W4 -T- 3f '" 9 JANUARY 1&, 1909 land the treasury department solemnly made out a warrant fpr one cent to close the account between the United States and Grover Cleve land. He is determined he shall do nothing of that kindjn the case of President Roosevelt. Reynolds knows that every month he makes out a warrant for $4,167.06 and twice a year ho makes out one for $4,166.70. In that way the books are kept straight. Not being bound by the rules of the senate that the day begins at noon, Mr. Reynolds is trying to figure whether he" should pay the president for March 4 or only for half of it and give the other half of the day's wages to Mr. Taft. The senate, even if it liked Mr. Roosevelt, which it does not, would pay him only for March 3, because so far as it is con cerned the outgoing president does not serve on March 4 at all, his term ending with the last session on March 3, which day comes to an end at noon of the calendar day of March 4. The treasury can not even take cognizance of the fact that the president who signs bills on the calendar day March 4 always dates his sig nature March 3. No sir; the treasury does with calendar facts, not finespun theories manufac tured by the senate. Hence the troubles of the clerks in Mr. Reynold's office." UNDER THE headline "A Fame Which His tory Must Preserve," the Christian Advo cate says: "The echoes of the campaign are quite monotonous. Some of them are simply sarcasms, witticisms ,and jeering against Mr. Bryan. One thing is certain: Since Henry Clay no other personality among defeated candidates for the presidency has accomplished as much as William Jennings Bryan. One of the two great parties has three times nominated him. When they skipped him they nominated a dis tinguished and accomplished lawyer, then chief justice of the court of appeals of the state of New York, the highest court in the country ex cept the supreme court of the United States, who did not do as well as Bryan. As a per sonality, Bryan is loved by more people today than any other man in the country. The people that compelled his nomination three times did so because they liked him. He is an orator of high but not the highest grade. The latter dominates all classes, . However, as a platform orator he, ,has, no. superior, if an equal, in this country. The London Times is not frequently deceived in its criticisms of men. When Mr. Bryan visited England, Joseph H. Choate was our minister to that almost finical country. If Mr. Bryan did not surpass, he was quite equal to meeting the ambassador in the realm of post prandial and platform oratory. The Times said there was only one man in Great Britain that could come into competition with either of theso two men, and that was Lord Roseberry. Mr. Bryan is a citizen to be respected and a pure product of western oratory. Of late, time and hard -work have moderated the incipient fury of his speech. The. points of his oratory are clear ness of language, clearness of enunciation, a melodious voice, ingratiating attitude, and a certain mysterious holding-attention power (which is genius, whether what he is saying is accepted or not. There is not a political squint of any kind in this statement, but we have steadily recognized the fact that Bryan is an unusual orator, and aa at the present time orators are exceedingly scarce in this country as well as in England we can not afford to cheapen any one of the few we have merely because he falls df success at the polls." -pESPONDING to a clergyman's appeal, 1,800 XL young people at Cleveland, Ohio, pledged themselves to live for two weeks as they be lieved Jesus would live were He on earth. A Cleveland dispatch to the New York World tells the story in this way: "The young people are members of three church societies, the Chris tian Endeavor, Epworth League and Baptist Union. The entire membership will take part i the experiment. When the Rev. W. B. Wal lace made a' dramatic appeal to be earnest in the experiment, some prayed and some cried in their excitement. 'What would Jesus have us do?' he exclaimed. 'Be a man. Be like a burst of sunshine. Learn to smile, show your joy in your hand clasp. Jesus was every inch a man. He would shake hands like a-man, not like a giraffe, were He here today. Fling sun shine into the lives of others. Do not go to work ten minutes late with a grouch. Be sunny. Also, don't quit work ten minutes early with a sour face, Christ' would not do that. Be frank. If .you are a fifty-cent man do not Pass oyurself off as a dollar man. There was The Commoner. fh vnn?!7 '? ChrIst's Renter shop. Be honest in your business and be honest in your religion. Lead a sustained life. Pray. Read your Bible, urge others to read the word. Christ is the world s gentleman. Ho would have you live as ladies and gentlemen. The titles are often mis used. Let us claim the right to the titles in tlie coming two weeks. Christ worked. If you haven't a job now, get one. Don't be a loafer. When the temptation comes to bo dis honest in business say no! no matter what comes. Let us be honest in speech, too, in what we say about our neighbors.' " THE VESTRY of Trinity church, famous alike in New York's real estate and theological circles, have been taking the public into their confidence. This board, for the first time in ninety-five years, has made a detailed state ment of its financial affairs. The board was, it is said, prompted to make this statement by reason of the criticisms aroused by the board's proposal to close old St. John's chapel Re ferring to this report the New York World says: "Trinity's total income in 1907 was $827,151 a considerable sum. Of this there was spent for special charities 'within the parish' $10,996, or 13 per cint; charities outsido the parish are lumped in accounting with gifts to churches. Upon schools $63,756 was spent. The tax val uation of Trinity's rented and productive property is placed at $13,646,000. As most of this is in poor condition and presumably as sessed at a low rate, its selling value for im provement may be nearer $20,000,000. Con sidering Trinity, St. Paul's and other church yards, and Trinity cemetery uptown, as merely real estate like the endangered St. John's, the parish would probably 'cut up for' $60,000,000 or more if it carried the St. John's precedent to its grimly logical conclusion and gave up all church activities. The poor condition of Trin ity's rented property is apparent from its own figures. Its rents are $752,741, from which is deducted $344,179 for management, repairs, taxes, elevator service, insurance, advertising and sundries, leaving $407,562 for net return. A small part of the office expense might properly be