TITE MORNING OltEGOXIAX, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 190S. 10 PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Poetoftloa as fivnod-CISM Matter. eobiuiptioB Kale Iarariablj la Advance. (Br Mail.) Tally. Sunday Included, one year 00 la!,y. Sunday InciuJed. six montha ... 4 -s I'ailjr. bunday Included, threa montha.. z : I'ally. Sunday Included, one month...- Jjally. althout Sun1ay. one year I'aily, without Sunday, air montha..... I'aiijr. wllnout Sunday, three m-ntha. . .1 T . - ,. , . . . A . . - An. Binnth -BAJ Weekly, one year '. !? eunaay. on yer.... Sunday and Weekly, on year 2 50 S 50 lily Carrier.) Pally. Sunday lneluded. on yar.. 00 Xally. Sunday Included, on month.... Hw to Remit Bend poatoSice "J"1' e.rtir. e xprera order or personal checK on your loril bank. Stamps, coin or currency re at the s-nrter'a rlek- Olv po.tolc ad ojeas In full. Including county and atata. Psatas Rate 10 to 14 pane. 1 cent; 1 to iiS paca. -i centa; 30 to 44 pases. 8 centa. 40 to SO paaea. 4 ceo la Fraia pota double ratee. Eastern Bualneaa Office The a C. Beck tiii Social Aency New York, room 4S ') Triuune bulldins. Chicago, room Slu-ow Tr 'iunf building PORTLAND, FRIDAY, NOV. , A KICK OF THE LIQUOR TIUDE. In the ordinary and natural course of thinirs. Taft should have had 100. 000 majority In Ohio and 40,000 to SO.OOO in Indiana. The vote of the people on National issues In these states should have been not unlike that In the other great northern states. But In both the majorities for Taft were relatively small. It was due to the effort of the liquor Interests. In opposition to local option. Those In terests have at the same time elected the Governor In each of the states of Indiana and Ohio, and have elected the majority of the members of the Legislature In one of them and possi bly In the other. At the same time they have thrown their forces for sev eral members of Congress, and have elected them. It was the enactment of the local option law In the states of Ohio and Indiana that produced this fury and outbreak; that Is. it was the revolt of the liquor trade against control or extinction, under local option. The law shuts out the sale of liquor In many of the counties of either state, and this action at the polls Is In the nature of retaliation and revenge. The course of the liquor trade on this sub ject, which enured wholly to the bene fit of the Democratic party, was rec ognized, long before the election, as making the two great central states uncertain as to Taft, and uncertain es to Senators and Representatives In Congress. But now, since it Is over, will the local option laws In Ohio and Indiana be repealed? Nay. verily. The party that has had the benefit of the storm against this law will not even so much as suggest repeal. If the liquor trade would cease fighting, be as quiet end decent as it can, and realize that It exists simply by sufferance but mustn't be arrogant. It would have very little trouble in the districts where permitted at alL PHOTOGRAPHY CHKCK9 FRAl'IHLF.XT VOTING. In the city of New York an extra ordinary method was adopted to pre vent illegal voting. When the elec tor registered, each and every one was required, as usual, to make his signature. These were photographed for each and every election district In the city. The photographs of sig natures, two copies at every voting booth the original remained at the office of registration were means of Identification of the voter, if chal lenged. He was obliged to write his name and the original, transcribed by photography, was at hand for iden tification. If he couldn't write his name, his mark would suffice. If the photographed names of his witnesses were with it. It proved the most effective method of preventing Illegal voting ever known. For Greater New York 7000 photographic lists were necessary. They were bound In books and in dexed according to alphabet. It was Impossible for one Individual to per sonate another, and voting on dead men's names was cut out entirely. The method was a nearly complete estop pel of many of the prartices of Tam many, and. as a consequence of it, it is believed that Tammany never more will be able to manufacture Its old time colossal majorities. The process most likely will be ex tended to other cities. It is the com pleted way yet employed for preven tion of fraudulent voting. The signa ture books at each polling place, showing an exact copy of the original, of course are obtainable only by re course to photography. SI'RKAUINH THK GOSI'KL OF GOOD FARMING. One of the moat practical and far reaching experiments that has ever been made by railroad managers for the development of the carrying trade was Inaugurated a few years ago when the first "corn train" was sent out ' over the principal railroads of Iowa, accompanied by practical instructors in the art of making two bushels of corn grow where but one grew before, by proper drainage, cultivation and seed selection. Instant popularity greeted this train from start to finish. An element in this popularity was the gratification the farmer felt at the in terest that the railroad managers were) taking In his vocation. The motive was, of course, at bottom a selfish one; but selfishness f this type rules In the commercial world, and the agricul tural as well, and is In Itself the main spring of prosperity. It puts the cor poration spirit in closest touch with The spirit of Individual enterprise to the manifest advantage of both. The experiment of the "corn train" has been repeated In various localities of the West for several years with in creasing success. In our own state It has taken the form of a farming