THE SCItAXTON TRTBUXE SATURDAY MOUXDsG, FEBRUABY 2, 1895. 11 IT IS NOTJOLE PASTIME Rev. Dr. Parkhurst Cautions Reform ers Not to Trifle with Reform. 'HAT IT MEANS TO FIGHT SIN Tsxt Of an Address Which Every Amer lean Citizen Ought to Read and Dl- gest-TcllIng Truths of Brave and Earnest Man. Chleago, Feb. 1. The Civic Federa tion, composed of earnest men, has de cided to reform Chicago, Lexow fashion. Before reaching 'this decision they communicated with Rev. Dr. Parkhurst, of New York; and after some Interchange of letters he consent ed to deliver an address In this city, be fore the Marquette club. He delivered It Jan. 23. He said: "The questions that are most deeply agitating the public mind this year, and that wUl continue to agitate lit probably for many years to come, are not na tional ones but municipal. We have reached a period that may be designat ed 'the renaissance of the city.' The remarkable concentration of popula tion at urban centers has operated to accentuate 'the municipality; and to such degree has this concentration reached, and so largely are material values and intellectual energies ac cumulated at these points, that we may almost say that the real life of the nation Is lived, and throbs itself out, at these centers, and that the nation Is going to be Increasingly what our mu nicipalities make It to be, determine that It shull be. At the same time and closely connected therewith Is the fact of quite a general deterioration la the quality of municipal life. And men who have respect for themselves and who love their city and appreciate the Inti mate relations in 'Which municipal con dtlons stand to the question of our na tional life and to the permanence of American Institutions, are bestirring themselves, pondering 'the situation and squaring themselves to It. Intcr-Municipal Fellowship. "It Is generally In our favor that there is a kind of Intermuntclpal fel lowship In this business.' While each city has Its own interests and indulges In a little rivalry once In a while In such questions as those of relative wealth, papulation and the like, yet there is a fellowship among cities, and a good cause In your city is helped by the fact that the same good cause Is being worked out In another city, and In a good many other cities. "I would like to say Just at this point. If you will let me refer to myself as I shall be obliged to do a number of times In the course of the hour that that has been one of the compelling motives that has helped to keep me In good spirits during the exacting war fare of the last three years in New York, that If the damnable elements of evil in our own city could be crushed that would be in Itself demonstration complete that they could be crushed In every other city. And you here In Chi cago, in view of what you have under taken, need to feel the grand conspiracy of effort of the same kind, as It Is at this Very hour in progress in so many slater cities. Let me add here that that Is a motive which has influenced my ac ceptance of the invitation tendered me by the Marquette club. This is the first time I have spoken outside of New York city for a year, but I have felt that If I could contribute, no matter how small an amount, toward aiding, toward stimulating In the task which you have upon your hands and hearts, it would be so much done not only toward redeeming Chicago, but so much done toward purifying and strengthening individual, social and civic life throughout the great north west. Effect of a Redeemed Chicago. "You believe In Chicago; I never struck a Chlcagoan yet that did not. But Chicago is not the whole earth, and you Willi do well Just at this point of your enterprise to realize the effect that a redeemed Chicago Is going to exert not only upon yourselves and your state, tut upon contiguous states. I mention this because if you are go ing to carry this undertaking through to the end, you will need the re-enforcement and the buttressing of large mo tives or you will geit tired. You oa.nnot dive on the farce of a resolution, but If your machinery is to be kept running to tihe end of the trip, level grade and up grade, you will ihave to keep replen ishing your fires by solid chunks of combustible motive. Enthusiasm is good, but it takes a constant suocession of motives to kep it up. "You understand, as I do, that my object In coming fcere and discussing the municipal problem Is not to rescue your city. You will have to do that yourself. The Cincinnati Tribune re marked the other day, that Dr. Park hurst would find it another story when he undertook to tackle Chicago. I am not Duere to tackle Chicago, although, as for Cincinnati, I might say in pass ing, that I have exceptional opportuni ties for knowing what her moral and political condition is, and that It will be more becoming to her to use her mop in scrubbing her own dirty floor, than to use it in bespattering Chicago. I on mot here to tackle Chicago. It is true I have availed myself of all means within my readh of acquainting myself with your condition; but even then you know llhat condition better than I can a (hundred to one. As nearly as I can make It out, your municipal depravity exceeds that of New York. It costs ira no pang to yield to you that pre-eminence. You do everything in a colossal way In Chicago and it is natural to expect, therefore, if your municipality la depraved, it ,wlll be colossally de praved. Vice Not Orgonlicd In Chicago. "In one other particular, however, I am confident that your municipal con dition has -the advantage over what oura has been, 'this, namely, that as to your municipal depravity, while there le more of it. It Is not so thoroughly or ganised; .that while you have no Tam many Hall, exaotly, you have stuff enough to make dt, make two perhaps, so that your bottle as contrasted with what ours has been will be that of fighting burtljwthackers rather than con tending -with an organized ary. "Now, (Whether the corruption that ha fastened upon your municipal vRals is one tJhat shows Itself promi nently in the matter of election frauds. or in that of blackmailing, or