TTIE 3IORIXG OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1907. Wit (Ditnnmi SUBSCRIPTION KATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall. . Dolly. Similar Included, one year -J?' Paliy, Sunday Included, six raonihi.... 4.25 Inl!y. Sunday Included, three months. .,8 .2a Dnlly. Sunday Included, one mouth 15 Dally, without Sunday, one year fl.00 Dally, without Sunday, six months.... 3. -5 L-ally. without Sunday, three months.. 1 's. ral!y. without Sunday, one month IW Sunday, one year 8.60 Weekly, one year (Issued Thursday).. Sunday and weekly, one year. a. 50 BY CARRIER.' Dally. Sunday included, one year.- 9 00 Dally. Sunday Included, one month 5 HOW TO REMIT Send postofBce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofnee ad dress In lull. Including- county and atate. POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland, Oregon. PoetoBce as 6econd-Class Matter. 10 to 14 pases 1 cent 38 to 28 Pastes 2 cents 30 to 44 Pages 3 cents 48 to 60 Pases cc Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully Prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN Bt'SIKESS OFFICE. The S.-"C. Brckwlth Special Agency New Tork, rooms 48-BO Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 010-512 Tribune building. KEPT BALE. Chicago Auditorium Annex. PostolTlce News Co., 178 Dearborn at. 8t. rani, Minn N. Bt. Marie, Commercial Station. Colorado Springs, Colo. Bell, n. H. Denver Hamilton and Kendrlck, 808-91 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street) H. P. Hansen. B. Rice, Geo. Carson. Kansaa City, Mo. RlcksecVer Cigar Cc, Ninth and Walnut; Yoma Newa Co.; Harvey News Stand. Minneapolis M. J. Cavanaugh, SO South Third. Cleveland, O. James Pushaw, SOT Su perior street. Washington, D. C-Ebbltt House, Penn sylvania, avenue. Philadelphia, Pa, Ryan's Theater Ticket office; penn News Co. New York City L. Jones ft Co. Astnr House: Broadway Theater News Stand: Ar thur Hotaltng Wagons; Empire Newa Stand. Atlantic City, N. i. Ell Taylor. Ogden D. L. Boyle, Lowe Bros., 114 Tweniy-flfth street. . Omaha Barkalow Bros., Ufrton Station; M.-igcath Stationery Co. Iea Moines, la. Mose Jacob. Sacramento, Cnl Sacramento Newa Co.. .439 K street; Amos News Co. Salt Lake Moon Book A Stationary 'Co. : Rosenfeld & Hansen; J. W. Jewett. P. O. corner. Los Angeles B. E. Amos, manager ten treet wagons. San Diego B. E. Amos. Long Beach. CaL B. IS. Amos. San Jose, Cal SL James Hotel News Stand. Dallas, Tex. Southwestern News Agent. El Paso, Tex. Plaza Book and Newa Stand. Fort Worth, Tex. F. Robinson. Amarlllo, Tex. Amarlllo Hotel News Stand. New Orleans, La. Jones News Co. Snn Francisco -Foster A Orear; Ferry News Stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; L. Parent; N. Wheattey; Falrmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co.; United News Agents, lift Eddy street; B. E. Amos, man ager three wagons. Oakland, Cal W. H. Johnson, Fourteenth and Franklin streets: N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; B. E. Amos, manager five wagons. (.oldlleld, ' Nev. Loula Follin; C B. Hunter. Eureka, CaL Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1007. GOVERNOR CUMMINS VIEWS. .Very likely there is no man who rep resents more accurately the progres live political thought of the Republi can party in the West than Governor Cummins, of Iowa. A courageous and persistent man, he Is at the same time sufficiently conservative. He thinks quite independently of tradition, but he is no mad seeker after novelties. The silly cry of "heretic" ha3 no terrors for him; still he prefers to be orthodox when orthodoxy is not Inconsistent with common sense. Mr. Cummins Is Important in National politics because he is the Republican leader in a cen tral, enlightened, populous and wealthy 6tate, TVe read with respect ful interest, therefore, what Mr. Cum mins has to say in Appleton's Maga zine for November on "The Issues of 1908." Touching the tariff, Mr. Cummins says that the "progressives of the West will do what they can to make" the next Republican National platform "clear and unequivocal for an immedi ate examination and revision." He believes that the protective theory is sound, but the use of it "to shield ex tortionate profit" brings It into disre pute. The limit of a protective duty ought to be the difference between the cost of production in this and compet ing foreign countries. ' When this limit Is exceeded competition is destrdyed and the producer raises the price by the full amount of the duty. This we all know to be true, but the exposure of the fact has been stigmatized as heresy in certain quarters, and It Is a comfort to see it reasserted by a genu ine Republican like Governor Cum mins. Of course he believes that -the re vision of the tariff is an essential fac tor in the struggle against monopolies. Competition is "wasteful, expensive and sometimes ruinous,"" but Mr. Cum mins sees only two possible alterna tives to it. We may submit to see all prices fixeJ. by monopolies, or we may agree that all prices shall be fixed by the Government. Despite the undeni able evils of competition, it is probably better than either of the other meth ods of establishing prices. But sup . bose the country finds it impossible in the long run to restore the old system of competitive production and distri. ; button which everybody knows has Ihow all but vanished? Mr. Cummins :is a strong individualist, but he doubts , TVhether this can be don.. "If we are not successful," he says, "In restoring .ana preserving mac degree of competl - tion which will, through natural laws, i maintain reasonable prices," then .what? Why, "It is Just as certain that Government will undertake this task as that free institutions will endure.' Thi3 statement of the case from the pen of a careful man is interesting in . the