THE MORXISTO OltEGOtflAtf. TUESDAY, ATTOtTST SO. 1910. 8 POIXTLAjrD. ORIOO. Eatra4 st Partiaaa, Oragoa, PoatoSlce ccad-Claa Matter. abatilallan MaumtwnrtaUr BT MAIL). tallr. Sund.-r lnHnd4. Tr. ..... v Tiiy. witsout Sunday, oa a monta.... "? Waklv. eae rar 1 k-undar. ana yaar. Sunday and vaakly. ona Tr .......... a-av (By Carrtar). Tally. Ma4ay larladad. aaa yaar...... JJ Sally, lunday. Inciudad. one month Haw Rcaarl Sand PaatofTIca mSZZ ardr. axi-ras ordar or poraonal ehack B your local bank. Stamp, coin or ""Tl'.'i ara at tha Bandar- run Cl "otomca aadraaa In full. Including county and atata. INMtaar Bataa 10 to M Pg- t 1 10 2 saga J casta: s to do pair S " 0 to 0 pages, d mm oias poaias doublo rata. Faatrra nlnaaa OfTW TTia B. C. fak with Kparlal A r.nry .w Tork. room -SO Tnbana buloina. Chicago, room i!3 Tnbano aulldln, PORTLAND. TVEDAT. AlO. SS. !! DIVINE MGRT IN CF.H-M.lJi V. The ghost of divine right which the Kaiser has evoked from the tomb where many people supposed It was lecpln, lu last sleep Is not enjoying a very peaceful visit to the glimpses of the moon. What William told his loving subjects was that his right to reign Is enUrely Independent of the wishes of the German people and de pends entirely upon the choice of the Almighty. Since he was appointed by the Creatoc it follows that William is responsible to him and nobody else for what he does. If he rules be nignantly and wisely, let his subjects rejoice at their good luck. If he reigns cruelly and foolishly, let them cast all the blame upon the Almighty who could have given them a better ruler If he had so desired. Thus far. If the reports are true, not a single newspaper In Germany has ventured to commend the Kaiser's outburst very warmly. Even the ex treme conservatives) deprecate hla In discretion and try to make out that he said something else. Naturally the Socialists are on tiptoe with delight. It means many thousands of votes for them at the next election in all llkll hood. for though the Germans tolerate absolutism, they Insist that It shall be modestly veiled. When It stalks naked Into the garish light of day and begins a scalp dance, they rebel. The Kaiser never has been notable for his democratic sentiments. On the contrary it has usually been more or less, difficult for him to keep his dislike of modern ways and methods In politics and religion under the cov r or silence. Now and then his un conquerable belief that he Is divinely inspired as well as chosen has cropped out and made International mischief. Not long ago one of these ebullitions brought hlra Into grave difficulties, and he had to draw In his horns rather swiftly. Ernst Haeckel. the eminent German scientist, said lately In a public speech that the Emperor's reactionary religious vie a had been the greatest hindrance to progress that has existed In the empire for the last quarter century. William Is or h. thai Ik. Almta-htv re vealed to him the deepest secrts of religious truth at the same time that he bestowed upon him unlimited pow er over his subjects. He holds In his tecret heart to the old maxim whk-h was current In Germany In Luther's time. "Cuius rerio ejus rellglo." that Is to say the king may impose any religion he likes upon his people. Divine right Is like the tall of a snake. It dies very hard. Long after the head has been pounded to a Jelly, the tail still wiggles. We are not without suspicions of Its existence here In America now and then. Every body remembers the words In which the distinguished Mr. Baer declared that the Creator had given the coal mines of the United States, and much other property, to the present owners because they were so much wiser and better thaa the rest of the population. When Mark Hanna after much tribu lation finally landed safely In the federal Senate he telegraphed the President that "God still ruled." mean ing that the divine purpose had at last triumphed over the wiles of Satan. The Adversary of souls was supposed to be deeply concerned to diminish the greatness Of Mr. Hanna. The fact of the matter is that any system of government which manages to exist for a generation or two is very apt to begin to plume Itself up on divine favor. If It lasts a century the claim of an appointment by the Lord Is certain to be made. The dynasty to which the Emperor William belongs has reigned for much longer than a century". .It Is one of the oldest royal houses in Europe and has passed through many vtclssitudrs. Vpon the whole. It has ruled wisely, though occasionally It has shown signs of imbecility. In Napoleon's day William's predecessors had fallen pretty low. They were nothing but wax In the fingers of the mighty ma gician who dominated Europe. Will iam's father was a man of genius, and had he lived he would have avoid ed much of the trouble with the So cialists which has harassed William Im-essantly and caused many of his foolish outbursts. But Frederick was early stricken with a fatal disorder hu h may have passed on to his son In the form of mental eccentricity. No doubt the KaJser Is sllghtiy touched with the malady known as the mania or greatness, but It mould be a mistake to underrate Ms ability. If he Is inclined to rule absolutely he has for the most part ruled In telligently and Germany Is Indebted m his statesmanship for many bene fit. The Germans are perhaps the best educated people In the world and cer tainly they yield to no nation In In telligence. Why then do they submit to a monarch who Is not far front ab solute, or thinks he Is not. while Italy. France. Spain. Scandinavia, are all marching toward democracy? Why is Germany the most backward nation In civilised Europe politically? We as sume for the moment that Russia Is not civilised. One reason lies In the extreme sentimentality of the