TIxE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, SEPTE3IBER 28. I90S. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofnca as Cecond-Class Matter. fcubscriptlon Bate Invariably In Adranca. By MalL Dally, fiunday Included, on yearr... Dailr. Sunday Included, six months..., L-slly. Sunday Included, three months. Xlaily. Sunday Included, one month...' Laiiy without Sunday, one year Xaily. without 6u3day. six. months..... EaJly. without Sunday, three months. L-ally. without Sunday, one month..... Weekly, on year Sunday, one year. ........... .-- Sunday and Weekly, on year. .$8 00 . 4 23 , 75 . 6-00 , 3.2J . XTH . .60 , I SO , 2 50 . 1 50 (By Carrlar.l Dally. Sunday Included, one year I 0 Xally. Sunday Included, one month.... - .78 How to Remit Send postofOe money rdar, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency ars at the sender's risk- Glv postoffic ad dress In fuil. lncludiag county and slat. Postage Rates in to 14 pages. 1 cent; Id to 28 paces. 2 cents; 30 to 44 pages. 1 cnts; 46 to AO pases. 4 centa Foreign y ace double ratea Eastern Bo nines Office Th S. C- Beck wllb Special Agency New York, rooms 48 BO Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 10-013 Tribune building. PORTLAND. MONDAY. SEPT. IS. 1S0S. IT 13 CXAP-TBAP IVEKT TIME. ' Senator Gore, of Oklahoma, has been holding up the financial ability and banking: achievement of his state ; as a model for all the rest. It U much ; as If Buffalo Bill were to tour the country as an exponent of the eclectic and sympathetic philosophy. When 1 you wish to learn about banking, in ' theory or practioe, you may look in on London, Paris, Berlin and New York, ' ' but you will not go to Oklahoma not J for that purpose. Yet it is an inter esting cowboy, Indian and wild-cat . ; state lying between Texas and Ar- ; Kansas; in the old phrase half horse " ' and half alligator, with the cross of an . earthquake; but the world will not sit at the feet ot Oklahoma, to learn tha principles of money, finance and banlc ; , ing. -The w'll of the people" .if Ok ' lahoma douDtless is good for Okla- hnma; or will be, till all finance and banking and business there shall go into the pit together. But the banks of the country, and they wiij use the '. banks, will stlli beg to be excuse-J. ; . Taft, in his speech at Minn.Mp:lis on Saturday, touched to the quick the ! ', fallacy of the guaranty plan, and J showed, moreover, why it was impo.- sible it ever should be adopted. The J', statement is of considerable length, ' and should be read in full. It was ? printed yesterday. The capital objec- tlon is that it will make good banking J stand as security for bad. This would afreet not only banks that are carefully I conducted, but their depositors and J customers in general. It is the plan of a party which, under its present leadership, must have something that offers a short cut to 'reform.' at the ', cost of the honest and industrious peo- .' pie of the country. The guaranty, be it observed, is to be supported by a a tax on each bank in proportion to its ; deposits, the proceeds to constitute a fund from which the depositors of any ; failing bank are to be paid; and people willing to take chances for big profits - will deposit with banks that offer great , returns assured by the guaranty i against personal loss. It is a complete J Invention for promotion of Irresponsi J ble banking, and of compelling con- servative banking to pay for It. As '. turned success of the scheme in Okla J ' homa is deceptive. It is a Juggle of finance and hanking, absolutely sure to ! collapse; arid when the collapse shall come. It will carry the state funds with it. which are used to full extent ; in promotion of the scheme. It Is 'maverick' banking. Nor will it pre- vent panics. "A panic is not stayed ', . by the promise that the money will be ; forthcoming. It can only be stayed by production of the money itself." The system offered in lieu of this doubtful and dangerous scheme is the postal savings bank. Strictly under control of the Government, it will offer a sure and safe Investment for money, at the rate of interest the Government pays on its bonds. ! It may become the means of supporting the National debt, and ' of distributing widely the interest paid upon it. Nor would it destroy private banks, that "pay a higher rate of inter est and confer privileges on their de positors which it would be impossible ' to grant under a Government system. Good, clean and safe banking must '. be kept free from Irregular and lrre sponsible banking, and should not be expected to carry it. Nor can It be I compelled to do so. But it may be em barrassed very much and subjected to ." burdens and losses, hard to be borne. But the burden really will fall upon t the settled and legitimate business of the country, through which the losses of reckless and speculative banking would be made good. Besides, the ar gument for bank guaranty is addressed largely to those who have no bank ac counts, but have votes, which every appeal of the kind Is expected to at tract to needy candidates the candi dates of a party uncommonly in need ; of material this year. The country will do well not to follow Mr. Bryan or Oklahoma in any matter of money, finance or business. A short time ago ' the one need was free coinage of sil '. ver. Now it is guarantee of bank de ; posits. Some clap-trap, every time. J POFTTNG THE XON-P ARTISAN MASK. Behold celebrated local Democrats, ! who have been posing as non-partisans ; and denouncing party politics as cor- rupt and enslaving this for the pur pose of breaking down Republican : sentiment In Oregon now moving heaven and earth for their own party ', and election of Bryan. Why have they J turned so Intensely partisan? Why have they thrown to the winds the pre J ' cepts they have been teaching Repub licans of non-partisanship and lnde- 1 pendent voting, of "no-collar" politics ! and ballot liberty? Why have they rushed