THE 3IORNING OREGOZSTAJf, TUESDAY, JUL.Y 24, 1906. 8 'Entered at the Poelornn at Portland. Or as BeconA-Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. E7" INVARIABLE IN AUVAKCE. . tS (By Mall or Express.) DAILY. SUNDAvT INCLUDED. Twelve monlhi $8.00 Six month! . - Three montiu .............. 2-5 One month - Delivered by carrier, per year.......... .00 Delivered by carrier, per month...... .75 Less time, per week. . -20 Sunday, one year ...... x.50 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday)... 1.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year.. S.50 HOW TO REMIT Bend postoftlee money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S. C. Err k with Special Agency- New Turk, room 43-&0, Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 510-S12 Tribune building. KEPT ON BALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex, Postoffics Kews Co.. 178 Dearborn street. St. l'aul. Minn- N. St. Marie. Commercial Station. Denver Hamilton A Kendrtck. 906-812 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. 121 Fifteenth street; L Welnstein. Ooldfield, Ner. Frank Sandatrom. Kansas City. Mo-Hlcksecker Cigar Co.. Klnth and Walcut. Minneapolis M. J. Kavanaugh. 50- South Third. Cleveland, O. Jamea'Pusbaw, 307 Superior street. New York City L. Jones Co., Asior House. Oakland, Cal. W. H. Johnston, Four teenth and Franklin streets; N. Wheatley. Ogden D. L. Boyle. Omaha Barkalow Bros., 1612 Farnam: Mageath Stationery Co., 130S Farnam; 248 South Fourteenth. hucramentu, Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 439 K street. Salt Lake Salt Lake News Co.. 7T West Second; street South; Miss L. Levin, 24 Church" street. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager seven street wagons; Berl News Co.. 82 South Broadway. Sma Diego B. E.- Amos X'asadena, Cal. Berl News Co. San i'rancisco Foster A Orear. Ferry News stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand. Washington, D. C. Ebuitt House. Penn: Sylvanla avenue. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, JULY 14. 1906. I REVOLUTION IK RUSSIA. In evoking the .Douma from the chaos of Russian life, the Czar raised a spirit more potent than himself. To the na tion it seemed the harbinger of hope, to the terrified despot an angel of doom. Nicholas tried at first to belittle the National Parliament; by treating It with contempt. The messengers who conveyed to the palace the reply of the Douma to his ppening speech he treated with studied ignominy. His ministers made It the burden of all their speeches to reiterate to the representatives of the people the story of their dependence on the Czar's will and their utter pow er! essness to initiate reforms. The representatives believed that their authority came from the nation which had chosen them, and that its only limit was the nation's welfare. They acted from the first day of their meeting upon the theory that the peo ple are the source of all political power and proceeded to debate every ques tion that arose, without regard to the restrictions which- Nicholas had im posed. Russia saw in its representa tive assembly a power higher than the monarch. It was the organ of the na tion's will. It voiced the precept of the new world that the people are their own masters, to work out their own destiny. The struggle between despot ism and democracy in the capital has spread over the whole country. No where in Europe, for many centuries, has civil society come so near to utter disorganization as it has in Russia to day. But matters there must be worse before they can be better. There seems no hope for that unhappy land except to begin at the foundation and build its political institutions anew. Had Nicholas been a man of courage arid information, either he would never have called a National Assembly, or else, after calling it, he would have been prepared for the consequences. As a matter of fact, he called it because tie was frightened, and he has tried at every step to neutralize its work by trickery. Scarcely a straightforward word has passed from him t the Douma. In all his dealing with it not one act has been reported that an hon orable man would not be ashamed of. His only contributions to the enormous work of civilizing Russia and righting Its hideous wrongs have been a mass of childish twaddle about his "divine rights" and a number xf foolish at tempts to create dissension among the representatives - of the people. To be perfectly just, we must nof forget his attempts to punish the contumacy of the Jewish members of the Douma by ordering his soldiers to murder their relatives at home. Discovering Anally that the Parlia ment of a nation with evils like Rus sia's could neither be a toy nor a sham, Nicholas has dissolved the Douma in the hope that the army will support him in a return to that -tyranny which he and his relations remember with fond regret. It is quite likely that he will take revenge on the representa tives, who have opposed him actively, by scourging them to death In prison. If he acts up to his reputation he will burn their dwellings, have their women outraged and their children murdered. Such is the way divine right, or vested right, or special privilege, how ever it may be named, defends itself and justifies its existence. Everywhere end always Its methods are the same, though it sometimes lacks the power to carry them out as It would. There Is not a holder of special privilege in the United States who does not feel and act. In his degree, exactly like Nicholas toward the people whom he despises ' and robs. Whether the Douma will stay dis solved is another question. Many of he members hae fled to Finland, where liberty is not yet quite dead, but this may have