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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 26, 1908)
TIIE MORNING OREGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY S6, 1908. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. (By Mall.) Imllr, Sunday Included, one year $8 00 iJnlly. fcunday Included, six months... 4-25 Dally. Sunday Included, three months.. 2.23 Lally. Sunday Included, one month. . Dally, without Sunday, one year 6-00 Dally, without Sunday, tlx months 8-23 Daily without Sunday, three months.. 1-73 Daily, without 6unday. one mouth..... JJ Sunday, one year 2-30 Wf-kly. one year (Issued Thursday)... J-SSO Sunday and weekly, cne year BY CARRUEB. Dally. BundaT Included, one year "JO Dally. Bundav Included, one month " HOW TO KfcMir Send postoffice money rder, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofflce ad dress In full. Including county and stats. POSTAGE RATES. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce as Second-Class Matter. 10 to 14 Paaes 1 cenl 1 to 28 Pases 2 cents JO to 44 Pages 8 cents s6 to CO Pages cents Foreign postage, double rates. IMPORTANT The postal laws are strict. Newspapers on which postage Is not fully Prepaid are not forwarded to destination. EASTERN BUSINESS OFFICE. The S'. C. Reckwith Special Agency New Tork. rooms 4H-00 Tribune building. Chi cago, rooms 310-512 Tribune building. KEPT OX SALE. Chicago. Auflitcrlum. Annex; Postofflce Neus Co.. 178 Dearborn street; Empire JCews Stand. Paul, .Minn. N. St. Marie, Commercial Station. Colorado Springs, Colo. Bell. H. H. Denver. Hamilton and Kendrlck. Uo8-12 Seventeenth street; Pratt Book Store. 1214 Fifteenth street; H. P. Hansen. S. Kice. George Car.on. Kansas City, Mo. Ricksecker Cigar Co., Nlnih end Walnut; Yoma News Co. .Minneapolis M. J. ' Cavanaugh. 50 South Third. Cincinnati, O. Yoma News Co. Cleveland. O. James Puahaw. 307 Su perior Mrecr. Washington, I). C. Kbbitt House. Penn sylvania avenue; Columbia News Co. Pittsburg. Pa. Fort Pitt News Co. I'hilixielphia. Pa. Ryan's Theater Ticket Office; Pcnn News Co.; Kemble, A. P., 3To5 Lancaster avenue. New York City. D. Jones Co.. Aator Houae: Broadway Theater News Stand; Ar thur Hotallr.g Wagons; -Empire News Stand; Ogden. D. 1.. Boyle; Lowe Bros.. Ill Tv piity-tifth street. Omaha. Rnrkalow Bros.. Union Station: Miigcath Stationery Co.; Kemp & Arenson. Ies .Moines, In. Mose Jacobs. l-'rettno, Cal. Tcurist News Co. Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento News Co.. 4:i K. street; Amos New Co. Salt Luke. Moon Book & Stationery Co.: Hosonfeld Hansen: ti. W Jewell. P. O. corner; Stnlpeck Bros. I. ing Beach, Cal. B. K. Amos. I'Hhadcnu, Cal. Amos News Co. Nan Diego. B. E. Amos. Sin Joee. Kmerson W. Houston, Tex. International News Agency. Dallae, Tex. Southwestern News Agent, 844 Main street; also two street wagons. Ft. Worth, Tex. Southwestern N. and A. Agency. Amarilln, Tex. Timmons & Pope. Nan FrunciM'O. Forstor & Orear: Ferry News stand; Hotel St. Francis News Stand; Parent; N. Wheatley; Fairmount Hotel News Stand; Amos News Co.; United News Agency, ll'.i Eddy street; B. K. Amos, man tiger three waieons; Worlds N. S.. 2023 A. Sutter street. Oakland. Cal. W. 11. JVhnson. Fourteenth and Franklin streets: N. Wheatley; Oakland News Stand; It. E. Amos, manager five wagon.; Wellincham. E. G. (.olillleld. Nev. Louie Follln. Eureka. Cal. Call-Chronicle Agency; Eu reka News Co. PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 190S. TAXATION, ONCE MORE. Now of course the people of Oregon know, or are supposed to know, vcri'thing. "The?.' knows it instinctive." They have been informed that all ex perience and all history, and all the Kst-ons of experience and history, have now no .significance or applica tion. Some believe it. The new method, which is to supersede the old, is to be enforced through initiative end referendum, through the primary law and Statement No. 1, and through other forms of innovation and super Hedure. The Constitution of the United States must "go." So must the constitution, of Oregon. The whims of politicoes of the time are to be the supreme law. An entirely new principle of taxation is offered. The old constitutional system, which re quired ell taxation to be equal and uniform, and the old statutes long ago enacted and enforced on this princi ple, are good no longer. There is new light on all these things; but when that light Is darkness, how great is that darkness! On this business of taxation the new light has been trying to shine upon the benighted State of Ohio. But the peopLe of that state are too blind to see the new star. They discredit the magicians who have announced it. Whimsies and fads and fancies, uch as those now presented in the initi ative hill in Oregon, for rejection of the old system of equal taxation and substitution of a new one, have been put up to the Legislature of Ohio. It will be objected, of course, that that body is not representative. For just so soon as men are elected to the Legislature and begin to study the sub jects with which they are to deal, they pause, hesitate and cease to be repre sentative. Thus we find representa tive government a failure: and initi ative and referendum and Statement No. 1, and wild and weird notions about taxation, and of making and un doing constitutions and laws by direct vote of the electors without opportu nity of debate or amendment and the endless list of various and multi farious loose ideas, all and several, that are floating In the unbalanced mind, come forward as new revela tions of the gospel of political, social and economic truth. But somehow such states as Ohio and