THR 'TOnytSfi OREGOXIAX WEPyESDAYv SEPTEMBER:-14, 19ia FORTLAND. OREGON. . Eruar4 at PnrtUnd. Ortcon. Poatofflce (ud-Cliu Miliar. Bubacrlplloa. Bm lawtably la Advaaea, . CBT MAIL). !!!. urT Inrluda. mm ymr ? IllT. Sunday Included, six month.... J -J anr. unday Included. thraa monioa.. Xaliy. Sunday Included, on month.... - Pi!r. without Sunday, ena 7ar J fil-T, without Sunday, all month.... J ril, without Sunday, thraa inonlha... 1 riiy. without Sunday, on monta.... rekly on yaar 1 Sunday, on, year. . Suadar and waakTy. na yaar.... mr Carr!T. rrrs!nidav tiirladXI. ona yar. . aj;. Sunday.' Incluoad. ona month .TS Mow ta Remit Sand PoatofTIra monay rdr. axr-raaa order or parannal check on your local bank, fctamDa. coin or currency ara at the ender a riak. Jive pnaton-iea addraaa In full. Includln county and atate I'aataco Rata 10 to 14 rae. 1 rent: 1 to It paxea. 2 renta: 30 to do Mtt eenta: 4 to ort paces, a centa. Foreim polaa double rata. rata rtaalaeaa office Verrea ft Conk l!n New Tora. Hranawtck bulldlna.- Chi cago, Sieger bulldlnc. FORTT.AND. wrDFJDV. 8r.PT. 14, MAINE. . Perhaps It is not worth while to try to do anything for h Republican rty since the temper of the country obviously Is that It shall be beaten, and beaten overwhelmingly and ' 1b toominlously. in thecurrent election". The result In Maine foretells disaster In November in unmistakable terms. It is unprecedented that Maine, a his toric Republican state, steadfast here tofore ax the rocks of Its granite coast. hnuld have administered this chas tisement to the Republican candidates through any local dissatisfaction or Brother accidental or fortuitous clr cuoetence: If the Republican party cannot rely on safe majorities and ronsistent support In .Maine, where hall It look confidently for success thrs year? . . ... The Immediate cause of the. Maine outcome undoubtedly was the disaf fection of a portion" of the " Repub lican voter through 'the activity of Senator Hale and the Congressional delegation for the Payne-Aldrich bill nd otherwise In support of "regular" men. methods and measures. Maine lias long had Hale In the Senate,- so long that he had come to look upon the office as a personal possession nd the Republican party In the state as a private asset. Hale was never popular, at home: or if. he ever had elonjents. el strength aside from his polltifal prowess, the time had long ravsed. Tot the force of tradition was strong in Maine, and Hale was kept In the Senate because he had been there .a long time and had become an Influential "National figure srnd was able to keep- Maine in Its ancient position In the National councils. Then came the Payne-Aldrlch bill, the mild outburst of Insurgent passion, and all the accompanying symptoms of ireneral political disorder and unrest. Kansas, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, New "Hampshire and Vermont gave evidences of their Indifference toward the Republican party and their active discontent even In the highly prosper ous conditions to which the policies of the party have contributed so large a hare. Now Maine breaks the rule of over forty years, elects a Democratic Governor, two Democratic Representa tives out . of four, and a Democratic Legislature which will send, a Demo cratic Senator to succeed Senator Male, who, having with unexpected Intuition seen the rising storm, had already announced the withdrawal of , his candidacy for re-election. It Is said that the falling off in the Republican vote In Maine was 7 per rent and the Increase m the Demo cratic vote 18 per cent, so that for the most part the- shifting of voters from one party to another was not a heavy percentage.- Tet It is always so. The balance of power In a Nation controlled- through popular government rests with a few. who by alternating their party allegiances may bring about momentous consequences. Yet there is little or no consolation for Republican to be found in the figure.-; but the lesson of Maine must bo Interpreted by the evidential facts, which are that the party was not and could not be held together, and by the results, uhich are an almost com plete reversal of the state's old-time political attitude. If the New York World's astonishing assumption that the Nation is every where aroused over the Governmental extravagance is a correct reading of the general Democratic mind, that party has again manifested Its usual opacity In Interpreting events and in dicated Its Incapacity for taking ad vantage of thetn. There are a hundred explanations of the present public distemper.- and each of them Is better than the World's. The country is prosperous, and the producers are all getting high prices and making large profits.- They can stand the drain of Governmental expenditure National, state and municipal a great deal bet ter, than they could sixteen years ago, when the country turned to the Re publican .party to extricate It from thc-.alough of despondency, debt, dis traction and despair, and was placed on the high road of financial inde pendence and general prosperity. Since this great task was performed 'by the Republican party, there has been no backward step, nor even a sign of recession to the old days. It Is hard to resist the temptation to remark that the Nation Is at last tired of being well off and wants. to smash something. Just for the sake of a change. That Is not the true explana tion, of course, but it is a part of it. nevertneletw. The influences that -overturned Maine are everywhere . at work throughout the country- They are almost innumerable, but they proceed with the common purpose of upset ting the party In power: They are the tariff. Cannonlem (so-called), the war on Taft by the restless friends and allies of Roosevelt. Pinchotlsm, ' the gospel of suspicion, dissatisfac tion, discontent "and falsehood fos tered and spread by the muckraking magazines, growing desire to set aside representative government, the "direct primary, the initiative and referen dum, socialism, and all the kindred fads, theories, principles and doc trines of the New Idea. There are other reasons, no doubt, but there Is not room nor occasion to mention them. ' Yet withal there is no Increase of confidence- In the Democratic party, whlch.