light of the modern economic doc trine that monopolies 'cannot be de stroyed, since they are a necessary feature of social evolution, precisely like religion, war ana representative government, and whetherwe like them or not we'must make up our minds to live with them. Governor Cummins evidently believes, or tries to believe, like Mr.' Bryan, that the monopolies are but a temporary disease of the so- .eial. organism.. The socialists would ' smile at his faith; and, while Mr. Roosevelt is as. far .as .a .man can -be from socialism, even he has largely given, up the hope of destroying mo nopolies. His-latest doctrine looks al together toward regulation Instead of extermination, and the change indi-. cates a-growth in-wlsdtfm and states manship. Will regulation . fall as the ' radicals- predict that it must, and will full control by the Government follow? I T1 U 1 tha il.m ,1c. i V. ' Mr. Roosevelt has been compelled to advocate differs from ownership only slightly in' many particulars; but of course the somewhat narrow chasm may never be crosseC. -. J Mr. Cummins thinks also that "It would be a fatal mistake" to nominate for leaders . In the coming campaign "men whose selection would be an im plied rebuke" to the states which have participated in the recent railroad leg islation that has excited so much dif ference of opinion. The hysterical clamor against the 2-cent-fare laws, for example, has been so violent and so misinformed that It is refreshing to read his clear and convincing state ment of the other side of the case. More than one Federal Judge seems to have been intimidated by the fierce tempest of Ignorant vituperation to enjoin these laws without waiting to investigate them, and it is pretty gen erally accepted by the unthinking that they were passed in fits of mad excite ment. Mr. Cummins points out that the Iowa 2-cent-fare law, "which has been so bitterly and so unjustly at tacked," was passed after full and pro tracted hearings at "two sessions of the General Assembly." This does not look much like intemperate haste. By the testimony of the representatives of the railroads themselves the average passenger rate in Iowa did not exceed 2 cents per mile, but there were gross discriminations and favoritism. The passholders, of course, paid nothing. Purchasers of mileage tickets paid 2 cents per mile. Excursion tickets were sold for much less. The only effect of the new hyw has been to make the rate the same for everybody, leaving the total of the proceeds Just about as it was. Where does the confiscation come in? "There never was a law more firmly grounded in Justice, . and those who are assailing it . . . may as well understand that it has come to stay." Thus speaks the Gov ernor of Iowa. But what if the Su preme Court decides that it is "uncon stitutional"? So many things grounded in Justice and vindicated by reason are unconstitutional nowadays that one al most agrees with" Mr. Cummins in his clear demand for amendments. Two amendments, he thinks, are necessary one for direct election United States Senators by the people, the other for the organization of Inter state carrying companies under a law of Congress. These amendments are desirable, if they are needed, but it sometimes seems as If all that .they could accomplish will be '-obtained without them. IS IT WORTH WHILE f The zeal of the Initiative One Hun dred, or aome of Its officers, for revis ing the dictionary incites one to in quire whether or not it might be possi ble for that public-spirited body to find a more useful outlet for its energy. After all, names mean what we agree to make them mean. The most ele gant appellative may acquire disagree able associations by chance or custom. The most inelegant may come to be fairly redolent of delightful meanings. Is it worth while to stir up a great row over anything so flexible, so Intan gible, so obedient to the human will, as a name? Is it worth while, especially, when there is so much real work waiting to be done? Portland needs a park-like area in the heart of the city, where most of the rubllc buildings, may be grouped In course of time. Scattered over the whole town, these buildings are Ineffective and Inconvenient. Few devices combine so much utility and beauty as a skillful grouping of the public edifices of a city. The difficulties of this task would probably keep'the Initiative One Hun dred busy for a long while, but If they had energy to spare in the meantime, there is the rivep front to be reno vated. The rotting piles ought to be replaced by concrete constructions which would last forever and always be clean as well as sightly. A spec tacle of sordid ugliness such as Port land presents to the traveler by water Is vastly more shocking to a delicate sensibility than the name Bull Run. Why not reform the greater evil first? Why not plunge into the fight which the Mayor is making to win back to the city the control of its property in the streets? Would not every draught of water taste Bweeter if it were swal lowed by a man who knew that he was not being . plundered by the public service corporations? Would not the abolishment of strap-hanging in the trolley-cars refresh the average citi zen more than any possible alteration In the name of our drinking water? With so many important matters to occupy the mind, why waste Its powers onMrifles? MOROCCO'S FAMILY PARTY. With Ralsuli raking In the graft in large slices and Mulal Haflg, the "Sul tan of the South," moving to the north at a comfortable speed, the careter of Abdul Aziz, ruler of Morocco, seems destined to an early end. The French troops are endeavoring to maintain something like orderly conduct in the more thickly settled provinces, ' and have fought numerous battles suffi ciently bloody to receive mention at The Hague Conference. But Raisull is still raiding and robbing, and at last accounts had not delivered up McLaln, the Englishman, ,on whose head he placed a valuation of $150,000. While this highly successful modern outlaw has attempted to Justify .his .conduct on the ground of the intolerable op presslons of Abdul Aziz, he has thus far displayed no particular desire to control all of the grafting privileges of Morocco through supplanting' Abdul on the throne. .