. nnnriAvtiv linnTI V"r T?TTT?"TTt TT'T? 25. 1012. . . . - t i PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce aa Second-Class Matter. Subscription Kales Invariably In Advance. (BT MAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included, on year. . Ijally, Sunday included, six months. -f? L-ajiy. Sunday Included, mree month.. Dai!;. Sunday Included, on montli... .5 Dally, without Sunday, ona.year auo Daily, without Sunday, ix montha Daily, without Sunday, threa montha... LiJ Daily, without Sunday, one month...... au Weekly, on year J-j Sunday, ona year J-OO Sunday and Weekly, ona year a-81 (BT CARRIER.) Dally, Sunday Included, ona year J0 Dally, Sunday Included, ona month T Mow to Remit Send Postojfico money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the senders risk. Olvo postofflce addras In full. Including county and state. - Postage Rates lo to 14 pases. 1 cent: 16 to 2 pages. 2 cents: 30 to 4U pages, 8 cents. 40 to 0 pages, 4 cents. Foreign postage, double rate. Eastern Buftlnem Offices Verre ft .onk lin New York, Brunswick building. Chi cago, steger building. San Francisco (Mflce R. J. Bldwall Co.. 72 Market street. , European Office No. I Regent street, s. W.. London. PORTLAND, 6CNDAY, SEPT 22, WS. '. BELLING THE INITIATIVE CAT. Mr. Kroner, a Democratic candidate for the State Legislature, proudly boasts that he belongs to the Immortal pioneer band that offered the initia tive and referendum to the people of Oregon; but he sadly admits that the thing is being overdone. "I am one of the heretics who think we have too much of the initiative and referen dum," he told tha Jackson Club the other night. "I am opposed to the peddling of petitions and the indis criminate proposing of bills on all sorts of subjects." These sensible and patriotic words were not challenged by anyone except ona timid soul, who offered the cautious suggestion that "we would better proceed slowly about Bny amendment to the initiative." . Colonel J. Woods Smith, who also has a Democratic nomination for the State Legislature, was bold enough to come right out in meeting with the as sertion that the initiative ought to be protected from "Jokers," and he sug gested a clause obligating each elector to state that he has read a bill before he signs a petition for it. It is to be assumed that Brother Smith has no notion that his candidacy may be suc cessful, else he would never have ut tered a sentiment so treasonable and wicked. Requiring a voter to know what is in a bill before he lends his name to an effort to submit it to the sovereign people would forever put an end to the mischievous trade of petition-peddling. That would newer do. It could only have been proposed by an enemy of the Oregon system. Other devoted followers of the Illus trious Jackson who, by the way, never heard of the initiative or the referendum, and died in happy ignor ance of the peaceful revolution that was to take the Nation far away from practices and principles to which he devoted his whole political life thought that of course the initiative ought to be amended, if at all, "by its friends." That sounds strangely fa miliar. 'It was the line of argument put forth for years by the sponsors and guardians of the sacred tariff. Mr. Aldrich, Mr. Cannon and Mr. Payne agreed that the protective tariff had a few defects, and an Irregularity or two, and they responded with alacrity to the demand of the country for a change. All they waited, however, was for the solemn task of rebuilding tha sacrosanct edifice of the tariff to be left to its friends viz., Aldrich, Payne. Cannon, et al. The defiling hand of no Democratic, or low tariff, or free trade, vandal should be per mitted to come within reach of any tariff plank. The people agreed to their demands, and all know the rest. Here now we have the same demand that no critic of the initiative, no one tainted with the damning suspicion of unfriendliness, shall be heard or con sulted in the great work of recon struction. But presumably the people shall view with patience the increas ing abuses of the initiative until Mr. U'Ren, Mr. Bourne and the other pro fessional friends of the system and self-called prophets of the masses, are convinced that something ought to be done. But while the doctors are agreeing on a do-nothing policy, what becomes of the patient? All persons except' the demagogues who want office and the agitators who have in view their own political schemes agree that a limitation must be placed on the Initiative, else there will be more and more confusion in our affairs and less and less order in public administration. One im portant candidate for office recently said that he would be pleased to see as many as one hundred measures on the ballot a startling suggestion of the unlimited possibilities of the un regulated Initiative. It may be as sumed that a public which is capable of acting wisely and carefully on thirty-eight measures the number proposed for 1912 need not be dis mayed at one hundred. But thirty eight measures cannot be handled wisely and carefully by all the people. It is folly to pretend otherwise; it Is conscienceless demagogy to pander thus to the supposed prejudices of the masses. That the average citizen is Intelligent enough to vote discrimi natingly. The Oregonlan will be the last to deny. If he desired to have thlrtv-eight or one hundred measures submitted to him. The Oregonlan would insist that the people, having the ultimate authority in free govern ment, have the right to be heard on all subjects or Issues wherein they have a direct interest or a specific de sire to be heard. But the majority of the thirty-eight bills for 1912, and of other bills in previous years, were de