In that of city contracts, or 1n your Judiciary. In ferlor of auperlor, makes very little ai Terence, it is the municipality that Is diseased. I do not mean the mayor; I do not mean the alderman and Judges, It is the municipal condition that you have to aim at If you have a mercenary Judge, or a black mailing polloe officer, displacing him does not touch the heart of the matter. Bad municipal conditions can put new cor rupt Judges on the benoh Just as fast gut you can Impeach the old ones. Lop- , ... . ( ' i J - ping off Ilia tops does not embarrass the roots. There is . yery little use in doing anything unless you Hre prepared to do the wiholey Bpasms'of .virtue I think are quite as racking to the system as chronic Iniquity. ,., ' "The inquiry I put to you, therefore, is: Are you prepared to make a thor ough Job of it? That is the: first ques tion you have to answor. Do .you ask how long It will 'take? We have bnly begun yet in New. York." All the car toons of dead tigers with 'which pur illustrated Journals, have fooled their readers Bince'the sixth "of last. Novem ber are simply the produot of an over heated' imagination. And even if the tiger were killed, 'there la a whole menugerle full of other beasts .wh(ch, if more respeotable, some, of them a.re Just as bloodthirsty and keep tljelr incisors in Just as good trim. . After Another .Municipal Beast. "In fact, Just at this moment, the very men who were among' the heart iest and most chivalrous In our recent Higer hunt have mounted horse again and are off scouring the Jungle for another municipal beast of prey who Is more decent than the tiger, but Just as hungry and ten times foxier. It is not well to discourage people, but It is al ways wholesome to face the entire sit uation. To use an illustration that I have used u great many times at home in order to accomplish anything that is really worth the pains It takes to ac complish It, you will have to regenerate your city. That word is a quotation from Presbyterian theology, . but an swers the purpose well even If it Is. It means more than reformation. Reformation denotes a change of form only. Regeneration meuns a change of heart, the Inauguration of a new qual ity of municipal motives and Impulses. If you say this Is dealing with the ideal, of course It is dealing with the Ideal. You are not going to win except by the pressure of a splendid enthusiasm, and you will start no popular enthusiasm by any effort that you rqake to achieve half measures. Remember", If you please, that I am not speaking to you along a line' that I have' not myself trodden. Municipal mending, Jobbing, cobbling, will not move the popular heart, and it Is by the pressure of the aroused popular heart you are to be saved, If you are to be' saved. Now, how are you going to do that? "Let me go on and In a few para graphs give you a little Idea as to how we did it In New York. The conditions are, in some respects,"' different with you from what they are with us, but men ore men everywhere, corrupt municipality is corrupt municipality all over, and there Is enough in common between our two cities to1 make the policy pursued in New York at least of service to you here. I have examined with a good deal of care all the material that has been put In my hands rela tive to your municipal condition and there is scarcely anything In it that differs essentially from what Is appli cable to my own municipality. Many Obstacles Encountered "When we began work In February, 1892, everything was against us. The difficulties were so gigantic as to be Inspiring. I have known what It Is to climb precipitous Alpine peaks that were so nearly up and down that .the ugIy obstinacy of the pile refreshed me, recuperated me and filled my legs with a nervous irritability and muscular In spiration that easily carried me up over the rocks, perpendicular and all. That was something the way we felt when we started out In '92. Everything was In the hands of the enemy. Mayor, aldermen, commissioners, district at torney, police Justices, all banded to gether In solid, organized resistance to assault, and the town In all Its better elements either so asphyxiated by the foul miasmatic air It had been so long respiring, or so appreciative of the dif ficulties of the situation as. to be pros trated in the apathy of a supine resig nation. "I had been requested to take the presidency of the Society for the Prevention of Crime vacated by the death, of Dr. Howard Crosby. I con sented to the arrangement provided the society would quit quiddling with small matters, such as arresting saloon-keepers, and commence gunning for big game, subh as gambling shops patronized by police captains and dis reputable houses frequented by the Ju diciary. My conditions were accepted, and we started In. The opening gun of the campaign was fired In the shape of a sermon preached from my pulpit Feb. 14, 1892. "I never could see how It was fair to preach against lihe Ahabs and Jeze bels 3,000 years back and be any less pronounced In the respects we pay to the sarnie genius of depravity brought down to date. It its Just a bit sugges tive of cowardice to pound the antedilu vians for their depravity and Ignore the manifestations of equal wick edness that are contemporary. If a man preaches In that way it looks as though he were preach ing for his salary and setting up his target centuries enough away to guar antee ihlm against the risk of libel suits. Severe Arraignment of Officials. ' "You will pee w.huit sort of a situa tion we had to confront if I quote a sentcmice or two from the Just men tioned discourse. And I want to re mark , that my characterization has since ithat time been Justified by de velopments a good many times over. I said: Here Is an Immense city reaching out arms of evangelization to every quarter of the globe, and yet every step that we take looking to the moral betterment of this city has to be taken directly In the teeth of the damnable pack of adminis trative bloodhounds that are fattening themselves on the ethical flesh and blood of our clixcushlp. We have the right to