VTHE OREGON DAILY; JOURNAL, PORTLAND. MONDAY EVENING, . NOVEMBER 14, 1910. I THE JOURNAL AN IXrKrENjEVT KEWSrAPKB, o. S JACKSON... ruwisuiT.ry iiinK (iTf-ept snnny n j Portland merely in its effect on ln- rr,.rr-witr mornliif it Th Journal Butld-1 . tn , nnthlns- of tha bin lug. Tifrt and vn.hui trt. rortimi. or. vestors, to. bay notmng or tne nin- ICn. red it the ttnfflo t Portland, Or., frr triirn-mlsaloo through lh mull second -claw n ti.t;PH04N!:8 Main, 7I7S; Horn, A-60M. ' All dPirlitifnt rote-hod by tlir numlwra. I Tell the operator what department Ttm want. 1'OHKION ADVEKTlSINa RKi:RESRNTATIVB, Itonlamln & Kontnor (Vi., Brunawtrk BulMlntr, r:3 Mftu arrnue. -New Tork; 10KT-08 Boj-c t Siiborljnl.iB TVrma by mil) or to any addrosa in-the I ulti'd States., tannda or Mexico: i " .' , DAILY. i;b year.,,.... ,tK. 00' I On .month. .80 .. crtvniV - , , Oea yar......;.2.80 Or month.. .'... -58 f , DAILY, AND SUNDAY. One year... $7.M On month .MS , ..Vigilance in watching oppor tunity; tact and daring In seiz ing upon opportunity: force, and persistence tn crowding; oppor tunity to Us utmost of possible achlevitment those are the mar tial virtues which must com mand success. Phelps. PRESIDENTIAL TIMBER BIO POLITICAL events are be lieved to be ih the process of formation.; During the - late summer Mr Bryan announced that he would not be a candidate for the presidency in 1912. The late elections have projected new figures on the horizon. More than one of them la seized upon - as excellent, Democratic - timber for the presi dency. 4 Among them is Woodrow .Wilson, ity, who resigned his position and became a candidate for governor of Xew Jersey;. He is a Democrat of the old school, but in his entry into the political arena he came with sew Ideas and a masterly application of .'old principles to present condi tions. His speaking campaign was one of the most brilliant and forceful the country has ever witnessed. It demoralized his opponents, brought an army of recruits to his own cause and won him the governorship of the. state by a handsome plurality.' As a polished, broadminded and con structive statesman he is looked upon as a future leader of great power and possibilities. V; v - The reelection of Harmon tn Ohio rivets public attention oaMijftore on that forceful and successful leader. His plurality is more than 60,000, and It Is " given him in the home state of President , Taft, and at r ai time when the administration sought for an indorsement. His plurality is an increase of more than 40,000 over the 19,000 by which Mr. Harmon was elected during the presidential elec tion of two years ago. It is a hap pening of great potentiality in the hpnrlnr Ir mnv riavn nil tha tinHi-innl Democratic convention In 1913. Another figure of equal potential ity is Mayor Gaynor of New Tork. His leadership tests on his cold In difference to public preferment, at tested in many refusals of advance ment, among them his late refusal to abandon the" mayoralty of New York for tha " errvernnrshin nf thfi state. Ills, potentiality was revealed in the concern, with which all lead ers of his partjr sought his counsel in naming a candidate, and in the weight carried by his advice during the heat and burden of the .cam paign. ;: At the moment, Gaynor is perhaps the better known, but what the events of the Immediate future may disclose is a result that cannot be foreshadowed..., A, ,;U . Great events can be shaped and yast forces ' can t be set in motion through the leadership of men of the type of this trio of Democratic states men, . That President Taft is likely to be his own successor in the nom ination of his party is believed to be a certainty by far seeing observers. Their claim is that the coming 18 months will give to him a far bet- v,r evauumg wiui ins party ana me country than has been possible in the stormy vicissitudes . of the period since March. 4, 1909. The situation presents a study that is absorbing Interest throughout the country. WANTED, TEA3I WORK z ORTLAND is just coming to hJ her own. Her great future . is being recopnlzed in all sections of the country. Must it all be Fpoiled by the damna ble greed of a few men and a few interests?" , In these words, Edward Campbell of San JoHe, Ca!., expressed himself h a letter Jn- Sunday's -Journal. Mr. Campbell owns ,$300,)00 worth of rroperty In Portland. lie is deeply v concerned in the welfare of Ihe city and anxious that those things may bfv don here that wtll add to (he value of his Portland holdings. Ills letter was a denunciation of the opposition to the , Broadway Trldge and the oppocltloti to public docks, k He declared that the ob Btruction thrown in the way of these public activities la discouraging to investors in Portland and to those in .distant places who have planned making investments here. He added: - "If Portland. Is to secure the ad vantages of her. great tribularv re- i-ources, her people will have to pull together. They will have to do what the football men call 'team work.' " There ia not a man in Portland but knowa that Mr. Campbell's words are troth. If a tew try to pull down what1' the many ; are attempting to . build, progress is laborious and slow. It Is a process of haggling and w rangllnf that is discouraging to the diHtant capitalist who thinks of ) miiig lo Portland to itivi-gK money., it ia a nrocess f fpudim - ' ' rnd furillty that is dLicouraglug to hoBo who are