forward to snatch the conduct ! of Democratic party affairs away from ! ; men who have been steadfast Demo- ; crats and deaf to their no-party har- angues? I Last week Democrats were startled ' to hear that a committee of non-par-l - tlsans had returned to the party and constituted themselves a finance com ; mlttee. for the purpose of raising . funds for Bryan. The patriots com ! ' posing the committee are the follow ing: Jefferson Myers. J. N. Teal and C. ' ' S. Jackson, of PortlandBC J. Smith, of Pendleton, and W. M. Kiser, of Sa- ; lem. These men have been striving long for emancipation from party. Time and again they have lured Re publicans into electing to offices Dem ocrats disguised as non-partisans. Each time, these patriots hid their own partisanship so that gullible Repub licans could not see It. Now, at last, is the juncture for them to 'bring their true politics out Into the open. But why is now the time? Why cannot the old guard of the Democratic party that led in 1900 and in 1896, be trust ed to lead again? Is It because the non-partisan bunch think they at last see a chance to win in the November party election? In that event some Democrats in Oregon will be turned into big men. They will dispense big wedges of patronage pie and be regarded in National politics as the chiefs of this State. Feeling hope ful of Bryan's success, it is Indeed op portune for the patriots to get first in line. As for the old faithfuls who will be crowded out, they have be come used to living on wind pudding. A FABRICATION. It is admitted by Broughton Bran d en berg-, syndicate writer and pro moter, that the article furnished by him to the New 'York Times and sev eral other newspapers, purporting to have been written by Grover Cleve land, "was not written nor dictated by Mr. Cleveland as it appeared In print." But Mr. Hastings, Cleveland's ex ecutor, unhesitatingly pronounced it genuine, and no one questioned It till a short time ago. Doubts as to Its gen uineness appear to have been started by Mr. Watterson, and since then every part of the production has been subjected to close analysis. - What seems to be the truth Is this: The article was written by some one whose name is not yet disclosed, after .private conversations with Mr. Cleve land; for Cleveland's thought, method and expression are clearly manifest in it. But there was much elaboration by the writer, and many things were attributed to Mr. Cleveland which he Tlid not say, and such things as he did say, or may have said, were given a color very different from that in which he would have presented them. The article, therefore, is a forgery, but an exceedingly clever one the more clever because it Is so close an imita tion of Mr. Cleveland's well-known manner and style. In it there is much of Cleveland, and the resemblance to his characteristic and customary work is so close that it misled excellent judges. The Oregonian used two or three short extracts from the article, with out a doubt of Its genuineness; and it was so received and treated by most of the newspapers of the country. The warrant appeared both in the senti ment and in the style. A NON-PARTISAN CAMPAIGN? Hammer and tongs Roosevelt and Bryan are at it. 'Twere well for others to keep at a distance from the wind of such commotion. Let the protagonists hae it out. They can settle the "is sues" and decide the campaign. It re minds one of the single-handed con tests of Homeric battles. Now one heaves a great stone, now the other, and winged arrows leap from the string. It's an alright fight alright. Taft toils in another part of the field. Bryan insists that the President of the United States ought to devote him self unselfishly to his country's welfare and not mingle in a political contest. But participation in the present con test Roosevelt interprets as devotion to his country's welfare; and they know very little of Bryan who don't know that if he should be elected he will not be non-partisan either, but will use all the power of the office to elect as his successor the candidate who may be presented In the name of his party. On a great scale ho will be the kind of a "non-partisan" that our Governor is on a small scale. Besides, it is quite as objectionable for candidates to go out and contend for the Presidency, In the name of party or otherwise, as it is for the man who, for the time occupies the office. to use his efforts for the election of a successor representing the party to which he adheres or belongs. No man In office, whether of one party or another, refuses to help his party or thinks that unselfish devotion to his country's welfare requires him to re fuse to do so. Shall we be able to keep our "non-partisan" Governor off the platform for Bryan? Not all the king's horses and all the king s men can do it. WHAT IS GOOD LIVING? What constitutes a good living de pends upon reasonable wants, and these. In turn, vary with circum stances. The mental attitude .of the community, as well as that of the in dividual, has Its influence In deter mining what a man or family shall need In order to live comfortably and. If the word may be used, respectably. During the Summer months hundreds of families lived out In the mountains in tents or in shacks, cook ing their meals by camp fires and wearing old clothes. Many a letter to the folks at home described the sit uation as very comfortable. But simi lar habitations and similar clothing would be unbearable when the outing parties have returned to the city. Half-baked bread, a kettle of beans, some bacon and a cup of coffee make a most enjoyable meal out in the for est, but such provisions would be pretty conclusive evidence of hard times in the city. These comparisons apply as well under other circumstances than those Incident to a Summer outing. To live decently In the city the average fam ily must have a house of six to eight rooms, with all modern conveniences. Expensive clothing must be purchased and