-is at Its lowest estate, and no desire -to put affairs In its hands with a view to their proper adminlstraton. The plan appears to be to make room for the Democracy In the Republican household, and to displace the old kames. tha old. traditions, the-old poli cies., and the old leaders. Does the New Nationalism mean a new party? ' (.PREADIMi OREGON'S FAME. - Mention like thla from the Spring field. .Mass Republican, pure reading matter, first column, editorial page, helps to bring Oregon to the fore: . A rood many New Fnglandera fret that thev have transacted nulta a piece of bual bmi when they aril tha 1.1 or 2v barrrla of applea grown In thrlr orcharda each year. There ara larger transaction In New York State, but tor real apple-buyln ona muat Ir-ok to the Oregon and Waehlngton or chard. A bit- transaction of th sort was completed lat week, when th crop handled b-r I ha Hood River grower- aawlatloo a a old In on lot to a New York home. It I euppoeed to be th blggeet red appla deal on record, and between 40O and rerloada of apple wer old for about IIOU.OIW). By the time the paragraph is copied Into numerous exchanges, which Is sure to happen, a whole lot of Eastern folk will be puckering their lips for some of the Incomparably fine fruit therein mentioned. Meantime. the Hood River association will not take unkindly the hint that a box of extra fancy Spltzenbergs be sent, charges prepaid, to the editor of our' distin guished New England contemporary, not exactly as an honorarium, but to demonstrate the worthiness of the product so generously noticed. A SHORT rATWHISM. What is-Insurgency? - A sort of' an epidemic which has spread all over the United States. For what object? To split the Republican party into two factions. What is the result? Thus far. the election of Demo cratic" Congressmen in districts that have always been safely Republican. Is the. disease spreading? Road the returns from Maine. "As Maine goes, so goes the Union." Whar Is the remedy? There Is none. The Democrats are playing both ends against the middle. That party presents a solid front. Will the next Congress be Demo cratic? Maybe two to one. What about Oregon? The worst duck in the puddle. The partnership heretofore existing be tween -the free-silver-Populist-sore-head Republican wing of the domi nant party and the unbroken Demo cratic party, whose fruits are Bourne and Chamberlain, has not been dis solved... The. firm is still doing busi ness at. the old stand. Will Oregon elect a Democratic Governor in November? Possibly. That party's candidate is likely to poll more' votes than the assembly candidate or the anti-assembly candidate. Up to Monday night 4911 electors In Multnomah hadreg tetered as Democrats. Watch "that number multiplied by two and a half or' three 'at' the November election. Bourne has publicly declaned that he would vote for a Democrat against an assembly candidate for any office! How about Congressmen? We are worried. . But what's the use? Then is the Republican party of Oregon, numerically twice as strong as the Democratic party, to have no voice in National affairs? There is no Republican party in Oregon. What has become of the party that elected Taft? Ask Roosevelt. i - t -IXRXTER' FEAST. . The. projected dinner in Senator Lorimer's glory will, no doubt, be a momentous happening. It Is to be at tended by a great host of his admir ing friends and will carry a tremen dous rebuke . to Colonel Roosevelt, who declined to dine with the smirched Senator. This banquet, if It ever comes off, will not be exactly like the celebrated feast of Belshaz xar. The Babylonian monarch had "a thousand dark nobles" bending at his board, according to the Inspired Byron, but their sable tint was a matter of exterior complexion only. Leoiimer's guests will also e dark, but the dye will be internal. Their outside will be as fair as a Summer morn. A con gregation of whlted sepulchers they might possibly be called without de parting far from the truth. We do not anticipate any handwrit ing on the wall, either, at the Lorl mer festivity. That miracle has al ready happened so many times over this Summer that there is no more need of it. It would be a trifle super fluous for the Almighty to go to the trouble of telling Lorlmer and his crowd that "they have been weighed In the balance and found wanting" at this time of day. The weighing pro cess Is now an old storj". It is a little .disconcerting to read that the banquet in glorification of bribery is to be "held before the No vember election." This Is too unkind. In the present suffering condition of the Republican party one would sup pose that Mr. Lorlmer might have spared it this last blow. The patient Is already sick nearly unto death from too much glorification of the things that Lorlmer stands for. To call em phatic attention to them Just before election day seems like painting the lily, but If. he Insists on doing it we suppose there is no law to prevent. Time was when a man morally con victed of the' deeds that Lorlmer has done went away and hid himself In some secluded nook, suppressing the odor of himself as much as he could. But things are different now. Such characters seek "vindication" either by a grand dinner or by an election or something of the sort. It never occurs to them that the best medi cine for. a smirched soul is humility and remorse.