THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1910. 8 rORTUMD. ORKOOJC. Entered at Portland. Oregon, poatootc as Eeccnd-CUM Matter. ' fcutwcrlptioa Bates Invariably la Advance. (BT MAIL). Ta!ty. fandaT Included, one yar J JJJ l any. Buniiar Included, six momn. . Ieily. Sunday Included, threa month. Iaily. Sunday Included, ona month.. I'i!y. without Ounday. on year lally. without Sunday, ell month. 4 IS 2. IS ..1 a.00 2S 1.7.-. ralr. without Sunday, th ree month. 'illy, without Sunday, ona monta w'ek!y. ona year - Kundam r r. a s . . . 3 SO Sunday and weekly. 'one year . (Py Carrier). r!'y. Punrtar Included, ona yer...... J Tally. Sunday. Included, one month 71 How to Krtnlt Send Poatoiriea money order, axrreea order or peraonal chock on ur local bank. Stampa. coin or currency ra at tha tender run. Oia PnMolTIra lUrm in foil. Inrludtng county and state. 1'oetac Kutee 10 to 14 raaea. 1 cent: 1 pi ice. 2 centa: 0 to ) pares, t cent: 4" to a paces. 4 cents- forelsn postass do-jbie rata. twtni RoslaeM Offlee Verreo Cnnk I'n New Tork. Urunjwlck building. Chi cago, iiteger building. PORTLAND. MTIRDAY. 8KPT. S. 1910. rly-vAl. EW YORK. The people of the United States will receive with placid satisfaction the In formation that New Tork Is now the biggest city In the world vith the soli tary exception of London. Paris. Ber lin. Pckln are all left far behind. It contains more human being's than fourteen of the cities of the country which reach the 200,000 mark taken together. New Tork has perhaps one and a a!f times as many inhabitants as there were In the thirteen colonies when they fired the shot heard round the world and raised the stars and stripes In defiance of the British lion. The City of New Tork could rebel pgalnst the state with fairer prospects of success than attended the rash en terprise of the revolutionary fathers. Jts rate of growth for the last decade has exceeded 38 per cent. If the ratio of increase does not fall off, it will have more than 15,000.000 inhabi tants in 1950. It will then be the biggest city there ever was in the world. Babylon, ancient Rome In Its palmiest days, the fabled municipali ties of Central Asia, will all hide their diminished heads. During the last decade Detroit has grown faster than New Tork. Its rate of Increase has been 63 per cent. But Detroit's ex pansion has been attained by system atic effort. The business men joined hands to build up the automobile In dustry. They succeeded, and with the new manufacture came a great inrush of population. New York's Increase has been like the flow of rivers to the sea. People go there to live as planets revolve round the sun. Its immensity creates centripetal forces which cannot be resisted. Money, trade, fashion, luxury, literature, the theater, all Bend out attractive influ ence to which men and women yield more and more willingly every year. With New York's astounding rate of growth goes an equally astounding concentration, of the Inhabitants. The municipality hsa done something in the way of abating the ancient tene ment dens of disease, vice and crime, but not enough. The population Is still far more compressed than that of any European city. London's limit Is 600 people to the acre. New Tork has 1600. This is one consequence of the small area which the heart of the city occupies. Squeezed In be tween Its rivers It has been compelled to expand upward Instead of later ally. Hence Its overcrowded tene ments and swarming skyscrapers. The population of a single New Tork of fice building exceeds that of any town In Oregon except Portland when the rush of business Is on. At night, of course, the cliff dwellings are deserted and the multitudes reek their dinners and beds In far-away suburbs or In Brooklyn. The last census will show that. In spite of all that has been said of the "back to the land" movement, the expansion of our American cities hits not been checked. Very likely they have actually grown at the ex pense of the country- Vermont may not be the only rural state whose pop ulation has diminished In the last ten years. Perhaps the sane is true of Iowa, though the farmers of the lat ter state have sought the fertile prai rie wheat lands of Canada, instead of the city pavements. One might take occasion to dilate upon the evils of this concentration of our population In the big cities, but It would be useless. Nothing can stop 1t. As rapid transit develops men will move out Into the suburbs more and more, but they will still live in the city and not in the country. The problems of the city are the real prob lems of our future. To solve them adequately requires more persistence and ingenuity than we have yet dis played, but no doubt it will be done sometime. Meanwhile they will grow big In squalor, sin and shame, with here and there a gleam of something better. The healthy rural topulation of the United States has hitherto been the surety of the country against hasty politics. Farmers are conserva tive by nature. As their number falls off in comparison with the urban throngs, it is likely that we shall cut loose from many moorings and ven ture upon untried seas. Great cities favor the inculcation of radical ideas. The vast Jewish population on the Kast Side In New York is Inoculated with socialism of an extremely un compromising sort. Milwaukee has been captured by the Socialists. They cay they have hopes of getting Chi cago. No doubt the growth of our cities Is a brilliant and beautiful thing to contemplate on one side, but the other may possiHIy look a little darker. r.TTSa THE UtrHT. Attorney-General Wkkersham and Secretary of Commerce and Labor Na gel have reached Cordova. Alaska, af