striving to promote tho city. The miserable Broadway bridge suit with Its more than a year of delay, Its first bonds Bold at low figures, its quibbles, if pbstruc tion and its general spirit of tearing down, has done Irreparable Injury to arance jt nas Deen locaiiy to mo ae- telopment of: the city, Portland has boundless opportun ity. But it is unfortunate in the presence her of a number of Jack the Rippers who, at every chance, put the knife and the knife to the hilt, into the city's progress. How vastly better it would be if all couia pull together, and as Mr. Campbell says, "do team work." FOOTBALL AND FRACAS I T APPEARS that the big annual football game between the state university and O. A. C. turned out to be a football game, and a fracas. ;. Instead of hearing from the two big institutions chivalrous and generous praise of each other's prow ess and valor, the public reads in lengthy news dispatches statements and criminations' aa-to which was to blame for the fight. It is not the first time the annual game has been followed by an unpleasant season of bad blood and unpleasant newspaper publicity.;, ;;' ' ,, .t'; .': .... v One average student or one group of average students is usually very much like another. With the energy and Joyousness of youth upon them it never happens that one lot of stu dents is immaculate and another al together culpable. With this gener al maxim as a guide, it can ba safe ly concluded that in the educational fight each side had its share in the beginning, and that, as in the foot ball game, each had a fair shake in the finish. ? The real regret is that members of both faculties could not have "all been on the scene to referee the va rious bouts and to have seen that each was conducted according to the latest rules of thd ring. In that way, there could have been a more scien tific 6tudy of the fighting game, and more progress ; toward that happy time when we ehall win back the glory of the white race, so recently snatched from us by the Honorable Jack 'Johnson. In the meantime, if football games are to continue to be preliminary to a fracas, it will be, well to abolish the game. There is a long list of people who regard It as a bad game anyway, and a long list of annual fa talities and injuries that bear testi mony in the same direction. There are many arguments ;: to the ef fect that It demoralizes student work during the football season and that it ia in general a questionable sport There is another view to the ef fect that it has a valuable place in student life, and there are many who accept and admire the , game as worthy of perpetuation. If, however, a star game by star players is to continue to be the prelude to a sea son of fisticuffs in the public press and out of it, an ,' abandonment of the sport would 6ervt the ends of educational peace and peaceful edu-' cation. WHY WE FIGHT OR THEIR commendation of The Journal , for Its efforts in behalf of pure milk this news paper is thankful to the pro gressive and patriotic women of the Consumers', lqague. It is commen dation from a body of women who have themselves'done splendid work in behalf of wholesome milk for the homes of Portland, and who are likewise entitled to applause. As the reports by Professor Pernp.t show, much fighting Is yet to be done in the campaign for pure milk. In a dozen samples analyzed, Professor Pernot found no less than four that were not'- only unwhole some, but. absolutely dangerous. Be sides pus and blood, the tainted sam pies contained streptococci germs which - comprise varieties that " all scientists pronounce dangerous to life and health. Professor Pernot is state bacter iologist and bis investigations were independent of the city authorities, having been conducted at the in stance of the Consumers' league. The incident shows that in spite of what ever vigilance is maintained by the city authorities,' unwholesome milk is eriering the city and being sold in Porsfrdhomes and consumed by Portland families. ' It meansuthat tho city government must increase Jts efficiency and re double its efforts. Sick milk from pick cows muRt not be brought into Portland for human beings to buy and consume. What 1b wanted is wholesome milk from healthy cows, end it is the business of our city" government to see that no other kind ia permitted sale within the city -limits. This is what we are all fighting for and it is a fight that must rot be given up until it is won BERNHARDT T HE- RECEIPTS for a two weeks' engagement of Sarah Bernhardt in Chicago were $54,000. The actress receives 80 per cent of the proceeds, or something over $40, iuu. The sum would have . been greater if the seating capacity at the theatre had been larger, as many who desired to attend were turned away nightly. The history of the stage contains account of no actress of greater pow ers. , At 65,sbe Beems to be still in her zenith, with strength to work with the same zeal and marvelous art as at any Um'e in her career Tii j account of her Chicago engagement u ir ,w -- -1 .. . 