8 rOHTC-aJCD. OKEGOX. Eatarad at Portland. Ontv. Poattfflee aa ccnd-C!aae Vatter. , , ItubecripUaa kala iDTartnoly I" A (BT MAIL). ri:r. "andsT Inelodad. on year Ji ln;r. Smdar Included, six months.... J " t!'.r. Sunday Included, three month.. - Xnr. Sundar IneluJad. ou month.... !? re. It. without fcjndar. one year " Daily, without Sunday, ell month ... a Fatly, without Sunday, three month... l j ri:y. without Sunday, ana monu.... Wtfktr. ana yr J S-jndar. ont yaar iZi Sunday and weekly. o 7 war. ......... aw (Br Carrier). rinT. iTi4eT tnrladed. eae year. -2 XVailv. Sunday. Included, ana month.... Mow to Bnl Hand Poatofnca money rder. eTpreee ordar or peraonai cha-k on OMf local hank. S-.ampe. coin or rurrn-y doaola rata. Eaataia ftnelne OtT n V rr-e a lln Naw Tor, ftrunawtctt building. rOB.na.VD. THTKSDAT. OCT. . 1- THE KXVOLCTION IX FOBTCOAI. American are accustomed to see reform In religion and politics pro ceed peacefully, even If a little more lowly than some would prefer. Ar gument often becomes heated and re crimination is common, but as a rule we avoid violence. This makes it somewhat difficult for us to under stand the recent occurrences in 6 pain and Portugal, where nothing more startling is desired by the liberals than republican Institutions and re ligious liberty; and yet every day brings news of some fresh outburst of disorder. Events In Portugal have culminated in the dethronement of King Manuel and the temporary, per haps permanent, triumph of the Republicans. People who are well Informed would not be surprised to receive sim ilar tidings from Spain any morning. The reason for this felicitous process of advancement lies in a very simple fact. In both Spain and Portugal the clerical forces and the monarchy co operating for centuries have so cement ed their Joint power that scarcely any freedom of opinion or action is left to the people. On the other hand, educated men In both countries have caught the Infection of modern ideas very strongly, and since they cannot express themselves legally they resort to violence. This la the invariable re sult of too much suppression. The example of France may be deemed the prime cause of the unrest throughout Latin Europe. Spain and her neighbors have always followed the Intellectual leadership of France and usually imitated her politics. The establishment of the French Republic therefore, in its successful career for almost half a century and its deter mined hostility to clerical Influence, have stirred up the Spaniards, the Portuguese and many of the Italians to try to accomplish something simi lar. Modernism has undermined the dogmatic basis of clerical authority everywhere. It has impeached the veracity of ecclesiastical history and emphasized the unscientific preten sions of the clergy. The fruits of this spirit have spread among the common people as well as the educated. Be . aides that, there has been an unwel come Influx of monks and nuns Into , both Spain and Portuiral since they were expelled from France. These . Immigrants are exempt Trom taxes ! while at the same time they compete with secular labor. Hence they have 1 Incurred the bitter hostility of the wage-earners. i The clericals on their part have not fought their battles with much astute ness. "When they had the opportunity they have applied the methods of the middle ages to suppress their oppo- neat. Last year the, execution of Ferrer In Spain set the liberal world aflame. We may attribute to this 111 advised action a large part of the present bitterness of anti-clericalism throughout the Latin world. The i Portuguese clericals, learning nothing i from experience, repeated the folly of i their 6panlsh brethren by putting to I death Dr. Bombarda. a scientist, a liberal and a progressive politician. He was very much such a man as ; Ferrer. The King of Portugal. I Manuel. Is a rather simple young man. not too rrefle in his morals and far from a Richelieu in politics. He was too reactionary for the liberals and too advanced for the clerical. The unhappy result was that when the i crisis came he had no friends. He has fallen between two stools. rXCKEASTVO the farmfb-s profit. Concerted effort which Is being made by the Faclne Coast cities to force the Government to abandon the Idiotic practice of bringing Eastern coal to this Coast for the warships is not aided by ruch arguments as are put forward y the Seattle Railway and Marine News. That raper has made this remarkable discovery: -Aside from the injustice done by the Navy Department to Pacific Coast coal in shipping Atlantic range fuel In such large quantities In foreign bottoms, a still greater Injustice hit been done for Ave years to American shipping on this Coast." This "still greater lnjus tl" consists in "lowering rates" and "causing an oversupply of tonnage and the consequent fall In rates to a point at which It Is unprofitable to operate American tonnage." What a calamity this lowering of rates is for the Pacific Coast! Let us. to illustrate, take a specific case and determine how the Coast Is being in jured by the presence cf this foreign tonnage. The British steamship Ugan a - i. ,,-, t.tixt of the foreign vessels to bring coal to the Pacific Coast. After discharging her coal at Fremer ton. on Puset Sound, the Uganda came to Tortland. where she Is now receiv ing a cargo of wheat. The vessel will carry approximately 550.000 bushels of wheat, the total product of more than 100 farms. Admitting for argument's sake that there was American tonnage to handle this wheat, which there Is not. there would be not to exceed two cr three shipowners benefited by the higher rates that could be charged If the foreigners were driven from the field. In other words, more than 100 Oregon fanners would be taxed to In crease the profits of one or two ship owners. The Pacific Northwest produces ocean-going trafSc In enormous quan tities. This traffic require cheap " freights. There axe more than a thou and producers for every shipowner. so any cause that would tend to ln- crease freights would be a tax on the many for the benefit of the few. There Is no logical excuse that can be of fered for discriminating against Pa 1 rifle Coast coal for use In the Navy, ,ut the weakest argument against the practice la that which, attempts to show ara at tea eenaere riea. tiie r" addraaa In full. Ineladlnc county and etata Toataca Rata 10 to I paaaa. 