been largely from fear of military terrorism. On the other hand, they may succeed in a second at tempt to reorganize and defy the Czar. Should they do so and issue commands to Russia fjom some retreat in Finland, perhaps the nation would obey them rather than Nicholas. The army will have work in St. Petersburg and other home cities without invading Finland, If the general strike is declared. Thus Russia may have two governments, one backed by the people, the other by the army, though part of the army would probably side with the Douma. Which of these governments-would be the rightful one? Nicholas, with his army and his loyal band of relations and grafters, or the representatives of the people? Which would foreign na- Ions recognize? Germany and Austria, from sympathy and interest, would side with Nicholas. The triumph of free dom In Russia would deprive these courts of their fat plunder lit Poland for one thing, while neither William nor Joseph Is especially fond of democ racy; nor would a free republic across the border be a good example to their own subjects. Apart from its money klngsl France sympathizes -with the people rather than the aristocracy. That nation would be pleased to eee Eastern Europe erected Into a gTeat republic from which a heartier concord with its. own Institutions might toe expected than from the Czar, who is dangerously in fluenced by the Kaiser at critical mo ments. Bat France is a heavy creditor of Russia, and, if reTolution inclines toward repudiation of debts, will not countenance it. As to England, the natural feeling of the people, united with the strong radical element in Par liament, would probably make it the first European nation to recognize a revolutionary government in Russia. PORTLAND'S REAL "TRAITORS." The Oregonian willingly admits that, together with the people of Portland, it did not see until late through the seem ing goodness or the "respected" crowd of first-family' franchise fllchers, who, headed by A. L. Mills and J. N. Teal and other sharpers, framed the city charter to conform with their franchise interests, secured for nothing through political jobbery, additional valuable street-car privileges at the expense of the public and finally sold them for a clean profit of $4,000,000; and who now, through their newspaper organ, charge The Oregonian with "treachery" to the people for not having perceived this infamy when it whs done and held its doers up to the community for what they are now seen to be. In their opinion, the charter is a good instrument, made by. best men, and perfect throughout. It is not to be ex pected that anybody can successfully dispute with them in this. They have been Portland's "best" always, and all their works have been perfect at least for their own interests and they were never "caught with the goods" until recently. Now, after having been ac counted excellent and high-minded men so long a time without the public's "catching on," and having "run" poli tics by means of money bags and thumbscrew pressure, their conscience may feel the swash of the reform wave that is cleaning the land of rapacity and greed euch as theirs. It has occurred! to them, therefore, that The Oregonian was a "traitor" to the public when it trusted their sup posed honesty and allowed them to make the charter as they did, and se cure by stealth car franchises which they sold for millions of dollars. In the present awakening of the doers of this franchise infamy The Oregonian should have exposed the wickedness of -Mills, Teal, Ladd, Lewis, Swigert, Campbell and other "respected" men, and should not have spoken a good word for their charter nor their franchises, nor should The Oregonian's editor, who was a member of their charter -board, but took no part in the drafting of the in strument, have accepted their, word that it was good and perfect. . These evidences of reformed con science, on the part of Mills, Teal and other rich contrivers should be grate fully received by the people who have been rudely shocked by their du plicity and Trill have to pay the price of it for years to come. The "organ," which they own, protest ed at the time, against what its booses its owners, the charter-makers and the franchise-mongers were doing; yet what they did was "all right" and -high ly creditable; it portended a great deal for the upbuilding of the city, said the organ meaning, of course, the upbuild ing of plutocratic fortunes, wjiich have grown accustomed to believing them selves the only things in. Portland worth while and the sale of the use of the public streets toy rich schemers was a highly creditable achievement. . The hypocrisy of the franchise-grab bing gang in Portland is coming to be well understood, now that all its vil lainies have been reviewed consecutive ly. It is a gain for morals, public and plutocratic, and for Individual de cency, that the doers of this ignominy should perceive "treachery" somewhere, but If they can draw nearer the fold of Portland's Teally decent citizens, they may behold the beam in their own eye. THE PAN-AMERICAN CONFERENCE. As a means for cementing interna tional friendships and promoting the commercial, political and social inter ests of practically the entire Western world, the Pan-American Conference, now in session at Rio de Janeiro, is one of the most important organizations ever effected. The United States is represented at this conference by Sec retary Root, whose unquestioned diplo macy of course will admit of the best possible showing on the part of the United States. The session which be gan in Rio de Janeiro last Saturday is the third so far held, the first assem bling' In Washington in 1889 and -the second in the City of Mexico In 1901. That the