- ' - . - 1 THE ABRCKl COMXirr. -Any fears or fond hopes that might have been' raised over the possible disappearance from the news columns of the engagement of Miss Katherine Elklns and the Duke of the Abruzzl have again" been dashed to earth. Few, If any. of the American girls who have attempted to sell themselves to for eign nobility have had more extensive and long-drawn-out negotiations than those which followed the original an nouncement of this proposed marriage. At 'the beginning some difficulty was experienced In making Pa Elkins un derstand that the Duke, at the beg garly few millions at which he was quoted, was a bargain in royalty. Sat isfying himself that Italian' Dukes were not on sale at the dollar stores. Pa Elklns at last consented. Then the Duke backed water. A closer exam ination of his Intended bride failed to reveal any greater claim to royalty than a vulgar fortune made In oil. steel and slimlar prosaic staples which Pa Elklns had skillfully syndicated Into a trust. Katherine did not even have Indian blood In her -veins. On making this discovery the Dnke took a short cut back to his profession of mountain climbing and Pa Elkins began graft ing limbs on a family tree. In this pursuit, to use a classical expression, he- had Burbank "backed off the boards," and In dus season the Elkins family tree revealed beyond question that through the Elkins veins there coursed a strain of royal blood as blue as that of the South Sea Island kings. Ready money and royalty then seemed to be getting close to gether, but the King of Italy object ed, and again the Duke of the Abruzzl took to the mountains. Meanwhile, pressure from an un known source convinced the King of Italy that there was too much money In the Elklns dower to permit It to get away from Italy, and the royal con sent was given. Now comes the news from Rome that the fat Is again In the fire and that "the Duke of the Abruzzl himself "broke off the match for personal reasons." The next scene In this international comedy will be awaited with a mild degree of Inter est. It Is approaching the vaudeville period. REMOVE TICE RESTRICTIONS. The advantages of removing the an cient restrictions which hamper the growth of this country have often been referred to In an effort to secure need ed reform in our tariff laws. It re quired many years of effort to secure the tariff reductions necessary to de velop trade with the Philippines, and the Interests which antagonized the effort drew doleful pictures of the re sults which were sure to follow this first attack at the sacred Idol of pro tection. .Virtual free trade with the Philippines has now been In effect more than one year, and the returns are so satisfactory that even a high tariff paper like the San Francisco Call speaks In glowing terms of the change. According to the Government figures, the value of our exports to the Philip pines for the twelve months ending with June was nearly J 17.000.000, a gain 'of over J3.000.000 over the pre ceding twelve months. The purchsaing power of the Philip pines had- been increased through the market which we provided for the Islands' sugar, tobacco, hemp, etc., to the extent of more than 117,000.000. Of hemp alone we took $10,000,000 worth, and tobacco, -which had previ ously been barred out by the tariff, amounted to nearly Jl,700,000. The San Francisco Call, in noting this heavy increase In business, states that "It has an important bearing on the business of this port (San Francisco), through which pass most of the Im ports and xports." There is another most necessary reform ."which will have an equally Important bearing on the foreign business of San Fran ciscothe repeal of the ancient navigation-laws which prevent us from attracting ships to the American flag. If the Call and other high-tariff news papers would Join in- a demand for free ships with which to handle this ever-Increasing Philippine trade, there would be an enormous saving In freights, and San Francisco, Portland and Puget Sound -would, in'due season, become the home port for big fleets of ships which are now forced to sail under alien flags, and, of course, spend their money for repairs, equipment, etc., in the ports -where they are reg istered. As free trade In the Philip pines has proved so satisfactory, why not extend it to the ships needed to carry 'the products of our Island de pendency? .. THE STORY OP FORT WAIU WALLA. .For good and sufficient reasons the historic stockade known as Fort Walla Walla was established by the Government: for good and sufficient reasons the War Department has de cided to abandon the old fort sell it out this Autumn. The logic of events Is behind both the establishment and the abandonment of this military sta tion. Away back in 1847. so runs the story, the mission established by Mar cus Whitman at Walilatpu. six miles from the present site of Walla Walla, was invested by the friendly (as was supposed) Cayuse and Nez Perce In dians and its peaceful, unarmed In mates were massacred. The Govern ment, owing to the absence of troops, military posts and supplies In the Far West, was powerless to protect its peaceful citizens of the frontier. Wars and rumors of wars followed this trag edy, and