I 10 THE MQirJTTXO OEEGOXIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1010. POBTIASD, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Postoffice as Second-Class Matter. Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (BY MAIL). Daily. Sunday Included, one year J8.00 Daliy. Sunday Included, six months.... 4.J5 Daily, Sunday included, three months. . 2-J!o Daily. Sunday included, one month 1 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6 .0 O Dally, without Sunday, six months.... Daily, without Sunday, three months.. I.i5 Ially, without Sunday, one month..-. Weekly, one year I-5" Sunday, one year..... .......... 2.50 Sunday and weekly, one year......... 3.50 (By Carrier). - Daily, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 Daliy, Sunday included, one month.... .76 How to Kemlt Send Postoffice money order, express order or personal check on vour local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ire at the sender's risk. Give postoffice ad dress in full. Including county and state. postage Kates 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 13 to 2H pages, 2 cents; 30 to 40 pages, 3 cents; 40 to OO pages, 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Office The S. C. Beck wlth Special Agency New York, rooms 48 50 Tribune building. Chicago, rooms 510 613 Tribune building. PORTLAND. THURSUAV, MAY 5, 1910. EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY LAW. Between the contentions of workers and employers as to liability for per sonal injury is a medium of fair deal ing. This medium the people of Ore gon will be impelled to find. The outcome will be wholly satisfactory to neither side, nor will it end their strife. Whatever concessions shall be allowed, employes will want to have extended, while those who hire the hands will desire them modified. But between the two contending elements is a basis of substantial Justice, that accords with the public interest, and that citizens as a whole desire to have defined. Unfortunately the electors who hold the balance of power to "legislate" on this question under the initiative next November do not have the means of adjusting matters in that election. There can be no deliberation nor com promise, no amendment nor substitu tion of remedies. The ballots must be cast on alternative extremes, neither of which the electorate may really de sire to enact. The labor measure ought not to become law in the form it Is offered. And the retaliatory bill of the employers if there shall be one and it will be natural for one to be submitted could probably be justly amended, if there were facilities of doing so. Proper legislation is a matter of ad justment and compromise. If it were not so, it would benefit one class of citizens at expense of another. Dis regard of this principle or impossi bility of applying it, throws discredit on the initiative method of lawmaking. Oregon has passed through this ex perience. Two years ago extreme fishery bills were submitted by rival , salmon factories of the Columbia River, each measure framed for the purpose of driving a rival out of ex istence. Both were enacted and they were such flagrant violations of jus tice that they were hastily repealed by the succeeding Legislature. The association of employers who are opposing the labor bill say they are willing to make substantial con cessions in the direction of liability. The premiums they pay for liability insurance show that they are making large outlay In this direction already. Last year in this state they paid twice as much for insurance as the insur ance companies returned and injured employes received only a small per centage of the indemnities. The labor bill goes too far when it makes owners of buildings that are under construction liable for injuries sustained by the employe of a contrac tor, sub-contractor, foreman or archi tect. There could be no security for owners of property under such a law. No class of citizens should be per mitted to legislate for its own interest, whether its citizens be rich or poor, employes or employers. The fault of the initiative system of lawmaking is that it admits extremists into the pow ers of lawmaking. Is this fault to be proved again? WHY PRICES ARE HIGH. Both Secretary Wilson of the De partment of Agriculture and Mr. B. F. Yoakum, a railroad man, had some instructive remarks to make to the Farmers' Union at St. Louis on May 3. Kach gentleman spoke . principally Upon the all-absorbing bpio of the high cost of living and each had a theory of his own to account for it. Secretary Wilson believes that the prices of food are high because the productiveness of 'the farms of the country does not keep pace with the Increase of population. Our failure to produce crops comparable with what the Knglish and French farmers raise on the same amount of land is due to our universal neglect to care for the soil. The American agricul turist has always acted upon the theory that he could continually take fertility out of the soil and still raise profitable crops. The sad experience of recent years teaches him that this is en error. To make farming pay permanently he must restore to the soil in the form of cheap fertilizers the element.