must be discarded as soon as it becomes a little worn or out of style. Custom forbids the city fainily to practice many little economies that would detract nothing from the en joyment of life. But if this same fam ily moves to a farm a much smaller house will suffice and the conven iences need not be very modern. Less expensive furniture serves satisfactor ily, a 12 suit of overalls ana jumper make good apparel for any male member of the family, and dresses for the other side of the ho.use need not be expensive nor need they be discarded every time the styles vary. There are no water, gas or electric light bills to pay. Most of the eatables are produced on the ranch, and many of those purchased In town are paid for "In trade." The family lives on one-half or even one-third of the money required in the city, and not only enjoys life as much as before, but stands as well In the estimation of old friends and new. Changed cir cumstances and surroundings have diminished wants and set a new standard of living without in. any way diminishing the power of enjoyment. The city laborer, accustomed to wages of $2 a day and up, cannot Imagine how a family can live la the country on $30 to $50 a month, with innumerable things "furnished. As a matter of fact, the farm laborer, as a rule, lives better than his city cousin, enjoys better health and saves more money. The Homeseekenf As. sociation of Chicago has had consid erable experience in sending city fam ilies to the country, and it is the al- most Invariable rule that the family thus sent out finds its condition lm proved and: has no desire to return to town. Life on a farm Is not one of Idle ness nor yet of unremitting hard la- bor. In fact, farm work is not, on the average, more laborious than work In the city, for modern farm machinery has made muscle less es sential. The farm worker goes to bed Instead of to the theater or the grog shop in the evening, an A his dreams are as enjoyable as moving picture shows, and his nightmares less tern fying than the imaginary reptiles pro duced by bad whisky. THEIR RECOMMENDATION NOT SOUND. The county superintendents of this state recently adopted resolutions urging upon the Legislature a number of proposed laws designed to promote the welfare of the 'educational sys tem of the state Doubtless the Super intendents discussed the various sub jects before them In a very serious. and, in their opinion, very thorough manner. There is no doubt In their minds that their conclusions are based upon good reason, and, if the Legis lature should fall to follow their rec ommendations, then they will be con vinced that legislators are either stupid or disloyal to the public schools. or both. It is well for the County Superintendents to come together every year or once In two years and to talk over educational affairs and adopt resolutions. Superintendent Ackerman deserves credit for calling them to meet In conference. It is worth while to know their opinions upon public school problems and it Is quite likely beneficial to them indi vidually to exchange views collectively. But it is not to be assumed that, be cause these very dignified gentlemen are at the head of the educational affairs of their several counties, their conclusions as to policies in public school management are always cor rect. If there is to be a presumption at all it should be rather the reverse. for in any line of work those who are actively and continuously engaged in an occupation or calling come to look at every phase of their work from a prejudiced standpoint. We do not look to lawyers for reformation of our system of Jurisprudence. Doctors of the old school give up erroneous ideas only when driven to do so by the loss of patients or 'by the pressure of new schools of medicine. The laity accept new ideas in religion long before the clergy will give assent. However im portant it may be, therefore, to have the opinions of the School Superin tendents or of teachers upon school problems, they are no more to be fol lowed blindly than are lawyers, doc tors or preachers. It is well to hear what they have to say but do a little thinking on our own account. One of the most important recom mendations made by the Superintend , ents was that for temporary purposes 'a portion of the funds now raised by indirect taxation be turned into the school fund, that receipts from the leasing of water rights be turned into the school fund, and that similar dis position be made of the receipts from the inheritance tax. In other words. the Superintendents wish to establish the policy of turning practically all the receipts from indirect taxation Into the funds for maintenance of the pub lic schools. Criticism of this plan need not im ply antagonism toward the public schools nor a disposition to be nig. gardly in their support. If It be as sumed, as the -Superintendents evi dently believe, that the money avail able for public school purposes is now insufficient, it does not follow that additional funds should be secured in the manner they propose. The state has many institutions to maintain be sides its public schools. It is not es sentlal for the support of any one of them that the money therefor be raised in any particular way. The state should arrange its schemes of taxation first with a view to securing equality among the taxpayers and then the question of distribution of the funds may be considered. As every one knows, the great dlffl culty In this state has been to prevent counties from vielng with each other In making low assessments In order to escape a Just share of state taxes Competition in reduction of assess ments became so keen and was car ried to such an extreme that it finally became necessary for the Legislature to enact a law fixing a ratio of appor tionment of state taxes among the several counties, which ratio should be maintained for a number of years. That plan was finally found unsatis factory to some of the counties, and