liberately imposed on the electorate through the machinations of selfish cliques, or of special groups, or of hired propagandists. Most of the bills had no proper place on the ballot. The people had made no demand for the referenduVn. - It is the general custom In theory to look upon the Initiative and referen dum as among the reserve powers of the people. So they are. There Is no general opinion or sentiment that they should be employed for miscel laneous legislation, or. in any case, where no emergency exists or no pop ular issue is to be decided. We find in practice that ten constitutional or legislative proposals are made where one would suffice. Yet we suffer without effective or organized protest the gross perversion of a solemn gov ernmental function into a convenient vehicle for the exploitation of legis lative fads, fancies and follies. The initiative belongs to the people. It is not the private property of any per son, or company, or party. Mayor Gaynor, of New York, is numbered among the political might-have-beens. He has appeared In such an unlovely light in the police scan dal growing out of the Rosenthal mur der that few can realize that only several short months ago he stood so high that he dared to angle for the Democratic nomination for President. Like another man who is much" in the public eye, he has lost his tem per and is alienating his friends by abusive scolding of his critics. When a man is subjected to such a daily fire as is aimed at Gaynor, we dis cover how very human he is. The men who hold their place unshaken In public .esteem are those who can stand the gaff. WOMAN'S WAY. A new Solomon hps arisen in Phila delphia and his name is Gorman. He has not found a way to decide between rival iatment tn a. child, but he has found a means for a man to keep peace in his house. In deciding tne case 01 a man who complained that he could not get along with his wife. Judge Gor man said: If you want to be happy, never talk back to your wife when ahe starts to argue with you; ahe'll be the boss around the house and there's no use combating her. It used to be that the men thought they were the bosses. It la well they have rid themselves of that delusion. All this fuss over the suffragette problem la nonsense. No change will be brought about by giving women the vote, because they are already In full con trol of tha situation. When your wife In sist on quarreling. Just let her talk. Don t, under any circumstance, try to answer. Just let on you don't hear her. or if that's Im possible, pick up your hat and take a walk around the block. Husbands might as well acknowledge that the women are the bosses and accept the situation as it Is. In advising the man to "Just let her talk," the Judge adopted the phil osophy of Posthumus in Shakes peare's "Cymbeline," who said: Yet 'tis greater skill In a true hate to pray they have their will; The very devils cannot plague them better. In other words, if a man refuse to argue with a woman, she will lose the desire to argue; if he let her talk and does not reply, she will lose the zest for talking; If he let her have her way, she will wish to let-him have his way, for her own way loses its attractions when she is not opposed. It Is para doxical, but it is woman's way. SCFFRAGISTS DOUBT ROOSEVELT. Woman suffragists find In Roose velt's silence on the cause during the Ohio campaign on constitutional amendments in Ohio reason to doubt the sincerity of his over-late conver sion to their cause. In an article in the New York Evening Post, Ida Husted Harper thus shows how the suffrage issue in Ohio was neglected by Roosevelt: The Progressive party had Its first oppor tunity to show its loyalty to the woman suffrage plaak tn Its platform when the vote was taken last week in Ohio on a new constitution. Forty-two amendments irere on the ballot and all were adopted ex cept the one for woman suffrage 1 Ohio Is one of the "banner" Progressive states, and Mr. Roosevelt expecta to secure its electoral vote. In order to do this, a plurality of the elector muat be progressives, and they could therefore have easily carried the suffrage amendment if all the others had voted against it, aa the vote on the consti tution was very light only a few hundred thousand out of more than a million who were eligible. Did he Issue any orders to this effect? Did he say to his followers: "Now here Is our first chance to show the women that we mean business: of course, if we win In November, we will give the franchise to all in the United States, but Just now we can make good by giving it to those In Ohio, so let every Progressive vote for the woman suffrage amendment"? Did he do this? On the contrary, he completely ignored the matter, although he passed through Ohio the very day of the election. A fiw daya before, at St. Johnsbury, Vt-. Mr. Roosevelt had devoted a large part of his speech to showing bow strongly he be lieved in the ballot for women and how anxioua he was for them to get it. The question was not an issue there or likely to be, but It was a vital Issue In Ohio, to be settled in four days, and yet not by spoken or written word did he show to the people of Ohio that he knew of Its ex istence. Women who worked In that cam paign say that they did not receive a par ticle of help from the Progressives, and that Jamea R. Garfield, Roosevelt's chief lieutenant, was openly against tha amend ment, and his wife was a member of the Anti-Suffrage Society which was fighting It. The record of the Progressive party In Ohio doe not stop here. Two days after it per mitted the defeat of thia amendment. Its state convention met; if any women were elected delegates, the press dlspatchea failed to mention it, and In the platform