- which he takes from it an nually in the form of grain and fruit. Secretary WiLson deserves high praise for the persistence with which he has kept this elementari- truth before the people of the United States and the practical efforts he has made to apply it. The good work which the expert merit stations are doing for .the farmers all over the country is largely the result of his diligence. The fact that Secretary' Wilson was right in what he ssid to the farmers about high cost of living did not pre vent Mr. Yoakum from being right also, although he had a different theory. In his opinion living is dear because of the plundering middleman This useless intermediary robs the farmer on the one hand and the con Burner on the other, absorbing most of the profits of agriculture and mak ing life a burden for the man who is compelled to purchase meat and bread. Evidently there is no conflict between this view and Mr. Wilson's theory that the fertility of the soil has been depleted and production cur tailed by bad farming methods. Both are undoubtedly true. We may also agree with Mr. Yoakum's further re mark that the way to escape from the clutches of the middleman is to organ lxe. With the farmers organized for marketing their products and consum ers organized for purchasing, it Is not easy to see how the parasitic inter mediary could reap his profit. Organization of the farmers has al ready progressed to a certain point, and It Is likely to go a great deal far- ther. It proceeds more slowly than on could wish, but It does not slacken and perhaps after a time it will move faster. But to consumers the idea of combining to purchase their goods is novel in this country, though it has been applied elsewhere with "great success, notably in England and Bel gium. Probably we have never thought much on the subject in Amer ica because living has always been comparatively easy, no matter how much was wasted. Now the time has come when we are compelled to think about the scraps we have been in the habit of throwing away, and it is likely enough that consumers as well as producers will seek to mitigate their hardships by organizing. DODGING COST OF WATER MAIXS. Latest of proposals as to water mains in Portland is that the city charge lot owners for new pipes and then give them back their money in free water service for a commensurate period. This will not reach the root of the trouble, if the doctrine is to hold that persons, whose land is im proved by water mains, should pay for the Improvements. The city does not give back to lot owners any part of the money they pay for improvements in sewers. streets or sidewalks. These better ments, as of water mains, enter into the value of land and into the selling price, when the speculator or the in vestor "realizes." Water mains give land more value than any of these im provements. It is not Just for water consumers or taxpayers to make fa vored lot owners a present of this increment. That would mean higher water rates or higher taxes. What the present effort of reform is trying to do is chiefly to compel per sons who add new tracts to the city to pay out of their own pockets for an Improvement that they sell to their successors. This is Just what certain land owners are trying to escape. Will the city let them? CONSEBVIXG AGAINST OFFICIALS. As if the people of the several states do not own the use of unappropriated waters nor possess control of appro priated waters through power of tax ation and regulation of service, Gif ford Pinchot reiterates that his pet Federal bureau must be put in charge, in a fresh article in a current publica tion, of which the following is an ex cerpt: Under the Constitution the United States exercises direct control over navigable streams. It exercises control over non-navi gable and source streams only through its ownership of the lands through, which they pass, as in the public domain and National forests. It is Just as essential for the pub lic welfare that the people should retain and exercise control of water power monop oly on navigable as on non-navigable streams. If the difficulties are greater, then the danger that the water powers may pass out of the people's hands on the lower navi gable parts of the streams is greater than on the upper non-navigable parts, and it may be harder, but in no way leas neces sary to prevent it. The people are in control of the streams of this country, both navigable and non-navigable. They have or dained in National and state constitu tions that the Federal Government shall supervise and regulate navigable waters and that the state governments shall exercise this function over the others. There is no reed of extending the authority of the Federal Government beyond 'present legal limits. The streams will be safe in control of the states and will be better conserved. True conservation now-a-days is that of protecting the waters from de vouring hosts of Federal officialdom who would tax the users of the streams in the new states to maintain a costly bureaucracy in Washington, D. C. The people who use the waters should not be compelled to pay toll to swarms of officials in the National Capital. Nor will they do so while their constitu tions last. THE LONG AND SHORT HAUL. Far-reaching in its effect and be wildering in the changes it will make possible is the long-and-short-haul clause of the Congressional railroad bill. As agreed on by the House, this long-and-short-haul section of the bill permits railroads to charge low rates for a long haul, with water competi tion, only after such lower rates have been approved by the Interstate Com merce Commission. This provision, if it finally becomes the law, will vastly increase the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission, which up to the present time has assumed no jur isdiction over rates susceptible to wa ter competition. Under such a pro vision, the Commission will have pow er to decree at what point in the in terior the rail rate and the water rate will meet. The delicacy of the task before the Commission can be understood when the instability of the water rate is considered. Ever open to competition. this rate fluctuates much more rap idly and frequently than rail rates and presents a problem not easily solved. But the troubles of the lonir