finally. In 1S55, Fort Walla Walla was established, a bulwark of reassurance if not of safety to the set tlers, and a warning to the hostile Indians who opposed the occupancy of the country by the white man. Many of the succeeding years were years of vigilance and anxiety, of sor tie and defense and of martial spirit and array at old Fort Walla Walla. Detachments from thence were hur ried to the front with Colonels Steptoe and Wright and later Joined in the weary marches led by General How ard in his hot pursuit of Joseph the Nex Perce. Peace at length reigned, a peace that was literally conquered, and quiet fell upon the old fort. Other years passed, and now at last it has been decided that, having en tirely outlived the necessity that called it Into existence, the old fort will be abandoned. Not since 1878 have soldiers been called from Fort Walla Walla to the defense of settlers from a savage foe. Having performed its part In the great drama of civilization like a sen tient' thing; having answered a vital need In a strenuous time wherein savagery and civilization were at war, or sleeping . upon their arms; having in brief served well its day and gen eration, the old fort will be disman tled, the small detachment of troops there quartered will be sent to other stations, the fine acreage comprising the military reserve will be appraised and sold, and Fort Walla Walla, with Its storied past, -will belong to history. Memory for a while will linger over scenes of which It was the theater; tradition will weave tales of fairyland with the old fort for its inspiration: folk-lore will recite legends of fair women and brave men who now and again called Its officers quarters home. Further than this. It will soon belong to the roll of things that were for a time but now are not. A woman organizer, professing al legiance, to some National organiza tion or other, has appeared in Port land for the purpose of getting the department store female clerks and employes into a union. Of course it is their privilege to form a union if they desire, or to do anything that will serve to benefit them. But there is no excuse for misrepresenting their condition to bring about that result, or any result. This -woman organizer is responsible for the statement that the average monthly wage of department J store women and girls In Portland is I only- $17.50. J.t is not true. " It la so j far from the truth that it is grossly and ridiculously false. The average wage in one large store for female employes of all classes, from highest to lowest, is over $45 per month; and the pay is practically the same In all. These girls and women, by the way, have not been dissatisfied with their employment or with their treatment. Probably they are not asking for out side help, since obviously they do not need it. , The Oregon State Fair, which got a good start on the high road to pros perity in the past several seasons. Is again attracting large crowds. It was the success of the State Fair that, was largely responsible for the attempt to revive the Livestock Show and racing meet in this city. Either of these events Is decidedly advantageous ' to the other. . By, affording exhibitors an opportunity to' reach two of these big events without loss of time, much bet ter exhibits are attracted. If Port land can Induce the streetcar company to provide adequate transportation, it will be possible to have a number of the largest stake races ever arranged In the West, and Salem, following a week later, will also have the same number of big events. In time the Country Club track in this, city and the State Fair track at Salem will be come as well known to horsemen all over the country as Charter Oak and Lexington are known today. The State Fair offers a fine programme this week, and It is apparently receiving the support It deserves. The Canadian government an nounces the wheat yield of that coun try for 1910 at 122,785,000 bushels, a decrease of 44,000,000 bushe.ls from last year. When It Is considered that there has been an enormous amount of new wheat land brokea up in that much-advertised country, a 25 per cent decrease in the output does not make a very good showing for the per manency of the industry, or for the assurance of profitable crops. There are, of course, occasional crop failures in the United States, but nothing ap proaching the uncertainty of the Ca nadian crop ever troubles the Ameri can farmer. If wheat prices-continue to rise to a permanent basis much higher than that now prevailing, it might pay to get one crop out of two or three in Canada, but the farmer who is desirous of securing a crop every year will prefer the American side of the line. There was no meeting, secret or otherwise, of corporation lawyers, or any others, at Mr. Fenton's office In the Interest of Judge Cleland's candi dacy. Mr. Fenton explodes that per sistent campaign falsehood by explicit denial. There was a meeting of Judge Cleland's friends of various shades of political opinion and of various pro fessional connections at ex-Senator Fulton's office. It was not secret Do the anti-assembly candidates insist on a monopoly of secret meetings for the purpose of slate-fixing? Next to dogs, chickens are the most fruitful cause of quarrels .between neighbors. Saintly men and angelic women have been known to curse and swear at persons who refused to stand quietly and be bitten by their dogs. A Seattle man shot his next door neigh bor Monday after a year's quarrel over their hens. The plain lesson of such events la that the city Is no place for livestock. The" sooner it Is' banished to