E JOURNAL iNDCriNDBNT KKWSPAPCE. -il . , PnUIkr r tfnhf inrnt Baa4art tn4 ' ""day mtdIdc, at Tee JoarnaJ f.i.t aa4 lambiU streets. Igriuna. Or. " ! at tka pMtomea PortUa. Or.. h.ImIob uroti-e taa asalk u aacoad-claaa TELEPHONE UI! fits. ' 1 SepertaBaots raaoaaa by tbla aamber. - --- "WW Um davartaMut roa waat. i.l.JCiPl 4VIRTiaiW0 MPaMENTATITK '"""Iftfld-FUlnJamln Unarlil AArrtlltna A ruler I'mnawtck BuUdlat, KB Flfta aauae. Maw rirwua Bu using, mileage. fniwrtptloa Tama fcy aiall to any addraaa la ma liultad Stataa, CaMda or Mexico. 5 lUILr. One rear ;,.S.M jOne noath I -M flUNDAf. I na year IlfiO I Om month . . DAILY AKB iCNDAT. 'n rw 7.60 On woath I -M I. will govern my Ufa and my thoughts at if the whole world were) to sea the one, and..tojra4. ..tne. other. Beneca.. , - - THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE MAYOR. cgalnst Mayor Lane. Every skill 1 dt'oftlve knowa the extreme signifi cance of such circumstances aa these. Evt-n tho most hardened criminal l.etrays his ruITt whilo the crime is ritll liesh pod In the first numblcif ncccir of fear. of arrest and punish ment. The criminal seeks safety In flight, and lf captured takes refuge in falsehood In the present cage, t?e conduct of the alleged conspira tor. Is one of the strongest evidences tpniriHt the presumption of their In-noceiice. WAGES AND COST OP POOD. A fHE TWO MEN and the wo- 1 man who have been arrested, JL charged with a conspiracy to blacken the good name of Mayor Harry Lane, continue to pro test their Innocence, but there la one damning fact which gives them the lie and which goea far to prove their guilt That fact la their demeanor at the time of the1 attack upon the mayor In; his private offioe, and their subsequent conduct. If their Btory were true, there was no pos sible reason why they should go Into hiding or seek safety in flight. On the contrary the plain, obvious and only course was for the woman to appeal -Instantly, to the authorities and i to the protection of the law. Conscious of her own virtue and Innocence, she would have rejected with Indignation the mere sugges tion of flight. . Still less would she have, consented to any false state ment of the facts, knowing full well that the truth must be her chief defense. But what did they do? Raddlng Mandelay and the woman made their escape from the building with all possible' baste. Hurrying to the wo man's' rooms In the Marquam lodg lng house, a conference was-held there, with the result that Mra. Way mire left the city the same evening and fled to Vancouver, where she would.be beyond the Jurisdiction of the. Portland authorities. She was accompanied 'In her flight by one W." F. Bell, who is said to have posed as her husband, and the two Bpent the night at a Vancouver ho- A l . T ii t . 1 m iti. no iiemyi, wag maue oeiore her departure, or since, to lodge any compiaini against tne mayor, no effort was made to get before the public any defense of the woman's . reputation. The woman and her confederates did precisely what every.vxrimlnal does, striving red- handed to escape from the conse quences of his crime. Raddlng went to Vancouver the next day and joined the woman there. Presumably they agreed up on a plan of defense. Raddlng came . back to Portland and his arrest fol lowed. Within the past three days statements have been made to the police and to the press by Mandelay, Raddlng, Bell and Mrs. Way mire. These statements have bristled with lies. The woman is smarter than nercompanlons and has not given out such glaring falsehoods as they, yet it Is manifest that in numerous M.I.uImm mViA la tint HU V. ' yaivivumlt BMC IB llllUS, lut- trntn. Manaeiay ilea persistently for hours after his arrest, denying All acquaintance with Raddlng or Jlrs. Waymlre, only to break down &t last and acknowledge that he went to the Hamilton building at Raddlng's request, expecting ' some 'thing to happen" and he admitted that he had known for 10 days that BOme plot was about to be hatched. ;y ' Raddlng s reputation is so un savory that little credence would be : given to his statements, -even .though they were uncontradicted by Other evidence. He denies that there v Was a plot but witnesses are at hanJ 'to prove that he told them that he ;Wa engaged in a job which was to Jield Wm $1,000 and that It was to be "pulled off" Wednesday even ing. The occurrences at the mayor's offices were one day later, and if tthls was the "job" of which Raddlng had spoken it is easy to understand how the delay of a day might have occurred. ; Finally W. F. Dell, who was in timately associated with Raddlng ' and Mrs. Waymlre, gave The Jour Ufll last Saturday a long statement v:hIch-now proves to have been u mass J Of falsehoods. Although he .weut to Vancouver with, the woman Thursday night,. he vehemently de nied any knowledge of her where alKjuts 'and made . eumerous-asser-tlon$ Which are no provedly ta.lm. '. Txiese'are but a few of the fauti v-blcb, indicate' the guilt of the per fiut charged ; with, the conspiracy nnCENT REPORT Issued by the bureau of labor furnishes Ronio additional - Information