present one is vastly more im portant for the United States than any of the others is easily understood, when we consider the steadily growing Im portance of this country as a trade fac tor in the Latin-American countries. With the British and Germans firmly intrenched in so many of the South and Central American republics, American traders have had to overcome no small prejudice, worked up toy trade rivals. The building of the Panama Canal and the Pan-American Railroad, and even the Tehuantepec Railroad, will contribute to the growing prestige of the United States in those countries ly ing to the south. The Tehuantepec road is, of course, financed by British capital, but it is, to all intents and purposes, an American transportation utility, for its business will be confined largely to handling American goods, en route to and from the Atlantic and Pa cific Coaste and for distribution north and south of the Isthmus of Tehuante pec. Our trade with those Southern coun tries will grow with the aid of this new transportation line, but it will grow more rapidly when the Panama Canal is completed. The Pan-American Con ference, however, does not limit its de1 liberations to business matters, . al though its favorable action on recip rocal trade relations at the initial meet ing gave American trade an Impetus which, had it been properly taken ad vantage of, would have given Ameri cans a much firmer foothold than they now 'enjoy In Pan-American trade Recognizing that the railroad Is the greatest civilizing influence In modern industrial life, the first conference went on record as favoring and urging the construction of a Pan-American rail road. It is not yet a reality, but the bands of steel are slowly creeping to gether from the north and from the south, with intervening sections which, in the not far distant future, will be come parts of one grand trunk line running the entire length of the West ern world. . ' Prior to the meeting of the first Pan American Conference the peppery little nations, as well as the big ones, were in an almost constant state of turmoil over their territorial possessions and political ambitions. ' That conference placed a ban on the acquisition of ter ritory by conquest and insisted on the settlement of such disputes by arbitra tion. Jt is a notable tribute to the work of the conference that the period of peace since that meeting has been longer than ever before in the history of the countries concerned. One of the most Important matters to come before the conference at Rio de Janeiro is the Indorsement of the policy that public debts shall .not be collected by force. This matter was approved at the City of Mexico conference, but re affirmation is now desired in rjrder that it may have the greatest possible effect at the great peace tribunal at The Hague. There are a large number of other topics for discussion, such as con sular reforms, treaties, patents, copy-rights,- etc. With the interests of the United States in the hands of Secretary Root, much good, both commercially and politically. Is assured. FROM AFFLUBNCB TO WANT. A pathetic story, and yet one too often rehearsed, is that of Fredrich No dine and wife, of Union County the one 80 years old and blind, the other 70j and working in me oeet neias tor mo support of the two, for the bare pit tance that suffices to keep life afoot. ' An energetic young man was Fred- rich Nodine and a prosperous man In middle life kind, generous and help ful to others and a faithful helpmeet was his wife. The "hard times" of '93- 94 found him with plenty and, as he thought, to spare. With generous pur pose he came to the assistance of friends and neighbors, lending his name to notes to save them from finan cial ruin, but with the result that he went down with them into bankruptcy. The outcome is told in the story lately printed, wherein he is depicted as sit ting stone blind In his lowly home while bis wife toils for his bread and hers at work unsuited to her age and sex. There is a possibility, it is said, that they "may recover, through litigation. now in progress, enough of their once ample fortune to assure them food and shelter during the brief span of life yet remaining to them. This sad story is npt without its les son in prudence. A certain amount of selfishness Is necessary to carry even a' thrifty, capable, accumulative man through life to ' a serene old age, the shadows of which are unhaunted by the ghost of want. The eecurity debt, as sumed with generous intent, and in a purely unselfish spirit, has been the rock upon which many a fortune has been wrecked. Ingratitude is not the unfailing accompaniment of disaster of this kind. The man to whose note his friend lent his name is often sincerely smitten with sorrow at the loss entailed by his inability to make payment, but this does not prevent the disaster, nor does it mitigate" theeinjustlce, the smart of which every one who has had to pay a security debt has felt. We can only hope that this old plainsman, whose generosity has cost him so dearly, will yet, by the grace of the Supreme Court of the state, or through the principle of abstract jus tice for which it stands, be restored to enough of his property to insure free dom from, want for himself and wife during the few remaining years of their life allotment. It may be hoped also that the story of their descent from wealth to poverty will be beneficial, as counselling prudence in assuming a debt for which value has never been received and which may easily become a weight that will drag a generous man down without "saving the friend for whom the risk was generously but un wisely taken. - - GAINING. A REPUTATION FOR FRUIT. The assertion, which comes from an authoritative