a suit Is now pending in the courts for the purpose of declaring the law unconstitutional. The problem of rais ing state taxes and at the same time removing from the several counties the temptation to reduce assessments to a ridiculously low figure. Is still unsolved. , Several' years ago, Sacretary of State Dunbar, who, by the way, has done more than any other one man In Oregon for advancement of modern Ideas In production of public revenue, proposed that all revenue for state purposes be raised by indirect tax ation, thus removing from the counties every temptation to reduce assess ments. His suggestion was a good one and Legislatures which have met since this recommendation was made 'have tried to establish the policy of rais ing state revenue from indirect sources, such as the corporation tax, Inheritance tax, etc. Industriously and persistently pursued, this effort should finally succeed in placing Ore gon alongside such states as Wiscon sin and New York, which get nearly all their revenue for maintenance of state government from indirect taxes. But the suggestions of the county School Superintendents are antagon istic to this policy. They want the Indirect taxes turned Into the school fund, thus leaving all the revenue for maintenance of the state government to be raised . by direct taxes appor tioned among the several counties. It would be interesting to know what plan they have to suggest as a prac tical solution for the problem of pre venting counties from reducing assess ments. We have tried the scheme of having assessments revised by a state board of equalization and .that plan was abandoned. Maintenance of the public schools Is very properly a local undertaking. Revenue for maintenance of the com mon schools may very appropriately be raised chiefly by direct taxation. School revenue has been protected from the results of low assessments by a provision that each county shall raise a fund amounting to a certain number of dollars for each child of school age In the county, which rate may be Increased as the needs of the schools demand. Ample provision has therefore been made for raising school funds without encouraging reduction of assessments, and there can be no reason whatever why Indirect taxes should be turned Into the school fund. As already shown, there Is a very im portant reason why they should not be. The Legislature is more likely to give due consideration to this rea son than to follow the impractical recommendations of the County School Superintendents. THE INCREASING NAVIES. Early in September Great Britain launched the St. Vincent, the most powerful fighting vessel that has yet been floated, her armament Including no less than ten 12-inch guns. Now It is announced that work will be rushed on two sister ships, the Collingswood and Vanguard, so that they will be launched before the end of the year. This will give Great Britain ten mon ster- fighting machines of the Dread naught type and two others of nearly equal power for destruction. Prior to the launching of the St. Vincent Great Britain had 67 battleships, 31 armored cruisers and 142 destroyers, the time. honored "two-power"!, standard being religiously adhered to, for the United States, with twenty-five, and Germany, with twenty-two, battlesships were next in order of importance. Great Britain also has an enormous fleet of protected cruisers and gunboats amply sufficient to maintain the two-power standard In those classes, while her destroyers outnumber those of any other three powers. The enormous cost of this, prestige Is shown in a table taken from a re cent British Parliamentary paper. This places the expenditures for naval purposes last year at 32,319.500. with new construction under way to the amount of 8,660,202. The same table credits the United States with expend! ture of 25,833,217 last year, and with nearly $40,000,000 worth under con struction. The other powers are trailing, although Germany is not very far behind the United States, and Is said to be Increasing her warship building at a tremendous rate. It is generally believed that the present great activity in Germany Is respon sible for the determination of Great Britain to maintain her two-power standard instead of abandoning the effort, as was reported early In the year, when a policy of retrenchment was demanded. The immensity of the investment made last year in war ships is not generally appreciated, but official figures presented to the Brit ish Parliament showed a total for Great Britain, the United States Germany, France, Japan, Russia and Italy of more than $570,000,000, with new work under cotistr-uctlon to the extent of $165,000,000. Japan, In spite of her wretched financial condition, has cut her naval estimates to a smaller extent than any other branch of the service. The ap palling cost of peace Is rapidly becom ing greater than that of war, and to the peaceful layman it would almost seem as though $570,00,000 per year might be sufficient to employ all bel ligerents to keep the peace for pay. As the cost of the ships is by no-means the limit of expense in connection with a great navy, it is quite probable that the amounts given could easily be swelled to more than $1,000,000,000 per year without getting very far out of the way. Just where this expan sion of naval strength will end is un certain, but it seems to be a difficult matter to quiet the fears of the Euro pean powers so that one can view the building of a battleship by another power with even the slightest degree of complacency. Wheat receipts at Portland are very satisfactory for so early in the sea son, but they have not yet reached proportions where they Justify any such extravagant claims as are being made by some. The receipt of some thing over 100 cars of wheat per day does not make Portland the "greatest grain market In the world," when the receipts of other ports are considered. For example, Minneapolis last Satur day received 636 