about the relative increase In the cost of food and In wfges. It shows that as to food, other neces saries not being considered, the In croase in Its cost has been exceeded In recent years by the Increase in wages. For the past 10 years the Incomes and expenses of the masses of the American people have been running a close race, but as a rule the expenses have bad the best of It. Wages, as every one knows, have Increased since 1896, but by no means In proportion to the Increased cost of living. "In effect-' says so careful an observer as Samuel B. Moffet, In Col ller's Weekly, "Wage earners have been in worse condition on the crest of a wave of prosperity than they were In the depths of hard times." The advantage of the "good times" to wage earners consists principally In their ability to find steady work now, as all of them could not do dur ing the "hard times." But according to this report there nas Deen in tne matter or food a rather steady gain for Income over outgo, up till lately. Last year the average weekly earnings of each em ploye in the country Increased by 8.9 per cent, while the cost of food used In representative worklngmen's families increased by only 2.9 per cent, a gain for wages over food cost of 1 per cent, as compared with 1905. Compared with the 10-year period, 1890-1899, wages per week last year were 18.5 per cent higher, and food 15.7 per cent higher, an advantage of 2.8 per cent. But food is only one of life's nec essaries to workingmen, and the cost of other necessaries has much more than swallowed up the slight gain on food. And even as to food, the report shows that the cost was rapidly increasing through 1906, the price in December being 5.1 per cent higher than in the corresponding month of 1905; and It is a matter of common knowledge that the cost of food has gone, on Increasing during the present year, so that even In this respect it is supposed that the gain of income over outgo has been wiped been uncompromising In its war on evil. The effect of Its labors for the uplift of mankind has been tre mendous. Its influence In raising the standard of citizenship has been inestimable. It Is Impossible for a good churchman not to be a good citisen. The state Is the product of the units. Christianity Is a character-builder. Every denomination is a salutary factor In state-building, and none more far reaching in its achievements than Methodism. The church militant is, Indeed, the handmaid of the state, in civilizing and organizing the world. The world could do without one about as well as without the other. It Is doubtful Indeed, If there would be governments and states, were there no religions, it Is notorious that where there is no. church, there is no enduring civilization. History reeks with the decadence and decay of barbarian nations, and the pas sage of barbarian races from the stage of action. Even lf we doubt the form or conditions of Chris tianity, we are compelled to con fess its towering Influence for civil ization. We may reject Its outward signs, but, deep down, we are obliged to admit its vitalizing, harmonizing and elevating agency in the enlight enment and betterment ot mankind. Jengbis Kahn pllea up 100,000 hu man heads before the gates of a city he had conquered. Those Were the terms of surrender before the days of the gospel. What a contrast with that scene at Appomatox, when the victorious general of a Chrls tion nation handed back his sword to vanquished General Lee and told the defeated soldiers to take' their horses home with them ' for use in working their fields. The contrast In the two incidents, is typical of what the church Is doing for the world. And so, It is a good omen as well as good tiding, when Meth odists meet. Ttc PJay Wheal Aftar thr hours spant with "Llttla Johnny Jonas" you ara sura of only ona thing that you hava mad a nisht of It Tou araa't carUla what your condition was and you raal of your hrad tenderly and with a remlnlacent am lie. But you know that you'ra glad you went Your evening starts In with a stiff brandy and aoda at that horn of par venu Americana, the Cecil, London. There la a whirl of other drlnksi It la vagni'ly remembered that someone men Hons a cup of tea while the fun la hot teat, which strikes you aa hugely funny, red cherries and black olives re call that there muat hava been a food many Martlnla and Manhattans with a pouaae cafe or two In colore, and you know that you wera denied the comfort or a aoborlna deml-tanae at tne end, Mr. Onltea' company this year la on the whole excellent and there wn nothing but pralae from the audience which niled the Helllg from top to Bot tom for the scenery and coatumlng. In a production of tha character of Cohan'a It la aunrernely neceaaary that the audience be nair-Dllnaed with a glare of llghte, of good atage eettlnge. or many gins wno display mucn lin gerie: that they be kept In a atata ol Intoxication from tha time tha ourtain goes up on the first act until It drops on the neoond. with enough more thrown In to assure a hang-over the next morning. There are 17 mualcal numbers Inter spersrd