a published in the Evening Post a woman suf frage plank was conspicuous by Its ab sence! "The Progressive party pledges it self to the task of securing equal suffrage to meu and women alike," says Its National platform, and Ohio has Just given the first example of the way it apparently means to keep that pledge. Mrs. Harper analyzes Roosevelt's entire record on this subject to show that his advocacy of the suffrage cause is only a bait to trap the votes of women in those states which have already given them suffrage. There were a million and a half votes at stake; that was too much to risk los ing, so he swallowed his scruples and went after them. THE BUDGET SYSTEM. The Democrats cannot easily answet President Taft's indictment of Con gress for violating the Constitution by forbidding the use of the budget sys tem. Congress has always been ready to resent as an- invasion of Its prerog atives any assumption of power by the President. It now commits the very offense of which it is so ready to accuse him. The constitutional duty of the President being to execute the law as made by Congress and to make rec ommendations as to what new laws shall be made, it is clearly his duty to make recommendations as to what sum shall be appropriated for each particular purpose. Each department being under his direction, it is clearly his duty to co-ordinate the estimates of necessary expenditures made by department chiefs, and to make those estimates balance with probable rev enue. If he finds that expenditures are necessary in excess of prospective revenue it is his duty to recommend raising of revenue from new sources. As the Chief Executive, he is the head of all executive departments and Is the only official in a position to make that general survey of the operations of the Government which is requisite to forming a Judgment on revenue and expenditures. Being empowered to recommend legislation and to approve or veto bills, he is the head of the legislative as well as the executive department. He Is the connecting link between the two departments, a link essential to the harmonious work ing of the Governmental machine. The preparation of a budget is clearly within the powers conferred by the Constitution and is a power which Congress cannot take away. The President can include a budget In his annual message to Congress without any additional legislation. Only the narrowest jealousy and partisanship can deny him this power. Only men blinded by these ignoble sentiments will deny that the budget svstem is in the public Interest. To the lack of it is largely due the ex travagance which increased the Na tional expenses by alarming strides until Taft became President. The practice of allowing the head of each department to submit his estimates directly to Congress, using the Secre tary of the Treasury as a mere mes senger, shows total lack of system and is a fruitful source of waste. Each department chief should submit his estimates of expenses to the Cabinet, which should revise and harmonize them. Having compared the total with the prospective revenue, the President should recommend addi tional taxation if a deficit is shown, remission of taxes if a considerable surplus Is probable. Congress would remain free to increase or decrease appropriations for each particular purpose, but it would have fair warn ing that it could not add .35,000,000 to pensions without equally reducing expenditures for other purposes, and that it could not reduce revenue sev eral millions by slashing the tariff without either cutting expenses or imposing other taxes. Such a system would compel a showdown between the President and Congress. ' It would place where it belongs the credit or blame for In creased expenses or deficient reve nue, or for taxation materially ex ceeding Government needs. Such a showdown is precisely what the Dem acrats desire to avoid, for their con trol of the Government has coincided with increased expenses and deficits. They are economists before, spenders after, election. A SECOND EDITION OF DREYFUS. A trial begins this month in the French courts which bids fair to out shine the Dreyfus affair in the sinister light it sheds upon the secrets of the army. It began three years ago with a sentence imposed upon one Aernoult for indiscipline. He was ordered to march under the blazing Algerian sun with his full kit on his back. This is a common punishment in that region and is In itself full of sig nificance as to the effects of mili tarism and its practitioners. Naturally, &mnnH fainted and In nrder to rouse him the officers inflicted barbarities which injured him ror lire. ne af fair was kept quiet for a time. Perhaps nothing would ever have been revealed but for a soldier named Rousset, who ventured to protest against the out rage and who was imprisoned for his audacity. So much finally leaked out tnrougn a wTtir9Ti'i nnrletv in which were some of Rousset's friends. The society published a statement or tne case aim was prosecuted for it by army officers, but the French courts dismissed the suit- Public clamor then compelled the military authorities to make an lnBEtiinHnn Tf niiOAet'o. StOrV Was confirmed. He was released from prison, while the officers who torturea Aernoult were put upon their defense. But, wonder of wonders, a little before their trial day, Rousset, the main witness against them, was accused of j tfioH hv murt martial and sentenced to prison for twenty years. Thus the system wprus. bui oy um oil Fram-o wat buzzine with the story. The civil courts Intervened. Rousset was ordered berore tne juages ami y.a nun armed with confessions of perjury at the court martial. The scandal is now to be sutea to me last grain. Friends of the French