-.-'' ' Raleull's motto seems to be some thing like "I care not who makes the laws so long as I can collect the graft in certain provinces, from most' of whloh Abdul has evicted me." But Mulai Haflg, the new star in tiie Mo roccan constellation, has a thirst for power. which he could not quench in his own country, 'way down in the dry southern part of the Moroccan desert. He is " accordingly . jnoving northward and gathering strength as he approaches the stronghold of his present ruler, who Is said to be soma kind of a half brother to Mulal. ;The skill of Mulal liang in rallying to his sup port'-several thousand troops pre sents a neV feature In the comic! opera wars which add to the gaiety -of na tions in the saffron belt throughout the world.' For Mulai, in the development and perfection of his plans, hit on a new. scheme. Instead of doing the Marco Bozarrls ac'. and striding f.rth with - an -inconsequential following which he' could theatrically urge to "strike till the last armed foe expires." etc., Mulai made It a family party. ' He began by marrying the daughter of a sheik in a province adjoining that in which Mulal contro' ed th primaries. Father-in-law thought well of Mulai and instructed the taxpayers to vote and fight with him. They obeyed and Mulai moved on and mar ried the daughter of another sheik iu another province, whose voters also entered the Haflg combine. Four tlm'j has Mulal repeated the performance, and, as the sheiks In the remainl- ; thirty-four provinces of Morocco, all have daughters and Mulai is irresisti ble, Abdul Aziz hard:, needs the gift of second sight to convey to him the intelligence that he will soon be Abdul Az-isn't. It is probably a good thirg for the marriageable daughters of the sheiks that this clever system did not appeal to Ralsuli as It did to Haflg, With two such energetic outlaws working the same territory on the same lines, Morocco might meet the fate which overwhelmed the Kilkenny cats. A GLANCE AT THE MIRROR. "The Oregonian has always been en vious of ou- part of the state. . It has neglected us, it has checked our growth; It has done us Infinite harm. When it has noticed us at all it has printed slurs about' us. It is afraid our growth will hurt Portland. It has prevented Astoria from becoming the shipping port and the great city of Oregon. It has stifled all the ener gies of Taquina Bay. But for it, Coos Bay years ago would have had three or four great railroads and a city of 200, 000 people. It has prevented the con struction of railroads through Eastern Oregon and the settlement of popula tion there. Sclo would be a big town If The Oregonian had not blasted its prospects, and so would Florence. But for The Oregonian the Willamette Val ley would have five times the popula tion It now containa." Et cetera, and so forth, and so on. "But we rejoice that The Oregonian has no influence. Nobody cares what It says. It has fallen altogether be hind the progress of the country. Its impotence is merely equal to it3 mal ice. Fortunately it has little or no circulation. Nobody reads it. We are perfectly indifferent to what it says. Its news is nothing. Its edi torials get no attention. We would rather have it against us than not." Et cetera, and so forth, and so on. We think there are persons here and there and round' about who will recognize these statements; for they have made them often enough, them selves, these many years. Just now we have in mind one paper published at Astoria and another at Yaquina. They will have that The Oregonian's mighty influence for evil has thwarted all the efforts of their localities to grow to greatness; and yet the,y con gratulate themselves that The Orego nian is utterly powerless, has few read ers and Isn't worth minding. Meanwhile The Oregonian, through out Its whole career, has labored for all Oregon and for. the entire North west, as no other force, instrument or agency has ever done; It publishes more matter about the growth and de velopment of all sections than all other newspapers put together; it pays more for news and descriptive articles from each and every section than all others, and is more rea" than all the rest combined. No person within 100 miles of Port land who cares for an account of what is going on in the world falls to read The Oregonian. For the next 100 miles all read It who can get It early; and It is the source of all the news. except mere local detail, that all pa pers within 100 to 200 miles of Port land publish. Dear? unhappy breth ren, you really need The Oregonian. That is clear. You wouldn't have any news worth notice or naming but for its supply; nor very much to stir your Intellects, to think or write about. You know with what eagerness you look for it, every day. Without it your lives would be a desert. Dear brethren, do you not see how you make yourselves foollBh by your contradictions? Just for a moment we hold up the mirror. Good day! PRESERVING GAME. Most persons who are Interested in wild game birds have commented upon the curious fact that the birds grow scarcer while the laws for pro tecting them grow more numerous and strict. The open season is shortened by successive Legislatures. Often the shooting of some species of game is forbidden entirely for two, three or several years. Bags are strictly lim ited by. law. The exportation of birds from the state where they are shot is forbidden, and it is widely