demand that the mayor and those asso ciated with him in administering the af fairs of this city should n6t put obstruc tions In the path of our ameliorating en deavors, but they do. There is not a form under which the devil disguises himself that so perplexes us In our efforts or so be wilders us In the schemes which, as Christians and churches, we devise for the good and the saving of men In our midst, as the polluted harpies that, under the pretense of governing tills city, are feedj Ing night and day, on its. quivering vitals. One of the most striking things to the American reader of English newspapers Is the not infrequently encountered ad vertisement of Home city or "corporn tlon" for the services of an official to take charge of some department of Its munic ipal government. Very often a city thus "short" of first-class officials secures them from among the civil lists of sister cities, by offering superior Inducements. To an American who rei-ollects with what eager ness, amountinga)mot te unanimity, tho male population of one of his own cities, seek office at the first suggestion of a pos sible change or vuoancy this business-like English custom- -appears Inexpressibly droll;, yet it is what we shall probably have to come to. In this-(Mist .-land of freedom, if we expect ever to put the srOv ernment of our cities down from their present chaos to the bed-rock level of sen sible, honest and efficient government. Because In England, monorchia! though It be, the qlty is governed purely as pri vate or corporate business Is governed. It Is managed by experts for the benefit of ths contributing partner. One isn't They are a lying, perjured, rum-soaked and libidinous lot. "And thpy were; but they did not like to be told of It. The grand Jury of that month called me down for my sermon and asked me If I had any authority but common rumor and newspaper statement. They Issued a presenti ment against nie as a means of snuffing me out as a warning against any other interloper who should venture to in vade the eecret precincts of a Tam many administration. "The Jury's presentment taught me a good lesson never to go gunning with blank cartridges. My next step was to fill my cartridge box. The grand Jury threw down -the gauntlet and I nicked Jit up. I accumulated a few facts that I was not obliged to write with quotation marks. I npalatuhlo Facts Presented. "Having been trodden down, sneered at, cursed, threatened, 'presented,' for Btatlng what I did not know as of my own knowledge, I would have entered hell if need be to find facts to an swer the Challenge. I did go tuto hell, and I got ny facts; then I got out my little gun on another Sunday and went Into .my pulpit 'With cartridges that were not blank cartridges, and then they swore at 'me worse for knowing what 1 was talking about than they had the month before for not knowing What I was talking about. It Is almost impossible to suit such people and to adjust your treatment to their ethical and esthetic propositions. "Thereupon the grand Jury of March, which was of quite a different com plexion from that of its predecessor, took our evidence against the police, Bcured some more of its own, and Is sued a presentment agalnt them, tell ing them that they were either crimi nal or incompetent, and that they were not Incompetent. "It would take an unpardonable amount of time and be of no service to you to continue with any detail of the three years events. The community knew the condition of things through out the city, but 'had no feeling of It. There was conscience enough, but so far as these matters were concerned, It was 'not sufficiently supple to be practically available. The clergymen were not interested In the movement except to the extent of Intimating from tl-ne to time in a general sort of a way, that a minister's duty is to preach the Gospel. However, we believed in the people, and kept at our work of discovering the facts and publishing them. We knew, or thought we knew, that when this process had been con tinued long enough, something would give way. "Our society' suffered some pretty hard raps at the hands of the police; amcng others, our detective was ar rested and thrown into Jail on the charge of blackmail. The object of this move was to discredit our work and to prevent his interfering with their practice of blackmail. Our police and yours, I soe, are cut from the same cloth, they are so sorry to have people do wrong that they are self-sacrificing enough to do all the wrong themselves so as to save others the bother of the iniquity. Helped by the Newspapers. "All these proceedings kept the town stirred up. We availed every oppor tunity to get some new facts into the air. All this helped the newspapers, and they requited uj by turning round and helping us, or if they did mot help us they bluckguarded us, which, In u way, answered the same purpose, for It kept the thing in the air and htid peo ple's attention fixed upon it. We were careful not to- let more than a week go by without giving the public some thing fresh. We secured the lndict n.em of a captain and our society stock went up. We failed to convict him and stock went down. But people kept talking about the matter. They knew there was a good deal in it, land they beKiin, after about a year and ' half, to feel that there was a good deal in it. They were beginning to get 'their moral blood up. Public conscience had been Chafed so long It was beginning to feel sore. "We would scour a whole precinct, make anywhere from twenty to sixty solid cases against gamblers and the keepers of disorderly houses, then pub lish a list. All of the papers would publish It. Then I would sharpen my pen. nix up a concootlon of oxalic acid and vitriol, write a complaint against the captain In question and send copies of it to the mayor, the public officials, the newspapers and the ' New York Sun. And that was what did It. Facts did It. We did not bother with theo ries, but trleJ as nearly every day as we could to get some fresh facts into thi papers for the citizens to flavor t'lelr coffee with at breakfast. We were