Kentucky can't see it. Our URens and Wag nons do not prevail there. A short time' ago a tax commission appointed in Ohio In pursuance to law, after a study of the subject for fifteen months, made a report to the Gov ernor of the state, Who laid the report before the Legislature. A summary of that report is printed on this page. It runs violently opposite to the prin ciples in the initiative bill offered for amendment of the constitution of Ore gon, which virtually proposes to throw all burdens upon land and to exempt property in other forms. The report shows that Ohio is moving to get away from the principal evils which we are now asked to enact into law in Oregon. The Ohio report Is a' protest against the burden' Imposed on real property, and against exemption of personal and Intangible property. The initia tive propositon in Oregon would re verse this rule. It would virtually, exempt personal and Intangible prop erty, including manufacturing plants and corporation assets, and throw an even greater burden than now on real property against the injustice of which, already excessive In Ohio, the tax commission of that state strongly protests. Ohio Is now proceeding to amend ment of her constitution to meet the requirements of this report. Her Leg islature a short time ago adopted a resolution to this effect. The present Initiative movement in. Oregon is In exactly the opposite direction. Ken tucky, which, many years ago, bor- rowed the Ohio system. Is now also changing It, by constitutional amend ment, so as to obtain more Just taxa tion of the kinds of property which the proposed amendment In Oregon would exempt. In most ways the constitution of Oregon was very good. But It satisfies no class of doctrinaires of the modern time. Have we anything to learn from the experience of older and greater states? Here are Ohio and Kentuoky, amend ing their fundamental law, to get rtd of evils of long standing, which Ore gon now is asked to enact into her fun damental law. Oregon, probably, will decline to do It. For this effort is made precisely In the wrong direction. It looks to Increased taxation of real property, held without improvement, and forgets everything else. But this evil can be corrected, and Is being cor rected rapidly, under the laws of Ore gon as they stand. Observe that the vast Increase of taxable property throughout the state, returned by the Assessors during the last three or four years, comes mainly- from the unim proved . lands and franchises which hitherto had been taxed hardly at all. The laws are good enough as they stand. If there can be a better rule of taxation than equal taxation, no state has yet adopted It. SEATTLE REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Mention was made in these columns a few days ago that the Seattle real estate transfers for February 4 had reached the astounding total of $35, 052.181.85. This information was gath ered from the Seattle Daily Bulletin, which, being the "city official paper," was, of course, a reliable authority. Day after day these enormqus figures appeared in the Bulletin, and will, of course, be included in the total for the month of February and. for the year 1908. A Seattle friend, noting The Oregonian's astonishment that trans fers of such magnitude should be made without the details appearing under glaring headlines on the first page of the daily newspapers, sends us the details of the enormous transac tions In Seattle real estate. They are thus explained by the records: 532.608 Land The St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Company to the Great Northern Railway Company, a line of rail way beginning at a point in St. Paul, Minn., and extending thence northwesterly by way of Anoka, St. Cioud, Barnesvllle and Crooks ton to a point on the international boundary line between the United States and the Do minion of Canada near St. Vincent in said state; together with other railways in Minne sota, North Dakota. Dominion of Canada, etc., (metes and' bounds- description) October 11. lflOT J35.000.000. It will, of course, ipuzzle the disin terested stranger to Seattle methods to understand what a "bookkeeping transfer" of railroad property in Min nesota, North Dakota, the Dominion of Canada and intermediate points has to do with Seattle real estate transfers. It will occasion no sur prise, however, to those who are in touch with the Seattle spirit. There Is a rumor afloat that the Graaid Trunk Pacific has been absorbed by the Canadian Pacific. The transfer will undoubtedly involve even more millions than were named in the transfer of the subsidiary properties of the Great Northern, and, as the Cana dian Pacific has interests in the State of Washington, the consideration named in the deal will, without doubt, be included in the Seattle real estate transfers. If this should fail to keep the trans fers at a sufficiently high figure, the Trans-Siberian Railroad might be drawn on. It cost a right smart sum and the transaction appearing In "Se attle real estate transfers'" would bo fully as appropriate as that which has already swollen the totals to such mag nificent figures. A MOMENTOUS DECISION. The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Mul ler against the State of Oregon mark3 an epoch in American civilization. It definitely removes woman from the. category of beasts of burden whose la bor may be exploited by her industrial masters without restraint and estab lishes her status as a mother of citi zens with immunities of motherhood which the law must respect. This de cision has been awaited with anxious forebodings by enlightened think ers. They are aware how apt the