1 rent: IS - mn jii ... . a rente: COT!U- Chl- that the cheapening of freights by these foreign coal carriers Is a detri ment to the Pacific Coast. PROHIBITION AND LIQUOR EVU-S. Prohibition was one of the Issues of the recent political upheaval In Maine, in which Democrats carried the state. Democrats will at once repeal the Sturgis law, which authorized the Gov ernor to send commissioners into any county to ferret out prohibition law offenders. It was natural, of course, for prohibition enthusiasts to demand enforcement of the law by that method, against the apathy of the states ordinary officials of prosecu tion. In Oregon the demand hasf een made frequently that the Governor or the Attorney-General be empowered to force prosecuting officials to ferret out liquor offenders. But In Maine it was found that the Sturgis law Is an Imple ment of political tyranny and of out rageous inquisition and Is no remedy for abatement of liquor evils. So that the Sturgis law "will be re pealed: and- if Democrats can muster two-thirds the Legislature, with aid of a few Republican votes, they will sub mit the prohibition clause of the state constitution for repeal by popular vote. That vote. If taken now. would evidently repeal the prohibition law. tt.ii- . tinimr traffic or rather of liquor drinking are self-evident and no right-thinking person denies them. If It Is the duty of the state to guard i,- .,-.,.n fmm llnuor. that duty it can most effectually carry out by din ning Into their ears rrom tenuer yuui.ii. -Shun liquor: It mal-ns and debauches and corrupts: avoid this danger as you would any that "would destroy you." Man or woman or child who fully knows the devil will not receive him as guest. The average person who ,i ih. iinuor Dolson will sel dom take it into his stomach as bever age. Prohibition law teacnes no sucn ir,.- whv. wherever It Is enact ed, doe's consumption of liquor fall to diminish, and why does u even m- 1VHT THEY ARE INTERESTED. "Under our form of government." AjwIoj-m the Oregon primary low in Its preamble, political parties are useful and necessary at me pri time. . . . The purpose of this law ! hottAr to aeenre and to preserve the rights of political parties and volun tary political organizations, tun w" members and candidates." Kin in Orft-oD a coterie of Democratic and near-Democratic poli ticians, constituting a Democratic ma chine, who are boldly undertaking to run the Republican party, or rather to . !. pnnhiiian oflrtv. by desig nating certain Republican candidates whom Republicans shall support, and cortaln others whom Republicans may not support. Frocl.-jming inennma everywhere as the friends, guardians, supporters and defenders of the pri mary and of the right of the people to choose their own candidates at tho pri mary, they set up their own Judgment a-nirMit the neoDle's Judg ment and desires expressed through the primary. Political parties cannot be pre served. In accordance with the plainly declared and denned purpose of the primary law. If political parties are not supported and their candidates elect ed. Much less may any political party live If Its control and direction shall be turned over to its opponents. Who will have the temerity to say that Mr. Botime or Mr. Chamberlain desire RepublU-an success In Oregon T Who does not know that their interest is In Republican disaster and demor alization, and therefore their counsel and their effort are to be on that aide? TTO5 SOCLKMAX AXD THIS PTBUC. Evenbody will feol sorry for those Impoverished and despairing milkmen. They pay less than 6 cents per quart for milk to the producer, and they re ceive an average of about 10 cents. From this 100 per cent Increase they must pay the cost of distribution. That la all. Is 100 per cent fair profit for a mM dleman. less his own expenses and his Incidental losses in depreciation, bad collections, and so on! Ten years ago the cost of milk In Portland was barely more than half the present rates. What has brought about the advance? Who la getting It? Is it all to be ex plained and dismissed by crediting it to the "higher cost of living"? Where is It all to end ? Will It help for every body to move to the country and keep a cow and chickens and have a gar den? Or will It be better to stay In the city and keep a goat In the back yard? How much of this advance is due to the greater cost of milk Inspection? How much to the necessary elimina tion of tubercular cows? How much to higher cost of feed and of labor? How much to greater disinclination for the family to do for themselves, but to hire It done? How much to the greater consumption per capita of the richer milk and less consumption of "skimmed" milk? Can the responsi bility be fixed on one class, or must it be distributed rretty much around among all concerned? We hesitate to defend the rapacious milkman and we will not. Send him to Jail. But we