people. Thsy love their Institutions because they are old. because they are encir cled with a halo or poetry, victory and commercial success, and because they are German. Another reason Is that the present German government Is probably the most efficient In the world. It Is economical. It accom plishes results. It is not unbearably tyrannical. When some royal simple ton steps Into William's shoes we shsll see the specter cf divine right fitt . r. fc-jn : r innucio. m m"" - - - - - - -- I'i!r. Sundar Included. taraa month. . Daily. Sundar Included, ona raontB.... railT. without Sunday. ea yaar "' rally, without Fanday. ill month.... a ing from Germany with tha same speed as it escaped from England over two centuries ago. I OR A3 HONEST JJSl C Undoubtedly the Democratic party has a mission; and It should fulfill Ita mission by attending to Its own busi ness. The Democracy Is entitled to name a ticket, and a whole ticket, county, legislative. Judicial and state; but It Is not Justifiable that the De mocracy should participate In the naming of any so-called Republican ticket or of any ticket other than the Democratic ticket. No exception even need be taken to the Democrats holding caucuses, or writing out a ticket in the primary booth, but there is objection to Demo crats mixing In Republican primaries and controlling Republican nomina tions. Let us have an honest primary, and an honest Issue between the Republi can and Democratic parties; then we shall not need to go through the bur lesque Of getting the "popular will" as to Senator through so fallacious and diaphanous a device as Statement No. 1. t THE IXtMfTEKENT PORTLAND MAX. With but IS days remaining, in which voters can register for the pri mary election, there still remain In the city more than 15.000 unregistered voters. Even with the customsry hur ricane finish, the total registration will undoubtedly fall several thousand short of the actual voting strength of the city. It -would be less surprising if thia Indifference were displayed by newcomers or foreigners. Unfortu nately, most of the procrastlnatora are our "good citizens" who have un consciously drifted Into a habit of postponing, neglecting, or refusing any duty that Involves effort on their part. Many of these good citizens will wake up the morning after the registration books close, and be sur prised that the registration was no greater. This lack of Interest In a very Important public matter. Is a fair sample ' of the disposition to "let George do If. Every resident or Portland should know that the million-dollar stock show and race meet that will be held In this city next week, is of inestima ble value. It wll ladvertlse thla city and state and one of the greatest re sources In the best possible manner. Hitherto the show has not received the support to which It is entitled. All that Is needed to make It success ful Is the attendance of a good aver age baseball crowd, although Its eco nomic value entitles It to ten times the attendance that is . attracted by baseball. The good citizen or the slow-registering type should not for get the stock show as he is forgetting to register, nor console himself with the thought that "George" is attend ing. HI CORRECT STATUS. Of course there is a Bourne legis lative slate In Multnomah County and a definite Bourne propaganda pushing along the whole antl-aseembly movement- That Is the Bourne game. That others happen to be playing the game without invitation from the original author and grand custodian or State ment Number One. and perhaps In the ultimate hope or defeating him, does not alter the situation. They have made common cause with Bourne and with all his Democratic allies and are affording him his only possible op portunity of re-election," and he Is making the most of it. They sit In tile game with the, Old Dealer, with the cards all stacked, and the cappers all duly stationed, and think things are going to fall out evenly. .It is to laugh. Bourne openly says he will not sup port th assembly candidate If thoy shall be nominated. This proposi tion Includes Hawley and .Ellis, his Republican colleagues on trie Oregon Congressional delegation. He works In notorious alliance with Senator Chamberlain, his Democratic col league. There is the true status of your Statement No. 1 Republican. THE JiORTH JETTY. The Government will build the north Jetty at the entrance of the Co lumbia River, thus confining the mighty volume or water that sweeps seaward Into a space so narrow that a depth or forty feet will be easily obtainable. This north Jetty has been recommended by the engineers and by the Secretary or War. and as the proj ect will receive the unanimous sup port or the Pacific Coast delegation at Washington, provision for Its con struction will no doubt be made at an early date. The Importance of the great river which drains such an Im mense territory was never better un derstood than at the present time, when every railroad leading Into the PaciHo Northwest is seeking to follow the river or Its tributaries. There will be no opposition to the Improve ment sought and there will be a mighty demand for the carrying out of the work. Critics, animated by motives which will hardly bear careful analysis, have at times sneertngly represented the Columbia River as an artificial water way because the work of the Govern ment and the Port of Portland has chsnged It from a stream of many shallow. zigzag channels Into a straight, deep highway over which 10.000-ton carriers pass unhindered where vessels of 500 to 700 tons were formerly obliged to lighter a portion or their cargo. But artificial water ways have built some of the world's greatest ports. London and Liverpool, at the start or their careers as mari time centers, suffered a greater han dicap