i S - . TITE MORXISG OKEGOXIAX, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1903. POKTXAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflca " Eecond-Claas Matter. Bubacriatloa Rate Invariably In Advance. (Br Mali.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year $100 Dally. Sunday Included, six months 4 2 Pally. Sunday Included, three monthl... 2 K5 ral.y. Sunday Included, on, mnth - .75 Itktiy. without Sunday, on year 0 Ually. without Sunday, six montha 8 23 Dally, wtthout Sunday. three months.... 1.7 Ially. without Sunday. OQ month...... 00 Weekly, on yaar... 1 Sunday, one year... J 50 Sunday and weekly, on year. .. -50 (By Carrier.) Dally. Cunriay Included, one year 0-00 Dally. Sunday Included, on month 75 Mow to Reanit Send poetofTlce money order. express order or personal check on eur local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Glv postoftlce Ad dreas In full. Including county and stato. Toatac Km tew 10 to 14- pagea. 1 rent: 18 to 28 paves. 2 cents; 30 to o pace. S cents; 9 to do pages. 4 centa Foreign poataga double rates Eastern Rnelnesa Of! Ice1 Tha 8. C. Beck wl'h Special Aeency New York, rooms 4 r Tribune building. Chicago, rooms aiO-olJ Tribune building PORTLAND. TTEKDAY, SKPT . 190. A RIVAL' OF ROBFBT Ft LTON. t It is passing Into a proverb that , contests orer discoveries and inven tions are inevitable. All hare their rivals. Cook has his Peary and Peary ' lias his Cook. Columbus had his ' Amerigo, who gets the name of a hem ; isphere on his monument. Hudson ' had his Verrazano, whose name now : pops up with a claim that antedates ' Hudson's by eighty-five years. And Verrazano frets a monument at the ' Battery. In New Tork. Now a move ment in opposition to Fulton's claim as the inventor of the steamboat is started, to honor the name of James Rumsey, of Virginia, a Revolutionary soldier, millwright and boatman, who. It is asserted, employed steam to pro pel a boat on the Potomac River, De cember 3-11, 1787 antedating Fulton by twenty years. The story Is an Interesting one. Rumsey was a native of Maryland, but went to Berkeley County, Virginia, row West Virginia, in 1772. People of that state are now putting forward the claim for him; and, It Is proposed to ask Congress to provide a statue of Rumsey in the Hall of Fame at the National Capitol. Senator Scott, of West Virginia, is named as one of those who will push the effort. The whole delegation in Congress from West Vir ginia, of course, will help. It is likely, therefore, that the question whether Rumsey or Fulton has the prior claim will become the subject of an interest ing controversy in Congress. In a pe tition prepared by the West Virginia supporters of Rumsey it Is said: "The great success and practically useful ; character of Rumsey's steamboat was established by sworn testimony of many notable witnesses, such men as General Horatio Gates, conqueror of . Burgoyne. and many others, as well as by the multitude, of astonished and de lighted spectators." Rumsey's supporters say that full proofs of his work and Its results ex ist, 'both in the archives of Virginia and In the national archives at Wash ington. If so, it will devolve on them to bring the proofs to light. In sup port of Ruhisey, a document has been Issued from Berkeley Springs, W. Va., In which It Is asserted that It was due to the representations of Robert R. Livingston, Chancellor of New York, , business partner of Fulton, that the Idea was Industriously propagated that Fulton was the inventor of the first steamboat. . It would not be at all surprising, if the claim made for Rumsey should be proved.' But it would not detract from Fulton's merit. No great dis covery In mechanics, or in the use of natural forces. Is made all at once. Often the first tentative efforts are abandoned by experimenters, to be taken up later by others, and carried forward by further steps towards final success. But the antecedent elTorts. though actual success may be denied, are always necessary. Not a single great invention ever sprang in com pleteness from a single mind, as Min erva was fabled to have sprung full armed from the head of Jove. Steam . had been successfully used, for power, 'tv long time before Fulton conceive'' the idea of his steamboat. That others may have anticipated him in the. ex periment is most probable, but Fulton has gained the narrffe and the fame, because his experiment was mere suc cessful than preceding ones, and was Burported and proclaimed moreover in a time of greater industrial and com mercial activity, by influential men, (who were able to give it wide public ity. Besides, at an earlier time, the significance of the invention, could not have been so well understood and less attention naturally would be paid to it. CHANGES IN UARREMAN SYSTEM. Wall street is said to be very much concerned over the disposition that is to be made of the Harrlman securi ties, and over the possible changes that may be made in the manner of han dling them in the future. It Is pretty generally understood that Judge Lov ett has inherited all of the power that It was possible for Mr. Harrlman to turn over to any living man. One thing, however, could not be handed down to Judge Lovett, and that was the phenomenal genius and brain power of the departed magnate. From New Tork comes the story that there Is to be a return to the old order which" xisted prior to the assumptlojrUy Mr. Harrlman of direct control of all of the great properties in his charge. Before Mr. Harrlman became presi dent of the Union Pacific, the Southern Pacific, the Oregon Short Line, the O. R. & N. and numerous other- lines which were afterwards destined to lose their identity under the general classi fication as portions of the Harrlman system, each of these roads was man aged by a president and a board of di rectors, separate and distinct from that which looked after the destinies of