and-short-haul provision of the bill do not end with water competition. The oretically it seems wrong that a rail road should charge a higher freight rate for hauling freight 400 miles than it charges for hauling it 600 miles. Viewed from a practical standpoint. however, the situation discloses the presence of an endless array of varying conditions which at times and in cer tain localities make a high rate on a 400-mile haul seem more reasonable than a low rate on a 600-mile haul. Density of traffic, cost of construction maintenance and operation show such great differences in different localities that the men who are entrusted with the duty of applying this long-and-short-haul change will be confronted with many serious problems. Applied with a disregard for these conditions and with strict adherence to the theory that a 600-mile haul should cost the "shipper more than .a 400-mile haul, there must result a general shifting of the jobbing centers throughout the country". Spokane, for example, could no longer engage in a jobbing business west of that city be cause Ritzville. Odessa, Colfax and other points on which Spokane now levies tribute would enjoy lower rates than Spokane could secure. On the east. Helena and Missoula, being nearer the originating freight centers of the East, could ship into territory east of Spokane that is now served bv Spokane. If the Interstate Commerce Commission should see fit to wield this immense power given by the long- and-short-haul provision in a manner detrimental to Coast interests, the Coast cities might suffer considerable inconvenience pending read justment of conditions and addition of sufficient steamers to handle the heavy increase in water traffic which would immedi ately follow. The Impregnable position of the coast cities will protect them against either the railroads, the opposition of interior cities or a hostile Interstate Commerce Commission. This position is almost invulnerable now. It will be further strengthened as soon as the Panama Canal is completed. Long be fore the big waterway connects the two oceans, the business interests of Spokane and of every city west of the Rocky Mountains will be joining the coast ports in a demand for lower distributive rates from the coast to the interior, so that all may share in the benefits of ocean competition, the only competition which is open to every man who cares to build a ship and engage in the carrying trade. SHIPPTN-G GOLD. To add to the economic puzzles of this perplexing period we are now confronted with an unfavorable bal ance of trade. It has always been the pride and Joy of our American econo mists that at the close of each year Europe owed us a comfortable sum which had to be remitted in hard cash. This year the state of things has been reversed and It is we who must do the remitting. American' gold is flowing to London and other European money centers by the ship load, and none is likely to return for some time. The Springfield Repub lican opines that the gold is bought by foreign banks to fortify themselves against an approaching panic. As for the panic, it is looked forward to as the natural reaction from the wild speculation in rubber shares which is raging in London. The demand for rubber to make automobile tires has made everybody crazy to Invest in the shares of the bubble companies. By and by they will burst, and then woe to the banks which have not provided for the inevitable. This is a pretty theory, and no doubt it is true as far as it goes, but .there is another rea son why American gold is going to Europe. It is to cancel an unfavorable bal ance of trade. We are in debt to the old country and the time has now come when the account must be bal anced. In former years we had so much raw material to export, grain, cotton, meat, lumber, and so on, that the other hemisphere invariably closed the year in debt to us. Now our raw materials are falling off, not greatly in absolute measure, perhaps, but in the amount we can spare from home consumption. Our manufacturers can not compete with those of Germany in desirable markets like those of South America and the Orient. At the same time our expenditures run up to enormous sums. It is said that American travelers spend $50,000,000 in France alone every season, and of'course this Is only a fraction of the total cost of our Eu ropean pleasuring. If the shipment of gold to Europe is to be a steady pro cess, it means that the United States has fallen into a position of economic dependence and that this country will be more and more completely drained of its wealth as the years pass. The natural remedy is to cease to ship raw materials and send out manufactures. Another remedy Is for some of our travelers to stay at home. KEW THOTOHT TEACHERS. A curious phenomenon of the times we live in is the swarm of "new thought" practitioners of one sort and another which has settled down like locusts on every city in the country. A story is told of one in Los Angeles who usually draws an audience of 200 or 300 people to hear what he calls his "lessons in the heavenly life." The admission is $1. The lessons are taken down in shorthand and something like a thousand copies of each one sold at $2.50 apiece to his worshiping fol lowers. It Is safe to say that the les sons teach nothing whatever that can not be found in dozens of books, but the lecturer possesses the magic art of humbugging people and thrives upon it. . , The tale which has Just come from New York about the young man who goes by the title "Om" shows that sometimes practitioners of the new thought do not always content them selves with mere swindling; It ap pears that this enterprising vessel of inspiration, whose real name is Bern ard, was in the habit of inveigling