1 ' iiiUV- fatigable attention to her work, tak ing no time for outtlooremploymonts, pleasures or dlversiona. With more than 120.000 a week a the price of her endeavors, with men and women t using; English as a medium In convert r almost tumbling over each other ia tioiv lor though thawrittonjannag-e the desire to rush to see her wonder- ful acting, with the; whole world united- In acknowledging her as the most brilliant, performer, on tho stage, we are compelled to ,contem plate Madame Bernhardt as one of the most striking figures of the age. . Madame Bernhardt has been an actress for 50 years. For 30 years she has been an international actress. The present is her seventh American touiK and, though 65, she declares it Is not to be her last. ALL BUT HER HAT AFltlZH is unquestionably due a Chicago builder for the skil fuL manner in which he has , J it. . V. 1 . . A 1 boivcu mo prouiem oi me aa- Justment of human beings In a mod ern apartment house.4 He proposes to v successfully , and satisfactorily squeeze a family into a three room apartment. After the meal 13 cooked, the gas range automatically disap pears on the backjprch. The dlnjng table unfolds out of a wall space, a section of tall wainscot lets down and becomes the bottom of a fold ing bed.- All you;aee of a piano is the keyboard against the wall. So much" is. furnished with the apart ment that all you need to bring with you is your clothing. Thus arranged, everything is pro vided for but the wife's headgear. It is taken care or in a garage in the. basement. ;;; .'X . ; '-. Mayor Simon announces that he will name the best men he caVfind Tor the docks commission, and that they will be men who are fully in sympathy with the public; docks movement. After . the expiration of 80 days from the date of the elec tion, he, will have 10 days ln which to make the appointments, Then, the forces will be set in motion for publie docks and' for a greater Port lands Judge William Galloway has been reelected circuit judge in the Third district In spite- of an adverse ma jority of several thousand that as a Democrat he .had to overcome in or der to be successful. .James W. Ham: llton, another Democratic Judge, is apparently reelected la the Second district over B.,F. Jones, a district that is also heavily Republican. The death of a football player who was killed in a game at Wheeling, W. Va., Saturday is said to have been caused by the, foul playing of an opponent. If the facts can be proventhe assailant should be sent to the penitentiary, where all euch belong. . . The country's crop of corn, wheat; oats, barley, and potatoes for the year amounts to 5,275,000,000 bush els.. But when; sold it will not bring as much money as congress spends in three years on war, preparations for war, and the Incidentals of war. First there was a football game and then a fight between tho stu dents of the state's big educational institutions. Would it not be a good plan to introduce Mexican bull fight ing as a further meaiis of sport? Thirty thousand people, recently marched in a procession in Pitts burg as a protest against profanity. Probably not one of them ever tried to put up a stovepipe. Wellman and his crew are repre sented as anxious to make another attempt to cross the Atlantic. The cat has probably had enough." Everything considered, we shall all be surprised ' and more or less pained If Ann Morgan really does marry Count Bonl. Anyhow, they cannot accuse the colonel of having Btarted that fracas down in Mexico. John W. Gates says. Birmingham will equal Pittsburg in 1920. Let us pray. Assembly? Assembly? The name, is dimly reminiscent of something or other. English Language in China. From The Churchman. The prince regent of China, by impe rial decree, has made English the offl cial language In all Chinese schools of "modern learning." -The effect cannot J but be far:reachlng in making English; more than ever a lingua franca, a world language, and the Indirect help to mis sions, which are themselves in a very real sense the original . causes of the decree, must Inevitably be very great alfo. ' ; " ' ' '' ' . The necesnlty of Providing some standard medium for education in the sciences 'and arts had long been press ing in China. A memorial 'of . the min istry of education, on- which the prince regent bases ills decree, expresHly rec ognizes the inadpf(UrtC of Chinese to render technical and edentlfio terma, notes the incongruities that have arisen through the rivalries of foreign trained Instructors and says tlte time has come for uniformity.' English, It continues, wa the first of foreign languages Introduced , into China; It Is most widely used there and In the world. Most imported text books are In English. '';' '7 "It In, therefore, proposed that in the different nchools teaching technical and scientific subjects the English language be adopted." says the 'decree-. "In the case of schools which do tot Include foreign languages in the ; curriculum they mlist In the future ' bS taught. The study of foreign languages la to be made compulsory in those schools where thejr are now optional,' ; "In all provincial high schools (scien tific and technical) already existing or established In the future, the studies (with the exception of ethics. : Chinese literature, history and geography) per 'talnlng to science shall bn taught; in llrrJIsh-u..,nwhcn.:tiift fitnfVnu , ar. fcuut to, fcking for inl exutninatlon lif ter graduation they shall be examined through the medium of the English lan guage.",;, v'P'. ';'-'' - ,',.,-" J-.V,:,.i ,-.,;;:,; .:' Even now it is not .uncommon to heur two Chinamen from (Jlfferant provinces Th vnnwin of English may thus come tn tha future to play an Important part in building up a national consciousness. It Is gen erally recojrnlzed that - tha share' of American