the country the sooner sweet peace will unfold . her ' snowy pinions above our heads. Dr. Brougher"s courage In donning an "Ice cream suit" for pulpit wear rather scatters one's wits. Such revo lutionary conduct can only be properly weighed after long meditation. Per haps it is wicked, perhaps a noble victory for righteousness. At any rate, it raises the profound question of what particular good is accomplished by the customary outfit. What neces sary accession of salntliness accrues from buttoning a collar behind? The love troubles of Miss Elkins and her fickle Abruzzl are like a novel in sixty volumes. They were interest ing to begin with. Now they pall. For the sake of a weary world' it is to be hoped that the woebegone twain will either hurry up and get married or sunder their fortunes for good. It is time to clear the stage for new actors. Dr. Brougher savs he will wear his "Ice cream" clothes whenever the weather at Los Angeles sizzles. That's what he gets for moving away from Portland, where withering heat is never felt This headline covers an Indianapolis news item: "Coal Still at $1.60 a Ton." In Portland It would be mov ing Into 10,000 basements If the price were three times as high. If Bryan had only "laid low" two years ago, what a chance he would have now with the insurgents doing more for his party than it could ever do for Itself. Just as the icemen have been trained to become honest, the coal dealer be gins to sell short weight. This is a world of woe and "wickedness. According to the very latest bulle tin Ahrmzl has broken off the match. Things might have gone differently if Katherine had a big brother. Lay by something else than the um brella for the rainy day. The lean years are already casting a vaporous shadow o'er the land. Seismic disturbances are felt right along in many parts of California, but nothing now can shock the Native Son. ' Doesn't It always come to this? In surgency elects the Democrat. Then what have you accomplished? Don't be discouraged over the news from Maine. Cheer up. The worst Is yet to come. Why didn't Bryan think to go up Into Maine and unload a few speeches last month? Now watch the cartoonists bind up fresh wounds . on the G. O. P. . ele phant. Members of boards of election will earn their compensation this year. Make it unanimous and let them do their worst, which Is their best. "Remember the Maine" election and repent. . ' Insurgence, -then resurgenca. SAFK, SAXB, SELF-RESTRAINED Attitude of President Taft In the Present Hullaballoo. Philadelphia Public Ledger. The , events of the past fortnight must have suggested to thoughtful and honest observers of American politics of both parties some such sen timent as this: Let us thank God that whate'er befall, we have In the Presidential chair a sane, honorable and self-restrained man, who has kept patience in the face of the utmost provocation, who has borne himself as a gentleman, who has sustained the high dignity of the Presidential of fice, even though false friends have aimed deliberate insult at him: who has so acted that the promise exciteQ by his reputation and record have been more than fulfilled: who by the force of his character gives assurance to ail patriotic. Americans that though the gusts of hysteria and lawlessness may descend upon us. . the executive, un moved, will do his duty, so that the republic shall take no harm. The race is not always to the swift. President Taffs finest performance lies in keening silence.- and in show ing confidence that in the long run the mania .will abate, and that the conservative portion of the country outweighs and outnumbers Populists, Bryanitos, half-baked Socialists, sen sationalists and all that class of reck less persons so ignorant of the art of government and so careless of conse quences that their possession of a voice and vote has always been considered the chief danger of a republican form of government. The current news dispatches pur porting to quote from Mr. Taft's pri vate conversation to the effect that soma of the planks of the "new na tionalism" are "unconstitutional" have been denied. Ha is to be congratulated for refusing absolutely to enter into these wild controversies. Unconstitu tional? Why It is simply nonsense. It is gravely proposed to undertake a programme of universal social uplift, and to "use the National Government as a tool wherever it is necessary." in order to revolutionize our social, gov ernmental and economic life. Appar ently some inspired and all-wise auto crat is to Judge of the necessity, and is to proceed gayly on the unending quest for the millenium, without any sort of regard for or even recognition of the fart that the Constitution of the United States exists or that this is a Governmen of law and not of per sonal whim and caprice. When a reasonable, moderate, thoughtful statesman like Taft. learned in the law and acquainted with the spirit of our institutions, shall state his opinion of the new nationalism, which lightly brushes aside the Con stitution, the courts and the state gov ernments, and accepts the recall, the referendum and all the experimental fads of populism, he will not stop with a mere statement that It' is unconstitu tional. He could show that it Is a wild dream, supported only by those who would lightly and wantonly turn the United States Government Into a laboratory for rash sociological experi mentation, despite the fact that Amer ica escaped the perils that have usual ly beset republics, and has won the mightiest success of- the ages, chiefly because the wise founders positively thrust aside the notions of