the adjoining link in the system. This plan certainly presented advan tages over that which succeeded it, and, regardless of the. remarkable eijowlng that was made in the earn ings and the Improvements, in the physical condition of the roads, the old policy was preferred by the people' who paid the bills to its successor.. In con nection with the reversion to the .old ' plan, it is reported that the presidency of the Union Pacific "Will fall to A. L. Mohler, whose administration of the road as first lieutenant for Mr. Harrl man has proved so highly successful. It Is also reported that E. E. Calvin will become president of the Southern Pacific, and logicaly and tnatnrally J. P. O'Brien will be president of the O. R. N. Co. Public confidence and good will of the people who supply the traffic li an asset of steadily increasing value to the rallrnads. Mr. Harriman in his New York office, or Mr. Stubbs and Mr. XriucJiniu mors than 2000 miles away In Chicago, may have desired to win and hold this good will, but In the case of all the Western roads they were too far away from the originating point of the traffic to be in direct sym pathy. and touch with the local situa tion on the several roads which made up the great system. Reproached for the miserably Inadequate steamship service between Portland and San Francisco, and admitting that it ought to be better, the late Mr. Harriman once testily said: ''With all of the load that I am carryinr. you can't expect me to be perfectly familiar with the details of this one small branch of the business." Mr. Harrlman's argument was sound, but It was his own fault that he had arrogated to himself such absolute control of all rail and steamship lines In the system, that local managers were forced to shoulder the blame for the shortcomings and at the same time were powerless to remedy them. Oregon and the remainder of the ter ritory served by the O. R. & N. would like a return of the'old regime, when differences between the railroad and Its patrons could be adjusted at a point nearer home than Chicago or New York. TO TEST CORPORATION TAX LAW. "Direct taxes shaiU. be apportioned among the several states which may be Included in this Union, according to their respective numbers." Thus, the Constitution of the United States. Is npt the corporation tax of 2 per cent a direct tax? If not, what description of tax Is Jt? Certainly it is not ap portioned among the states on the basis of their population and numbers. The corporations, moreover, exist under state law. They are instruments or agencies authorized by the. states for convenience of their citizens in do ing business. They are artificial en titles, created by the states for their own purposes. The General Govern ment can have no proper right to tax them. Most, not all-the states Ore gon among the number are atready taxing them taxing not only their property, but taxing them for their ex istence as corporations. President Taft makes special de fense of the Government tax on cor porations. His main plea is that the Government needs the money. He does not deny that It discriminates against corporations as such, or that it favors partnerships and Individual proprie tors, who are exempt. He thinks It Is constitutional. Others think not. That point Is to be tested. ( Ex-Senator Foraker, counsel for the Cincinnati Traction Company, is pre paring. In the name of that company, a test case. Foraker is an able lawyer and a good fighter. He will present the case against the tax for all it la worth. There is in it that also which may stir Mr. Foraker to peculiar activity and effort. For, as the Brooklyn Eagle says: "President Taft, who. in a sense, may be said to have driven Mr. Foraker out of public life, tempor arily, at least, was the one force that put this tax on corporation profits on the Federal statute books. The Presi dent frankly acknowledged a strong purpose outside revenue-raising, viz.: to subject all the artificial persons cre ated by state law to United States espionage "and supervision." The right to do this will be ques tioned, since the corporations exist by virtue of state law. Again, it is a form of direct taxation that would appear to be more surely inhibited by the Constitution of the United States than even an Income tax, which was pro nounced unconstitutional, and( to, au thorize which an amendment to the Constitution is now pending. Foraker has the spur of motive to make it a lively contest. IGNORANCE OF MOTHERS. Wa ViAnr munri now and again of the , deplorable ignorance of young mothers o-enerallv. In the care, and es pecially In the feeding, of Infants: That there Is good ground for- the accusation that to this Ignorance, much more even than to that scourge of Infancy and childhood Impure milk large proportion of the sick ness and death of babies and young children Is due, there Is no reason to doubt. For the young mother, how f 'mftv be said that she is Ken dall willing and even anxious to learn. She does not know, howl to bathe and dress a baby. Why should she? She has never been taught, and this Is her first pitiful attempt.-. Very likely she spent the rew years or ner, perhaps all too brief, period of maid anhnnH behind the stocking or notion or underwear or ribbon counter of a department store.