a good deal of a nuisance in a way- -at least we were told so and 1 think that those who told us were sincere; but we knew we were right and kept doing it Just as we kept going to bed at night and getting up in the morning. There was nothing particu larly difficult about it. It required no special genius except the gerolus a dog shows in fastening to a root -the ge nius of hang-to-it-lveness. It Is like drllllna into granite the, granite may be tough, the drill may be dull and the hammer light, but If you keep pounding and live long enough you are sure to get through. You can dp, the same thing here' and you w Ml -'get the same results, only, as I said . before; while thers may he Just as great thick ness of a rtratum to drill through her,. I am confident that it Is nut go knottl ,ly organized as it was with 'us. ' "When finally the thing had been pushed so far that people began to bo ashamed 'of themselves, and of each other, to live In a city that was gov erned by a crew of banditti that would be a disgrace to Turkey, amd a brood of libertines that would have been re fused naturalization papers in Gomor rah, they sent up to Albany and ob tained an Investigating committee, and the whole world knows the' rest. ...'. "I .would not dike to address you-In any such .terms as would be Offensive to you, but I .wan to say that how much you will accomplish here in Ohl oago will depend entirely upon how Sevemtlh Day::- asked hqw he votes on national election's,, or what race, creed or ward he., "repre sents." The question Is: "What can you do In exchange for your salary, and how well can you 'do- H?" But never mind. We will reach that point, too, In due Sea son; we will reach It or "bust.". - ( In all probability one of the lessons that will be learned by. a good many people In various portions of our country as a con sequence of the recent depression In trado .la that the poRcelon of great wealth ly a comparatively few men Is not an un mitigated evil. The man accustomed to handling great sums of money; the man, -Indeed, who has great sums to handle, Is generally, the last one to get soared In a panic Instead of colleotng all Ms stray change In a convenient-' stove-pipe or .feather bed tick,' he Is apt to put tt out with renewed briskness Into the channels of stagnant business,. Into new building and, generally peaking, Into Investment that have to do with real estate as basis. Hs does thl because, In the first much you are willing to sacrifice. You will have to pay for everything you get; and it Is not money that I am think ing of either. I wonder how many there are in this great city that are willing to "take their coats off and keep them oft until they die, or till Chicago Is redeemed? That is what will do it, and it is the only thing that will do it. You will have to take your life In your hands and your comfort and your ease in your hands and conquer a vic tory step by step. There is no call for the dlUettarata or the dude. Reform clubs are numerous and they have large enrollments, but some how they do not succeed in saving their city. There is no short cut to municipal sal vation. You cannot win It by the pres tige or the wealth or reform organiza tions, municipal leagues, civic clubs or by whatever other name the Institution may be distinguished. You will avail nothing exopt to the degree that you fling your personality and all that It stands for directly against the oncom ing tide of evil, even at the risk of be ing inundaited and swamped Sy it If this language Is more strenuous than fits into your predilections, you have only yourseir to blame for it, for I cume here at your bidding, not my own. If you have any object in life that means more to you than the redemption of Chicago I would counsel you to keep out of the municipal regeneration busi ness. It is to be gone at in the same way as that in 'Which the Dutch saved Holland and our revolutionary fathers enfranchised America, Reform Is an Expensive Luxury. "You have got to pay for the thing all It is worth, and you have got to pay for it In the expensive coin of your own personal tissue. There is nothing funny about it. You will not live any longer for It. You will not rest better nights nor eat with a better appetite daytimes. It Is feasible, but the cir cumstances are a good deal what they were In the old days when the children of Israel wanted to reach the promised land. There were the Anaklms, and they would have to be met and beaten down, and there was no fancy device for doing that except to club them down; and that they had no grit for, and so they wasted thirty-eight years zlg-zagging through the wilderness. But postpone It as they might, the pinch came, and the Anaklms had to be met. You may zig-zag as they did, and feed on manna till you are worn into your graves as they were, but you or your children cannot escape the Inevit able. It is a long, bitter, square fight that will be the means of giving into your hands a city that you can gener ously be proud of, and it you do not do It, somebody will have to, or your city will go utterly to the bad and sway the whole country along with it. "The movement with you will not be a question of numbers though. The in fluences that shape national or munic ipal destiny are not arithmetical. It has always been the case that the lar gest results have been achieved in the first Instance by small minorities. 