ter an extended trip through that country. In an interview they said thRt they were unable to express their surprise at the wonderful things they have seen In Alaska. "The one great need of Alaska." said Mr. Wicker sham., "is railroad transportation, as upon It depends the adequate devel opment of Alaska's mineral and agri cultural lands. It Is evident that this transportation cannot be furnished until the coal lands are opened up, for cheap coal is required to operate a railroad." If more Eastern people, endowed with average Intelligence, would visit the over-conserved West, there "would be a heavy decline In the moral support that 1" now given the ca-ise of PlnchotLsm In the East. The natural resource of the West ars so much at variance with any thing that the East know or can un derstand that its Ignorance on the sub ject make It an easy matter for the Plnchotsj and Oarflelds and other vis ionaries to mislead them and secure their approval of schemes that they would not countenance if they were more familiar with the subject. Of course. Judge Wlckersham and Secre tary Nagel were surprised at what they found In Alaska. They have also learned that under the present policy of Pinchot the great coal resources of the country can never be developed and that the great wealth of the country must remain locked up for an indefinite period, unless something Is done to attract capital and make the country an attractive place to live In. While Alaska is the most flagrant ex ample of what ultra-conservation will do for a country, the same blight on a lesser scale is noticed throughout the West. Wherever there have been unneces sary withdrawals of land needed by bona fide settlers, the growth of tho surrounding country has been ham pered and the good citizens seeking new homes have been obliged to cross the border Into Canada to secure them. This is a phase of "the conser vation problem which will probably be fully discussed at St. Paul, unless the Pinchot forces are in full control of the situation. rORTXAND'S MATTOin. The Oregonlan had occasion yester day to say something about the large amounts of money reported to have been spent by candidates for high of fice in Idaho, Oregon and Washington and offered the following comment All will urM that hers Is a grara detect ot the dlrort primary that ought to be cured. If there is a cure. It has no'.nmg to do with any question about assembly or anti-assembly. If enormous amounts of money may bs honestly spent, the primary places a premium on tha csndldscles ox wealthy men. It they may ba dishonestly stent and under the corrupt practices ac there la no other wav the new system o electlnr Senators Is not better than the old. What Is to bs dona about It? ( Because the Democratic paper o Portland, now engaged chiefly In en deavoring to run the Republican prl marv and wreck the Republican par ty, knows that The Oregonlan shares the general contempt for so common and universal a liar, and seldom heeds or hears what it says. It makes bold to garble this perfectly reasonable comment Into an unqualified declara- tion by The Oregonlan that the prl mary places a premium on the candi dacies of wealthy men. No friend of the direct primary will complain of the criticism made by The Oregonlan. No person or newspaper anywhere will have the hardihood to defend a system that permits the ex penditure of vast sums in the interest of anyone's candidacy. All that re mains for a newspaper without con science or character or any sense of accountability to the public Is to pur sue a system of ingenious and malig nant misrepresentation of other news papers, possibly to hide its own infa mies. Why is this disreputable newspaper mattoid so sensitive on the subject of prodigal outlays of slush money under the direct primary by candi dates for United States Senator? The Orfronlan had not accused It of holding out Its hand for Its dirty mite from any Senatorial Jackpot made up by any political gambler, with the public interest, or will, or welfare as the stakes. It hadnT seemed worth hile. MERELY AN ACCIDENT. Another steamer has been wrecked while endeavoring to get out of Puget Sound, fortunately without loss of life. As The Oregonlan stated, when the Seattle Times a few weeks ago made mighty outcry over a few minor ma rine mishaps in the Columbia, acci dents will happen wherever steamers run. Portland has never claimed Im munlty from these accidents, and never will, and we shall also expect to note their frequent occurrence on Pu get Sound. This latest disaster. In which the steel steamship Watson, car rying nearly 100 passengers and a full cargo of freight, was Impaled on a reef on Waddah Islands. Just Inside the Straits of Fuca, happened at midnight during a dense fog. These conditions were what caused the loss of the Va lencia, when 138 passengers lost their lives. Fortunately, tho Watson was Inside the straits In comparatively smooth water, so that rescue by life boats was easy. It Is even probable that thA stMrncr will be saved wlth- l nut brina- damaged bevond repair. The Incident does not demonstrate that Puget Sound is an unsafe port for steamships. It simply shows that in a thick fog at midnight even 'the most careful navigator will sometimes get into trouble. There is plenty of water for ships on either Puget bound or the Columbia River, so long as they remain In the channel. When they get out of the channel they encoun ter trouble In either waters. ORBOON COL1.EX.es. Many friends of higher education in this state have feared that the exten sion and development of the state and Nationally-endowed State University and Agricultural College would Injure