WORLDS FAIR FAR BEYOND EXPECTATIONS Verdict of a New York Writer Who Spent a Exposition at St Louis in July Tho Worlds Fair at St Louis Is low in Iho midst of its splendid sea ion Colossal complete cosmopoli ian it commands the attention of tho jyorld as no other enterprise of the present year From all nations there iro pilgrims coming to this shrine md from all our states and territories hero is a constantly growing throng f visitors United States Senators Sovernors of States men eminent in science art and letters all express mqualifled admiration for the Exposl ion and free acquiescence in the oft epeated statement that this is by far he greatest and best universal expo sition ever held During July a well known magazine and newspaper writer from New York Mr Addison Steele spent a week at Hie Worlds Fair inspecting the grounds buildings and various attrac ions as thoroughly as was possible in hat limited period Returning home Mr Steele published in Brooklyn Life tho following appreciative com ments on the Exposition In tho expressive language of tho cay St Louis has the goods I had expected much of the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition for I had kept in touch with the making of it from its very inception five years ago but nfter nearly a week of journeying through this new wonderland I must confess that in every essential par ticular it is far beyond my expecta tions The biggest and best it was meant to be and the biggest and best Thousands of Negatives Made For Millionaire August Belrnont Among rich American perhaps none is so fond of being photographed as August Belmont James R Keene being a close second One New York photographer whose patrons are most ly wealthy men has made thousands of negatives for Mr Belmont in the last few years 0n3 of the largest smgle orders for prints from old nega tives ever received by this photog rapher came from Mr Belmont himself soon after the death of his wife It Included a good print from every nega tive in whicb Mrs Belmont appeared The photographer never guessed how many photographs he had taken for Belmont till then he found that they numbered nearly a thousand Why Birds Live Long Why do birds live so much longer than mammals which are often a hun dred times their size Possibly among other things because they have beaks instead of teeth All carnivorous beasts become weak and liable to star vation as their teeth drop out or break Neither are the herbivorous animals in much better case Old horses would probably die of starva tion if wild for their teeth would fail them indeed in some stony countries old horses have to be killed because their teeth are worn away by cropping grass close to the rock Rodents con stantly die from injuries to teeth But a birds beak neither wears out nor drops off and as it constantly swal lows fresh grit to aid in grinding food in the gizzard that needs no repairing cither ent parts do justice to their nobility of architecture and general grandeur Then again in the ground plans and birds eye sketches the only possible manner of showing it the tan shaped arrangement of this group looked stiff and unsatisfying Far from that it is quite as remarkable in Its way as the famous Court of Honor of the Colum bian Exposition In one respect it is even more notablq for instead of two gifand vistas it offers a dozen The main vista is of course the one look ing up the Plaza of St Louis whose crowning feature is the great Louisi ana Purchase Monument and across the Grand Basin to the Cascade Gar dens On the right are the Varied In dustries and Electricity buildings and on the left Manufacturers and Edu cation these with Transportation and Machinery still further to the right and Liberal Arts and Mines beyond at the left making up the body of the fan For its handle the fan has the Cascade Gardens rising in a grand terrace to a height of sixty five feet above the floor level of the buildings mentioned and crowned by the great Festival Hall the Terrace of States and the East and West Pavilions and the Fine Arts building directly behind The Pike has in the Tyrolean Alps the finest concession that I have ever seen There is a great square with many quaint buildings a little village ttreet and above the snow clad moun tains which look very real as the evening falls The best scenic rail road yet devised affords several fine glimpses of the Alps and there is a very graphic exposition of the Ober ammergau passion play in the little church The Cliff Dwellers conces sion alsoslooks very realistic at night fall It is elaborate in arrangement and the courting snake and other dances by the Southwestern Indians make it another of the Pike shows which should be taken in by all In Seville there is an amusing marionette theater and some genuine Spanish dancing For the rest the Pike offers How the Waiter Lost a Tip At one of the Kansas City hotels where the colored waiters give espe cially good service but always expect adequate remuneration for the same from the guests a waiter was espe cially officious the other day in serv ing a man from whom he expected a liberal tip When the meal had been served and he was standing