source, that Oregon leads all other states In the packing and handling of fruit, will surprise many people who do not expect a state to excel in an enterprise in which it is comparatively new, Tet perhaps the fact that Oregon is young in the fruit packing industry is one explanation for its superiority. Older states adopted certain packing methods years ago and have kept along in old ruts. Oregon, in order to put its fruit upon the- market in competition with the product of states that" had already established a regular trade, was compelled to pack fruit in better and more attractive shape, so that it would keep while be ing shipped and win favor by its ap pearance when displayed for the In spection of Jconsumers. Hood River and Rogue River apple-growers have been packing their apples in a manner that wins commendation in the largest markets in the world. Small fruits could not be better packed for shipment or for display in the market than they are here in Oregon. Prunes, which are a standing joke all over the East, have a new character when packed In ten pound boxes, carefully faced and partly covered with a border of lace paper. The prunes that were formerly bought In bulk from bags were exactly the same as the prunes packed in boxes, except that the latter are cleaned by a steaming process and have a brighter appearance. , The packing of the fruit has a double value to the state, for it not only gives it a better standing in the opinion of consumers, but it brings a price enough higher to pay the Oregon laborer's wages In packing. While there will al ways be a market for prunes or apples, or other fruit carelessly packed, at lower prices, -the fruit that gains a state or a community a desirable repu tation Is that which has been put up in an attractive manner and with a name or trademark that will make it remem bered. TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES OUT GROWN. The accident which placed the steam er Tv J. Potter out of commission for practically the entire period when its owners are accustomed to reap a golden harvest out of the beach travel offers a good illustration of peculiar transportation methods in the North west. The Potter was built about sev enteen years ago, its machinery and cabins having been taken from the old Wide West, which had outlived useful ness. At that time the population of Portland was about one-half that of the present day, and travel to the beaches was probably less than one- third as great ae it is now. The Potter was crowded during the beach season even in the old days, but while the pop ulation of Portland has doubled and the beach travel has trebled, there have been no Increased facilities to meet the demands of North Beach travel. From year to year . the report has gone forth that the Ilwaco road would be extended up to a point where the ordinary sternwheeler could run in safety, thus affording proper facilities in case the one lone boat, built for the travel, should meet with a mishap, but the road has never been built. . There were ten cottages on the Ne canlcum peninsula at South Beach when the Potter began running to Il waco. Today there are more than 250 cottages and half a dozen hotels and lodging-houses there, while no such in crease has been noted at North Beach, where the people were dependent on one boat. It is much the same in other lines of transportation in the Pacific Northwest. Aside from - the Ilwaco road, the State of Washington is as weir provided with transportation facil ities as is the South. Beach, in Oregon. This country is too rich in resources and is developing traffic too rapidly to be held down much longer to a one railroad or one-steamboat basis. It is not alone the river and the rail lines that exhibit indifference to prepara tions for the future. The traffic be tween Portland and San Francisco by water is more than five times as great as it was when the steamers Columbia, Elder and Oregon were plying on the route, but today the sole representative of that fleet which flew the house flag of the O. R. & N. is an ancient tramp, too old and expensive for any use. The Oregon has been . sold, the Elder wrecked, and the Columbia disabled, and If any effort has been made to re place them it has been concealed from the public. But this system of busi ness cannot go on forever. The coun try is too rich in possibilities-and there is too much idle capital. - Not all Portlanders. care- to spend their Summer season on the South Beach. Some "of them would even like to divide their time with the North Beach, and eventually the numbers of this class will be sufficient to - induce some one to provide facilities in keep ing with the onward march of progress. In 1850 the steamer Columbia, with its three-day Strips between Oregon City and Astoria, was able to handle all of the business. In 1872 th Emma Hay- ward handled all of the seaside busi ness and had room to spare. Neither of those craft, however, would fill the bill ' today, and the one lone steamer Potter was unable to do it when the inevitable emergency developed and ex posed its weakness. Russell Sage is dead and it is esti mated that he has left a fortune of 100,000,000. The reason he left it, of course, was his inability to take it with him. He lived out his long life doing few deeds for the betterment of his fel-low-sinan. All around him, in the great est and wickedest city on earth, chi dren were dying every hour in the year for want of the bare necessaries of life. The Income from a fortune of $100,000, 000, Judiciously expended, would have brought light and comfort and even life Itself to the perishing innocents. But there was nothing on the tape of the Wall-street ticker that told Uncle Rus sell that any money could be made in saving the lives of children. Money was the only idol before which he wor shiped, but he eventually found its lim itations. His transportation on old Charon's ferry is no better than that of the poorest Bowery outcast, who per ished for want of some of the things which Russell Sage had, but would not give up. The world is hardly better for Russell Sage's having lived in it. Per haps it is better for his leaving it. A. B. Hammond, who is in Portland again on annual inspection of his As toria and Yaquina railroads, will eee more evidences of progress here than ever before due to the increasinginde- penoence oi tne country iroin uie -plu tocratic influences which have ruled commercial enterprises and which ad mitted him with .poor grace to this in vestment field.