cars, Duluth 520 cars and Winnipeg 387 cars of wheat. Ex travagant claims, having no basis in fact, have a tendency to belittle legit imate news regarding Portland's pres tige as a wheat port. The "killing frost" has got in its work from two to three weeks earlier In this section of the state this year than imiial. Late Dotatoes. tomatoes. Troll n9 nnd other second crop vege tables have suffered greatly in conse quence. The season for concord grapes will also, it is said, be cut short bv the heaw frosts of the past week. The climate of Oregon Is not given to freaks, though the unusual does hap pen occasionally, Just to make Ore gonians conscious of their blessings, perhaps. It Is an awful pity to find that Presi dent Roosevelt has laid aside the arrerl robes of his office" to favor a noFtv whlln Governor Chamberlain strictly non-partisan never did, never will. It shocks all Oregon. .fossiDiy n, Tnfr will not sret that full major ity of 62,133. to which the registration of the state shows that he is entitled. Drop off if the concession must be ortfi the odd "133. Concede so much to "non-partisanship." rin mav "reckon" that "the Peer less 1" through his nearest friend, Governor Haskell, of Oklahoma, who wrnt tha Denver platform at Mr. Bry an's dictation, and was treasurer of Dn-nn'o TCational Committee and near enough to Standard Oil to tap Its Dari may feel that bad company led him mighty near to Standard Oil him- Aif- His letter to Roosevelt shows that, and, moreover, that he feels that it was Roosevelt's duty to warn him earlier. Traveling men of the Oregon Coun try demand legislation against short sheets, with which they are plagued in the country hotels. Traveling wo men (and other women) have long been demanding legislation against the man under the bed. When will Gov ernment do its full duty? SALOONS AND SUNDAY CLOSING Experience of - Oramre, N. J., That Dwelllngr-Honsea Are DrlKttaaT-Ds. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Some one writes for the Independent what he knows about saloons, and as his knowledge of the subject Is evi dently based upon what he refers to as a "rich and variegated experience," ex tending from New York to Denver, he naturally prefers to keep his name to himself. What especially impresses him is the "hard, unfeeling, listless type of men" who keep saloons, which he at tributes to the fact that the saloon keeper sees worse human nature and more of It than any other class of tradesmen, and is made to feel that "every man's hand is against him, that he is despised and looked down upon, and that hardens him." Some, of this writer's observations are of interest for their bearing upon the matter of regulating or suppressing the liquor traffic Of the Sunday-closing movement in New Jersey he learned this from a factory operative at Orange: One of these hatters said to me the other day: "This Sunday-closing law is turning me from a beer drinker into a whisky drinker." He went on to explain that because it was so easy to carry home one or two-quart bottles of whisky Saturday night he was tak ing that instead of beer. "Before Sun day closing." said he, "my kids never saw r"e take a drink. They've seen me drunk twice on Sunday since." He also said that the law was turning, houses into saloons. A number of men put together and order cases of beer sent to one house. Then they go there to drink and play cards on Sunday. The bottling business has certainly in creased In Orange since the present regime began.'- I know personally of two saloonkeepers who have given up their business and gone into the bottling, delivering at the houses; and there are others. Still it is admitted that there must be a great deal less drinking there as a result of the Sunday closing of sa loons, "for there is not a saloonkeeper in Orange who wears a smiling face." But it is added that midnight closing on week days has more to do with this than Sunday closing. As for the Sunday saloon, the critic would evidently combat It with Sun day baseball, rather than with unlim ited closing laws: Now, in combating the saloon, I want to register my sincere conviction that there is nothing that will take a saloon bunch away from the saloon except baseball. The masses are crazy over baseball. They like It better than the theater, better than any show, better than the saloon. On Sundays, all through Summer, when baseAall games are running, the saloons are emptied. And the men are not only not drinking, they are also saving money and sitting out in the open air. I believe Sunday baseball is the strongest enemy the saloon has got among saloon habitues. The churches fight Sunday amusements, and are particularly earnest against Sunday baseball; and I confess that baseball makes a lot of noise. Never theless, baseball is a perfectly clean, decent innocent amusement, and I sol emnly register my belief that among drinking workingmen it Is the saloon's only competitor. Perhaps, in the larger Industrial centers, where factory operatives have ho other day at their disposal for at tending baseball games without loss of pay, Sunday ball games might be per mitted with wholesome results. To say as much as this, however, is to be most disagreeably reminded of how far away we are getting from the older times, when people were able to find at least some little diversion and rest from vthe week's labors in a quiet Sun day. ;But while the Industry and life of the! present day are far noisier and more distracting, yet a closer confine ment is imposed upon the average wage-worker than was the case in the day of the orthodox Sabbath, and this cannot be forgotten in dealing either with the liquor or the Sunday problem. THOSE) GREAT CROPS OP OURS What Country tn tbe World Can Com pare With Thin! W. J. Ballard In New York Sun. The United States annually produces more corn than all other countries of the world combined 2,927,000,000 out of 3.8S8.000.000 bushels. The United States annually produces more wheat than any other country in the world 634,000,000 out of 3,108,000,000 bushels. The United States annually exports more wheat flour than all the other countries of the world combined 15,000, 000 out of 26,000.000 bushels. The United States annually exports more wheat, including wheat flour, than any other country in the world 146,000, 000 out of 646,000.000 bushels. The United States annually produces more oats than any other country In the world 746,000,000 out of 3,582,000,000 bushels. The United States is the third largest annual producer of barley in the world, 153,000,000 bushels, only 7,000,000 bush els less than Germany, with Russia leading. The United States annually produces more cotton than all the other countries of the world 13.000,000 out of 20,000. 