charged against church administration, but . on the most favorable showing the estates yield only a trifle above three per cent on the assessJ ment values and probably no more than two and one-half per cent net upon the actual values, without any allowance whatever for deprecia tion of buildings. Trinity has been called the worst landlord in New York. It describes it self as the least business-like and most unsuc cessful. By selling off its real estate and buy ing bonds it could so Increase its revenue as to be able to spare for charity more than one-fifth of its office expenses. It might even . o able to continue the work, and spare the dignity and beauty, of St. John's." T'lE PRESIDENT of France Is having lots of trouble these days. The London Daily Mail is authority for the following: "The Christmas festivities at the Elysee are menaced by an embarrassing contretemps, which places M. Fallieres, president of the French republic, in a curious dilemma. Socialism, it appears, has invaded the precincts of the presidential palace, and a few days ago, the head maitre d'hotel presented a petition to the chief of state, requesting permission on behalf of the ushers, footmen, and other male domestics to . wear a mustache. The petition set forth the right of every citizen of the republic, no matter what his station, to complete liberty and equality in the matter of hirsute adornment, and main tained that in a democracy founded by the sons of the revolution, no man was entitled to inflict a' badge of servitude upon his neighbor. M. Fallieres is said to be much perplexed as to the ronlv he will make to the petition. The liveried menials of the Elysee do not hide their deter mination to proceed to extremes if their request is refused, and a strike in the servants' hall of the presidential palace at this time of the year would mean considerable inconvenience. At the sime time 1.1. Fallieres realizes that he can not peremptorily dismiss a petition which takes its stand upon the rights of man, and asks for noth ing more than equality for all citizens. Another argument put forward by those who have signed the petition is 'that M. Viviani, the minister for labor, a post created by the present govern ment, is a militant socialist and an active advo cate of the rights of the proletariat. He is very nroud of his handsome black mustach . and the petitioners have urged him to use his in- fluenco with the president of the, republic for the abolition of the objectionable order, which entails compulsory shaving. A' few years ago a porter at the British embassy in Paris, a fdw steps from the Elysee Palace, was given the alternative of shaving his mustacho or being dismissed. Ho bowed to tho Inevitable and sac rificed his mustacho. All tho male domestics at tho ministries and ombasslcs In Paris are obliged to keep the upper lip free from hair, and M. Fallieres can not accede to tho prayer of his male servants without committing a grave" violation of tho protocol." o THE STORY of a little hero Is told by tho editorial writer in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Joseph Smith, a negro orphan eight years of age, lived at tho House of tho Holy Child in Philadelphia. Tho Public Lodger writer tells tho story as follows: "On the morning of New Year's day there was a fire at tho orphan age. Little Joseph jumped from his cot, calling to the other children: 'Get up, everybody! Hurry!' and running to tho window lowered tho i.ro escape. It was a job for his small, unaided strength to handle the heavy counter-balancing weight and chain, and since he could not man- . age It with his arms alone, he jumped on tho first section of the ladder, which his weight brought slowly to tho ground. Then ho clam bered back into the dormitory, and with stout heart, as Little Nemo In Wonderland, marshaled tho other children and led them single file down the ladder to safety. That boy will some day make a useful' man, the kind who Is 'all there' In an emergency. There is no seve- ?r test of one's ability to collect one's wits and keep a clear, cool head than a fire interrupting a sound sleep with its dreaded alarm. Many a grown-up h scatter-brained on a similar occa sion, and In the present Instance one of the nurses rushed, hen-mlndedly, about the building, her clothing aflame, eluding the grasp of those who could and would have helped her. Oliver Wendell Holmes ence wrote of a friend: 'And then there's a youngster of excellent pith, -Fate tried to conceal him by naming him Smith.' But this youngster of excellent pith will not be lost to view as ho gets bigger and older, for ' he has the makings of a man In him." " ' ' TT-IE STATISTICS of lynching In the United States are mainly the work of volunteer and unofficial observers and there are some dis crepancies In the totals but the general results are sufficiently accurate for purposes of com parison and comment. In this connection the Philadelphia Public Ledger says: "During the year 1908 there were in round numbers 100 of these crimes of violence within tho confines of tho United States, no less than ninety-seven having been committed In the south, and ninety three of the victims were negroes. As these figures show an increase over the totals for the four years immediately preceding, they hardly mark an encouraging progress in respect for law and order, nor in the decrease of those crimes which chiefly provoke this form of sum mary justice at the hands of mobs. The fol lowing table will show, however,, that, compared with some years, the record of 1908 is not with out ground. for encouragement: 1882 114 1892 235 1902 97 1883 134 1893 200 1903 104 1884 211 1894 197 1904,... 87 1885 184 1895 180 1905 66 1886 138 1893 131 1906 68 1887 122 1897 165 1907 51 1888 142 1898 127 1908 100 1889.... 176 1899 107 1890 128 1900 115 Total 3709 1891 195 1901 135 Viewed In the aggregate, tho lynching phenom ena are an appalling feature of American social life, and justify in some measure the strictures passed upon us by foreign critics and observers. Whether tho recurrence of this form of violence is to be attributed to the faults in the adminis tration of criminal law in this country, or whether it Is a result of the peculiar nature of the race problem presented by the presence of the negroes in the midst of a white population occupying a different plane of- civilization, it Temains a stain upon the fair name of the United States which every patriotic citizen would see eliminated. Compared with previous decades, the record of the last undoubtedly indicates im provement, but the condition revealed by these statistics is far from satisfactory." " X 9 1 ,i mi mm n titixu ti" r.