'One man shall chase a thousand,' Is just as true here as It was in the days of Israel. If I knew that there were ten men In all this city with good heads, honest hearts. Indomitable pluck and thor oughly appreciative of the situation, that were prepared to lay themselves upon the municipal altar, with the same steady eyed unreserve with which Savonarola gave himself to the world, there Is nothing on earth or In hell thatJ could defeat you. That Is the principle upon which history has always been administered, and In all likelihood al ways will be. Side Issues Must lie Avoided. "It is quite closely akin to that to say that if you are going to do thorough work you will have to be most punctil ious In avoiding all side Issues. What ever the movement with which I have been associated in New York has been able to accomplish has been due to the fact that we have kept to a straight line and have refused to be side tracked. The one object we had In view was the breaking down of Tam many hnll by showing the collusion be tween Tammany's police department and the criminals. We simply wanted a good city government administered ou business principles and conducted according to the requirements of the ten commandments, and every other consideration had to go by the board. "The personal investigation of dis orderly houses with which, in February of '92, the movement was Initiated, was not a crusade ugainst disorderly houses, but against Tammany's vicious method of protecting and encouraging disorderly houses. It was Tammany we were after, and not the disreputable women with which Tammany had cap italized itself; and all the hypocritical curses heaped upon us by the police commissioners and Tammany chiefs for persecuting the poor, frail unfortu nates, was unmitigated rot and known by the police officials to be such. We had no interest In the social evil, no more did we have interest in the gam bling evil or in the violation of excise. Those were simply three points at which we tried to Jab our dagger Into Tammany's vitals, and we Jabbed it, we did. We tried to show not that crimes existed and ought to be broken up, but that Tammany was working in with the criminals and that therefore Tam many ought to be broken up. And we did show it: at least we began to and the Lexow committee finished it up. "And I want to tell you that all the prominence ithat was given by Tam many officials and their friends to the work done by our society In connection with disorderly houses was done for the purpose of confusing the Issue, shift ing the attention from themselves to us, and working our activity as a kind of moral umbrella to ward off the drop ping storm from their own unprotected heads. Tammany Journals obfuscated thtSalr with such religious consecutive news ithat dt was a good while before the issue become clear; but when it became dear, the people were with us and are there today. So that when re porters came to me to ask my opinion as to the proper method of dealing with the social! evil, I told them to go home Thoughts .amid place, he has been through panics be fore and tin got over being skittish; and in the second place because he knows that at such times Ms dollar will go further than It will when men are "flush" and times booming. If It were not so, we poor mortals would have felt the pinch a good deal more poignantly than we did feel It. I had occasion lately to visit a commun ity In another state where there are no .rich men to speak of, and honestly the average condition of that community, with each man hiding his few dollars un der the attto rafters, was something ter rible.' I doubt If altogether there was a much money in active circulation In the place as would suffice to buy one square meal at a metropolitan care. A few bold millionaires thereabouts Would have been hailed as dor.iirlght luxuries. The recent discussion, by several local clergymen, of the sinfulness of certain amusements, among which novel-reading and theater-going are sometimes clamed, calls to mind ths fact that I saw at the and mind their business or words to that effect. ' Wary of Politicians. "I speak of all this because too much consideration cannot be given to the matter of working with an eye single to one end. It is impossible ito do two things at the same time and half do either of them. And there is nothing that has come nearer to making us profane (that is, the clerical members of our society) than the attempt to impart into the crusade political and partisan considerations. Whatever ad vances we have made In my own city, we have arrived at the point at least the rank and file of our citizens have where we wanlt ithe administration kept untouched by the taint of politicians. There Is no Republican and no Demo crat in the ten commandments; no Re publican and mo Democrat in business. So that politics ds as much an imperti nence In the honorable conduct of a municipality as in the honorable and successful administration of a bank or manufactory. New York will never be administered honestly, economically and effectively until It is swept clean of politics and politicians. And the same is true of Chicago and every cither city. "Our movement, then, has had no partisanship in it and no sectarianism In it. An all found man Is bigger than either party and the decalogue Is as broad as Protestantism, Catholicism and Judaism, all placed alongside of each other. You will not eliminate munici pal corruptlon till you decide that the exclusive qualifications for official posi tions are Intelligence, adaptedness and honesty. Such a condition of things would be purgatory to the politician and chronic crucifixion to the 'bosses.' But it is meat, drink and no end of dessert to the rest of us. "When It came time to make up the slates last summer, the party leaders beat their drums till the ground shook and the party organs worked their diapasons till the sea roared, but the people called them down and ground their heel into all political fooling; and our new mayor proposes to run New York as he would Tun any other bUH'Intes in the Interests of decency and the stockholders. Probe Needed, Rather Than Plaster. "In the materiad from various sources that has come Into my hands to be used as 'pointers' in shaping my address to you this evening, considera ble has been said about 'elevating the tone" of your community. There Is something In thalt way of phrasing things ithat ds lialule to be misleading. Tho first thing you have to do is not to elevate but to tear down, and rip to pieces; you Willi have to bore Into your city council, riddle your police force, put your pol Ice courts Into the criminal box and let daylight clear through your assessors' office. 