THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, SUNDAY MOKNINft JANUARY 1, 1311. 1E n n . mm a V ri i i :,! M ' V (Copyright, 1919, by Associated Literary 1TCSS.) ITTrPTETEEN ten was a year of won fill nva,.,..a,4 MlillIV' POm(t ll the spring, with its Ull enveloping ns in May; Chaxex, in an aero- plane, oyer the Alps; Moisant, the , - American, across the Enul'ah chan 1 ', nel with passenger; the Amer ican . Johnston up nearly 10.000 - Tbet above the earth's surface; huge . 1 iiraMim, MOMltn, lIlHltllM trAVP.llnff ' "fat. railroad sneed. on schedule time . Bkmg regularly laid out and maintained Siilr routes;'' between Important German . cities, with the v travelers enjoying aw the luxuries of the Pullman compart- mentcar, Including a game or Driage; i and a flaring band of Americans, under v. the leadershio of Walter weiiman, es- i saying a trip In a dirigible from New WOTld ter Oldr- " It was a year that caused us to ('"marvel at the. announcement that Pro " , iHessor Paul Ehrlich of Berlin had at Inst - found a cure for a dread disease that for 0 years, to man's certain knowl- ...fdge, baa been causing untold woe and death to a countless multitude in Eu ' Tvrope, to say nothing of the rest of the " world! Ol-' i V . - 1L1 ht tk. i was a year ui ui6'". - V world mourning, about the bier of a monarch of that empire on which the . fun never sets, and the last resting piace 01 ttussiap . great nuvcu. aw ' Idealist , . - It was a year when we of Amer ' ''"lea beheld a fellow citizen, emerging . Jifrom primeval Jungle, received with the ' highest honors by the heads of great . OWwers and showered with honors by Uthe classes and the masses of the peo i:Plft,wherever he traveled In Europe. PHI ' . Horrors a rumj. In the year we stood" aghast at the ravages of the cholera: in Russia, where ' jiiofi man JVUtVu uvco waning , by the-disease during the summer ' months. We were horror stricken at the wiping out In the autumn of entire towns and hundreds of lives by forest fires In northern Minnesota; at the at- ,. tempt of a discharged city employe-to assassinate .Mayor - Gay nor of New ,Torl on August 8. as he was sailing - . , for a holiday In Europe. ' ' We viewed for a week the spectacular 1 'alh T-l In Ik, mrfn nf mlrhtv . , flood that left In Its wake a money , loss of $200,000,000. We sighed regret . fully when, on August 27, Korea, quaint- est of lands, passed from the company Of the nations after, a national exist ence of 10 centuries and became a mere 7 vassalage of Japan. The day follow ing we felt as though we were present at a performance of a comic opera In ' ' real life when Nicholas of Montenegro i converted bis little mountain prlncl-'V'-paHty Into a kingdom, and took a new title befitting his altered ran. K few days lees than three months later we beheld a world -farce staged In the harbor of Rio Janeiro, when four ' Brazilian warships, Including that na ' tlon'a two Dreadnoughts, were stolen '-- by their crews, and for a week kept the ',' capital in terror until congress, hastily t assembled, had granted them full .A. amnesty for their mutinous off teera, and solemnly assured them that their de , - monds for the abolition of corpora! pun ' tshment more pay and less work would ' be granted after which the bold sall-- orraou, who had been led by a negro, 1 Joao Candldo, returned the warships to I the natldn. t In November, too, we were mightily i "cheered despite the fact that from t January on we had been constantly t harried with rising price for the neces. si ties of life when the last crop re " porta were In, revealing to us that from '- start to close of the harvest season we had been i extraordinarily blessedby Providence us a nation. The corn crop topped by 300,003,000 bushels the an ';. tlripated 3,000,000,600 bushel yield; the . crop of oats was also of banner dimen sions in short, the crops "of the year . . exceeded bv 9 cer cent the average ' cropf of the preceding five years, l l' A Tsar of world Vnrsst. Yet, Important or Interesting or enter- - tainlng as these and other events more - or less1 like unto them seemed at the , 'tlme their happening, they were sim ply happenings of a moment, a day, a y week,' a fortnight, a month or a season. ' The one great overpowering, ever pres ent event of 1916 practically the world ' ' over was pronounced political and eco nomlc unrest,; manifesting Itself In varl ous guises and With widely varying re ' - suits. I" In our own country, this spirit of un- 'rest centering about the new tariff and f the high, cost of living led to an lnler , est log dramatic ballot box decision in . , xavor of the lang drawn out Democratic party. In ;ortngi.;it snatched a crown ' from a pleasure seeking boy's head and raised up in his stead an aged university , professor and poet as the new republic's first president. In France It brought " about a nation wide strike of railway ftrhnlovM. an industrial movement thnt at one period seemed to imperil the lift) ,of the republic Itself. ' ; v In England H led to a general election ; In January, and another general appeal to the electorate during the closing ' month, preponderalingly, over the ques ' tion of limiting the legislative powers of tha bouse of lords, and barring the ' few weeks that the British were en gaged In mourning for their, dead king ' and acclaiming his son . as Oeorge V, -that question, and thf opes allied with It Jn the Liberal program of reform, kept . them in bitter turmoil the entire year. .1 Porflrio Dial, Inaugurated president j of Mexico for the eighth time on Po- ( , comber 1, was called upon the month uviurr lu irui uuwii Mil aui'Biciiitv tt e- fully planned rebeJliori. Spain seemed , to be on the edge of revolution from 4. mixed courses the year throughout; It ' Svas an armed camp. In Japan hoary . political Ideals were so shaken that there was discovered a plot to assassln , ate the mikado, hitherto venerated by . .all Japanese