missionary achooU tn prepar ing the way for this roortentoua decree lias been very great Unsatisfactory Car Service. Portland, Or.,' Nov. 11. To the Edi- I tor of The JournalThe streetcar com- nnvt-av Vmm .. Vn-a wA f AN VJk TiWtvw lacs made, to the people on their part -Last night we waited on the corner of Third and Washington street over 80 minutes, and saw three Broadway, three St Johns, four Woodjawn, and five Tjnlon avenue cars pass by, but ne Al berta cars to be had. - When at last an overcrowded Alberta happened along, we, tried to find out from the very officious oonduotor, where ' the . breakdown had hap pened, but . were '- instead .;. ; told that he was - - only ; four tnla utes behind Behedul9,tim and offering to bet $10,00 . tOr"I0 cents If any one wanted to make some money, no break down had occurred. ; -: f The Albertas had changed lnt TJnlbn avenue cam on their . j way back to the barn.' ;;;' ;; , : --y !'.., .;.,: ('.'; ; We have a city coundl also lntbla city,' but Its .members dont eeem for some reason or other to like to get on the wrong side of , tha corporation, (pos sibly because Bowerman might get there and the whole thing come before him, and then where would they stand.) Hat any one around here seen Kills? : If the city fathers are tied up so that no longer they have any control then it'a time for the patience of the people to cease also. , "''This notion of a few Jugglers to to tally Ignore the rights of their best, patrons looka like unto times gone by, and not of today. One who wu there O. ANDERSON, Enforce the Laws. Portland, Or., Nov. 10 To the Editor of The Journal What Is the age limit for girls working In factoriesT Why Is It that bo many boys are allowed to go Into saloons T Why don't the: police foroe and the city council , look -after these things? There are glrla not over 14 years old Working : In factories and wholesale houses when tlie should be In some school. 'Why do the police allow the automo biles to exceed , trie speed limit? A man with common aense can stand on any street and see nine out of. ten Of the automobiles going from 10 to 20 ; miles an hour, People think that they are well protected by the police of Portland, but let me state that a poor man has no chance to get away from the rockpile. Did you ever notice that where there was a peaceful "meeting of any kind, there would be a policeman standing around, but If there was any trouble Up the street you' could not find a policeman anywhere you might look? I would like to ask the citi zens of this city why don't they see that the law Is enforced? . They talk about making laws, 'but who don't they enforce the laws that are ih effect? . . V '.'.. This is ,a city of prosperity and in order to make it go ahead the people must see that the lawa are enforced, - . D. J, HARRIS. From a Former Portlander. Modesto. Cal., Nov. 11. To the Editor of The Journal Here is to the good old state of Oregon for defeating the XsJt relic of the assembly bunch and electing West!, . -: ( . Down this way Mr. Bell was defeated. Ha made a splendid fight, but pioneers have never been 1 properly rewarded. Four years ago Bell, single handed, fought the great railroad combine which was dominating .politics in California, while Hiram Johnson had not the cour age' to fight Herrlnism. Bell was de-. feu'ted. " This year Mr. Johnson made his fight on the same issue, and was swept into office, the people forgetting the pioneer work done by Bell, , It was the laboring vote In the bay counties that defeated Mr. Bell. - The reason for this opposition was Mr. .Bell's opposition - to Mayor McCarthy. The union men.' could not consistently vote for Mr, Johnson on account of the let ter's anti-labor record, and particularly on account of the help he rendered to Calhoun in attempting to smash the carmen's union, so they voted for the Socialist candidate.. . x.. , However, with a registration showing a ratio of three '. Republicans to one Demoorat and a 'plurality of about ,80, 000 Tor Taft, Mr. Johnson's majority will not exceed 20,000. Victory a la Pyrrhus. LEON YANCKWICH. . Why Not? . ; Portlanrl, Dr., Nov. 12. To the Editor of The Journal This little article , is written as an offer, rather than as an accusation, to those worthy people com monly known as staunch. Republicans, who having been "sour graped" desire to vent .their spleen at the expense of tne, people or uregon. By way of preamble I might state that I am neither a Democrat nor a Repub lican, but desire Justice. 1 , Secondly, I have no enemies and fur thermore. I desire none, Rut as one interested in the welfare of my fellow cltiKems, I feel as If It is my duty to them to express ray-feelings and attempt to. further the good cause of uniting those two powerful, but to a very large 'extent unacquainted factors, knowno as politics and common sense. Wo have Just pulled through some of us still , pulling an ordeal that ' has placed In the nanrts of a certain Party. the"" ruling power ,of the state, by the wilier the people, which show that the world is truly growing wiser, 1. e., wo place a higher value on the merits of the man than wo do on tho fear of not being with tho majority,,. Briefly,' the charac ter, and ''principle of our chosen leader have wercoine the blinding bigotry of tho more rational of that staunch O.. O, P., tq the extent that ho was elected by their votes, and all , we want and, ask for" now, "is