off at one Sde eagerly looking for an opportu nity to be of service he said to the guest Didnt yo have a brothah heah last week sah No said the one addressed I be lieve not Well continued the waiter theh was a gemman heah at mah table what looked vey much like you and he was so well pleased with the serv ice that he gave me 50 cents when he left The guest had by this time finished his meal and as he arose he said to the expectant servitor Come to think of it Sam that was my brother that was here and I guess he paid you for the whole family He may be back again in a week or two Kansas City Journal Church and School for Indians Mother Katherine Drexel of Phila delphia founder and head of the Or der of the Blessed Sacrament com posed of nuns who devote their lives to the uplifting of the Indian and ne gro has offered 500000 of her own private fortune with which to build a church and- school for the Indians of the Winnebago Neb reservation The only condition is that the Indians consent and this Father Schell of Fjmr Neb has obtained Week at the irfinhe variety and as a rule tho full moneys worth is given Tho enor mous Jerusalem and Boer War con cessions are not on the Pike It is a case of dine at the German Pavilion and die at the exposition In a beautiful Moderne Kunst building adjoining Das Deutsche Haus the best fcod and the highest prices on the grounds are to be found tho table dhote lunch and dinner costing two and three dollars respectively There is also a la carte -service Everything considered the prices are not exces sive and at least one meal should be taken there for the experience An other should be taken at the Tyrolean Alps either outdoors or in the gor geous dining room in the mountain side The best French restaurant is at Paris on the Pike Lower in prices and in every way admirable are the two restaurants conducted by Mrs Rorer in the pavilions of Cascade Gardens The east one has wait resses and no beer and the west one waiters and beer For a bit of lunch Germany France and England all offer delicious pastry in the Agrlcul Ural building These are not free ads but time saving tips for the trav eler There are no end of restaurants to fit all purses on the grounds I tried nine of them and nowhere found the prices more than they ought to be As a matter of fact for neither food tor lodging no one need pay any more ac St Louis than he feels that he can M 1 i I LI IUIU1 v i JBr in ft fcv UaPfWi 3Te mm mS SBrSK SECS Kt HI 1 till wm9fmM llIS S WPwPSI S 8 m MmU WW- m aw v E cfa SHr ffiaf wti hk h IB pi5iSvaH4i i WiXmmMjlyLSim WSiSs IRPl8fJBilgiiffTn LOUISIANA PURCHASE MONUMENT AND PALACE OF VARIED INDUSTRIES It is The exposition rumors notwith standing quite finished r One of the greatest and certainly one of the most agreeable of my many surprises was the extreme beauty of the main group of buildings For the simple reason that the camera does pot exist which could take in the vast picture as the eye sees it the early views of the group a bit here and a bit there gave a scant idea of the scheme as a whole Nor did the early views of the ten individual buildings which make up its HAS FAD FOR PHOTOGRAPHS afford and yet be well fed and housed it he will use ordinary common sense in making a selection out of the abundance offered Hot Yes but on the two hottest days of the summer at St Louis I suffered no more from the heat than in New York before leaving and after returning Every day of the seven there was a breeze at the fair grounds and it was always possible to find a shady spot The nights were cool and comfortable ADDISON STEELE SETJTHEM ON EACH OTHER Belligerent Callers Fooled by Quick witted Newspaper Man Representative Brqwnlow of Ten nessee tells that once he was running a country paper during campaign times and was printing fighting language every week One day just after the paper was out a big man armed with a club walked into the sanctum and fiercely inquired if the editor was in The frightened Brown low had wit enough to answer that he was not but that he would go out and hunt him up He started for the street and at the foot of the stairs met another irate fellow who asked Will I find the editor of this dirty sheet upstairs Yes said Brown low hes up there at his desk just itching for a fight The second man went up and Brownlow disappeared Which whipped the other is not re lated and Brownlow didnt go back during the day to find out Ancient Phases Corrupted Ancient Picts in England were called by the Celtic word pehta or fighters This was Latinized into Pic ti So too Barbary of the ancient maps is a monument to the miscalling of the Berber tribe by the Greek word signifying barbarian Even the leg end of the victory of Guy of Warwick over the dun cow is assailed by ruth less etymologists who insist upon its derivation from his conquest over the Dena gau or Danish settlement at the champions gates The Celtic words alt maen are responsible for many old man crags upon sea coasts and among mountains They mean however high rock ttm iWiyxi rHEYDKAW THE LINE DEMOCRATS MAKE THE MAIN IS SUE PLAIN By Declaring in Their Platform That Protection Is Robbery They De- dare Anew That