- Or, perhaps, she spent this period at a typewriter, rattling oft business letters, "which she had previously taken rrom dictation in shorthand. Or. mayhap, she passed it in a aewins- morn or in the back room of a fashionable millinery store, learning to make arid trim hats: or at any other one of half a hundred voca finn to which the young woman of today devotes .her time, her strength and her energies; Why should she be expected to learn,- In the course of such activities. how to sterilize mim mr ms food? To fashion its tiny garments in nr-crrrrlanre with the laws of hy giene? To feed It proper food at proper intervals and to aress ana wrap us Httia, hnriv wurmlv. vet lightly? There are some things, it is true, that any young mother, of common sense, or baby sense, for that matter, might be expected to know, as, for example, not to wheel the bab in its go-cart, with the sun shining broadly into Its little blinking eyes a sight that is almost as common on the streets as is that of the baby in the go-cart. And as for food, any mother with a modicum of common sense, not to mention ma ternal Intuition, might well be ex pected 1 to know better than to give her yearling child raw corn, or a piece of fat meat, or a rubber nipple upon which to work the Hps constantly. But beyond the relatively few things that any young woman of common sense ought to know, because she Is a naturally endowed human being. It Is unreasonable to expect one of these. Just because she has become a mother, to know how to care for an Infant, with due regard "to Its com fort and health. What then? The quick response is: '""She should be taught how to do this." Very true. ' But who Is to come in at this stage of the game and teach her? Her mother has "old-fashioned Ideas about babies"; clearly, she must not Interfere. Her husband Is as .ig norant as herself lh 'matters pertain ing to the health and comfort of the babe 60 wisdom .caryiot be gained from that source. The children next door are subject to colds and have weak eyes and digestive disturbances. Clearly their mother is not a safe ad viser. The family physlcan too often knows as little about babies as the mother herself, so 'having reached the st are of responsible but Ignorant motherhood what is there left for her to do but to experiment upon the babe? And what wonder that It does not thrive under the treatment? The logical remedy for this state of 'affairs is, of course, to give young women, while yet in their girlhood, elementary Instruction In the proper care of infants and young children. And, since it has become the fashion or the fad to saddle all Instruction of every sort upon the publio schools, .why not cut out Instruction in music, which Is little more than a guttural or squeaky utterance of disagreeable sounds; or the labored conjugation, of Latin verbs or drill In higher mathe matics, and substitute a brief and simple course in hygiene, with direct reference to the care of infants and young children? Impractical? Then what's the use of growling and com plaining and growing sarcastic on this theme? Affer all is said and the truth of what is said Is granted, what of It? Who has a remedy to propose? Don't all speak at once. . ''the Ant oka borealis. Among the few natural phenomena which may still be properly called mysterious Is the aurora borealis, or the northern lights, as it Is popularly designated. Science has- reduced, un der law and order, almost anything that we see or hear, ut this spectacle of the Arctic heavens remains to be ex plained. The ancients looked upon It with superstitious awe, as they did. In fact, upon everything that happened, while our still less enlightened prede cessors of the Middle Ages, of course, thought an auroral display was a man ifestation of the wrath of the creator. If' the creator had been as busy' as those wretched people thought he was in displaying signs of his wrath, it is difficult to see how he could have found time to attend tb the ordinary routine of the universe. To their minds his temper must have been something frightful. One queer thing about the aurora Is the fact that for a century or two before the voyages . of the modern polar explorers began It was not nearly so commonly observed as It is now. At least there is little mention of it among the records of scientific men. One might imagine, if he iwere fanciful enough, that nature had arranged the auroral displays which are now such a magnificent spectacle In the northern heavens to compensate travelers in part for her shortcomings In other particulars round about the Pole. All Arctic explorers, make a great deal of the northern lights. They are visible in the extreme north with a frequency and trilllancy which are seldom rivaled in lower latitudes, still even In the temperate zone they some times present a marvelous display. Examples are recorded where the aurora has covered the whole expanse of the sky with rosy light which shift ed about In the most amazing manner. Sometimes great waves of fire appear to chase one another across the sky. Sometimes what looks like .a lake of radiant mist .heaves and trem bles as If it were disturbed by pent-up winds. Whenj one of these splendid' auroras is seen in our latitudes we ought to be thankful to Providence for providing such a glorious spectacle free of charge, but as a matter of fact there are always multitudes of people iwhom it frightens nearly to ; death. Their first thought Is that the end of the world Is at hand, and Instead of rejoicing they begin to call on the rocks to cover them. Superstition makes ari abject creature of poor man, but it is a comfort to reflect that he Is rapidly outgrowing It. There Is nothing In the aurora to be scared at, even when It is most bril liant. The old theory that It Is com posed of meteoric dust which has been Ignited by striking the earth's atmos phere was plausible for a time, but sa vants no longer put much faith in it. They are disposed to explain the au rora as some sort of electrical phenom enon. As soon as the action of an electrical discharge in a vacuum tube had been studied, scientists felt that they were on the track of the secret of the nortnern lights. These, displays al most alwayB occur in the upper regions of the atmosphere when it Is exceed ingly rare, perhaps hot denser than at is' In a Crookes tube. Moreover, the light moves about much In the same mysterious manner as does the. Illumi nation in the tubes, now In a proces sion of strata, now. In waves, now in long shooting streamers. In