10 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, NOVE3IBER 22, 1910. je (Drr rrtmtnn rORILV.VD. ORtf.OX. Etr! at rrt and. Or(oa. poalofnea a iid-':a Ua-.tcr. lutKr:t:ii hat.. InvirtiMr l BT tAtL.. Baltr. Fm4av he., 14. nn Tar 1 - Il!r. Fjndajr !cc: j.l.l. month, J" Lai.'r. BjnlmT Incl.. !!. t.-T m"n-.ba... " ll LT. F;irdlr !n-lu..l. on, mt;ttl.. Xu:. wuh'-.ut Pufi0y, on, : ,c Xl.)r, without Suniltjt, ,! month,.. I'alW. wlt.-iout su:.lay. thr m-ith I aliy. without Sunday, on monta... wl.:y. or.a ),ar Bitt'lay. or, year unday au4 ,-rk ly. on yar 1 1 :s 1.71 .81 1 VI a.4 tBT CAP.KItR). rl. Sunday Ir.rlud'd. on, yar...... -JJ aJary. unr lncluu-.i. on, mm!h Haw I. Krrail S-n4 r.-...f a - "V"' wj,r. fiprna urtirr or cnok a ,r local bank, stamp, com or curr"c r at th, ,-r.J-r, r.H. ll: poatcrnc aM--. ia f-iU :n a.!lc county and rlac Italr 13 to It r'- 1 ,0,; ,' to 11 -. 1 -nt; to new n.. -o !, ctnll urta jxta o3l rat. w Iatrm HolDa Of fief Vrr coJw, Ba tui. HmoKK'I bulidlo. Cm . itttr tui:.!lr.. roKTLixn, n t-Div, ov. t? ! the ri.iMrvATn- or KnoM r.i.T. The disposition !n many quarters to explain the rWtlon as a rebuke to Mr. Roosevelt may not be entirely un justified by the fact. No doubt his real or Imaginary aspirations to t-rrve another term exiit.d a great deal of rotntal disturbance In the philo sophic and well poised East. Th Wet was not mii' h flustratfd over the. matter, but what can you rxpect cf the bovine bucolic temperament In lb storm and stress of jm h an emer gency? It Is only too apt to "ait on the stile and continue to smile." no matter what happen.". Such was the wild outburst rf panic terror In the Ka.tt over Roosevelt's hypothetical "Caesarism" that the Independent ventures to refer to it as "mob fury." which seem. indeed to b fairly de scriptive. New Tork was the cyclone center, and It Is natural therefore to explain the rt-sult in that state as a repudiation of tho Colonel's ambitious projects. If he has any. Of course, other thing were re pudiated at the same time, and some other men. Tho result In New York can hardly be taken aa an. approval of the AM rich tariff or of the Kt-publlcan CM Guard. Outside of that state Roosevelt and his supposed aspira tions to sovereign power cut much Jena of a P.&rur. Tho Democratic vic tory in Mr. Taffs state. Ohio, might by straining a point be made to mean anti-Roosevcltism. but It U vastly cal ler to read anti-Taftism in:o it. As a matter of fact. It tjrned on the tar iff and local issu-s. Neither of these Individuals played anything like the part In It that many suppose. To say that the complete Demo cratic victory Indiana and the par tial ones In Massachusetts anil Min nesota were intended to rebuke Itoose velt Is madne... In state like Kan sas, the party held Its own In spite of Roosevelt and Ms am bitions. The truth of the mat ter Is that popular desire to drive out certain bedraggled machines weighed heavily in the lnte election and de cided many result.. Whero the voters were enabled to punish the machine without overthrowing- the party, they did so. Whero the ma chine and party were virtually Iden- : tlca!. both went overboard together. It stands to reason that the Demo cratic landslide must have cut Mr. Roosevelt to tho heart. Whether he did It uusetflshly or with vcrct reach ing after a throne axd diadem, there Is no question that ho threw himself with all his might Into the contest and did his best to win the battle for the Republicans. He failed for tho time, but it does not follow that ho U no longer a power to be reckoned with In politics. The clamor of the Eastern press against Mr. Roosevelt has not affected Western sentiment a great deal. The people of the Mississippi Valley explain it all by a very simple formula, -Wall Street." and go on Just as they did before. In the election, o far as they were concerned, he was not an Issue. They were occupied wrth other matters. If the time ever comes when he Is clearly and Indis putably an tatue. then we shall learn what the West thinks of him. Until this has occurred. It may be just as well for our metropolitan contempo raries not to flatter themselves too Jubilantly that "Roosevelt is dead. Me la likely to prove to be an uncom fortably lively corpse. BLOCKING THE OFT..V DOOR. ' The views of ex-Consul II. B. Miller regarding the attitude of the Euro pean powers In the Far East are In conformity with the reports of com mercial traveler who have recently visited the Orient. The stubborn Hsht made against the United States ob taining any part of the recent Chinese loan, revealed a very hoetilo senti ment against this country. It Is un questionably true, ns stated by Mr. Miller, that Japan is taking advantage of this commercial Jealousy and Is get ting the trade. To paraphrase on old saying. It has the appearance of a caae of where thieves are getting away with, the swag when honest men fall out. But while it may be agreeable for the European powers, acting un der an unofficial agreement, to block the open door for the time being, a policy of this kind will hardly be per manent. The rivalry between Germany and Great Britain, at home and In the Far East, Is so Intense that neither will sit Idly by and permit such a won derful field for exploitation as North ern China fall under the spell of an upstart nation like Japan. It was formerly the practice of Germany and England to make ever)' little squabble between their traders and the Chi nese an excuse for annexing a few thousand square miles of territory as balm to outraged feeling. This policy of territorial expansion Is no longer practicable, for Japan has more