- Mr. Hammond broke their jetty rock trust on the Columbia River three years ago, and that marked the beginning of new things In this country, and the rise of new blood and the growth of new opportunities, un throttled by the old regime. Glad to see you, Mr. Hammond; come again. Congressman "Yakima" Jones, of the State of Washington, says he will not move to Spokane, even for the sake of getting in position for the 'United States Senatorship. perhaps the Hon. Wesley L. is fearful lest the voters mis take him for a former Congressman Jones, of Spokane, who gained a fleet ing fame with a wheat chart, with which he theoretically proved that wheat and sliver, to quote the Minne sota statesman, were 'both worth a dollar a bushel." It turns out that Mayor Lane's Civil Service Commission did "monkey" with the charter for appointment of "that Philippine Islander," Bruin, as captain of police. If Bruin had been a battle scarred Democratic patriot instead of a strajiger like Joe Malley, for example. or Lamont, or Armitage, or Ryan, or Judge Foley, or General Killfeather, or Pat Powers the uncivil service of the commission might be easier excused. As the first step in needed reform, there has been evolved the non-breakable, non-combustible passenger car, made of steel. Now for the flawless axle, the non-adjustable switch, the sleepless telegraph operator, the non-mistake-making train dispatcher, the non-breakable rail, the non-explodable boiler, the non-washable embankment and the non-collapsible bridge. Mean time, renew your accident policy. . It is curious to read the latest criti cism of China. The empire of Tsi An wants to go ahead too fast, we af e told. Five years ago China was still a case of arrested development- Changes come rapidly in the Orient since Japan set the example. The staid and loyal Democracy surely is being vindicated. There's Word put out of the Sheriff's office and here's Bruin ousted from captain of police. There may toe time yet for Mayor Lane to prove himself a true Democrat- Wide demand for dwellings by fami lies whom the great disaster drove away is a cheering sign for theTehabll itation of San Franciscor-ft city sought by multitudes, engaged in varied ac tivities, oannot long be held back. Russell Sage laid the foundations of his wealth In tb.e liquor traffic. Port land has seen a great estate grow from the same beginnings and understands fully how it can be done. If Secretary Hitchcock, - as charged by his enemies, is in his dotage, what would have happened to land thieves had he been in full possession of nor mal mental faculties? All Oregon will agree with Mr. Yagd Joglou, wholesale fruit dealer, of Vladi vostok, that the finest apples in the world are grown in this state. Tf the land trials should be- delayed long enough the defendants some day might Join Hitchcock's dotage class. A FEW HOT WEATHER RECORDS. We Are Now Living; In Comparative ly Cool Period. Eighty degrees in the shade is about as high a temperature as human nature can patiently endure for an extended per riod. Weather can be so much hotter. however, that 80 degrees would seem blissfully cool. Whenever an unusually hot season is unon us. sweltering humanity talks about the changes in climate, and shakes its head in a foreboding fashion. But let no one feel that he has seen the worst. There have been many super latively hot waves in different parts of the globe and in different centuries. For tunately, they do not come often. New York: Ronated In 1773. In times long gone by people grumbled at and enjoyed heat waves much the same way as we do. That they had some scorching seasons a dip Into the records amply testifies. For example, in 1809, so fearfully hot was it in Spain that the streets of Mad rid and other cities were deserted, while laborers expired in the fields, and the vines were scorched and spoiled. The Summer of 1T72 was a dreadful one In New York, and it is related that the principal thoroughfares resembled battle fields In miniature; people were strucs. down by the score, no fewer ,than 155 cases of sunstrqke occurring on July 4, of whom nearly one-half died. The follow ing year in FrarrSe the thermometer rose to 118 degrrees Fahrenheit France also experienced two periods of great heat in 1705 and 1718. In the former year it was described as being "equal to that of a glass furnace. Meat couia De prepared for the table merely by exposing it to the rays of the sun, and between noon and 4 in the afternoon It was cer tain death to venture out of doors. In the latter year it was so hot that many shops had to close, and the theaters did not open for three months, while not a drop of rain fell during double that pe riod. Rhine Dried Up In 113Z. Going- back many centuries, one comes across years when great heat was expe rienced. In 1132 the Rhine dried up, as It did partially, together with the Danube, In 1303; and that it Vas more than warm in the Summer of 