that , the .residue let. by gones be hy-gones, rally to the support of the victor, and leave tne spirit-of re venge and envy - on the field of battle. United we stand. -ffivided we fall." ; Now Instead: of crying over split milk and looking for the slightest chance for revenge, why not endeavor to take tha medicine like a man and help the -victor through his tent) -of -.off ice, ,r--'5-;-'.; ' Why not. Install or making him bear the brunt of ill feeling, endeavor to help htm over his path' of duty, which is full of enough tribulations, goodnf knows, without . the hand of, enmity enlarging tnem. 1 There huve been, reflections cast unon the rosult of tho people's choice that would have bunefltod the( people at large more. If they had enhanced the victory of the victor and his merltai and promised him sincere cooperation In his life as leader, in Btead of attempting to show the people- at large their folly tn ciioosjng sucu a leuucr. iPtr,t,..,u jinereiuri', wiiy mi Bimoavor to ns with "mallco toward none, and friend ship for all," thereby- benefiting . oil. wnereas tne liana or eranity and reveiiKO would harm only the owner. Why not? v ' -noom, i-i jvortneast Corner, I 8ESV4 Yahmill street City. ' Letters Frpmtlie People I November 14 in History Great Aurora Borealis 1 1 i i i i i Years of obaervatWn, covering many centuries, and embraoingall aonea and latitudes, give no records of any dis play of auroral glories equal in sublim ity, magnificence and extent to the aurora borealla of November li, 1837. The phenomenon attracted attention everywher. and most every locality had a different aspect of the wonderful Bight Scientific observation ' of Jhe phenomenon were made 1 by most of the scie'ntl8ts,-and Uicse were very gen erally published and attracted a great amount of attention. Professor , Olmstead. of New Haven, thus describes it: "The enow, which at sunset had covered , the earth and all things near it with ; a-mantle of the purest white, closed early In the evening with a most curious and beauti ful pageant - About six o'clock', wljlle the sky was yet thick-wih the falling snow, all things suddenly appeared as If dyad In blood. Trre entire atmos phere, the surface of the earth, the trees, the tops of the houses; and, in short, the whole face of nature, were tinged with the same Ecarlet hue. At short intervals It alternately increased and dlmlnislied in brightness,, until, at half- past eix, only, a alight tinge of red re mained In the Bky." , ' t ; V ; In - the city of New Tork the dis play was witnessed, from i an eminence which Commanded an unobstructed view of the horizon In every direction and the observers report that It was magnifi cent beyond description. : There it was of very much longer duration. An ob server wrote: "For a time the earth was completely overarched by a perfect canopy of glory. The southern columns, which seemed to proceed downward from the corona, rested on an arch of diffused light, extending In a great circle from east to west, or nearly bo, and being about 20 degrees, or a little more, above the horlaon In the center. The. south ern columns were at no trme as' bright 83 the northern, but they maintained their position, after these last had re tired." In the western part ef New Tork stats the exhibition was most supurb as seen and described at various points of ob servation. In Hudson. Ohio; at the Western Reserve college, especial,; at tention was paid to the phenomena by ' Why Tay Jlore? . From Collier's. , "Wastes of material, wastes of fric tion, waste of design, wastes of ef fort, wastes of Crude .organization and admlnlatratlpn" in those divisions Mr. Emerson, in his fasoinatlng hook on Efficiency," Bumsap the usuar condi tion lie tells us that railroad -repair shops "throughout the country do not show 60 per cent efficiency on an av erage as regards either material or la bor. . F, W. Taylor, the pioneer in the movement to Introduce scientific: meth ods Into organizations, ha .been proving the correctness of his idea, In practice more- and more conclusively, for a quar ter of a century. - In the crude labor of picking up plg-lron and putting it on to . cars he increased the amount , ac complished more than fourfold, - the change being ' represented by 12H to 63; partly, to be sure, by selecting suit able men, but very largely by arranging more Intelligently the times for every movement, the relation of Iwork to rest, the right weight for a shovel-load, and the-right size and shape of a shovel. In one foundry ; the .efficiency was greatly increased by merely reducing the size 'of the rough bushing, to les- Ben the effort of removing unnecessary Iron. In another big; locomotive shop the output was doubled, with less labor costs, mainly by , changing the location of the machines, bo as to facilitate the progress of work from One to' the other. Locomotive repairs average, from 8 to 12 cents a mile, where they ought to average 4. On two roads they cost 12 and 16. where they should cost 8. On a transcontinental line repair costs per mile were reduced from nearly 14 to '8 hy perslsten effort, and when the ef fort was relaxed they went up to 17. They ought to be. 6. ' Eastern and south ern roads on the whole are worse. tCoal waBtes in railroads are almost as bad as labor -and material wastes." 