girls to his house and keeping them there for improper purposes under the pretense of giving them instruction in new thought mysteries. Persons who have attentively lis tened to lecturers upon this elusive subject agree that they have nothing whatever to teach that is worth learn ing. The very slender stream of heal ing influence which flows from the mind to the body has been magnified and misrepresented by them until it is distorted out of all semblance to the truth. They play upon the credulity of their victims without scruple and fool them right and left as long as they can be persuaded to part with their money. The wonderful thing about the business is the ease with which any adventurer who has no credentials and but little apparent at tractiveness of speech or manner can go to a strange city and quickly gather a "class" to listen to his non sense. The class seldom lasts long. It dissolves almost as quickly as it assembles, but that does not matter. The inspired teacher can go his way to some other town and repeat the process indefinitely. THE INDIVIDVAL AM) THE PARTY'. Mr. Bailey's remarks in the Senate the other day on the tariff and the in surgents have that doctrinaire flavor which seems to cling to everything that an irrecoverable Democrat thinks and does. He could not understand, he said, how Republicans can wrangle among themselves "over the extent of protection." As soon as a duty is high enough to afford any protection at all, he argues, it makes no difference how much higher it is made. At least it makes no difference on the Repub lican theory, which assumes that American manufacturers will compete among themselves to keep down prices. If Republican statesmen would only let their Democratic brethren formulate and interpret their prin ciples for them there might be greater harmony in the Federal Senate, but there would be a good deal less com mon sense than there is. Where can a Republican politician of ordinary intelligence be found today who be lieves that competition among the pro tected interests will keep down prices? The effort of thoughtful Republican statesmen is to discover some method. if possible, of preserving the home market for our manufacturers and at the same time so regulating the com binations that they may not prey upon the people. Mr. Bailey was not neces sarily correct therefore when he said in the same speech from which we have Quoted that men who do not approve of the present tariff schedules are more Democrats than Republicans. Moderate protection which equalizes the cost of production in this country and Europe need not afford any shel ter for extortionate combinations while it may exclude foreigners from the American market. This is the Repub lican ideal as expressed in the last National platform; and if any man believes that the ideal has not yet been attained he may have his con viction without being . a Democrat. The Democrats, according to Mr. Bailey, eschew the protective principle altogether, though when they had an opportunity to revise the tariff they did not seem to be very firmly at tached to their creed. The truth is that individual freedom of opinion is becoming more prevalent in American politics than it has been before for many years and the consequences up to a certain point cannot but be bene ficial to the country.. As long as in dividual liberty of thought does not go to the length of bieaking up the party organizations Cere is othing injurious to be feared from it. The Alaska Northern Railroad is Importing 3000 tons of coal from Ja pan for use in running its trains in Alaska. The Commercial Club of Sew ard, Alaska, has forwarded to the Government a protest against the pol icy which- makes necessary importa tion of coal at a time when Alaska has such a large measure undeveloped. These Alaskans must be near-sighted and not at all familiar with Pinchot ism. They should welcome the impor tation of coal from Japan, as it will permit these great coal resources of Alaska to remain undisturbed so that posterity can use them. Besides Japan ese "Guggenheims" who are selling this coal to the Alaskans, have spent money in developing their mines and building railroads to them, and if we buy their coal, we will exhaust the supply that much sooner, and then a few thousand years hence our own Alaskan coal will sell for high figures. For shame, Alaska, you should wel come this Japanese coal that enables you to conserve your resources. A senseless run on a Los Angeles bank ended Tuesday, after frantic de positors had been drawing out their funds for two days, and one of the hysterical depositors had dropped dead through excitement and fear. There was still plenty of money In the bank when the wave of hysteria had spent Its force, and then the "back flow" 'began, thousands of depositors returning the money which they had foolishly withdrawn a few hours ear lier. An idle rumor started the run. When the great American public either with a local or a National panic, gives an Idle rumor support, trouble ensues. We speak lightly of the in telligence of the sheep that rush pell mell over a precipice Just because one of their empty-headed number got started the wrong way; but in case of most runs made on our banks, the in telligence of the sheep does not suf fer by comparison with that of the two-legged goats who follow the leader In a run on a bank. When Senor Evariso Madero (may his tribe increase), Governor of Coa huila, believed that he was about to die, he summoned all of his relative to his bedside. There were children and grand-children and even great-grand-children, and to the number of 105 they obeyed the summons toy mak ing a swift rush on a special train. None, so far as known, sent regrets or excuses, which, of course, showed