than was In evidence on the Co lumbia River, even when that stream "heard no sound save Ita own dash Ings." For more than a thousand years London has been one of the world's greatest seaports, and for half a thousand years Liverpool has been a great clearing-house for water borne traffic from all parts of the world. Centuries before the age of steam the fleets of these great ports roamed the seven seas, and the an cient windjammers brought home car goes of "slaves, spices, gold and gum," for which the crude manufactures of early England were exchanged. This commerce Increased as larger and raster ships "drew the world together and spread the race apart," and the flight or centuries has railed to dim or weaken the prestige or the two big ports or the Old World. Liverpool and London came Into existence by reason or their conven ient location where the traffic of the land could to best advantage meet and exchange with the traffic of the sea. There were hundreds of other ports in which Nature had provided a greater depth of water: but the traffic could not be diverted to these ports, and as the traffic Increased Liverpool and London continued to Improve their facilities. It has been dig. dredge and dike for centuries on the Thames and the Mersey, but the value of the improvements haa never been questioned, nor will It ever again be questioned on the Columbia River. An ever-Increasing stream of traffic will be moved In and out of this great river, and there will always be an ade quate channel for handling it. The building of the north Jetty will assure a forty-foot depth of water at the river entrance, and ir the time comes when that will be Insufficient to meet the demands of commerce. It will be further deepened. TRACHTStO OIIU-8 TO Pt.CMB. Superintendent Ella Flag- Young's project or teaching plumbing to the girls In the Chicago schools need not frighten anybody. If the Idea should spread to Portland and other cities it would do no harm. Plumbing may very well be classed among the arts which are called "women's". While It presents a difficult problem occa sionally It Is not in the main excessive ly hard to learn and practice. Any woman wjth two hands and ralr com mon sense can plumb. She can cut threads on pipes, put packing in fau cets and do almost everything for which plumbers charge the magnifi cent prices that all householders ad mire so much. The only genuinely difficult trick In plumbing Is to "wipe a Joint". This consists In delicately holding the ends of two pieces of lead pipe together In a cloth and wiping enough molten solder upon them to hold them together. It looks like magic, but It is nothing more than expertness. Still one Inay doubt whether Miss Flagg can teach it to the Chicago girls in school. Most women who do not roll in gold and pass their days In fashion's giddy whirl have occasion to regret often times that they were not taught to use tools when they were young. Men al so experience the same regret when It falls to their lot to saw a board straight across or chisel out a little mortise. Few people who are not trained carpenters can saw straight Only a rarely endowed genius can drive a nail properly. It would be safe to wager that out 'of ten men selected at random on the street In thia thriving city not a single one can drive thirteen nails Into a pine board without splitting the board and pound ing both his thumbs. How seldom do we behold a man who truly relishes putting up shelves for his wire. Had he been educated properly he would have enjoyed It. We all like to do the things we can do skillfully. The old copybooks discovered this great truth and It ought not to be rorgotten now that the typewriter haa driven copybooks out of existence. THB DAIRY COW. Can It be true that Oregon farmers are going back on the dairy cow and selling her oft the farm by the carload In the full tide of her usefulness? It Is Incredible, surely, yet true If the Deputy State Dairy and Food Com missioner and Dr. Wlthycombe are to be believed. Here Is an agency that not only conserves but Increases the fertility of the soil, puts money in the rarmer'a pocket, keeps the boys and girls at horns and busy, gives the whole family an interest, and does Just what Colonel Roosevelt Is preaching that Is. raises the standard or the farmer's life. But In the Willamette Valley espe cially the pastures are dry and feed is dear, while stock prices are high; so the short-sighted farmer sells His cows. When the cream checks that have been coming in each month fail, the pastures are bare and the barn empty; when the dairy work stops and the cream separator rusts; when the pigs and the chickens look in vain for their dally meal, then will come, first regret and later repentance. But far easier it is to empty the cow barn than to fill it, as tnany -will find who have acted In haste to repent at leis ure. In other states there might be excuse, where the dairyman depends on purchased feed but not in Oregon, since vetch and rape and kale and al falfa and clover, all ormost of them, can be grown on every dairy farm. It must not be forgotten that labor In the dairy that Is reliable and expert Is as hard to get here as In the states of the East and Middle West. It Is no easy thing to suggest a rem edy, nor one to be lightly undertaken. Thr Is thia to say. that of all work on the rarm the best wages can go to the dairy, ror that gives the best and surest returns. INCREASED COST OF RAILROADING. Th statement or railroad earnings for the month or June, as filed with the Interstate Commerce Commis sion, offers an ample explanation for the difficulty that is experienced in floating new railroad securities.