army hnna Ita nfflfers will COITIP OUt a little less bedraggled than ' they did from the Dreyfus aftair, dui it must ub con fessed that the prospects are not promising. THE HARROWING HIRED GIRL. The ' Outlook brings to a brilliant climax a series of articles which it bu hoen nnblishine on "The Problems of the Home" by presenting in the number for septemDer i a conctuuu of letters from readers which furnish Interesting comment on what has pre ceded. The home problem which ap nooro tn stir ii n most disturbance of soul among the Outlook's feminine Mmniuiiiiti! is that of the "hired .girl." She exists fitfully in every household and seldom laus to Decomc an emotional storm center. Her sins are various and black, while her wrongs are unspeakable. When the mistress speaks tne maia is emu iniquity. ' When the maid speaks the mistress is held up as a heartless tyrant. One woman whose letter the Outlook prints depicts the hired. girl as a giddy, conscienceless; creature oiiirhta in Merry Widow hats and spends "far more for clothes than the mistress whose money sne buwm. Observe that the verb is "takes," not "earns." In the eyes of many a mis tress the hired girl Is the constant recipient of favors for which she makes no return and her pay is pure charity. This justly indignant woman, pro ceeding with her plaint, tells the Out look's readers that her hired girls do not look upon her house as their home. -Their insidious purpose is to do as little work as they can for the biggest obtainable wages. They will not pay for the dishes they break and when the milk sours through their carelessness, with cynical unscrupul ousness they lay the blame on the white-robed milkman. This woman believes that the solution of the vexed hired girl problem lies In the simple expedient of convincing the creatures that their interest is wholly identical with that of the mistress, that her house is their home, and that her will is the all-sufficient guide for the con duct of their lives. We fear that this task it sounds easy enough will be found beset with difficulties. Charm ing as the thought may be that the house where she tolls Is the hired girl's home, it does not work out with much felicity in practice. She is obliged to receive her company in the kitchen under the eagle-eyed surveil lance of a mistress apprehensive lest the contents of the Ice box should be depleted during the visit- Her male friends are stigmatized as "followers. If one of them becomes noticeably at tentive he Is driven off if possible, since the hired girl's marriage is a domestic calamity which is to be prevented by every device, lawful and unlawful. How much of a home for the hired girl the house where she works can be Is exemplified by this particular better perhaps than by any other. The daughters of the household are encouraged to receive male friends be cause their marriage Is desirable. The hired girl's admirers are harried and frozen "because her marriage is not desirable. In spite of the mistress' honied protestations she is an alien In the family. She would not be toler ated if life could go on without her and she is valued only as a machine for doing tasks too disagreeable for nr her daughters to un til o dertake.' Her marriage deprives the family of a useiui implement ouu therefore it is discouraged. The mis tress whom we are quoting- laments that hired girls so often take to vicious ways but, frankly, what other ways are there for them to take In many cases Another woman complains because the brightest hired girls sooner or later forsake the domestic hearth, where they are .so carefully cherished and watched over, and be take themselves to laundries, depart ment stores and so forth, where there is nobody to look after their morals. In her opinion when a girl leaves do miicHi ari7rA for Indenendent work she exposes herself to terrible temp tations. This roads oddly in tne ngnt of well-known facts. It is perfectly understood by social students mat oy far the largest contingent of fallen wnmen come nroDortlonally from do mestic service. With all the loving attention which the average mistress gives to her servants' morals there seems to be something about house work which leads them astray. The truth of the matter is that the ordinary hired girl lives under a sense of constant wrong. She feels op pressed, slighted and humiliated, it Is her lot to perform tasks which the rl the mistress sel- Hnm hesitates to exhibit her scorn, especially before company. Men wno perform menial tasks, usually work in gangs, who sustain one another's self respect, while the boss wears clothes much like his hands. But the hired girl drudges alone and her sense of social degradation is never lightened by the kindly chatter of comrades. She is the Inferior of everybody about ho en her Inferiority is rubbed in by a thousand hourly slights. She must wait at table upon otner women, often no more intelligent than her self, who wear beautiful clothes and gaily converse. But she is condemned to wear a livery of servitude and If she speaks or smiles she has com mitted a domestic crime. On the other hand the mistress knows only too well that the hired girl lives In rebellion more or less cautiously sup pressed, and she on her part feels continually wronged. No doubt her feeling is Justified. It must be con fessed that the relation between mis tress and maid in the middle class household Is anomalous. It grows more nearly Impossible with every year that passes. As industry welcomes women more warmly the household will find it in creasingly difficult to obtain servants. The problem of domestic work Is one which cannot be solved by recrimina tion. The facts are as they are and women must recognize them. It is