as a sort, or supernmnj or . deml-god. In Germany SoclallsF and L suffrage demonstrations were numerous, ' several leading to rerious rioting; while Greece and Turkey, witli Crete once more the bone , of contention, seemed several times-to oe on the verge of war, Greece's problems. -being augmented by , internal dissatisfaction and a li't.1ro for a new and more liberal constitution. f Though the regent of China, Prince Chun, on October 3 marked a nw epoch "in tho empire's WstorV when lie opened 'the new senate, a few weeks later the government was petitioned to grant fur ther .representative government, and hot to postpone the assembling of a par liament; until 191&, on the ground that j " the Intervening time would, be necessary cuuuntc 4iw iu nil appreciation of constitutional government. The Hindu agitation for self govern ment, with the accompanying Incipient attacks on British rule, harried ithe rep resentaUvesV of Kings EUwanl and George throughout the entire year, the trial of a native bringing out the fact that the establishment of an Independent kingdom had been: planned, with a na tive ruler. 14 Egypt. , too,, the question of nationalism fare ths British officials much concern, and stirred up an ocean fif dlswr1'trrrrwtmerirsfoilow log Colonel Roosevelt's approval of Brlt iwlv rule In Kgj'pt , , , On , Pecember : I Ixsgftgneux won the distinction of being the first aviator to as.-end "to a liettfnt of 10,000 fefctvor A Year of World Unrest, Politically and Economically, With New Republic Born in Europe anrj Political Landslide in the United StatesThe Largest, the Smallest, the Young v est, the Most Ancient Nations Affected by the Spirit of . Unrest the Year Through.' v.' over, his actual altitude record "being 10,498 feet. S inrhes. On December 26, Areh Hoxsey, lying at Los Angeles, ascended to a height of 11,474 feet, set ting, a new altitude record for pkymen. Finland was restive and remstlve un der Russia's efforts to take away the last vestiges of the duchy's autonomy. There was fighting between the govern ment and the nationalist forces In Per sia, and so great was the tomol! in the reputed craaic or tne numan race mat Great Britain, in October, threatenod to occupy the turbulent regions .unless order was speedily restored. Even so Insignificant a political division as lit tle Monaco was so affected by the gen eral political unrest that, petitioning for it. It secured constitutional govern ment Indeed, the youngest as well as the most ancient of nations the hugest as well as the smallest found through out the year a common bond":ln much that the term "political unrest'! has come to signify. ., , r Ballot Box Revolution. Until the November elections con firmed the, suspicion that a political revolution had been in progress In the United States, a revolution which was foreshadowed. Derhans not Indistinctly. by the September upheaval 4n Maine, the reduced majorities In Vermont and elsewhere, and "Insurgent" and "pro gressive" primary triumphs In other commonwealths, notably In the west. tne year 1910 had not been epdthal as far as Uncle Ram's nephews and nieces were concerned. True, there had been the homecoming and attendant welcom ing of Theodore Roosevelt. But the po litical landslide in Its eleventh month transformed the year into one of the historic twelvemonths of the century for the country. In the forcible collo quialism of Mr. Roosevelt paraphrased slightly to fit the occasion the domi nant party was whipped to a frazzle and pu over the ropea, losing the lower house of congress, governorships, state legislatures and federal senatorshipa in wholesale fashion. The Democratic tidal wave, beginning with the election of Frederick W. Plai sted an governor of Maine, had an even more pointed illustration in the greatly reduced Republican majorities In such states as Pennsylvania, Iowa and Rhode Island than In the positive Democratic victories in New York. New Jersey and Ohio. Pennsylvania's enormous Repub lican majorities of the past It gave Theodore Roosevelt a plurality of 505, 000 ip 1904 -shrank to about 18,000 for John K. Tener for ' governor; Aram J. Pothler had but 900 Republican plural ity In Rhode , Island, and Carroll, in Iowa, received only 18,000 plurality against 108,000 two years ago. John A. Ulx's majority of 66,000 showed a smaller Republican loss than occurred In Pennsylvania, Ohio or New Jersey. Woodrow- Wilson In New Jersey and Kugene N. Fobs In Massachusetts achieved remarkable personal triumphs. tne lormer -Being a winner by a plural ity of 49460, and the latter by 33,000, after a campaign of only two weeks.. In ConnecUcut, Judge Simon. E. Baldwin was ejected by the Democrats by 8000 majority, while In Ohio, Governor Jud son Harmon was reelected by the, larg est majority -about 100,000 ever given to a Democrat In that state. He is also the first Democratic chief executive of that state ever to be reelected. In the 27 states noldlnr ruhemnfoHnl elections, the. Republicans derived some comfort from the fact that Mihi ran rolled up a standard ReDUbllenn mnlnr. Ity; Minnesota broke off the habit of electing a: Democratic chief executive; the party standard bearer in Nnbraska defeated a Democrat, thanks, to Bryan's bolt of his party's candidate; by the aid of Independent Democrats, a Republican will sit in the gubernatorial mansion of Tennessee for a term, and Nevada pre ferred a Republican to another Demo crat. The following governors were elected: . Alabama. Emmet O'Neal (D). California, Hiram W. Johnson (R). Progressive. Colorado, John F. Shafroth (D), re elected. Connecticut, Simon E. Baldwin (D), succeeding a Republican. Idaho, James 1 B. ' Hawley ceeaing a Republican. Iowa, B. F. Carroll (R), reelected. Kansas, Walter R. Srubbs (RJ, re elected. Progressive. Massachusetts, 3ugene N. Foss (D), succeeding a Republican. Michigan, Chase sr. Osborn (R), Pro gressive. Minnesota, Adolph O. Eberhart (R), succeeding a Democrat