- For months it has been practically Impos sible to induce foreign capital to take up more than small quantities of American railroad securities. al though both England. France and Germany are Investing heavily In rail roads In other parts of the world. The current number of the New Tork Fi nancial Chronicle prints June returns on 687 separate roads or companies, covering an aggregate of 204.596 miles of road, or about 88 per cent of the mileage of the country. This report, which Is compiled from the official statements filed .with the Commis sion, shows a gain in gross earnings over June. 1909. or $23,565.11:; but of this heavy Increase all but $627, 025 has been wiped out by the In creased expenses. In percentages th gross earnings of t208.S64.918 showed an Increase of 11.21. The operating expenses in. creased 19. S per. cent, and the net earnings 0.95 per cent. As a reflec tion of th general prosperity throughout the country, the material gain In gross earnings Is quite satis factory. It shows clearly that the railroads are doing more business than ever before and In consequence their patrons must likewise be sharing in the increased business. The state ment, however, when submitted to the men from whom It Is necessary to se cure the new capital for extensions, improvements and new lines is less attractive. One of the strongest In ducements that can be offered for eign capital Is the possibilities of fu ture growth and development of a new country for which railroad capi tal Is sought. If all of the advan tages of this new growth and increase In business are to be absorbed by In creased expenses bt operation and , maintenance, the Incentive for Invest ment has been greatly lessened. If it is impossible for the railroads to make a net gain of even 1 per cent, with a record-breaking volume of business, what assurance can capital be offered that a year hence this 0.95 per cent gain will not be replaced by a loss. Wage Increases on a number of the roads are responsible for some of this transformation of a heax-y gain in gross earnings to a very scant gain In net. As there are still pending a number of applications for increased wages on a number or large roads, and as many of them will no doubt be granted the outlook can hardly be said to favor any immediate Improvement in that striking differ ence between the gross and net earn ings increases. In transportation as well as in other branches of business the West seems to be showing up bet ter than other parts of the country, and nearly all of the Western roads make very good showings, although here, as elsewhere, the gain In gross, earnings was out of all proportion to the gain in net. One reason, perhaps the only rea son, why the Weather Bureau at Port land misses it occasionally in the daily forecast. Is that we get our normal weather almost simultaneously with the "symptoms." Tha entire region west of the Cascade Mountains is af fected by conditions out on the ocean, where Uncle Sam haa no stations. If there were, say three between Port land and Honolulu, we could get much valuable advance information. As there are no Intervening Ulands, sta tions are Impossible. Still, it may be practical to receive weather reports from the bosom of the Pacific by wire less at small cost. If vessels within 600 miles of the coast sent in a bul letin every day at noon, the fore caster would be supplied with facts now altogether Inaccessible. The mes sage would get here from twelve to twenty-four hours ahead of an ap proaching storm. With the steady growth of ' ocean commerce there would nearly always be a steam or sailing vesel within "hailing" dis tance. What's the matter with the tradi tions of the Old South? In the old days "before the wan" and for some time thereafter, whenever an irrecon cilable difference arose between two gentlemen they either shot it out on sight or at a stipulated number of paces, without taking the public into their confidence beforehand. Now comes Tom Watson, of Populist fame, and publicly announces that one of his enemies has a "mind so disor dered by long years or Intemperance" that he thinks the killing of Watson and avoidance of a penalty would be easy. Watson informs the public that "my blood is not ditehwater and my life Is worth something to my fam ily ' and my country." Watson Is making a fight against Representative Hardwick, of Georgia, and seems to be afraid that Hard wick's objections will take the form, of physical punish ment..', .j , . The rolling deep continues to sup ply the stage settings for affairs fully as thrilling, bloodthirsty and romantic as those of the good, bid days when Morgan sailed the seas and Captain Kldd "most wickedly he did." Clark Russell haa few equals and' no su periors In providing thrilling and killing in the fiction he -wrote of the sea. but his wildest romancing con ceived nothing stranger than the trag edy on the steamer Buckman a few days ago. Some of the "blockade-runners" who have been smuggling arms Into Nicaragua and Honduras have all of the nerve and daring that made the men or Morgan and Kldd terrors of the sea. Less bloodthirsty, but not lacking a high degree of nerve and daring, was the attempt of a Seattle barber to take a schooner away from the custody of a United States Mar shal and sail to the South Seas on a treasure-hunting expedition. The prospect of a . public utilities commission to replace the multitude of expensive and largely useless com missions which prey -upon the state ought to please the people of Wash ington. In that state, as In Oregon, there Is a separate commission to reg ulate almost everything that exists, but with too particular results. A sin gle body competent and business-like would accomplish more than all of them together, while the ' expense would be very much less. When two acquaintances happen to be riding on the same streetcar, why should either feel obliged to pay the other' fare? John pays for himself and James.