really think a better remedy for the evils of more costly and less desirable milk will be a gen eral determination to drink nothing but canned milk. BARKK CITY'S EXPEKEireXT. Baker City Is the first municipality In Oregon to place itself under the commission form of government. Al though details of Its new charter are lacking, one may gather that the com mission pUn has been adopted in Its full rigor, much as it was In Des Moines. In fict. the capital of Iowa is serving more and more as a model for those cities throughout the coun try which hope to better condition by changes In their form of govern ment. Baker City's venture Into this new political experiment will be watched with interest. If the antici pated benefits ensue other towns will no doubt follow its example. There are now some seventy cities In the United States which have adopted ths commls!don system with modifications more or less extensive. Most of them report favorably upon the results, but the question Is still debatable whether or not a mere charter amendment can really make fundamental" betterments In social conditions. The fundamental merit claimed for the commission system is that It places every public official la a glare of publicity, fixes his responsibility accurately and permits no evasion of duty. The ticket presented to the electors Is much shorter than under the ordinary plan cf city government and this is held to be another advan tage Students are of the opinion that It Is unwise for the voters to under XTTE aiOIKOXG OREGOXIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1910. take the choice of a host of petty of ficials at every election. It confuses them and gives the political manipu lator an opportunity to play his subtle game. A society has been founded in the East called "The Short Ballot Society," which believes that politics can ba purified by the simple process of placing only three or four import ant candidates' names on the ballot and making all other offices ap pointive. All these schemes are interesting because they are signs of the struggle going on everywhere for better polit ical conditions. Some of them may and doubtless will disappoint their ad vocates when they are actually tried In practice, but in this country we are free to change and keep on chang ing until we get what we really want If we ever do. XEW NATIONALISM DANGERS. "Now Nationalism." thus far de fined, means vast extension of gov ernmental functions and wholesale in crease of already large swarms of offi cials. Functionaries who live at the public crib universally approve the many proposed additions to officialdom and taxation. They make "reports" and file recommendation, ail with the Idea of "new Nationalism" in mind. It will not be denied that authority of the General Government should be extended In certain directions: as for example for more comprehensive con trol of corporations and monopolies that engage In Interstate business. But the schema easily goes too far. Its sponsors propose enormous extensions of Federal authority over actions of individual citizens; all this In limita tion also of local state authority. The public health they want nationalized; also the matrimonial relation. They would take from the states taxation of Inheritances and corporations. They would make the Federal power su preme In taxation of Incomes though in this matter there Is not so much valid objection. They would deprive the people's state governments of control of Umber, water and mineral resources. Ail this and much more is contained In the programme of new Nationalism. It means enormous multiplication of officials and of taxes. Already the Na tional Government spends more than a billion dollars a year, while local gov ernments bring the people's burden close to three billions. This Is worse extravagance than in any other coun try on earth. "New Nationalism" has made the most of It. Tet it Is not con tent. It proposes to pile the load higher. Swarms of officials hie hither and yon over this Pacific Northwest "conserving" resources, yet devouring more than they conserve. This business should make the peo ple of this country who pay taxes stop, look and listen. New National ism, unless severely pruned, will make surfeit of government. Least possible legal interference with the course of industry and of commerce, least possible obstruction by law, least possible number of polit ical Jobs, is the policy suggested by reason and approved by experience. This does not mean that private and corporate greed or political corruption shall go unrestrained: but It does mean that these needs of regulation shall not be made pretexts for bureau cratic hordes or for abolition of com monwealth home rule. 6IOTCNT FRANK The career of the late Slgmund Frank, president of the Meier & Frank Company, affords a signal example of what a young man of ability and en ergy can accomplish under the protec tion of American institutions. -Mr. Frank began lire with no particular advantages of birth or fortune. He came from Germany to New York at the age of 20 years, with no prospect before him but that of earning his liv ing by his own Industry. How he transformed his youthful poverty and obscurity Into the headship of a great commercial enterprise and the posses sion of a large fortune Is one of those tales which would excite our astonish ment if they were not so numerous in our history. Perhaps the most signifi cant Incident In Mr. Frank's career was his meeting with Aaron Meier in San Francisco. This meeting, which may have been accidental, though some would call it providential, decided Mr. Frank to try his fortunes in