Su preme Court is to be swayed by con siderations of arid formalism rather than by far-sighted considerations of social justice. They knew, too, that the highest court in New Tork in a similar case had recently held that the property- right of women In the power to trade their labor to employ ers was superior to the interest of the state in their physical and moral health. When, therefore, this pivotal case went up from Oregon to the high est tribunal in the country, every man whose feelings set the permanent wel fare of the human race above the temporary profits of the insatiate trusts awaited the result in suspense, with fear outweighing hope. Much depended upon the turn which the reasoning of the court might take. Nineteen states had enacted laws lim iting the hours of women's labor. Massachusetts took the lead in 1874; other states followed in slow proces sion for a generation. If the Oregon law .should turn out to be "unconstitu tional," the whole mass of this hu manitarian legislation would be anni hilated at a stroke, and there could be little doubt that the state child-labor laws would share its fate. If the right of women to sell their services is above the welfare of the Nation, so also is the right of parents to sell the services of their children. The future of the race and nation is of no conse quence in comparison with the imme diate success of the dollar chaser. Friends of humanity have dreaded the day when these child-labor laws should come at last before the Su preme Court, but now they will look forward to It with more confidence. Their confidence will be temperate and . chastened with doubt, however, for as The Outlook discreetly suggests the Supreme Court takes now one side of the subject, now the other. First comes a decision founded on the for lorn doctrlnairism of Herbert Spencer, which negates every principle of hu manity and forsakes mercy altogether; then follows another like this In the Oregon case, which boldly lays down rules of justice so enlightened and true that one is almost convinced that the justices of our highest court have for once taken a peep into their Bibles and abjured Herbert Spencer and all his works. The New York decision, of which we spoke a moment ago, de clared that the law could not deprive a woman of the right to make any contract she chose for the sale of her labor. With flagrant hypocrisy the judges argued that this right was more precious to women than their own health, the. welfare of their children and the Integrity of their homes. The unlimited right of laboring people to sell their labor Is a delicate euphemism for the unlimited right of their em ployers to make them slave day and night without regard to their health or morality. .The New York court took that view of women which Is charac teristic of the Bowery tough and the European peasant. The decision il lustrates the cast of opinions which Tammany politicians may be expect ed to hold when they become judges. On the other hand, the Supreme Court of the United States expresses the view of women whlcH Is held not only by advanced humanitarian think ers, but by the poets,.the prophets and the sages of all the world. "As healthy mothers are essential to vigorous off spring," the court declares, "the phys ical well-being of woman becomes an object of public interest and care." Are not healthy fathers also essential to vigorous offspring? Stockbreeders know that the sire's health is as im portant. as the dam's, and the courts will learn it after a while, perhaps; we must not expect them to move too fast. When our Supreme Court uses the language we are about to quote. there Is no reason for despair. "The sexes differ In structure of body, in the functions to be performed by each, in the amount of physical strength, in the capacity for long-continued labor. . . This difference Justifies a dif ference In legislation and upholds that which is designed to compe'nsate her for some of the burdens that rest upon her." Such is the gospel of the in spired prophets. If she be small, slight natured, miserable. How shall men grow? . Tennyson asked this question sixty years tego, and today our highest'eourt answers by saying that they cannot grow with dwarfed mothers. "Woman is ' not undeveloped man," the poet goes on to say, "but, diverse. Could we make her as the man, sw.eet love were slain." Yet in the long yeans must they Uker grow. The man be more of woman, she of man; And so these- twain upon the skirts of time Sit side by side full-summed In all their powers. Then comes the statelier Eden back to men. Then reign the world' great bridals chaste and calm; Then springs the crowning race of humankind. Milton said that woman and man both showed the image of their glori ous Maker, but they were not equal. Man was formed for, valor and con templation. For softness she and sweet attractive grace; He for God only, she for God In him. Neither men nor women, according to Milton, were formed for the sole purpose of selling their labor power to the trusts. RAILROAD LAND FRAUD. Fraud has always marked the rail road land grants in Oregon. The land was obtained by fraud and the parts sold have been disposed of by fraudu lent violation of the terms of the grants. More than 2,000,000 acres are held by the Southern Pacific in diso bedience of those terms. The Oregon & California Railroad repudiated the conditions attached to the grants for protection of the public interest, from the very first. The land was given to the railroad in trust, to aid construction of its lines and to be disposed of as the Government would have sold it to settlers. But the railroad assumed absolute