fact, it Is pretty certain to the modern mind that the aurora is some sort of emanation which will ultimately take Its place among the varied types of radiant matter. It is probably composed of the same material as the tail of a comet, and it would surprise few men of science to find that the phenomenon is simply a display of electrons. Mean while, It makes the Arctic night Just as beautiful as It would if we knew all about it. If it is composed of elec trons Its connection with the earth's magnetic-pole, which is a well-known fact, would be the most natural thing in the world. Quite likely the earth sends off emanations lnto space from Its north magnetic pole Just , as a Crookes tube sends them from the cathode. " AWAKF.NIX3 PAST ECHOES. The story of the record-breaking voyage of the sailing ship Howard D. Troop from Yokohama reads likea tale of the long-departed past. For nearly sixty years sailing vessels have covered that route, and among the thousands of vessels that have made the. voyage were large numbers of those wonderful clippers which, long before the age ot steam, made" phe nomenal speed on every sea. In view of these past performances, the rec ord run of the Troop, one of the few survivors of 'a rapidly vanishing type of vessel, is all the more, remarkable. Twenty days from Yokohama to the Columbia River Is good time for the average tramp steamer, and there are not half a dozen tramp steamers afloat on the Pacific today that oould cover as many miles in a single twenty-four hou- as were sailed by the, Howard D. Troop yn .ome of her "best days' dui.ng the voyage Just completed. Vow that tne riow-moving, brcid btamed, snub-nosed tramp steamer :s gradually nut surely e'bowlng the sail ing ship oft the ocean, the Important position which the sailing ship once held in the world's commerce Is not sor readily appreciated. The American clippers which raced round the world fifty years ago were not only the fast est sailing vessels ever 'built, but even in ' this twentieth-century age of steam many steamships can travel but little faster than some of the old-time sailing craft. The famous Dread nought made " the run. from Sandy Hook to Queenstown in 9 days and ,17 hours, at a time when the ten-day steamer was the fastest on the route, and at a still earlier period the Flying Cloud established a record of 43314 miles for a twenty-four-hour run. Very few of the tramp steamers of the present day can show better pas sages than the thirteen-day trip of the Red Jacket from New York to-Liverpool, or the seventy-five-day voyage of the Trade Wind from San Francisco to New York, or the long-distance runs of the Flying Dutchman, the Young America, the Comet or a number of others. - The old-time clippers that made these , world's records have all van ished, and for the broader-beamed, heavier-sparred " successors of the Howard D. Troop type the, end is al ready -written. An occasional burst of speed- like that shown by th.e-TYoop as she raced across the Pacific is only a "swan song." and 'fire and tempest and the ravages of time are sweeping these "whitewinged argosies of trade", out of existence, with no new keels going down to replace them. As a factor in the carrying trade of the world the sailing ship will soon be extinct, but the record run of he Troop is inter esting, as it serves to keep alive the memories of the former aristocrat of the sea, the AmeVlcan clipper. COLOR LINE IN MARSHFIELD. The color line' is being sharply drawn in Marshfield, this time between negroes and Chinese, on the school qusetlon. There Is one lone Chinese pupil in the town, a meek'-mannered. inoffensive little lad, and the negro mothers there are In revolt at the prospect of having to send their chil dren, of whom there are several In town, to the separate school provided for colored children and to which the Chinese boy is sent. Negroes can only make themselves ridiculous and in tensify the feeling against them by scoffing at and ostracizing other col ored folk. The Marshfield School Board; how ever, strained a point in at tempting -to set up a school for. a sep arate handful of colored children. The first step in promoting race troubles in a community, where the race ques tion Is not an issue, is in recognizing racial disparity. The few colored children in Marshfield probably play on the streets and associate elsewhere in childish ways and sports with the white children. Why draw the color line In the public schools? Why not let sleeping prejudices, like sleeping dogs, lie? Why strain at a gnat and swallow a camel? Canadian railroad contractors are facing a labor famine, which promises to prevent the construction of a large amount of new road in the western n-..Hnr-Aa An effort is being made to secure permission from the govern ment to bring Vn several mouadua ' nese to aid in the work. The scarcity of white labor Is such-that farmers are paying as high as 14 per day for com mon labor, which, of course, makes It impossible for the railroad company to secure the forces needed. Natu rally, there will be a vigorous protest against admitting the Chinese, but the economic advantage"' to the country, and even the interests of white labor, is manifest. In the Pacific Northwest Chinese labor built many a mile of railroad and cleared many an acre of land In a territory that, had It been the Inadequate supply of white labor, would have re mained undeveloped ana uupiuuuT. for many years. . Dr. Brougher uses a trotting race a . Inof nrOAaT flit A. text for a mat no iciji. - - sermon on life's struggle Most men . . li a lma wVten or middle age can rcu - - any minister of the gospel who would stoop to so sinful an act as going to , .ni tia-c-A been rerard- a norse rate, ed by his congregation and his govern ing body as on the straight road to a bad place. In many communities his " . , , j...t him to the HOCK wouia nvc - . . . . t.t nnlH hn.vn