during tha evening: which prac dually makes It a caaa of there being a few lines placed now and then between musical numbera. "Cecil In London Town" doea for an eya-opener and la soon followed by "1 hey re all my mends'- and "Mam seue aucnette," tne latter a good song, although the Im provised Ooldle Is a long waya from being what she might, both as to danc ing, singing and youthfulneaa. Perhaps the best known of the num- CALIFORNIA PETROLEUM. S CARCELT less wonderful than the story of gold production, following John Marshall's ac cidental find in Sutter creek in 1848, is the tale of the yield of oil in California during the past few years. It Is this vast outpour of oil In the southern part of that state, more than anything else, that bers is Johnny Jones' aong, "Yankee Doodle Hoy," which made Ita usual hit. Billy Seymour gives a very fair account of himself aa Johnny Jones, the Ameri can jockey. It la a trying part and Seymour hasn't a stage voice, but the Cohan music very nearly alnga itself and actually doea whistle of Ita own accord. Then there Is Captain Squlrvy of the 10-day boat who shades of Gilbert and Sullivan! brings in the pura melody of "Pinafore" In that motley crowd of painted and berouged and utterly shameless Cohan creations. Wa blush end are ashamed at the Intrusion of this Innocent "Pinafore" aong and aje much more comfortable when aha taks her flight behind the wings. "Give My Rerards to Hroadwav- "A Girl I Know" and "Life Is a Very Funny Proposition After AH" are some of the best-known of the favorites In "Little Johnny Jones" and they all won recalls from the good-natured Helllg auaience. i ne cnorus sang wen. Ita average of years was pretty good. Con sidering the scarcity of girls on Broad way u was reasonably comely. Of the leading parts William Keough aa "The Unknown" carried- off the honors thta year aa last- Ada Olfford made a hit as Flora belle Fly, the San Francisco "reporteress," while the chap wno taxes tne part or Henry Hapgood name unknown although evidently a bit new, has a good atage appearance miu carnea on mi songs ana lines very well. ' "Little Johnny Jones" will contlnuo Its offering of refreshments and cure for bad dispositions tonight, tomorrow and Wednesday. ANYTHING TO BEAT TOM JOHNSON From tha Public ' Corrupt traction Interests ara now centering their fight for ailstence In Cleveland, as six months ago they cen tered It In Chicago. .At tha time of tha Chicago election the Cleveland' trao Uoa ring was upon tha edge of a set tlement with Mayor Johnson which would hava Involved tha extinction of tha monooolr rlna and tha substitution or a l-cent faro system wUh provision for municipal ownerahlp aa aoon aa atata legislation permitting It could be obtained. But tha Cleveland gang "backed water" aa aoon aa political cor ruption In Chlcaao had sleeted Buaaa and pasaed tha fraudulent traction franchlaea. Since then they have been hunting In couples with tha local Re- puDiican machine ror a may oral canai- date, In order to save thalr graft In tha only possible way by a-ettina Mayor Johnson out of office. At last their ef forts hava culminated In Congressman Burton's reluctant consent to run. But ha consents upon condition that tha traction ring shall hla itself Into the background of local politics, while Its partner, the Republican machine, goes forth and proclaims a dissolution of tha partnership. This naive demand or Mr. Burtons. that as a condition of his accepting its nomination hla party machine ahaJl give him a certificate of non-alliance with the traction Interests, la not with out a touch of pathetic humor. Mr. Burton la really a well-meaning man. It la Inconceivable that If elected mayor ha would consciously lend himself to tha corrupt schemes of the traction ring. Bur It la equally Inconceivable that ha has either tha will or the ability to cope affectively with tha ring. No matter now conscientiously ha op posed Ita plans. It and not he woulj win. In tha olrcumatancea In which 'It would manage to surround him. Mayor Johnson, with all hla special knowledge of the subject, supplemented with high business skill and acute political per ceptions, has been held at bay by tha political, financial and judicial powers with which the traction ring and Its affiliated Interaats have confronted him. Only now, after tha best kind of work, ia he on tha eve of achieving tha vic tory be set out to win for hla city atx years ago. It la not a certificate of non-alliance with the traction ring mat Mr. wurron needs, but a certificate of the unflinch ing will, and tha neceaaary ability to cope with tne conspiracy wnicn exists between the traction ring and tha ma chine of his own party. A certificate of non-alliance with tha traction ring such-a certificate Trom tha Repun llcan machine which has been In part' nerahlp with tha traction ring ever ainoe Mayor Johnson began attacking tha unluat privileges of that ring! Of what use does Mr. Burton suppose such a certificate from such a source would be to hlmT Doea he draw no lesson frtom tha old anecdote of the tender hearted Judge? Wa