- The next time they meet James pays for himself and John. Neither gains anything. Both suffer a little in their, self-respect. The Scripture which urges every tub to stand on Its own bottom is still worth remembering. Let's keep local history straight. The man killed by lightning at Oswego Sunday was not the first victim in Oregon. While fatalities of this kind have been very rare In this favored state, they are not unknown. Wyoming and Colorado women are giving Mr. Roosevelt a royal wel come, but only Oregon has Mrs. Mary Woodcock, who knows how to ap proach Teddy Rosenfelt. - Idaho experiments today with first and second choice, which seems ri diculous In an equal suffrage state, for woman is not frivolous when she gets down to business. The fact Is. so seldom does light ning kill anybody in the Valley that people disregard It as a danger and consider thunder an atmospheric di version. Although Portland is not in his itin erary this time, we shall still hear from the Colonel several times during the week. As fifty years sgo. so today It is true that John Brown's body I. p a mouldarlng In the grave. But hi Qul rg marching on. The migration of hop-plckere has begun, and Is the first sign of the approach of Autumn, regardless Of the calendar. The 8-year-old child in San Fran cisco who can converse in five lan guages Is aft example of how not to do It. Johfi t. positively refuses to talk in th presence of reporters. Therein he differentiates -from T. B RICHEST BfAW WINS IN A PRIMARY. ReprenentatlTe Government Remains Best Which Ma Has Devised. Philadelphia Enquirer. Rep. Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell University, and president of the first Philippine Commisaon because he had visited and studied those islands long before most Americans had ever heard of them, haa been talking right out in meeting about primaries. One would suppose that one of those misera ble college reformers who learn so much of practical affairs by reading Plato at midnight, would come out for a system by which representative government should bo abolished. On the contrary. Dr. Schurman has had a lot of exper ience In practical life and he has studied conditions past and present to no lfttle advantage. He says that he believes that primaries are good In small communities, town ships and villages, but that they have no value beyond these limitations. It is generally recognized that the New Eng land town system, which the West has adopted to a large extent. Is the best de mocracy that has been established in the history of the world. Where every man knows every other man, where every public act, every cent of expendi ture can be scrutinized, it is evident that the community must get Just the sort of government it wants or deserves. But when it comes to the larger field the situation is by no means clear. Our fathers did not believe In democracy; they had a horror of It. They believed in representative government, and were not In the least backward in holding that the best government consisted of repre sentatives selected from the most cul tured, richest and best educated as well as the most honest in the community. When Nathaniel Lyon walked into the House of Representatives at Sixth and Chestnut, clad In homespun, he shocked our fathers almost bevond expression. Practically, the primary In many In stances seems to have become an engine of bosBlsm or an opportunity for great wealth to seize power, not because the people can be bribed by wholesale, but because publicity costs In a state-wide campaign. Wisconsin s last benatwlal primary cost the aspirants in the neigh borhood of 1400.000 and the richest man won. In Oregon a Democrat was nom inated in a Republican state. In Illinois a man was Indorsed who did not get elected. The reason is that all of the people cannot- possibly know the exact ratio of merit In all of the aspirants for office and they do a lot of guessing based on peculiar conditions. Government by primary has been much lauded by academic politicians, but Dr. Schurman Is right in saying that its achievements up to this time have been meagre and that representative government still remains the best which man has devised. , OCR NATIONAL WEALTH. Ita Comparison With Oar Increase of Population. Wall Street Journal. Census Indications now point to a popu lation for the current year of 92.000,000. and an estimated National Wealth of $125,000,000,000. For purposes of compari son we now bring together below the results of previous decennial censuses, to gether with such computations for the intermediate yeans as were made at the time by economists and statisticians of repute. The figures are In millions and decimals thereof: Population and wealth of the United State: Wealth per Tear ' Pop. Wealth. Capita. 101O ...9X0 $125.0"O l.r,59 7rt.3 B4.000 !,2!ta P5 .S9.0 T9.U1 1.14H i tBB.S.IH 1.090 m ,rn.2 4:i.6K 1R7 ..3S.S SB.Onil fl" ISMS 31.0 24.30CI 71.i 1SRO 31.4 14.18:1 . 4.11 JS50 '-'3.2 1X10 ''I 3.0 ........15 9 12 isirt I 110 1?O0 " . 