rjre- last sneep. i vented his expulsion. Today, no pror ... . i i irc-iiv the world test - Will DO item u. ' - . - moves. Walla Walla County, as was kind, dignified and proper, celebrated Its day Aiaota.Viikon-Paclflc Exposi tion by unveiling a statue of Marcus Whitman pioneer missionary and martyr of the early years. It would have been meet and generous had the scheme included the figure tender, .mi heroic of Narclssa Whitman, who shared with her hus band not mly the laDors, tne pnva- .i nnrl the anxieties of the Li U 1 1-3, t " " - mission In the wilderness, but its mar- tyrdjMn as well. - The Yamhill bridegroom who was t v. tv.. ittm nf a charivari patty IU W fcxiv - - - had his gun handy and killed one of them. The dead man leaves a- wmu and ten children. It Is little comfort t.n.A n-hw autrer -from the results of this kind of foolishness to know it was all meant in run. renmj .i there were more killings of the kind, the charivari Idea of Jesting would cease. . riivlrle these honors. Discovery could not have been made without the Eskimo; ine nu powerless without the dogs; ' both j .v.la lonrlArahlo WOUld; have failed except for the optician. Dr. Cook gives full credit to tne uilci colored goggles. , tlnn of Alaska and with it material and social advancement along all lines Is now assured. A sec tion that supports a four-club baseball league can no longer be regarded as cizlHzatlon's frontier. ' i x Grandest of all blessings, to turn the rdadhouses dry will be Winter's cold ..-in This will take the pleasure out of riotous "Joy riding" for part of the yar, at least, tiurry tne ram. , The President applies to the Ballln- Tir,ffent onus hhle: "A soit answer turneth away wrath."' So far so good. but the soft answer is neuner uauui ger's nor Plnchot's. ' r' 'iro.cr. TOolllnirpr and Plnchot coufd now Issue manifestoes assuring each other of their distinguisnea consiaera tlon. That's the "soft answer" now needed. Having called for estimates op next , i -j . xTovrtf filmnn will soon yearn uuuisct,, ....... - --- have the opportunity to make good on the promise to Keep im While loss of Jlfe is generally to be deplored, there Is small public regret when Joy riders confine fatalities to their own set. nmra mRtters are under considera tion this week at the Portland con vention of undertakers. Only four more days until Taft ar rives. - Walt for the big show! . AGITATION FOR A CEXTBAt BANK. The Question Discussed for and Against by Different Newspapers. President Taft's recent speech. In which he asked, the American people to prepare themselves for a report from the Ald rich Currency Commission In favor of a central United States bank. Is discussed as a leading public .issue, and tha predic tion is already made that the question will occupy an important place lh the next National political campaign. Sena tor Aldrich Is viewed with suspicion by some observers and with praise by oth ers. VThere can ba no doubt," says the Chi cago Inter Ocean, "that It would be desirable, when panic conditions, rise, to have the currency under some strong central control, capable of safely and promptly expanding the supply. The trouble with efforts to establish such a central banking system, with currency control, in this country lies in the well founded aversion that the- American peo ple have to centralization of power, and to the confusion in the public mind be tween note-issuing and other functions of a bank." - "Does Mr. Taft know of any method by which a central bank of Issue couldliie kept free from Wall street Influences or from political manipulation?" 'asks the New York World. "When the' United States Treasury cannot be kept free from such Influences, what hope is there in a central bank of IssuB with power to con tract or expand the currency at will? If the currency system can be reformed only by substituting a greater evil for a lesser evil, it had better be left unre generated." "Methods of improving the banking and currency system of the country should be worked out and championed by men in whom the people at large have a rea sonable degree of confidence," hints the Chicago News. The Philadelphia Press Is against the experiment, and says: "Commercial and financial power has a tendency toward concentration, which it has been sup posed the people ought to guard against, and yet this central bank would involve the centralization of . commercial and financial power by law." ' "More than 40 years' familiarity with the National banknotes has made the country look upon them as more than fulfilling all ifs requirements," is the opinion of the Boston Transcript. "They have come to be regarded by the average American of thefinaneial stand-pat type as almost sacred, as beyond the possibil ity of Improvement. To the holders of tbls belief, reformers must appeal, and they cannot work more effectively than by demonstrating thatthe modernization of our currency system is to establish conditions exactly the reverse ' of those which inspire so many Americans with the fear that they will be called upon to assume the risks that were in the old state bank bills." e e e "Under all the circumstances, it looks as if the central bank of issue had stormy days ahead, and as if the country were confronted with the prospect of a battle in Congress over the revision of the mone tary system compared to which the con troversy over the emergency currency measure will be Insignificant," says the Baltimore News. "The details are not j-et worked out," states the Philadelphia Inquirer, "but if such a bank can be established without disturbing existing, banks, without ulti mately affecting the price of Government 2 per cent bonds,, it is an end devoutly to be desired. We are harassed by ancient banking laws which in times of trouble make a bad situation worse." "Bankers in the large cities seem as a rule to be drifting Into a favorable-attitude," says the