.-! THB COURIER. the American public. "The amount required to effect Miss Stone's safety is but a mere bagatelle compared to the millions which have been spent to maintain the officers of the Board in their easy, extravagantly paid posts." I know of no board in this country which has boasted so much of its accomplishments; but if Miss Stone is murdered someother medium will certainly distribute the money for foreign missions gathered here. And it is very likely that appeals for foreign heathen from any board will fall upon deaf ears if Miss Stone be harmed. The conduct of the Board is un-American, uuchivalrous, cold blooded, unbusinesslike. The dis pleasure of the American people is already made manifest by the re proaches aimed at the Board by the secular presc. To America this wo man's life and security is worth more than the 130.000 heathen, men, women and children, that in the ninety years of its existence the board boasts of having saved by the expenditure of tens of millions of dollars. And if .Miss Stone is not included among the number saved the Board will never have another million dollars to spend. The Naval Trouble Any opinion that we may have held concerning the elevation of character of admirals, commodores, captains and lieutenant commanders, has been dissipated by the naval inquiry. We are an imland people. North America is so large that the coast dwellers are an inconsiderable part of the popu Jation. Sailors, either common sea men or officers, are an uncommon sight. We think of them or we did think of them before this investi gation had progressed so far, as bluff, hearty, generous, truthful men. De catur, FnulJones, Nelson have made the definition for all of us of sailors. The investigation at Washington makes it necessary to revise our def inition. After this for a few years, until the impression wears off, an admiral must be a man who is jealous Of all the officers under him, who in case of war will send misleading dis patches home, claiming victories be did not win, or one who in pursuit of a fleet is the last man to see the masts of the enemy in a protecting harbor and makes all sorts of excuses to get away from the neighborhood, only being kept there by repeated commands from the bead of the de partment. According to the new def initions with which the investiga tions have supplied us, there is a low standard of truth among the higher officers of the navy, and an officer once out of favor with the depart ment, at Washington Incurs the ill will of all the officers on all the ships of the American - navy. The dissipa tion of an old ideal is unpleasant but if it is so that the isolation of the sea faring man makes him jealous and more than ordinarily selfish, land lubbers ought to know it so as to quit expecting high-mindedness from those who go down to the sea in ships. jt jt The "Cop." Sir Thomas LIpton is a true sports man. Just before the yacht races were run, at the close of a dinner served on board The Shamrock, he said in reply to a toast: ''Let the best boat win." After he had lost he was satisfied that the races were fair ly conducted and that the best boat did win. As there were only two boats, the sentiment was not gram matical but the spirit of the wish was eminently commendable, and the spirit is more than grammar. Rot many people know the name of the owner of the boat which actually did win. The glory is absorbed, with the owner's full consent, by the New York Yacht Club whose officers and mem bers have been the patrons of yacht ing, and have by undiscourBged pat ronage of the sport kept interest in It alive. Per contra everybody knows the name of Thomas Lawton, the man from Boston who said he was going to chop up his boat because it was not fast enough to get into the race at all. Kindergarten experiments have discovered that children are disciplined into the knowledge and practice of good citizenship by the games they play together and the conventions they agree to abide by during the progress of the games. A kindergarten visitor is usually im pressed only by the gayety of the lit tle children in their play. The team work which means concerted and harmonious action is apt to be over looked. Yachting is a grown-up game and is a means of discipline to the play ers. Mr. Thomas Lawton, who is a self-made man, and with all the faults of a self-made man, wanted to play the game because of the compliment and conspicuousness likely to be be stowed upon the winner. His motive for building a yacht could, of course have had no influence upon that yacht's lines and speed, but when she was distanced the country was sat isfied. The impression obtained be fore the preliminary trial races came off that the management of the 27. Y. Y. C. objected to the admission of the Lawson boat because of its superior lines, chances of beating the Colum bia, and the relief when Lawson's boat hardly showed at the horizon of the race course-was perceptible. Mr. E. D. Morgan, the responsible manager of the Columbia, made him self very inconspicuous. He is a yachtsman of long experience. At one time he owned, seven boats. His grandfather was the war governor of New York. J jt The Booker Washington Incident. There are very few southerners who are not troubled and in a way indig nant because President Roosevelt asked Mr. Washington to dinner and actually dined with him. They do not deny the fact that Mr. Washing ton is a southerner and a credit to the south. All men admit that be is one of the most distinguished men in this country and that bis birth place and dwelling place are tbe more dis tinguished for his presence. A north erner cannot understand now, any more clearly than in war times, just the feeling that southerners have for tbe darkies. Now as in the pre , rebellion period black women nurse white children. They hold them on tbeirlaps, fondle them and kis." them. They are excellent nurses for the sick and the super-sensitive nerves of aristocratic patients are not disturbed by tbe necessarily intimate associa tion with a black nurse. But if one of these patients, recovered from a sickness, were to be obliged to ride on a railroad car with a negro, trouble would ensue. The south is proud of Booker Wash ington. Southerners recognize his good sense and have constant re course to it. Somewhere, I tbink, Mr. Washington himself has said that he preferred southern intolerance tempered by intimate understanding of his race to northern patronage and imperfectly concealed race-repulsion. Topsy expressed the same thing to Miss Ophelia. Miss Ophelia had the conventional New England disap proval of slavery and sorrow for the slaves, but she could not bear to have Topsy's hand touch hers. On the other hand, the angel child Eva was content to sit upon the floor near Top sy and read the same book with her. However much we northern people