that Senor Evariso was popular among the young folks, and that Mexicans are kind to the aged. It might be ex plained, however, that Senor Evariso was the owner of a fortune of about $30,000,000. Even in this country, where we are sometimes chided for our neglect of the aged, a dying man with $30,000,000 would be pretty Cer tain to round up a large assortment of relatives before he died, not to men tion a few who would appear after wards, if the will had failed to prove satisfactory. Evidently, according to the Gervais Star, the "poor widow's - cow" dom inates the voting population of Ger vais. The editor of that journal, look ing dreamily out of his office window one day last week in search of a topic worthy of editorial mention, counted "forty cows, all bunched together," in accordance with the gregarious bovine instinct, on the main street of that town, chewing the cud of contentment. Side streets are yet to hear from, but; most people who have trodden the thoroughf ores of towns wherein the liberty of the streets Is- accorded to the family cow in multitude, have a mental picture of these which they do not take pleasure in recalling. Even the cows in the Instance above noted were manifestly compelled to vacate these side streets and alleys for their own comfort it being "fly time." Mrs. Isabel B. Baker, a. conscien tious, capable and faithful teacher in the Portland public schools for nearly a third of a century, finished her course recently and passed on. Pupils of the old North School, now the Atkinson, knew her during most of this long period of service. Mrs. Baker was an instructor in the best sense of the word one who gave the personal touch to her work. The service of thirty years, the value of which cannot be estimated, stands to her credit among the unwritten archives of human endeavor. The Illness that closed her contract with life lasted for some months, and her death was not unexpected. The "interests" are said to be ac tive in the public-docks matter. The Interests usually have something they would like to "unload" on taxpayers. The non-political dodge has suc ceeded so well in the past that it is not strange that certain aspirants for Judge wish to try it again. It has been troublesome to find men for Banker Morris' jury. It usually is difficult to find men who are unpreju diced about a bank wreck. Secretary Ballinger certainly is car rying out the Roosevelt conservation policies when he calls his muckrake detractors by the ugly word. King Edward has presented $500 to each of Canadian quadruplets. He will also have something to boast of when he sees Roosevelt. Wezler will escape hanging for the murder of his mother-in-law. An other mother-in-law Joke, apparently. OREGON'S REW-COCJITY TROUBLES More Taxes for More Officials. Pendleton East Oregon. Those who profess to believe that the creation of "Orchard" County would not increase taxation in the east end country are asked to read of the effect county division had upon the taxes E. A. Schiffler pays on his Hood River property. The creation of Hood River County caused an immediate advance of 61.4 per cent in the ' taxes which Mr. Schiffler has to pay. The last year his property was in Wasco County his Hood River taxes amounted to $85.50. The first year of Hood River County in creased his taxes to $138, an increase of $52.50 on the same identical property. This Is a fact that is shown by the rec ords. It is not an "estimate" made for campaign purposes. Before they Join the movement for the carving up of Umatilla County the people of the east end and especially the farmers of that section should count the cost that divi sion will mean to them. A Vxinjr Question. Baker City Herald. The Herald is in receipt of a roll of circulars, printed in two colors, stat ing that the citizens of Lane County request the voters to vote against the creation of Nesmith County. In this section of the state the voters know very little about the proposed county and whether it should or should not be created. If the people of some section in Eastern Oregon should de sire to have a new county created, the voters in the valley would not know whether to vote for or against the measure. The state is so large and con ditions so varied that the people of one section do not know much about another section. The creation of any new counties in the State of Oregon shoQld be postponed until the people have placed upon the statutes of Ore gon a law permitting only the voters of the counties and district affected to decide whether or not their territory should be divided. DlsMn tin faction In Umatilla. Weston Leader. Milton is reported to be "starting something" again in th-5 way of county division. . A campaign fund of $2000 has been raised, it is said, and S. D. Peterson and J. P. Neal, attorneys, re spectively, of Milton and Freewater, apointed as campaign managers. The Leader prefers to remain in Uma tilla County, but has no objection to a new county containing Milton and Freewater only, if these towns find their present political condition un bearable. Milton Is a growing town and Is readhing out after things. If it must have a county seat, well and good. But its attempt to annex Weston and Athena to Williams or Orchard County is a trifle too ambitious. These towns are content to remain in old Umatilla. Milton, by the way, should try to cure Itself of this irritating "division itch," and to devote Its energies to further progress along legitimate and praiseworthy lines. HOMES. ARE SEEDED IN FORESTS Conservation Should Not Prevent Cre ation of Farms by the People. Denver Republican. Wherever there is a tract of agricul tural land large enough to provide sub sistence for a family, it should be placed under cultivation. The only