Portland, first as Mr. Meier's clerk, afterward as his partner. Portland was then lit tle more than a village, and the Meier & Frank store In those pioneer times gave few indications of the mammoth establishment It was to develop into within the next fifty years. Mr. Frank was a born merchant. His mind was singularly adapted to grasp the problems of business on a large scale and solve them in the best possible manner. He seems to have carried In his mind a complete picture of the great store he presided over, and at any Instant he could turn his attention to any of tlje numerous de partments with full knowledge of its details. His career Illustrates the harpy lot of the man who Is exactly adapted by nature to the work ho has chosen, and the brilliant success which he attained Is an Inspiration and ex ample to young men for whom the fu ture Is still an open field of adven ture. Opportunities are as numerous in the United States today as they were when young Sigmund Frank arrived from Germany. They are not quite of the same kind as they were then, but they exist, and it requires nothing more than determination and ability to seize upon them and profit by them. Conditions have changed since those days, and the path to success docs not lie In the same direction, perhaps, but that is no reason for discouragement. Mr. Frank had to exercise his Judg ment and select from many Inviting fields the one best adapted to his na ture. The youth of our day must do the same. The world always has en viable rewards for the man who serves Its new needs as they arise. Mr. Frank had the sight to perceive ex actly what was demanded of a suc cessful merchant forty years ago. Achievements as honorable as his await the young man who will ecxrclse similar faculties upon the commercial problems of today. ,. FOREIGN CROP SCARES. Having exhausted ail of the possibil ities of the "crop dairfage" scare In this country, the speculative grain trade now turns to the Argentine for weather news that will Inject a little ginger into a situation which of late has been rather quiet. The Chicago market. In response to a slight advance In Europe, yesterday moved up 1 'A cents per bushel after receiving the Argentine report second hand. While the Argentine crop is the nearest to hand of any of the big wheat countries of the world, there is still ample time for all kinds of good and bad reports before the harvest is actually under way and before it Is possible to de termine whether the crop is short or otherwise. With Russia and the Dan ubian provinces pouring out more than 10.000,000 bushels of wheat per week, the Argentine crop scare will be obliged to work overtime for several weeks in order to keep much strength In a sagging market, such as has been In evidence for the past month. One of tha most significant features of the foreign wheat situation Is the large weekly shipments of old-crop wheat from both the Argentine and Australia. It seems hardly probable that this wheat would come out in such large quantities unless the grow ing crop gave unusually good promise. The United States, with a crop well above the average, has cut but an in significant figure In the export trade this season, and unless something hap pens to check the flood of Argentine and Australian wheat that will begin moving in December and January, the Old World will get along very well without any contributions of conse quence from this side of the water, Russia, of course, filling in until the new crop begins moving la the south era hemisphere. According to the editor of the Scan dinavian, a newspaper published in Chicago. Scandinavians are skeptical about irrigation projects that require millions of dollars to perfect, but they have the brains. Industry, perseverance and money necessary for successful dry farming and are anxious to learn all they can about It. This suggests a rare opportunity to this thrifty class of the adopted citizens of the United States to attach themselves to the soil and bring up families in ways of in dusry and abundance by filing on dry lands and learning how to make them productive. That way lies Independ ence, health and ultimate success for a multitude that works literally in tha shambles in great, overcrowded cities. Upton Sinclair doubtless drew an ex aggerated picture of the lives of workers In Packingtown, but if one tenth of what he wrote was true, a sturdy Scandinavian or ' Lithuanian would be far better off on the dryest land Into which industry forced a plow and where thrift in hope trod the dusty furrow with a promise of two years' crop in three, than in the stress and stench and brutality of this suburb of a great city. The Harriman system has mate rially shortened the distance and re duced the grades and curves between Portland and Pug-et Sound by boring a mile-long tunnel through the pen insula at Portsmouth. The original en. r.t .nini. t Vi m : i h a hill is gener ally much greater than going over It or around It, but modern rajiroaumu demands better construction, than was carried on In the old days when most of the roads were built at the lowest possible cost, regardless of the heavy expense of operation, which could not be avoided. The time between Port land and Puget Sound has been mate rially lessened since the rivalry began between the two great systems; still, compared with the speed that is main tained" on roads in other parts of the country, there is abundant room for improvement here. With the new tun nel and tho double track to Puget Sound completed, Portland and the Washington cities will be thrown very close together. Three frightful accidents on lnter urban electric