They Are Wedded to the Doctrine of Free Trade The Democratic party in national convention has declared that protec tion is robbery of the many t6 enrich the few The Republican party in national convention has declared its belief in and support of protection as essential to the prosperity of the American people Practically all of tho issues men tioned in the platforms of the great parties this year will have little con sideration in the campaign except this squarely drawn line of difference be tween them on this elementary prin ciple in the economic policy of the American republic It will be useless for the leaders of the Democratic par ty to attempt to make an issue over alleged violations of principles of the United States Constitution by Presi dent Roosevelt and his party when it is a fact perfectly apparent to all thoughtful American citizens that the complaints made by the Democrats in respect to these alleged issues have no real foundation In an attempt to get away from the overpowering influence of sweeping defeat in two great na tional campaigns on the issue of the monetary standard the Democratic party through its delegates in nation al convention assembled has by elect ing to maintain absolute silence on the subject of the money question sought to eliminate that question from among the issues to be discussed dur ing the campaign With so many still unsettled problems intimately associ ated with the financial system such as national banks of issue and pro visions for increasing the monetary supply it seems incredible that a par ty which casts six and a half million votes in a national campaign only four years ago while declaring against the single gold standard should so far admit defeat on that question as to desire that there shall be no further discussion of it But whether the par ty shall be successful in this attempt to evade an issue which its leaders forced upon the country during two national campaigns remains to be seen At this time when there is dis cussion of the question whether the tariff law of the United States shall be revised and when that revision shall be made it certainly becomes a paramount issue in the campaign when the two parties are lined up with for mal declarations the Republican party for and the Democratic party against the doctrine of protection In its course upon the money ques tion the Democratic party in national convention at different times during the past fifteen years has made decla rations positive and unequivocal at one time to be followed by evasion equivocation and silence at other times The party has heretofore de clared that the principle of protection which has been the fundamental prin ciple underlying every tariff act since the first tariff law was signed by George Washington is an unconstitu tional principle and directly hostile to the basic law of the republic In its platform declaration this year the Democratic party does not say that protection is unconstitutional but vio lently assails it as robbery Surely it would seem that a principle of gov ernment or of taxation that is sub ject to denunciation as severe as would be applied to a criminal offense consisting of one person violently tak ing the property of another must not only be unconstitutional but de serves to be uprooted from the law of theland without the slightest hesita tion The Republican party declared in its platform at Chicago its faith in and support of protection as essential to the prosperity of the American people The Republican party in that platform recognized the present public discus sion of tariff revision to the extent of saying that changes in the tariff should be made Avhenever the good to be derived from such action would not be overbalanced by the evils which might flow from the agitation inci dent to such changes What was more important in connection with the tar iff issue of the time was the formal declaration in the Republican plat form that when changes in the tariff are made the work should be intrust ed to the friends of protection not to the enemies of protection It is the belief of protectionists that the ex perience of the American people un der the revision of the tariff made by the Democratic party in 1894 which was attended by great industrial dis asterthe closing of mills and facto ries and the throwing of thousands of men out of employment and caus ing widespread loss to American workingmen in reduction of wages as well as in loss of employment war rants them in saying that when the tariff is to be revised it should not be revised by the Democratic party That the Republican party will read just the tariff when it is necessary and do it upon protection lines is demonstrated by the experience of the past The Republican party has never hes itated to undertake readjustment when in its judgment changes in the tariff schedules were necessary or de sirable The Republican party in May 1S60 introduced what is known as the Morrill tariff bill as a purely protective measure and it was passed ten months later and signed by Pres ident Buchanan two days before the Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln As a check upon foreign