Springfield (Mass,) Re publican. VThe country bankers occupy generally a hostile position in fear of un due encroachment upon their independ ence and their powers' of local accommo dation. The country must not be hurried Into the adoptleaj of any scheme. But It Is also not to forget that, fundamental reform has become urgently necessary." The Washington (D. C.) Post thinks "there can be no suspicion that President Taft will favor other than the best sys tem which those who have expert knowl edge can devise and which 'may be for mulated by the legislators who are charged with Its enactment." The Issue is conducive to the formation of an opposition party, hints the Wash ington (D. C.) Herald. "The lines are drawn," says the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Eagle, "and the captains are in command. Soon we shall see the enemies of a central bank unllmber ithelr guns. The fight is on. The advantages are with the Ad ministration. And it Is a matter for con gratulation that it Is sft" "The people are a unit with the President in his idea of such a bank," says the Cincinnati Enquirer, "if he can have It securely bound by his two indispensable require ments free from Wal street influences and that It shall not be manipulated for political purposes." e e . "Opposition to the proposed reform would naturally be looked for among the bankers, unless the recommendation of the Monetary Commission should con tain some compensating advantage for the individual National banks," thinks the New York Tribune. "Withdrawal of Government deposits, loss of note-issuing power, centralization of reserves, depreciation of Federal bond values, all have been mentioned as dis turbances of the existing situation, which, if necessary, must be accomplished by careful readjustment and full recog nition of existing rights," says the Bos ton Herald. "These are indications that the conservative financial interests of the country are looking carefully before they approve an important leap." - . . "Senator Aldrich, the head of ' the finance committee in his chamber, - is chairman of the commission, and he fa vors a central bank," says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. "A bill will be reported by the commission, it is . believed, some time during the session which begins in December. It will be introduced in both chambers simultaneously. All the Influ ence which can be exerted by these com mittees to secure its enactment will be employed" The Indianapolis Star is antl-Aldrich: "When Mr. Aldrich says that a' central bank. If one. is to "be established, should serve the public welfare and not- the JJurposes of Wall street, he does nothing to .clarify or Improve the situation, but does much to obscure it with uncertainty and suspicion. . . . But the Star has. always favored the principle of a central bank." A Lesson in Geography. SHERWOOD. Or., Sept. 25. (To the Editor.) Dr. Cook and Commander Peary are demanding too much in re taining their North Pole records until private experts correct every blunder and before the public sees the records. Thesepapers are not worth one cent as a test, after two or lhree days at most from the time the explorers touched at civilization. I notice that The Oregonian Is in the habit of saying that every way a man looks at the North Pole is south. This is not so. To the contrary, one cannot Bee south because his feet are In the way. His head Is north and his feet south, and the horizon In every direc tion" is at right angles to south. URIAL GROAT. , Looking; for Rooaevelt. Des Molnea Ia.) Register and Leader. It Is idle, even In the face of the Presi dent's coming Journey to cover up . the fact that there la a growing disposition to look to Roosevelt's return as the Signal for a lireak .to progressive leader ship, a restoration at Washington of aggressiv and courageous "come on" policies. Tho country-took the President as a RooBevelt man. If there Is a grow ing couvlotion that, hs la not of the Rocfevelt metal it Is only natural that, as the real Roosevelt is barely 60 and fuD of flsftt, tfiere should bs a looking to fii blwn-in-the-botOfi arUuia. TUB RUSH TO. THIS FARM. Here Are Good Satire and Pleasantry ' and Some Sense. New York Evening Sun. One of the many versatile farmers at Washington, W. J. . Splllman by name, and "Agriculturist In Charge of .Office of Farm Management, Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture," by title, seized his pen not long ago and made the following pleasing discovery: At no previous period In the history of America nave city people evinced ao much lnteneat in farming as at the present time. Large numbers of city tollers are looking longingly to the country aa. an avenue of escape from the uccertalntlea of olty em ployment. Tliis picture of . tired men, women and children, worn out in the treadmill of the typewriter and, other city abomlna-' tlons, casting eyes of envy upon the happy farmer and sighing for his bliss ful lot,, so worked upon the sensitive nature of Expert Splllman that he at once set to work to write a sort of, "First Aid to the City Farmer." The results we find la tire Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture for 1908, re cently Issued. In the' first paragraph he remarks: At the present time thens is practically no literature that will give these people (1. e., the city tollers), unacquainted with, even the rudiments of farming, a general view of the possibilitlea of farm life. Of course, there are those delightful periodicals of the farm which every com muter who has so much as one hencoop or a row of string beans reads faithful ly. But this branch of agricultural liter ature is too discursive and casual to fill tlie niche whose emptiness Mr. Spill man" perceives. Such lore as "Now Is the time to set the hens," "Look out for potato bugs" next month," and "Common table' salt mixed with bootblacklng is