the private Institutions, like the Pa cific University at Forest Grove and the Pacific College at Newberg. There is evidently ample room for both. Even when the new Reed Institute opens its doors and students flock to register, the older institutions will be able to hold their own so long as the spirit of faith and energy continues to animate their conductors. Each university, college and Institute makes Its own and its independent appeal. One may. from Its foundation, claim special support from one church or sect. But each year such calls lose, more and more, their power. It Is rather to the outcome of the teaching given, in fitness for the practical, everyday life, than to the maintenance of any segregation in religious beliefs that both parents and children look today. One institution may specialize along certain lines in which tho intending student sees his future. Another may rest its claim on the very opposite, the excellence of its general plans of work, on what the Morrill Act de scribes as the lines of a "liberal edu cation." Again, the economy and fru gality practiced by the students of yet another college, and the comparative ease with which one can make his own way through, appeal to many. One need be behind the scenes to learn how great is the multitude of young men and women In this young state, who. earnestly seeking to fol low on their time of study past the days of public school and high school, are hard put to it to find the ways and means. All honor to them, for they earn by hard knocks the culture they obtain. It is to be hoped that boards of regents and faculties of all our insti tutions will earnestly guard against the ever-encroaching expenses that make difficult the students' life in college. Athletics have become a very necessary and a very attractive side to college activities. But each year adds to the contribution that is asked from the entering student for their cost. And the students arriving to register are powerless to protest. Even If courage be there, pride forbids. AH of which leads to congratula tions that the Pacific College Admin istration building, long planned, and diligently worked for, is now in sight. A brick building, providing, in addi tion to president's office and class rooms, an auditorium seating 900 peo ple. Is no small addition to the equip ment of one of the worthy colleges of Oregon, that was born, has lived and prospered, and is now opening wider doors to Increasing classes, all without state or National aid. - - TILE ALLIES. Plainly stated, anti-assembly has for the body of its support these ele ments: Democrats, ex-Popullsts and Statement No. 1 Republicans. find a Democrat and you will see one wno Is deeply agitated over the holding of any assembly by Republicans. Find an ex-Popullst, and you will dis cover one who Is loud for the peo ple's will provided It shall not be for the assembly. Find a Statement Oner and there will be revealed one who Joins hands with Democrats and Pop ulists every time in preference to Re publicans. The spirit of the entire movement was most effectually ex posed in the statement of its chief backer and sponsor, to wit: If I am hers at the time of the general election, and any assembly men have been nominated, and there nre no anti-assembly candidates from tho Republican party opposing- them. I will vote tor the Democratic candidate, provided he Is opposed to the assembly and Is a competent man Public statement by Senator Bourne. So you see how much interested in Republican success are these anti assembly allies. They prate every where about the "will of the people" and prepare In advance to repudiate It. They care nothing about the will of the people; they are concerned only about the will of some people. A WORTHY LIST. THIS. Here are twelve names that will appear on the primary ballot for the consideration of the Republican vot ers of Multnomah County: Angel. Homer D. Moores. Charles B. Reverldge. Joseph W. McCue, John C Collier. Henry K. Northrup, H. H. Farrell. Robert S. Ravburn. E. I.. Kobklrk. Peter Stapleton. O. W. Hume, Peter Wether bee. Dr. J. R. These men are candidates for rep resentative for Multnomah in the State Legislature. It is a group of well-known names. All, or nearly all, of them have been Identified promi nently with the activities and develop ment of Portland and Oregon. Every one has, and deserves to have, the re spect of his neighbors and the confi dence of the public. No word can or will be said against the character, or capability, or life of any of them. If they shall be elected to the Legisla ture, it is certain that Multnomah will have representation in the lower house worthy of Its best traditions and able to achieve results of value and importance. These are the assembly nominees. Effort is being made to have It ap pear that these reputable and worthy men are enemies of the public Inter est, have been nominated through the procurement of a dishonest body for dishonorable purposes, and that they will seek to perpetuate the rule of some corporation ring or political combine. It Is not true. It has no basis of truth whatever. It Is known everywhere and by everybody who knows these men not to be true. They ought to be nominated by the primary on their merits as high-minded. Intel ligent, efficient and disinterested citizens. MR. HUMPHREY'S MISINFORMATION. Hon. W. E. Humphrey, Congress man from Washington, has favored The Oregonlan with a copy of his speech In which he attempted to show that foreign shipping rings "control not only the shipping of the United States, but Its commerce as well, both on land and sea." Mr. Humphrey be lieves that "this condition