owner ship and has refused to sell the lands as the terms require namely, at a price not exceeding 2.50 an acre, In quantities of not more than 160 acres to each purchaser, and to actual set tlers only. Details of this unlawful grab have heen exposed for the first time, com pletely and consecutively, by B. D. Townsend, special attorney for the De partment of Justice. "The provisions of the grants restricting the manner of sales," says Mr. Townsend in his report, "have never been respected. The lands have been sold to any per son, whether settler or speculator, in as large quantities as possible, and at the highest prices possible. In mak ing sales, the railroad has always ob served the law of supply and demand, and has never obeyed the law of Con gress." The very purpose for which Con gress inserted the restrictions in the grants to prevent speculation in the land by the railroad and others in large quantities, and creation of a great estate, the railroad has thwarted by ignoring the restrictions and assert ing absolute ownership of the land. And now a vast proprietorship is in the hands of Harriman, which he an nounces he will keep. The people of Oregon long have needed the information contained in the report of Mr. Townsend. The railroad has sold only 15 per cent of the land that has passed out of Its hands In compliance with the granting acts. It now holds In violation of those acts, refusing to sell, 2,080,306.44 acres, or 72 per cent of what It has received from the Government, It has sold only 4 per cent in compli ance with the law- The report shows that the land pat ented to the railroad amounts to 2,894,215.26 acres, and that the rail road has filed selections for 300,000 acres more; that the railroad has sold 610,215.40 acres and contracted to sell 203,693.42 acres additional, a total of 813,808.82; that It has sold in com pliance with the acts of Congress as to $2.50 an acre price limit and 160 acre quantity limit to each purchaser 127,418.57 acres; that It has sold within the acreage limit of 160 acres to each purchaser, but exceeding the $2.50 an acre price, only 170,561.63, and has sold in excess of the 160-acre limit 615,928.62 acres. Of the last named total, 363,991.50 were pur chased by thirty-eight Individuals, in quantities exceeding 2000 by each pur chaser, in the last ten years, since the demand for timber land has been active.- In the total of conveyances, only 1947 sales have complied with the $2.50-an-acre and 160-acre llmtts.'and 3376 sales have violated those restric tions. These totals do not take into ac count sales in which several deeds were made to one purchaser. Were this done, the number of sales obeying the law would be somewhat smaller than 1947. Between the years 1890 and 1902 the railroad sold 400,000 acres to timber men and speculators In quanti ties exceeding 1000 acres to each pur chaser. Late In 1902 the railroad adopted the policy of refusing to sell, and in September, 1907, Mr. Harri man in a speech at Oakland, Cal., an nounced that this policy would be per manent. In 1891 the railroad ceased giving warranty deeds and thereafter used the quitclaim form, thereby freeing it self from liability should title be menaced, as now seems likely to oc cur In cases of transfers in violation of the granting acts. In the sales so far made. Inclusive of deeds given and contracts to con vey title yet pending, the average pur chase price per acre has been $5.42, realizing approximately $4,500,000. If the terms of the granting 'acts had been observed, the railroad would have received for all the land not more than $8,000,000. But it now asserts abso lute ownership, of the remaining lands, amounting to 2,080,306 acres and as sessed for taxes in 1906 at $18,000,000. Up to the present year the railroad has paid $1,000,000 in taxes on the land. Up to 1891 the total taxes paid was but $75,000. More than one-half the $1,000,000 has been paid since 1902. In that year the railroad re fused to sell any more land. Then As sessors began marking up the land like other holdings. "In other words," says the report, "the greater portion of the taxes paid by the rail road company down to the present time have been incurred by it as a direct result of its own violation of the law. . It Is difficult to see how any equities can be predicated upon these facts." The total taxes paid by the railroad do not average more than 40 cents an acre. Here, then, are facts that the people and the Government long have want ed. They reveal a long train of fraud reaching back thirty-five years. This fraud should be terminated. The railroad should be forced to release the lands still in its clutches, either by forfeiture or by order to sell them in obedience to the conditions of the grants. Early adoption of Senator Fulton's resolution in the House is hoped for and then Immediate pro ceedings in the courts. The Morning Astorian has Issued an exceptionally handsome edition devot ed to exploitation of the resources of the city by the sea and surrounding territory. The paper is illustrated with numerous half-tone engravings showing the various industries which contribute to the wealth of Clatsop County. That the prestige of the en terprising city at the mouth of the river no longer rests on salmon and sawlogs is shown by some remarkable pictures of orchards, dairy ranches and small farming enterprises. The pictures are accompanied with com prehensive data which cannot fail to attract the attention of the homeseek er and small investor, and for. this purpose the efforts of the Astorian will undoubtedly prove successful. There are thousands of acres of won derfully rich