fash ionable to exclude game from the markets. This, of course, means that people who have neither time nor means to shoot can seldom know the taste of game. It is replied, of course, that they are quite as well off as they would be if' the game were extermi nated, which nobody can deny. But it may be doubted whether it is worth "while for the Btate to enact penal laws. provide game wardens and prosecute, fine and even imprison citizens for the sake of furnishing sport to a privileged few and replenishing the tables of their friends. If the preservation of game by state action cannot make it so plentiful that all citizens may par take of it on reasonable terms, then the effort ought -to be abandoned. That wild game birds are becoming scarcer year by year, in spite of all protective laws, is notorious. A writer In the current - number of the Inde pendent mentions that wild turkeys, which were once common even in New England, have almost disap peared from their last asylums In the West. The -first settlers In Kentucky made a fairly constant diet of these noble birds, the dark parts serving for meat and the breast for bread; but now a wild turkey is seldom or never seen in Kentucky. When the settlers from New England first made their homes at Marietta, O., herds of buf falo numbering tens of thousands crossed the river not far from there every .Spring and Fall. There are men In middle life who remember a time when the flight of wild pigeons in Wisconsin and Minnesota would darken the sky uf an afternoon in Au tumn. "Veracious persons tell of see ing flocks which covered half tha hori zon like a great cloud, and when they settled in the forests they broke off huge branches of trees by their weight. Today the wild pigeon Is a rare bird in those states. Twenty years ago there was always good shooting from the time of wheat harvest till Winter In the fields of Northern Mississippi States. Prairie hens were abundant; quails were su perabundant. After snow fell boys would catch' thirty or forty quails "in a single night in a box trap by an old strawstack. Now both these fine game birds are pretty nearly extinct on the Mississippi prairies. The wood duck is much less common than it was a .few yei-rs ago. The native grouse of Oregon is becoming hard to find. And so on all over the country with all our birds In spite of all our laws. While . these - laws have re stricted the use of game to people of wealth and leisure, or to lawbreakers, they have failed to protect the birds. The writer in the Independent, re ferred to above, believes that these laws are based upon, a mistaken prin ciple. Their sole aim Is to defend the birds from human hunters, while noth ing is done to defend them from ver min, which Is incomparably more de structive. We have in this country placidly adopted the theory that as civilization advances game must necessarily dis appear; but nothing could be farther from the truth. . England Is probably as highly civilized as most parts of America, but wild birds show no tend ency to disappear there. They are plentiful both -in the fields and In the markets. Any Englishman who is not in abject poverty can have game on his table during the open season, while here it Is out of the question. The truth Is that most game birds breed more rapidly near human dwellings unless men unite with vermin to ex terminate them. Game birds can re sist vermin acting alone. In all wild countries they are plentiful. But when the weasels, skunks, moles. cats, crows and snakes are reinforced by the hunter with his gun, then their fate Is' sealed. The average game warden has an area of some 300 square miles to guard. Of course no can accomplish little. All of our game laws are habitually violated with im punity. Deer are hunted with hounds almost openly within thirty miles of Portland during the closed season. Birds are shipped to the Portland market under the pleasant disguise of eggs and butter. And all other re strictions are defied in similar ways. The only effectual method of pre serving game is to protect the old birds and their young from vermin during the nesting season. This is the method followed in England, and It is successful. To each gamekeeper a reasonably small area should be as signed, and there he should be re sponsible for the birds. He can keep the vermin down by traps, guns and poison, and rear birds enough within his limits to stock a largi territory for the open season. Of course there must be a closed season for hunters, but, as the writer in the Independent remarks, 1'; ought also to be closed for vermin. Were one-half the birds pre served which are now destroyed by snakes, skunks and crows, there would be no excuse for prohibiting the sale of game in the Portland markets. And they might be preserved were the war dens set to guard the nests of birds instead of spending their time in a perfunctory search for hunters. The Eighteenth annual meeting of the Trans-Misslssl. pi Commercial Con gress will be held at Muskogee, in the new State of Oklahoma, next month. and, on account of the Increasing agi tation for waterway improvements, the meeting Is expected to be one of the most Important yet held. Irrigation and Improvement of inland waterways have been the two principal topics in which this great organization has al ways shown special Interest, and, as both, are subjects which appeal with special force to the Pacific Northwest, this section should be well represented at the coming meeting. The Trans- Mississippi Congress has done a great work in bringing these important sub jects before the people, no more elo quent or earnest worker In the irriga tion cause being found m the West than John Henry Smith, one of th founders of the Trans-Mississippi Con gress, and a man who has never missed a meeting of the organization. Rudyard