is costing our country, directly and Indirectly, hundreds of millions of. dollars every year, and adds: T;he writer reels as if he would like to have you know, as far as possible, all the facts as they are likely to be a subject of thought and discussion In the near future." The Oregonlan has made more than a superficial search for facts In connec tion with the shipping business, and observes with regret that Mr. Hum phrey, In an attempt to bolster up his very weak: cause, is using very light and gauzy fiction In lieu of fact. We read in his speech, for example. that when the International Sailing- Shipowners' combination was formed "they were carrying wheat from Seat tle to Liverpool for $1.25 per ton. They Immediately raised it to $5.62 per ton and recently to J6.90. As a matter or Tact, wneat never was carried from Seattle to Liverpool at 11.25 per ton, and the rate named by I Mr. Humphrey, J6.62, for carrying a long ton, 2240 pounds, of wheat 14,- j 000 miles between the two ports. Is so low that the operation will show a loss unless cargo is secured on both the in ward and outward trip. Mr. Hum phrey presents a numbered list of what bears in the Congressional Rec ord the heading "Undisputed Proposi tions." If they are undisputed. It Is time that some one disputed them, for the element of fact Is missing from nearly all of them. Undisputed prop osition No. 1 is a fair sample of the lot. It says "90 per cent of our com merce Is carried by a giant monopoly composed of foreign ships, among which there Is not the slightest com petition." Any reliable, well-informed shipping man In Seattle. Tacoma, Portland or any other first-class port In the United States could have given Mr. Hum phrey Information which would have prevented him from making so obvi ous a blunder as that statement. Nearly all our foreign commerce Is carried by tramp steamers and sati ng ships, which cut and slash rates without the slightest regard for any other principle than to "get the busi ness." For example, last month a line of Norwegian steamers were car rying wheat and flour from Portland to the East at $3 per ton, when sud denly a British line operating out of Puget Sound sent a steamer to Port land and took all the cargo she could get at 2 per ton, or 50 cents per ton less than American vessels get for car rying it a few miles down the coast to California. Portland ships more lumber by water than Is shipped from any other port on earth, but there has never been a foot of It carried by vessels that were In a combine. Exporters can secure tonnage in unlimited quantities at rates so low that it would be Impos sible to meet them without a subsidy so enormous that the American people would refuse to pay it. Mr. Hum phrey's entire argument Is so strange ly at variance with the facts that it Is not surprising his ship subsidy bill was defeated. The American people are not all fools and quite a number of them know something about the ship ping question. According to a compilation by American Consul Goding, of Monte video, the population of the Latin- American countries is now 67,796,072. This Is a much larger figure than it was generally supposed could be mus tered by the countries lying to the south. The figures suggest great pos sibilities for trade development as the wealth of the people increases. We shall not, however, be able success fully to compete with England, Ger many and other Europeans in that trade until our own population In creases to a point where it can con sume all of the wheat, corn, cattle barley and other great agricultural staples which we now export to Eu rope in large quantities. Europe has the first call on the trade of the Latin-American countries because she Is such an enormous purchaser of tho nroducts which South and Central America produce. When the Argen tine can sell return cargoes of wheat to the United States, this country will find It easier to sell other commodities to Argentina. New crop cotton is now coming on the market. With prices so near the 20-cent mark, there will undoubtedly be a rush to get the money out of the great staple. According to the Gov ernment report, th6 condition of the crop on August 25 was about 8.4 per cent better than on the same date last year. Climatic conditions have been quite unfavorable, but with 20 cent cotton an actuality, the incentive to perfect cultivation and care is very great, and the final out-turn may show an even greater gain than is now expected. High prices not only stimulate production, but they also have a tendency to curtail consump tion. Thl3 appears first in the demand, for the finished product and is then passed on to the cotton grower. The ultimate consumer who has been pay ing war prices for cotton, corn and a number of other commodities will not regret to learn that prospects are fa vorable for a larger cotton crop than last year. Acting Mayor John P. Mitchell, of New York, estimates that the census returns for 1940 will show New. York with a population of 12,700,000, or nearly 1,000,000 more than London will be able to muster at that time. This result In New York will be at tained by an annual increase of 3.8 per cent, while London is expected to increase but 1,6 per cent annually. If Portland makes anything like the showing it has made for the past five years, about the time New York passes London, this city will be pretty well along in the million class. New York with 13,000,000 population will be pretty badly crowded and will probably show fully as much squalor and misery to the square Inch as are now in evidence In London. The secret of the wonderful pears which are produced in the Frey or chard near Placervllle