importations and the outward flow of gold to pay for them as a stimulus to domestic pro w duction and as a producer of rovenuo to defray tho expenses of the War of tho Rebellion the first tariff law passed by the Republican party proved itself of incalculable benefit to the country The Republican party readjusted the tariff downward in 1872 and again in 1883 for the purpose of correcting some Inequalities The results of theso downward readjustments were far from satisfactory The Republican party readjusted the tariff upward in 1890 and in con sequence the country entered upon a new era of prosperity Once more in 1897 the Republican party readjusted the tariff upward in order to correct the gross inequalities and disaster producing features of tho Democratic tariff readjustment of 1S94 and forthwith followed a period or prosperity far exceeding anything previously known in the worlds his tory Through all those years of tariff re vision and modification the position of the Republican party has consist ently been in favor of a tariff law em bodying the essential principles of pro tection Through all those years the Democratic party has opposed protec tion and in the only period of Demo cratic control in all branches of the Federal government that party re vised the tariff upon lines that ig nored as far as possible the princi ples of protection Here is presented therefore in a few words the records of the two parties during the past for ty years The Republican party has revised and modified the tariff when such action was necessary either to increase the Federal revenues or to correct inequalities of the law The Democratic party when entrusted with power revised the tariff upon non protection lines and in the sched ules of the law which it passed re fused protection to some of the most important industries in the United States the factory the mine and the farm In every instance when the Republican party made a tariff law the industries of the country were quickened intojiew life capital found ready investment and workingmen re ceived increased opportunities for em ployment at increased and increasing wages When the Democratic tariff act of 1894 was passed it was followed by greater competition from the prod ucts of foreign lands with the result that domestic industries were crip pled and a million workingmen in this country were either thrown out of employment or their wages were greatly reduced Admitting for the purpose of argu ment that the time may come when the tariff law of the United States should be modified in order that any inequalities it contains may be cor rected and its schedules made to con form to altered conditions the ques tion which will confront every voter in the coming campaign is whether such changes in the tariff shall be made by the Republican party the friend and supporter of protection or by the Democratic party which op poses protection and declares it to be robbery It would seem from this statement of the situation which is an accurate statement borne out by the facts ol history and the experiences of men in this country during very recent years that the efforts of the Democratic par ty in its national platform to meet the tariff issue with the plain declar ation that protection is robbery and at the same time attempt to sugar coat those powerful and significant words with the suggestion that the tariff be gradually reduced togeth er with the for-revenue-only stipu lation that the tariff be limited to the needs of the government cannot but be regarded by thoughtful people everywhere as a covert attempt of the party to mislead the people into striking a blow at protection under the claim that the blow will not be permitted to do harm The effort of the Democrats to dis guise their purpose in assaulting pro tection will not be successful The American people are in favor of pro tection They will not entrust the making of a tariff law to a political party that is opposed to protection As Aell might the American people have invited Mr Bryan in 189G or in 1900 to make and execute a law estab ishing the gold standard as to invito the Democratic party under Judge Parker on a platform that declares protection to be robbery to make a tariff law that shall protect American industries and American labor Why Gradual In one sentence denouncing protec tion as robbery almost the next phrase of the Democratic platform guarantees the gradual revision of the existing protective tariff Whats that Protection a robbery that is to be corrected gradually It is as though a thief caught red handed stood in the prisoners dock to be thus addressed by the judge I find you sir convicted of picking pockets The sentence of this court is that you gradually revise your thiev ish propensity and that you diminish the number of pockets picked from day to day and from week to week until finally you will cease altogether to pick pockets You may go If it be true that protection is rob bery then there should be nothing gradual about suppressing the fel onious policy It ought to be instantlj stopped If it be not true as everj person of common intelligence knows it is not but if protection is on