seri ous Intentions on China than the mere using of It as a trade field and will object to any further, slicing of the carcass on which she Is beginning to feaet. If the European powers have determined to go It alone In the M.an churlan game, temporarily using Ja pan as a pawn. It Is not Improbable that their course was. suggested by the preposterous proposal made by Sec retary Knox. The division of Manchuria Into two separate fields to be exploited by Ja pan and Russia created some misgiv ings In this country and the matter might have been arrur.ged more to our .satisfaction hail not Secretary Knox demanded the Impossible and been promptly turned down at Toklo and Et Petersburg. His demand was for the surrender of control of 800 mis of double track road which Rus sia had built In Northern Manchuria after the close of the war. but as a scheme for neutralizing the Man churtan railway, the Knox demand was a flat failure. Since then we have submitted nothing In Ueu of that pro posal, and. until we make a protest Hxalnst any partiality In the manipu lRtion of the open door, the Japanese and their foreign allies will go as far as they dnre. - Meanwhile, It must not be forgotten that China, erstwhile an ancient, fos silized country. La awakening and with that awakening has come the knowl eiige. that of all th countries of the earth, the United States alone is the one that hits always ployed fair with I'hlna or sought to protect her from her tnoml. s. With the awukening hai al.-o come n realization of power that lain dormant for centuries. li fore submitting to anf more indig nities at the hands of the Japanese, Ru?-slan. or even tho British and Ger mans, China may turn to her most recent creditor and best friend and. with our assistance, keep her trade door as wide open as is necessary. The Chlr.a of the old days was never a serious element In nny of the grab games that were worked, but the new China must be reckoned with and the Vnltej States may aid In the reckoning. TUK U--SON rou OIUXON. That experiment station of .the Union, the sovereign commonwealth of Oregon, has more kinds of fancy modish reforms to the square mile than nny other spot in the country." This from the Ne.v Tork Evening Sun. Oregon la advertised by Its lov ing friends. Now we are to have the single tax somewhere or anywhere in nreir.in nerhnns. Anv county is at liberty to try it. If It shall desire, un dr the latest and newest fashion In constitutional amendments. Few rounties will, perhaps none. But, though we don't know where we're going, we're on our way. Oregon wanted the direct primary, and rot It. through the Initiative. It wanted local option, and got it, throtish the Initiative. It wanted a corrupt practice. act. and got It, through tho Initiative. So th other things. Lately it trlod to abolish the poll tax. through the Initiative, and enacted an optional county single tax. Hut Oregon U not a single-tax state It rejected single tax two years ago bv a two to one vote. Now It makes the Initial step for the exclusive and arbitrary land tax. It was a trick, an artifice of single-tax schemers and theorists who dared not make their purposes known. The voters of Ore gon have been outrageously deceived. They will not stand it. They will repeal the single tux. also through the Initiative. But who will say now that limita tions and safeguards should not be put around the Initiative? LAND 1HSWJW Buffeted by cold winds and drenched by rain, a large number of landseekers lined up before the land office In La Grande. Sunday, and there waited all night the opening of the ofTlce Monday morning and an oppor tunity to file on land in Grant, al- lowa and Baker Counties. Land hunger thus demonstrated Is nothing new In the occupation of the Great West. Beginning some twenty years ago with the opening of Oklahoma to settlers. It has followed the trail of Indian reservation open Insrs across the continent without dis closing any new features, except as the p.rplexed Government has taken a hand, and through the cheap and common continuance of a gambling wheel has lessened to some extent the eager strivings of the land hungry to be first upon the ground, and the bit ter feuds that resulted therefrom. When the "land opening" was a new thing the sedate public looked on In amazement at the scenes that ac companied it. Rushing across the Oklahoma border where they had been waiting, many of them, on half rations for days, were men on foot and on horseback; men with scrawny teams drawing dilapidated wagons. In which the family and household goods were bestowed: widows with hungry children clinging to their scant cal ico skirts: men and women, old young and middle-aged, upon some of whose faces failure In life was written In every line, upon others eager ex pectation all anxious to secure a fair and fertile tract of Government land practically for nothing. History has repeated Itself many times since then, without furnishing any new details. Urged on by land hunger, which next to mining fever Is the most potent force that moves men to great exertion, a host has sprung from the ground, as It were, at every "land opening," possessed of frenzied eagerness to be first In the great game of "something for nothing." Fine farms and valuable holdings for the few and disappointment for the many have formed the rule In these cases. Those who really profited by the op portunity took with them to the land opening something more substantial and reasoning than land hunger. They took with them a determination to settle and make the best of what they got; an unflagging Industry and some experience