way in which this can be done is by allowing it to be acquired by homeseekers. Pursuit qf this policy would result in an Increase in the population of the Rocky Mountain states and in a large addition to the aggregate area of tax able property. That would, however, not be the only benefit. Were all the agri cultural land within the National forests occupied by homesteaders, the danger irom lorest nres would be greatly re duced. These small tracts of cultivated land would act as breaks against the spread of forest fires in case the latter had not gained great force and headway. They would also deprive the forest, of some of their wilderness character, intro ducing homes into vast areas now almost wholly without inhabitants. However enthusiastic for forest conser vation the people of Colorado or any number or them may be. they will wel come a policy which will open the way for more' home building and an Increase in the population of the state. Remedy for Print Paper Famine. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Herbert Knox Smith, Commissioner of Corporations, says we may have a print paper famine in the United States be fore the end of the year. The produc tion of print paper has fallen off con siderably for various reasons in the last six months. On reading so doleful a suggestion one instinctively asks, "What would be the effect on the ever-increasing array of 10- cent and 15-cent magazines? How could they decrease their size and yet give the public about what it has grown accus tomed to expect?" The substitution of intensive muck raking for the present old-fashioned ex tensive method should be the first step. Extensive muck-raking Is a great waster of print paper. Scientific, or intensive, methods would make it possible to get the same results from half the paper area. Reflections of a Bachelor. New York Press. Cheerfulness is the art of concealing your real feelings. A man marries for domestic responsi bility, and his wife gets it. The way to have nonsense seem sen sible to you is for It to be your own. The servant problem is much nearer home than the Government's foreign policy, so we don't try to solve it. You can tell a girl who has been en gaged several times by how she seems so innocent about what goes with it. A Savlngj Also a Waste. Houston (Tex.) Post. Some idiot estimates that Governor Hughes has saved $1500 in barber bills by not cutting his whiskers. Yes, and the newspapers now printing his pic tures have probably had to pay four times that much for the extra ink re quired to make the whiskers show up. Provocative of Profanity. Houston (Tex.) Post. "A gentleman will not say 'damn, " declares a Louisville preacher. We do not deny it, but how on earth can a fel low express his convictions in moments of emotion or when he contemplates the greed and arrogance of the infamous Republican party? Forcing; a Handicap. Lippincott's. Diogenes returned from his search for an honest man. "Given up the chase?" they inquired. "It became a matter of necessity," re plied the philosopher. "Some one stole my lantern." Colonel Watterson's Mint Bed. Washington Post. " What with a freezing blast from the West and the Roosevelt blight from the East, these be parlous times for Marse Henry's mint bed. BOURNE'S PET COMMITTEE IDLE. Oregon's Sentstor's .Efforts to Save People's Money Fall to "Pan Out." New Tork Tribune. What has become of that monumental agency of Federal retrenchment, the Senate Committee on Expenditures? Its creation was celebrated a year ago with a magnificent flourish of trumpets. It was to act as a restraining force on the various committees of the Senate to which the regular appropriation bills are referred, to slice away extravagances which had crept into those measures and to discourage any extension of the Gov ernment's present liabilities through gen eral legislation. The membership of the new committee was fixed at 20, more than a fifth of the full strength of the Senate. It included the chairmen of the other leading committees having to do with ap propriations and was considered to out rank in dignity and quality, as well as numbers, all the older committees. Its work, it was predicted, would result in retrenchment in the annual appropria tions of anywhere from $30,000,000 to $100,- 000.000. Yet there are investigators in Wash ington who say that they cannot find a trace of the committee's reforming activi ties even with the aid of a searchlight. There is no record so far of a noteworthy reduction in the Senate of the appropria tions voted by the House of Representa tives. On the contrary, the Senate only few days ago passed a river and harbor appropriation bill carrying $10,000,000 more than it carried when the House passed it. Much of the extra money voted by the Senate is for projects which the Army engineers do not approve and which the Administration would like to see omitted from the river and harbor meas ure. Whero was the Committee on Ex penditures, with its 20 votes and Its all powerful influence, when the Senate was being importuned in behalf of local in terests to add $10,000,000 to the amount for rivers and harbors voted by the House? Its members were evidently too discreet to urge an embarrassing economy in a flald in which evil precedents have set the fashion of lavish Governmental disbursements on the I-tlckle-you-and-you-tickie me plan. Private pension bills continue to pass in each House of Congress by the' hun dred. The Committee on Expenditures has apparently not yet sought to discour age special pension legislation, which always Involves favoritism and irregu larity and often has no other excuse than to make private political capital at home for an energetic pension-hunting Con gressman. If rational retrenchment In