000 bales, and also exports more cotton than does all the rest of the world 9.000,000 out of 13,000,000 bales. The United States annually exports more cottonseed oil than all the other countries of the world dombined 42, 000.000 out of 52,000,000 gallons. The United States annually produces more tobacco than any other country in the world 690,000,000 out of 2,201,000, 000 pounds. The United States annually produces more flaxseed than any other country in the world 25,000,000 out of 87,000, 000 bushels. The United States annually produces more hops than any other country In the world 57,000,000 out of 211,000,000 pounds. The United States annually exports more niicnkp, and oilcake meal than any other country In the world 2,063,000,000 out of 4,913.000,000 pounds. The United States annually exports more rosin than all the other countries of the world 717,000,000 out of 846, 000,000 pounds. The United States annually exports more spirits of tumentine than all the other countries of the world 16,000,000 out of 24,000,000 gallons. rru TTntt Ktnte has more C22.244.- 446) dairy cows than any other country in the world; more horses, 23.000,532; ore mules, 4,056,399; more swine, of,- 976,361; and (except British India) ore cattle. 7S,Z46,673. Among our other great crops may be mentioned: Potatoes, bushals .S?S'XS2X2 Hay value $,4o. 000,000 Klce. pound. 621..40O.O0O Beets tons J.7bi.l Beet sugar manufactured, lbs. . 927,256.40 Cane suirar. long tons... 1.532,054 California fruits. flowersT wines. brandies ana vegoiapies o.vvv,wv Says Bees Are Deaf. Pathfinder. t.- ivohiirv. batter known as Sir ti T,,hhni-lr Vina been furnishing a O VJ II 11 Mvuw, congress -of bee enthusiasts with some Interesting iniormauon conceruuiis me busy insect. Talking of his own experl- ... ,innn thn apnKPR of beeS. Lord HlViiLO J' w - Avebury observed that no doubt they could touch, taste, smell and see. He had kept bees for many years. One queen bee lived for seven years. To test their sense of hearing he had blown a trum pet, a whsltle. had played a violin and had talked to them, but he noticed that while feeding, at any rate, no sound af fected them. They went on working, re gardless of the sounds. Possibly they did not hear the sounds as we did. but rather the overtones. They had five eyes, two of which were constructed on a different plan from the other three. They certainly could dis tinguish colors, and he believed the ultra violet rays which we could not see were Visible to them. HEARSTS WAR ON DEMOCRACY Inquiry Into His Motives for Desertion of Bryan. Brooklyn Eagle. Ind.-Taft. Had Mr. Hearst been nominated for the Presidency four years ago he would have accepted. Had the Denver convention selected him as Its standard-bearer, he would now be canvassing for the office. It follows that he would also be glorifying rather than finding fault with the Democratic party. Obviously, therefore, he Is dissatis fied with Democracy now, not because of what it is or is not, but because of what It' has failed to do. It would have been altogether to his liking had it placed its standard in his hands. Not having done so, it Is beyond redemp tion. So Is its .candidate. Twice Mr. Hearst has supported this nominee, finding him acceptable. Now he finds him Insupportable. In the in terval, Mr. Bryan has not changed for the worse. On the contrary, he is not so irrational as he was. Nor is his platform such "a thing of shreds and patches" as he has hitherto exploited. In other words, there are better rea sons for supporting Bryan now than there were in 1896 and 1900. His prom ises have lost some of their prodigal ities, not to say impossibilities. True, he can and does sonorously say Im pressively and triumphantly things that are as obvious as that two and two make four, but some of his foam khas subsided. In the face of a change for the bet ter, Mr. Hearst not only deserts, but becomes more than vehement. He Is vituperative, vitriolic This also In the face of a willingness on the part of Mr. Bryan to espouse the cause of Mr. Hearst four years from now. It is no easy task to reconcile with all that has happened what the Independence party leader is now saying and doing. One statement should be qualified. The allegation that In the interval Mr. Bryan has not changed for the worse may be disputed. Certainly, the Ben nett affair developed unsuspected char acteristics. The Nebraskan had struck lofty - attitudes. He had protested against putting the man before the dollar." Apparently, he had risen su perior to sordid impulses. It is a fact that Mr. Bryan was -on the high Toad to financial independence when net sought to obtain $50,000 at the expense of a widow. The scheme miscarried. Mrs. Bennett concluded to fight, and one of the results was ex posure, In spite of the precautions taken to prevent publicity. It should be added that Mr. Bryan had rendered no 'service for the money that his effort was secretly to obtain some thing for nothing. This compels a revision of estimate. It throws Into repelling relief the Itch ing palm, all the more repugnant be cause Mr. Bryan had ceased to be poor. It makes a mockery of talk about put ting