ia plowing, sowing and reaping, and something besides their bare hands and a wagonload of di lapidated household goods with which to begin operations. Continuing In the purpose of home building, these people in a few years have won out in the land game. By far the greater number, however, who Joined the frantic rush to the land opening In Its earlier stages retreated, discouraged and disconsolate, over the border, de nouncing the wholo thing as a fraud and a snare. Truth Is, the benefit to be derived from these land openings depends largely upon the Individual who makes a filing. Some of the land is worth less for agriculture, much of It is susceptible to cultivation, but none of It will make the -holder rich and happy without the expenditure of some money and much time and effort which represent money. Thousands of acres of varying grades of land In Grant. Wallowa and Baker Counties will be filed upon through the La Grande land otllce this week. Hundreds of homes will grow out of these filings as the years go on. The development of them will be slow or fat In accordance with the means In money. Industry, economy of resource, and experience In farm ing semi-arid lands that are brought to. bear in the subjugation of these holdings. Nature Is kind In that lo cality, but she needs to be coaxed somewhat and. above all. It Is nec essary to understand her moods. Transportation Is a great factor to be reckoned with In making this vast and beautiful wilderness productive, and Its promise of assistance has been given. These things assured. It need no prophet to foretell the result; for truly a vast empire will blossom Into plenty here when thus reinforced by the skill, the Industry' and the deter mlnatlon of man. HOMB KI LE IN TIEE COfXTBY "With all the wet votes and home rute'Iaws In the state. Hormlston will remain dry," declares the Hermlston Herald. Doubtless. That Is home rule. If Hermlston shall desire to re main dry, all the home rule laws and wet votes In the state should not be permitted to make It otherwise than dry. Vet there are perplexing problems to be worked out under the new home rule amendment to the consiitution There Is no troublle under the local option law about the smallest geo graphical unit the precinct going dry and Maying dry If It desires: but It would not, under the local option law, go wet If the. remainder of the county preferred to be dry. Now- home rule Is going to change the sit uatlon by permitting any municipality in Oregon to be wet or dry as 1' chooses. So we shall see manv wet oases In th dry Oregon desert many of them where they should not be unless there are proper and desirable limi tations placed on the home rule act For example, no small community de siring to set up a saloon should he allowed to do It If the common sent! ment of the surrounding territory Is against It, and If the wet area is not In Itself large enough, strong enough and populous, enough to- make I clearly able to regulato Its own af fairs. In other words, the home rule unit should not apply to villages or country communities. HKLPS EX TEACHING AGRICT'LTUKK- School Instruction In agriculture has as yet rcarcely passed the argu mentative and amateur stage. In many rural districts the teachers and patrons are still discussing the ques tion whether or not It is worth while to teach agriculture. They doubt If upon the whole It la as valuable to the youthful Intelligence as the geog raphy of the Sunda Islands. Some are frightened at the Idea of displacing any of the ancient and moth-eaten pedagogical fetLshes with a-subject so familiar and homely. What educa rlohal value can It have which com pares with the subtle and elevating Influence of cube root and compound proportion? The two latter subjects may not be very useful, but they fairly bubble over with "culture." The dyed In-the-wool pedagogue Is loth to admit that any study can be both use ful and cultural. He divides all pos slble objects of study Into two sharply distinct classes, those which furnish mental adornment and those which look to bread and butter. Before the former he bows down In humble adoration. The latter he despises. It would be interesting to Inquire why It Is that many American educa tionists looks down so scornfully upon "practical" studies. We boost of being a practical people. In our popular oratory we cannot say enough of our dislike of theory and abstract tlons. But in school, where our chil. drcn are supposed to be prepared for life. It often happens that theories and abstractions reign supreme. There Is no warrant In educational literature of the better type for this hatred of the useful. Aristotle lays down the law that children ought to learn how things are done a long time before they are taught the why. Practice should precede theory In his opinion He says again that the only purpose of schooling Is to teach men the activ ities they must follow afterward. Of pure "mind culture" the shrewdest of the Greeks never seems to have had a conception, or If he did he put H away as something unworthy. In fact we must look to the modern peda gogue for the Inception of that lovely but futile dream. The only way to cultivate the mind of a child is to bring; his muscles and senses Into action. This is probably the principal edu cational value of instruction in agri culture. But in addition It provides a mass of school material which Is In terestlng- and wholesome and which at the same time prepares the way for a decent moral attitude toward labor. Hitherto the strong Influence of the school has been directed away from respect for the manual and material The new