OREGON CITY COURIER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1902. $ $ $ $ Champ Cl&.rkV fj ' ffo f fj f tl f ; Special Washington Letter. SEVERAL years ago, when the trusts first began forming un der the favorable influence of a robber tariff, I proposed to put on the free list every article manufactured by a trust. Recently a good deal has been said on the subject, and the Republican party is badly di vided against itself on the subject Now comes Roosevelt advocating a constitutional amendment.; says noth ing else will do any good. If there be others who share that opinion, let them read this press dispatch: Peoria, 111. A stir something like tha't caused by the handwriting on the wall at Belshazzar's feast was created among the Republicans in attendance at the convene tion of the Republican State League of Clubs here by the appearance of an inno cent paragraph in the Peoria 'Journal, the afternoon Republican daily. It occupied the place of honor in the ''convention ex tra," first column, first page, and was in troduced by a glaring caption. Here it is: "Chicago. The combination of the great packing houses of the country which has been under consideration and in process of actual xormatioji for the last six months has been abandoned, at least for the present, says the Tribune. The. de cision not to contemplate the combination is due, in a large degree, to the attitude of the national administration toward trusts as outlined by President Roosevelt in his recent speeches and to the possi bility that in the event of a consolidation congress might remove the tariff on cat tle." Thus the beef packers give us con firmation of our belief that a good strong free list will clean out. the trusts. Why, the more fear of free trade in cattle prevents the 'consumma tion of a gigantic trust! This should effectually squelch all of Teddy's talk about constitutional amendments in the dim and distant future. A Demo cratic congress is all that 'is needed a body of legislator who -will cut the tariff off of glass, lumber, beef, every thing tbn is a necessity .of life and which is controlled by a trust. He Dotes on 'Em. Congressman Calderhead is not tear ing his clothes in his anxiety to find a remedy for the trusts in fact, he likes them. He wanls more trusts. Another thing he takes a jab at 'organized la bor. There are few unlommen in his district There are many .more Repub licans who would loudly indorse his remarks on the subject but ;for the fact that many of their constituents belong to labor unions. Among the number is Senator Pl.trt of Connecticut, who emasculated (he Chinese .exclusion bill when it was iu conference in order that it might not prove effective against Chinese labor coming into the country. Chinese cheap labor is tbe .club that is to be used to bring the labor unions to terms. But, going back to Congress man Calderhead, read what .he thinks of the trusts: Topeka, Kan. In a remarkable political speech W. A. Calderhead, Republican con gressman from the Fifth Kansas district, defended the trusts, which he .character ized as "godsends to the country," and denounced organized labor as "the great est menace the country ever had." His remarks nave caused much .com ment, as Mr. Calderhead is a prominent member of the committee on banks and banking In the lower house and has been regarded as conservative. He said in part: "Why all this fus about the trusts? Speaker Henderson has resigned because some Republicans insist on tariff revision as a panacea for the imaginary ffls which the trusts are supposed to represent. 'Why seek to remedy that which has been a blessing? I deny that trusts constitute an evil. I contend that they have been a godsend to the country. I have no sympathy or patience with this fuss about the trusts. I care not If it .does emanate largely within my party. I con eider It all political buncombe. Trusts aiie the handmaids of progress in every chan nel of business and every avenue of life. They have reduced the cost of living. They have furnished employment for la bor. They have promoted science and en couraged Invention. Instead of attempt ing to remedy or 'suppress' or 'contror or 'disturb' that which we know Is a blessing we should turn our attention to that which Is known to be an evil and take a hand at suppressing organized la bor, I regard organized labor as the greatest menace this country has today. It not only robs its members of their lib erty, but is a constant menace to the lives and property of the whole people." "A Solid Republican Column." It will be remembered by the readers bf these letters that in my speech at Bangor, Me., before the Democratic state convention June 17 I declared that the Republicans are badly split, up and that for making that truthful assertion the St Louis Globe-Democrat, Republican organ grinder, took me to task, denying my statement and de nouncing me as "a queer person," what ever that may mean. It boldly