1152 is indicated by the statement that during that season eggs were cooked merely by being placed In the sand. That man can exist under great neat has often been shown, although no one has probably demonstrated it more clear ly than did a Spaniard June 26, 1828. In Paris an oven was heated to over 290 de grees Fahrenheit, and the man entered this inferno, where he remained for five minutes. On emerging, his pulse was found to be beating 200 times in 60 sec onds, but a few minutes later he seemed none the worse for his experiment- This was an extreme case, for as-heat of 160 to 180 degrees Fahrenheit would atinear to be the utmost that man can remain in for any length of time. In this respect the men-who worked in the Corn- stock silver mines ln Nevada the hottest mines In the world are to be pitied. The shafts and galleries of the'se mines are over 250 miles in length, are more than SOOO feet deep, and at the 2700-foot level the temperature of the water Is 153 de grees, and the air 126 degrees. In an other shaft the temperature rises to 170 degrees, and it is only possible for men to work in it for 10 or 15 minutes at a stretch. Heat In Persian ttuir. There are other parts of the world, too. where the heat- even in the open air, is terrible. For instance, on the deck of a Persian Gulf steamer 120 degrees Fahren heit has been recorded in the morning, while on shore at Muscat a black bulb solar thermometer in the sun has regis tered 187 degrees. Great Britain has once or twice ap proached this high record. The heat of the Summer of 1826 was so great that In some localities wheat and barley were pulled up by hand, being too short in the stalk to cut in the usual manner. The pastures were so burned that cattle had to be fed oft sprouts of gorse, streams dried up, and It was years later before many of them got their fish again. In 1851 a disastrous heat wave was ex perience In different parts of Europe. In Hyde Park the shade reading varied from 90 to 94 degrees; In Paris during a review scores of soldiers fell victims to sun stroke, while at Aldershot men dropped dead at drill. Two years later New York spent a week in dreadful heat; the -city seemed as if it were on fire, 214 people being killed by sunstroke. Another great heat experience fell to the lot of the, United States in July, 1876. especially in the Middle and Southern States. In Washington, D. C, the heat was so intense that a prominent official declared the car rails became so expanded by the action of the sun as to rise up In curved lines, drawing the bolts. In 1881 again we stewed in an atmosphere of 106 degrees in the shade, and in the same year 101 degrees was reached in England. London Day Beats Record. The day really entitled to the proud dis tinction of being the hottest of the nine teenth century, in London, was July 28. 1885, when 162 degrees Fahrenheit was registered in the open air. July 7. 1886. 155 degrees Fahrenheit was recorded, the previous day's reading having been 151.5; the 4th of the same month in the follow ing year it was 151.7, and on August 14, 1876, 147 degrees was registered. The hottest place in the United States is in Arizona- In the town of Yuma, which ifs at the junction of the Gila and Colorado Rivers, in the southwestern por tion of the state, the temperature record ed as normal for July is 118 degrees not high, perhaps, when compared to the phe nomenal jumps which the mercary has taken, but certainly high when one reflects on its being the normal every-day weather. Force of Solar Heat. Sir Robert Ball, the famous astronomer, has stated that if the earth were likened to a grain of mustard-seed, the sun by the same cdmparison wo,nld be as large as a cocoanut, while the heating power of a single square foot of its surface would be sufficient, if placed under the boilers of an Atlantic liner to enable her to break the record In crossing the "herring pond." If the sun's heat were maintained by earthly means, in doing so all the coal in existence would be consumed in a tenth part of a second. Another famous astronomer in his day, the late Richard Anthony Proctor, ex plained the total heat of the sun in an other way. According to him, it was equal to that which would result from burning something like twelve billion tons of coal per second, and its heat would be strong enough to melt, not far short of three trillion tons of ice in an- hour. But of this almost unthinkable force of heat the earth receives but a small proportion only about one in two thousand millions of solar rays. Keeping a Weather Eye on Mr. Bryan. Boston Transcript. The London Morning Post in a re cent issue contains this impressive an nouncement: "Mr. Jennings Bryan, the Democratic candidate for the United States Presidency, arrived in London yesterday afternoon." Who can here after speak of London papers as slow on the news? Stokes' Type of Socialism Is Old, Boston Herald. J. G. Phelps Stokes, the millionaire, who has decided to become a Socialist, will not carry his conversion so far as to make an actual division of his wealth. Besides, he says he has only enough to support himself and those dependent upon him. This sounds familiar. FUN IN BUTTERMILK BOOM. Politicians' Object Lesson in Favoring; Milk Against Beer. New York Sun. Hon. Charles Warren Fairbanks, calm as a clam and irresistible as gravitation, has made Indiana his own and Is now moving majestically in all directions from his farm in Piatt County, Hlinois. He radiates from that center. Every day he reduces the Democratic vote by his auto mobile and Increases the Fairbanks vote by his relentless consumption of butter milk. Meanwhile, Hon. "Steve" Sumner is pushing the buttermilk boom In Chi cago. He convened a meeting of 500 mem bers of the Milk Drivers' Union. He "opened" a keg of beer and a can of but termilk. He let the drivers decide for themselves which was the more beneficent drink. Particulars from the Chicago Trib une, which is not a Fairbanks organ: Sumner irew a glass of beer and ottered it to a driver, who drank It thirstily. .