spirit teaches that muscle has its rights In the world as well as mind, and brings the child Into rev erent relations with the soil, the grow ing plant and the tools of the artisan. He finds sermons in the healthy ac tivities of the lrve human being as well as in literature and mathematics, The grammar of growth stands out beside the grammar of language and suffers nothing from comparison with It. The principal difficulty in the way of teaching agriculture will be for a long time the lack of properly-pre pared teachers and adequate text books. The teacher must be in sym pathy with the subject before she can teach It effectively, and this Is prob ably too much to expect from the average young woman who holds a county certificate. We do not take much stock In the common twaddle about the natural tendency of the feminine mind toward abstractions. Women are by nature If anything more practical than men. But they have been directed away from the real so long and persistently that they have acquired a distaste fur It. Their liking for abstractions is similar to one's taste for olive oil on peaches. It Is an artificial prod uct. But It exists all the same and It must be reckoned with. It Is this. for one thing, which makes It diffi cult for women to teach agriculture. Another trouble Is their unconquer able contempt for the subject. Much more than men they are slaves to tradition, both literary and religious. and In tradition the farmer Is an In ferior being. He is the dolt, the clown, the hind, the brother of the ox. Bryant speaks of his farmer neighbors In "Thanatopsls" as "rude swains who turn the clods with their shares." When they die they will be nothing but clods and even now they are little else. Literature high and ow abounds with terms of contempt for the man who tills the soli, and it Is from literature of one sort and another that the schoolteacher obtains her Ideals of. worth. If she does not get them from literature she does from the more aristocratic members of her social circle, and here It Is theology, law, medicine and the like which are honored while the soil Is despised. , It follows that the average teacher must take a revolutionary course of ; Instruction before she will be prepared to teach agriculture fruitfully. To help her conversion, the United States Department of Agriculture has pre pared a number of bulletins dealing with the subject. They will steer her uncertain steps' carefully away from old-fashioned botany, which resembles modern agricultural teaching as little as anything could. Farmers' Bulletin 409, for Instance, contains a series of actual school exercises on corn. The pupils study the grain Itself to begin. with. Then they plant it and ob serve the depth at which It best ger mlnates. Afterward they go to the field and notice how the roots lie and Infer the results of deep and shallow cultivation. What would deep plow ing do to the surface and brace roots? This Is one of the specimen questions, The reader win observe that it aims at practice rather than ornament. Then there are problems which may some time replace the ancient sums in the "double rule of three Inverse "About how many bushels of corn are required to feed a 250-pound hog Is one of them. It sounds pretty sor did, does It not, compared with really profound study of "Hamlet1 Still most of the pupils In our schools will deal more with hogs than they wlll with "Hamlet" in after years, In school they ought to get some knowledge of both. The Pullman Car Company has de elded not to fight the Interstate Com merce Commission order reducing the price of upper berths. This will be good news to the traveling public. Many a man will now stow himself away for the night ip an uncomfort able upper berth, fairly well satisfied because it was the best he could do, and witn a 25 per cent reduction to salve his feelings. Under the old practice, he, of course, accepted the upper berth, but retired with a well warranted grouch against the com pany because he knew that the man in the lower berth was enjoying its su perior comforts at exactly the same price that he was paying for the up per berth. The only things now- needed to restore cordial relations be tween the Pullman company and its patrons are a general reduction in all rates and a withdrawal of the priv ilege it now gives the public of paying the porters' salaries. It was a fine tribute and one well deserved that more than 100 repre sentative men of Washington and Ore gon paid to John Miller Murphy on the fiftieth birthday of his Washing ton Standard. Wonderful changes have taken place in Washington since Mr. Murphy lifted the first copy of the Standard from the old Washington hand-press and while that half cen tury of honest endeavor has brought him smaller financial returns than might have been achieved In other walks of life, it has certainly brought rewards of which any man might well feel proud. To have made an Impress on the political and social life of a commonwealth sufficient to bring to the anniversary banquet young and old admirers from all parts of Oregon and Washington, Is an accomplishment the value of which cannot be estimated In dollars and cents. Miss Gunhilda Sklnbones' words of profound sympathy to "those sweet rah-rah boys from Eugene" will be as balm to their wounds, we dare say. Without taking sides In the affair to which this gaunt and grim spinster refers we cannot help remarking that It looks marvelously like much ado about nothing. A boy who cannot take a buffet in a friendly scuffle and grin and bear It needs Just such sym pathy as Miss Sklnbones seems to proffer. It