useless to kick against the pricks. The obvious solution lies In the direc tion of co-operative housekeeping, wh-ii vma elreadv made amazing ad vances. The popularity of city flats testifies to the willingness or people to escape the harrowing misery of dealing with hired girls. Flat dwel lers are really co-operators in a hun dred essential particulars, though many of them have never thought of their situation in that light. A NEGLECTED ISSUE. A feature of the present campaign which the Nation may have cause to regret bitterly is the neglect of the .,.rrn and nankin? reform issue. The American people shun such sub jects as dry and uninteresting until soma financial disaster like the panics of 1893 and-1907 force attention to them. The catastrophe of 1893 and the Imminent danger that adoption of free silver would prolong indefinitely the grinding depression which fol lowed were necessary to force the peo ple to study the first principles of our monetary system and to decide final ly on the gold standard. The panic of 1907 has not sufficed to compel us to take to heart Its obvious lessons, for the only remedy provided for the evils which caused it has been such a miserable makeshift as the Aldrich Vreeland act. True, the National Monetary Commission and its National reserve bill are fruits of that panic, but the lesson has already been so far forgotten that It is impossible to fasten the people's attention on the valuable remedy provided. So little study has been given the subject, even by men who assume to be leaders of public opinion, that the Democratic platform Ignorantly calls the National Reserve Association a central bank. Wilson confesses' that he does not understand it well enough to be dogmatic about it, the Roosevelt platform returns to the discredited panacea of fiat currency and the Re publican platform, scared by the prejudice against the hated name of Aldrich, talks around the subject in vague, indefinite terms. Apparently nothing except another panic will bring home to the minds of the peo ple the necessity of understanding the subject of currency and banking and of settling the question on such sound scientific principles as have removed it from the realm of political contro versy in Europe. President Taft is awake to the ne cessity of definitely settling all those questions of government which affect business, and he has recognized this as one of the most important by his commendation of the Monetary Com mission's bill, but the people refuse to hearken to him. -In one of his speeches he named four subjects of legislation which intimately affect business railroads, tariff, trusts and currency. The railroad question is near settlement, existing laws needing only some supplementary acts to carry out their full purpose. We are so busy now with the tariff and the trusts that we have no time for the currency. We shall be fortunate If before the next Administration has disposed of the two former questions a financial cataclysm does not force us to take up the last in earnest. WILSON INDICTS ROOSEVELT. Woodrow Wilson's statement of the real source of the difficulties which drove Dr. Wiley out of office is emi nently fair and true to fact. The board of review, or the Remsen board, as it is commonly called, was a thorn In Wiley's side and on many occasions when he endeavored to stop some fla grant violation of the pure-food law, it blocked him with a purely technical decision. t The benzoate of soda decision, to which Wilson referred, is a food il lustration. . Benzoate of soda itself is harmless; Wiley did not deny this. But it is used to conceal spoiled con dition of fruit and vegetables in can ning and to arrest the process of de cay. Its presence, therefore, la prima facie evidence that the stuff with which it Is mixed is unfit for food. For this reason Wiley condemned it, but the Remsen board reversed him because the chemical Itself is harm less, and thereby defeated the very purpose and spirit of the law. The Remsen board was created by Roosevelt, who Is therefore mainly responsible for the fact that the pure food law has become in many respects - AaaA letter. Wphen Wilev be?an to enforce the law unflinchingly in the Interest OI tne consumer a. huwi went up from the interests which were hurt the most contemptible of those predatory interests which Roosevelt denounced in lurid language, for they prey upon the people by selling poi son disguised as food. In. response to their pleadings, Roosevelt created the Remsen board of experts to review Wiley's decisions. Like all experts and like technical lawyers, this board took a narrow view of the questions submitted to- it and appears to have correctly read the purpose of its ex istence to curb the zeal of Wiley. It thwarted him so effectually and was so ably aided by McCabe and Dunlap that Wiley resigned in disgust, unwill ing to be identified with the enforce mont of a law which had become a sham. Roosevelt's coufse in this instance is typical of his course In many other instances. He has a craze for com missions of experts to decide every possible question, from pure food to country life. Experts are very useful to furnish technical information for use by a broad-minded, level-headed man in forming a decision, but they are unfitted by their very training to form the decision themselves. Witn all his loud defiance of the Interests, too, Roosevelt almost invariably yielded to pressure. He yielded to pressure from the steel trust and the harvester trust. La Follette has shown how he weakened In the coal land controversy. To him Is due the prac tical nullification of the pure food law, and Wilson's speech Is in fact an In dictment of him for allowing the manufacturers of