Kipling, who is investigat ing the Hindu-Japanese immigration problem in Canada, has decided that the way to keep the yellow man out Is to get the white man in." It may not have occurred to Rudyard that both the United States and Canada have been straining every nerve for years to get the white man in and he is still coming in numbers which are In adequate to the demand for his serv ices. The Hindus and the Japanese can never become good citizens, but they are apparently on this Coast in response to a demand for their serv ices. Their labor could be utilized in the blearing of land and other simi lar tasks on which the white laborer looks with disdain, but the cntagonlsm their presence arouses is such that the good In this direction is offset by the disturbance they make elsewhere In the economic situation. It is a source of regret that those who wish the name of Portland changed to Multnomah were not here in 1845. when Frank- Pettygrove flipped a penny and chance decided against Lovejoy's choioe of Boston. As a bit of geographical information to many who have lived here only thirty or forty years, it may be again stated that Portland was then situated in Washington County. Simultaneously with news that Chi cago clubs have begun a campaign against tipping waiters comes the an nouncement that the Government au thorizes an expenditure of 40 cents a day for tips by its traveling employes. This new reform seems to be up against a stone wall. Large as It is, the eastern half of the United States is too limited a race course for balloons. Only the Atlan tic Ocean itself interposed to prevent stretching an 880-mile flight into four figures. Perhaps the next American contest will start from Denver. ' To thmany varieties of luscious and good-looking Oregon apples there has been added the Coos River Beauty, soon to be exhibited here. Let's have more distinctive Oregon apples and let them be exploited at the chief city. Portland plays no favorites. Aba Ruef solemnly declares that he doesn't know what the word "graft ing" means. As an emergency lexicon we commend his former business asso ciate, the Hon. Eugene E. Schmitz. According to ex-Governor Yates, one side in Illinois is solid for Cannon, the other for Bryan. This so simplifies the situation that the Issues for 1908 may be said to be made up. Larry Sullivan, though a losing "sport," won't lay the blame of his latest failure on Roosevelt's doorstep. Clearly some big concerns in this country have been borrowing, money regardless of payday. ' In the contest for the 1000 prize Bourne essay, are Rockefeller and Harriman barred? N. . . P. SAYS TAX TOO HIGH Railroad Makes Complaint to As sessment Board in Morrow. HEPPNER. Or.. Oct. 24. (Special.) The County Board of Equalization is in session this week. Kickers are not numerous and none of any conse quence has appeared aside from J. C. Fairchlld, who is tax agent for tha Northern Pacific Railway Company. The Northern Pacific, through an 614 land grant from the Government, has acquired title to about 80,000 acres of land in Morrow County, and some of it lies In the best farming communi ties. This land Is assessed from 50 cents to $1.25 per acre, averaging about SO cents. The Assessor asserts that this land is assessed at the same valuation as other land In the same vicinity, but Mr. Fairchlld declares the assessment is excessive. Grazing lands are as sessed at $1.25 and improved farms at $6 per acre in Morrow County, and the board is unanimous in the belief that the assessment on the Northern Pa cific is Just and will hold for the same. The usual objection from the O. R. & N. Company has so far missed the eye of the board, and it is not likely that Mr. Morrow will attempt any re duction 1n that company's taxes at tnis late date. CATCH THIEVES IX THE ACT Vancouver Police Uo In Wait for Men In Railroad Tarda. VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 24. (Spe cial.) The police last night arrested William Doak in the act of stealing oop- per fittings from the yards of the Colum bia River bridge contractors. Complaints of the thefts have been numerous of late and this week Chief Bateman started a vigorous campaign for the capture of the roDDers. Last night Patrolmen Se crist and Gassaway were detailed to watch the yards. At midnight Secrlst was relieved by G. M. Shearer. About 4 o'clock this morning the officers saw two men shoving a pushcar up to a pile or copper wire. Directly opposite the of ficers the car was stopped and the plun derers started to load a reel of copper wire, xne omcers stepped from their hiding place and ordered the pillagers to surrender. They started to run, but a few well-directed shots sufficed to stop one of them. The other escaped behind a pile or construction steel. The captured man was brousrht to tha city Jail. He refuses- to have anything to say, except, mat ne Knew his pal only Dy a nicKname. WOMES WANT AN EXCISE LAW Representatives of Fonr Denomina tions Meet at Oregon City. OREGON CITY, Or., Oct. 24. (Spe cial.) Seventy-five women of four Protestant church denomination!) held a mass-meeting in the First Baptlss- Church this afternoon and effected a preliminary organization "fo secure the enactment of the proposed excise ordinance at the polls in the Decem ber election. There was considerable enthusiasm manifested and brief speeches of encouragement were made by Rev. John M. Linden, Rev. J. R. Landsborough, Rev.. R. C. Blackwell and Rev. E. C. Oakley, pastors of the BaptiBt, Presbyterian, MethodlBt and Congregational Churches, respectively. Attorney C. Schuebel explained the provisions of the ordinance and urged the women to organize with the object of making the law effective. The Hawaiian party of young ladles sang at the meeting. Vancouver Jail Overflowing. VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 24. (Spe cial.) Last night was a record-breaker In Vancouver police records. Fourteen men were arrested, filling every cell in the City Jail, and making emergency cells necessary. A large part of the arrests were for drunkenness and disorderly con duct. The robbers or the railroad yards, it is believed, were also captured. Mcintosh Reappointed. SALEM, Or., Oct. 24. (Special.) Gov ernor Chamberlain today reappointed A. W. Mcintosh, of Portland, Port Warden for the Columbia River for a term of four years. SAW CAPTAIX KILL PAUL One of Olga's Crew Describes Sboot ' Ing of Engineer. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 24. A Jury was chosen in the United State Circuit Court (Judge Van Vleet) for the trial of Cap tain Christian I. Kllngenberg, charged with the murder of Jackson D. Paul, en gineer of the schooner Olga, on the high seas. - Frank Miller, formerly steersman On the whaler Olga, the first and only wit ness of the day, testified as follows: "Chief Engineer Paul, of the Olga, was lying in his bunk asleep, suffering from two bullet wounds, when Captain Kllng enberg crept Into the cabin on tiptoe, with a cocked and loaded Winchester rifle on his arm, raised the weapon. placed it against the back of Paul's neck and fired, killing him Instantly I was in the room and saw the whole thing. Captain Kllngenberg then turned around and said to me: 'If anybody asks you about this, Frank, tell them he showed fight and I killed him in self-defense. REDUCE TIME TO THE ' WEST Burlington & Alton Find , Slow Trains Do Not Pay. CHICAGO, Oct. 24. The Chicago Kansas City and the Chicago-Denver passenger train schedules are to be cut. Announcement of this was made yesterday by the Alton and Burlington officials, and, while the other 'roads have not announced their intentions, they probably will be forced to adopt the same schedule. This is in reality the resumption of former schedules which were lengthened last. June. The present schedule to Kansas City is 14 hours and to Denver 32 hours. The new schedule will be 13 hours to Kan sas City and 80 hours to Denver. Both Alton and Burlington officials assert they have lost business since the longer schedule was adopted. The principal competition was from tha California trains of the Santa Fe and the Rock Island. Fight Lasts Half Minute. PUEBLO, Colo., Oct. 24. "Muggsy" Shoels, of Cheyenne, knocked out "Roxy" Roach, of Missouri, tonight after a half- minute of fighting in the first round. A right to the Jaw was the blow. Strike on Levee Is Settled. NEW ORLEANS. La.,' Oct. 24. The levee strike, involving 10,000 men, mostly cotton handlers, ended tonight. The men agreed to return to work pending final adjustment by arbitration. Preacher Tames Fractions Mules. Osceola, Mo., Dispatch. A farmer near Osceola, Mo., had a pair of fractious mules which became docile, he says, after he had presented them to "Sam" Eaton, a Baptist missionary. THE BUSINESS OF MAKING NEWSPAPERS The Paper Trust and Its Exactions Labor Inlona and Their Methods. What Arbitration and Conciliation Have Done. Address by Herman Rldder. president of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association, before the National Conference, on "Trusts and Combinations," t Chicago, October 24. 1907. , OVERNMENT reports upon the , condition of the printing and publishing business, as it was two years ago, show that It was the only large manufacturing industry which tended toward diffusion and away from consolidation or concen tration. In the previous five years It bad grown in greater proportion than any other industry, and It had taken first place among all the Industries of the country In the number- of estab lishments. Furthermore, the number of printing establishments had shown a greater increase in the five years from 1900 to 1905 than in the previous 10 years. Then, too, the per capita value of printing and publishing products had increased in greater pro portion than those of any other in dustry. In fact, only three other In dustries had shown an absolute in crease in products greater than that of the printing and publishing busi ness. These facts become important and significant in any discussion deal ing with the effects of combinations or trusts upon Industrial progress. Slnoe the reports were compiled, tha printing and - publishing interest has been menaced and beset at every point by oppressive combinations. The cost of every article that it uses, including labor, has been subjected to an artificial stimulation, and it is doubtful if the splendid contrast that was then made by that unprotected in dustry with the coddled favorites of the tariff or with the trusteed indus tries, can now be maintained. The leading manufacturing indus tries of the United States in 1905 ranked as follows: First Slaughtering and meat packing. Second Iron and steel. Third Foundries and machine shops. Fourth Flour and grist mills. Fifth Clothing. -. Sixth Lumber and timber. Seventh Printing and publishing. Eighth Cotton manufactures. Ninth Woolen manufactures. Tenth Boots and shoes. The printing and publishing inter ests then represented an annual product of 1500,000,000, of which six cities contributed $250,000,000, and New Tork City alone contributed almost one-quarter of the great total. There were two great divisions of this 'vast business book and Job printing constituting one class, newspapers and periodicals the other class, tha lat ter contributing over three-fifths of the output. It is for the newspaper especially that I propose to speak. The news papers and periodicals had a reported capital invested of (239,000,000, of which nearly $100,000,000 represented machinery, tools and implements. They paid salaries and1 wages amounting to $106,000,000 per annum to 160,000 workers. They paid $58,000,000 per an num for their