will please many old-timers to know that Mrs. Annie Yeamans at the advanced age of 75 is well and active and still amusing the public. In the days when Ned Harrlgan and Tony Hart wrote and acted clean, genuine ly humorous Irish comedies. the 'fattest" feminine roles went to Mrs. Yeamans, an actress of commanding ability who knew better than any contemporary how to play a woman In the lowly, struggling walks of life. The current complaints that the American people are extravagant come noticeably from men whose economies never have been very pinching. Mr. Richard Croker, who runs a racing stable In England on the spoils of his New Tork bossdom. Is the latest critic of our wastefulness. Perhaps It would be Just as well for him and hli like to pluck the. beam from their own eyes before they look for motes In other people's. Why is it that every effort to cleanse the pension rolls of fraud Is bewailed as an "assault upon the veterans of. the Civil War?" Is this a case where the tares cannot be separated from the wheat without de stroying both? What honest veteran Is benefited by the frauds in the pen sion department? Local history', recorded In the minds of pioneers, is being opened Just now to tell again of early hangings In Oregon. Many old-timers-will declare that these ceremonials were not as frequent as circumstances Justified. Of course, according to the rules of the Weather Bureau, Oregon will be charged with a storm yesterday. Res idents of a less mild climate would call It a refreshing shower. These sporadic disturbances aaross the border Indicate that Mexico is go ng to have more trouble than usually attaches to Southern American efforts for change of government. Sentencing one guilty man to eight years and another to six years on Mc Neil's Island will tend to make the white slave" traffic unpopular In Portland. All that Is now needed to clear the male parasite out of Portland Is co operation of the local police. The Federal authorities have made a good start. Today is the very best time-to begin Christmas shopping campaign. Every gift you select this week is so much work out of the way. The Seine Is falling and the Wil lamette Is rising. If it were not for these balances the oceans might slop over. Among other things charged to the Igh cost of living is the $34,000 paid to see the Yale-Harvard game. Every respecter of women "will say Charles E. Wolverton is a Just Juda-e. OF INITIATIVE VOTE Electorate Rebukes Opea Abuses, bat Need Protection Axalnst "Jokers." Except In one instance, the Oregon electorate on November 8 rejected every bill of purely local character. Eight of the nine measures adopted are of inter est to the state at large. In this result may bo found an emphatic decision by the people that miscellaneous legislation Is out of place on the general election ballot. Every county division bill was defeated by a decisive vote, the voters thereby plainly indicating that they had not the time, patience or opportunity to deter mine the merit of such bills. The approval of one normal school bill and the rejection of two others was logical outcome of the normal school controversy. There was a general senti ment expressed that Oregon needs but one such Institution. Monmouth had th advantage of being the best known of the three, and probably the fact that Its location Is readily accessible from the more thickly settled portions of the state also Influenced the action of the voters. It will be observed that the majority against the Ashland normal school bill was greater than that against tho Wes ton bill. Undoubtedly this feature may b accounted for In a disposition on the part of many voters to favor two normal schools. Preference being given to Hon, mouth, the voters of this opinion natur ally believed that the eastern portion of the state should have the other school In- the defeat of one local measure th Baker County Judgeship bill the voters It may be presumed, believed they were striking at a gross abuse of the Initiative and referendum. While the purpose was laudable, the result w-111 possibly be the opposite of what was intended. Th voters failed . to distinguish between ahuse of the Initiative and abuse of the referendum. Had the bill been presented by initiative petition its defeat by so great a majority would have been proper rebuke to its promoters. The bill, however, had been adopted by the Legislature after an Investigation into the merits of the question not possible for the ordinary voter. A dissatisfied faction In Baker County Invoked the referendum on this measure and sub mitted it to the state at largo, although outside of Baker County the matter of the salary of the Judge of the Eighth Judicial District was absolutely of no consequence. It was pronounced abuse of the referendum, and the only way to rebuke It was to approve the bill, thereby discouraging future efforts to have the electorate pass on questions of solely local Importance once decided by the Legisla ture. Baker County, however, voted aid tne other portions of the state. against the bill. and. so far as the In dividual merits of the measure are con cerned we may all be satisfied with the result If Baker County Is content. The majority of more than 24,000 against the Official Gazette bill may be properly ascribed to Its utter lack of merit, its attempted imposition of burden of 1100,000 annually on the tax payers for the free dispensation of so clallstlc Ideas and Its failure to fix the salaries of the three inspectors of gov ernment provided for la the bill. The rejection of the constitutional amendment embodying the proportional representation