174 266 3.7H4 220 2.6.".3 2 1.SH2 19B l.SHO 214 1.5'JO --'"S i.072 '-'02 7uO isa 1791 -4.1 Value of slaves deducted. tValue of mortgage and other incum brance deducted. The result Is an average wealth per capita of 13o9. or about J6800 ' an av erage family of live persons for 1910 If the nominal dollar were always of the same purchasing power, we would be nearly eight times richer than were the founders or the Republic; but such Is not the fact. Measured by the price of labor, or of any of the great prod ucts of labor, we are perhaps two or three times as rich; and that ought to be sufficiently gratifying. Reflection) of a Bachelor. New Tork Press. . The man who thinks he does the mar rying Is easy game for any woman who sets out for him. The way a hero makes love On the stage Is cold-blooded sanity to the way any man writes a love letter off It. There are no more Summer fools than Winter fools, only more of them are out doors where they can be seen. The most wonderful thing about how natural a young woman can be Is how different her naturalness always Is with different men. If a man can be lucky enough to in herit a house to live in, he can be un lucky enough to have the taxes and re pairs amount to more than the rent he used to pay. Population of the World. . ' Puck. Actor ' who played . with Booth nrt Ttarrett 11.456. People who knew you when you were poor 71.006. Oldest Inhabitant -8.187. Assorted liars 3r..4."i. People with a grievance 11)8.087. People who remember you vh,n vou were "so hiKh".... 7fl.3'!.v "Old subscribers". t 64.458. tlamphools (all varieties) . 703.453. Total . 1.457.37S, 02 Everything In (he Wash. Tjoulsvilie Courier-Journal. "Family all back from the Summer trip?" Yes." "I hear your wife Is confined to her room. What does the doctor say?" "We haven't employed a doctor. The laundress promises to have her out in about four days." A Tie. Pittsburg Leader. "Pa, what is a tip?" "A tip. my son. Is a small sum of money which you give a man because you're afraid he Won't like not being paid for something you didn't ask him to do." Aldrlch's Wicked Partner. Washington Herald. What has become of Mr. Sereno Payne? Wis he not In on the wicked tariff deal? Anyway, the Impression lingers persist ently that he was connected with it somehow. - Will History Repeat Itaelft Indianapolis Star. In the annals of 1SS4 and 1SP2 there is written very plainly what Republican quarrels in New Tork State may do to the electoral college. Extravagant Economy. Atlanta Journal. Economy often consists In doing with out something you want now in order to get something you don't want -In the future. Conservation. Ne Tork Sun. . goon w ahall see thesa signs pnated on Govarnment soli : . .- "Don't pick th. flrtW'rs or.c'oal.'' ' - "Keep off the glut sad. oil." Roosevelt Defines His Stand on Conservation Colonel Declares Nation Rather Thaa State Should Renralatr and Control Land, Foreats Streama Crajra Wrt Profit by Iaaow of Kaat Says Alaaka Coal Ml ara Should Be Leased by Government, and Not Sold Oregon Lumbermen Praised, DENVER, Aug. 29. Declaring that it Is the place of the Nation rather than of the individual states to take the lead In matters regarding control of public lands, forests and streams. Colonel Roose velt discussed at length the subject of conservation at Denver this afternoon. He said that the West should take warn ing by the East's bitter lesson of the re sults of wasting Its resources, and should profit by it, and urged that the Alaskan coal mines be leased - by the Government and not sold. He also de clared that not a single acre of public land should hereafter pass into private ownership except for the single purpose of homestead settlement. Colonel Roosevelt said: "Conservation does not mean nonuse or nohdevelopment. It does not mean the tying Up of the National resources of the States. It means the utilization of those resources under such regulation and control as will prevent waste, extrav agance and monopoly, but at the same time not merely permit but encourage such use and developments as will serve the interest of the people generally. "This country has shown definite signs of waking up to the absolute necessity of handling its natural resources with fore sight and common sense. The Conserva tion question has three sides. In the first place the needless waste of the natural resources must be stopped. It Is rapidly becoming a well-settled policy of this peo ple that we of this generation hold the land in part for the next generation, and hot exclusively for our own selfish enjoy ment. Just as the farmer is a good citi zen if he leaves his farm Improved and not impaired for his children, and a bad citizen if he skins the land in his own selfish interest, so the Nation behaves well if it treats the natural resources as assets which it must turn over to the next generation increased and not impaired in value, and behaves badly if It leaves the land poorer to those who come after us. "In the second place, the natural re sources must be developed promptly, com pletely, and In orderly fashion. It is not conservation to leave the natural re sources undeveloped. Development is an indispensable part of the conservation plan. The forests, the mines, the water powers and the land Itself must all be put to use. Those who assert that con servation proposes to tie them up, de priving this generation of their benefits in order to hand them on untouched to the next, miss the whole point of the conservation Idea. Conservation does not mean depriving the men of today of their natural rights in- the natural resources 6f the land. AH it means is that we of this generation shall so use our rights as not to deprive those who come after us of their natural rights in their turn. "In the third place, so far as possible these resources must be kept for the whole people and not handed over for exploitation- to single individuals. We do not intend to discourage individual enter prise by unwisely diminishing the reward for that enterprise. On the contrary, we believe that the men of exceptional abili ties should have exceptional rewards up to a point where the reward becomes dis proportionate to the service, up to the point where the abilities are used to the detriment of the people as a whole. We are for the liberty of the individual up to and not beyond the point where it be comes inconsistent with the welfare of the community. Thus our consistent aim is to favor the actual settler the man