principal article of use white paper. They represented the Intellectual growth of the country; they expressed its desires. Yet so scrupulous were they in the subordination of their own and im mediate Interests to those of the varying constituencies whloh they represented that they submitted with out material protest to exactions and oppressions which no other interest would have tolerated. While all others, were consolidating and planning to enrich themselves at the general ex pense, tha publishing interests were maintaining a competition that re duced their subscription prices to the lowest limit. The newspapers of the country that reached the minimum in price had increased their average size from 5.7 pages in 1890 to 8.5 pages in 1906. They improved their product and extended their scope until the cir culation of the dally newspaper aver aged one copy per day to every four of the entire population of the oountry. But all the benefits arising from the introduction of typesetting machines, the perfection of the printing press and the cheapening of the cost of white paper by the use of meohanically ground wood and the improvement of fast-running papermaklng machinery, were given to the public. .. Within the five years from U00 to 1905 capital to the extent of $47,000, 000 had been added to the investment for newspapers and periodicals; but the product per thousand dollars in vested had declined from $1409 in 190? to $1288 in 1905. During that period tha mechanical cost of output had in creased about 80 per cent. For many newspapers the Increase in size and the increase in circulation had not been attended by corresponding increase in profit. Tha tendency toward concen tration and consolidation in every other direction has Increased the cost of every article supplied to the news paper, though It receives less than formerly for the article itself. Con sidering tha cars and attention and energy and ability bestowed upon it, the newspaper percentage of profits is less than that of any other manufactur ing enterprise. Speaking generally, the newspapers have encountered large in creases in cost of production. The competition between themselves and the Increases in output have, been maintained to the advantage of the employe not of the employer. This vast manufacturing industry, repre senting a greater number of establish ments than any other one Industry, thus finds itself the only one that Is refused the protection of the Govern ment. More than that, it is loaded with the burdens arising from the pro tection of every Interest with which it deals. Every machine that the pub lishers buy and they have over $100, 000,000 Invested in machinery has sr tariff on it whereby the manufacturer taxes them' unduly. Every ounce of paper they buy has a protective tariff behind it to maintain prices. In New York City and elsewhere the morning papers sell practically all of their product to a combination known as the American News Company. The news papers obtain all their telegraphic news from a combination. They buy their typesetting machinery from the Mergenthaler Linotype Company. They buy their advertising type from a company formed by a combination of type foundries. Substantially every mechanic whom they employ is pro tected by a self-constituted tariff lji the form of a labor union, and to that species of combination they are pay ing the largest amount of tribute. It should be understood that the Ameri cain Newspaper Publishers' Association la a voluntary organization of 278 news papers located in 141 cities. It has no power to compel any member to act out side of his own volition. Its National agreements with labor organizations are not labor contracts. They simply provide a way by which each Individual publisher may secure arbitration without interrup tion to his business, the National labor organizations guaranteeing the perform ance of all the contracts made by the local . unions under their Jurisdiction; In other words, the National organizations underwrite local agreements. t . - Under that arrangement, both aides h were bound to make en effort toWard conciliation. If that falird then agreed to try local arbitration, and nn National arbitration. It Is tt. under the plan of arbitration neither fii. has obtained what It thought it was titled to receive,' but friendly relatii were maintained. The employers had ' opportunity of work uninterrupted strike or lockout. Neither side has M subjected to the wasting effects of fare. Both sides have been gainers. Tl principal gain of the employers is not tne troubles they have settled, but those they have prevented. I know of n oiner group of employers which has sucl ceeded in perfecting a great pact with th) laoor unions and In maintaining entirely satisiactory relations. In 1901 tha newspaper publishers had 1 accepted the Idea of the closed shop and of the eight-hour day. Thev had decided to deal with labor representatives rather than with individuals, and thereby they increased the responsibility of the unions. They recognized the fact that the labor question was full of complications and that the leaders of the unions must exer cise great patience and tact in controlling the men who elected them to office. Dur ing six years, ending May 1, 1907. arbitra tion contracts had prevailed whereby the employers and employes arbitrated all differences arising over wages and hours in new scales. A new agreement, which went into operation on May 1, 1907, In cluded "working conditions" within tho scope of the arbitration, and also outlined a radical departure in tha abandonment of the third man, or umpire, in the boards of arbitration. Each aids has an equal number of votes. With the expiration of the old arrange ment and the Inauguration of the new plan the newspapers received an unusual number and variety of