land in Clatsop County, and artificial Irrigation is unnecessary. For this reason alone it offers induce ments of unusual value to intending settlers. The Astorian and its gener ous supporters in the advertising col umns are entitled to much credit for the effort. "From Wisconsin to Nebraska, over Into Colorado, back to Wiscon .sin, down again to Wyoming and Colorado. It was no use. He moved about from Denver to Iowa, back to Colorado, on to California, the Hawaiian Islands, and Oregon and back." No, gentle reader, this is not an extract from the autobiography of a tramp In search of work which he hoped he would not find. It is the personal narrative of a great man In search of what he and his biographer, Llckum Stuffins, termed "liberty." While other men stuck to their posts and hewed out fortunes by persistent effort, this great man, following the ranks of brake-beam-riders, went up and down the earth in search of liberty, which, ac cording to his Interpretation, was to make every one . else think as he thought. Of course they could not all do as he did, or we would today be a Nation of tramps and Idlers, but even this shows that we are all wrong and he alone is right. Now this great man says, and possibly thinks, he is a. can didate for Senator from Oregon. There are two saloons at Second and Couch and now the license committee of the Council proposes to establish another on a third corner. There is still one corner on which there is to be no saloon, at least not now, but of course time will tell. Yet two saoons ought to te enough, even if it is a fac tory district. Many young women, em ployed there, pass this corner every day. A large number of them joined in a protest to the Council to deny a license to the third saloon. Doesn't the Council think the protest of these, decent and deserving young women ought to be heeded? The public is likely to think so, and perhaps will have prohibition down there some day if moderation In granting saloon li censes is not practiced now. The Supreme Court of the United States has taken a hand In the "sell-iivg-whisky-to-lndians" industry, and decided that the laws of the United States take precedence over those of any state. Prior to this decision laws in a number of states in which Indian reservations were located have held that Indians on allotted lands were cit izens and as such could not have their rights abridged. The Supreme Court decision takes the ground that an In dian is an Indian, and, as the unfavor able effects of firewater on his consti tution are proverbial, he will not be allowed to Indulge. Matrimony seems to be a criminal offense in the eyes of the Portland School Directors, but It is very doubt ful whether they can legally discharge a teacher for getting married so long as her work Is well done. If the law permits action so flatly contrary to sound policy, it ought to be changed. In the interest of morality and the general welfare, matrimony should be encouraged, not penalized. On gen eral principles a married woman will be a better teacher than a spinster, and the same rule applies to men also. For concrete Illustration it may be said that Republicans who object to Statement No. 1 do not like the alter native it may present of the selection of Mr. TTRen for Senator as against Mr. Chamberlain. Of course it is entirely accidental that Uncle Sam's protest against Japan's usurpation of Manchuria is held back until Bob Evans gets within hailing distance. The woman was and Is an adven turess, plying her trade. She was rightly convicted. But it does not ex cuse Mayor Lane. If this fine Summer weather con tinues very long we shall be witness ing a rush to the beaches. TAXATION IN OHIO. Snbsance of the Report of the Tax Commission, January, 1908. The members of the commission .have been deeply Impressed by the Inequalities. and' injustice revealed by the operation of the existing tax laws of Ohio. It is im possible to account for the patience with which these evils have been borne except upon the theory that the complexity of our methods of taxation has favored the concealment of their results. A more gen eral discussion of the subject, however. which has been going on with Increasing insistence for Rpveral rears, and which ' resulted finally In. the present movement for a modern and equitable system of taxation, has brought to lisht certain conspicuous wrongs that are no longer either denied or defeated. The first and most important of these is that the general property tax bears un justly upon the owners of real estate, whether farm lands or city homes, and permits with Increasing advantage the escape from taxation of all forms of per sonal property, and particularly of that class of personal property from the taxing authorities. 1 Of all the consequences of the a;en ral property tax, the moat deplor able is that which produces an ever Increaslns; burden upon real property and an ever-diminishing? share on per sonal property In the support of the Government which frlves an equal pro tection to both. In 1870 real estate paid fi0.7 per cent of all taxes, and personal property 39.3. while In 1907 real estate paid 57.7 per cent of air taxes, and personal property but 32.3. The escape from taxation of fully 90 per cent of all intangible property, which Is undoubtedly going on In Ohio today. Increases by exactly its share the burden upon the owners of other property, and particularly the owners of real estate, which, under no circumstances, can al together avoid taxation. We recommend an amendment of the Constitution . of Ohio revising the gen eral property tax now required, and giv ing to the Lesisldt'.tre a