an excellent compound to cure your horse of ringbone," Is -the principal subject matter of the farmers' journals, and. of course, the thing for which tho Washington-expert Is aiming Is a far loftier flight of imagination and intellectual en deavor. An enticing birdseye view of the farm, scientific yet alluring, is his con ception. From what we are able to judge. Mr. Splllman has well succeeded In his effort. "Types of Farming in the United States" is the title of his essay, and therein you may read of every species of agri culture from the "dominant crop system" of Aroostook County, Maine,' to the os trich industry of California. The bank clerk or the telephone girl Is enabled to make a ready choice and no New Yorker longing for a farm need now lack infor mation as to the range of possibilities open before him. There is only one obstacle that we see in the way of this great movement. Wo make' no question of the longing' which Mr. Splllman has perceived In the tired city eyes. We ourselves have often seen Just that expression and indeed heard earnest words of desire uttered. . But, to state the trouble briefly, we have never known any of these aching hearts to land anywhere near a farm. They long and long for the smell of. tilled earth, the epudge, spudge of the milk in the pail, and-the cheery call of the whippoorwlll. . Their hearts thirst for such things. But they stick close to Broadway. "There's nothing in this city life," they - say. "A man .makes a few dollars, but what good does It do him? We've-only one lifo to live arid I'm for a farm soon. Why, I was reading only the other day about a man out in Oregon," etc. We have been ob serving these would-be farmers for years, be It understood, and we never knew any that ever came nearer the great, wild bosom of nature than East Orange or Mount Vernon. It is an unfortunate situation, we aq rait. There Is no question but that, many thousands of our city dwellers would be. many times better off in the country; we sincerely hope that Mr. Spillman's ef fusion will start the procession farm Ward. But it has not started yat, so far as our observation goes; and as an In dication of the future we distrust com pletely the longing of the city heart, for the furrow. The one consolation of the Washington expert must be the con sciousness that he has created a master piece of agricultural literature, the pro duction of which is, after all, the end and aim of our Washington farmers. CAMPAIGNING IN VIRGINIA. The Smoothness With Which the Ma chine Is Worked In That State. , Newport News Letter to the Washing ton Star. Political contests in-the Old Dominion are carried on in a very conrtly way, which is refreshing as well as amazing to the outsider. Oat in the rude, and unpolished West and in the hustling North you call your political opponent a "bottle-browed scoundrel," and branch out from that; tell him his party is the party of imbeciles, - thieves and rapscallions intent upon wrecking the country and hand him a few hot ones of like tenor. In Virginia It is different. You say: "Sir, I am constrained to remark that your character lacks that elevated strain whlLh should mark the leader of a free people" and ''Your party's course, sir, in this community has not been characterized by true devotion to the best interests of the people," or something on that order. Go to calling your opponent a thief or a thug down here and the meeting would break up In a row, with somebody a candidate for a hospitaL I am told that even when sequester ing a ballot box in a negro precinct a certain degree of formality Is observed. They don't do as Tammany does, hit you over the head with a blackjack and tell you o "get to h 1 out of here," but say, "By your leave, sir," or more likely, with a smile of pained surprise, remark: "Surely you are mistaken, there is no such ballot box here." Ah, well, these little amenities add to the pleasure of politics. The campaign for Governor and state officers is proceeding in a very dignified way. Thus far it is not marked by as much asperity as characterized the Democratc primaries for the selection of candidates. The Republicans are not calling the Democratic, candidates names; they merely quote what was said about him by Democrats before the primaries. The Democrats cannot attack the Republican candidate per sonally, for his record, while brief,- is clean. Anyhow they think it sufficient to hint at the affiliation of his party with the Republican party of Mahone's days, and the adherence to it today of a certain element which votes the Repub lican ticket. In Virginia the dominant party con trols every branch of the public service. Bipartisan boards, even of elections and education are unknown. The Republi cans do not get a look-in at election times, to any practical purpose. i ne entire school system is absolutely under the control of the politicians, and their power was exerted in such a way in the last appointment of school supervisors as to elicit a. roar of protest from even their own side. ' The way the game Is framed Op the political machine In power finds a valu able, auxiliary In the educational branch of the state service. That power ex tends down the line, even to the ap pointment of teachers. Under the state constitution of 1902 the State Board of Education consists of eight members, threeof whom the Governor, the Attorney-General and the Superintendent of Public Instruction are elected by the people; three professors from state Institutions of higher education are elected by the Senate; and two division Superintendents, one from a county and one from a city, are chosen by the re m aindar of the board. Life's Sunny Side "Did the Major ever get that office he was running for?" , 'Don't want it. You see, the Major Is a born orator, and if hs should get the office he'd have to quit speechlfyin'. Only thing that saves him is to keep a-runnin'." Atlanta