'Elevating the tone' does not quite touch it. So fur as I can learn, you have no tone that is worth elevating. It Is like our police force that 1s to be reorganized. I tell our people that they cannot reorganize rot. When mortification has begun to set In, the moat considerate thing .that can be done is to hand the remains over to the offices of the undertaker. "I am not counselling on your part any procedure different from the one we have been ourselves prosecuting. The first step toward putting up a building Is to dig down to excavate. Architecture is of no account until you have touched solid bottom. Under ex isting circumstances, therefore, I beg of you not to talk of 'elevating' your 'tone.' Drop it. Of course, all of this performance will create a stench. Well, we know out our way what stench isi We have had the moral sewers of our municipality open now about three years, and metaphorically speaking, during the past six months we have de pended on surface drainage exclusive ly; and 1 have sometimes feared that when we come to breathe pure air again the shock of the change will be so great as to asphyxiate us. But It Is your only way out. Better make thor ough work of It than to play the dilet tante with It and do it in installments. Popular Heart Must Ho Touched. "While of course this enterprise will best be prosecuted by a limited number on the principle that the auger needs to be smallest at the point where it en ters, yet it is a matter wherein you need the backing of all classes so fast as you can get It. Let me caution you to make your movement comprehen sive enough to win the confidence and support of every Btratum of society. The Marquette club, under whose aus pices I am privileged to speak tonight, Is made up of men who are eminently respectable so I am told; and you have, I believe, other seml-polltlcal organiza tions of a similar character. We do not want to disparage 'respectability' 1 am using the word noV with quota tion marks but too much respectabil ity In a lump Is fatal in a community as composite as yours. You will have to touch the popular heart or you will fail. "Our success in New York was due to the fact that our movement was learned to be also In the Interests of the poor, the distressed and of those who were born, or whose parents were born, on the other side of the sea in Ger many, Italy, Poland, Russia; and It was the votes of that class of people that made victory possible last Novem ber. If you are going to win the hearts of these people you will have to go Into It as a matter of heart and not merely as a matter of policy. You understand that it is the poor as well as the rich that are suffering from the present situation and you will draw them from bad alliances by demonstrating to them the practical advantage that will ac crue to them from contracting alliances that are better. If you will persuade them not only that what you are in pursuit of Is a city that is more decent, but a city that will be more comfort able for all classes of people to live In a city whose more economical adminls tratlon will reduce taxes, and a city where the taxes will be so assessed that paying the tax commissioner or his 'pal' a consideration will not relieve Sluggestiol5oOIIIIIIIIIllll,'l' theater, the other evening, during the performance of the Baldwins, a number of persons who would disdain to witness an ordinary play, but who saw no Incon sistency in viewing the queer feats ot theee clever wonder-workers. I am not going to discuss this apparent Inconsist ency, much lees criticize it, but wish simply to use It as a pretext for alluding to a somewhat remarkable editorial In this month's Chautauquan, evidently from the pen of that excellent magazine's cultured editor, Dr. Theodore L. Flood. It Is en titled "The Drama and tho Novel." I call It remarkable for the reason that In It the eminent divine who wrote It takes the somewhat usual ground for a clergyman that both the play and the novel are here to stay; and that it behooves wide awake Christians to accept this fact and act upon It, rather than try to Ignore the whole subject. But perhaps I ought to give his exact language. This Is the gist of It: "Perhaps It is time that we adapt our vision to a new light and take Intel ligent cognizance of what the drama and the novel should be and ef what should be the millionaire from his Just proportion and so throw a heavier burden upon the pockets of the impecunious I say If you will put the whole matter in simple and transparent shape before the less prosperous classes of your city and show them that decent ipeople will look more carefully after their interests than the rascals and blood-suckers will, that are befriending them now, you will win from them all the backing that your cause needs and deserves. Arrogance of City Officials. "I urge dt upon you also that you should let dt be part of the clvlo gos pel of this community that every citi zen should count himself to be a privi leged and active member of the city corporation. That Is part of the genius of our Amercan institutions. If there is any one thing that makes me angry to the extent of causing me to wish that I could write a new dictionary that would give me words that would do Justice to the way I felt it is to have the official classtd spurn our inter ference, and complain of us for ex erolslng our Qod-glven right of keep ing tab on them. We are where we are because we have not kept tab on them. "A year ago or more I put detectives on the track of some of our police Jus tices. Studying up their history as they make it day by day, but more particularly night by night (we like to have full obituary records In stock against their provldehtial withdrawal from the field of their sublunary ac tivity) I say I put detectives on the track of some members of that sport ing fraternity known among us as the police bench, and Superintendent Byrnes of the police force got wind of it ( It is one of .the remarkable features of that gentleman's administration 'that, while he ds as innocent as a cana ry of what dids own officers are about, Ignorant that they are buying cap taincies, peddling female virtue JUBt as your policemen are, and playing