poison in the guise of food to block Wiley's splendid work. WHAT STIMSON MAX EXPECT. If Henry L. Stimson should be nomi nated by the Republicans for Governor of New York, Roosevelt would be more embarrassed than ever by his record that is, if anything could embarrass him in his versatility. When the Colonel went into the fight to down the bosses In 1910 he chose Stimson as his standard-bearer. Were Stimson again to be a candidate, the Colonel would be confronted by all the encomi ums he heaped upon the present Sec retary of War in that year. But the Colonel is-equal to the oc casion. Almost every man of emi nence whom he now denounces was a few years ago the subject of his eulo gies. Taft, Root, Knox, Cannon and many others have basked In the fleet ing sunshine of his praise, but now, rest under the dark cloud of his dis pleasure. Refusing to accept him as their boss, they are all "tools of .the bosses." Men of integrity and unques tioned patriotism when they followed him. they are now "corrupt crooks" since they reject his leadership. If Stimson. should run for Governor against Straus, he may expect also to be cast into outer darkness. It simply depends on whether ona Is for or against the Colonel what kind of adjectives are flung at him. Stim son knows what to expect, and his course will not be affected by the re traction of all the Colonel's words of praise and the volley of opprobrious epithets which will be substituted. MILESTONES. London has been greatly enter tained for a few months by a new play called "Milestones," which pre sents many unusual features. The authors are Arnold Bennett, whose novels everybody reads and likes, and Edward Knoblaugh, an American, who has already written two successful plays. "Milestones" lives up to its name. It begins In 1860 with a set of character.? who are in the bloom of youth and ambition, arranges their love affairs and exhibits the business complications which disturb them. Then it deserts the group for twenty five years, until their children are grown and new love affairs have de veloped, together with new business relations. These are settled accord ing to the more modern lights of 1885, and again the characters are dropped for almost a generation, twenty-seven years this time. The history of their fortunes is then resumed. The love affairs and business entanglements which have developed among the grandchildren of tha original charac ters are treated according to the canons of 1912. Beginning fifty-two years ago "Milestones" ends in our It sets out with the furni ture, clothing, manners and ideals of the mid-Victorian period ana closes with those of the current moment. Of .course it is really three plays. It has three sets of heroes and hero ines, and three plots, but for all that the survival of the original characters throughout imparts a satisfactory unity and keeps up the interest. In spite of Its novel form and compli cated action it is said that "Mile- n . KamiI the T.nndnn ail- stuuea ucfui " -" diences for k moment." Its success strengthens the suspicion that many of the accepted rules for the compo sition of stage plays are superfluous. Recent examples show ,that all . of them may be violated without much danger of failure if only the play con tains some element that holds the In terest of the public. What tnat ele ment shall be depends on circum stances. It need not be a love tale. It need not be the uninterrupted story' nt onv individual's fortunes. It may h a nrnhlem in heredity or a quarrel between man and wife, or - a mere philosophical speculation. Anything which fixes the attention or me au dience will do. It must be conceded that Arnold Bennett and his collabor tnf havn achieved a difficult feat im constructing a play which covers three generations, but it nas oeen none ue fore with success as complete as theirs Shakespeare's series of "Histories' onrtonfls throueh more than three gen. erations. It takes up the English Kings one after another, brings upon the stage the rebels, usurpers. Intrigu ing nrist nnd military women who made the history of the age before Elizabeth and does not let tne story ,,ntii it linn been nursued to a grand catastrophe in Richmond's victory at Bosworth which ended the struggle between the nouses ot Lan caster and York. Shakespeare carries his characters from one play to an other much as Bennett and Knoblaugh do from act to act. For example, Henry V first appears as a gay young companion roistering with Falstaff, and it is only as a mature and care worn monarch that he leaves us. The anthnra of "Milestones" may have had Henry V in mind as they developed the character of John Rhead, which is the strongest in the play. He enters originally as an energetic young man filled with new ideas ana oeiermmm to have his own way in the world, arhat It m tLV. His bUSUleSS IS shipbuilding in partnership with the Slbleys, father and son. The elder Sibley Is as conservative as possioie, and his son Samuel is his image. John is in love with Samuel's sister, Rose, and Samuel with John's sister, Ger tn,Ho n that there is nlenty of room for plot and counterplot, though it must be said that tne interest oi me play Is mainly intellectual. It depends nn character than on" events. John Rhead is taken with a project of building Iron snips, uan nas al ways been used and the Slbleys are determined that It shall be used for ' ever. They will not hear of substitut ing iron. So there Is a break in the partnership and John goes into an other firm where more progressive s9v nrova.ll. Gertrude refuses to marry Samuel and becomes a thin old mnM hut PnsA itinrriM John in SDlteL of parental opposition. This ends the first chapter of the play. In the second, twenty-five years