freer hand to deal with 6uch subjects as franchises, stocks, bonds, cash, mortgages and other Intangible property. AN 'OPEN LETTER TO W. S. U'REN Here's a Chance for the Lawmaker to Debate Statement No. 1. PORTLAND, Or., Feb. 25. Mr. W. S. U'Ren, Oregon City, Or. Sir: You have, within the last few days Issued challenges to Hon. Stephen A. Lowell, of Pendleton, Hon. George H. Williams, of Portland, and others, to meet you In debate on the, primary law of this state and the so-called Statement No. 1. Both the above gentlemen have declined your challenge. You- take the ground that the law or laws in question are right, just and proper for the people of Oregon. As you claim the authorship of these laws, and as you seem to be anxious to impress on the Oregon public your desire to have them prevail at the coming state election in June, I ac cept your challenge to debate the question, I taking the ground tlfat the law or laws in question are unjust, in equitable 'and unconstitutional. You are posing as the great law giver of the State of Oregon, and In the county where you have resided for a number of years you are pre-, sumed by politicians to have a strong influence. In 1896 you were elected from Clackamas County on the Populist trcket for Representative by a vote of 2528. In 1893-you were a candidate on the Fuslqn ticket for State Senator from the. same county, and was de feated by George C. Brownell, a Re publican. Your vote was 170G, show ing that you were not so popular in 1818 as you wore in 1896 by 822 votes. I maintain that the people are com pletely disgusted with your vagaries, and I propose to show that your so called Statement No. 1 is about the greatest humbug that was ever foisted upon an unsuspecting people, and it is my great ambition to enter into this debate with you in order to show up this humbug to the people of this com monwealth, and I am sure the people of this state are anxious to hear you defend these creations. I accept your challenge and will make the necessary arrangements to carry out your wishes. Let me hear your answer at your earliest convenience. Respectfully. J. D. STEVENS. 1746 East Twenty-third street. Port land, Or. UNTIL NEXT JUNE, AND THEN. Mrs. Abigail Scott Dunlnlr Criticizes Anti-Suffragists' Manifesto. PORTLAND, Feb. 25. (To the Editor.) I am glad, Indeed, to see by today's Oregonlan that Mrs. Ralph Wilbur's long delayed and painfully labored manifesto against equal rights for Oregon mothers has at last given out its feeble wall. The expected Infant had been so long In com ing that we began to fear It had "died a-bornin . The Oregon State Equal Suffrage Asso ciation has not yet released to the news papers its "Open Letter to Voters," which has been filed in the office of the gentle manly Secretary -of State for nearly a month, ready at any time for Inspection by Mrs. Wilbur's senehmen. Nor. are we now ready to release it preferring to per mit the present legal voters of the stato to manage their own affairs, as they used to do, untrammelcd before Mrs. ..llbur took up her abode among us, to dictate terms to them, and who knows as little of the peeds. duties, alms, responsibili ties and handicaps of - Oregon's falthfiil mothers as she knows of the amenities of courtesy and civility that lead wiser women to mind their own business. No reply will be offered to the childish manifesto of this notoriety-seeking woman. We note the absence, this year, of the names of the prominent taxpaying women of Portland whom Mrs. Wilbur used to parade as her "backers" in the Issuance of her stereotyped manifesto. The very leading businesa men, repre senting all political parties of Oregon, have, of their own accord, espoused the cause of Oregon motherhood In the Inter est of liberty, rlghteousnes, chivalry, jus tice and patriotism. They will speak for themselves In our 'behalf next June Mrs. Wilbur's dictum to the contrary, notwith standing. ABIGAIL SCOTT DUNI WAY, Mother of Men and President of Oregon State Equal Suffrage Association. The Democratic Mule. Hill3boro 'Argils. Senator Bourne has .issued an ap peal to Republican voters to support Statement No. 1 candidates, and Ful ton is opposing the statement. If The fight' keeps up in the party, there Is a possibility that the Democratic mule will be found eating hay in the elephant's stall, after the election. Let us have harmony. Public . Ownership of Boats Fails. Boston Transcript. . Block Island is trying to bond her self for $200,000 to ward off the men ace of impatient creditors, .who other wise may levy on the town. She fell into this difficulty through public ownership of a steamboat . line. The Difference. Philadelphia Bulletin. In the days of old, When kinghta were bold. Their weapons seldom-rusted; When they got through A small set-to Two suits of mail were busted. In days of new A small set-to Brings little harm to fighters;. when up they wind We merely find pair ot wrecked typewriters. WHAT THE SOUTHERN' PAPERS SAY Variety of Views on Crowlsg Political Sentiment of Dixie Land. Charleston (S. C.) News and Courier. Dem. If the politicians of Soutn Carolina must have a Bryan delegation, let them have it, but they must elect It with their eyes open. Election of United States Senators toy popular vote would Invite the candi dacy of independents in every Southern state and demolish the political solidarity of the Southern white party. . Should Repudiate Mr. Cannon. Dflllas (Texas) News. Dem. The Cannon view as to the duty and prerogative of a presiding officer is a view that the people of this country can not repudiate too quickly or too emphat ically; and even those generously indulged "Infants" and "Interests" that he has so heroically protected appear to be afraid that his nomination by the party. If such a thing were possible, might defeat the party at the polls. Miss Democracy Gets Advice. Nashville (Tcnn.) American. Dcm. It Is true the party Is In a bad way, hut It will not improve its situation by throw ing tip its hat every time Roosevelt uses his big Btick. It has more to gain by standing up for the constitution and equal and exact justice to all men. Sans culot tism, socialism and other dangerous isms will never bring victory to its banner, and of these Roosevelt is now the chief exponent. 