who takes as much of the public domain as he himself can cultivate, and there makes a permanent home for his children who come after him; but we are against the man, no matter what his ability. Who tries to monopolize large masses of public land. Now, to preserve the general welfare, to see to it that the rights of the public are protected, and the liberty of the in dividual secured and encouraged as long as consistent with his welfare, and curbed when it becomes Inconsistent therewith, It Is necessary to Invoke the aid of the Government. There are points in Which this Governmental aid can best be rendered by the states; that Is, where the exercise of states' rights helps to secure popular rights; and as to these I believe in states' rights. But there are large classes of cases where only the au thority of the National Government will secure the rights of the people, and where this Is the case I am a convinced and thorough-going believer in the rights of the National Government. Big business, for instance, is no longer an affair of any one state: big business has become nationalized, and the only effective way of controlling and directing it, and pre venting abuses in connection with it, is by having the peopla nationalize this con trol, in order to prevent their being ex ploited by the individuals who have na tionalized the business. All commerce on a scale sufficiently large to warrant any control over It ' by-' the Government is nowadays interstate or foreign commerce; and until this fact is heartily acknowl edged and acted upon by both courts and legislative bodies, National and state alike, the interest of the people will suf fer., "In the matter of conservation, I heartily approve of state action where Under' our form of government the state only has the power to act. I cor dially Join with those who desire to see the- state, within its own sphere, take. the most advanced position in re gard to the whole matter of conserva tion. I have taken exactly this atti tude In -my own state of New York. Where the state alone had power to act, I have done all I could to get it to act in the most advanced manner, and where the Nation could act, I have done all I could to get National action in the same direction. Unfortunately, in the East we have in this matter paid the penalty of not having our for est land under National control; and the penalty has been severe. Most of the states, although they are old states, have not protected their forests; each failing to act by itself, because the ac tion was really the common concern of all; and where action is the common concern of all, experience haa shown that it can Only be profitably under taken by the National Government. "As a result of the impossibility of getting Such wrse action By the sev eral state governments in the East, we are doing our best to get National leg islation under which the National Gov ernment, at the expense of millions of dollars, shall undertake to do as re gards the Appalachians and White Mountains of the East what It is now doing in the Rocky Mountains here out West. It would be both a calamity and Sn Sbsurdity for the National Govern ment now to do In the West the very thing that at a heavy pecuniary cost It Is trying to undo In the East. By actual experience id the East we have found to ouf cost that the Nation, and not the several states, can best guard the Interests of the people in the mat ter of the forests and the waters, and that If it fails to attempt this duty at the outset it will later on have to pay heavily in order to be allowed to take up the work, which, because It is done so late, cannot be so well done as if it had been begun earlier. "Take the question of the control of water power sites. The enormous Im portance of water power sites to the future industrial development of this country has only been realized within a. very few years. Unfortunately, the realization 'has come too late as re gards many of the power sites; but many yet remain with which our hands ere free to deal. We should make it our duty to see thst hereafter the pow er ltes are kept under the control of the general Government, for the use of the people as a whole. The fee should remain with the people as a whole, while the use is leased on terms which shall secure an ample reward to the lessees, which' shall encourage the' de velopment and use of the water power, but which shall not create a perma nent monopoly or permit the develop ment to be anti-social, to be in .any respect hostile to the public good. The Nation alone has the power to do this effectively, and it is for this reason that you will find theBO corporations which wish to gain improper advan tage and to be freed from efficient con trol on the part of the public doing all they can to secure the substitution of state for National action. "There is something fairly comic in the appeal made by many of these men in favor of state control when you realize that the great corporations seeking the privileges of developing the water power in any given state are at least as apt to be owned outside the state as within it. ' In this country, nowadays, capital has a National and not a state use. The great corporations which are managed and largely owned in the older states are those which are most in evidence in developing and using the mines and water powers and forests of the new territories and ihe new states, from Alaska to Arizona. I have been genuinely amused during the past two months at having arguments presented to me on behalf of certain rich men from New York and Ohio, for instance, as to why Colorado and other Rocky Mountain States should manage their own water-power sites. Now these men may be good citizens ac cording to their lights, but naturally enough their special