dem onstration train sent out by the South ern Pacific, and, accompanied by dairy, fruit and wheat experts from the Stats Agricultural College, it Is now abroad spreading the gospel of good farming. Intelligent dairying and acientiflc fruit growing throughout the Valley. Schools have been dismissed at various points to allow the children to profit by instruction that can never come too early to country boys and girls. Farm ers cut off from such sources of infor mation in their youth and young man hood are eager students of ways and means whereby their lands may be made more productive and the quality " of their crops Improved. Conscious of their inability to deal with the problem of modern dairying without competent Instruction, dairymen flock to the dem onstration train and listen intently while the state's experts expound the science. It must be clear to all who visit the farmers' demonstration train and lis ten to the addresses and Instructions of those who accompany it that the I old era In agriculture, horticulture and dairying has passed away, and that in Its place new methods, new results and increased profits are found. "The old est of Industries" has now become the youngest in eagerness to learn and thereby make the most of Its oppor tunities. MKBELI A REMINDER, Since Jefferson, the great Apostle of Democracy, let us say the John the Baptist of Democracy, put up Madi son as his successor, and then put up Monroe as the successor of MadiBon. don't you worry any longer about Taft and Roosevelt, Roosevelt making Taft his own successor. You see the Republic has survived these crises. And other crises. And more crises are yet to be survived. Though Jefferson is utterly dis credited, and all that he contended for perished at Richmond and Appomat tox, the Government at Washington still lives still lives, because Jefferson was turned down at Richmond and Appomattox. It was not his dictation of Madison as his own successor, nor his dictation of Monroe, as the successor of Madi son, that troubled anybody. Those were trifling Incidents. Such things will do for people to talk about who have no conception of first or funda mental principles. Jefferson's first and distinctive prin ciple was exaltation of state sover-etgnts- over National sovereignty. The crisis of American history rose out of this conflict. Never mind his dictation of the nomination of his successors for the next sixteen years. But he didn't like . Jackson-, and de clared there were one hundred men In Albemarle County (Va.) fitter to be President. PRKSniENT ELIOT. The news that Charles William Eliot has retired from the presidency of Harvard University will Interest every enlightened American. His ad ministration began In 1869 when he was 35 years old so that it has covered a period of 40 years. During that Interval the Ideals of educational pur poses and methods in this country have been completely transformed and to President Eliot more than to any other man the credit of the great work is due. But one person, the late Daniel C. Gllman, the famous Presi dent of Johns Hopkins University, could have been named as a possible rival, but the achievements of these two remarkable Individuals lay along lines so divergent that they supple ment rather than compete with each other. To Dr. Gllman we owe the or ganization of genuine university work in the United States as distinguished from the high school and college studies which before his day passed for university education. His-principal feats were of an administrative nature. Among educationists his or ganizing ability was supreme. Dr. Eliot has not only been a busi ness man of unusual capacity, but he has also been a propagandist of new and revolutionary theories. He has known the bitterness of strife and has felt the edge of satire as every pioneer must in the world of thought. When he assumed the presidency of Har vard the college was pretty well cob webbed over. For -the time it was a wealthy school and Its enrollment was large, but It had fallen Into academic routine. The spell of antiquity was upon It. Tradition had replaced vital thought. Reverence for established customs seemed to put progress out of the question. The schools of law, medicine and theology were virtually independent of one another, droning along year after year in prosy lethargy well satisfied to be forever as they then were. President Eliot brought into the ancient halls of the college new life and a disturbing energy. It had been the custom for previous presidents to drop into the meetings of the medical faculty once dr twice a year as a matter of form without a thought "of interfering with business. Dr. Eliot took the chair from the first and kept it. "What is the reason for all this hurlyburly. this upsetting of the established ways?" Inquired Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes at one of these newly enlivened sessions. The humorous author and physician was not altogether pleased with the Inno vations. "I'll tell you the reason," replied Dr. Eliot serenely, "there's a new president." New he was in every way. He be gan by organizing the helter-skelter faculties of the school Into a powerful and united body. Then came the long campaign for elective studies which is not yet entirely over, albeit the fight against the new idea Is now nothing but a skirmish. Dr. Gllman of Johns Hopkins never accepted the elective system. He adopted in place of It a scheme of what he called "groups." The student was given his choice among a number of groups of studies, but he was forbidden to wander at will among the courses offered by the professors and select what he ' liked. Yale has