Nebraska, Chester H. Aldrich (R), succeeding a Democrat" Nevada, Tasker L. Oddie (R),' suc ceeding a Democrat. New Hampshire, Robert P. Bass (R), Progressive. New Jersey, Wood row Wilson (D), succeeding a Republican. New Tork, John A. Dix (D.), succeed ing a Republican. North Dakota, John Burke (D), re elected. Ohio. Judson Harmon CD), reelected. Oklahoma, Lee Cruce (D) Oregon, Oswald West (D). ' Pennsylvania, John K. Tener (R). Rhode Island, Abram J. Pothler m). reelected. South Carolina. Cofe L. Blease (D). South Dakota, Robert S. Vessey (R), reelected. Tennessee, Renjamln W. Hooper (R), succeeding a Democrat Texas, Oscar B. Colquitt (D). Wisconsin, Francis E. McGovem (R), Progressive. ' ) Wyoming, Joseph M. Cary (D), suc ceeding a Republican. Democratic senators wHl succeed Re publicans in Indiana, Missouri,. Mon tana,. Nebraska, New Jersey, New Tors. Ohio and West Virginia; for the first time in 13 -years in Indiana tha Demo crats control eveiy branch of the" state government the vwo.Uoited fftates- sena tors and all but one representative Jn the house. In the senate the Progressiva Republicans, generally successful In the election, both as to state candidates and congressional, will hold the balance, of power, while the next house willJiave 227 Democrats, 1 S3 Republicans and one Socialist, a Democratic majority of 68. The strength of the Progressive move ment In the Republican party was fore shadowed by the September primary elections held In many of the states. Ithi Michigan Senator Burrows met defeat at the hands of Charles E. Townsend, a mgYe-vuTfi-'w,i!ongift'sen(ifor"rJ Follette carried the primaries by. one o'f the most sweeping victories of his ca reer. )n Washington Representative Poindi-xter. one of the most aggressive Insurgents ,in the Sixty-first congress, won his fight. Hiram Johnson. Insur gent candidate for Governor of Cali fornia, ' triumphed at the August pri maries. Governor Stubbs pf Kansas, who was an early recruit to the Pro gressive cause,- was renominated. Rob ert P. Bass, Progressive candidate for governor of New Hampshire, won at the primaries. v 1 In Wisconsin the Socialist strength shown last spring ln ths election of Mayor Selflel of Milwaukee became pow erful enough -In November to carry ths entire Socialist ticket in Milwaukee county and to elect the one lone So cialist who will sit in the next con gressvictor Ld. Berger, the first mem ber of his party to reach the national legislature. In Pennsylvania the So cialists were In fores sufficient to dis place the Democracy in the' third col umn In the official ballot and will get the Democratic quota of watchers at the polls in tho next election. They also elected a member to the legislature for the first time. Minneapolis came with in 1000 votes of electing a Socialist mayor. The Socialist vote (throughout the country approximated 720.000, an Increase of 75 per cent over 1908. Woman suffrage was an issue in four states Oklahoma,,, South Dakota, Orei gdn and Washington. It was adopted only ln the last named state, making five states In which women?' have full righ,ts at the polls Wyoming Colorado, Utah, Idaho and Washington.' As a result of the Colorado election four women will sit In the state lower house. In Oregon the voters faced the resnon- jslbillty of the referendum for the first time, no less than 32 DroDositlons helne submitted to them. ' Ancient Kingdom Beoomos JUpubllc. The other startling political revolu tion of the year, and one In which bul let", not ballots, played the leading part, occurred In Portugal on October 4, when the Republican party, with the assist ance of the army and navy, overthrew the Braganaa dynasty In a few hours of fighting and established in its stead a republic, with a venerable poet and university professor, Theophile Braga, as provisional president. For years the throne of Portugal had been tottering, .and for months .the Re publican leaders had been assiduously plotting for its overthrow not later than Christmas of 1910, In the midst of their planning came the murder of Bom barda, a well known Republican and antl-clerioal. and this was seized upon by the revolutionists as ah opportunity. On. the night of October 4, at a precon- ! eolved signal, several warships Jn the harbor of Lisbon were seized by the revolutionary members of the crews and the royal palace and government puiiaingB pom Darned at ihe same time that various regiments came boldly out on the side of the revolutionists and seteed the approaches to and occupied the strategic points In the city. King Manuel, whose extravagance and devo tion to a French music hall dancer had aroused the Indignation of his poverty-and-tax-rtUdcn subjects, together with his mother and the queen dowager, were permitted to escape to the royal yacht, which bore theqn to Gibraltar, where thoy remained for a brtef period before taking up their residence in that asy lum for cast-off royalty England. The new government, which is grad ually being recogniied by the nations, promises financial reform, development of national resources, reform of the courts, freedom of the press, and the suppression of the religious congrega tions. Immediately 'following the suc cessful termination 6f the revolution and the restoration of order, the relig ious orders were given 24 hours in which to leave the country, under threat of expulsion, ami the government pro- iu cgnnscate an re. ngious propertyj Following the suceees-of hir hth. rcn ln Portugal, the world looked to tho Republicans of Spain to move to over throw the Bourbon dynasty. That that government was fearful of such a move was shown by the manner ln which It speedily transformed the country Into something like an armed camp, paylrlg especlnl attention to Barcelona. Bllboa and other places where the spirit of un rest was especially strong. But the an niversary of the death of Ferrar, Octo ber 13, passed off quietly, owing to the preparedness of ,the government. Still, It were useless to deny that the spirit of political and economic unrest was strong tnroughout the year ln Spain; and the uncertainty of the situation was added to by the government's determined policy to exercise strict supervision over all ecclesiastical mattess and religious orders, a policy that brought Madrid and the Papacy at loggerheads and led to the employment of the military in July to overawe threatened clerical dem onstrations, partaking of a revolutionary nature, against the government. Other countries In which the forr of arms played a part in emphasizing the 1 . . . , . , ff e . . K. ...u, ur ,esa general or. spec:ai unrefii were Mexico and Nicara gua. In September the one hundredth anniversary of Mexican Independence was celebrated, together with the eight ieth birthday of President Porflrio Diaa. At that time the nation appeared to give itself up unreservedly to the gala occa sion, and, in the large cities at leas, there was no external evidence of pro found discontent with the existing order of things. Later, it developed that for at least four years the, United States department of state and the officials of the Mexican government hart hert' waicninH tne unroldlng of a carefully- plotted revolutionary movement for thai Z , ,J17 V 'L't!8 Paa8,mer overthrow of President DiaT This wftflan1 fr6't rate?' Th grease In the followed by numerous insurgent out- urem -law in iovember esneclallv iri the northern ftates of tW reri.MI,r. J it-u icnm:u in a oonsiderablo less of ?ff an1.JTrty' but the government hold a firm hand ln the crisis, md the armed innurrection was largely at an emt by December 1, when Dlaa was again inaugurated president. Tim revo lution In Nicaragua was really a left 2Vf,r kT,1 Th,!re were almost daily batt es between the hostile forces; but. finally, 011 August 28, President Madri fled frofn the capital and Gen eral Estrada, the vktur, proclaimed himself- provisional -president and set about to have himself ,:it,rted pre8l(leat tor two years. , ' j""" Twice during the year the capital of Rio Janeiro was siibj,eted to bombard ment The first bombardment took y . ..-,, wnen me country's two dreadnoughts and two other war. him HA Btrvl,... i. .. . ut"Hr War- " in,,,r Then 'wifoineT Dv way ui ieuintr runs t., the mutineers Were In earsTl het? demands that conditions tn the navy'bl ameliorated. "That mutiny a 'an Ja everything "was neaeef,,. L S,eJ . ,7"v mutiny took Dlikca among the marines quartered on Cobras Island, I. Rio Janeiro harbor. Tha 200 mutineers were almost annihilated by the fire of warships and land batteries, but - not ' before, they had . "shelled the city. Inflicting considerable damage, and killing a number of citizens. . , Tsar of Contention, in, UfuinU "The difference between the house of lords and the house of commons served to keen Great Britain In a political tur mot throughout -the entire year, and twice made recourse to the ballot box necessary. . General elections began on January 10, when the second parliament of King Edward VII Was dissolved and writs Issued for a new one to meet on February 21. Is this election -the cam paign leading up to It having been hotly waged mainly around the government's proposition to limit the lords' power of yetQ.Jased on the lords' refusal; to ap prove the budget the Liberals were re turned to power, with but one vote .OVer their Unionist opponents, a result that seemed to satisfy nobody, since It prac tlcally left all thedfsputed questions unsettled. '' , 1 X" Following the election the- months were Spent by the liberal ministry In an effort to put through its refprm pro gram, announced in detail last year, and now familiar to every Briton to the last detail.' A series of conferences between the warring parties failed "to lead to any undertsanding regarding the reform of the house of lords, a failure that cansed George V to call a special meet ing of the privy council to discuss' ways and means of : surmounting the crisis an unusual -proceeding ln British poll tics, and one revealing a critical situa tion. A few days later, on November 28, the king, who, had succeeded to tho throne on his father's death on May 16, dissolved his first parliament which had lasted only ten months, and sum moned a new1 parliament (elected ln December) to meet on January 31 of this year. In the second general election, which began on.-December 3, the Liberals were returned to power, and It now seems certain that the lords will he reformed according to the plans of the coalition of tho Liberal, Laborite and Irish home rule forces In the house of commons. Another radical outcome of the election will probably be some measure or home rule lor Ireland. 9 What will be th disposition of the troublesome votes-for-women questloff remained problem atical as the year closed. November witnessed a renewal of suffrage at tacks on parliament and harrying of Liberal leaders. Premier Asquith being surrounded arid beaten by a group of angry suffragettes. Great Crisis In r ranee. The premier industrial manifestation of world unrest and one that held for a time momentous political possibilities occurred In France. The National Con federation of Railway unions, on Octo ber 12, voted ln favor "of a general strike on all the railroad svstems in the country; electrical workers In the pro vision industries were already on strike. Great disorder and violence ensued for nearly a week, but Premier Briand. himself a Socialist and a friend of or ganized labor, called out the army re servists, some of them among the strik ers themselves, and demanded their aid In putting down disorder, declaring that their primary duty was to tho country. On this Issue he let it be known that tne government would stand or fall, and because of his firmness the strike was called off, but not before .the republic itself had seemed Iri danger from the, revolutionary movement coupled with the strike, industrial unrest, dne In part, rat least,, to the high cos of living that was pretty general both in this coun try and in Europe, led to numerous im portant strikes, nor infrequent rioting, and much agitation for higher wages and Improved working conditions ln la bor circles. Early In the spring the great street car strike, and sympathetic strikes In volving 40,000, ln Philadelphia para lyzed trade in that city for several Weeks. The street railway strike In Colurnbus. 