interests obscure their sense of public need; and as their object is to escape an efficient control, exercised In the interest of all the people of the country, they ciamor to be put under the state In stead of under the Nation. If we are foolish enough to grant their requests, we shall have ourselves to blame when we wake up and find that we have per mitted another privilege to entrench itself and another portion of what ehould be kept for the public good to be turned over to Individuals for pur poses of private enrichment. During the last session of Congress bills were in troduced to transfer the water-power sites in the National forests and the public domain to the control of the states. I cannot state too strongly my belief that these measures are un wise and that it would be disastrous to enact them into law. In substance their effect would be to free those great special Interests from all effective con trol. The passage of such a bill would be a victory of the special interests over the general welfare, and a long backward step down the hill of prog ress we have of late been climbing. "The same principle applies with peculiar force to the coal lands, and especially to the coal lands in Alaska, whose protection and ownership by the Federal Government Is so necessary, both for full and free industrial devel opment In the West, and for the needs of our fleet In the Pacific. The coal mines should be leased, not sold, and these who mine the coal should pay back a part of the profit to the people. "As an old-time stockman I realize that the present order of things on the open range cannot continue, and that the sure way to protect the range itself, prevent the Increase of big outfits, promote the equitable use of the grasing lands, and foster genuine homestead settlement, is to extend over the open range a system of range control somewhat similar to that now In effect on the National Forests. "I do not believe that a single acre of our public lands should hereafter pass into private ownership except for the single purpose of homestead Settlement, and I know that the stockmen stand with me in their desire to remove every obstacle from the path of the genuine homesteader, and to put every possible obstacle In the pathway of the man who tries to get public lands by misrepre sentation or fraud. This Is absolutely necessary on the agricultural lands. - It is at least equally necessary on the min eral lands. It would be a calamity, whose baleful effect on the average citi zen we can scarcely exaggerate. If the great stores of coal and other mineral fuels still owned by the people in Alaska and elsewhere should pass Into the un regulated ownership of monopolistic cor porations. "You progressive stockmen have stood heartily by the Conservation movement, and with you have stood many others throughout the West, to whom large credit is1 due, such as the lumbermen in Washington and Oregon, the Irrigators in California, and the supporters of the country life movement in and around Spokane. t "I have just come back from a very interesting trip in the old world. M spent a year In a comparative holiday in Africa, and a quarter of a year in fairly vigorous work in Europe, dur ing much of which It seemed the kind purpose of my hosts to give me exactly the same kind of experience, the point of vigor which I am having today. When I came back with my feelings of friendliness for foreign people in creased, yet I can with sincerity eay that with all our faults and with all our shortcomings and I know them well there Is not any other spot on the face of the earth where life is so su premely worth living, where the chance which the average man has is so good, as in this country of ours. There-is any amount of things which need to be improved and yet, I think. It Is per fectly possible to combine a full know ledge of the evils which exist not only with a determination to cut out those evils, but with a full realization of our great advantages. "Two things struck me while I was abroad. The first was that to the ave- . rage man whose life was hard. Ameri ca stood as the name which symbol ized hope. The second thing was that almost e'ery man whom I met on the other side and talked with to any ex tent, would ask me anxiously about some feature of business or political corruption in America. Every reac tionary, every opponent of free Insti tutions, hailed with sardonic laughter every Instance of corruption, as proof that our plan for a democratic Govern ment was an empty dream. ."We should t realize that we are not only the custodians of the prosperity of our children, but in a sensei of the whole world. Shame, triple shame, be ours, if we spoil the world's dream of the possibility of a popular government on a Continental scale. I ask you, men and women of Colorado, to go back to your homes with the resolute purpose to fight for honesty, in both business and politics, not only for our own sakes and for the sakes Of our children, who ought to inherit the land, but-for the sakes of the people of the world. who stand and watch the experiment which we are making in the Republic of the West, so that their hopes shall not be dimmed." A Real Town in Forty-eight Hours. 8t. Paul Dispatch. "Watch Timber Lake Grow!" With this slogan a commercial club al ready haa been organized in Timber Lake, a town a little over 48 hours old. atid efforts are being made td secure the county seat of Dewey County and' a Gov ernment land office. The lot sal of the Interior Department has closed. It was one of the most successful ever held in the Northwest. The road disposed of 310 lots in two days, at a total price of $78,121. A newspaper has . been started, and water works will shortly be inrtalled. A lake three miles long adjoins the town.