'The total amount of preventable ma terial and labor wastes and losses In American railroad operation a and-maintenance approximates 8300,000,000 a year." " ' "Many of tha operating and main tenance methods are extremely waste ful, at least 61 per cent above reason able standard. " , These estimates of Mr. Emerson can easily be supplemented by the studies and experiences of other experts, like Taylor, Orcutt, Carpenter Gan.tt Hal sey. Ha the way and Barth. We hope the Interstate commerce commission will provide itself with the facts to be ob tained from such expert economic en gineer's, as in a week or two It is again to listen to Louis D. Brandels'a argu ment against the application of certain railroads 'for permission to raise their rates. Mr. Brandeis' argument is that if a railroad Is running wltlt an efflc- iency 30 per, cent ' below standard it ought to wipe out a little of thatwaste before it asks the public to pay for it in higher rates. Mr. Brandels statement of the facts! Is backed by tha highest expert testimony. If. it can not be con troverted by the roads, how can the in terstate commerce commission- escape the conclusion? Instead of putting a premium on Inefficiency, by allowing the requested advance, they should tell the road to bring themselves up to., a reasonably;, efficient organization,-and thus bring about a notable benefit at once to-themselves, their employee, and the -whole i-Amerlcan public. - If- the commission Wishes a collection of vol umes ' on the subject, it can procure them from, the "Engineering Magazine." -'' " Chestriuttlng. " ' ' .By Clarence rfeming in Collier's. ' ' In nutting there js science -wlth its siibnote of warning as : well as . es thetics, albeit - more for the , boy and stripling than for the grown man. 'The lad , Who ' is, a scientific seeker knows his "happy " nutting - grounds 'aa the Bkiljod trout fisher kens his streams, or the fruitgrower .;. his orchard, ulle has marked down the big trees, their times of bearing, the-size and. shape of their nuts. .To knowledge he , jn expert news, and, in his recreation during the days when the red maples , signal each other from hill to .bill,; his nutting in cludes no. small faofor of science plus his training in the athletics of the tree top. .., Vr ' ;"--,- " i;--, ; To such a lad In the early ventures of . nutting, as well as to the novice, may the veteran, Hong parted from the days of scientific -: nutting and whose October of boyhood has ( merged into the October of 11 fo, offer a few in structive hints. The halcyon day of successful ntittttiR is not. so much the day that ' follows - high wind as that which comes after an October Spell of still days when the nuts, have matured and the purs ana buucks, openea m the natural process of ripening, hang ready for the fait ' At such time it is not the club nor tha' pole nor a device to be briefly told of later that fills the nut bag but, instead, the 1 hard climb find : the s1iak-dowrt. And tau be hcititiunciUly shaken , with the minimum of periL As in baseball, the Quick, firm : blow , oats out the three. baser or home ran, so it is the firm, snappy shake that brings .down the nuts a snap-tbe-whip movement that vibrates sharply to tho end of the bough. 1 j 1 Jm " Professor Loomls, who wrote at length upon" bis Impressions, Vi"'-v wi ''; Strange, though It may appear, this beautiful and magnificent . phenomenon was visible during .'nearly the whole night in the neighborhood of St Louie! and was partlcnliuiy brlllfant between the hours of island 1. when the moon was near Its rcntth. -".The "commencement of the phenomenon in Philadelphia waa similar to that observed In New York. The aurora was also observed in Mary land, Virginia, South Carolina, in Certain sections of Georgia, and so extensive was this magnificent ; celestial pheno menon, that It exhibited its wonderful splendors,, contemporaneously, to the In habitants of Europe Bnd America, though the presence of clouds greatly Interfered with ' the attractiveness and grandeur of the exhibition In the for mer. ' : , ;: - -J0' At 12:80, 'however say one of the observers In England a patch of the most Intense blopd-red color ever seen, was visible, free from the interposition of clouds. The whole "of the sky had in awful appearance; for the tinge of red -which pervaded the whole expanse, assumed, in : many points, , foom the depth of colors above, the dark cop per tint, which is Been 6n the disk of the moon during a lunar eclipse. It was such a night as fills the mind with wonder and ? awe; and. In America : at least, was the most marvelous -of the kind ever known; though that of Au gust and September, 1869, proved but little inferior in some respects. On November 14. 1818. England er- rtierlenced Its greatest earthquake and In 1860 Alexander H, Stephens - delivered his famous "Union Speech" before tne Georgia legislature. Today 1b the birth day of Maurice, of Nassau (1567); Ben jamin Hoadly, bishop of Bangor (1676); Robert Fulton (1765) ; Jacob Abbott, clergyman and author (1808) i Christo pher R. P. Rodgera. naval officer (1813); Anson Burllngama, American diplomat (1820); General James B. McPherson (1838) ; j Henry Clay h Barnabee, i the comedian (1838); and Jenkins Lloyd Jones, , noted Unitarian clergyman (1843). f Today is the date of death of George W. F. Hegel, the German philoso pher (1881); and Dr. John Abercromble, physician1 and moral writer (1844). In that trick ons foot 1 worth two hands or arms, for, then the whole weight of the body is added. The best combination of all is when, with both hands on an upper branch and both feet on a lower, a snappy and increasing swing of the whole body cleans both boughs and, applied toths whole tree, doubles the pace of the shake-down. This body movement Is most tellin g In the treetop where a dozen email boughs may be whipped at once. But before "vm go up the tree study it from outsrde, mark down the boughs that are worth "the attack and the underground where the nuts ; are to fall whether In tha open where they can be seen or In thick brush where the pickup Is slow and vexing. - Like wise in seeking the windfalls of the woods this external analysis-of the tree and noting tho point Of . greatest nut fall Is peculiarly efeotive. 