has at last been discovered. The ground is pep pered with gold nuggets. No doubt orchardists whose trees have been barren will profit by this information. They need only sow a few bushels of gold nuggets to the acre and their next crop of fruit will be satisfactory. We anticipate great popularity for this novel method of fertilization. Temperance orators may be mis taken as to fact and opinion, but re turns to United States revenue collec tors don't He. In the prohibition States of Alabama and Mississippi, sales of intoxicating liquor last month, as shown by the revenue office, were twice as large as In the corresponding month of 1909. Among other prominent citizens, Ralph R. Dunlway is accused of vio lating a municipal statute which re quires property owners to cut tall weeds on vacant lot9. What better opportunity could be offered for test ing the constitutionality of that ordi nance? While Portland is still behind New York in population, there Is no reason to be discouraged. New Tork had 235 years the start of us. We are willing to make a small bet, payable then, that in the year 2145 Portland will have more people than New York has now. ' The local traction company is cer tainly doing a I go amount of im provement work, but it is an invest ment that will pay, for Portland's growth keeps ahead of it. With the finest apple crop In the world (Hood River's, of course), sold over our heads, Portland can feel for people on the cattle ranches who have to use condensed mux. Corvallis has let contracts for pav ing thirty-eight blocks with hard sur face. This means nearly three miles of metropolitan streets In the Col lege City. Further proof that the. South pro poses to Inject comedy into National politics is the Georgia commendation of Hoke Smith for the presidency. I-atin America, according to latest statistics, has nearly 68.000,000 peo ple, which Is several millions behind Anglo-Saxon America. Mr. Roosevelt will note that it cost a Chicago lawyer 50 yesterday to use the short, ugly word, and the cam paign Is yet young. New York expects to outstrip Lon don in thirty years, but what do you suppose Portland will be doing meantime? Oyster Bay increased 33 per cent in the decade, which is very good for the home of the anti-race suicide propaganda. ' There is opportunity for some Ore gon community to emulate Rocky Ford and become the melon city of the state. Those who would "eat 'em alive" will move from the Vaughn-street grounds to the Armory tonight. Young Mr. Clagstone makes a poor third in the Idaho primary. ALL A DEMOCRATIC PLAY. Real Animus of Antl-Asaembly Move ment Set Forth. PORTLAND, Sept. 2. (To the Editor.) It seems to me that this entire anti assembly movement is nothing more than an effort of the Democratic party to defeat the Republican party at the primaries, before the election arrives. .Read the Democratic newspaper press. Do their party papers say anything about Democratic principles, Demo cratic issues, or Democratic candidates? Hardly a word. If the Democratic party were endeav oring to make a fight for the election, their papers would be filled with ap peals to their constituents in behalf of Democratic issues and Democratic can didates for office. They would not have time or Inclination to enter Into the fight In the Republican party. They would be working for Democratic suc cess. But, amazing as it may seem, their newspapers are fighting harder in Re publican party Issues than even the Re publican newspaper press of the state. But notice, their efforts are directed toward stirring up dissension in the dominant party, hoping thereby to cap ture the election by defeating- the Re- nuhllcan nartv in the primaries. Witness these facts: The i anti assembly movement is led by a Demo cratlc newspaper, and the organized movement Is composed of the Demo cratic newspaper press In general "sorehead" Republicans, and a rabble of followers without party affiliation Democrats are registering by the thou sand as Republicans: Senators cnam berlain and Bourne are Its backers, an the Democratic leaders are all mixed u In the anti-assembly fight. Now, If the Democratic party leaders reallv believed that the assembly move ment was a mistake, and contrary to the primary law, they would either re main perfectly silent until after tn primary election, or they would encour ns-e socretlv the Kepuoncan party i fall into the assembly trap. The very fact that the Democratic party is fight iner the movement is positive proof tha thev believe it to be the best thing that could be adopted by the Repub 1 ion ns. The fact is, they know that the only linn, of the Democratic party is in rlefrnt of the assembly movement, therefore the Democratic leaders hav organized the anti-assembly movement. They have hoodwinked "sorehead" Pe ri. iMienna Into aiding them in their ei forts. There is quite a following of voters not affiliated with either party, and some Republicans who read the Democratic newspapers Instead oi mei ntv-n nartv newspapers, have been de ceived by misrepresentations and false statements into believing mat ini "nntl" movement is in the interest o irood srovernment and reform. In fact it is the rottenest political trickery that has ever been perpetrated In tne state nnrt Is caused by discruntled party leaders In the Dartv itself and the enemy of the party from without en tering clandestinely into the party rank-j for the purpose of its overthrow. Let all lovers of pood government and of clean polities beware o his anti-assembly trickery and vote straight for the repular Republican assembly candidates at the cominer pri maries, u. A. &,u 1 i i-i. NAMIXR THE "PKOPLE'S