'Wants- Leader to Beat Mr. Bryan. Charlotte (N. C.) Observer, Dem. What is the difficulty? Have we no men In whom the people have confidence? We have Gray and Harmon and Johnson and Woodrow Wilson. They are Democrats and of Presidential size. What is our dif ficulty? The answer is not hard to give: We need a leader, a powerful voice raised cry for the opposition to Bryan, no man about whom the forces of opposition can assemble. The possible leaders seem to be frightened by the seemingly Inevitable. We need a leader, a powerful voice raiser in protest, a powerful personality thrown into the light. We need a man who Is not afraid of political death. If Cleveland were on the morning side of f.0 again there would be a fight that would shake the world. Tearful Appeal for Democratic Unity. Florida Times-Union, Dem. Mr. Bryan Indicts the Roosevelt admin istration and condemns the effects of those policies which he claims as his own. How can wo suppose that the same poli cies will produce contrary effects wnen administered by President Bryan? Shall we Judge the tree by its fruit or the fruit by the tree? Why should any man believe that the policies are so fair and so deserv ing of our love and support If these be the fruits, the effects and the promises of their growth? What Is a name? If Roosevelt and Bryan be right, why not admit that socialism has long shown us the path of wisdom and that both of the great American parties should now be merged In the one source of wisdom to which both have so nearly approached? One plunge, gentlemen, and all la over. Long live chaos! "If We Don't Watch Oat." Florida Times-Union, Dcm. Mr. Bryan possesses power despite his denial and he has dictated to us; let him beware that his theories do not lead him astray. He opposes Imperialism, but he opened the gates to It when he secured the ratification of the treaty with Spain. He must see now that his financial theories are Impracticable and dangerous. He claims Jefferson as his model, but he must know that his democracy is not that of the fathers. He should tremble when he sees that Roosevelt, professing the same theories, scorns law and pro poses to wipe out the state, to change the constitution by legislation or con struction and would substitute a benefi cent man for an Impersonal law. Mr. Bryan is a master of words; let him be careful that he does not deceive him self with them. THE FUTURE OK ROOSEVELT. He Has Decided Not to Be Senator From New York. From Walter Wellman's Washington letter in Chicago Record-Herald. What will President Roosevelt do after his present term expires, a little more tha na year hence? This is a question which many have asked, and which no one is able to 'answer. The President himself cannot answer it, for the- simple reason that he does not know. But there is one point as to his future as to which he has finally and definitely made up his mind. He will not accept a seat in the United States Senate. Within the past 48 hours the President has told personal friends of his decision as to this. There has been a great deal of talk of the President going to the Senate as the successor of Senator Thomas C. Piatt, of New York, who will step down and out the 4th of March, 1909. For a long time the President himself looked upon this with favor. Without at any time reaching a conclusion, the idea appealed to him. and he talked it over with his friends, some of whom advised him to go to the Senate, and some of whom are radically opposed to the suggestion. Until quite rc eently it has been strongly believed by those in the confidence of Mr. Roosevelt that when the time came, fur a decision on this score If If ever did pome the President would consent to wear the toga and sit in the "Amer ican House of Lords. Upless Mr. Roosevelt again changes his mind this may now be regarded as out of the question. The determining factor In this deci sion Is found In the peculiar duties of a Senator. The Senate Is an executive council. It must give "advice and con sent" to the Prcsldont in all treaties and appointments. If Mr. Roosevelt were to become a member of the Sen ate the day he retires from the White House his duties as a member of that body would be peculiarly delicate. If, for Instance, Mr. Taft wore to become President the same day, the ex Presldent, as- Senator, would find It necessary either to champion the Ad ministration and acts of his successor or to criticise them from time to tlino, because with Mr. Roosevelt there is no middle ground. Either would be embarrassing. The same is true if Mr. Bryan or another Democrat should enter the White House that eventful day in March next. Senator Roosevelt would find it difficult to defend the policies of the new President If he attacked them he would lay himself open to all sorts of criticism. Sseehenyls Reward Police Offlclnl. New York World. Police Lieutenant William Kennel, who has stood guard at the door of every Mayor since Mr. Strong, Is one of the "chostiest" bluocoats In New York just now. The cause was