'Ohio, which held throughout the summer, developed Into a serious conflict between law and disorder, and for several wetoks the local authorities seemed powerless to control the situa tion and state aid was given. The gen eral strike on the Grand Trunk system also occurred during the summer, end ing In wage advances: and ln November the express package industry ' of the country was partially paralyzed by a strike of employes ln New York and Jersey City. In July and August a strike of 70,000 cloakmakcrs ln New Tork City ended. after two months of great suffering and anxiety, with an agreement by which the strikers accepted the "prefer ential shop" Instead of the "closed shop," which they had demanded. These strikers won most of their minor de mands, such as larger pay and shortelrJ hours. Later a city-wide strike of gar ment workers began in Chicago, and was unsettled as the year drew to. a close. , The last of March 300,000 bituminous coal workers quit the mines pending a settlement of wage demands. In Jan uary a riot involving 20,000, persons took place ln Naples, due to Increased rents of workmen's homes. In April there was a general strike of the build ing trades In Berlin. In August iosO mechanics ln the Hamburg (Germany) shipyards went on strike with a de mand for Increased wages. In Septem ber a general strike occurred In Barce lona, with accompanying revolutionary tenaencics. The Bole of ths XaUroads. The American railroadB were most intimately connected with the national economic unrest. During the early part of the year many railroads announced Increases ln wages. Some of these were forced by employes' agitation for. bet ter wages and Improved working condl tions, wvhile other lines voluntarily granted Increases m pay. This waa the case with the Pennsylvania and the Reading, each road increasing by 6 per cent the wages of every employe earn ing less than $300 a- month: These grants o better pay were fol lowed closely by Increases In passenger commutation rates on ; railroads with terminals in New Tork City met with indlgnftnt protest, which in New Jersey took " the form of a demand that the gdvernor call - an extra session of the legislature to empower the newly creat d"Publlc Utilities commission to act ln the matter. In November the Inter state Commerce commission held hear lngs In the matter, where the rates raised were Interstate. ( The Increase In freight rates was of even greater Importance, it was esti mated by the railroads that the Increase In wages would aggregate $150,000,000 an4 that It would be necessary to meet a greater, part pf the shortage , in net revenue that the Increased wages would cause fey advances In freight rates: The shippers at once took issue with the roads on tnis point and tnereafter until near the. close of .the year the Interstate Commerce commission was engaged ln hearing botn sides pr the .ease In various men, with a membership of 300,000, in dorsed the proposed increases hVfrelght rates.';;;,.: : , ; :' ' The- same month President Taft an nMaeed the personnel of the new rall- A Year of. Natural and ;Mah-Made Wonder Overhead A ; Dread Disease Conquered arid Another One Rampant Record - Breaking, Crop in ; America The Role of Railroads -The Death of King EdwaTVUsand Europe's Welcome of Theodore Roosevelt " ,' , - ) v ' ' rOaj commission; which the- recent amendment to the railroad act author izes, to report on railroad stock, bonds and notes,' their Issuance and how It; may be controlled by the public The naming nr President Arthur T.- Iladley of Yale university as head gave gre'at public satisfaction. Professor B. H. Meyer ofr the University ot Wisconsin, another member, is also chairman of the Wisconsin railroad commission.- Two months later on November 27 the new Pennsylvania railroad station In the heart of New York ity and the tunnels leading to It under the Hudson river, were thrown open to the travel ing public a gigantic Improvement fin ished after seven years of effort and at a cost of 1150,000,000. t Deeds of Oongress In 1910. Until the fall elections the most dra matic event associated with the spirit of political unrest ln this country was tho undoing of Speaker Cannon in the house of representatives. First , the house voted not to let the speaker ap point its members on the Balllnger-Pln- chot Investigation committee, but tp se lect the members Itself. That was ln January. Later, the Democrats and the insurgent" and other' Republicans to the nuraber of 35 united to pass a res olution authorizing a new committee on rules, much larger than the old com mittee and elected by the majority and minority members of . the' house, with the distinct provision that tho speaker should not be on the committee. Of the - old - committee the speaker was chairman and that commlftee he ap pointed. It was charged widely both In and out of congress that the commit tee ran the house to suit Itself. Since the beginning of the first regular ses sion of the Sixty-first congress ln, De cember, 1909, there had been much dis content over what were called the- ty rannical ways of the committee and finally, on March 19, after a bitter de bate lasting two days, the speaker was shorn of one of his time honored prerog atives. The Balllnger-Pinchot Investigation re sulted from the controversy begun the year previous between the two princi pals and their adherents over the Sec retary of the Interior's fitness to have charge of the matters relating to na tional conservation. Early