bowed at last to the logic of events and made her courses elec tive, but she was almost the last Im portant school in the country to do It. Her reluctance to adopt the Harvard idea illustrates the deep contrast be tween our two most famous universi ties. Harvard stands for the forward movement in thought and practice; Yale stands for the good old ways, even when their goodness has become more or less questionable. Harvard represents the ideal in American life; Yale represents the material. While Dr. Eliot Is a pioneer in the realm of speculative educational thought. Presi dent Hadley of Yale Is a great author ity on railroads. The so-called Har vard Idea has both its good and Its bad sides. At its best it gives us Charles Eliot Norton. the stern champion of democracy enlightened by art and purified by obedience to God, or a Roosevelt who has the cour age to do and die for his concept of duty; at its worst it gives us the sickly mollycoddle for whom duty has no meaning and life is a dismal dream. Dr. Eliot was led to his scheme of elective, studies by comparing the in efficiency of American education in the sixties with the solid accomplish ments of Europe. The graduate of the German or French university went out into the world thoroughly equip ped to take up technical work and carry ft through. The American col lege graduate knew rather less than nothing of a practical sort while his classics and mathematics were pitiable phantasms. If he wished to learn anything worth while he had to go to Europe. As a matter of fact, every student of American biography up to the last twenty years or so expects to read of each man that "after grad uating at Harvard or Yale with the highest honors he went to Germany to complete his studies." This Is a polite way of saving that he went to Germany to begin his studies. That la what Dr. Eliot himself went for and he came back an expert In chemistry. How many remember that the great educational theorist wrote a text book of chemistry in those far-off days when he was at the head of the Institute of Technology? The cause of our educa tional Inefficiency Dr. Eliot saw in the cut and dried courses and methods of the colleges, their foolish depend ence upon theology, and thffir seedv old faculties. He perceived tha,t the adoption of elective studies would re vive them at one stroke. It would put new life into the branches, rout theology, .eliminate the half dead pro fessors and compel the adoption of modern methods of instruction. All this would come through the force of competition, he prophesied, and events have confirmed his foresight. The retirement of Dr. Eliot formally ends the public career of our most eminent teacher and college admin istrator; but there is no reason to fear that he will not continue to think for many years to come and express his thoughts with his habitual compelling vigor. . RETTRN OF PROSPERITY. Gratifying in the extreme is the in dustrial news from the Eastern manu facturing districts as well as from those nearer home. The protracted period of waiting and uncertainty that has been so trying on the nerves of business men has given way to a feeU ing of confidence which is reflected in all lines of trade. Prior to election it was generally believed that the stock market, which had been steadily re gaining its lost strength, had reached a point where any possible advantage due to Republican success would be fully discounted; but even In that ac curate trade barometer remarkable gains were scored es soon as the news of Mr. Taft's election had been con firmed. . In the East, numerous large fac tories are resuming operations with liberal orders which had been held up pending result of the election. These orders are from merchants who have been sailing close to the wind since the panic of a year ago, and who are now ready to aban don the hand-to-mouth policy that seemed necessary so long as there was a possibility of election of Bryan and the attendant flight of confidence from all lines of business. There is noth ing manufactured or artificial about this confidence and Its effects. It is the spontaneous and natural demon stration of normally healthy business conditions 'which for a time have been held in bondage by distrust of a blighting change In our political and economic policies. Money Is plentiful. Never In the history of the country has there been more of it stacked up in the banks. For several years our farming indus tries have enjoyed wonderful pros perity, and naturally not only the farmers but others Indirectly interest ed in their prosperity, have accumu lated large sums which since the panic a year ago have been held off the mar ket. Recovery from that panic has been remarkably rapid, but it would have been much more rapid had we not been threatened with a drastic change in the political policy of the country. This return of optimism, vigor and confidence means more to the Pacific Coast than to any other part of the country. It Is here that the opportunities for development and growth on a large scale are greater than anywhere else in the United States. With an abundance of money at the low rates which are encouraged by confidence in the future, it will be pos sible for the railroads to proceed with their needed extensions and improve ments, and following these extensions will come other Industries throughout the territory traversed. There will be no wild, hysterical boom, but there will be a steady and uninterrupted move toward greater things In all of the Pacific Northwest. In that move ment Portland stands In a position to realize more heavily than any other Pacific Coast port, for the reason that, even in