the dollar before the man. And there are few records so -unpresentable that such an attempted grab, would not deface. Mr. Hearst could use it to advan tage. BRITISH VIEW OF MR. BRYAN Latter la "Windy, Superficial and In capable of Thinking Deeply." Sidney Brooks' Article in the Westmin ster Gazette. At the same time Mr. Bryan has be come better as well as more widely known. The fanaticism of his earlier days has given place to a broad, good humored charity. He has borne himself under the trial of successive defeats with a smiling manfulness. His bitterest op ponents would not deny that he believes all he says, though they might add that the more wrong-headed it is the more ardently he believes it. , There Is a pretty well universal ac knowledgment that he Is no self-seeker, that his politics spring from his convic tions, and that he fights for them with unimpeachable fairness. Against his pri vate life and his personal character there has never been the smallest whisper of accusation. His rhetoric moves on a high plane, if not of practicality and states manship, at least of idealism. No one has dispensed the sonorous platitudes that Americans love more lavishly than he. His oratory is not of a kind that we should stomach In England, but It Is at all events more finished than it was and not less facile. Moreover, Mr. Bryan has made the most of his chances. He has capitalized his political prominence and built up a respectable fortune by lectur ing and journalism. His weekly paper, the Commoner, has a circulation of over 200,000, and would be one of the most profitable properties in American Journal ism but for Mr. Bryan's overscrupulous attitude toward advertisements. It is, ho wever, his lecturing tours that have chiefly kept him in the public eye. He has developed of late years a strong inclination for religious subjects, and it is probable that the business of expound ing Christianity, in a simple, old-fashioned way is really more congenial to him than political or economic discussion. The pul pit, the Sunday-school, the Young Men's Christian Association, and the innumer able semi-social, seml-religlous societies that flourish in the States have occupied him during the past year or two even more than the party platform. No man living has ever addressed such vast or such varied audiences. I suppose there Is hardly a county in the whole Union in which he has not spoken. His two trips abroad were followed by his coun trymen with an affectionate Interest. The attention shown him by the rulers and statesmen of Asia and Europe gratified their National pride. His journeylngs gave Mr. Bryan experiences, if not ex perience, and no doubt contributed some thing to his stock of tolerance and mel lowness. But he remains essentially an average middle-class man of the West, with an eloquent tongue, very earnest, sincere and good-natured, but windy, ap nalHnerlv superficial, and incapable of thinking deeply. Practically all his qual ifications for the Presidential duties, ex cept that of character, have still to be taken on trust. Simple Arithmetic Eugene Register. The total registration of voters In the state Is 109.709. Of this number 80.921 are recorded as Republicans and 28,788 are Democrats. If you want to make a test of how many Democrats have registered as Republicans, It will be an easy matter. All you will have to do Is to get together ail the votes cast for Bryan at the No vember election, subtract the 28,788 from the total Democratic vote and the differ ence will be the Democratio registration under false political colors. MAY POSSIBLY AMUSE. "I asked for her hand last night." "Did her father give his consent?" "He not only gave bis consent but borrowed $5 from me." Judge. "The giraffe has a tongue 18 Inches long," said Mrs. Talkmore. "And knows how to hold It. 'too." growled Mr. T., who had had a long curtain lecture tha night before. Answers. "Since Miss Ann Teek has had ' her elec tric phaeton she drives at such a rate that she keeps the police trappers busy." "Why does she do it?" "She says It's so exciting to be chased by a man." Tlt-Blts. -Yes. Belle is married at last, and, do you know, her husband is the very man who proposed to her 10 years ago?" "Why didn't she marry him then?" "Oh, my dear, he was really quite too old lor her at that time." Modern Society. , A little girl was sitting on the floor cry ing After a while she stopped, and seemed burled In thought. Looking up suddenly, she said: "Mamma, what was I crying about'" "Because I wouldn't let you go out." '"Oh, yes." And she set up another howL London Opinion. "J don't think your father feels very kindly toward me," said Mr. Staylate. "You misjudge him. Tha morning after you called on me last week he seemed quite worried for fear I had not treated you with proper courtesy." "Indeed! What did he say?" "He asked me how I could be so rude as to let you go away without your breakfast." Penny Pictorial. BADINAGE FOR MR. HITCHCOCK. Republican National Committee Chair man and "S-h-h!" Policy Slscd Up. R. Q. W. in Chicago Inter-Ocean. Republican National Chairman Frank H. Hitchcock's retreat In the Har vester Building has been characterized by some of the distinguished callers as The Office of a Thousand Mysteries." They say they are seized with strange sensations and impressions on entering the office. The first sensation is like stepping from the hot sunshine Into a deep subterranean passageway where the air is cool and damp. There is a strangeness all about. The secretaries and clerks seem to glide from spot to spot. There are swinging doors, offices within offices, disappearing egresses, low talking, whispered messages. Now and then a clerk seems to drop through the floor or go up through the ceiling without the slightest noise. Something uncanny, say some of the free and easy Western men, strikes the visitors as they wind through the noise lessly revolving doors, are bowed in and out of the winding