lines In the Middle West within a few weeks, entailing loss of more than a hundred Uvea, emphasize the danger attending travel where trains are in the hands of careless or Incompetent employes. In each case the cause was disobedience of orders. The crow did not wait at the switch for the opposite train to pass. Cir cumstances surrounding tha collisions were precisely the same the train in fault proceeded, attained a high rate of speed and at a curve crashed Into the train that had the right of way. These accidents were wholesale man slaughter. Lives of persons ought never to be Jeoparded by being placed In the hands of a man who cannot obey orders. Advancing civilization brings penal ties as well as pleasures. The elec trical washing machine will save hours of toil to thousands of house wives, but to a Utah man who han dled it carelessly it brought speedy death the other day. Ages of experi ence have taught us to avoid Instinct ively a multitude of perils which sur round us night and day. but these are ancient perils. The modern ones which arise from the progress of sci ence will no doubt continue to slay their victims until a defensive Instinct has been evolved In the race. Douglas County falls promptly into Une with a fruitgrowers' union. The one way to get a reputation is never to ship unsound fruit. Follow the Hood River plan. There Is an ample market here at home for culls. Indeed Imperfect fruit is the only kind that t Vimi-sanda of wage earners can afford to buy and at that it is a luxury. Fifty cents a box for apples that won't pass muster is not bad for the grower. Professor Harry Thurston Peck, who has been dismissed from Colum bia University, is a difficult man in many ways. Besides his matrimonial singularities he has a Jaunty and bumptious literary style which makes his readers want to kick him. His erudition In Latin is profound, but something more is needed in a college teacher. A little common morality Is not out of place. If It can be shown that pure milk cannot be furnished to Portland con sumers for less than 10 cents a quart except at a loss, perhaps the public will stand for the latest gougo. But it demands to be shown. A mere state ment from Interested concerns on the gouging side will not suffice. Furnish the proof. This time the great K. & E. con cern will have a real, not a paper theater. It has already been named tho Columbia. Hall. Columblal Naturally, several Eastern newspa pers In grouping comment on the New Tork Republican convention, headed the stuff Saratoga. Chips. Roosevelt may succeed to the posi tion once held by Mark Hanna, but it Is dead certain he will never make like combinations. Let the convention bureau of the Commercial Club get busy on the Y. M. C. A. National gathering in 1913. What an epidemic of insureencltls broke out In Portugal. MORE HOME STUDY BY PUPILS. Overaisht Needed In Work of Steady and Sustained Effort. Washington Post. The plans offered by the school au thorities for a limited amount of home study by pupils ought to bring very satisfactory results. The graduation of the hours of study so that the task will be fitted to. the age and progress of the pupils is a very necessary ar rangement, and one that will call for very wise and Judicious adjustment There have been very serious com plaints made by responsible and right thinking parents that their children have had to carry an improperly ad justed load at school which has gen erally been ascribed to the highly di versified and overloaded curriculum. Especially is this condition brought about in the cases of ambltous pupils who conscientiously try to advance their work at home, and who In a few cases require to be repressed. , But with the great majority of children the regulation and oversight of their work must be along the lines of steady and sustained effort. In such cases the discipline, which follows upon the performance of a task at stated times every evening, will often count for much In the development of desirable habits than will the scholastic at tainments. Much has been said of the boys and girls who have been permanently in jured by overstudy. Often the ill health that is ascribed to too close ap plication to school duties may be traced to other causes, chief among which Is the overindulgence In social entertain ment. The number of hours devoted by school children la the United States to study is trivial when compared to the work done by students of the same age In Germany and other Old World countries. But the essential thing is that it ba systematized and regularly performed. This Is a direction in which the co operation of parents and schools is most called for, and in which great and permanent results may be easily se cured. The hours as prescribed by the school authorities do not appear to be in any sense a hardship, and are, in fact, little enough If children are to derive any adequate return from the years, spent in school. Where there are individual cases, in which the pre scribed home studies cannot be per formed with satisfaction within the period named, there is then need for readjustment, and this is best secured by consultation. Experience has shown that In this direction the mutual help of parent and teacher, without which no system can possibly be most ef fective, can be best and most easily ap plied. The same valuable teacher of all has also shown that without home study of some nature It Is folly to at tempt satisfactorily to secure that combination of education and instruc tion which the world Is today demand ing of Its schools. BtASQX-ERASINO PURS EXPOSED. VUElIanee Committee to Investigate Selling; of Fnra by