doctrin arles and adhered religiously In fram ing the Government to those devices which had been' proved good and sound in practice. But the President has wisely re frained from making any answer, for who can answer mere exclamation or argue with it? Like Bryanism, it will spend Itself and dwindle to nothing ness. The value of Taft to his country and to his party at this Juncture Is that, as Grover Cleveland let Bryan denounce him and win- the plaudits of the thoughtless, so Taft "sits tight," docs his duty, remains calm and trusts to the saving sense of the country. He will not read men out of the party; he will not attempt to make the laws; he will not overrule the Supreme Court; he will never foment strife be tween classes nor evoke the passions of that mob which It is easier to arouse than subdue. He will simply do his duty as President, enforce the laws and stand by his country. Pointed Paragvapha. Chicago News. There are more brain calms than brain storms. Investigating committees have no terrors for honest men. There's no place like home, even if It Is a homely place. Happy is the rounder who has no wife to square himself with. A faint heart is considered an easy mark by the up-to-date girl. Half a million In cold cash makes a fat widow nice' and plump. We feel sorry for the man who thinks that everybody else Is dishonest. Nearly every girl thinks it Is up to her to resist a kiss she really wants. Honest, now. haven't you written a lot of letters that you wish you hadn't posted? Fortunate is the man who takes a wife for better or for worse and strikes a happy medium. When It comes to selecting a second mate a widow is apt to make a better qholce than a widower does. Roosevelt's Self-Restraint. Congregationallst. The President of the United States and the responsible head of the party finds himself confronted not only with the difficult task of harmonizing a divided party, but with an apparent rlvalshtp which Is an impeachment of his authority. The party cannot have two supreme leaders much less two leaders who are drifting apart. Tho situation is unprecedented in our his tory. It will become even more un familiar and distasteful to sober minded Americans If the party in power is divided on the question of personal allegiance to the United States. That will seem to many of us a step to ward the politics which have some times characterized the Spanish-American republics. We look to the self-restraint of Mr. Roosevelt for a relief from this condition of affairs, and ths best sign of that self-restraint wouM be. his positive declaration that he has no wish to return to the Presidency. ' XothinaT but Kleka for Taft. Springfield Republican. After all has been said that can be said against President Taft, It remains true that he has been faithful to his promises In respect to the "clinching'' of "my policies,", and has been to a large degree successful. In. this work he has tried to keep the party together, as -did Roosevelt when he was Presi dent. He has felt the need of em ploying such established party leader ship as was at hand, however reac tionary it may have been, precisely js did Roosevelt when he was President. And for his methods he has received nothing but kicks from the Roosevelt followers, and for what he has done through these methods he has not had a word of recognition from Roosevelt himself. Blue Prints. McMeasure struggled. It appears. And did his honest, level best To please his firm of engineers At building bridges in the West. He took the blueprints out one day Above the stream his firm's bridge spans. And In his willing, witless way He fell right in with all their plans'. Lipplncott's. J. J. HILL IJi ANSWER TO HEXEV. Full Text of Hla Reply to an Attack at the Conaervation Coogreaa. Tho Oreg-onlan has published a part of-the reply of Jamea J. Hill to an attack by Francis J. Heney at St. Paul. Here It 1 In full: " St. Paul Pioneer Press, September 10. It is not often that James J. Hill, railroad king and aptly termed the Empire Builder, allow-s ' himself to re ply to the criticism of others, but he does so this morning in the Signed statement-from him that follows, and Francis J. Heney, uncoverer of timber frauds on the Pacific Coast, untangler of the graft snarl of San Francisco, Is ths target, into the very center of which Mr. Hill's shafts have flown. Mr. Hill's answer to the statements of Mr. Heney, made during the closing moments of the conservation congress Thursday, when it was too late for the chairman of the board of directors of the Great Northern to make reply In kind, was brought about by the request yesterday afternoon of the Pioneer Press of a statement from Mr. Hill re garding the matter. There was the fire of combat in Mr. Hill's eye as he wheeled about in his chair to respond. He called for his stenographer and dictated a reply to Mr. Heney. It follows in full: "In this morning's issue of the Pioneer Press, Francis J. Heney Is re ported to have made, during the closing hours of the Conservation Congress, certain statements so recklessly and maliciously false that they cannot be passed with silent contempt. You will no doubt be glad to give to the truth as prominent publication as to the libel. "Mr. Heney was talking about mat ters long of public record. It was his business to know, and it is fair to assume that he did know, the facts. Having wilfully falsified them, the re sponsibility rests upon him. and his sponsors. He says: " "We gave to Mr. Hill 60.000.000 acres of land a strip 2000 miles long, 40 miles In width through the territories, and 20 miles In width through the