- "How do you feel?" Sumner aaked the man. "Pretty good," ires the reply. He was given another Klass. - "Now how do you feel?" Sumner asked. "Like having another," was the response, amid a?;ilause. "That's Just it," announced the union tem perance demonstrator. "You drink one glass of beer and want more. Now, we will try the buttermilk." - A driver consumed two glasses of butter milk and acknowledged that he had enough. Another was persuaded to drink three glasses, but that was the most that any teamster in the ball cared to imbibe. Sumner gave the following figures to show that it costs less to drink buttermilk than beer: Average amount of liquid consumed per man dally... ...8 quarts Cost of three quarts of beer -.30 cents Cost of three quarts of buttermilk 24 cents "In a year," said Sumner, "each teamster can save $21.00 at this rate." All but 18 members, signed the pledge for buttermilk and Fairbanks. Hon. Leslie Mortier Shaw "signifies" higher prices. Hon. Charles Warren Fair banks means 21.90 a year in the pocket of every moderate beer-drinker who turns from the brewery to the -dairy. And three quarts of beer is but a beggarly allowance for a man with any serious de votion to the "light, airy child of malt and hops." By tens, by hundreds, by thousands, the Chicagoans forswear beer and expense, and swear by buttermilk, Fairbanks and money in the pocket The "drys" will name no candidate but Fairbanks. The "wets" are running "dry" for the butter milk ticket. From Illinois, from Wiscon sin, from Michigan and Minnesota, from every state that knows beer or milk, comes the heartening chorus: Fairbanks, Fairbanks! He's aa smooth a silk; Fairbanks. Fairbanks! He loves buttermilk; Down with the beer keg and up with the can. And Buttermilk Charley, the Pee-pul's Manl The cows chew it. The churns turn it. The people bawl lt- A SALOO.X MAN'S PARADISE. Liquor Interest Geta l-'nt Political John In Classic Boston. Boston Journal. Watching John B. Moran, as he leads and illuminates the Prohibition ticket, let us not forget to pay due tribute to the work against the demon rum now being carried on in his own inimitable manner by the Mayor of Boston. He removed William F. McClellan from the saloon business in East Boston and made him president of the Democratic city committee, without power. He Induced James H. Doyle to retire from the wholesale and retail liquor busi ness In Roxbury and planted him in the office of superintendent of streets. Hunting for the most competent candi date for superintendent of public build ings, he discovered James F. Nolan, and the latter was compelled to become a re tired liquor dealer. There was need of a tried and true fore man for the sanitary department's Rox bury district. The right man was found in Thomas Tlrrell, one of the most pop ular bartenders in Boston Requiring the services of a special and personal legislative agent on Beacon Hill, Frank J. Doherty, bartender, of Charles ton, was the diplomat naturally selected. Garrett W. Scollard, city collector, was doing his level best, but he lacked the right kind of help. Hence he is to be braced and encouraged by Deputy Col lector John L. Donovan, peculiarly expert in the preparation of mixed drinks. For years it was felt that the depart ment of weights and measures was lack ing in technical knowledge of barrels and glasses. When the appointment of new deputies was made, Manasseh E. Bradley and James J. Sweeney were chosen as qualified experts. And now, determined to reform the board of health and put new spirit into Its movements, the Mayor has summoned Michael W. Norrls, liquor dealer, of South Boston, to the rescue, and has com manded him to sit on the right of Samuel H Durgin, M. D., and chairman. Give the Mayor time and money enough, and there will be neither liquor dealers nor bartenders In Boston, and the con sumers will be obliged to devote their in come to taxes. Sick Marines Go North From Panama. San Juan, Porto Rico, Dispatch. The United States cruiser Columbia has sailed for Boston with 300 marines on board, of whom 165 are suffering from ma laria contracted at Panama, where they were stationed in anticipation of trouble during the recent elections there. Nineteen of the marines are seriously ill. Dr. Stokes, of the San Juan naval hospital, had made plans to establish a hospital camp here, as five days' quaran tine is necessary in such cases, but he suggested that the time be consumed in going northward under climatic conditions more favorable for. the treatment of the sick. The Navy Department accepted Dr. Stokes' recommendations and gave sailing orders to the Columbia. Stars and Stripes for Uncle Joe. Nebraska State Journal.. Uncle Joe Cannon is going down into New England to stump for the Republi can ticket. If he finds any more char acteristic Yankee in speech or make up than himself, it will be remarkable. AH that "Uncle Joe" requires to be Uncle Sam Is a stars-and-stripes suit. Eighty Warships Sold for (400,000. Portsmouth (Eng.) Dispatch. The 80 British warships of all classes, which were condemned recent ly as being unfit for present-day war fare, have just been sold, bringing a total of $400,005. The vessels repre sent an outlay of J50.000.000. . THE AMERICAN SCOURGE AT THE ISTHMUS FEW KNEW BEIT BY SIGHT. Quiet, Unobtrusive and Fond of Hid ing;, Golf and Good Pictures. From Various Sources. "If my photograph were put on