expenditure is to come, special pension legislation and river and harbor Improve ments of the compensatory sort must be abandoned. Why shouldn't the Commit tee on Expenditures begin to plant the seeds of reform now? SHAM IN PROTECTIVE! TARIFF. Democrats' Are Engaged In It as Deeply as Republicans. Chicago Tribune. The difference between the authorized positions of the parties upon the tariff is academic. There are high tariff Demo crats as well as high tariff Republicans, and the actual tariff is the result of a complex of nonpartisan forces. When the Democratic party had a chance to put the tariff down it put the tariff up, thereby performing a great service to the plain people, who ever since have realized that trie devotion of the Democratic party to a low tariff is purely Platonic. Respecting legislation against privilege, the situation is virtually the same. Sen ator Bailey thrusts his left hand into the bosom of his "Prince Albert," waves his right hand toward the press gallery, and thunders: "Upon great questions which underlie the structure and deter mine the character of this Government all men who think one way must neces sarily be Republicans and all men who think the other way must necessarily be Democrats." This out of the mouth of a man whose plutocratic associations and sympathies have been notorious will make no Impression except to remind us of the fact that throughout the battle for progressive legislation Democratic lead ers, as representatives of privilege, fought shoulder to shoulder with reactionaries and obstructionists among the Repub licans. The Tribune apologizes for reiterating these truisms. But if they are ignored in Congress they must be emphasized else where. The same struggle is going on in both parties the struggle against privi lege, the struggle to make the party or ganization responsive to the party mem bership, the struggle to make representa tive government representative in fact as well as in form, the struggle to broaden and deepen the foundations of political power, the struggle to make democracy real. This is the test the American peo ple are learning to apply to public men and to party measures, and it is a test the Republican party can accept with better grace than their opponents. For it can offer the practical progreBsivism of its real leader, Theodore Roosevelt,, as against the unpractical and eccentric lib eralism of Bryan. Boole for Marie Twain's Dying Hours. New York Times. Mr. Clemens had called for Carlyle's "French Revolution." To what episode in that tumultuous aggregation of epi thets, that collection of strangely un couth but often splendidly forcible de scriptive passages, did his mind revert in his last hour? It may seem an odd book for a dying man to think about, but there are moods to which it ap peals strongly; the whole sum of hu man life is between Its covers: It sets forth as well as other great books the vanity of worldly glory, the need of charity. Clemens was a strong man, and one of just principles, on the whole. with a heart full of sympatny. it is interesting to know that he often must have found mental refreshment and consolation in that greatest of . the works of another strong and emotional man. Voice From Polk: County. ' Polk County Observer. The Observer is among those who who have long believed that the people of Oregon would honor themselves by erecting a statue to the memory of James W. Nesmith, but it has extreme doubts as to the propriety of giving the name of the dead soldier and statesman to a county with boundaries as zig zagged as a scrap in a crazy patchwork quilt. The question is one of business, and should be settled on Its merits not on mere sentimental grounds. Where Apology Pays. Mansfield News. In his African stories Colonel Roose velt makes from $20 to $40 every time he apologizes for missing a shot. CURRENT NEWSPAPER JESTS. The Grovers have lost their cook." "What was the matter?" "Grover listed himself as the head of the family when the census man was there." Chicago Record Herald. "Did they do anything- to make the family and neighborhood safe after your daughter had the diphtheria?" "Oh. law, yes'm. The doctors came and we had the house varie gated." Baltimore American. "You say she is no longer editor of the Women's Corner." "No. She wrote so many articles on how to mak over last year-s hats that her readers began to sus pect she was a man." Puck. The Widow Oh. sir! My poor husband has died, and I've chosen you to officiate at bis funeral. The Preacher But, madam. I never knew your husband. The Widow That's why I chose you. Cleveland Leader. First Horseman (bringing up the rear of a large field) I thought you were going to make the pace for us? Second Horseman No fear, old chap! If en of that crowd in front comes down. I'd ratheawbe on top than at the bottom, thank: you. Punch. "Lady," said Meandering Mike, "you're thinkin' right now dat if 111 choo some wocd or cut de grass you'll give me some lunch." "Correct. You can go right to work." "Oh. I ain't choppln' or cuttin. I'm a mind reader an' was practlsln' a lit tle." Washington Star. LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE A man died and went to heaven. When he arrived at the pearly gates, he said to St. Peter: "Well, I'm here." St. Peter asked his name. "John Ev ans." was the reply. St- Peter looked through the book and shook his head. "You don't belong here," he said. "But I am sure I belong here," said the man. "Wait a minute." said Peter. He looked again, and in the back part of the book found the name. "Sure," said the guardian of the gate, "you belong here, but you weren't expected for 20 years. Who's your doctor?" American Drug gist. Henry Watterson in the Louisville Courier-Journal: The head