asserted that "the Republican column is solid." Subsequently 1 submitted certain bits of evidence which proved that I was right. Here Is another. The Washing ton Post, independent. In an edotorial headed "Implacable Hostility" says: The factional fight In the Republican party, which broke out with great viru lence during the first session of the Fifty seventh congress, is still on. The organs of the minority that caused the defeat of the administration's Cuban policy the policy of McKinlcy, of Roosevelt and of a majority of the Republicans In con gressare still firing their "barb pointed arrows of malice" at the administration's friends in congress. Although the elec tion of a Republican majority In the next house is by no means assured, the leading organ of that bitter faction prefers the election of Horace Boles to the return of Bpeaker Henderson by the voters of the Third Iowa district and regrets that there Is no Boies In the Eleventh Ohio district "to take the measurements of another representative of the same breed as Hen dersonthe sailed and spavined back, Grosvenor." f f i t, AAAAMAWWVSAAAAWSM rj I Free Trade the Only J Medicine Which the ' I Trusts Really Need and $ Fear Attorney Folk s of St. Louis v wwwwvwvwwvvwv That paper Is the New York Press, mouthpiece of the protection extremists; the men who, while posing as the only genuine protectionists, are doing far more toward condemning that doctrine and bringing it into disrepute than all of its open enemies have done or can do. In the case of the speaker the Press does not admit, in so many words, that it pre fers Boies, but its remarks are equiva lent to such an admission. The Press says that "It-would be an extremely diffi cult task for any Democrat to carry Hen derson's district, which is naturally Re publican by a tremendous plurality, but the character of ex-Governor Holes is so well known, he is so highly esteemed by the citizens of his state, and his record Is so generally good that there can be no doubt, though he should not succeed in carrying a- Republican stronghold with Democratic Issues, that he will cut the Henderson vote to pieces and thus give the American people an accurate meas urement of Henderson." That is a splendid sendoff for "Uncle" Horace and ought to 'be goofl for a num ber of votes if skillfully utilized by the Democratic managers. But as Hender son has a margin of about 9,000 votes the chances are that the Press and the fac tion for which it speaks will not be able to dislodge him. The Globe-Democrat should read that pungent editorial, digest It and then make the amende honorable to me; but it will never do it. Journalistic Mendacity. The Globe-Democrat lis caught 'lying about seven days in each week on an average. Here is a fair sample of its everyday lies lies that are nailed as fast as they are uttered. The follow ing is fioni the St. Louis Republic: Mr. Irwin L. Page, editor of the Bonne Terre Star, was in St. Louis yesterday. An editorial in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat of Friday was shown to him. The editorial said: "Mr. I. L. Page, editor of the Bonne Terre (Mo.) Star, has put himself forward to deny facts perfectly well known and to call the Globe-Democrat .a liar. Mr. Page's letter may not have been written by Sm Cook, but its publication .will in sure for the Bonne Terre sheet the con stitutional amendment advertising." Mr. Page said in comment on this at tack: "As for the advertising the iGlobe lies, as usual. The contract for the advertis ing has been made and not with my pa per. So, you see, I am free from bias on that account. According to the . evidence obtainable, the Olobe .deliberately faked the Farmington dispatch about Governor Stone's speech. The .Globe's regular Farmington correspondent, Mrs. T. D. Fisher, told me emphatically that she sent a report of the Sonne meeting and that the Globe used merely a line or two of it. That part of the ipublished dis patch purporting to give what Governor Stone said about the tec hnical .constitu tionality of the school ertillcaies was not sent by her, and she .-Kays 'that Gov ernor Btone said nothing of the sort Unless the Globe can prove that some body sent an extra dispatch ifrom Farm- ington it must confess that the report v.'us a fake concocted in the Globe of fice. Certainly the burden of .proof Is on the Globe. Mrs. Fisher has .been the Globe correspondent at Farmington for fifteen years. It is most improbable that the Globe ordered a separate report from anybody else. If it did. it was because the Globe knew that Mrs. Fisher would not send a political lie. Anyway you put It the Globe has concocted and published as news a deliberate political falsehood of facf. In view of the savage attack made by the Globe on the country editors gen erally I am certain that the Whole pro fession will thank tue Republic for ex posing the forgery of Democratic editors' signatures to an invented letter in a re cent