Wrong; Namea. Philadelphia Record. Most women know the most out rageous kinds of Imitation furs, but not everyone is equal to the detection of the really skillful frauds that are perpetrated on the fur buyer. With a view to protecting the purchaser, the fur and skin trade section of the Lon don Chamber of Commerce has been considering the matter, and has ap pointed a special vigilance committee in the hope of being able to arrest or diminish the illegal practice of misnam ing furs. The following Is a list of the most common misdescriptions of manufac tured furs: American sable, sold as real Russian sable. Goats, dyed, sold as bear. Hare dyed, sold as sable or fox. Kids, sold as lamb or broadtail. Marmot dyed, sold as mink, sable or skunk. Musquash dyed, sold as mink or sa ble. Opossum sheared and dyed, sold as Otter pulled and dyed, sold as seal. Rabbit dyed, sold as sable or French sable. Rabbit sheared and dyed, sold as seal, electric seal. Red River seal, Hudson seal, seal musquash. Rabbit, white, sold as ermine. Rabbit, white, dyed, sold as chin chilla. , . White hare, sold as fox and other similar names. ,., Dyed furs of all kinds sold as Natu ral " If purchasers have any doubt as to whether any furs bought by tham are correctly described, the vigilance com mittee will be pleased to give free expert opinion if the articles are sent "the offices of the London Chamber ot Commerce. Oxford Court, Cannon Street. E. C. World'" Largeirt Cities. "N-ew York Journal of Commerce. A Philadelphia statistician, who has been endeavoring to give a list of the IS largest cities In the world, arranges them as follows: . . a T.TBO.O0O 1. London .(, ( 2. New York a0IM00 3. Paris ........... ......... .o 04 tfQ e,r'm 2:5o;oo 6- Toklo 180 ?S3 S. Chicago -2 0O0.O' 7. Vienna - i pun 000 8. Pt. Petersburg 1 Si-Joels 9. Philadelphia .i'. fino 11. Constantlnopla .... iso 009 12. Osaka - l'liO.Ouo la. Buenoa Ayrea - w ' " Estimated. He points out that the reason London surpasses New York In population is because London Includes 700 square mi es in her area, while New York only in cludes 320i . . Medicinal Value of Grapes. Detroit News. Genuine cream of tartar is the natural salt of the grape. They also contain much tartaric acid, and of all the fruits composed of these minerals they are the best to take Into the system. They are always to be recommended for persons whose digestive organs are out of order. " Grapes are a perfect conveyance for the Introduction into the system of pot ash salts, and through their use wonder ful results not at ail surprising to the learned have been achieved In cases of Illness. Both the water and sugar of the grapes are taken at once into the blood, requiring virtually no digestion. The kidneys, liver, intestines and other organs are cleared and strengthened by the mineral elements of the fruit. Shall Demoentfle Donkey Rule. La Grande Observer, Rep. The fight in November is for Bower man and the ticket named. If those who opposed Bowerman for nomination see fit to continue the fight to the polls, naturally Bowerman men will feel like retaliating, end through it all Democratic leaders will sit on the fence and laugh a hearty laugh. This is a time when Republicans can make good, or they can be captured body, soul and spurs by the Democratic donkey. Which shall It be? Drawn Battle. Woodburn Independent, Rep. It was a victory for the assembly and a victory for the anti-assembly. Bower xnan, the assembly choice, is the nominee by the grace of the minority. One as sembly Congressional candidate won and another was defeated. Men. not factions, got there. In short, it was defeat for neither side. The issue of assembly and anti-assembly came up at the direct pri mary. Statement No. 1 Issue will be tried out November & f HEXRT LEWIS STIMSOJT. Republican Candidate for Governor of New York. New York Sun. Henry Lewis Stimson, nominated for Governor, is 47 years old. Ha was graduated from Yale as an honor man in 1SSS and studied law at Harvard. He became a law clerk for Senator Root in the firm of Root & Clarke in 1891 and two years later became a member of the firm. Mr. Stimson was in tha firm of Winthrop & Stimson in 1906, when Senator Root brought him tt the atten tion of President Roosevelt as sood material for United States District At torney in this district. Mr. Stimson married Mabel Wellington White, of New Haven. In 1S93. He lives at 275 Lexington avenue. Mr. Stimson was appointed District Attorney in January, 1906. He resigned soon after President Taft was inaugu rated, but agreed to prosecute the cus toms frauds against the sugar trust as special counsel after he retired. He had not been In office more than a month when the payment of rebates to the sugar trust by the New York Cen tral and other railroad companies was brought to his attention and he began prosecution. Mr. Stimson proceeded both against the railroads and the trust. The New York Central, the Great Northern, the Rock Island, the St. Paul and the Central Vermont roads were all either convicted or pleaded guilty and the fines amounted to $400,000. The sugar trust was fined $150,000, in 1S06, for accepting the re bates. Early in 1907 Mr. Stimson began his Investigation into the sugar under weighing frauds, and this resulted In a suit in which a Judgment for $184,411 was recovered based on frauds be tween 1901 and 1907. The Government then started out after extensive frauds revealed by the evidence in the suit tried, and the sugar trust compro mised ail of its civil liabilities to the Government by the payment ot $2,000, 000. In addition the Government got $695,000 from the Arbuckles and $60. 