n 5 u . Father "Tom" Burke delivered a speech In New York in 1872 in which he said: "Mr. Froude says that the parliament of 1872 The was a failure because'the Irish Inheritance are incapable of self-legislation, of Freedom. It is a serious charge to make now against any people. I, who am not supposed to be a philosopher, and, be cause of the habit that I wear am supposed not to be a man of very large mind I stand up here tonight and I assert my conviction that there is not a nation or a race under the sun that is not capable of self-legislation and that has not a right to the inheritance of freedom." Caleb Powers has for the second time been convicted of complicity in the murder of Gov ernor Goebel of Kentucky. The fore WHl They man of the jury which convicted Pow Now Return era had been a schoolmate of the de Tayior? fendant. "Will the republican gov ernor of Indiana accept this second conviction as a reason for the delivery of Mr. Taylor to the Kentucky authorities, or will, the , Indiana governor use this second conviction as another reason "why he should continue to defend a fugitiye from justice? If the republican party is in truth the enemy of assassination, It cannot af ford to protect a man charged with complicity in assassination, simply because, the fugitive hap. pens to be influential in republican circles. The report of the superintendent of "West Point Military Academy contains the cheerful in formation that hazing has been abol Hazlng: ished. For many years army officers Atolished insisted that hazing could not be at West Point, abolished, and successive superinten dents acknowledged their inability to stop the brutal practice. But the Cadet Booze case brought on a congressional investigation, and that investigation disclosed such brutalities at the academy that the great American public was aroused. It came to a point where the people demanded the abolition of hazing or the abolition of the a'cademy. As a result hazing was stopped. When the people become aroused to the necessity of a reform the reform comes. An ex-bank robber, who has reformed, srrys crusades against vice in great cities usually fail because the reformers become weary Reform of the activity necessary to success. Too He is right in pointing to the spas- Spasmodic modic character of reform as the weak T)oint in the movements started by the lovers of law and justice. Stealing from the gov ernment is a regular business with some, and it cannot be stopped until the honest people become as much in earnest as the criminals are. The commercialism which is lowering the political Ideals of the nation is also sapping the purpose of those who give so much time to chasing the dollar that they have no time left for the prosecution of those who offend against government and public conscience. W: R. Hearst, publisher of the Chicago Ameri can, has been cited to .appear before Judge Hanecy and show cause why he should not be The Court punishcl for contempt of court. Mr. Objects to Hearst's paper had the temerity to Criticism. criticise Judge Hanecy's decision in the gas and coke company case. This attempt to muzzle the press will fall, as other at tempts have failed. When the day comes that the courts are above calm and unbiased criticism it will be sad for the American people. But Judge Hanecy has his hands full when he endeavors to stifle the Chicago American. These judicial at tempts to prevent criticism are becoming alto gether too numerous. A year or two ago an Omaha judge issued an order restraining the Omaha World-Herald from printing certain matter in its advertising columns. The World- The Commoner. Herald promptly defied the judge, printed the mat ter and assured his honor that the World-Herald was one institution that could .not be governed by injunction. The judge made a great bluster and Anally beat a graceful retreat. The Commoner feels like saying to Judge Hanecy what James Whitcomb Riley put into the mouth of one of his characters: "Good-bye, Jim; take keer o' yer self." It is reported upon what seems to be good authority that Lady Roberts, wife of General Lord Roberts, is responsible for tho The Way of degradation of General Buller. The a Woman story goes that Lady Roberts felt With a nan. aggrieved because of some social slight put upon her by tho wife of Gen eral Buller before General Roberts became a lord. When Fuller was restored to the command of an army corp3 Lady Roberts arose in her wrath and insisted that he bo retired. Her influence with her distinguished husband was such that he ex ercised his influence and authority and had Buller retired. It was reported that Buller's disgrace was visited upon him because of his Ladysmith speech, but this seems to have been an excuse seized upon for the purpose of disguising the real cause. If the story is true It offers some explana tion of the disastrous campaign management of -the British in South Africa. W The man with a sure sign concerning the win ter is with us once more, and numerously. Tho goosebone, the cornshuck, the squirrel, Gooscbone the chipmunk and other signs and and wonders are cited to prove that it Is Cornshuck. going to be a severe winter, and the same signs and wonders are cited to prove that it will be a mild winter. Every man has a sure method of predicting what the winter will be, and no matter how often or how far he may miss it, he comes up smiling every year with his faith in his signs unshaken. Last summer was a record-breaker in point of prolonged heat, and some wiseacres