issue of the Globe." Taking the Cork Under. Those Democratic newspaper corre spondents In Washington must be a guileless set who will allow themselves to be hoodwinked into sending ito their papers impossible tales to the .effect that the trusts will not contribute to the Republican campaign fund because Roosevelt has uttered a few beautiful platitudes on the subject of their .con trol. Republican talk of controlling the trusts cannot be very sincere when it comes from men who were elected with funds furnished by trust mag nates, who voted for the tariff law that brought the trusts into existence and who refuse to vote for a law to .control the trusts, who also refuse to enforce the present law against trusts and who are opposed to any alteration tf the tariff law that makes the trusts possible. Of course it takes a good deal of gall to enable them to put up a plaint that is so palpably false, but gall has always been the long suit of the Republican party. Rut it is strange that the correspond ents of Democratic newspapers will bite at the false bait in fact, they take the cork clear under and send the harrowing tale to their papers. The real truth is that the Republican campaign managers always have enough money to enable them to squan der it lavishly, while at the present time, as always, the Democratic cam paign committee In Washington has not enough money to more than pay postage. The editor of the Folton (Mo.) Ga zette hits the nail on the head in the following: Discerning people will take with a grain of salt all of the utterances of J. Pler pont Morgan that President Roosevelt must not be elected a second time be cause of his supposed unfriendliness to the trusts. Mr. Roosevelt may have erred, from the trust standpoint. In ever men tioning the trusts, but he has not yet given the country any suggestion of prac tical legislation, and his latest Idea con cerning the tariff that is, that Its regula tion should be put In the hands of a commission smacks so much of old world imperialism that it will not even receive respectful consideration. It Is apparent that Mr. Morgan's hostility Is a bit of stage play to deceive the voters, Just as was the canard that Chairman 2rigg tl the Democratic congressional Bommittee had been to New York looking for funds and found that the trusts and nj.jt,y bags of Wall street were willing to honor his drafts for any amount, while Chairman Bibcock rot the Republican committee had been turned down at every place he ap plied tor funds. Reasoning folks will not for a minute doubt that there (s an at tempt to Impose upon the credulity of the people. The very nature of the sto ries o far current Indicates that there is an agreement between the political pow ers that be and the money powers that be to take advantage of the unpopularity of the trusts to secure the return of a Republican congress. Fortunately, the .nature of the stories show on their face the Impossibility of truth. Some Truth From the Post. The Washington Tost has an able editorial page, and even its Republican leanings cannot stifle the clear truth that the Republican party is the party of political fraud and misrepresenta tion. Just read this editorial loader from the Tost printed under the head ing "Astonishing Misrepresentations:" Deliberate misstatement of Indisputable facts is never politic. While it may be excusable for a party organ to ignore or dodge such facts it never pays to misrep resent them. To state that which 4s the reverse of true as to the proceedings of a congress of so recent a date as the Fifty sixth is to display something more repre hensible than unwisdom. Nothing In the proceedings of that congress, with the single exception of its badly botched gold standard act, attracted wider attention or is more distinctly remembered than the farcical treatment it accorded the trust question. It was, as the Post has here tofore explained and as every live news paper in the United States understands, a farce-comedy in two acts under the man agement of the house judiciary commit tee. The first act ended with the defeat of an antitrust amendment by the solid vote of the Democrats. Had there been the ghost of a chance of effecting the pro posed change in the fundamental law of the nation no one suspects that it would have been introduced. Its presentation was a feature of a carefully prepared scheme to "put the Democrats In a hole." The object of the management was to manufacture capital for the then pending presidential campaign of 1900. The second act was the passage through the house by a .practically unanimous vote of a stringent antitrust bill amenda tory of or supplementary to the Sherman antitrust law. That bill met its pre destined death In the senate at the hands of the Republican majority in that body. The senate refused to consider it An op position senator on the eve of the ad journment of congress made a vigorous plea for an opportunity to vote on that