plan was another rebuke to attempts at miscellaneous enactments through the Initiative. This was the most sweeping measure proposed. It contained more than a score of radical amendments of the constitution, almos any one of which could have been elimi nated without destroying the main feat ure of proportional representation. The Oregonlan does not believe that the Ore gon electorate would put proportional representation Into practice If It were presented as a distinct or Individual measure and thoroughly discussed from all points of view. True, a constitu tional amendment permitting the adop tlon of laws providing for proportional representation was previously approved, but the words "proportional representa tion" are not so appealing when at tached to the visionary working plan presented In the defeated measure. But in the face of wise action on such a large number of measures the voters approved the obnoxious county taxation plan. They elected to give taxation theorists in each county an opportunity to beguile the voters therein into ex perimenting with untried methods of pro viding public revenues and opened wide the way for a chaotic state In tax regu lations and exemptions. The soundest reasoning is that they were deceived by the wording of the amendment. The final analysis of the virtues of the initiative and referendum must be based on a consideration of the complete re sults. Oregon has demonstrated this year that, as a rule, measures squarely and honestly presented In such form that yes" for "no" will be a complete an swer to -the question presented, .will re ceive fair consideration and a wise de cision. Measures complicated by ramifi cations into subjects not properly con templated in the main Issues of the bill are likely to be defeated. And it has also demonstrated that a power so lack lng In safeguards that undesirable laws may be carried by presenting them un der false colors may be a dangerous Implement In the hands of theorists, spe cial Interests or classes. In the un bridled Initiative, plain and open abuses of the power of the people were counte nanced, but it was proven, as so often asserted by Tho Oregonlan, that some protection is needed In the law Itself against tho designs of those who would use the initiative and referendum as other than a court of higher appeal from the incompetency, indifference or corruption of the Legislature. Haughty Young Mlaaea. , New York Evening Mail. If you would see human nature In all Its phases, study the "Situations Wanted" column In your newspaper. You would not expect to find unalloyed Impudence In that column, but you may. You will find girls advertising to do housework who specify that there shall be no children and no pets, that the washing shall be sent out, and that they will accept from 7 to $10 a week. Then they observe that they will pay no attention to letters sent In answer to the "ad;" the housewife must "call" on them In person. The picture of the haughty young domestic sitting around at home waiting1 for busy women to come and beg her to work for them Is at once delicious and Irritating. Individuality Neceaxory. Springfield Republican. The Republicans must decide soon to be something completely. They must be conservative or radical or "mlddlin." They cannot be all three, and win the next Presidential election. Wherein Thejr Differ. Chicago News. Miss Askitt What's the difference be tween advertising Jingles and real poetry? Scribbles Oh, people read advertising Unfflaa. PHASES "RIOT" OYI.Y SMALL INCIDENT Eyewltneaa of Student Mixup Says Re port, Are Exaggeration. Vancouver, wa.-h., Nov. a. (To the Editor. Had I not happened to be In Carvallis when the football game with the Eugene University was played, I would have been impressed by press re ports to believe that some serious riot-tngs- occurred after the game and that the college town's authorities were un willing to stop fierce attacks upon unof fending visitors. Amonf the prominent" people of Oregon at the depot, where the wildest of this supposed rioting is re ported to have happened. I noticed Governor-elect West, State Treasurer-elect Kay, Mr.- Cake, former Senatorial candi date: C. N. McArthur. private secretary of the Governor, and others. There were also several members of the faculty of both institutions present and several members of the CorvalUs police. Any of these men could, with little trouble, have caused the subsidence of the songs and resultant "rushes" that are termed a "riot" in press reports, and the reports are as much an insult to these men as they are a reflection upon the town, which appears to me to be as orderly and law-abiding as any In the West, for not only did they not attempt to prevent the "rioting," but. so far as I could see, enjoyed it. It may be that the Eugene students, generous victors, should have refrained from 6inging their tantalizing song to the effect "We came to give CorvalUs hell, and we gave Corvaliis hell," and It may be that the Corvaliis students, as de feated hosts, should not have sung their "Rub It Into Oregon" song, and It may be that either side should not have attempt ed to silence the songs by pressing en masse against the singing sections, but In any school that is largely attended at least some students will do such things, and no sensible man is going to regard such student pranks very seriously. I also witnessed the tally-ho incident, which was described by the university correspondent as an "assault by a mob of O. A. C. students upon a tally-ho ' loaded with young men and ladies, which lasted till the mob was put to rout by a horsewhip." The