the guardian angel to the bunko-eteerers; that while he never seems to know anything of this, I never do anything but he is immediately 'on to It.' That Is one of the ways he takes of showing what he calls his sympathy with my cause). Well, as I was saying, I put detectives on some of our police Jus tices, and Byrnes came out and notified the public of the fact, as though he Imagined it was going to embarrass or humiliate me. Public lllllet Doux for Mr. Byrnes. "I thought It was a good thing to do. My wife and I look after the servant gli'ls in the kitchen, and it never oc curred to me that I was doing anything essentially different in keeping an eye out for the servants that we are em ploying and helping to pay the salary of in the police courts. So I sent Byrnes a public billet doux through the press and told him he was right; that I had my emissaries out on the track of the Justices, and that when circum stances seemed to me to warrant it I should .put one on him. If he was straight K would do him no harm, and if he was crooked it might do him good. "It would be useless and out of taste to relate the love passages that have transpired between Byrnes and my self; but I wanted to make that refer ence as an illustration of the principle that no citizen is doing his whole duty as a citizen who conceives of a public officer as being anything other than a servant of the popular will and an in strument for the execution of public choice. Officers are our representa tives, not our substitutes. You cannot deposit your vote In November and then Tetlre Into the shell of your own private Interests and have any reason able ground for expecting that the gov ernment will be administered accord ing to the principle which your vote was Intended to express. "The sense of personal responsibility for the quality and trend of the munici pality one may happen to belong to should be counted the axis of all civic virtue. That is the best that simply indulges in discussions of civic account ability. Any man In this city who knows official crookedness and gives no sign of it to that extent is himself criminal and ought to be blacklisted. No Confidence In Politicians. "With special emphasis let me urge it upon you to pray to have your reform movement delivered from the influence and participation of professional poli ticians as you would pray to have it delivered from the devil. And I am not speaking Jestingly. I entered Into this work In no spirit of Jest three years ago, and certainly there is not anything of it In me now. We are dealing with matters here that concern the deepest Interests of yourselves and your chil dren and that not only embrace the weal of your city but extend out and forward and Intertwine themselves with the destiny of the nation. Every thing in all this business depends on the solidity and everlasting immobil ity and the unmarketable righteous ness of the men you tie to. Therefore, skip this sort of creature I have just designated as you would skip Satan. Never give them your confidence, never repose upon them any of the weight of a critical situation. Make none of them sharers with you in your movement. "If I were to mention the hardest lesson that I have had to learn during the past three years It would be that of the damnable dangerousness of n professional politician. You know what I mean by that term; we are In no need of bothering to give a definition; you have specimens of your own that you can lean your mind upon while this species of creature Is being dls sected. "The professional politician is the people's natural enemy. He takes a technical satisfaction In manipulating the popular Interest without having any sensitive appreciation of the sign ill cance for good or evil which such In. terest Involves. He Is like a man play. ing at chess: he enjoys handling the pieces without those pieces being rep. resentatlve to him of any other value than what attaches to them as gam Ing Implements. It Is not intended by any means to say that every man who officially concerns himself with these matters is animated by the spirit we our attitude regarding them. Certainly It is too late to think of abolishing them, and the most Inveterate and Indiscrimin ate play-goer and novel-reader will admit that reform Is needed. It would seem that there must be a safe middle ground where on thoughtful and right-minded people can come together to use their Influence for a pure spirit In the production of the novel and the drama so that the power exerted by fiction on the stage and In books shall not be destructive of high morals and subversive of good manners." In other words, If it be right for profess ing Christiana to lend their countenance to public, entertainments In mlnd-readlng, real or pretended, the evident purport of the Chautauquun's argument la that It would be equally proper for these person to commend that which la good In the purely dramatla art of the stage and of printed fiction, to the end that both the drama and the novel may be gradually improved In tenor, tone and morals. It aeema to me that this I a fairly good theme for reflection. As such I present tt, for what It tt worth. have Just specified. Sweeping vituper ation would be unwarranted and in ex cessively bad taste. Still, the prof es-' sional politician, understood In the sense . Just Indicated, is the people's enemy. His watchword is diplomacy rather than principle. He is made dizzy by traveling a straight line. He values a situation according to the number and variety of interesting combinations Into which it can be developed, and has no interest in municipal reform for the reason that the farther it is 'carried the more it will contract the area of his own versatility. Appeal to Chleago Clergymen. "And now, if I may be permitted to conclude with a brief appeal to the clergy of this city, I would like to say that civic conditions and duties are not a field into which the modern prophets of God have entered with an earnest ness and effect that comport with their wide opportunities and high endow ment. Responsibility need not be taken from the