ln the year1" Secretary Ballln ger asked for a full Inquiry at the hands of congress and a Joint com mission, consisting of six members of each house, waa appointed to attend to the matter. Before this commission had ttmo to convene Senator Dolllver of Iowa rose in the senate and read a letter from Mr. Plnchot acknowledging : that some of his subordinates had been actively connected with the newspaper attacks upon Secretary Balllnger and the Interior Department In this let ter the former chief forester com mended the actlop of his subordinates. This was followed by the removal of Plnchot and his associates. Price and Shaw., and the appointment of Henry S. Graves, head of the Yale Forestry school, ln Plnchot's place. The investigation began in February. Both sides were represented by attor neys and testimony did not come to an end until the, third "week ln May. On September 9 the four Democratic mem bers -of the committee made public at Minneapolis, Minn., a report of their findings against Secretary Balllnger; Congressman Madison, of Kansas, "In surgent," made a separate) statement, also against the secretary. Four days later the Republican . members of the committee met at Chicago and de nounced as unlawful the action, of the Democratic members . This majority, ln December, reported to congress that "the evidence has whol ly failed to make out a case. Neither has any fact proved nor all the facts put together exhibit Mr. , Balllnger as being anything1' but a competent and honorable gentleman, honestly and faith fully performing the duties of his high office with an eye single to ths public Interest." The committee scored Mr. Bellinger's accusers, called the forestry bureau wasteful, and disapproved of Mr. Balllnger's plan for selling Alaskan coal lands, urging leasing. President Taft's plan. v . probably the , most Important legisla tive measure passed by congress was the ne.w Interstate Commerce act, "which was signed by the president on June"18, and provided for the estab lishment of the long-talked-of eOmT inerce court. Under the law the- pow ers of the Interstate Commerce com misshm are strengthened materially, and it has ample time within which to suspend "the operation of new railroad rates pending Inquiry as to their rea sonableness. While the bill was pend ing the principal railroads attempted some Important increases In , freight rates. Just as thesu changes were about to become effective, Attorney General Wickers ham checkmated the move by obtaining an injunction alleg ing that the Increase would be unrea sonable and oppressive and In violation of "the Sherman anti-trust law.-There upon, the railroads agreed to withdraw tne rates and submit them to the In terstate Commerce commission for deci sion as to their reasonableness. Congress also authorized the estab lishment of a system of postal savings Dan Kb. Separate statehood was granted, to Arizona and New Mexlpo. There was created a bureau of mines in the Inte rior department for tho saving of lives ana tne protection or the public wel rare. An appropriation of $250,000 was made to pay for a year's work of the tariff board under the president's direction. The raising of the wreck' of the battleship Maine from Havana har bor was authorized and .the work is now progressing. ' " In the Closing days of its first regular BOTniOT,-;cwngres authorised tne lssu ance of $20,000,000 In bonds, for recla nation projects. It also passed a bill giving the president authority to with draw, lands from public entry pending congressional action ror their disposi tion,; Jr July President Taft began affirming land 'withdrawal made by tho preceding administration and also mak ing lae withdrawals himself. 4n that same month a total of Tl.BlS.SSJ acres of coal lands were withdrawn In the United States' and 770,000 acres in Alas ka. On Juiy 3 the president signed or ders for the withdrawal of 8,485,731 acres of power site, phosphate and pe troleum lands. Thus far. tha tal of land reserved by the. government reaches th. of i(. inft -- more than the combined land - and water surface of New .York. "Pennsvl- more man tne combined lanri... nnri 1 l; RoIaand-SoutlL Carolina. " x ' Tne president's Message. , The closing session of the sixty-first congress, which met- 4n December., lis- tenea to ine rouowmg reoemmenaaTIons made in the president', mesnagc: , ' , I nat a permanent tariff commission be appointed and all future revision of the tariff ba made, schedule by schedule. That the Panama canal be fortified, and an appropriation of $19,000,000 be made for the purpose. That .the beginning of ft'pareela- pest-eervioe ba ostabllshed on all. free rural delivery routes. - That the civil service rules be extended to Include all postmasters, thus taking them out-Of politics. (That the limitation which now prevents the executive from withdraw ing more forest v lands be withdrawn, and that " other legislation looking to wards the conservation of our natural resources be enacted. That congress give some fitting recognition to Peary for his discovery of the North Poles that Secretary Meyer's clan to reorsran- ixe the navy and build two battleships a year oe a train ana that a new army bill for the .organization of volunteer forces in time of war be passed; that a greater numoer 01 army orncers be authorised. That ,4he present eight hoar law be en larged by providing that public works ball be construed to include not only buUdlngs and work upon publlo ground, but also ships, armor and large guns when manufactured In private yards or factories. That with the exception 'of a law to prevent fraudulent bills of lading, no further amendment 'be made to our corporation controlling laws ua til they have been tested. Referring to the recent fraudulent cotton bills of lading scandal, he Urges congress to enact a uvw under which one who In good faith advances money or credit upon a oiu or lading issued by a com mon carrier upon