pretend to see in this a sure sign that the winter will be unusually mild. Other wiseacres insist that it portends a severe winter. But tho wind bloweth where it listeth. No man knows what kind of a winter we are to have. But It is safe to act on the supposition that it will be cold and get the heating stoves and furnaces into working order. The man who puts his de pendence in goosebones and cornshucks is not wise. ' The administration seems to have settled its course in relation to the Boers there will be no t intervention. There is no hope held Suffering out to the Boers who are looking to at Our Own this great republic for sympathy Poors. never before withheld. But we may demonstrate the charity of the nation by extending a helping hand to 'the Foers who are suffering almost with in sight of our shores. Hundreds of Boer men, women and children are captives In Bermuda. They are crowded into a comparatively small section, their greater number being alloted to one third the area devoted to the lesser number of British soldiers guarding them. They are ter ribly overcrowded. Their homes are floored tents and their rations not at all what they havo been accustomed to in their home. They have been forced to make clothing from old sails and blank ets. They suffer from tad water, and sickness is devastating their numbers. They sleep on straw beds and suffer untold hardships. The Christian Register invites all good men and women to lend a hand in helping these poor prisoners. Contri butions 'sent "Lend a Hand," No. 1 Beacon street, Boston, will be received and will help in the work of mercy. The administration's attitude to ward the nation that is assassinating two little republics in South Africa reflects upon the sin cerity of the people of this great republic. Great Britain rules India with a rod of Iron, and Amer ica foods tho starving people of India. Great Britain Is assassinating republics In South Africa let the American peoplo show their opposition to this course by extending a helping hand to the Boer prisoners In Bermuda. VVVN The Negro's Position In the North. It was to have been expected that northern papers would wax wroth and grow bitterly sar castic in replying to southern stric tures upon tho president for enter taining Booker T. Washington at din ner. But the southern papers are re plying by asking some pertinent ques tions and citing some pertlnont facts. They point out tho fact that northern love for tho negro is confined to election day. How many business ofllces in tho north employ negro clerks? How many negro trainmen aro employed on northern railways? How many negroes havo been ap pointed to postmasterships in the north? How many northern states havo elected negro senators or congressmen? How many negro mechanics aro employed In northern mills and factories along side white mechanics? North ho is limited to tho position of porter in hotels and on trains, or to waitershlps in hotels and restaurants. Is there a negro linotype operator on any great daily news paper in tho north that Is so roundly denouncing the south for Its attitude toward tho Roosevelt Washington dinner Incident? Does any one of these northern republican dally newspapers em ploy a negro pressman, a negro reporter or a negro city editor? Some of these days the negro will realize that he has nothing to gain from the alleged friendship of men who seek to use him for political purposes only. Local Self-Government. (Extract from an address made by Louis Kossuth at the Congressional Banquet.) "Sir, as once Cyneas, the Epirote, stood among the senators of Rome, who, with an earnest word of self-conscious majesty, controlled the condition of the world and arrested mighty kings in their am bitious march, thus, full of admiration and of reyerence, I stand before you, legislators of the new capitol that glorious hall of your people's collective majesty. The capitol of old yet stands, but the Bpirit has departed from it and come over to yours, purified by the air of liberty. The old stands a mournful monument of the fragility of human things yours as a sanctuary of eternal rights. Tho old beamed with the red lustre of con quest, now darkened by oppression's gloomy night yours beams with freedom's bright, ray. The old absorbed the world by its own centralized glory yours protects your own nation against absorption, oven by itself. The old was awful with irrestricted power yours Is glorious for having restricted it. At the view of the old nations trembled at the view of the yours humanity hopes. To the old misfortune was only Intro duced with fettered Hands to kneel at the triumph ant conqueror's heels to yours the triumph of introduction Is granted to unfortunate exiles, in vited to the honor of a seat, and where kings and Caesars will never be hailed, for their powers, might, and wealth, there the persecuted chief of a downtrodden nation Is welcomed as your great republic's guest, precisely because he Is persecuted, helpless, and poor. In the old, the terrible vao victls was the rule In yours, protection to the op pressed, malediction to ambitious oppressors, and consolation to the vanquished in a just cause. And while out of the old a conquered world was ruled, you in yours provide for the common fed erative Interests of a territory larger than the con quered world of the old. There sat men boasting their will to be sovereign of the world here sit men whose glory is to acknowledge the laws of nature's God, and to do what their sovereign, the people, wills." i . -