shoulders of the laity, but the relations proper to be occupied by the clergy in a crisis like yours hero and ours in New York are unparalleled and unique. A live preacher, If he only gets far enough away from his study and his Bible to know the world and. what Is going on In it, cannot watch the footsteps of the prophet statesmen who swung the destiny of the people of Israel 3,000 years ago without feellnfr that the inspiration still vouchsafed to the man of God Is never designed to be employed exclusively in fitting men to) get out of this world respectably and tu live beautifully In the world to come. "The Lord's prayer teaches us to pray, 'Thy will be done on earth.' For you that means, first of all, 'Thy will be done In Chicago.' And there Is no point from which such a keynote can be sounded so effectually as from your pulpits. It ds encouraging to know that the feeling is growing that Chris tian fidelity means patriotism Just as much as it does piety; means being a good citizen just es much as it does being a good church member; and that 'Nearer, My God, to Thee,' and 'Star Spangled Banner,' are both Christian hymns in the mouth of an all-round, Christian. "We are not saying that there ara not a great many matters In municipal administration upon which the pulpit Is never so eloquent as when it keeps Its mouth religiously shut, but those . are not the matters that have been en gaging us In New York or that need just now engage you here. Battle Not Political but a Moral One. "Our battle has not been a political but a moral one. The appeal has been steadily to the conscience. 'Expedi ency' we have known nothing about and cared nothing. Republicanism and Democracy we have had no inter est in, no more Interest than Republi cans and Democrats had in us till they found the movement was going to go and might have something In it that they could make capital of. The move ment with us began In a church, and the appeal all the way through has been to that which the church and the synagogue represent. The strength of the game throughout has been man's responsiveness to the authority of the ten commandments.. "One of my most thrilling experiences in the campaign of last autumn was the enthusiastic response with which an audience I was addressing greeted my reference to Moses and the Deca logue. Perhaps you would not think that of New York, but it was a symp tom of the municipal condition of mind. 'Thou shait not kill,' 'thou shalt not commit adultery,' 'thou shalt not steal' are what you might be disposed to call ethical 'chestnuts,' but they were what laid out Tammany. "Of course .that is matter for the pul pit. There is no event recorded In the old Bible story that for sanctity would rival the enterprise for regenerating Chicago, and no situation in which there was more occasion than here for the ringing out of the voice of some local Elijah, and the more of them the better. The whole question that con fronts you Just now is a question of righteousness versus iniquity, honesty versus knavery, purity versus filth; and If the clergy cannot come out en masse and take a direct hand in 'the duel, what under heaven is the use of having clergy, anyway? Moral Leadership Is Needed. "There is a moral leadership that It belongs to the clergy to exercise, and that It is wickedly delinquent 4f it falls to exercise. An appreciation and a vision of the eternal reaUtles that load the Instant makes out a very large part of the genius of statesmanship, and it is that appreciation precisely that dis tinguishes the preacher if so be be Is gifted with divine equipment. "In the odd days of Israel the states man was the prophet, and the prophet was the statesman; and within certain limits It even yet lies In the intention of nature and of God that the two offices should coalesce and that the man who knows the secrets of God should shape the moral purposes and Inspire the moral counsels and activi ties of his town and time. And I ven ture to say to my brethren in the Christian ministry that I speak with the assurance of definite knowledge when I say that there is no influence that will more immediately operate to bring back the world to the church than for the church and its modem prophets to come back to the world and fulfill to it their mission of gentle authority and moral governance. "This is a view of the case I under stand perfectly well that the politician will resent. No preacher ever puts the pressure of the authorlatlve office upon the local moral current of municipal events without hearing from one or an other of his parishioners that the pul pit would better confine itself to the spiritualities and .leave civic concerns to -the arbitrament of the expert, the district leader and the party 'boss.' I would see the entire center aisle of my church swept cleaw of the whole breed of them before I would surrender aught of the dignity that God puts upon the the pulpit or drop to a more Indeter minate key the tone of authority with which the preacher is divinely ordained to address himself to all that concerns the moral life, purposes and economy of Ws town and rime, knowing not only that this la the divine meaning of the pulpit, tout knowing besides that the re treat of the politicians through the center aisle will be more than mads good toy fresh access of worshippers In the gallery. , "I .have, perhaps, made too heavy a draft upon your time and attention. I have, of course, not treated the matter exhaustively. I have tried simply to put before you for your interest and possible guidance a few of those point that atamd before my mind as the more conspicuous outcome from my own, three years of effort along mumftelpal line. You oertalnily have no harder task before you here than we had in New York. Theaccompllehmentof It 1s not so much a matter of numbers as It la a matter of a few trusty souls combining with one another in singleness of pur- pose, untainted by considerations of preferment, committed in a sacrament of affectionate devotion to your city, and prepared to serve till ths tfma ripens and the vlatory comes," , A V