Constitution. Knicker When do you expect confirma tion of the discovery of the Pole?" Bocker When Mr. S. Claus comes to town. New York Sun. . . Farmer Ever milk a cow? Boarder No, sir, but I'd like to try. Farmer Think you can make 'er giv down? Boarder I guess so. I've served two years as a personal-property assessor. Chicago Tribune. Foxy Papa Have you vanishing Ink? Tradesman Yes. Going to make sure of no breach of promise suits? Foxy Papa Oh, no; going to give my daughter a check for loflOO as a wedding present. Tit-Bits. Reporter Senator, to what do you chief ly attribute your successful career? Eminent Statesman Entirely to hered ity, young man. I deserve no credit for it whatever. My father had ambition and my moUier had talent, and I hap pened to inherit both those qualifications. Exchange. ' Plutocrat (engaging new chauffeur) And have you any references from your last employer? Applicant for the Job No; but I can get some In about a month. Plutocrat Why the delay? Applicant He's in the hospital. Cas-, sells' London Journal. v Him You're the only girl I ever loved! Her That's interesting, but Immaterial. What I want to know is, am I the only girl you're ever going to love? Chicago Leader. v -In the air one minute "Another fool inventor."- In the air three minutes "Hasn't he killed himself yet?" In the air five minutes "AU tha fools ain't dead yet." In the air 80 minutes "Mr. Ayrlder, the well-known aviator." In the air one hour "Our distinguished fellow-countryman." In the air one hour and a quarter "The wizard of the air." In the air one hour and a half "Tha Legion of Honor could have been be stowed on no worthier man." Life, e Zeke Weatherby Josh, while I was up In town I saw the churn drummer that ran awa3- with yeour old woman. He's not a bad fellow. Josh. He's Just full of sympathy. Josh Henpeck (grimly) He ought to ba full of it, by heck. He's got mine. Chi cago News. Kind Old Lady (talking to a tramps Have you ever made an effort to get work 7 Tramp Yes, ma'am. Last month I got work for two members of my family, but neither of them would take it. Human Life. "You're a bum driver," says one chauf feur. "Say," says the other, "what I know about automobiles would fill a library." "Yes, and what you don't know about 'em would fill a morgue." Cleveland Leader. ; HAHHIMAN'S METHOD, But Who Would Have Dnrrd This nod Succeeded but Harrlman f B. J. Hendrlck In McClure's Magazine. The history of the Harrlman loads Is simply that of a small group of men who, without spending much money of their own, have concentrated In their own hands one-third the railway mile age of the United States. Once getting possession of the Union Pacific evi dently without going deeply down into their own pockets they have simply issued new securities and with the money derived from this sale have pur chased large stock interests in other roads. In 1898 Harrlman began the management of the Union Pacific, and in 1899 he Issued its preferred and com mon stock to the amount of $32,000,000, purchasing with the money thus ob tained the Oregon Railroad & Naviga tion Company and the Oregon Short Line, which extended his system to the Pacific Coast. In 1901 the great ex pansion of the Harriman system really began, when the Union Pacific and tha Oregon Short Line raised $145,000, 000 by the sale of bonds. The directors placed the large sum at Harrlman's dis posal to expend for the benefit of the road. Briefly stated, Harrlman used the money lnxbuylng a controlling in terest in two imperial railroad sys temsthe Southern Pacific and the Northern Paulfio. Many factors con tributed to the success of Jhls. probably the most colossal performance in the history of American railway finance. Harriman unquestionably used, not his . own money, but the credit of the Union Pacific in extending his railroad power. , Had ha not first rebuilt and remade tha Union Pacific, however, rescued it from insolvency and transformed it Into a richly paying system. It would manl- . festly not have had the credit with which tie accomplished the task. SHORT POLITICAL COMMENT. . Mr. Bryan speaks of tire two wings , of tha Republican party. Thafs as ! many as the angels have. Springfield Union. t That New York plan to "reunite all Democrats" will give new life to that exciting question: "What is a Demo crat?" Detroit News. . Judging by the number of Important recommendations President Taft says ; he will make to Congress next Winter, that body will have no chance to "loaf on the job." Philadelphia Press. It Is our belief that the worthlessness of Legislatures is a direct result of the muck raker campaigns which have been carried on by some magazines and some newspapers. Charleston News and Courier. President Taft switched from conserv ation' to the corporation tax at Den ver. In casting about for subjects the President will never find one that will prove more Interesting than the tariff as viewed by its friends Louisville Courier-Journal. If our state takes down one bottle from tho patent medicine shelf, the de mand for others will quickly be heai'd. While we are yet writhing in tha throes of direct primary gastralgla, a shout will arise for a dose of referen dum pills or perchance a recall tablet. And so it will go. New York Evening Sun. Tj'Be-n'a Eos Plan. Tillamook Headlight. The TTRen style of political bosslsm is advocating a constitutional amendment to take the election of Sheriffs, District Attorneys and etate officers out of the people's hands and give the Governor the ; power to appoint them. Those who so j blindly followed the U'Ren fallacies will , readily see that this would create such : a monster political machine that It would i eclipse all other boss rule ever attompted j In Oregon. Surely H la about time for I the Republicans, who went daft over the , U'Ren fallacies, to regain their senses j and adhere strictly to representative gov- ernmen. ;