1 The climb has. lte warnings which, heeded, may save - limb or even life. The ' high keynote of safety 1. never fail to have at least on foot or hand and better the hand on ! sound wood. The foot may slip, but the hand save one, and, if the hand errs, there is the foothold beneath which give time to grasp a new bough or, at tte worst, to fall and grip the bough beneath. Above all, in tree llmblng keep-- a Bteadily as possible the ' body bent forward, avoiding the ftoute pertlB of the back ward Blip, and giving eye and hand Joint action-for eccurtty. Moreover, In the scrutiny of the bearing power of boughe there is- a - practical study ; of the strength of materials. Beware the bark covered dead bough which under the bark hides punky rot! Far Bafer, but never to be trusted unduly, ts the dry residuum of an old -bough, whoss bark has dried away, or even the foot of the living twig Just where It Joins the tree trunk. .In a broader generalisa tion, timidity and rashness should neither of them go up the nut tree. Tho one loses his nerve, the other his Judg ment, and there I deep and vital peril for both. "' -v.-.-. ,-.;.;'-.- "& Slander on Woman Kefated. From the Boston Olobs. It Is often said that woman is wom an's worst enemy, , that" one woman is always trying to depreciate another, and,' In the language of a playwright, that ""Jealousy Is the friendship one woman feels . for another." . ; - The charge is a slander. Women are inclined to manifest deep sympathy with their less fortunate slstera In, this respect they set a good example to men, which, we regret to Bay, the latter seldom follow. '-; ;'",:.-"';,- We have already called attention to the 1 unselfish ' aid given the 'striking cloakmakerB in New York by Mrs. BVl mont, Miss Morgan and several Welles- loy and r Vassar ; graduates. , But who can point to any Harvard or Yale men fighting side by side with striker? Apparently men of education and prosperous leisure do not bother their heads, about the troubles of working girls or worklngmen. In , the strike now going on in Chicago, women of education, women of wealth and club women are working in the streets in behalf of the ; striking garment mak ers. We , have yet to hear of , men doing . anything so- altruistic- .,' - The - reason for the difference is simple, . Women, whether suffragists or not, have begun to realize that the woman of the future is not to be the ward of man. She lto be a person ality, not an appendix. As for, men, whether-rlch or poor. -educated or un educated, they have for some time real ized that a genuine man must not look to others to hetrr him out of the row he has -started - lie . must fight his own battles. .Therefore ' they leave strikers to their own resources. . Woman being t now on the. threshold of indcpindont personality,' nhow symp toms of clannlsljness,' whrch is a good sign,, as It indicates not a permanent dispositionbut a stage of development They have exchanged chivalry for sympathy. 1 : " . -; .' , Sowing Good Reed.1 From the Pes Moines Capital ' ; When you go camping this autumn, or on your walking or moutaln-cllmblng trip, why not take'along some packages of hardy perennlai riower seeds? You will find many places where you tcan make the' desert blonsom as a' rose, bo as to give a wonderful surprise to next year's comers. . . - .- ,',,., " ,,. : Often, as you go along In the Tallroad train, you can drop seeds- from the win dows oh promising looking spbts; and perhaps next season that track will run through a field of violets and-popplea BeskteB these seeds.: there are oorn flowers, laskspur,' foxglove, marigold, hardy-asters each part of the country will suggest new , ones. Indeed In one ritv of tflls country it Is tha custom to Uprlnkl all the refuse heaps with nas- miJUxCf'dJi'rlJjl'Tl-J aunaUUUy uuibnum vi tiujr uio imt a wiia garden. : . S';''-- .It is ilke Penliouse, In Maurice Hew lett' book you, have all the deligut of oreafing your own countryside and, of growing1 blossom' . Whare they never grew before TANGLEFOOT By MaM OverUt AMUSEMENTS FOR A RAINY DAY. When only half awake in th earlv mornln endeavor, to look nt vnur ' Watch In your vest pocket that hangs on jne cnair.ny the edslde without spilling the contents of the vest pock ets. :,:('...:.. . ';'. ,i ., ',:::" -.