measure, which had received the vote of every Republican member of the house, but his appeal .had :no effect. The bill is still on Tile hi a senate committee room. Such are the facts, and it would be a gross disparagement of the Intelligence of so enterprising a metropolitan .news paper as the New York Press to suppose it to be ignorant of them. Yet in the face of that record the Press declares that "amendments to the Sherman law attempted by the Republican party when it was discovered that the Sherman law was Inadequate to protect the interests and rights of the public against combina tions and agreements In restraint of trade and competition were defeated by the Democrats." That no room may be left for doubt as to the meaning of the Press it goes on to assert that "in the Fifty sixth congress the Republicans engaged to make such changes in the Sherman law as would make it fulfill the designs of its framers and enable its provisions to be applied to all acts In Testraint of trade without .evasion or escape. But the Democrats in .congress aligned themselves solidly against this Republican legislation and for the time being killed Jt." The Press can easily find "this Repub lican legislation" in the north end .of the capitol. It reached the place It was in tended to occupy. The Tress can also readily iind the practically solid Demo cratic vole of the ihouse recorded for it, and the Press should toe able to discover abundant evidence that no business of the Fifty-sixth congress was more care fully attended to than the accomplish ment of its firm purpose to let the trusts alone. Thus far the Fifty-seventh con gress has shown -equal disinclination to Injure the feelings of the managers of monopolistic combines. Fourteen Different Ways. The St. Louis rost-Dispatch says: Just how to pronounce the name of .our president Is a matter that puzzles a great many people. His name has given rise to a greater variety of $aronunciatkn than that of any statesman who has ever .oc cupied the front rank. The English people shied at "D'Israali" when they first saw it in print, and , Americans when they first saw "Thiers" were given pause. Bonaparte changed the spelling of his name, and there me some purists who excite amusement 1py still spelling it "Buonaparte" and pro nouncing li accordingly. But for a man of worldwide fame, as the president of the United States must necessarily be In these days, there has never before been a case like that oi "Roosevelt" to puzzle mankind. Even "Goethe" and "Pepys" were not so mys tifying. Elsewhere than in New York and in Holland and South Africa, where Dutch names are common, the greatest varia tions of the president's name are to be met with. People in England are at sea about It. On the continent almost every man has his own opinion on the subject. Here are a few of the vagaries: RUZY-VELD, ROSA-FELT, ROOZE-VELL, ' ROSEN-FELT, ROSE-VELT, ROOZE-VELT, ROSEN-VELL. RUZY-FELT, ROSEN-VELT, KOSSA-FELT, ROOSE-FELT, RUZY-VELT, RUZA-FELT, RUZE-FELT. The Man and the Hour. New York has had her Parkhursts and Jeromes, and they all turned out to be fanatics without executive capac ity or politicians merely playing on the desires of un overwrought populace, but St. Louis bus a man who Is one lu ten million In an emergency Joseph W. Folk, the hard hitting young prose cuting attorney. The way he Is ham mering the boodlors has put his name on erery lip. The future has much In store for young Mr. Folk. One of these days he will be hulled as Congressman Folk, Governor Folk or perhaps better than either of those. When Folk was nominated by the Democrats, St. Louis was the most corrupt city politically In America, with the possible excep tion of Philadelphia. The city had been In the hands of a powerfully in trenched Republican ring, and somo times the returns showed a Republican majority as high as 10,000. But Rolla Wells was elected mayor by the Dem ocrats lu a three cornered race. The strides made by St. Louis since that happy change was made will probably serve to make the city Democratic for a generation to come. The name of Folk has become as great a terror to 8t Louis eomintionlsts as was that of Tamerlane to the robber bands of Asia. RICH FIND OF FOSSILS. Three Tora Horse , Skeleton I . earthed by -.xiiloriii I'uri). Word was recently received by Pro fessor Osborne of the American Mu seum of Natural History that the par ty of sclentilic explorers which went west some mouths ago to search for relics of extinct species of horses had found fossils of a. herd of five small horses, says the New York Herald. !The animals belonged to the three toed variety, which hitherto has been known only from skulls and poor fragments of the frame. Professor Osborne is overjoyed at the success f the present searching party. The word ho received stated that ten fore legs, ten hind legs, several skulls f.nd cue skeleton almost intact, all in an excellent state of preservation, had been