inter .Tnhn Rhead. who set out as a radical, has become conservative. His Ideas are the same as they were a quarter of a century before, but thmiffii thov were far ahead of the times then, 1 they are as far behind now. Like Bernard Shaw's progres sive in "Man and Superman," he thinks he has . been walking at the head of the procession, wnue in iruin he has been falling farther and iar hehinri everv vear. In his youth he stood for Iron ships against oak, but when his daughter's lover aavo cates steel he refuses to listen to him. . inrni tha vounsr engineer as a visionary, forbids his Emily to marry him and gives her hand to a iora. She, poor obedient thing, protests a little, but makes no effectual resist ance. Gertrude, the old maid, satis fies her maternal instincts in a sna dowy way by mothering Emily, while Rose has become a typical British wife, who merely echoes her husband In everything. The curtain now drops again, this time for twenty-seven years. When it rises tor me im chapter John, Rose and Gertrude are well on In the withered seventies. Emily has a daughter of her own, . r 1 i- M litra with Sgmllpl'S lVXUriCl, WHO IS 111 1"'0 ...... - - son. Richard and this match Is for bidden by the elders, as were tne otner two. But with the change In clothes onrt furniture and shiDbuilding has come a change in the character of vmintr p-irls. Muriel is not so submis sive as her mother Emily was. She boldly declares that her marriage is a matter which she Intends to dispose of in her own way and in ' fact she finally does so. The obvious lesson of "Milestones is that advancing Time leaves all of no MTnrwri hv the roadside. The pro gressives of this generation are the conservatives of tne next one. iuo onset of the tide of youth inevitabb' takes possession of the world what ever their elders may say or do, but the elders never have ceased to cling to their power to the last gasp, and never will. Anti-Tammany Democrats In New Vrtrtr atA f-VmrvHTiir over "Wilson's snub to Murphy and Dix, by causing him to sit at table with them and by shutting him in a room alone with Dlx, at Syracuse, when those wonnies Enlist ti ppantn the anoear&llce that he countenanced them. His speech nn thnt nrrjisinn is taken as hitting straight at Mumhv. for he saia III tell luu 'i a'"'Ji ' ' United States are tired of politics. They . . . . . . ,...irT. ih nMn nr x.am are sick oi pyi ii '""' " the bottom of their naturia for a release . a . . tv ,t whlrh makes I nj il o vi j iuii.fi l . . ! - .- the public service look like public duty. ana legislation iook nun iw ... the public neea into tne puuuv ;i- The New York Evening Post ex presses the hope that, if Murphy should compass LUX s renoraiiiauuu, wttenn "nHii he nnahle to restrain his natural impulse to disavow the whole state ticket." If that event snouia come to pass there would be the prettiest mixup ever seen in the, Em pire State. Wilson's war on Jim Smith would be nothing to compare with it Tka vnnvAvnent tn check the hlffh Act r iivino. and tn turn the tide of population back from the cities to the farms, has gained sucn strengm mat in 1911-12 over $562,000 was appro priated by 35 States for agricultural extension schools. Georgia is spend ing $45,500 a year and has already reached nearly 100.000 people through farmers' meetings and boys' and girls" corn clubs. The soil of every section r the state ia neintr cnetmicaity treated, and a new strain of cotton seed, called sunbeam, has been sown nn e-rnerlmental tracts in many coun ties. It is proof against the disease called anthracnosev nas a neavier dmi and lnna-er stnnle than old standard varieties. The fact is becoming gen erally recognized, ana is Deing acieu ,.nnn that increased Droduction. u..,!v. mi ltlva tine- the soil to its maximum capacity, Is the solution of two problems high prices ana agri cultural prosperity If a battle has actually been fought between American marines and Nica-rao-nan rehels. we may not be able to avoid pacifying the country with the only effective pacuier wnicn tne tropi cal races respect namely, lead. There would .follow an arrangement for American control similar to that we have made with Cuba. That would be In line with American policy, for it would block any effort of another na tion to dig the Nicaragua canal and would ensure that, if suCi a waterway were ever constructed, it would be under American auspices. As there have been definite rumors of a Ger man scheme to dig a Nicaragua-canal, the revolution has come opportunely to enable us to biocK it- One gathers from the Eastern news that there has been an almost miracu. lmm enlargement of woman a feet in that region of late years. It Is so stu n.HjM,a that the nresldent of the Mothers' Congress proudly proclaims the feet of New xora ana wasmngiun women to be the largest In the world. Naturally, big feet require big shoes, and the manufacturers of footwear have been obliged to alter their pat terns and machinery at an expense of $300,000. This Is what comes from othietira and other modern fads. If woman had confined herself strictly to her sphere, business would not have suffered this disaster. If all reports are true about the Kaiser's domination over his wife, that lady will be called to account severely for promising to secure the girls of Alsace-Lorraine the privilege of study. ing French. One of the strongest points of German policy Is to stamp out in annexed provinces everything French and every memory that they ever were French. The Empress may be told to make no more reckless promises. A cartoon In The Oregonlan says, "Can ada Hangs Murderers." That la true, and in consequence Canada la a law-abiding coun try. The United States does not hang mur derers