000 from the National Sugar Refining Company. It was in Mr. Stlmson's term that the Philadelphia Sugar Re fining Company's suit against t-e sugar trust for damages under the Sherman law was tried, and on the evidence in this case he obtained the indictment of the sugar directors and their coun sel, John E. Parsons. Attorney-General Bonaparte had previously refused to act on the same evidence. For under weighing frauds the secretary of the trust and a number of employes and customs men have been committed. Mr. Stimson also conducted the prosecu Uon of Charles W. Morse. WANTS TO BE OREGON'S SENATOR Private Citizen Who Thinks It a Step ping Stone to tbe Presidency. THE DALLES. Or.. Oct. 4. (To the Editor.) I have at length convinced myself against my will that my really superior ability requires that I should run for some good paying public of fice, and after looking over the field carefully, have finally decided that the office of United States Senator really offers the best inducements in the way of pull, and pull means money. Also I am thoroughly convinced that no man who ever expects to be President should begin higher up the ladder than that. My political creed Is "Got the Money." and I never change It what ever party I adopt. I believe in any proposition of any kind with money in tt, provided the money comes my way or to my friends, but not if it goes to my political enemies. I now promise, if elected to the Senate, never to be caught doing anything for which I may be sent to the penitentiary. I believe that the easiest and most practical way to obtain this office is through Statement One, so I shall now boost for it for all I am worth. I was formerly opposed to it. but I have since seen the error of my ways and have been converted to the only true faith which will now elect a man to the Sen ate. I would like to admonish all er ring politicians that the assembly Is a delusion and a snare for the unwary and is not the real thing. The only way to be elected to the Legislature or any other office is to boost for State ment One. Upon this we must all stand together, and when we get in office, insist upon cash in advance in all cases except where the salary is fixed by law. A great many people think we are in politics for our health, but it la the fate of politicians the world over to be maligned by the newspapers and have their motives questioned, and If we ail pull together we may sleep well with a clear conscience, knowing that no good graft Is being overlooked, and that after we retire from office and the people finally realize that their money is really gone, they will then know that we have been actuated by the sin cerest motives. Z. M. CHASE. Pointed Paragraphs. Chicago News. A cheerful man 13 a pessimist's idea of a fool. Life is a grind, but the world is full of cranks. The next best thing to being rich is to have people think you are. A man makes his mark and then his wife is apt to make him toe it Today is the time to do things; tomor row is the time to do nothing. Throw on the emergency brake when you find yourself talking too much. Be sure your sins will find you out but If they don't your neighbors will. Some men expect others to agree with them even when they don't agree with themselves. We once heard of a man who loved to pay his debts, but we have forgotten his address. Fooliab Question. Chicago Journal. "Were you ever arrested before?" asked the magistrate, whose principal business is Imposing fines for speeding. "What do you think I've been doing all these years?" said the chauffeur, "push ing a wheelbarrow?" Kelgnbor'a Baby Is Useful. Louisville Courier Journal. "You watch your neighbor's baby with considerable interest." "Yes," said Mrs. De Style. "When the wrather turns her baby blue I don't let Fido out." Timely Advice. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Advice to alleged millionaires with fi nancial guardans: Don't marry a pro fessional entertainer until you are quite sure you won't have to ask her for the car fare. Rational War Correspondent. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Theodore is a contributing editor who Is "good for a column" in all the other papers every day. Life and Death Per Minute. Baltimore American. . It Is computed that 67 people die and TO are born every minute. She Poured the Tea. Puck. Erie poured tbe tea. Ah, she was fair Am, urn in band, aha nearad my chair And stooped my waiting cup to nil. The while I sensed a wond'rous thrill For suca fragrance filled tha air. Twaa not tha tea; her wayward hair Just brushed my cheek and lingered there. How could I calmly wait until She soured tha teaf To steal a kisa who would not dare? If one, who would not steal a pair? I stole them, as a fellow will. And sensed a warmer feeling still. ThV not of heart, for that's not where She poured the teal - - - Life's Sunny Side Little Lawrence's grandfather was very ill and a trained nurse had been employed to care for hlrn, When ne became convalescent a young woman, who had studied In a hospital for a short time, was secured in her place. A sympathetic neighbor meeting Law rence, the following conversation took place. "How Is your dear grandpa this morning, Lawrence?" "He is better." "Have you the trained nurse still?" "No. the trained nurse has goua away and the one we have now is half trained and half wild.'' nonia.ua Home Companion. "Lysander," said "do you know what the wife sweetly, day this Is?" "Of course," said to have remembered the anniversary of dear." "No such thlnpr!" the wife. "It's the to nail the lejr on table." Tit-Bits. hubby, pretendlnsc all the time, 'it's our