found. With the fragments, it is believed, it will be easily possible to restore at least two complete skeletous. This remarkable find far exceeds any ambition the exploring party had. At best the Members had expected to un earth but a few fragments, with the aid of which, by dint of much labor and study, it would be possible to give an idea of the frame of one of the three toed horses which once galloped on the plains of the west. Just where the find was made wits not stated. The searchers, have been working with the fund provided for that purpose by William C. Whitney. The fossils have been shipped to New York. "This find is an Important addition to the history end development of the horse iu Amerca." said Professor Os borne. "Special explorations for fossil horses began iu 11)01. Last season two complete si ages were obtained, but they were of an earlier period than those just found." FADS IN FALL JEWELRY. Detncliniilr Gold I cdmvear Button j I'or Rich 'li-n's le. The sole outsiaistMii;; novelty iu fash ionable fall a. ul winter jewelry is de tachable plain gulti underwear buttons. These are put c.p in sets of four and six and can lie haj in varying sizes and weights says the New York Times. A thoroughly servii-eaide set of six can be obtained (or X)n and this size gives evidence of being th.- most popular. The buttons v ilaiig or round on the outer xU'.v.; !s.l the reverse ends are molded to li! the curves of the body, 'ihe man f luxurious tastes and ample means -.wed no longer suf fer from the distress occasioned by the deadly animosity of laundresses to buttons of ail kinds. In the wit tell trade the demand Is all for thinness, flatness and plainness. Watches even of only moderate thick ness are being displaced as rapidly in the American market as were their ponderous predecessors driven out by the "mediums" of today. "Customers arp constantly asking for something new," said a prominent re tailer. "They are tired of watches, rings, pencils, dressing cases, etc., and a big fortune alraits the man who will bring out something really novel. There are all kinds of adaptations, but noth ing that is at once unique and artis tic." WOMEN AS. "IMMORTALS." French Paper SuKKext the Idea and AmL For Name. Feniinn, a Frenchwoman's review, has asked its readers to give the names of the forty Frenchwomen who would be "immortals" if there were such a thing as a French academy for wom en, says a special cable from Faris to the Philadelphia Press. Among the names sent lu were many well known to Americans, some of them being Sarah Bernhardt, Augusta Holmes,, Rejane, Gyp, Calve, Chaminade, Bre val and Lucie Felix-Faure. There were also the names of the wives of writers well known in the United States, like Alphonse Daudet, Edmond Rostand and Octave Feuillet A Rash to South Africa. A rush of emigrants from Australia te South Africa has set in and Is wor rying the authorities, says the Argo naut. Applicants for permits to emi grate have to prove themselves pos sessed of a minimum of $500. The re quirement, together with the expense of the voyage, is an obstacle to the poor In purse, and the result Is that ships from Australia are suffering with a plague of stowaways. The captain of the Fortunatus, bound from Mel bourne to the Cape, recently found that he had twenty of these unlicensed pas sengers on board, and so he took a drastic course. He dropped all the stowaways on the Australian coast 250 miles from Melbourne. Popularity of Irish Country Seat. To have a country seat in Ireland is a growing fad of rich Americans abroad, says the New York Press. After a round of London gayeties Mrs. Adair finds relaxation at Olenvalgh, her beautiful country home In the sub urbsif suburbs It may be called of Dublin. The beautiful old hall Is rare ly without house parties of alien Amer icans and a foreign lion or two. Glen valgh is looking forward to a visit from Lord Kitchener before he starts for India. , Winter Style In rnre. Green leather purses and wrist bags will be much used through the winter, Russian seal, polar seal, matte seal and oriental seal will also be worn, and there Is a new leather, graphite, that Is being made up smartly with French gray silver or aluminium Into chate laine bags and the like. Aluminium, by the way, Is a novelty as a trimming. In bag trimmings nothing excels In popularity Pompeilan gold, a dull Ro man gold with green tinge. NEV WHITE HOUSE CHINA. Service of l.IS.'U I'lccea Made In titu land to Com About If 10,0(10. The magnificent china service for the White House which is being designed at the Wedgwoed potteries at Stoke, England, will arrive some time in De cember, says a Washington special to the New York World. The design and pattern are of Mrs. Roosevelt's selec tion. The president and Mrs. Roose velt commissioned Charles M. Vau Heusen of Albany to visit nil the fa mous china manufacturers and place .the contract. This china will be the first service of English