CHOICP:." How Democrat Will Invade Republican Prlmnry la Wnnhlnerton. Aberdeen World. Approximately lOS.noo Republican and F.s nnn Democratic votes were cast at the state election In 1908 a Republican mnlorltv of 4S.0P0. Of these 58.000 Democratic votes. It is a safe and con servative estimate that 40,000 will be cast for Miles Poindexter. Senatoria candidate, at the primary next month Democrats throughout the state are nhantloninsr their party in order to en ter Republican primaries. The 106.000 Republican votes allowing nothing: for increaaA made durinor the two years that have elapsed since the last elec tion are to be divided among five ran didates, exclusive of Polndextcr. Foin dexter will, of course, set a percentaKe of these votes, but umler conditions as thev now exist, the Democratic- votes that will be cast for him will of them selves be sufficient to give him a plu rality nomination: and a Republican Lesislature will be forced to elect Senator named by Democrats. And that, we are told, is election by "partv choice" within the meaning of the direct primary law. Yet it Isn't "party choice." it isn't the "people's choice": it will not even be an "In gurgent" victory. There Is no question here of 'in surgency." There is no question of the "people's rights." This Is plain trick ery. Yet Democratic orsrans tell us that the pledge of the primary law Is "hiire-er" than any candidate, being:. they protest, a question of the right of the people to rule. Hut here is neither party rule nor popular rule it Is the imposition of the minority. How Mr. Harrlman Workn. New Idea Woman's Magazine. Mrs. E. H. Harriman s day Is mapped out with the systematic precision of a trained business woman. It allows for no luxurious feminine lapses from schedule. And she permits herself on ly the week-end as a season of rest trom her arduous interests. When at Arden. for example, she rises early and motors to the Erie sta tion. where she catches the train that reaches New York at 10:45 o'clock. At the Forty-second-street ferry Fhe takes a taxicab to her office. This is on the second floor at 474 Fifth avenue, with windows overlooking the street. She reads reports and Issues orders stendilv until 1:30 o'clock, when she walks to the St. Regis for luncheon and then goes back to the office for two hours more of thorough and pa tlent work. Her walk and luncheon are thus the only breaks in tne routine oi nor labor, for she returns to Arden onlv in time for dinner. And this is the average day of the richest widow In the world! Perfect Tisaue Builder. Dr. Woods Hutchinson, in Delineator. There is no known drug that will add in the slightest degree to the strength or vigor of the human body, and no "tissue-builder" on earth except food. The only universally reliable "bracer" Is ex exercise in the open air and sleeping with your windows open, and the only permanent tonics to the body are fresh fruit, red meat and green vegetables. A dollar's worth of cream contains 10 times the "strength" of any dollar bottle of tonic ever Invented. Eat plenty of real foods, the best you can raise or buy, and you'll have little need of either medicinal foods or patent medicines. Any remedy which universally, or even In the ma jority of all cases, produces a sense of exhilaration and Improvement is pretty sure to contain a "cheater" of some sort, usually either alcohol or opium. No Siftn of It Then. Chicago News. It may be true that the average American eats 82 pounds of sugar a year, but he does not act the part when the umpire makes a bad decision. Tho Old Story. Kansas City Journal. ' I liked my trip; Considered fine My dally dip Into tho brine. I liked the beach, the ocean's foam: But thtng look pretty good at home. I liked my ot At the hotel; The food I got Was served me well. I don't complain, like 10m; who roam. But. still. I'm satisfied with home. ED PAGE WHY MEN WEAR TROUSERS. Women Forced Them Into the Fashion and Now They Are Afraid. New Orleans Item. In pondering the apparently irrecon cilable inconsistencies of this life, the vexed question of trousers must inev itably occur to the speculative philoso pher, i Why are trousers, and why do we wear them? are questions which no man has solved that thought upon them until the other day. Unsuspected of the world, there is in an obscure town of Missouri an intel lect capable of dealing with the mys tery. After what years of pondering we know not, this mighty brain has brought forth a theory which, like the alchemist's stone, has transformed the base metal of our ignorance into the pure, clear gold of understanding. In the Democrat of Benton, Mo., the simple, the inevitable, the tremendous solution is thus unfolded: "No living man of this age ever de liberately chose to adopt 'trousers.' He was forced into them and all other eccentricities of diess by women. In the very earliest sartorial experience he is swathed in a queer bundle of in coherent bandages by a woman. Later she puts him in cute dresses, so that the netphbors can't tell him from his little sister. Still later she cuts off his curls and puts him in knicker bockers, and he puts on long pants when she gives the word not before. "That is all that man has to do with wearing trousers. Women forced him into them in the first place, and now he is afraid t6 wear anything else for fear of making a sensation." Of course, there is no doubt about the matter at all now. We wear trousers in subservience to women, and, perhaps. Just a little, In fear of the police. GOVERNOR HARMON JUST HUMAN Trait Thnt Takes Well With Thone Who Cast the Votes In Ohio. Review of Reviews. Harmon appeals to the Ohloan whether that Buckeye's