the contrary a system and a policy undei which millions of homes have been made happier and our country has gained the foremost place among all the nations of the world then the Democratic party should be held un worthy of confidence and unfit to undertake the management of national affairs And that is what is going tc happen ITS GrLGKIES ENDED FAMOUS NEW YORK HOSTELRY FORCED TO CLOSE Old Morton House Where Statesmen Politicians Actors Professional and Business Men Were Wont to Gather Is No More Subways and tunnels which are re ported to have proved blessings for Boston hotels have bepn the ruin of the Morton house one of Nov Yorks oldest hotels and at one time one of the citys best paying properties The house has gone into a receivers hands the employes havo scattered and tho man who ran the hotel until the un deground route of travel ran them and ihe hostelry under tho ground too f ay that no hotel -man will tacklo tho job of running the old house when so many new ones aro going up Nugent Jackson who ran tho ho tel until forced into bankruptcy say the tunnel ruined them With tho blasting and the dirt coming in through the windows for the past three years they couldnt keep their patrons Things went from bad to worse and the hotel for which Grover Cleveland had once signed an application for a 1quor license and whero James G Blaine and other famous men could always be found when in town is now hardly a memory The furnishings of the hotel were sold at a receivers sale a few days ago The night before the sale there was a wake at the old house Some of the old time patrons of the house were there and had things to eat and drink The gathering was called to clean out the food supply but the par ty was far from cheerful Every one felt that it was a solemn occasion this parting with an old stand by James Morton became the manager of the hotel in G8 The name of the house was then changed to that of the manager Morton was a congenial man and very popular His house became the stopping place of all the men of note Chester A Arthur was often there The late James G Blaine could be found there too when in town Les ter Wallack was then in the height of his glory and Shed Shook and A M Palmer were enjoying theirs Every body of any consequence went to the Morton house Politicians profes sional men and actors rubbed elbows at the bar When Morton took charge he of course had to have a license to sell liquor The city had its own excise bureau then and there was little for mality about obtaining a license All that was necessary was for the appli cant to notify the excise board that he wanted a license and they sent a no tary to him to swear to the applica tion It was necessary to have twe witnesses as a sort of recommenda tion but that was all When the notary appeared Morton failed to have his two witnesses on hand to sign the application In fact he didnt know the witnesses were needed and he expressed some surprise His remark was overheard by a heavily built man vho happened to come into his office Whats the matter Jim said the newcomer Why I want a witness to this doc ument said Morton Ill sign it said the newcomer He grabbed a pen and affixed the name Grover Cleveland Mr Cleve land was then mayor of Buffalo and r patron of the old hotel as well as a friend of its manager The Dulcimer Tho loaves were blowing red and brown Beneath the beech trees bare When the Dark ilaid came to our town With gold pins in her hair Her eves were like a forest pool Her lips they were po sweet Everv man put abide his tool To watch her down the street The leaves were blowing- yellow and Tn the waning of the moon When the Dirk Maid came along the way With shoon Ier mantle fell like folds of mist That rift and shift and change Wns never wandering lutanist That played a tune so strange The leaves were blowing crimson and geld The wind was like a sigh That sobs across a ferny wold Befoie the raindrops lly And none beheld her whence she came Or knew the way she went Our hearts being stirred to smouldering flame Of tenderest discontent The leaves were blowing ash and dun Athwart the edge of night When the Dark Maid toward the setting sun Sang herself out of sight And every man from marvel roused Took up his toil again How should that fairy joy be housed In homes of mortal men Ent still against a singing wind In dreams we follow her The Dark Maid never looks behind That plays the dulcimer May Byron in The Spectator The Summer Resort Widow The widow said I W Read of Nashville furnishes the most de lightful study to the observer of the tricks and maners of human beings One summer he continued in a ruminating manner I was spending some time at White Sulphur Springs Va I only tell this as an illustration of the acumen and intelligence of the genus widow and one afternoon a handsome young woman and her little six-year-old son sat near me on the veranda The little fellow trotted upr to me and I patted him on the head Whats your name he asked I told him Is you married he lisped No Im not I replied Then the child paused a moment and turning to his mother said Mamma what else did you tell ma to ask him Louisville Herald A V ijr I n