:S t i Aug. !, 190a The Dallas '(Tex.) News makes proper xdistinc tlom when It says: "The accumulation of wealth by American citizens is not A wrong, provided it comes by in- Proper telligent and honest effort. It is Distinction, the accumulation of money through legalized privilege and the oppression of the masses by exacting from them tho fruits of their labor unjustly that plays the mischief. Tho trains of prosperity will not al ways be able to make time on tho Dlngloy sche dules." In a recent address Rudyard Kipling said: ''Recent experience has taught us that we must j not allow a whole population to Teaching grow up In Ignorance of shoot Men Ing. Rifle shooting should be to War. taught tho same as are the A, B, C's. Such a course would not 'produce barbarians. Everything must be sub ordinated to shooting quickly." Mr. Kipling's re mark certainly represents the spirit of the times; but there are yet" a few old-fashioned people who will bo content if rifle shooting is not made a fea ture of kindergarten Instruction. In striking con trast with Mr. Kipling's suggestion is the state ment of King Victor of Italy that tho heads of monarchies will better accomplish tho, work of "heading off the American invasion" by decreas ing military armament and using tho money thus saved to promote industries. . The estimate placed upon J. Pierpont Morgan by the German emperor and the leading men of his domain haB created consider Genlus able indignation, among Mr. ' Fully Morgan's countrymen. The New Appreciated. York Post is surprised and dis appointed to learn from the Ger man press that Mr. Morgan abroad was not the (eminent and important personage which Mr. Mor gan is at home. The Post says: " 'Reporterphan tasies' is tho name tho Berlin Tageblatt gives to the stories which crossed the ocean a fortnight ago, and it adds some Bharp comments on what it terms our 'worship of wealth.' Surely the Ger mans are in an uncivilized and barbaric state when they not only decline to see in our wise prince of Wall street a man as good as any king on earth, but also fail to recognize that he is the greatest of living mortals." General surprise was manifest throughout the country when President Roosevelt offered to Sena tor McLaurln of South Carolina a position in the court of claims. Whatever may have been the president's motive it is true that it was generally understood that this appointment was given as a sort of a reward to Senator MLaurin for his betrayal of the trust reposed in him by the members of the party to which McLaurin claimed allegiance. The New (York Evening Post appears to understand tbAsit uation. That publication says: "PresidenjjjPose velt is in luck to have received Senatorffipsaurin's declination of a proffered United Statejudgeship. The court of claims is one requiring a high grade of judges, adequate to the important questions brought before them and to the serious responsi bilities which they have to sustain, and the retir ing senator from South Carolina has impressed no one, unless It be the president, with his qualifi cations for that "bench." Mack and His , Persimmon. VW'N There appears to be a misunderstanding be tween. President Roosevelt and Whitelaw Reid, the president's special representative Reid at thecoronalion ceremonies of and tho king of Englaud. Mri Well- Roosevelt, man, the Washington correspon dent for the Chicago Record Herald, say a that "In. the president's opinion the Mere Pawns of Mr. Morgan. The Commoner worst evil of modern trusts Is not monopoly or restraining of trade, but the era of wild specula tion and capitalization of stocks brought about by the effort of promoters to gain great fortunes by printing millions of share certificates and work ing them off on tho public." Whitelaw Reid de livered an address at Liverpool on the ovening of July 17. In that address Mr. Reid said: "Organ ized society abhors a Monopoly." The president does not appear to take tho same view of monop olies that Is entertained by his special ambassa dor. A'London cablegram to tho New York World, under date of August 2, says: "Tho Right Hon. W. J. Pirrlo, who represented tho White Star and Harland & Wolff interests in engineering tho At lantic shipping trust with J. Pierpont Morgan, asked this week for tho conservative nomination for parlia ment for the vacancy for West Belfast He was re jected unanimously by tho election committee bo cause it was said that he would bo a moro pawn of Mr. Morgan." Tho republic might learn somo things from tho kingdom. In this country candi dates for congress and other high public offices are not rejected because thoy are "mere pawns of Mr. Morgan." On the contrary, the fact that they are "mere pawns of Mr. Morgan" and other rep resentatives of class Interests is about all tho claim for distinction which many candidates for office in this country appear to have. The profits of the steel trust for the past three months are said to amount to $37,691,690. Tho Philadelphia Bulletin, a republl Enormous can paper, frankly admits that Profits of the fact that this trust could Trusts. reap such enormous profits in so short a period of time sug gests the advisability of a reduction In tho tariff on iron and steel. The Bulletin estimates that the anuual profits of the trust will be in the neigh borhood of $150,000,000, or, in other words, about $500,000 for every working day of the year. Tho Bulletin says: "The query why the