waiter at Voisin's told me this: Mr. Barnes, ot New York, ordered - a dinner, carte blanche, for 12. "Now," says he. "Gar con, have everything bang up and here's 75 francs for a starter." The dinner was bang up. Everybody hi larious. Mr. Barnes immensely pleased. When he came to pay his bill, which was a corker, of course, he made no objection. "Garcon," said he. "if I ask you a question will you tell me the truth?" "Oul, monsieur, certain ment" "Well, how much was the largest tip you ever received?" "Seventy-five francs, monsieur." "Very well, here are 100 francs." Then, after a pause for the waiter to digest his joy and express a proper sense of gratitude and wonder. Mr. Barnes came again to time with, "Do you remember who was the idiot that paid you the 7a francs? "Oh, yes, monsieur; it was you." . A boy in Buffalo left school to go to work for a small manufacturer. He was dull and his stupidity an noyed the manufacturer greatly. After two weeks of trial the employer dis charged the boy at the end of the week. "You're discharged," the manufactur er said: "Go and get- your pay, and let that be the last of you. You're dis charged." On Monday morning the manufac turer was much surprised to see the boy in his former place at work. "Here!" he shouted. "What are you doing in this shop? I discharged you Saturday night.' "Yes," said the boy, "and don't you do it again. When I 'old my mother she licked me." A woman living "on the Hill" who is known for her views regarding strict keeping of the Sabbath, passed an open lot one Sunday recently and saw a crowd of men and boys playing base ball. Calling one little shavfr to her. she demanded to know what his father would say If he knew his' son was play ing baseball on Sunday. The young ster looked at her with a smile and said: "Why, there he is right over there playing thoid base if yer want ter find out." Newark Star. In one of Pittsburg's hot municipal campaigns the issue was largely Sena tor William Flinn, who, by one party, was held responsible for everything good. vilnn woo " flrtntrncinr t that time. of the firm ot Flinn & Booth. At a mass meeting of colored citizens an im passioned orator assailed Flinn, and charged him with all sorts of high crimes and misdemeanors, and in his ecstasy of denunciation wound up with: "An', I ast you, who was it what shot down that great man, Abrum Linkum? I ast you dat. It was Flinn." "Hoi' on. Mistuh Speakah." broke in a Flinn man. "It wasn't no man named Flinn what shot Mistuh Linkum." "Who was it, den"" shouted the ora tor. "Booth." "Well," yelled the speaker triumph antly, "what's de diffrunce? It was one of de firm." Saturday Evening Post. DIVORCE WOMEN SHUN CENSUS Nevada Supervisor Finds Fair Sojourn- . ers Are Trouble-Malsers. Reno Dispatch, New York World. Determined to clear up the existing misunderstanding among enumerators In this city, Supervisor of the Census for Nevada George Russell telegraphed to Washington asking permission to swear in two officers to accompany enumerators in certain districts since many of the divorcons withhold infor mation about themselves. Some refuse to give their names or to allow the proprietors of the apartment-houses where they are living incognito to do so until their suits become matters of public record. "I have given the divorce colony here considerable thought." said Russell. "The enumerators have been instructed to get the names of all of these. Of course they duplicate on some of the enumerators in the East, but when a woman is here for a divorce and her husband is in New York, she is his wife until she gets the divorce; and she isn't generally here after she gets it. Her husband may give her name to the enumerator in New York because he is still married to her. Nevertheless, Reno is these women's legal residence and they must be counted. Conditions have arisen in Reno that have never confronted me in any other state." Women who are nere simply to get divorces still look on places in the East as their homes, although they know that only by establishing legal resi dence here can they get the decrees they seek. They are fighting hard to avoid being counted as residents of Reno. ' Cheap Watches Safe From Thieves. New York Sun. "It's a peculiar thing," said the head quarters detective, "that with the in crease in popularity of cheap watches the number of reports which we have received of watches stolen by pick pockets has diminished greatly. No first-class pickpocket tries for watches any more. The same skill is required to get away with a dollar watch as a $100 one. So when the dips found they were touching well-dressed men for Imitations they gradually ceased trying for them. The objective points now are stickpins, which the crooks can ap praise before trying for them, and wallets, which they are willing to take a chance on." Pointed Paragraphs. Chicago News. Most love stories are white lies. Many a man tries to stand on his rights when he hasn't any. One can't always disguise the breath of suspicion by spicy talk. Many a young man is- willing to marry an heiress in spite of it. How one woman doesn't enjoy hear ing another woman praised. Feminine Modesty. Chicago Record-Herald. The woman who is wearing a new $45 hat can't understand why people should waste time or strain their eyes trying to see a comet. Amusements in Youngstown. Youngstown Telegram. Halley's comet is about the only real big tjiing that the people of Youngs town will see for less than $2. Awful Possibility. Houston Post. Heavens! Will there be no Republicans In the next House of Representatives for us to shy a brick at? To Attract Attention. Springfield Republican. , The surest way to attract attention just now Is suddenly to take the next steamer to meet Mr. Roosevelt.