states. This was worth at a fair price $10 an acre.' "This has not a rag of truth to cover its nakedness. It would not be true to say, if the Government had made a grant to the Great Northern, that it gave the land to Mr. Hill. But It did neither. The Great Northern did not receive a dollar in money or an acre of land from the Federal Government. "Not only was the Great Northern built from the western boundary of Minnesota to the Pacific Coast without Federal aid, but it bought the right of way through all the unceded lands, from the middle of North Dakota to the eastern slope of the Rocky Moun tains, at a price fixed by a Federal commission. The Great Northern is the only transcontinental line so built. "It is probable, from the figures given, that Mr. Heney was referring to the land grant made to the Northern Pacific. But the charter of the North ern Pacific passed Congrese and was signed by President Lincoln in 1864, 15 jears before I was Interested in the railroad business, and at a time when I was working for $75 a month. "If Mr. Heney did not know these facts, public property for nearly 50 years, what shall the public call a man who brlng to important occasions such incredible Ignorance? If he did know them, what still shorter and more unpleasant name does he de serve? "Mr. Heney says again: 'I don't hesi tate to say that some good citizen like James J. Hill would have built the Great Northern on some such salary a-s $50,000 a year.' "Here ' It seems more probable that he is simply using the pet weapon of the coward innuendo. He does not assert that Mr. Hill receives a salary of $50,000 a year, which would be no crime if it were true, but makes a statement which conveys the impres sion to every one who heard it. There fore he likely knew the fact that I have never received, and do not now receive one dollar of salary from any railway company. "These libels bear the mark of pre arrangement. I had delivered before the Conservation Congress an address that opposed courteously, with fact and argument, the position taken by Mr. Heney and his backers. Every fig ure ued in it was taken from official sources. If its facts or Its logic were faulty, either could be corrected. In stead, at the last moment before ad journment, when there could be no re ply or correction, Mr. Heney puts be fore tha congress, not all of whose members could distinguish between the falsehood and the fact, between the public speaker on such an occasion and the discredited individual, theso bold, deliberate and carefully calculated falsehoods. "It Is reported that Mr. Heney In tends to spend some time In Minnesota and address himself to her people. It is up to him now either to tell the truth and explain how and by whom he was so groesly deceived, or to take his self appointed station as a member of the Ananias Club. The people, who like fair play and abhor lying above most things, will not fall to give some thought to the probable worth of any cause that needs or is willing to accept the sup port of such methods and such men. "JAMES J. HILL. "St. Paul. September 9." Favorite Book for Roys. Harper's Weekly. In an attempt to solve the question of what kind of books boys like best, a re quest was sent to the library assistants In charge of children's rooms in New York City, asking them to make a list of the 25 books of fiction most popular among boys of 12 to 15 years old. The lists were made after careful considera tion and without consultation and repre sent very fairly the preference of the boys. The following are the 25 books: Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain. Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain. Cadet Days, by General Charles King. The Adventures of Buffalo Bill, by Colonel W. F. Cody. Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, by A. Conan Doyle. Treasure Island, by Stevenson. Crimson Sweater, by Barbour. Behind the Lines, by Barbour. Jack Among the Indians, by Grlnnell. Halfback, by Barbour. Fast Mall, by Drysdale. Substitute, by Camp. Pete. Cow Puncher, by Ames. ' Ivanhoe, by Scott. ' Captain Courageous, by Kipling. Redskin and Cowboy, by Henty. Story of a Bad Boy. by Aldrich. Robin Hood, by Pyle. Yale Cup, by Dudley. Oliver Twist, by Dickens. Monte Crlsto, by Dumas. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. by Verne. The Spy. by Cooper: Kidnaped, by Stevenson. Hla Instructor. Buffalo Express. "What would your father say If he heard you say those words?" asked the kindly person as the young hopeful let out a terrific oath. ' "What would me fader say? I learned 'em off'n him." Promotions In the Ananias Class. Indianapolis News. It is understood that the Ananias Club is to remain in full force and vigor. Numerous promotions to this elect company may be expected. Its founder and most worshipful patriarch has no Intention of laying aside his prerogative.' LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE President Johnson, of the American League, was pointing out to a sporting editor the wonderful money - making possibilities of the baBeball business. Basebiill is ingrained in our people." he said. "They give their time and money to baseball, though the heavens fall. "There's a spice of truth in the story of the boss who said to his office boy: " 'Well, Henry, I don't see how you'll get to any of the games this season, as your grandmother died twice while football was on." " 'But.' said the boy. 