-v.., ' -y'-j. vs.. ., - AMBITION. tn my youth, I well remember, like- 1 wise I remember well How I longed to be a' poet, writing ef the boskv dell , ! .. ., v And the flowers blooming, tra, 'la, and '-- Of Inva anA IrlnW AA In the garden of my fancy but X culti vated weeds. , r I grew up, for no one stopped ma, also, : likewise d I arrvw. And I frolicked with the muses till my ' uruin was urea ann blue; Every event called for verses;, Z bub plied the country's needs,. - ,' I would write on deaths and weddings out tne uowers were all weeds. : Mush time came and' oft X warblad verses to my lady fair -"On ,the back of swift Pegasus4t ? waB .sickling stuff, -1 swear, But I knew I wa a poet, for I wrote of V perfumed meads. And of pansles by the brooklet bt I ,t raisea a crop or wveda , People guyed and Joshed m greatly t : "Take a tonia," oft they eaid, : "You have softening of the noodle you ,' have warnlna- of- thai bd" But Z wrote, despite the protests of v the birds of swavlnaT reeda Of the beauties of the woodland bat I ."jjeer pulled the weeds. - Tim Is fleeting that's authentic and I've grown to aulta an aire. But my verses, sad to tell it, hav yet never been the rage, - ? , For the garden of my . f anoy, full of alkalV and seeds, Oft was hoed and well attended but it crop wa always weeda ? nurruin Nature and Politics. ' From the New York Evening Poet The increasingly evident rift between ' a president and an ex-president Is of an Interest and even of an Importance far transcending the comparatively nar row field of politlca A break In the relations, political and even personal, of two men in publlo life is ordinarily lack ing In the element thatrenders the' pres ent separation not merely dratnatlo but tragic ' For, the thing that grips the heart of the hardened follower of pol itic in this Instance Is not that two long time associates have begun to take opposing sides, but that two friends -have seen swayed and bent and broken a friendship that had seemed as firm sarf it was apparently generous,: ,There la , loyalty . In politics that Is professional, that Is of the earth, earthy, that ex ists for the same reason that honor ex ists among thieves. But when ths most Buocessful polftlcian of his time, after employing all his official Influence to give bis unpolitical friend the succession to tho xhlef magistracy, breaks with him, one ifeels that here is something more serious and more Bad than a mere political parting. D'Artagnan and Ara- mls no longer ride the hills and dales together, These considerations enforce the truth that man Is a political animal. His politics, so to speak, runs away with his humanity. He forgets that ha is primarily human and only second arily political, : and In consequence con- - fuse means and enda In a way that would ha "laughable if it were not so serious. Yet it Is a fact that tha man who endeavors to put ; his manhood above his politic ha need of all the strategy he can command In order to convince a -politically sophisticated peo ple or ni iitness to govern rather than merely to idealize. At the same time there is a oertaln hlstrionlo atmosphere about political personages and activities that only the dullest or tha most Impas sive can escape. A Heart to Heart Talk. ' They tell me that I'm spoiling yotl. The neighbors say that you should For all the awful things you do Laia- lace aown over daddy's knea And spanked and put to bed. That -.what --)- The neighbors Bay. but what sar youl You think you Bhould be loved a lot? wen, some now aaaay tninas so, too. They tell me that it isn't right For me always to take your part, ' I've heard It said you often fight. Ana mat you oreax your motrters "-"-.I heart ' ' - The neighbors say that yon are bad And should be whipped, but what - Bay vou?- You think vou are toe small a lad TO wnip; weu, aaaay minus bo, ' What would you do If I were yc, ' And you were daddy, and they eam And told, as people always do. My little aeeos, ana . oriedi "For shame." Would you put me across your fcnes . And epanK me as you ought to doj ' What's that? You think you'd try to be --Forgiving. - Well, I think so too. . ' Detroit Free Press. - - On account of the large amount - of fruit packed in the plant of the Tlllson Packing Honein -North Roseburir,'' a portion of the 'foundatlim gave way to day, thereby dronplng ths building to the ground, reports the Roeeburg New. . - . ... . . Winter Coming v emitrlliBte(l tn Th Journal by Walt Manon, the fmoiii K a man purt prone-poc mi are a rrgular (earure of this column In Tbe Dallf Journal). , The north wind come from its re treat among the wastes of Ice and sleet it comes from. some far Arctlo coast, and hits us where we feel it most And now the man who blithely wrought in sum mer, when the days were hot has In his larder' flour aiafi Jam, hmburarar ' cheese and pies and ham. Ills bins Are ; running o'er with .coal, an3 in his Warn the horses roll in hay that came tram Battle Creek; and he, himseif. Is it ' and sleek. .The north wind comes with walling cry, and dark and sullen is the sky. ; And now the man who spent his day in Idle and In foolish ways, who loafed about tho weary town'and called -the "nation's statesmen down,' is asking band-outs at . the doors of - those iwho ; wrought and did their ehorea. Ths idler's larder has no Jam, no kraut, or' Wienerwurst or ham; thW-idler's wife is weeping ore; his chlldten raise a hun gry roar. Oh, let us heed tlte Idler's bleat, and give him "fluff, to'drlnir end cat, auu wop ma ciniureij irom despair. -and ease his poor wife's load of care, but when the eummer comes again, and there's, demand fori working men, let's prod the Idler from tho stroet, and' make him labor and repeat. - . ' ConrrlgM, 110, h. fSl '24ft ": ' ' Oeorja tUttbcw Adama. MSLtlt,' ' SIU