mean the judge who In passing sentence upon a young convlot of previously fair repute urged him to make a record or gooo Denavmr, aasurlng him that then he could doubt leas get at the end of his term a cer tificate of good character from the warden of the penitentiary and begin lire over again. lour nonor, inier- fosed tha humiliated youth, "do you hlnk a certificate of good character from the penitentiary would be a vai uable recommendation to travel on?" On Getting; Even THE FLY XS A PUBLIC ENEMY "The Girl With the Green Eyes." Jinny Austin drew tears and smiles has made Los Angeles the second ,lenr, yeRterday Bhe hM wlth oth(5r out. The expenses ol employes have enormously increased also, in all other respects as well as In wages paid, ao that in many cases it is not certain that more wages can he paid. If this be the case; if wage earners are no better off than they were 10 years ago, and lf employers as a rule are making only reasonable profits, who are having the good times? That there is a large degree of real pros perity there seems to be no doubt, but are not a comparatively few people getting the cream of it, while only the skim-milk is left to the masses? MISSISSIPPI IMPROVEMENT. THE VIEW IS TAKEN by some that the effort belne made to JL Improve and canalize the up per Mississippi river, which pro cct is to be especially exploited along that river and at Memphis this week, is designed to be inimical to other river improvement projects, or will result that way, but we are Inclined to take a broader view of the mat er than this. Because the United States undertakes the improvement of the Mississippi should be no rea son why it should neglect the Colum hi;t or any other stream. The peo ple of Oregon don't ask or want the government to spend all or the greater part of the river and harbor appropriation in the Pacific north-1 west, but only what is reasonable and right to expend here, and are quite willing that other regions and rivers shall receive their due share. With $50,000,000 a year for 10 years all the worthy projects can be attended to, and then they will have cost not much more than the probable ultimate cost of the Pana ma canal. city on the Pacific coast, and given it hope of becoming the first. In one broadly Important respect a great output of petroleum Is more beneficial to the region where it is found than a great output of gojd. The gold, with Its wings, files hither and yon, far away; the mining camps become deserted; but oil, In these days, largely remains In the vicinity to develop manufacturing enterprises, and for use as fuel. Not many years ago Los Angeles did not expect to be an Important manufac turing center, because of the scar city and high price of fuel, but it li now a city of many large flour ishing manufactories, that are con stantly Increasing in number be cause of petroleum. Within less than 10 years the oil production of California has in creased from 400,000 to 40,000,000 barrels 100 fold. The oil besides being used In great quantities lo cally, is shipped to Alaska, Mexico, Nevada, Chile, Japan, and other countries. Producers now have a contract with Japan for 20,000,000 barrels. Oil of this region Is piped across the Isthmus of Panama and shipped to Liverpool, cheaper than it could be delivered In Arizona. The Hawaiian islands are also a large customer This great output of oil has been a compensatory girt or nature to a region that was largely a desert. It has helped greatly to accomplish what seemed to be the impossible. Oregon, In most parts more greatly favored, has so far yielded no pe troleum, though there are indlca lions that it exists in various local ities. Oregon cannot complain If oil is never found within her borders, but it would nevertheless be a great day for Oregon if a gusher should be struck. audiences ever alnce Clyde Fitch wrote his near-great play, 'Tha Girl With tha Green Eyes," and placed In It, as the girl, the young person who cannot con trol her Jealousy. There has been a slight change In the arrangement of the members of the company since last week and now Dor othy Bernard is playing second lead and doing it very well. It la distinctly an advantageous snirtlng .as Ruth Chea ter, Mls Bernard glvea the most de- ngntrui perrormance in thla week s of fering. She Is graceful and has a pleasing and well-bred voice, her lines are spoken distinctly and there is no striving after a forced effect. As might have been expected from the cnaracter or his previous wora, Austin Webb gave a very satisfactory per formance of the part of John Austin, the young husband of Jinny, who pos sesses almost unbelievably good quali ties of mind and heart The man in a Fitch play mustabove all other things. From Collier's. Ona by ona tha plaguea of Egypt are being abolished by aclenca. Tha frog were abolished long ago by tha drain tile. The files ara checked by lnseot powder, and tha darkneaa that could be felt has melted away before tha arc light. Tha sixth plague stIU remains In full glory. The fly U always with ua. The great Dr. Radollffe uaed to declare that the three