'grandfather has married again, much against the wishes of the family.'" St. Louis Globe-Democrat. a a The electric ventilating fan on the wall of the restaurant was whizzing round. A gentleman who had dined ex tremely well sat looking at it for soma time. "Waiter," he complained at last, "that clock's fast:" Punch. a a Mrs. Jones' favorite warning to her young progeny when they were in mis chief was that tshe would tend to them in a minute. "Tending" was accom plished by applying her open hand where it would do the most good. When Harry was four years old he was sent for the first time round the corner to the grocery. In a few minutes he came trotting soberly back with the nickel still In his hand, but no bag of onions. "What's the matter?" asked his mother. "I'm 'fraid of the man," he said, sol emnly. "Oh, he won't hurt you," reassured Mrs. Jones. "Run along and bring the onions. I'm in a hurry for them " A second time Harry disappeared round the corner, and a second time re turned without his purchase. "I'm 'frald of the grocer man." he explained, as before. "Well, what makes you afraid of him?" demanded his mpther, impa tiently. "Why," answered the little fellow, "bofe times when I goed In he looked at me, an' said, 'I'll tend to you in a min ute." Youth's Companion. a a a Dr. Brent, the bishop of the Philip pines; has been addressed before now as the bishop of the "Phlllppians." He has also been given another designation much less apostolic. He says some lit tle time ago he was' dining at the house of an eminent Nonconformist. Most of the maids at the houee were stanch church women, and were greatly delighted at having a real bishop to minister- to. One was heard to say to another quite gleefully, "The Bishop of the Philistines is coming to . dinner." "He must be very old." drily remarked the housekeeper ,a grim, hard-shelled Baptist. Church Family Newspaper. a "What is your last name, my boy?" asked the teacher of the new pupil, a frlphtened-looking youngster of some half dozen years. "Tommy." "Tommy what?" "Tommy Tompkins." "Then Tompkins is your last name." turned to his record book. "No. sir." came the reply, with the air of one accustomed to render literal ness to Inquiring elders. "I don't think so. sir. Tompkins was my name already when I was born, and aunty says they didn't glvi me the other for a whole month afterward." Youth's Companion. Thinks That Coraii- Weaken Mind. New York Dispatch. Off with the corset! Let waists be. uneonflned! Such Is the substance of a highly original document addressed to Mayor Gaynor by Dr. Hobart San glovannl, an Italian physician, now in New Tork City. "I believe," said Dr. Sangiovanni. "that woman's Incontestable mental In feriority is due entirely to the use dur ing long centuries of the injurious cor set. You cannot compress the body without restricting the mind. The cor set is the symbol of countless proceses by which the bodies and spirits of women have been enslaved. "Consider first the corset of the body which causes many diseases, especially anaemia and predisposition to tubercu Iosts. Then there is the corset of cus tom and sentiment, which shapes her mentality to what the average man considers a fine womanliness, but which in reality weakens her moral . muscles Just as the constant support of the bodily corsets weakens her physical muscles." C'banfrlna; Foreign Family Names. Chicago Record-Herald. The Prussian Minister of Commerce regrets that many Germans in the United States' hasten to "Americanize" their names as well as their customs and sentiments. He thinks it more loyal to the mother country, as well as more expedient for the American Nation, to retain one's original name. Why should Schmidt become Smith and Weiss White? he asks. American savants and statesmen have often expressed similar opinions and pointed out the "ethno logical and sociological confusion" en tailed by the changing of names and the dropping of "skys" and other ap pendages. But how can the practice be stopped or regulated? The common law acknowledges a man's right to change his name, and where application is made to a court for the privilege of making a change, approval is almost a matter of course, provided there is no intent to defraud creditors or escape obligations. Asking Too Much of the Choir. New York Evening Sun. A singing exangellst recently In this city used to declare that the suc cess which his sacred concerts have everywhere met has been due to the fact that he insists on his choir ex pressing in their faces the emotions which they sing. Consider the phrase of the good old hymn: O Lord, how wonderful Thou art; What wretched worms are we. Now, how Is the choir to assume, the expression of a worm at all, let alone of a wretched worm? What is that ex pression? Has turning any part in tha assuming of it, and once assumed is it likely to draw the Sunday morning robins from the golf links into the de serted city churches? One can but wish the singing evangelist had been more explicit. Pointed ParnarraphM. Chicago News. A woman baits her hook and men nibble at It. Finally one gets over bold and he is landed. When a man says he wants to have a private talk with you it means that he has an ax to grind and he- wants you to turn the grindstone. The way of woman is beyond the understanding of man. She laughs when he thinks she should cry and cries when he thinks she should laugh. One Notable Exception. New York Press. Everything seems to be insurgintf now except the graveyards. Tart Still' on tbe Job. ' . Birmingham Age-Herald. In this Rooseveltlan era let us re member that Willlan Howard Taft is still President of the United States. Wild Midsummer polltlca. New York World. "Joe" Bailey, of Texas, for Presi dent is the wildest kind of midsummer politics.