course by blue eyed youths, who make motions and signs with their arms and eyes, but rarely speak above a whisper. "Sh-h-h!"' seems to be echoing everywhere. The visitors can hear it ringing in their ears, but they cannot see whence It comes. t One of the Rocky Mountain "boys" the other day said he got tbe shivers before he got out. Without the slight est commotion or sound a clerk would bob np beside him as If shot up through the floor. He got the habit himself, said the Rocky Mountain man, and in a few minutes he found himself gliding. He cast furtive glances sidewise and behind him as he explored the recesses, alcoves, niches and sound-proof coin extracting cells. He was covered with a cold nervous sweat, he said, when he finally rushed out to Michigan avenue and got into the sunshine to restore a normal circulation of the blood. s Even the newspaper men began to talk of the "office of a Thousand Mys teries." Their Impression was first gained by hearing about a "Miss Will iams." It was understood at the beginning of the campaign that Mr. Hitchcock did not intend to have any women in the headquarters. He had brought on from Washington the entire entourage com posed of what Sam Blythe, of New York, calls the "fair-haired boys." They were not only fair-haired, but the re port was tha each one carried a recom mendation from one of the exclusive Eastern finishing schools, where the "little brothers of the rich" are taught manners. One of the special "pets,'' as he was termed by the other boys, was also said to have won his spurs on the tennis court. Anyway, there was a lot of specu lating as to the Identity of "Miss Will lams," and It was not until the other day that this one of the thousand mys teries was cleared up. It develops that "Miss Williams" Is ' not a miss at all, but a real man. "She" is James T. Williams, Mr. Hitchcock's private and confidential secretary. "Jlmmie," as the Washington news paper men familiarly refer to him, is a delightful boy. At the headquarters It Is generally conceded that he perhaps approaches nearest of all to the ideal of elegant manners. It was because of Mr. Williams' scrupulous regard for the niceties of etiquette that some of his old friends referred to him as "Miss Williams,' without explaining that "miss" was merely a term of endear ment and discriminating taste. "Jimmie" has an elegance of manner that has never before been known in a Republican National headquarters. He has a Boston finish. Mr. Williams went to the National capital several years ago with his teeth gritting, determined to make his place In the world. One of the things that finally opened for him at the White House was his diplomatic work. "Jlmmie" went to prying for news and his chaste and ex quisite manner, his ever perfect, gen tlemanly, courteous regard for the de tails ot Latin etiquette, got him paet the butlers at last. He bowed and smiled and bowed some more until be got where he started for and then he landed the news for his newspaper, which made the other correspondents sit up and rub their chins. Of course, Mr. Williams should not be pictured as a prototype of Cedrlo the Saxon, Beowulf or Athelstane the Un ready. In that respect he does not come up to the Roosevelt measurements. He is rather delicate, white-skinned, per fectly attired and like a piece of plush velvet to rub against. Mr. Williams also takes himself very seriously. He rarely smiles except when bowing. He Is an indefatigable worker. The same system that brought him suc cess In the diplomatic quarter won him a seoure place in the esteem and confi dence of Secretary Taft- He made up his mind he would conciliate Mr. Taft and he just went and did it. He camped on Mr. Taft's doorstep until they got well acquainted, and he then began de livering the goods there. Mr. Williams, perhaps, is closer to Secretary Taft than any other newspaper man In Washing ton. He was after Mr. Hitchcock's own heart, too. Mr. Hitchcock, also, has a scrupulous regard for all the little de tails of manners. One of his first acts as National Chairman was to take "Jlm mie" as his nearest secretary. The tws are Inseparable friends, and Mr. Hitch cock never seems to feel quite safe when his secretary Is beyond calling distance. Although some of the Washington correspondents sought to have fun with him by calling him "Miss Williams," it is quite likely that this same James T. Williams will be the next secretary to the President of the United States if Mr. Taft defeats Mr. Bryan. He will If Mr. Taft follows his personal Inclina tion. British Earl's Cousin Wants Work. Cincinnati, O., Despatch. "I have just 15 cents; one dime and a nickeL My room rent will be due soon. I haven't a friend In the city, sir, and I want work work of any kind, sir. Washing dishes would do, for I haven't eaten a substantial meal in a week." The plea was the usual one, the speaker was not a rara avis among the species. A tall, gentlemanly young man, smooth shaven, neat clothing, everything betokening a man on the high road to prosperity rather than one on the path to starvation. "Lambart is my name, sir; Charles E. Kllcoursie-Lambart, Oxford graduate, lieutenant In Her Majesty's service during the Boer War; cousin of the Earl of Cavan, and but we'll let that pass. I'm not looking for charity; what I want is work." The Mayor, to whom he appealed, to day, will try to find him employment. He told the Mayor that he was best man at the Duke of Manchester's wed ding. Then he had $35,000, but horses, wine and women dissipated his fortune, after which his people turned him oft. Aoto .J nck-of-All-Trades. Boston Dispatch. I. S. Newell, of Thomaston, Conn., who owns an automobile, with its 10-horse-power gasoline engine runs his work shop, cider press and eaws wood when he is not on the road with his car. The Proper Implement. Rogers There's Gregg over there. I'd like to catch his eye. Randall Well, here! Take my um brella. Harper's Weekly. A