public should he forced to pay prices which give the combination a surplus over operating expenses of some $3, 000,000 a week, is likely to be presented with in creased earnestness in the interval before the next assemblage of congress." But the Bulletin must not overlook the fact, and the people may not overlook the fact, that the republican party is re sponsible for this situation and that the republican congress could, In a degree, have remedied It, and yet the republican congress adjourned without making an effort to repair the damage which re publican policies had imposed upon the people. The Washington correspondent of the Chicago Record-Herald says that "hundreds of letters and telegrams are pouring in upon Mr. Lincoln the president at Oyster Bay urg- on ing him to go slow on this trust Panics. business. Capitalists, bankers, and heads of big insurance com panies and managers of great railroad und other . corporations are trying to intimidate the president Into abandoning his program. Their idea is that he will hurt business, and they do not hesitate to predict that if a panic were to come the president's war on trusts would be held responsible there for!" Abraham Lincoln was once confronted with threats of panics. In reply to the suggestion that the course he had adopted might result in a panic, f Mr. Lincoln in a letter addressed to Trueman Smith, under date of November 10, 1860, wrote: "I am not insensible to any commercial or finan cial depression that may exist, but nothing is to be gained by fawning around the 'respectable scoundrels who got it up. Let them go to work and repair their .mischief of their own making, and then, perhaps, they will-be lees greedy to-do the like again." RcbubHcans and the Tariff. Voice of the Democratic. Party. The Chicago Trlbunt, republican, In an edi torial entitled "Tariff Reduction Inevitable," saysr "If William McKinloy were allv today he would view with un qualified satisfaction tho growth of tho sentiment in favor of a re duction of tho duties on many articles of American production. Tho dovolop ment of tho sentiment has boon gradual and sane. Some republican polltlcans havo so long been identified with tho ovorprotectod interests ahd havo looked to them for support for so long that they will side with tho manufacturers against the consumers. Either tho politicians or tho party will have to pay the price of their obstinacy." Tho Trlbuno concludes, however, that whllo the reduction must como "tho country will profor to get it at the hands of tho republican party' While it is true that among the rank and file ol tho republican party thero is a growing disposi tion favorable to tariff reform, what reason has tho voter to bcllovo that thero is any hope for tariff reduction at the hands of republican lead ers? Republican leaders know tho sourco of their onormous campaign funds, and they are not at all likely to kill the goose that lays th golden' egg. Tho Philadelphia Times says: "Tho demo cratic party has twico listened to Mr. Bryam through Its great disasters; It will bo bettor for him now to llston to the voice of the demo cratic party and to put himself In harmony with Its new life." How Is "one to recognize tho voice of tho demo cratic party? Is that voice to bo judged by the omissions in a few state platforms In tho face of the clear and explicit tones of tho party's na tional platform that has not yet been repealed; or are the omissions in these platforms to bo ac cepted as the voice of the democratic party while. the clear and explicit tones of the North Carolina platform, the Texas platform, the Arkansas plat form, the Nebraska platform, and tho platforms of the two Missouri conventions echoing as they do the volco of tho national platform, are to bp wholly ignored? The Times would do well to ex plain to its readers tho method it adopts in ascer taining tho "voice of the democratic party." How did It happen that tho men for whom tho Tlmoe speaks did not listen to the voice of the democratic party in 189C or in 1900? Or will tho Times deny that a national convention has any control over the voice of a party? An Associated press dispatch from Anders Ind., under date of July 18, says: "Tin plate workers tonight confirmed a re Enemies port that they have been asked to Home . by the American Tin Plate corn Industry, pany to allow their wages to be reduced 25 per cent so that tho company may accept an order from tho Standard Oil company for 1,500,000 boxes of American tin plato. The same question is before all the tin plate workers throughout the country, and espe cially those under the scale of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers. They will decide on the proposition by vote the coming week. This American Tin Plate company repre sents that tho Standard Oil company has been buy ing tin from Wales and will renew its contract with Welsh manufacturers unless the American Tin Plate company can meet them. The Stand ard pays a tariff of $1.40 per box, but receives -a, rebate of 99 per cent by exporting tho same tin made up into cans containing oil for foreign markets. By taking the Standard's annual con tract the American Tin Plato company would get the last of the big American buyers of tin from Wales." It is later reported that the worklngmen have refused to grant tho cut It is now in order for republican newspapers, to denounce theee worklngmen as "enemies ,to home Industry." v V V.