certain that such appointments would have excited widespread criticism. It is surprising that the appointing power would be guilty of such a Hag rant violation of official propriety, and scarcely less surprising that the sons of such honored sires would ask for, or even accept, appointments under existum circumstances. In 1890 the republicans expressed great indig nation because the democratic platform suggested, in language much more polite than that employed by Lincoln in 8G0, a possibility of the reversal of the income tax decision. And yet no criticism of the Court employed by any individual or party could do a" tithe of the injury that has already been done by these appointments. They are direct blows at the dignity and independence of the Court, and the silence observed by members of the domi nant party shows how imperialism and commer cialism are paralyzing the conscience of the re publican leaders. Militarism Against Pensions. The following press dispatch from Berlin will be read with interest by pensioners: Today's debate in the reichstag upon a resolution submitted by J err Nissler, conservative, to amend the pension laws, so that every veteran of the wars of 1804, 1800, and 1870-71 who is an invalid and unable to support himself would receive 120 marks annually developed into a terrible arraignment of the govern ment. Speakers of all parties, conservatives, na tional, liberals, centrists and even socialists, declared their willingness to vote fprf adequate pensions "and' .censured the government for constantly ignoring this debt of honor, unworthy, as one speaker said, of a country which had embarked on a world policy. Other speakers declared that the attitude of tho bundesrath in steadily refusing to provide pensions was inexplicable. As the burdens of militarism increase a govern ment which rests upon force finds it necessary to choose between the army of the present and the soldiers of tho past. It can better afford to do injustice to those whose fighting days arc over than to alienate those upon whom it must rely for future assistance. Liberal pensions are possible with a small mil itary establishment, but hardly probable when the resources of a country are drained to sup port a large body of professional soldiers. W McCall Taken to Task. The Boston Journal serves notice upon Con gressman McCall, of Massachusetts, that ho must leave the republican party if he desircsto uphold principles which gave immortal fame to Faneuil Hall. It suggests to him that he embarrasses the party by claiming to be a republican while he votes .against the administration. The republican party is so crowded that there is 110 longer room 111 it lor a man who is encumbered with a con science. To keep in good standing, he must be prepared to change his opinions at a moment's notice and must hold his principles subject to alteration whenever the command comes from headquarters. Victory 'has made tho republican leaders bo arrogant that their intolerance is likely to swell the ranks of the opposition. VS ould the International Navigation compam be willing to split tho desired subsidy in half am recognize the farm wagon and the city dray? y d ffi -u&2r''"-vW H 1