wedding day, frigidly answered day you promised that old kitchen The story is told that Judge Story and Edward Everett were once the prominent personages at a public din ner in Boston. The former, as a vol untary toast, gave: "Fame follows merit where Everett goes." The gen tleman thus delicately complimented at once arose, and replied with this equal ly felicitous impromptu: "To whatever height Judicial learning may attain In this country, there will always be one Story higher." a a a Mark Twain always took a keen de light in scoring off pomposity. While dining in a restaurant one day he sat next table to a couple of airy young men who were giving the waiter an unusual amount of trouble. One of them gave an order, and then, in a commanding voice, asked the waiter to tell the cook whom it was for; the other followed suit. Presently came Twain's chance, and he directed the waiter in a loud voice to "Bring la a dozen oysters, and whisper my name to each of them to be sure it's all right." Buffalo Commercial. a a There's a certain minister whose du ties sometimes call him out of the city. He has always arranged for some one of his parishioners to keep company with his wife and little daughter dur ing these absences. Recently, how ever, he was cailed away so suddenly that he had no opportunity of providing a guardian. The wife was very brave during the early evening; but after dark had fallen her courage besran to fall. She stayed up with her little girl till there was no excuse for staying any longer, and then took her upstairs to bed. "Xow, go to sleep, dearie," she said. "Don't be afraid. God will protect you." "Yes, mother," answered the little girl, "that'll be all rlgcht tonight: but the next time let's make better arrange ments." Human Life. APPLES STOW ARE JAG CURB. They Are Found to Abate the Appetite tor Strong Drink. New York World. The W. C. T. U. of Cook County (Chicago) is going to fight drink with apples. It has discovered that .the agent which caused the fall of the human race may now regenerate lt- Dr. Samuel Bailey, of Mount Ayr. Ia., has been experimenting on the antl booze qualities of apples. He has cured hundreds of drinkers by feeding them apples when they wanted to drink. The women are sending out thousands of leaflets, which read: "The use of apples as an article of diet will very much diminish, decrease and ultimately abate the appetite for alcoholic stimulants. "That this Is a fact could be proved in many instances if a little care, cau tion, and vigilance taken to investi gate conditions. As a rule the habitual user of alchollc stimulants is rarely a consumer of apples. There seems to be a peculiar combination in apples that allays the Irritation, or so-called appetite produced by the use of liquor." Some Facta About Catching; Cold. Medical Record. Dr. William Brady. Elmira, N. Y, ridicules the general Impression that almost any disease may be brought about by catching cold. He refers the symptoms of cold to errors la diet producing autointoxication. He says that no matter what position we take in a room we cannot dodge drafts. Ap plications of cold less severe than enough to produce frost-bite have been shown to be harmless. The tonic effect of porch bedrooms Is acknowledged. Dietetic errors, unhygienic living, ex cessive heat and defective ventilation are the causes of the "so-called" cold. Fuel economy and free ventilation ara opposed to Bteam heating, and tempera ture in the averapre modern building is too high. Sixty-five degrees is plenty for any house. The value of a saline cathartic in a cold Is due to unloading the portal circulation and the venous plexuses of the esophagus, nose and throat. Overheating and alcohol are predisposing factors' to respiratory dif ficulties. The wearing of improper clothing is another factor in predispo sition. A suit of woolen underwear acts as the hair of an animal does; it is comfortable and keeps out cold, being a slow conductor of heat Cot ton conducts off the heat quickly, and dissipates it rapidly and the blood is driven to the great Sphalanohnio areas, causing active congestion. Hard Workers of History. . Busy Man's Magazine. When we read the lives of distinguished men in any department, we find them almost always celebrated for the amount of labor they could perform. Demos thenes. Julius Caesar, Henry IV of France, Francis Bacon. Sir Isaac New ton, Franklin. Washington, Napoleon different as they were in their intellectual and moral qualities were all renowned as hard workers. We read how many days they could support the fatigues of a march; how early they rose; how lata they watched; how many hours they spent la the field. In the cabinet. In the court- how many secretaries they kept employed; la short, how hard they worked. Tendency of the Times. "Atchison Globe. There seeme to be a very general dis position this year to raise h 1. What's the matter with introducing smallpox la the public schools? . m Easy Task. Detroit Free Press. "Pa, what is a philosopher?" "A philosopher, my boy. is one who tells other people that their troubles don't amount to much." IMgfrtniC at Home. Washington Herald. President Taft will not go to Panama, but will stay right at home and watch his party dig. ' Octoberesqne. New York Times. Ho, brine the fcrown October ale And fill a foaming beaker! (That "beaker" seemeth somewhat stala, yet "dlpner" ooundeth weaker.) Now hands to cup. come, stand ya up. Make ring the oaken rafter I (In thus inciting you to sup Tla Scott I model after.) Quaff every Jaek and toast his Jill. Till not a man be sober! (rm strictly prohibition, still One baa to rhnna "October.