the height of our prosperity about a year ago real estate values never soared t the dizzy extremes reached by other cities on the Coast. The drastic liquidation of last year had a great moral effect on our finan cial Institutions and the business of high finance, received such a shdck that It will not soon, if ever, reach the prominence gained at that time. With housecleanlng completed among the weak financial institutions, and with four years of stable, reliable ad ministration of the affairs of the Gov ernment, there is nothing that can prevent the entire country, and espe cially the Pacific Coast, from steadily working up to a higher plane of pros perity than we have ever known be fore. A JOYFTL ANNIVERSAB1 Yesterday, November 5; was Guy Fawkes day. If Portland citizens were as observant es they might be of the customs of their' British ancestors, they would have constructed an ef figy of the great conspirator and burned it with hootings and shrieks of pious rage. The weather was s fine that It was almost a pity the festival was forgotten. But even In England it Is no longer celebrated with the zeal it once was. Except In .-the cathedral towns, where all pious observances are naturally attended to better than elsewhere, Guy Fawkes Is virtually forgotten, and his day passes like any other. His memory has faded with the waning of the old bitterness be tween the Catholics and Protestants. Guy Fawkes gained his evil emi nence in the reign of Jtames I, the King who had the Bible translated into an English classic. James was little beloved by the Catholics, whom he persecuted with a vigor natural enough in an apostate, but no less irritating for that. Certain men of the older faith arranged to have the King and his heretical Parliament, acceler ated In their progress through this vale of tears by blowing them all up with gunpowder when they assembled to open Parliament on the Bth of No vember,' 1605. Guy Fawkes was se lected on account of his many endear ing qualities to apply the match to the mine which had been planted un der the Parliament house. The plot was betrayed some ten days before its consummation, and on the morning of the Bth .Guv was caught squatting among the powder barrels with the slow matches in his hand. This being a sectarian quarrel, Fawkes and his accessories were treated with true theological mercy. He was first tortured a long time to make him tell the names of the oth ers in the plot and then hanged, drawn and quartered after the good old Brit ish rite. The rest of the conspirators were also put to death and for many years afterward Guy Fawkes day was celebrated In England with the mer riment which suited the anniversary of an event so joyful. The boy of twelve who is on trial for hia life in th State Circuit Court in this city is entitled to the sympathy that is naturally aroused when an un tutored child is on one side and a brutal man on the other in a murder ous encounter. The defendant in this case is not a delinquent child In the Juvenile Court's definition of that term, but a boy seemingly without evil intent or disposition, who, about to be a.sailed, as he thought, by an angry man with an oar. shot .in defense of himself, his sister, half a dozen other children and his dog. The encounter, with its fatal result, could certainly have been avoided by the man who precipitated it at the expense as the sudden sequel showed, of his'life. Hu man sympathy wages war with official duty In approaching Judgment in this case. Senor Palma, the Cuban, patriot, died in New . York Wednesday. . This old world of ours is hustling along so rapidly at the present time that most of our forgetful people would pause for a moment to try and remember who Palma Was. Ten years ago, how ever, Palma was in the limelight all of the time, and he was entitled to all of the plaudits that he received. To Palma more than all others among that sturdy band of Cuban patriots who plotted and fought and died that Cuba miglSt be free is due the credit for breaking the rule of Spain and starting that rich country- on the highway to modern civilization and prosperity. Tomas Estradn Palma will live in history, and the time will come when even the. descendants of the Liberals who caused him much bitterness in his closing days will re vere his memory-. An attorney with the suggestive name or Gaines seems to have been acting as financial agent for the Ore gon Railroad Commission. On the strength of his promising to secure a reduction in railroad rates on .wheat, he seems to have succeeded In mak ing contracts with a number of farm ers who agree to pay him a certain percentage of the reductions ordered by the Railroad Commission. Unfor tunately for Mr. Gaines, the rude and unfeeling Railroad Commission has intervened and informed the farmers that there is a law providing methods by which rate reductions, in case they are warranted, can be secured without the assistance of Independent financial agents. Mr. Gaines struck a promis ing field for exploitation, but it Is feared that he will not be permitted to enjoy the fruits of his enterprise. It's a dull day that does not bring to light some new position for Presi dent Roosevelt. Yesterday's dispatches announced that he would, after his term expires, become a special con tributing editor of Outlook. It was also stated yesterday that he had been mentioned as a possible successor for President Eliot, . of Harvard Univer sity. As It is quite evident that or ganized labor will no longer permit Samuel Gompers to lead It to destruc tion, there might be an opportunity for Roosevelt to succeed to that presi dency. Possibly, perhaps probably, nay, in