a handsome present which arrived at the City Hall accom panied by a card bearing the inscription, "With best remembrances. Count and Countess Szechenyi." The present, in a semi-circulax morocco case, consisted of a handsome set of amethyst dress waist coat buttons, shirt buttons and cuff links. There are 13 pieces. Before he was free to accept the gift Lieutenant Kennel had to get permission from General Bingham. The gift from Count and Countess Szechenyi was in recognition of Kennel's services in getting them into City Clerk Scully's office witnout publicity on the day they went to the City Hall to get a marriage license. Chicago's "13" Club Disbands. Indianapolis News. . A thirteen club was disbanded in Chi cago by 113 members breaking mirrors, spilling salt, raising umbrellas and walk ing under ladders. SILHOUETTES BY ARTHUR A. GREENE. THEJ reason why many automobillsts are in bad odor with the authorities is the scent of the gasoline. The one who bears animosities, con fesses his own defeat. It usually requires about six months for the statute of limitations to run against a love affair. The average woman Is reconciled to death for she thinks as an angel she will be able to display her lingerie. Deep down in her heart almost every woman cherlehes an ambition to be an artist's model. The only time a woman refuses to tell a bit of scandal is when It Involves her self. The following advertisement has been running for some time in a local news paper: "Wanted A governess of pure French type" Some people are too exacting for any use. As It Was In the Benlnnlna;. From out the somber quiet of a veld Where nothing was, A voice called omnlform creation To spread a feast therein And deck a bower fair. Then called a man And grav'ed upon his soul, "I reign, thou servest. And art not of thyself supreme." The summoned puppet read no word Nor of no doom took heed; For nascent life was large upon his con sciousness. He reared a tawdry throne, And of' Ambition's draught drank all, Then hurled the chalice far and shrieked: "I am the King." The Summoqer called seas to rise And when the day was done Remained alone the ooze of perished things. It Is Now and Ever Shall Be. Cycles and centuries and years What are they? But a day. To him who In the hollow of his hand Doth hold our fortunes. Dynasties, powers and regimes arise And for their passing hour of glory are the cal'ed. Then to their death they rush And leave behind Naught but rude scrawls upon the gate ot Time. Solitude Is the happy cloister of the world-weary. s Heaven Is not reached at a single bound. It ts attained by means of a long winding staircase after the elevator has stopped running. The philosopher is always ready to view calmly the misfortunes of his friends. When a woman Is uncertain of her self she flirts. With a man the rule is reversed. If the eyes are the-windows of the soul It should require but little spying to discover that most of us are untidy housekeepers. Youth is an invitation to a masque ball which we must all, perforce, ac cept. Wj mingle with the dancers un til our fancy fixes upon a domino and a pair of tripping feet and with them we tread a measure. Wearying of the dance, we go into the moonlight of the garden to "sit it out." We un mask and, presto, for tis the ball is over and youth is dead. Kiddle Me This. What Is this thing that we call hope? Tritely we say that it springs eternal In the human, breast, but this truism Is no solution. Who can diag nose the method of its springing? What one among you can riddle that? It is the unanswered wherefore.. In every breast a lamp is trimmtd and burning. Sometimes it flickers low, but it rarely or never fails. It seems a part of the day's work that we should- be disappointed and dis illusioned. Perfect happiness does not come to mortals. Not one among the many millions who have gone before learned the secret of it. Hopes and plans and aspirations fall. Cloud-scaling dreams of empire and ambitions lofty as mountaintops come out ot the past-gibleitt)g spec-tt-i-.s. There is no recompense in all the world for the loss of our illusions and failure and death seem everyone's only certain portion'. In and through it all, however, the beacon of Hope, sometimes 'flaring into a. great flame, sometimes dying down to a dimming ember, ig always there, a fire of good omen lighted on life's highway. It may be the spark of Divinity. It may be an Ignis fatuus, dancing before us through the wilderness of time. What one can say? Who knows the wliyfore? Riddle me this and tell me if you can. Hero worship is the most aggravated form of paganism. I have never been able to become enthusiastic over holding gloved hands. Although blood may be thicket- than water it is seldom equal to the task of floating a loan. l U'Ren's candidacy for United States Senator is the best political joke per petrated in Oregon since Otto Prag ran for the City Council. Glory and also hozanna! Our Mayor is not guilty. And so the sanctity of our well-meaning if slightly Impulsive burgomaster is preserved to be virtue's beacon for the gruidance of his people. Plaint of a Popular Poet. Exchange. Had I been born in other days I think 1 should have been a bard. And scribbled songs in Beauty's praise And written epics by the yard. But as It is 1 simply wake A very dilettante lyre. And mincing little verses make For languid maidens to admire. The strains of love are not for me. Nor yet the roaring rants of war, The line? 1 weave so daimtiy A 11 quaintly esoteric are; And though I don't exactly know What my melodious maundering means It smehow never fails to "ko" With all the high-class magazines. i