mob consisted of two bareheaded boys who ran up from be hind and grabbed et the bunting with which the rig was decorated. The tally-ho stopped and two or three of the young men Jumped down and put the boys to flight, after which the rig drove on down the street. Its occupants laughing over the affair, which they evidently took as a joke. ' No blows were struck by a horsewhip or anything else. W. G. EMERY. SOW FOR CLARK'S MULE RIDE Supposed Next Speaker Dae to Drive a Pair at the Capital. Washington Cor. New York World. Washington is wondering whether the new dignities of the Speakership, which now seem certain to fall to Rep resentative Champ Clark, pf Missouri, will be sufficiently burdensome to keep that statesman from riding down Penn sylvania avenue behind a team of mules, as he promised the House he would do some day. During the debate in the House last Spring over the appropriation of $2500 for the maintenance of an automobile for Speaker Cannon. Mr. , Clark an nounced a willingness to make use of this truly democratic method of trans portation. He opposed motorcars and all such plutocratic fripperies for the representatives of the plain people. Washington wants to know if he is still of the same mind. Boston View of Business Situation. Christian Science Monitor. Although it is too soon to notice any appreciable expansion In business fol lowing last Tuesday's elections, there has been a general expression of confi dence as to future developments. Busi ness Institutions that are sensitive to National legislation entertain the hope that as the lowea house of the next Con gress will be Democratic, while the Sen ate will be Republican, the country will be given a rest so far as the passage of draBtic laws Is concerned. Some fear has been expressed that the tariff again will be revised, and, as tariff making al ways has had an unsettling effect upon industrial activity, large undertakings mav be discouraged for the time being. However, another view of the situation is that ble enterprises of various kinds have been held in abeyance for some time past, pending a settling of political disturbances, and that, even tnough a new tariff law should be enacted, It would be possibly two or three years before Its provisions would become oper ative. That Is a long time for enter prise to wait, and American energy can not long be held in restraint. Wanted a Ren Cure. Charles Hawtrey In Strand Magazine. When at the Comedy Theater I once received an application from a young an who desired to see me on a matter of urgent Importance. I wrote him, asking to be informed as to the nature of his business. He replied that It was personal and private, but of extreme urgency, and asked tor an interview. gave him an appointment, ana ne called to see me, when I learned that his object was to place his service at my disposal. His doctor, he inrormea me, had oraerea mm 10 lane a coni- Dlete rest, or in any case to employ himself in some way that required ab solutely no brain work! So he had de cided to go upon the stage. Narrow Reciprocity at FIrat. New York Journal of Commerce. While there is room for a broad reci procity that would be of large benefit to both countries, and the broader the bet ter, the probability is that what can be accomplished at Washington this coming Winter will be only a beginning wnnin pretty narrow limits. There are conflict-. lng Interests on doih biubb wuiuu it. wm bn difficult to reconcile, and these are always obscuring the larger question of the general well-being of the countries concerned. Why She Voted. Los Angeles Times. I know a woman who lived In Colo rado. She says she never voted but once. Why did you vote thenr l asKea her. "Because, she confessed, I knew a girl who said she could get a certain political Job if she could swing six votes. I was swung." Why Waste Hla Breath. Suburban Llfe. Teacher Now. Tommy, suppose you had two apples and you gave another bov his choice of them. You would tell him to take the bigger one, wouldn't you? Tommy No, mum. Teacher Why? Tommy 'Cos 'twouldn't be necessary. Modern Problem. Rochester Express. The naragraphers are still keeping in circulation that paragraph about the Judge who ruled a man need not sup port his motner-in-iaw. vv nat is it, lmpecunlosity, tignt-waaaeaness or ust pure cusseaness.' How Abont the Expense! Baltimore Evening Sun. Champ Clark says the thing to do is to reduce the tariff to a revenue basis. With a steady monthly deficit, it might not be a bad idea to give some attention to reducing expenses as well. MiKbt Be Improved. Chicago Tribune. That policeman who comes to see you, Bridget Is he an officer in good standing?" Jist fair, mum; he's a bit stoopshoul- rad." SO YEARS Otf" NATIONAL PROGRESS Growth of United States Industries Since the Year l.S(M). J. Bullard in the Protectionist. Fifty years ago the population of our countrv'was 31,000,000; now it is fully 90.000,000, with 10.000.000 more resi dents under our flag In the Philippines. Hawaii. Porto Rico, Alasna and our other possessions across the seas. Fifty years ago our total National wealth but slightly exceeded J16.000, 000,000: now we are worth at least $120, 000,000,000, with immense natural year ly Increase. Fifty years ago our National wealth per capita of our population was $514, now the per capita is $1338. Fifty years ago we were coining gold at the rate of $23,000,000 a year; now our annual gold coinage approaches $100,000,000 a year. Fifty years ago w-e had $228,000,000 gold and silver in circulation; now our metallic circulating medium exceeds $800,000,000, besides $1,283,000,000 gold and silver In the treasury, against which gold and silver-certificates are probably in circulation. All told, including- United States and National bank notes, our money now in circula tion represents $3,121,000,000. as com pared with $435,000,000 in 1860. Fifty years ago our money circula tion per capita of our population was $13. SS; now it is $14.69, with a popula tion three times as large. Fifty years ago our annual bank clearings totaled $7,000,000,000 a year; now (1909) they exceed $158,000,000. 