an Interstate or foi. elgn shipment can hold the carrier liable fo the value of the goods desortbed ln tho bill, at least to the extent of the advances maoe ln reliance upon It H1 aiso recommenas that a punishment of nne ana impnsomet be imposed upon railroad agents and shippers for fraud or misrepresentation. The recommendation made ln the special message last year for a general law providing for the Incorporation of Industrial and other cOmoanies nmraa-ert ln interstate commerce Is renewed. He also urges upon congress the propriety of establishing cheaper and simpler forma of Judiciary proceaure so that the supreme court may be relieved of Its burden of appeals. The recommenda tion made in the last message ln favor of a law regulating the Issuing of in junctions without notice la repeated. The president also urges the passage of the bin now pending to Increase the salaries of federal Judge The Tederal Census. This session of congress will have among Its other duties the passing of a new" apportionment bill based on the r.ew census returns. The thirteenth cen sus begun April 15 with 85,000 enumera tors, was taken rapidly and on the whole accurately. It showfd a total population in the United States proper, exclusive of Alas ka, of 91-972.266. During the last 10 years tno stales or the union had an aggregate Increase of population of 15 977,691, which amounts to 21 per cent over the 1900 figures. The population of the United States, Including Alaska, Hawaii, and Porto Rico, is 93,42.151. The total does not include the Philippines. The increase, in the area included, during the last ten years was 16,146,62, or 0 9 per cent., oyer 77,256,630, the population In 1900, compared, with an Increase of i.io,oo, or Z2.7 per cent-over 62. 3 1 7.1 no, inn population ln 1890. Since the first census was tvn 1790, the country has grown 25 times as large, the population then having been 3,929,214, slightly lanrer than th present population or the state of Texas. me unuea states and ail Its posses sions contain a population of 101,100, 000, accordtng to the census bureau's official estimate, and in the United States proper the bureau estimates that more than 41, per cent of the popula tion IS urban: that in. 2ouv innauiiants or more Two Interesting facts stand nnt .... , . .... . ' w spicuously. ln connection with the offic ial figures for urban population given out by the census bureau the rapid growth of cities In the 100,000 class and the Impartial distribution of this in- creasy among iue geographical tions.' sec The growth of the country's metropo lis was phenomenal, a gain of nearly 89 1 rmurns irom many oth er sections were almost eaualiv mimri. lng. especially those of the Lake and n;.M TOax craes. Men living today T!t Ule nrst federal cen sus of Chicago, In 1840, when the popu lation was only 4.475. Now it i t . 185,258, easily the countrv'n uf i The census also shows that New York state has one-tenth of the population of the entire country, 9,118, X79. This means that the congressional delega tion from the Empire state will be one- . " w 0 anure Hous ' Represen tatives. The present memhrhin nr . body is 391, of which $7 are from New York state. For the first time In Its history the population .of New York city has outstripped that qf the rest ui w me ngurea polng 4,766,883 Other Federal AatMti.a Throughout the year' the government kept on the trail 'of the so-called "bad" trusts. In March the National Packing company, commonly known as the beef trust, and ten subsidiary concerns were mmviea , tor aneged violations of the Sherman anti-trust law, and a bill for the dissolution of the alleged comblna- :,o .u 7 "iea ftt Un1caS- November o- m.0 .ui.g twpeciea suit against the sugar, trust was started In New York city. It alleged a combination and a uvu.iHcw.-y .in. violation or the anti-trust law and was direct ,t , fuUS Rtfl.n,nsr company the trust u...y ouuamianes,; and thirty-nlne in dividuals. A . dissolution of w P?? f-.nLa8kd'' but the court shill enjoin them, their stockholders, of ficials, directors and agents from doing . a ""ou"e or , me conspiracy against the anti-trust law or engaging in Interstate or foreign huiino iL. these suits affect interests that are na tion wide. ,-' " -, . 1 The customs service was adminit".i wKh.an e.ver Inci-easlng degree of effi ciency, especially at the port of New York, when ' Collector Loob uncovered numerous frauds, both bis- iif.i- against the service. The, postofftce de partmbnt came to the nd of the fiscal Lf"T l year witn a aencit of t iaa aaa . .r .T.-'--"YVV lireveiiicui yi li.B JO.OOO OVer the rjrevl. ous year; and following .the tnm. lowf-ie-pees4dtm every department of the. gvveBnment endeavored to con ductlts business on lines of rigia econ omy. Throughout the rear the nr,, carried on the task, begun soon' after he wok oiiico, 01 trying to place the d. partmenta on an up to date, economical, yet efficient and "smooth running1 basis. By. the end of March the president had completed the task of granting the mln- : Imura rates under the new tariff law tof all the world ln exchange for. similar courtesies. ' : . . bench of the United 1 States supreme court by appointing Associate 'Justice . Edward D. White chief Justice;, Willis " , cuit court ana Wyoming ana Joseph Rucker Lamar of the Georgia sunreme court, associate 1ustle.es. . The new com- ' merce court was appointed at the same ' time; Martin Ai Knapp, taken from the . ' chairmanship of the Interstate commerce -commission: Judge Robert W. Arch'i bald, Judge1 William H. Hunt. John , E. . uariaoo, ana wuuan w. m&ck. xne su-... preme court appointments were prorapi- iyconxirmea.