only on rare occasions, and the United States Is the most criminal country in the world. Grants Pass Observer. If every man who contemplated murder felt, or knew, that by his act he would forfeit his life to society, who can doubt that there would be as few' murders In the United States as in law-abiding Canada? It Is not surprising that the man who had the nerve to marry Mrs. Yerkes should jest as his appendix Is being removed. The Rogue River pear may dispute with the Hood River apple for the honors in. New York, Scraps and Jingles Leone Cass Baer. The battle cry of the antl-vlvlsec- tionists should be "Justice has not gone to the dogs." A woman's toast Man, mirrors and modistes. a .iini .f a vedilina- savs the bride carried a bouquet of "orchards." Which beats the horticultural record held by the girl who had "a garden in her face." VTaan-llnlahlv T read. "Man kill a million wasps." Reading further I see he's all swelled up about it. see I.lttle Housekeeper Writes to ask what is the nicest kind of book mark ers. Children, is the answer. Note: Fashion's last decree Is that rat fur is to ba used in trlmmlna. Go little rat- Speed from my lady warily For Fashion's chat Says thy skin lor decking Da And her vanity la death for thee. She does not think. an wno s to faanion tioa. Of you, behind the kitchen sink She loves you only aklnned and dyei. For at the eight . Of alazed eyea and stuxenea iim Her eyes shine bright Thy lurry coat Will niceiy turn. Tha faclni of my lady'a brim. So" sklddoo. rat, for she Who takes her pick of all things rara Will include thee. And your rodent life she will not spare, For Same Fashion says you are a bear I Read that the man who wrote "How to Save Money" is going to have benefit tendered him, Man in Indiana who prided hlmaelt on his title of "The Greatest Whisky Drinker on Earth" has been forced to omit the last two words of his designa tion. And he was a comparatively young man, too. m a Truly It Is gratifying to note that the world improves. In an account of the "Passion Play" at Oberammergau a little deferred account the accountiat records that "Adam and Eve are re spectably married." a e Isn't It about time for our Ministry of Public Amusements to reopen tha Thaw case? e Local man is compiling a book on crime and criminals. Reckon we'll each buy a copy to see if we are in it, Review says actress made a hit sing ing "All Night Long." Personally I wouldn't want to hear even my idol. Rose Bloch Bauer, do that. At Dallas, Oregon, the Bull Moosa leaders, by an ironical twist of fate, have opened headquarters in the Wilson building. a a The very latest resignation that of the public to having Its morals cleaned. Haven't read anything about Dorothy Arnold for the 1-o-n-g-e-s-t time. a Miss Calamity Step-and-fetchlt, the clever and cultured lady poet of the Willamette Valley, formerly of Kansas, has, sent In a joyous outbreak called "To a Wild Oyater." It was Inspired, she says, by the ex press agent in her village. Unable to find oysters under the classified lists, he entered a consignment of them under wild animals. Calamity sings thusly Deal mollusc of the briny deep Hating vulgar speed. So quietly your daya are spent Are you wild indeed? Are you passionate and proud? Do you cry out In despair? Or whine, dear" bivalve, when cold acorn You ara forced to bear? Do pale gray emotions wend Your soul to wondrous heights? Would you, like I, be a poet. And take to litter-airy flights? Oh, dear oyster, would that you Might your naked soul reveal And in a palpitating stew Tell exactly what vou feel. But maybe In a coming age Jack Londons shall rehearse Stories of your wild, fierce rage And the oysters' curse. Aloysius Enters College By Dean Collins. Aloysius, fledgling from the High School's hall Hath answered Higher Education's call. ' Last week, matriculated, he began Careering aa a full-fledged college man. Today alraady he is scheming how He can save up and buy a bull-dog now A brute with jaw protruding, a creation "Sine qua non" to college education. Not the Aloysius of yester year He seemed, when I beheld him in his year Such as is worn by the brave youth who talks With Mentor, and pursues high Learn ing's walks. "What dost thou study 'Loysiua?" said I. "Oh, economics," was his prompt re ply "But say, you would die laughing Just to see The stunts they pulled when they were hazing me. "Crawling upon my fingers and my toea I rolled a sprightly peanut with my nose I said, "Tea. yes, Aloysius! But I yearn To know what else you do Intend to learn." "Well, I suppose I'll have to take," said he, "Some rhetoric and maybe history And, by the way, if things go as I dream, I have a chance to make the football team. i. " 'Tls a grand bunch, the football bunch. One night Down at the gym tbey staged a small dog-fight, I'm strong for them. I'm hoping may be that. When I get on, they"ll bid me for some frat. There's the We Tappa Keg, and BIta Pie. A going bunch and say they go some high." "But pray Aloysius,'' said I, "tell me more "Of the deep texts that you will ponder o'er." Aloyslas looked at me and winked an eye "1 won't know certain, until bye and bye- I have a friend who's doping out a line Of studies that he thinks will do for mine; Nothing too heavy, for of course yog - tee 'Twould put an awful social crimp in me. If I get down too deep into the grind. And let my college duties lag behind." Portland, .September 21. Education for Fntnre Hooaewivea. Indianapolis News. The Board of Education In Denver, Colo., has established a course to fit girls above the age of 12 for mother hood and the duties of the housewife. The course includes cooking, sawing, laundry work, general house manage ment and the care of children. 3