000. Fifty years ago we did not have a single National bank; now (June 30, 1909) we have 692fi, with $937,000,000 paid-up capital, $807,000,000 surplus and undivided profits, and $4,898,000,000 de posits, accommodating and helping business and development to fhe extent of $3,035,000,000 In loans and discounts. Fifty years ago the deposits in our savings banks did not quite aggregate $150,000,000; now .(June 30. 1909) they total $3,713,000,000. Fifty years ago the deposits in our state banks totaled $257,000,000: now (June 30, 1909) they amount to $2,467, 000,000. Fifty years ago we did not have any loan and trust companies; now- (June 30, 1909) the deposits held by such com panies aggregate $2,835,000,000. Fifty years ago the depositors in our savings banks numbered only 2,693. 870; now they number 8.831.83. Fifty years ago the ordinary revenue of our Government was $66,000,000; now it exceeds $600,000,000. Fiftv years ago our yearly disburse ment for pensions was $1,100,000; now it is $161,000,000. Fifty years ago out Imports and ex ports totaled a value of $686,000,000 for the year; now their value exceeds $3,000,000,000, a year. Fifty years ago our exports of manu factures were worth only $47,000,000; now- they are worth $671,000,000 a year to the American factory. Fifty years ago (1860) Europe bought $310,000,000 worth of American prod ucts and manufactures: now the yearly purchase exceeds $1,146,000,000. an In crease of $836,000,000. Flftv years ago the value of the ani mals on oar farms was $1,089,000,000; now it Is $5,138,000,000, an increase of $4,049,000,000. Fifty years ago the value of our farms and farm property was $S,000. 000,000; now their value Is fully, $25,-000,000,000. ROOSEVELT AS A NEWS SOURCE Change In the Demand That Occurred Within Two Weeka. Baltimore Evening Sun. Universal News Agency: Gentlemen You sent us only 12 col umns if items and philosophies by Roosevelt yesterday. We cannot tole rate such service. Our opposition had a story about Roosevelt milking a cow and another about Teddy's views on the adulteration of adulterants. Un less you can give us 15 columns of Roosevelt news a day please discon tinue the service. The Daily Bazzazza. October IB, 1910 Universal News Agency: Gentlemen Yesterday you sent us a full half column about Roosevelti We cannot tolerate such service. Our opposition paid telegraph tolls on only . in lines of Roosevelt junk, and we hereby notify you that If you can t keep this dry and uninteresting stuff about Roosevelt down to 20 words a day you may discontinue the service. The Daily Bazzazza. November 10. 1910. Taft, the One ImpMlng Flimre. Richmond Times-Dispatch, Dem. Out of the confusion of the contest there has emerged one imposing figure William Howard Taft with dignity and honor. Wrong, utterly wrong, on the tariff question, his bearing during the storm of misrepresentation that has beaten about his head, secure from the treacherous assaults of the enemies in his own political household. Indiffer ent to the sapping and mining of the man who claims to have made him. he has commanded the respect of polit ical friends and opponents alike. This does not mean that he will be the next President of the United States that office will go In 1912, If the Democrats know their opponents, to Wilson of Harmon, or "something better;" but it does mean that when he shall leave his office he will leave It with clean hands and without the taint of personal or official treachery upon his garments. At the Great Moment. Chicago Record-Herald. Suddenly the beautifully dressed young woman laid one of her hands upon the arm of the young millionaire who sat beside her. The great audience was hushed. The lights were low. It was an impressive moment. The glorious and never-to-be-forgot ten Bernhardt was speamng in low tones that seemed to vibrate with an awed exultancy. Leaning toward his lovely compan ion, the young man waited for her to explain why she had wished to draw his attention from the stage. In a whisper that betrayed her awful emotion she said: "I've Just understood six words In a row." Reflections of a Bachelor. New York Press. Wine may, but politics does not, im prove with age. Compliments please a woman more than flowers, and they cost a lot less. There's mighty little satisfaction in being good when there's nobody around to see it. Christmas presents stare a man in the face weeks ahead as bad as a note that's corning due. A woman likes to believe she Is the only one In a man's life, specially if Bhe knows there are several others. Living Cheaper Already. Cleveland Leader. Pork is now coming down, and it may be that many of us can have it for . Thanksgiving instead of being obliged to worry along with the cheap er cuts of turkey. Kegatlve Knowledge. Kansas City Star. In addition, Champ Clark has the ad vantage of knowing exactly what kind of a Speaker the American people do not want in Congress. Cheap, bnt Not in Demand. Christian Science Monitor. Hereafter, if present plans are carried out, you can get an upper berth for $1.50 when you would be willing to pay $5 for a lower one.