worst annoyances of life were smoke, flies and Irrelevant Ques tions. Humanity haa hitherto accepted these with a oatlent shrur Of the shoul ders as among the Inevitable, At laat the worm haa turned. It la proceeding slowly to put on smoke consumers, ana has declared a war of extermination aealnst the fly. The motives which whet our hitherto easily blunted purpoBe are supplied by aclence. They are, nrst. that file carry disease; aecond, that their verv presence Is a slsrn of dirt. That the fly Is frequently the angel of the pestilence haa long been suspectea, but its most vivid and Impressive dem onstration waa furnished "by the dis graceful death rate from typhoid, one of the most scandaloua of the many murders of official stupidity. In our camps In the south during the Spanish American war. It wss clearly proved by the eminent commission of experts, who Investigated the situation post-mortem, that the principal means of the spread of this dreaded disease was the flight of flies from the excreta of the earliest cases to the food exposed In the camp kitchens, carrying typhoid germa on their lega and probosces. Experi ments were promptly set on foot, and a gruesome! y vivid corroboration fur nished. Files were allowed to feed upon meat smeared with cultures of various bacilli, then Induced to alight on gelatin nlatea. and walk about on them. These plates were then placed In an Inoubator, and every step of tha track of the fly could. In a few daye. be traced by the clumDa of bacilli which sprang up where this feet bad planted tnem. f a Not merely typhoid, but tuberculosis, diphtheria, measles, and sepsis (blood poisoning) may be readily carried by these pests. The fly must go. Fortu nately, the problem of his extermination la not difficult he ia not only a cause but a consequence of dirt. While he can live almost anywhere, he can breed only In aoma form of filth, most com monly and chiefly In barnyard manure, particularly horse manure.. Thla he In finitely prefers, but can make shift with garbage barrels, dust bins or other ac cumulations of dirt. Destroy or prop erly disinfect the latter, and remove stables outside of town limits, and file will ilrklv dlsaDDcar. That this Is not too good to be true one may aatlsfy himself by a practical test. In amall towns, where stables can not be got rid of, lf the manure be thrown into a tight box or pit, tha opening of which la covered by a wire screen awing door, or. failing this, as a Tough and ready substitute, the heap be sprinkled one a week with a little Paris green or .It... .- net ar-BAnli tn nnlcAn hw f ll (II I1C r K'l III l r I ncuiv, " m . the brooding fllea and any eggs they may deposit, the plsgue enn be stayed. Or the problem may be attacked from the other end of the line where open vault privies are In use, by sprinkling the latter with arsenic, and thus killing- any flies that may resort to them and become Infected. We have known small towns, where the water aupply was good, keep entirely clear from any spread or typhoid by tnis simple pre caution, while their neighbors, with equally good water aupply, suffered severely. By Iran Gardiner, "Well. I got even with his anywa, . I hve that satisfaction. Hs played s hiean trick on me, but I got even with . him. Ua knows by this time that ha. can't get ahead of ma." The man spoke in a way that showed , his great satisfaction with himself. IV , don't know who he waa, for I caught tha speech I hava Quoted as I stood by hla aids on a street corner waiting for ? a chance to croaa. But since that I hava often thought of hla words and now , . contemptible they made him appear. i How delightful he waa that he had t "got even" with tha man who had, in - . hla estimation at least, dona him a wrong! it never aeemed to enter tt is -mind that in bragging abouV matting even he revealed a qualltyj'ih bis fns"s Deen rauai ture of which he should Mav4 heartily ashamed. Bomo man had played on Dim, and In getting even rnean trick t had been njtcjmanrv fnr Mm to be ea:lly mean. Thla lie did not seem to congirenenu. It takea neither Intellect sor courage to get even with an enemy. The aav age or the Imbecile ia capable of work ing out full revenge along the Una of "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." It la so very easy to slip down to the level of the one who baa Injured us. No courage Is required, neither any kindness. But. after all, how can we blama tha Individual for getting even In this cowardly way when the greit arm of the law sets him a bad example? Does one man kill another? Revenge Is quick, for the law geta even by taking a Ufa In return for a Ufa. It la all ao easy, so quickly done. Budh a dispensation of justice e guirea no tedious attempt at reforma tion, no dealing with a man's aoul. Hla hand brought death to one of his fellow men, and ao shall the law bring death to him. ' The very foundation of the Christian faith ia In the belief that an unregen- erate soul cannot enter the kingdom of heaven. Tet the more unregenerate a aoul, tha more atrocious the crime committed, the quicker does the law decree