deed, now surely. It will be under stood what The Oregonian meant when it said that the election was in the great cities of New York and Chicago; not only in the votes thrown in those great cities, but in the influ ence they exert all around them. We are none of us materialists, in the grosser sense; but all must do business, and not allow imaginative and unrealizable notions to overtop the realities of practical life. Chase of rainbows Interests us. But it is a fairy tale. It is said that Mr. Bryan is not de pressed by the news of his defeat. A man's feelings in such circumstances Niepend greatly on habit. One who has often been defeated In Presiden tial contests must acquire more or less immunity to disappointment. In the language of Dr. Johnson, "a man used to vicissitudes is not easily dejected." Besides, Mr. Bryan is a man of pious sentiments and he believes, doubtless, that all these light afflictions which he suffers at recurrent intervals of four years are blessings In disguise. The demonstration train which the Harriman lines are running through the Willamette Valley is the most per fect of its kind that has ever been sent out, and the interest shown by the farmers indicates that it Is appreci ated. Scientific farming is no longer a joke, but is of vital necessity to the farmer who desires to increase the output of his land, flocks and herds. The work accomplished by this trainis certain to bring good results. "If you want to study the genuine effects of romantic love, go to the Po lice Courts," wrote a famous cynic. Sebastian Greco has said .more for common sense In family relations by his pistol and razor than a dozen sloppy . novelists could say against it with their pens if they each wrote a book a week for a hundred years. Why should Americans make "var sity" stand for university? The ab breviation is sensible enough In Eng land because there It represents the real pronunciation of the word. The English actually say "univarsity," "Darby" for Derby, and so on; but we do not. With us the abbreviation is a bit of provincial imitativeness. Four years hence, likely enough, the Democratic candidate for Presi dent will not count on Missouri until he has its electoral vote nailed down tight. Missouri seems to betray an Inclination to show 'em that Democ racy in that part of the South may not be an Incurable disease. "Taft has carried every county in Oregon by unexpected pluralities," we are told from Democratic sources. Unexpected? Unexpected only by those who thought they knew all about it without taking the trouble to find out from impartial and truthful sources. Perhaps the fellows who stand around the streets and cigar-store corners and want to bet everybody on election will learn after a while that they don't know anything about it, never did, and never will. But where did they ever get the money to bet at all? Tired but happy. Judge Taft has gone to the Virginia Hot Springs for a complete rest. ' He will remain there two weeks, and as far as possible make his mind a blank on political matters. This Is wise. We shall also hear no more of the great Democratic scheme to require the good banks to guarantee the bad. The vote of Oregon for Taft was vote of "recall" of Chamberlain. STATE PAPERS ON THE ELECTION Deitr, Dear: They Thought of Their Stomachs. Pendleton East Oregonian (Dem.) Why Taft was chosen is not difficult to see. it Is because the people were satisfied to let well enough alone. It Is a difficult - matter to displace a political party when economic condi tions throughout the country are good. Business conditions are very fair now and ninny who favor the measures ad vocated by the Democratic party hesi tated to bring on a change. They lis tened to the threats made by the other side and feared to displease the pow ers that be. The people thought with their stomachs rather than with their brains. Hurrah! Alao Whoopla! Salem Statesman. There will be four years of solid and splendid prosperity in this country. The wheels of Industry all. over the land will go on with accelerated speed. A billion dollars in orders for manu factured articles, that would have been countermanded or not given had Mr. Bryan been elected, will now make the men In the factories throughout the country busy. Building operations in ten thousand cities and towns will go forward. There wlil be a market for prunes and hops and wool, and all the wants of a nation of workers will make a demand for the things raised on the farms and the articles made in the factories. The hoarded money In the banks and safety deposit vaults and stockings will come out from hid ing, to earn more money for its owners, and to give added prosperity to the whole Nation. Things worth while will proceed with a new activity." Oh, Cheer Vpi the Worat la Yet to Come La Grande Star (Dem.) The most inexplicable surprise comes from Union County, which gives Taft a plurality of 247. And this in the shadow of the failure of the Farmers and Traders Bank, which so recently closed Its doors, robbing the child Who has saved its nickels, to those helpless from age who had placed their sav ings of a lifetime there for safe keeping, and are now left penniless, the victim of a one-sided banking sys tem that takes our money and in our hour of need leaves us nothing but a ticket to the poor house. It is all over, the votes ate counted out and the trust and money baror.s have full sway for four more years. Still the Same Theortat. Eugene Register. There is little, if any, difference be tween the Bryan of 1896 and the Bryan of 19D8. He is older grown but still a theorist, and a theorist in the Presi dential chair would be a menace