exhibi tion in the most crowded street in Lon don, not a dozen people would recognize it." Such was said to have been the remark of Alfred Belt, the diamond king, reputed power behind the Rhodes throne and rich est man in the world, concerning himself. Belt was a quiet, unobtrusive-like man. well-balanced and well-groomed. Polite and courteous to all who came Into con tact with him. he was reticent to a de gree, and never spoke of his own enter prises. He had traveled extensively and read much, but cared little about Impart ing' information to others. He did not look like a millionaire, and was always very plainly dressed. His mild voice and sunny-tempered optimism belled the real character of the man. His eyes- were peculiarly those of a dreamer large. Bof t nut-brown eyes that shone out of his clear-cut face. Beit was a ready giver to charity, and made annual donations to many hospitals. He quite recently gave tSOO.OOO to Hamburg University and founded a professorship of colonial history at Oxford University. He Is said to have placed his purse at the disposal of the grand rabb of France when funds were needed for the Dreyfus campaign. He was fond of riding, of golf and of good pictures. His collection of Louis XVI furniture was considered one of the finest in Europe, and on the rare occasions he entertained he did so In a princely man ner. At a ball in South Africa several years ago .he presented each of his 300 lady guests a large diamond as a souvenir of the occasion. He died a bachelor, although It was at one time reported that he was about to marry Mrs. Adolf Ladenburg. Like many other great men, he was too absorbed in the realization of his ambition to devote any time to domestic affairs, and, al though kind-hearted, he earned the repu tation of being a woman-hater. Less than 40 years ago the first diamond was picked up in South Africa. Beit was at that time a student at Heidelberg, for his father, who had amassed a goodly fortune, was determined his son should have the education he himself had so sorely lacked. From college he went Into a Hamburg bank as clerk, and at 21 was taken Into his father's firm.' Demands for credit were pouring In from South Africa, and old Beit sent his son to the newly discov ered diamond fields. He had a free hand and plenty of money. Credit he gave to all who were willing to work. He was content to take diamonds In payment, and bought first the precious stones, then the mines themselves. He met Cecil Rhodes, and with Barnato en tered into fierce competition. Prices of diamonds were hardly remunerative. He formed the combine now known as the De Beers,, and the shares he held then, worth 5, are now standing over 60. With his associates he extracted over nine tons of diamonds from the mines, and later his wealth enabled him to con trol the gold output, too. He had the "gift of the grab," and never entered into a combine of which he did not get control. In the De Beers he was up against the Rothschilds, and the highest praise that can be paid to his formidable genius is that they were forced to play second fiddle to him in South African affairs. World's Richest Man Grows Peevish. Compiegne, France, Dispatch. John D. Rockefeller knows that a war rant and a subpena in a civil suit await him in the United States. According to his friends, he views the warrant as spite work and politics. He has been in com munication -."dth his lawyers, and will re turn to Cleveland Immediately after land-' lng. The past week has been hard on America s richest man. Mrs. Strong, his daughter, whom he came over to see, is not improving. Mrs. Prentice, his other daughter, is taking treatment at Carls- -bad. These conditions, together with the war rant, have so unnerved Mr. Rockefeller that he has become peevish. The most significant indication of his condition is the way he played golf today. He was disastrously defeated, and this so aroused him that he had Dr. Biggar get after the French reporters, who have been tracking him as though they were taking part in a fox-hunt. Dr. Biggar ordered the re porters off the golf course. Impudent Dog's Bark Leads to Fine. Lahore Tribune. A dog had the audacity to bark at the Deputy Commissioner of Purulia in Ben gal when he came to the house of the master of the dog orf a bike. The owners of the dog were sent up for trial under section 289, and one of them, Karusha, was fined 20 rupees. Minnehaha's Shirtwaist. New York World. The newspapers assert that a crusade, far from puritanical, is being waged in America against the peek-a-boo shirt waist. Cable from London. Then appeared fair Minnehaha, Minnehaha, Laughing Water Spoke she thus to Hlawatha. Thus she. spoke and made him listen: "Can't you take a little notice? ' Can't you see I need some clothing? Must you always spend your wampum All on bows and feathered arrows? Will you see your little wlfey 1 Going to a luncheon party Looking like a last year's bird's nest? Can you never, never, never. Get a move at least approaching Something like a gentle hustle?" Up spoke then the Hiawatha: "What would have, O Minnehaha?" Then her heart was filled with gladness- "Ha!" she cried, "I'd have a shirtwaist Of tha brand called peekaboowls." Thereupon did Hiawatha Hie him to the nearest knot-hole: Cut a piece from out the knot-hole; Then he found a darning needle And constructed such a shirtwaist As would make the heart of maiden Sing for Joy to see such beauty. Thus we .see. In the beginning, Minnehaha, Laughing Water, Fairest maid of the Bakotas, Made her husband. Hiawatha, Get a move akin to hustle. And construct a lovely shirtwaist -ith a needle and a knot-hole, Of the kind called peakaboowls. From the Detroit Journal. -r rvrersrw d a ma v w .-