that It be sent to the great unknown ao that It may no longer contaminate this world. No matter what Its. future. That la left to take of Itself. Verllv the angels In heaven must mock at the prkyers that are offered at the foot of the scaffold. Tha well- reaulated Christian community oraya for the future welfare of the aoul it is deliberately sending out of thla world black with crime. Within the airht of church steeples and the sound of church chimes the one puny creature la crushed out of existence. It is so much easier to annihilate than to risk contamina tion or to work arduously to reform. But some time in those fair future years, when our creeds shall In truth be graven on our hearts, we shall cease to lower oumelvea to tns level or tne murderer by murdering In turn. We shall realize that to bring repentance to one murderer's soul and teach him to live a life of usefulness and self sacrifice is to do more for the world than to send 10,000X10.000 murderers post-haste into eternity, many of them sullen, many of them cursing, and a few,. oh. how few repentant. No. we can hardly blame thought less men and women for bragging about 'jrettln even" as long as the law itself spreads this doctrine broadcast. The Beat Day WHEN METHODISTS MEET. L AST WEEK was Methodist week in Portland. The deliberations of the conference must have given stimulation to influences that are at work for the weal of the Btate. The denomination is one of the most powerful of all the foes of wrong. From thedays of the Wes lays to ths prasant Msthodlaia Jim The unveiling of the ' McKinley monument today recalls the very successful political career of a typic al American who waa twice elected president, and whose tragic death by assassination profoundly shocked the country. Mr. McKinley was per haps the most amiable of all our presidents, and he -filled a large space in our recent history. Be side him, now, lies the long-afflicted companion of his domestic life, vhieh set a luminous example be fore the world. be good-looking and the matinee crowd gave Mr. Webb a very resDectable acore on that point. Miss CulUngham, the meddling .friend of the Austins, was played by Miss Kent, Mrs. Gleaaon played Mrs. Tillman and Donald Bowlea, Goeffrey Tillman, the weak and selfish brother of Jinny. Mr. Bowles' presentation was, as alwaya, excellent. The play, representing aa It doea New Tork society people of wealth, calls for elaborate costumes on the part of nearly all of the people In the cast. The stage seuings were adequate. When it comes to a word on the play Itself , there Is the ever-present tempta tion to take, a whack at Mr. Fitch for hla fatal last acta There weren't many at the matinees yesterday, probably, who have gone Into the psychology of the Fiake play to any great extent, but It waa Interesting to note iiM:very reai ana intense Inter est which permeated every minute of the first three acts, only to be dropped cold and naked When the unconvincing, melo dramatic ana unsatisfactory last act was given. Through tnree acts there is a very remarkable struggle going on the struggle of a woman to conquer her hereditary weaknesa of disposition, her preouictlon to suspect those whom she really loves above all else. And when weakly and disappointingly she turns her back on her high resolves, she de cides to end her life, the Interest lags, the ridiculous details become over prominent. But after all It Is one of the most in teresting of Mr. Fitch's plays and well worth go4ng to see. Deceitful. From the .Buffalo News. Judge not from what the eyes behold. For rank deceit Ia practiced everywhere, I'm told, Rv fnllca'xve mAAt: KThe man who from his baby's bank Steals streetcar fares, Delights to strut like ftutf isak . ,viia aaiiiKM aira Laugh at "Uncle Josh. That rural drama of ever-lasting youth and animal spirits, "Uncle Josh Perkins," played to a laughingly appre ciative audience at the Empire yester day afternoon, and there waa another large crowd to see tha now company last night. Bart Hodgkins took down the house with hla Uncle Josh, the good old coun try philanthropist, who goes to New York City from Shelltown, Vermont, and snows tne city ooys mat ne Knows a thing or two, lf his chin whiskers are luxuriant and his jeans somewhat ab breviated. Uncle Josh acts the part of hero and heroine saver all the way through, from the time that he knocks out a gang of Bowery toughs and wild cat policeman until he coola the anger of Caleb Slick, the scheming lawyer, by taking him gracefully by the neck and ducking him In tha welL It . la real ducking, too, and Caleb appears after it, very wet, very "drippy" and without an evil intention In the world. Rags, an orphan, who is the ubiqui tous youngster of tha play, won high favor she made even more of a hit than do most stage children, and de served all the recalls that her singing and dancing brought her. , As a laugh-maker and a good type of rural play of Its Jtlnd, "Uncle Josh" seems bound to livs on to a rlrJe old age. V- . . The Weak Point. From the Atlanta Journal. The weak point in Taft's speech is his