to the republic, hence the people, who rule In this great Nation of ours, very wisely set Mr. Bryan aside for the third and. possibly, the last time, for, as between the man who Is a theorist and the man who is practical, con servative and longheaded the United States will always choose the latter. Bryan's bank guaranty plan and his position with reference to injunctions made against him In. this campaign, especially with the business Interests without regard to party. Plenty of Rrasoni) bat What's the I'sef Albany Democrat. Mr. Taft has beaten a clean, pure and able man, one above reproach. Nevertheless it was a great mistake run ning Mr. Bryan at this time. Twice de feated he should have, given up to someone else. Governor Johnson, of Minnesota, should have been given the Dlace. He would have made a cam paign that would have made Mr. Taft take notice. Mr. Bryan, like Webster and Clay, can never be elected Presi dent, and he will do well to accept the inevitable, and further, not to dictate i.ie policies of his party too persist ently, as good as they may be. , It Is easy to give reasons, but what's the use. . No More Vagarlons Agitation. Pendleton Tribune. Bryanism has again been given a solar plexus blow as it deserved. The United States has never enjoyed a ten year period of such prosperity among all its people as during the last decade and there has been no more call for Bryan's wild attacks on our Institu tions than there was against the opera tion of the laws of gravity. He has just closed the weakest campaign ever made by any candidate for President of the I'nited States and has been taught a lesson which should per manently terminate his incessant in fiction of half-baked vagaries on a people who think for themselves. Saved! Baker City Herald. The American Nation is saved for four years more at least. Saved from what? .From the ranting foolishness of a man with a hobby; from the de plorable conditions that are sure to follow free trade; from the financial disturbance which the guaranteed bank deposit scheme of Bryan would have caused; from the Idleness of factory and shop; from the reduced values in farm products and other depressions that are akin to Democratic statesman ship and rule. This Ib one of the many times when the "people rule." People Are In Great Luck. La Grande Observer. It is -conceded that no man ever en tered upon the duties of the high office of President as well equipped and with such general ripe experience as Wil liam H. Taft. The people, under these circumstances, expect a wide and profitable administration, and they will not be disappointed. Guaranteed. Astorian. The ejection of Taft is the best guar anty of bank deposits and other valu ables that make up the property of the people. Heavy All Along the Line. Roseburg Review. Emulating our heavyweight Presi dent, crops should be extra heavy the next year. JAPAN'S MESSAGE TO MR. TAFT Also Chnructerlatic Sea-inaper Notice of Our Fleet's Vial to Nippon. PORTLAND, Nov. 0. (Dear Editor.) Most hearty congratulation for the success of Mr. Taft which you have done a great deal for, and we, Japa nese are not concerned directly to the same, still, we enjoy it very much. Under separate cover, I seud a copy of a Japanese magazine which we have Just received from Japan which I think, you may be interested to see some Eng iish words of welcome to the fleet. This magazine is entitled The Taiheiyo, same meaning The Pacific and Is for young people. I do not think you can read the rest of those on the first page. M. FURUYA CO. D. T. UCHIDA The printed page referred to reads: Welcome!!! tva enthuaiastlcally welcome our dis tinguished gueata from the thither count of the Pacific. They are the bravest sons of a mighty Republic the glorious messen gers from a country, where relations to us were always cordial. Let us embrace them as brothers, entertain them as old com rades. Americans and Japan se are the two greatest nations on the coasts of thej broad ocean and so long aa they remain friends and brothers, the peac and prosperity of Lb East will not btt disturbed. I APPRECIATION OF DOI CLAS FIR A Beautiful Oregon Wood for Interior Finish of Offices and Homes. American Lumberman. When E. H. Harriman was ' on the Pacific Coast recently he vtstted the Portland Commercial Club and was at once attracted by the permanent furni ture, fixed seats, etc.. in the clubhouse made from Oregon, or Douglas fir. He thought them more beautiful than ma hogany and requested an official of the Harriman lines, who chanced to be in the party, to send him samples, saying he would probably use the wood in his new home, a country residence, which it is understood will be the most elab orate In America. Not long after came President B. L Winchell, of the Rock Island road, who is one of the ablest and brightest of the younger set of American railroad men. and he served notice upon the officials of the Harri man lines that unless they hastened to furnish a sleeper or dining car in Douglas fir he' would do so and "beat them to it." It. is somewhat surprising that out side of Washington and Oregon the merits of ftr for Interior finish of of fices and residences and for furniture are known so little, or not at all. It might have been somewhat of an ex aggeration to say that fir is more beau tiful than mahogany, but it is a wood of beauty as well as of utility. It is unnecessary to make comparisons. There are manv beautiful woods, and each should have its place In any well designed and artistically furnished home, or fine business structure, hue no wood of beauty should be ignored. A competent architect or furniture designer can not neglect