-, -, ,.The goVernmant'B 'most .hnpor uwiu witu m lureiga nsiioa .wu uit settlement by arbitration of the New foundland fisheries case after a discus sion lasting 130 years with Great Britain, Canada and Newfoundland. The award was, rendered September 7 at The Hague and became law,flve days later. , , The Usue was presented ln the form of seven questions and .the decision sup ported the United States, on five connhs and Oret Britaih on two. The Jlrst question concerned the right of Great Britain to make reasonable regulations, without the assent of the United States, . IV the matter of taking fish tn tb waters of Canada and , Newfoundlands The award went to Great Britain ln this. The second aueetft dealt with the lib erty ot American citizens to "employ ;; persons not inhabitants of the United States as members of their crews. The verdict was favorable to the American claim. The third and fourth questions . dealt with the right of Canada and New- ' feundland to subject American fisher- ' men to entry at custom bouses, the pay ment of dues or other similar regula- tions. The American contention was sustained. The fifth question which bad reference to the measuring of the coast line was decided against " the United States. Question six, regarding the right of the American fishermen to , take fish. In the bays, harbors and riv ers of Newfoundland was decided in fa- J v6rof this country. The seventh point, -f vocof this country. The seventh point, i also adjudged red In, our favor, concerned the right pf all American fishermen to all commercial privileges on these treaty coasts. Booseralt In Europe. Immediately associated with the American political I record of the year were the home coming and subsequent campaign activity of ex-President Roose velt Early In the year the Smithsonian, expedition to equatorial Africa headed ( by the ex-presldent came, to a successful end, and on April 2 the party landed at Naples and proceeded to Rome, but not before the colonel, In a speech delivered before the students of the University of Egypt, had commended British rule in their country and denounced the sym pathisers with '.he assassination, in February, of the Egyptian premier,' Boutross Pasha Glial!, by a Nationalist in planning for Colonel Roosevelt's brief visit at the Eternal City an audi ence with the pope was Included. But an unfortunate 'thing had happened In February during the visit to Rome Of former Vice President Fairbanks. The Indiana statesman made the . usual" re quest for an audience with the pope after he had accepted an Invitation to address the-Methodists, whose local ac- , tlvtty waa not relished at the Vatican.. The Incongruity of the situation was explained to Mr. Fairbanks, but he did net see how he could break his promise to his fellow religionists, and the audi ence did not occur. Mr. Roosevelt's re quest for an audience met with a polite assurance of welcome, and 11 might have been well had not some one at the Vatican suggested that It-would be wise , to caution Mr. Roosevelt against the dif ficulty which had confronted Mr. Fair-" banks. This hint was duly delivered, but Mr. Roosevelt declined to limit his freedom of conduct ln any way, and made public all the correspondence ln the matter. The guest of Italy's. king and xoeen, -and received by Francis-Joseph on April j 15. Colonel Roosevelt reached the French capital April 31, and .deliyered his lecture, "Citizenship, In the Repub lic," at the Sbrbonne. At Brussels he was entertained by the new king Albert, at his palace of Laeken. At the, Dutch court he lunched with Queen Wllhel- ' mlna- and Prince Henry Informally and left for Copenhagen the same afternoon. ,j There were royal receptions both at the ' latter city and later at Stockholm. At Christlania, May 5,Mr. Roosevelt deliv ered his address on international peace -before the Nobel prize committee, King Haakon and Queen Maud being present Oh account of the death of King Ed ward, and at Mr. Roosevelt's own, re quest, the kaiser sidetracked all offi cial functions In honor of the traveler and received him privately. His im perial host arranged to permit Colonel Roosevelt to review the maneuvers of 12,000 picked German troops, and In the presence of his entire staff the kaiser called attention to the fact that It was the first time a private citizen had ever reviewed a German army. Mr. Roosevelt delivered his lecture on World Movement at the Berlin uni versity May 12. The nlans for entertaining Mr. Roose velt In London were greatly modified on account of the national mourning. While still in Berlin he waa appointed by Pres ident Taft special ambassador at King Edward's funeral. Following the fu- ; neraL Mr. Roosevelt was given the free dom of the city of London at Guildhall, where be spoke on Egypt, again praising British rule In that country. His ad dress, at tha University of Oxford was delivered June 7. A few days later Mr. Roosevelt took ship for. home, arrlvhur ln New York June 18. v-. oseTslVs Homeoomlng. Of the great popular enthusiasm that ; attended "the ex-presldeht'a Kboroecora- f lng .it is unnecessary to epeakv There wa a1 widespread feeling that,, his re- turnrmlghfremphaslze factional difff. ' ences W his party The political git-' uatlon in hw own state 01 .new xork had undergone considerable change, u0 found Governor Hughes under appoint. ment to take a seat .on , the suonw 4 bench Vat Washington in the autumn, i U9 TQUna a f emocnn, nuimra-j. rjay nor. governing the city of New Toi-v with remarkable efficiency.; a He aim found his former - secretary, Willie ' Loeb; as collector Of -customs, admlni. -terTng the port of New York with an nnarsrv, that was sending crookelii. sourrylhg to COVer. We had made up hi nnna noi uu us uranu luw me catn. nalgn in his own state, but he sh'oMiB-4 yielded to the earnest request of $ ernor, Hughes and expressed himself .. ) favor- of a direct primary election li and other Hughes reforms, 'Then J f. came to the conclusion that his part tV, the' 8tate-JotewoTlr-muBt0Tns il ' new lpjidershtn nr be . snowo . ' -. der: In the eomlng- electktni ' llll - ti... -1 conviction on, Ae speedily dissociated hi m ' tfie -existing organization , self from (Continued en Page Sevens