advice to postpone for Is months tha correction of an tniftuliMi. abuse Ilka Mas jvuesji tarufr By John Anderson Jayne. In one of Mr. Emerson's masterly essays he gives expression to tne thought that "ona of the illusions of Ufa la that the present hour Is not the critical hour. Write It on your heart that every day Is tha best day In the year." How that suggests that important word of the olden time, "Now is tha accented time!" '. And then, by a very natural process of remembrance and thinking, you come to the idea so dominant in our American life. Do It now. There is no gainsaying the truth that today la the best day the world has ever known. The golden age of the world is not in the past, as poets who rave of the halcyon day of Queen Bess would have us believe. For real manhood and worth of character we aro not compelled to search the dim, dust gray ages of the past We find it in our everyday life. True, there was man hood then, but there is more manhood today. We may not have any better men than Marcus Aureiius, riaio ana Socrates, but we do have more men of the aame stamp who, .because of their broader outlook on lire, see tnings even mora olearlv than they saw. Ever is it true that the mental world keeps progress with the physical, ana the spiritual, or moral keeps pace with the mental. Because men are stronger physically today than they could have been hundreds or years ago is tne rea son they are better equipped mentally than 'hey were In tha centuries agone. Because thoy are mentally better. It fol lows that they must De spiritually per ter. Optimists always, we do not yield one inch in the argument that the world is better today than yesterday, consequently for us today is the best day the world has ever seen. Growing out of the thought that this day la the world s best day is tnia com peillng and forceful Interrogation: What are you doing today? There are three things you can do with today, as it comes fresh to you from the loom of the eternities: You can loaf in today. You can sit by the stream of life and see it float past you. . You can be idle, reatlesa and unresisting. You can let It elide through your fingers as water glides through the marble fingers of a statue erected in the center of a city fountain. And all the while the statue itands unre sponsive to the calls of the water, never attempting to stay or use the power that flows through It. You can be a cold lifeless beauty statue of brainless block in today lf you wllL for today and Its uaa Is up to you. To day Is yours to ao witn as you preaae. The second thing you may do with today Is to labor with your might, do ing with all the powers of your soul the work you find: to do. You may work ao hard that when night comes you will be unable to enjoy your paper, the intercourse with your family, or the delightful pleasures of life that bring strengtn to tne nana or power to tne bralsx You may labor so hard that you will be nothing more or less than an old horee treading round and round in a conttnous treadmill, never advancing. never getting anywhere, only moving, but not progressing. The third thing that you may do with, today Is to lift You may see the heeds of your brother men. You may help bear their burdens. You may help relieve their distresses. You may make the world brighter, better and nobler because you hava lived. If you live as a world-lifter, surely today will be the best day for you the world has over given you. Wliat are you: A loafer, a laborer, a lifter? i Answsr to your own heart the questions! Tacoma "Watched It Grow." From tha Tacoma Ledger. The salmon is a wonderful fish. A. D. Charlton, passenger agent of the Northern Pacific, caught a fine one down in tha Columbia river. It got Into the Portland newspapers at 18 pounds. Then Mr. Charlton came to Tacoma and, upon hla arrival, tha Chinook tinned Dinkelspiel to' His G irl ' Friends By George V. Hobart. (Copyright, 180T, by American-Journal-Examiner.) Home, Lately. Meln Lleber Looejr: Va haf reoeifed your letter from Pltta burg, und va vaa glat to hear It dot your healt' ia goot und dot pttsneaa mlt commercial trafeling Is also sat lsfactionary. I notice vat you set in your letter abould meeting your cousin, Louisa Ber genthaler, at McKeerfport, und dot Lou isa is yuat crasy I should write her a letter mlt some nice ettyket for girls in It. Vy does Louisa dink dot I am a et tyketist, I vunder? Haf you been showing my letters to somevun, Looey? . Such Is not der cheneral Idea of hos pitality. Looey, to show anyvun your private correspondences, eggscept ven you vas in politics, ven it is alvays a showdown. Un..r T.nnv Vi Ant o It hluM T must not disappointment your cousin, Louisa, so I haf made up a few leedie ettyketisma vicn vni De a nice iaea for her und udder girls to study und commit a memory mlt dem, yet. 