may desire to ameliorate the condi tion of the southern negro, we can do so only by gifts of money to educa tional institutions, such asTuskeegee. The b'ack race is not tbe problem of the people north of Mason and Dix on's line whlch.in spite of oratory,still exists. The black southerners must work out their own salvation with the white southerners. We can give individuals of neither race absent treatment for either ignorance or prejudice. The blacks are in the south. They are climatically fitted to live there and there they are go ing to stay. Industrial education, as Mr. Washington says, will accomplish their second and more significant emancipation. From this distance we can only hasten that self-manumission by gifts of money to manual training institutions. If President Roosevelt's invitation to dinner has in the slightest degree lessened south ern prejudice against the race or hightened the high respect of the south for Mr. Washington, tbe whole country is grateful to the President. If ithas increased southern distrust of northern intention and increased the bitterness, in spite of which the social condition of the negroes must gradually improve, the invitation, though given with the most generous of motives from one great man to an other was premature. jt jt Football. The fascination which football has for rich and poor, lettered and unlet tered, athlete and pale clerk has not been satisfactorily defined and ac counted for. It is perhaps one of those expressions of human feeling too deep for words.but which when the oc casion arises is overwhelmingly dem onstrated in action. Baseball is more intelligible to a crowd. Tbe players are distributed over the diamond as chess-men over a board, and the plays are not often bunched, so that tbe audience can keep track of the ball and indentify the players by position and characteristic action. But in football there is only a heap of dusty boys and it is occasionally difficult to be sure that the heap is human. It looks more like an octopus, a creature of one body and many arms and legs. Nevertheless in this mournful town where everybody is still more or less broke and where daily on every street corner monuments of former opulence meet and remind one of their depart ed influence, somehow the inhabi tants raised between twenty-five and thirty thousand dollars to go to Min neapolis and see the game of football between the Minnesota university team and the Nebraska university team. The game lasted only two "hours or so and Nebraska was crush ingly defeated, but nobody seemed to be sorry he went and the excursion ists said as old Caspar said of Blen heim that Is was a "glorious victory." A committee is trying to raise in Lin coln a few thousand dollars for a peal of chimes to be placed near the cen tre of the town and serve as a monu ment to the memory of President Mc Kinley instead of the triumphal arch iiiat was nrsL proposed. The project has not yet been received with suffici ent response to insure its success. Considering the strength of the spell we are under if we could get the foot ball team to give the chimes' fund a benefit we could buy chimes worth listening to; but there seems no easy way of effecting the conjunction be tween football and chimes. More particularly because college men, whether from reckless spending, in. are the - tu which is rarely the case, or f sufficient remittances from h-' always hard up and need money they can earn by admi the arena. jt jt 44 A Triumph's Evidence." All of Mr. William Allen U lute's stories have strong local color. Hi he roes have a photographic reEem'. ance to life. They are like a plaster cat of a living hand whose owner ron sented for a moment to allow it t be covered with plaster. Whet, the mold is filled up with the cwupusi. tion, and finally chipped oil, ail the fine marks that pertain to the human hand and that never were and never should be copied in marble, are there. Although the lines and crosses the intricate and innumerable dut- nod dashes, which distinguish a real hand from a marble or painted one, are never duplicated, although every one of the several billion hands in the world is unique; whenever we ee a copy of a hand containing these line and crosses that we never saw before we say "flow life-like!" Whereas when we see a plaster copy of a per fect band taken from a statue sculp tured by an artist who knows how an ideal band should be made, it scarcely attracts our attention, it i characterless and recalls no one hand in particular in which we have eer had any interest. The artist's ideal has all the qualities of a hand with out possessing a resemblance to any one band. There are characters in stories that we agree are human enough, only we mver saw anybody like them. 1 ued to ascribe my inability to iden tify such characters to insularity and non-cosmopolitanism, but latterly 1 hive come to believe that it is the author's fault when his men and women are strange, unfamiliar, stagy. In constructing them ha has used too many notes. His hero is a composite and has tbe unfamiliarity of many men with the aspect of one, like those strange composite pictures of a gradu ating class. Mr. White's boys recall this boy and that one I have known. There fore I know he has reproduced mhiic one boy of his own experience him self proabably for his boys are drawn from the inside. In the October Scribner's, Mr. White has a story called "A Tri umph's Evidence." The scene might have been laid in Lincoln, Nebraska, at one of the two hotels or at the state capital, and tbe time might have been last winter, and the mo-t prominent senatorial candidate in Nebraska might have sat for the p r trait of Mr. King. For instance "The senatorial deadlock occurred this way: Anything to beat Kinr. the state chairman, was the desire of forty-four legislators. Fifty one were willing to do anything to elec him. Six men voted patiently f- r state senator Metcalf, day in and da out, while three legislators insistcJ that there must be a clean man r there would be no nomination It took fifty-three votes to nominan In the last named group were su senator Moulton, and two young w Haff and Norris alumni of t State university. . . . The gr p was dubbed 'Ladies' Auxiliary.' K -' was supported by the party niacin and he held his men in bonds stron. r than iron; the men opposed to 1 were the party malcontents, who I J grievances against the party i r sonal, vicarious, or imagined. I anti-King men said that Joab . 13 ton, president of tbe Corn Belt r, -road, whose name was comm linked with scandal in state polu -was furnishiug King funds. Wl Myton arrived at the state capital lounged through the upper cornri r of the political hotel for an hour r so during the morning, sifting a weighing tbe gossip 1 personality of King waB the strong force In the crowd. Everyone - EEBBBHE2