demands. Suffi cient time has not elapsed to test thor oughly the merits of the later methods. Only partial returns of the present arbitration programme have been made to the association. Thus far, this year, tho publishers and the unions have discussed 76 new scales in 65 cities, with the fol lowing results: Settled by conciliation (which means by concessions to the unions) 55 By arbitration 9 Under "negotiation 12 Total 76 Regardless of these details, we find that the adoption of arbitration for the adjust ment of labor disputes has tended to In crease the stability of Investment In newspaper property, and It has afforded a means for the settlement of minor con tentions which formerly caused infinite trouble, often leading to destruction of property, enormous losses of wages and the engendering of passion. The pay ments they made for the maintenance of this arbitration arrangement and for the carrying out of the policies of concilia tion were regarded by publishers as pay ments for Industrial Insurance. Just as they paid for fire and accident Insur ance. It has been calculated that In Kpw York City' alone the newspapers pay $1, 600,000 per annum as their tribute to tho closed shop and to organized labor. Witli each new concession to the unions, or each new award of arbitrators, the pub lishers ask how far this payment may be carried. There are limits beyond which they cannot go, even though they are well wishers of organized labor. Thfy are approaching that limit where their necessities may force them to stop fur their concessions and allowances. They wish to emphasize the fact that they have no objections to unions. They believe that the unions, notwithstanding many faults, have accomplished excellent results for men who are not ambitious to rise abovn their " employment. They believe the unions can do much that is useful In the future In the way of securing better terms for workers who deserve them. However, they have a right to complain of those unions which set up a selfish guild for individual profit and without re gard for the rights of other labor. Tha unions have fallen into the habit of ex pecting more from a newspaper than any union could hope to obtain from any other employer. These unions are making demands upon the newspapers because of supposed friendliness of unions and because of supposed helplessness of employers in resisting such exactions. A newspaper, to exist, must run all tha time. It cannot wait to contest strikes or to resist demands. Serious as this labor trust may appear in some of its aspects, it does not com pare in objectionable features with a paper combination, which is probably the most remarkable financial freak that we can find in a long list of combination monstrosities. The printing and publish ing business as a whole turns over its capital -in about ten months. Large de partment stores, that advertise energetic ally, will turn over their stocks about seven times a year, but the largest paper manufacturer' in the world the Interna tional Paper Company with a capital ex ceeding sixty million dollars ($60,000,000), does a gross annual business of only twenty-one million dollars ($21,000,000), thus requiring three years to turn over its capital. It has watered Itself until it has no more money to invest. It has bor rowed upon everything it has. It cannot earn any more "money unless it can do more business, and it cannot do more business because it has not the money with which to do It. Instead of accept ing its responsibilities and extending its business to keep pace with the growth of its customers, the International Paper Company is producing less newsprint pa per today than it turned out immediately after Its organization. The available funds at Its command, which should have been used for new paper machines, have gone toward the acquirement of 2579 square miles of timber limits registered in one of the four land offices in the Province of Quebec, Canada. To main tain that concern and its allied combina tions, with their oppressive weight of over-capitalization, and to provide a pre text for protecting the labor of 16,000 pa per mill employes, receiving less than nine million dollars ($9,000,000) per an- ' num. the publishing business has been subjected to a . series of deliberately planned schemes of extortion. The first step was accomplished in the Dingley bill, so that publishers could not buy pa per elsewhere. The next step was one that has Just been consummated, whereby through combinations made In defiance of the Federal Courts, the supply has been brought below the demand, the market has bejen starved, the surplus has been exhausted, and the price for the present year has been advanced $12 per ton upon a consumption of 900.000 tons, an addi tion of $10,000,000 within one year. In creased cost of manufacture does not Justify such an advance. Aggravating that situation is a threat of another ad vance of $10 per ton next year, or $9, 000,000 advance in two years by an indus try that pays an aggregate of "less than $9,000,000 a year to its labor, while clam oring to Congress for a continuance of Its opportunities to combine and oppress publishers. Tha newspapers insist that the paper manufacturers who induced Congress to protect them against competition from abroad are under obligations to provide for the present and prospective demands of consumers in this country. To repress manufacture, or to starve the market so that the paper maker is in position, to create a famine and to stop the supply to any publisher, should rank as a crime. Many newspaper proprietors are unable to obtain any quotations for paper next year and do not know where to obtain a supply. In all the history of crimes charged against combinations and trusts, such a situation is unprecedented. It de mands immediate remedy.