mahogany, or oak. or birch, or maple. Or yellow plno in some of its forms, and he should not neglect Douglas fir. A wood is naturally beautiful when it combines an attractive color with a pleasing figure and when it will take a smooth and durable finish. Any wood having those qualities is god to use. and Douglas fir ranks among the best of them. It needs no. stain to make it beautiful in color, It does not have to be carefully selected for grain, it takes a fine finish and it is strong and as hard as many of the woods used for the finer purposes. On the Pacific Coast are many fine residences and magnificent office buildings In which this wood is used. Many office build ings a'e completely finished in it. In residences it is used in libraries, halls, dininfy-rooms, drawing-rooms or cham bers, vieing with oak, mahogany and other woods that are customarily pre ferred for such purposes. Perhaps a Tacoma lumber company was the first to make a practical dem onstration of its merits for such pur poses, for about 15 years ago it put up a fine office building for its own use in connection with its saw mills and finished it throughout in Douglas, fir. Most visitors from the East, un familiar with the wood, were puzzled to know what this beautiful finish could be made of. It was, in fact, remarkably attractive. Following that exemplification of its merits for the finer uses, it was put in a multi tude of first-class buildings, for either residence or business use, until now it Is more largely used than any other material for interior finish u-ied on the basis of its merits, and not merely because It is a local product and rela tively cheap. The rest of the country is beginning to know Douglas fir as an interior finish wood because it Is being made into doors and shipped all over the country, but that trade is not large enough yet to make every one acquaint ed with fir. and on account of its excess weight as compared to pine, and the distance which these doors are shipped, it may not for a good many years be a very prominent factor in the Eastern door trade. But as a raw material for the sash and door, interior finish and furniture factories of the East, it should rapidly grow in favor. It will not supplant mahogany and oak, but it should be used side by side with them and for substantially the same purposes. It will give variety In the office and in the home, and is well worth a place on its own merits. It should not be despised because it Is cheap. It is cheap, not because it is not ' good and beautiful, but because it is plentiful. Clear selected fir can be laid down in Chicago, for example, at less than one-half the cost of ma hogany and not much more than one half the cost of white oak, but this low cost lumber can be made into goods which will put to scorn the word "cheap." We do not expect to Influence the consumer by what we have said, for the consumer takes what the architects and furniture designers and the con tractors prescribe, but these gentle men are missing their chances if they fail to take Douglas fir into account. BLAMES BIG TIMBER SYNDICATES Favors Levying Tax on Fixed Basis of the Average Stumpoge Value. GALE'S CREEK, Or.. Nov. 4. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian of last Saturday appeared a communication by Ben Irwin, headed "Don't Assess Standing Timber." Mr. Irwin's communication is perhaps good In one way, but as there are al ways two sides to an issue, I now point out a few mistaken ideas of his. The counties of Columbia, Clatsop, Tillamook and others, did not cruise their timber for the purpose of raising the taxation, but to equalize It and place the burden of taxation where it properly belongs. Heretofore, a poor man with perhaps only 1,000.0)0 feet of standing timber on his quarter sec tion, was assessed as much as a big corporation was taxed for 20,000,000, on a like amount ofland. These big tim ber companies, in 90 per cent of their holdings never paid one-tenth of their actual cash value to the patentee and would not sell their holdings today for ten times the amount invested. The consequences are that the poor man is compelled to sell his timber claim for any price he can get, or have it eaten up by taxes. These same syndicates that own four fifths of the finest timber in the above counties are the sole cause of the enor mous prices we pay for lumber. They control the timber situation and will market only what they please. So, I say that it is only Just to levy a tax on a fixed basis of the average stump age value. Mr. Irwin also says that Columbia County will suffer for all time to come by forcing the timbermen to cut their timber now, and that when other coun ties are receiving high prices and heav ier taxes, Columbia County will only have a lot of cut-over, uninhabited land left. Does any one think that the "higher taxes of other counties" are going to lure the honest, hard working settler away from Columbia County? He will find that as soon as that timber is removed, that Columbia County will be settled with a class of thrifty, industrious homeseekers who will be a pride to any county and of a more substantial benefit to the tax roll than the timber. The records of Tillamook County will show that as administrator of an es tate, I disposed of 160 acres of land with the accepted estimate of 21,140,000 feet of standing timber, for which I had been assessed $36 per year. I can point to several claims that do not contain over 5,000,000 to the 160 acres, that paid the same tax. That speaks for Itself. that there was no fair play for the man who held a 6,000,000 claim. SAM J. SMITH. Mr. Hearst Knowa. Washington Star. Nobody but Mr. Hearst himself can say whether he got $12,000 worth of fun out of those letters. DR. FOILKES WAS MISQl'OTED Never Reported Conversation aa Havln Occurred at City Council. PORTLAND. Nov. . (To the Edi tor.) Councilman Baker does the Rev. W. H. Foulkes an injustice In his letter to The Oregonian. He charges Dr. Foulkes with "willful misrepresenta tion" In reporting In his address at the Y. M. C. A. last Sunday a conversa tion between a representative of the Retail I.lquor Dealers' Association and a member of the Council as taking place in a Council meeting. I heard Dr. Foulkes at the Y. M. C. A. meeting last Sunday, and distinctly remember that he said the conversation took place at a meeting of the liquor license committee of the Council, and not at a meeting of the ouncil. 