manufacture to be used at the White House. The famous $'io,(lU0 service purchased by Mrs. Hayes was from the Havilaud firm of France. The new service is plain white, with tt gold border, with the great seal of the United States In colors on each piece. The shapes are colonial. This is the lirst time that the arms of the United States have been used for the decoration of White House tableware. The design and shapes have been copy righted and may unit be duplicated ex cept by permission of the president. The set consists of l.iU'iti pieces. There are til'tcen dozen dinner plates, ten dozen breakfast plates, ten dozen tea plates, live dozen bread and butler plates, teu dozen soup plates, eight do.eu after dinner cups and saucers, ten dozen oyster plates, ten dozen lisli plates and twenty -four platters. Mrs. Roosevelt has been much an noyed by exaggerated statements con cerning the cost of this service. It is stated that the china will cost less than $10,000. ' Thirty thousand dollars was allowed for the purchase of china, sil ver and glassware for tlw repletion of the White House closets. The new rhisswiire will consist of 1-11 pieces of the liucst cut crystal Each piece will bear the great seal. Tiffany is now engaged lu designing about Tiiili pieces of colonial silver, which . .11 co,.:, :.'.e 'lie i .vsidci;; :il dinner service. The old silver was in much better condition than the china, and the new pieces consist mostly of oyster and oilier o.ld forks, which have recently beiouie requisite lor a well appointed table. Last winter Mrs. Roosevelt renewed the While House napery with the daintiest creations to lie found in the Philippines and Porto Rico. KIPLING'S NEW BOOK. Object of ills "JiiMt So Storle" For the Numery, The object of Mr. Kipling's new nursery book. "Just So Stories," for which he has drawn the droll and orig inal pictures as weN as written the tales they illustrate, seems to be to provide patient nurses and anxious young mothers with ready made an swers for (juestlous they cannot al ways evade, says the New York Times. Thus .they may now learn how the camel got his hump, how the leopard got his upols and various other Impor tant matters relating to the animal kingdom which have long been per plexing, though Mr. Oliver nerford and other philanthropists have tried to answer some of them satisfactorily. The new book is funny, even amaz ing, but It Is hardly one of Mr. Kip ling's master works, scarcely the stuff we might look fur If we chose to be exacting from a highly praised writer aged thirty-seven who published "rialn Tales From the Hills" In his twenty third year and "Seven .Seas" at the age of thirty-one. VENETIAN CANAL FOR PARIS American Engineer' Great Scheme to Beautify the City. Sidney Watking, the American engi neer,, has been expounding a gigantic project to the Paris municipal council, says a Paris cable dispatch to the Phil adelphia Press. It Is said to be backed by a powerful American syndicate, and he offers to take the old fortifications, now disused, and demolish the -walls at bis own expense. On the COO foot belt of ground thus provided all around the city he would excavate a grand canal communicat ing with the Seine river, build an auto mobile speedway, a horse and riding track and a bicycle path unrivaled anywhere. These would occupy only one side of the strip, and all Watkins' syndicate wants lu return for the tremendous cost is the privilege to build, sell and rent luxurious residences and hotels right nt the water's edge, making the other side like the Venice grand canal. It also wants a perpetual franchise for the gondola service. Jewelry Novelty For Women. The "pickup" Is the popular name of a new Idea In Jewelry. It Is an orna mental bucklo designed to hold up the skirt while walking. It may also be worn In front, with a ribbon, or to keep the bodice, the belt and the skirt In proper relations at the back. An October Sonic. Crackln' of the teamsters Whip 'long the country roads; Nelghln' of the hones as they draw the heavy loads; A shiver In the woodlan's, where the leaves the irrcen have lost, An' a whUper on the hilltop of the com- in' of the front 1 Light the cabin fires; Hummer iiweet has fled; Coldenrod is boomln' Neur the holly berries red. Up from many a cabin now the blue smoke curls, An' the boy have brought the wanoni for a brisk ride with the girls. Glad eounds In all the woodlan's; faint echoes from the town. An' the barkln' of the squirrel an the hlck'ry nut full down. 8o light the cabin fires, For Bummer aweet ha n1 An' the noldenrod Is bloomln' Near the holly berries red Atlanta Constitutor, TOYS FOR THE HOLIDAYS Some Novelties of the Christ mas Season's Trade. ATHLETIC GAMES IN BIG DEMAKD Fully Equipped Gymnasium, on a Small Scale, Can lie Bought For the Children Large Output of Pins pong; Acceorle Imitation B11- Hard For Youthful Player. Although It wants some time of Santa Claus season, Christmas toys are already on the