political no tions dovetail with the Harmon brand of politics or no. Because Harmon is, to use the expression of a Holmes County farmer who was analyzing the merits and demerits of the state ex ecutive, "jes" so durn common." "I'll tell ye. boys," he said. "I went down f th' State House an' I walked right into th' Governor's office an' I sez. zes I, 'Where's Jud?' An' right then he comes a-walkln' out an' he grabs me by th' hand and he asts me where I'm from an' hands me a stogy an", by cracky, when I tells him my name and that I'm from OI' Holmes, why, he asts me about a lot of th' fellers up here an' takes me by th' arm and we walks out o" the Capitol tog-ether. He ain't no more stuck up than you be." Which homely estimate casts an in tense and interesting sidelight on J. Harmon. He may not be feverishly In terested in you, but he has a quiet, un obtrusive way of making you believe that he has been sitting up and waiting to greet you since the dawn of history. Not an ostentatious palaver, under stand, hut just a natural, friendly sort of a way with him that you're bound to recognize and appreciate and swell up about. Ed Honf'fi Philosophy. Atchison Globe. Every automobile owner loves to tell how he lately took a ride in a buggy, and how slow it seemed! Nearly every woman looks at a strange man as if to say: "Don't you attempt to flirt with me, you wretch!" Women like to say this: "The only thing a man cannot forgive in his wife is. her mental superiority." When you are tempted to run for ofuce remember that many people wll! talk friendly who do not mean it. Somehow it always sounds like a woman's tea party when one man says to another. "I want to chat with you." As a man grows older time flies so fast that he seems to spend a good deal of his time switching from coal bills to Ue bills. A mother never really understands her hoys: she never thinks they are like other boys, which is the truth, but that they are better or worse. Church Service nt 2:30 A. M. Nef York Times. Rev. John F. Von Herrlich, a former rector of St. Paul's Kpiseopal Church in Kansas City. Kan., now is conducting a unique church service. It is a prayer and preaching service at :S0 o'clock each unday morning. The services are held in the St. Paul's Episcopal Church in New York, with which Rev. Mr. Von Herrlich Is con nected. The texts are adapted to the needs of tiie night workers, who make up this unique congregation. From the newspaper offices, the telephone offices, the lelegraph offices! tho workers pour into the streets at '.' o'clock. Mr. Von Herrlich conceived the idea of holding short services in which they might join. before going home to bed and. sleep. The idea became popular at once and the night workers flock by the hundreds into old St. Paul's Church, which lias stood Imost without a change since libs one of the landmarks of New York. What Wllrthe Democrats Dof Ixuiisvllle Courier-Journal. The Republican party has owed more to the - blundering of the .Democrats than to its own sagacity or virtue. The epi gram of General Grant that the Demo crata could be relied on to perpetrate some folly at The critical moment, nas held good ever since it was uttered. Even now the uemocrais may not iittve m wit. or luck, to profit by the dilemma In which the Republicans find themselves. They will surely carry the next House. When they get it. what will they do with It? They must either adopt a de cisive policy of their own a hard thing to do in the face of so many would-be leaders and so much dissonance of opln- on or surrender to the Insurgents, who have at least the courage of their con victions and who know how to lead. What In a I.arjce Fortune f New York Commercial Confronted with the question put to him by a member of the National House ways and means committee last year as to whether or not large fortunes had been made in cotton manufacturing in New Bmgland. Henry F. Llppitt, a Providence manufacturer, replied: 'That depends on what you call a large fortune.' I do not think that many large fortunes have been made In cotton manufacturing." "What do you call a 'large fortune?" " asked the com mitteeman. "Well, I should call three quarters of a billion dollars a 'large fortune," " was the frank answer. Question of Value. Metropolitan Magazine. Hogan was playing nurse to the twins on the front porch. Tho twins were annoyed because each wanted ex clusive possession of a solitary kitten and they were yelling. A neighbor passed at the gate. w ell. Hogan," he asked, "what would you take for them children of yourn? Hogan shifted in his chair. All the money In - the wurruio couian t buy thim," he declared. "But," he added, "I wouldn't give tin cints apiece for any more like thlm." nt All of One Kind. Pittsburg Gazette Times. Still it is too much to expect that all of T. R. s speeches will treat of the beauty of life on the farm. Impartial Enthusiasm. Washington Evening Star. For either side they-sound the drums And play "The Conquering Hero Comes." "Tis lucky for campaigning tricks A braes band has no politics. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. Rafferty were ex changing ideas across the shabby fence which separated their respective do mains. The conversation turned on the subject of woman suffrage. The first lady is reported as saying: "Are ye tak ing much stock In this attlmpt that a lot iv the wlmmln are making to get th' vote for us, Mrs. Rafferty ?" "I ain't botherin' me head about it," declared Mrs. Rafferty. "I'm satisfied to let Dinny and th' boys do all th' vot ing for me family. But I do think that a lady should get a man's pay." "Well," replied Mrs. Kelly, "all t Kin say is, Mrs. Rafferty, that I get one man's pay, or know the reason why, lvery Saturday night." Pittsburg Leader. Sir Ernest Shaskleton, at the lunch eon in his honor, Riven by the Pilgrims In New York, said of a piece of geo graphical ignorance. "It was incredible. It reminded me of a little waiting mvti: "As she brought me my tea and toast and bloater one morning. I said to her: " 'What a rainy morning, Mary! It's almost like the flood." "'The flood, sir." said the little maid. She looked at me with a puzzled smile. " 'Yes,' said I. "The flood Noah, you know the ark Mount Ararat." "She shook her head and murmured, apologetically: " 'I ain't had no time to read the pa pers lately, sir." " Nashville Banner. Mrs. E. S. Stewart, secretary of the American Woman Suffrage Association, was condemning, in an interview in Chicago, a certain type of anti-suffrag-1st. "This man," she said, "while shout ing that woman's sphere is exclusively the home, is apt to employ women at low wages in his factory, or else, if he Is poor, lets his womenfolk go out and work. "A virulent anti-suffragist, the kind that attends meetings to throw banana skins at the woman speakers, walked gloomily down the street one morning with a dinner pail under his arm. " 'Hello. Bill,' said a friend. 'Where are you off to so early?" " 'Off to work,' the 'anti' answered glumly. " 'Why,' said the astonished friend, what's the matter with yer wife. Bill? Ain't she well? ""Washington Star. At breakfast, recently, Andrew Car negie indulged in a piece of pie. A diet reformer present remonstrated. "Why, Mr. Carnegie," he said, "do you eat pie?" "Of course," replied the noted philan thropist benignly, "what do you do with it?" Success. The subject of a young man's essay, who was graduated rrom a high school in a Pennsylvania town, was "Haw thorne," and in that essay lie said, "At the age of 39 Hawthorne married and took his brido to the old manse." In discussing the merits of the essay one young- woman observed to a school mate: "Wasn't it awful that Harry Meggs should say such a thing as ha did?" Then, in response to the other's In quiry as to the allusion, the young woman added: "Why, he said that at the age of 39 Hawthorne married and took his bride to the old man's. Why couldn't he be more elegant and sav ti his father - in - law's?" Philadelphia Times. IS INSURGENCY JUST A DREAMT World's Prosrrsa Has Been Achieved by Practical Men. Amity Standard. Should all the pledges of the plat form of the Insurgent Republicans be come an active force in this country It would indeed be an ideal retreat. They have recorded a fine dream of the millennium, and Paradise could wish for but few better conditions than pro posed by them. But this is not Para dise and the smooth, soft ways of the visionary do not prevail. Hard and fast conditions are to be confronted. and lie who would make a name for himself must of a necessity meet those conditions face to face and gradually conserve them to the better use of the Nation. He who rants and tears his hair in full public, view, in the history of the world, has accomplished little beyond the noise he made In his stormy passage across front of the public eye. The men who have made real history in this country have been neither dreamers nor visionaries, but grim, de termined men who have met the obsta cles in the way of good government with a horny-handed faith in the strength of right, and in silence worked out the problems as they come up, re gardless of the stormy mouthings of the mob who would make all things perfect in their time and set upon the pedestal of fame a life-sized image of the dreams they dream. Five Congressional Election. New York Times. Here are the figures of five Na tional elections, in all of which, save one, the party in power lost the House of Representatives in the "off year": 1874 Republican majority' of 103 changed to Democratic majority of 1. 1876 Presidential election disputed. 1882 Republican majority of $ changed to Democratic majority of 74. 1884 Cleveland, Democrat, elected. 1886 Democratic majority of 84 re duced to 13. Harrison, Republican, elected. 1890 Republican majority of 7 changed to Democratic majority of 148. 1892 Cleveland, Democrat, elected, changed to Republican majority of 142. 1896 McKinley, Republican, elected. 1910 If the Republicans lose the House of Representatives? Gasoline Night. New York Sun. "Ask me to go to the theater any night in the week except gasoline night and I'll go." said the man. "What night is that?" she asked. "Saturday. Women get their gloves home from the cleaners on Saturday or else clean them themselves the last of the week, and the gasoline fumes haven't had time to evaporate. Half the women you meet In a crowd on Saturday night carry a gasoline odor about on their gloves. In a hot, stuffy place that is pretty bad. On Monday night gasoline still perfumes the air, but it is getting faint and I can stand it, but not on Sat urday." Hnnds Off. New York Sun. Columbus had just discovered Amer ica. "Awful." they cried; "didn't you know It is conserved?" Herewith they tremble.d for the fate of posterity. What It In. Chicago Record-Herald. "Pa, what's a Jeu d'esprit?" "Something that most people think they are saying when they exclaim 'Judas Priest.' " In the Kindergarten. St. Joseph Gazette. "Now, children, what is this?" asked the teacher, holding up the picture of a zebra. "It looks fo me Ifke a horse In a bathing suit," answered a little boy. New Ananias Member. New York World. Will the members of the new Ananias Club take equal rank with those of the old ones, or will they belong to a junior order, with inferior rights?