1 am also willing to say that he gave a truthful report of a conversation that did take place at a meeting of the liquor license committee, at which I was present. A. A. WILLS, Councilman at Large. PORTLAND. Nov. 6. (To the Edi tor.) Dr. Foulkes. of the First Preshy terlan Church, is charged by Council man Baker, in a letter to The Ore gonian. with "willful misrepresenta tion." He accuses Dr. Foulkes of tes tifying that a certatn conversation took place at a meeting of the City Council. I was present at the Y. M. C. A. meet ing last Sunday afternoon and heard the address given by the minister in question, and remember that he told the conversation as taking place at a meeting of the liquor license commit tee. He described the table around which the members of the committee sat, and how the representative of the Liquor Association set on one side and the Councllmen he addressed on the other side. In addition to his naming the liquor license committee as the place where the conversation took place, his description made it impos sible to apply to the City Council. F. MKEKCHER. VOTES FOR 18 C. S. PRESIDENTS Remarkable Experience of Veteran Re publican Who Supported Mr. Taft. OREGON CITY, Or., Nov. 5. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian of yester day it is said: "If a man lives 80 years, he can participate in only 15 Presiden tial elections. Another 15th part of life's joys came and went yesterday." The writer, a retired printer of Ore gon City, claims thp.t in the 90 years and over he has livid he has voted 18 times at Presidential elections, begin ning with the Whig candidate, W. H. Harrison, in 1840. and closing with W. H. Taft at Tuesday s election. In these i8 votes, he has had the satisfaction of being on the winning side 12 times. He remembers, too, that in the 68 years beginning with the inauguration of Mr. Harrison and the retiring of Mr. Roose velt. March 4 next, the Democratic pacty has had control of the Govern ment only 20 years five Presidential terms Polk, Pierce, Buchanan, one term each, arid Cleveland two terms. "Shall the people rule?" Yea. verily. They have drawn comparisons, and have said that in the 20 years of Demo cratic rule that the country has had more financial panics, more "hard times," more distress among the labor ing masses, than in all the 48 years of Whig and Republican rule. And for this reason they have wisely decided to keep a Republican captain and crew on board the ship of state during her next four years' voyage. E. WARNER. Stand by Principles, Not Men. HILLSBORO, Or.. Nov. 5. (To the Editor.) The editorial, "Constitutional and . Representative Duty." in today's Oregonian is terse and to the point. I trust that every true Republican will reread the article and ask his Representative and Senator to the next session of our State Legislature to at least be consistent and vote for a Republican Senator. Per sonal popularity may and doe's carry men oft their political equilibrium and lead them to forget that they should vole for principles as well as to vote for men; but when they regain their senses, let them make reparation and vote for the men who formulate and stand for Re publican principles. J. P. TAMIES1E, " According to "The New Law." Harper's Weekly. Parents of Wayne, a suburb of Phila delphia, are required to report prompt ly any case of contagious disease. In compliance with the regulations of the local board of health. In accordance with this order. Health Officer Leary received this post card recently: "Dear Sir This is to notify you that my boy Ephraim is down with the measles as required by the new law." Thinks Oregonian Fought Good Fight. PORTLAND, Nov. 5. (To the Edi tor.) I congratulate The Oregonian on Mr. Taft's great victory, and believes that It is all for the best. The Ore gonian fought mighty hard and cheered and encouraged the people of all the Pa cific States to come up strong against the miehtv. F. MACNE1L IN THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN SOME MEN WHO WERE CLOSE TO LINCOLN Living Americans who got close to the great Emancipator and are now able to throw side lights on his character. MAKING TRUMPETS OUT OF PUMPKIN LEAVES Full-page illustration in col ors of an entirely original Au tumn scene in Eastern Multno mah County. TILLAMOOK'S CAMPAIGN FOR GOOD ROADS General awakening over the construction of first class high ways throughout the county. MIGHTY RIDGES OF PRECIOUS ROCK Bohemia district, Lane Coun ty, with its wealth of undevel oped gold, silver and copper mines. STUPENDOUS OPERA AND HAM SANDWICHES Mrs. Alma A. Rogers writes frtaji Vicuna concerning enjoy ment of the highest in musical ai-t and' humble refreshment between acts. FOOTBALL AND ROMANCE BY THE HOTEL CLERK A dissertation on the second ary National game, together with comment on approaching matrimony. Order early from your newsdealer.