market, says the New York Times. All summer long the creators of children's novelties have been at work, and the retailer Is laying Iu his stock. The keynote this year is to be sensibleness in the matter of toy selection. Santa Claus has been at work on a variety of things Intended to promote the health of the child as well as to amuse him; hence athletic games are In the majority. You will be able to buy a complete gymnasium on a small scale for the use of the child this year, including everything that goes to make up the paraphernalia of muscle development. There are patent reversible wall sets, the weights of which are dumbbells and may be detached and used sepa rately. There are punching bags that may be used either on a bracket or on a floor and ceiling rope. There are parallel bars that may be converted Into vaulting horses. There Is even a punching bag and football combina tion. There are geographical puzzles which take In our new :vw":t possessions, teaching die name-- of r:ticn and towns therein. There are niiij.s which, when placed tojvcihi r. lorui themselves into niini.'iti:n o Manila. Porio itico and Cuba, but t',:ey are imt affairs which are easily pieced together, so that the child will m-od in have at least a smat tering ot the tup.i raplij of these coun tries be Lie ;e will be able to cotlr Stl'tlel li:e iu:t t!:' li'lii'. Most of l lie h'a.iliig novelties this year are Intended to furnish amuse ment for the elders as well as the youngsters. So, while a child will un doubtedly be fascinated with some of the games planned on the order of bil liards and p ( ".. - i also will be the older members of i ; lani.ly. for some skill is required t .laulpiilate many of the games. One 'if these games has even attained to the dignity of composition balls and chalked cues for shooting them into the pockets at the corners of the table. The game Is different from that which Is played in public halls, however. The bulls are placed differ ently on the table, and the counting is not the same. Gaines generally are In demand, and, Judging by the fact that one firm alone has placed orders for 100,000 sets of, piugpong, or table tennis, that game is: to be the popular Indoor Innovation this winter. Another dealer whose or ders are nearly as large as those of the dealer Just mentioned says that there has been no falling off In the popu larity of the game and that it will be in even greater vogue this winter than It was last year. The classic building block Is to be sold In even greater variety than ever before, and there are specimens of stone, cement, wood and other con struction, kites are also to be award ed the good little boy not the old fash ioned affairs that have to be adjusted with long tails, but great box kites, like those used by the United Statea weather bureau, to which tho young ster may attach Iieyden jars and do. some experimenting on his own ac count. Malay kites are also on sale, some of them seven feet high, but so easily handled that a boy under ten may fly them from the housetop with out danger of being pulled from his perch. For the little girls there are dolls the mothering Instinct Is always asser tiverag dolls that will not break. Tho chief novelty In this line Includes two. dolls In one. It Is planned to enable the child to practice a little magic, ta the great surprise of her friends. For Instance, she shows them a doll dressed In blue. Placing It behind her back, she brings forth Instantly a black pick aninny dressed In red.' In either case she has apparently only one doll. How does she" manage It? Under the skirts of the white doll, which has no legs, there are the head and bust of the pickaninny doll. By catching hold of the head of this black doll the skirts Immediately fall down over the white doll's head, the arms hanging down beyond the covered head and making the necessary feet. Freak toys aro not to be In vogue this winter. Those that are sold are In the hands of the fakirs and will be obtainable only on the sidewalks. The leading novelty In this line Is a rubber case, which, when Inflated, looks like a monstrous Frankfurter sausage and which, when allowed to leave the hand, files swiftly up into the air, pursuing a gyrating course; It loses air as It files, however, and soon cosies down again near where It was set off. A curious feature of the sale of this toy In that the fakir hav ing It In charge employs a Klstants to cliase (lie leea loons and hfl i:-; item !:: The crowd that gal l ei's a chape the t hit!.- r n:i ! u nild there Is coii .i iim m! . ; Of excitement in the .!;;:"" borhood if the halioi n sr . orps 11 1 1 : 1 i I f ns- bal- low-s f( as -miit. ": li lie,, I Quite ii 1 i. "J i :.. The 2r() p'ine'l stiioeiit in, in Iowa Who Is being bilked i.f as a probable center for Harvard's football eleven looks In the newspaper pictures of Inai to be broad enough, says the Iiostoti Transcript, to play center and both ends at the same time.