'Louisa, don'd nefer eat plgglea und candy at der same meal, because indt chestion is der root of all evil complex ions. Louisa, don d nefer change der com plexion of your hair yust to make It harmonization mlt der parlor furniture. Louisa, dond nefer forstet It dot der girl dot speaks elefen lankvlohes la not as popular as der girl dot keeps her tongue ouiet in vun. Louisa, don d nefer offer to pay your mends rare on der streetcar. Decause she may let you do It und you vlll be a nickel to der baa. Louisa, don d nefer stand In a street car ven men vas sitting all around you. It vas eggstremely lmpoliteful not to offer your strap a man. Louisa, aoan a nerer make goose-goose eyes at a strange man. Borrow a In troduction to him from somebody, und den if you still luff him all vlll be veil. Louisa, don'd nefer vear false hair In der pompador, because ven a girl has rats in der garret no young man vlll set a trap to catch her in der bonds of matrimonial s. Louisa, don'd nefer refusal to eat breakfast und luncheon at home yust because you vas going out to dinner mlt a chent in der efenlflg. Hunger is a nice idea, but It should not be carried to eggstremes. Louisa, don'd nefer go shopping mlt der Idea dot you can find yust vat you vant, because It chenerally turns ouid dot you Tiaf forgotten vot you vanted In der. eggscltement of remembering someding vlch you vould vant If you dit not vant someding else. Louisa, doan d nefer wear a short dress on a rainy day, because der longer der train der more passengers vlll it take to stand on It. Und, more also, how sveet it la ven der tvlllght makes faces at der sunset to Know dot during ail der day our long skirt has helped der veary streetsveeper mlt his labors. kindly" to der strange chent dot glfa you a seat In der streetcar, because he might response "Don'd mention it," und you vould haf to say "Much obliged," und he vould feel der Inspiration to say "Der pleasure vas ill mine." Und dis vould lead to a cheneral gonversatlon ine abould der vedder und a nroooaal of marriage vlch vould result in papa kicking der man down der airshaft, be cause politeness means so leedie at der Deginning, out grows so puier aa ve pursue it. Looey, teh Louisa it vould pleasure me to mention some more, but I vas ?:oing mlt your mother py Coney Island onight und ve need all der ettyket ve 7,877 84,838 88.184 1.820 .888 17.8 Effect of the Two-Cent Ro,t. From the Minneapolis Journal. The two-cent rate law has been found, in one stute. at least, to have proven highly beneficial to the roads, and ex tremely so to the public. That ona state is Minnesota, whose attorney general has compiled two very Interest ing tables, showing the receipts of tha Minnesota roads from their passenger traffic, both local and Interstate, for May and June, 1907, as compared with the average two months' business for the year 1906. when the three-cent rate was in force. MINNESOTA LOCAL BUSINESS ONLT May-June Two aver. 1907. ma 1908 2 cents. 8 cent a. Soo 8 70,823 8 78,188 Great Northern .... 363.442 327,620 Wlllmar & 8. F !S,rM 14.371 Northern Pacific ... 208,292 lie.iiJ St. Paul 158,989 Northweatern 82.106 Omaha 97. SOO M. & St. I j 70.397 Great Western 46,760 Rock Island 18,906 ENTIRE MINNESOTA BUSINESS. May-June Two aver. 1907. mo. 1906 2 cents. 3 cents. Soo 1102.276 Groat Northern .... 625,288 Wtlimar & S. F 31,398 Northern Pacific ... 361,108 Northwestern 171,094 Omaha 230,796 M. & St. L 160.420 Great Western .. .. 97.661 RcK.'k Island 62,301 The figures from which these tablea were compiled were furnished by the railroads themselves, and they show that the big roads the ones with con siderable mileage largely increased their Incomes from passenger business, and that the little onea did not suffer any material reduction. Locaj passen ger business gained 8160,000, and local and through combined gained about $260,000. This Is a state of big population. It will be Interesting to watch reports from states less densely settled. Editors Have to De So Careful! From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. The poet to the magazine editor I wonder if you would like a few verses I wrote after dinner yesterday? The editor, suspiciously What sort of dinner waa it? V ) 1 J $ 77.627 408,668 26,780 299,201 126,704 196,449 149.481 165.298 63,634 A New Route. From the Topeka Capital. Mr. Taft la believed to be the only man who ever went around the world by way of Oklahoma City and Spring field, Missouri. Elusive. s From the Louisville Courier-Journal. The richest man is as elusive to those who chase him as the dollar is to tha poor man when the richest man, chases him. . : v ... . can scrape up to get ua ofer der Brook- Yours mlt luff. lyn brltch mltould svearlng. d DINKELSPIEL. Far Georve V. Hobart Happy Adam. Adam never drove a horse That balked upon a railroad track; And. furthermore, Eva never wore JL waist that buttoned down tha hack. -Hunicag v pwora-tteraia, , "An East Side Bank for East Side People." . .... .'u, , It is the Desire of the COMMERCIAL SAVINGS BANK To make Itself useful and" agree ! able to its customers. 4 Per Cent Interest Paid on : SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, compounded semi-annually. Checking Accounts Solicited' from firms viduals. and indl- XBQTS AXtD '"WIXiXiXAIU ATX. - i r"' -t - George W. BaU. ..Vreaident iM.ii t.M.m mm.mm im X 4-