THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1909. 8 FORTLAVD. OKEOO.V Entered at Portland. Oregon. Fostofflce as 6econd-Cia Matter. Subscription Kates Inrarlahly la Advance. (By Mall.) " Pally. Sunday Included, one year. -on Ially. Sunday Included, all m'mths raily. aundsy Included three monlhi... Iaily. Sunday Included, one month rally. without Sunday, one year o.ju Iativ. without Sunday, six months. aa Pally, without Sunday three month.... 1 roily. without Sunday, oth month Vie-kly. one year Sunday, one year Sunday and weekly, one year (Br Carrier.) Daily. Sunday included, one year. . JJ Dally. Sunday Included, one month How to Remit Send poatofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local hank. Stamps, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postofTlce ad dress In fall. Including county and state Pontage Rate ID to 14 pases. 1. cent; 18 to 23 pages. 2 cents; 3' to 4i pages. 3 cents; 41 to t panes. 4 cents. Foreign postaue double rate. Eastern BtuineM Office Th- S. C. Beck wlth Special Agenoy New York, rooms So Tribune bnll.Hng. Chicago, rooms siooi ' Tribune bulldinir. PORTLAXD. THURSDAY, OCT. !1. 1909. THE INCOME TAX. It la very probable that the proposed Income tax amendment, submitted to the states by resolution of Congress at the recent session, will fall to obtain the assent, of three-fourths of the states, necessary to Its ratification. Georgia has declined to ratify it. Mas sachusetts. Rhode Island and New York give indications of a disposition to refuse It. Maryland will probably reject it. Twelve states can defeat it. All the New England states will probably reject it. Six more, of which the South will furnish more than one or two. will make a sufficient number. New York, New Jersey, and Pennsyl- vanla most probably will decline to ratify it. Likewise Delaware, which Is among the most 'conservative" of the slates. The Republicans of Rhode Island, following the example of those of Mas sachusetts, decline to make it a party question, but refer it to the Legis lature for action. "We deem It best." say the Republicans of Rhode Island, In a resolution adopted by their state convention, "that the Legislature, without regard to party consideration, take such action as may seem best concerning the Federal Income tax. It is a financial question and should not be considered as a question of party politics." ' This Is portentous, for large bodies f Democrats In New England will take the same view of this subject as that taken by Republicans. The ar gument against the tax presents It self to the minds of all these men in the same way. The argument divides Itself into two or three Important branches. First, It 'is desired to re serve the Income tax as a source of stite revenue. This was the main ar gument in Georgia. Second, states whose citizens have large investments, both In other states and In their own, object, on the ground that they would pay a disproportionate share of the tax. Third, the General Government has already unlimited income in tariff tares and exclsta, and should not be permitted to trench further on the revenue, powers and resources of the tates. It is argued further that with the corporation tax and the income tax In the hands of the United State- there would be a. growing tendency and power in the hands of the General Government towards the absorption by It of the resources and functions of the states; and such centralization would change the whole nature of our political and governmental system. This is an argument which will find Its strongest advocates in the South, as the argument against taxation of Incomes from investments will find its strongest advocates In the East, where realit.d wealth is relatively more abundant than In the newer states. While no tax can be satisfactory to those who must pay it, yet we believe an income tax is fair as any, and in some features fairer than most. It falls, certainly, on those most able to pay. The argument that the states sh uld reserve this resource for them selves has some force and merit; and yet It is not likely that the states ever will have uniform Income taxes, and without uniformity the system will be Ineffective. Transfer of residence and property from one state to another would be Induced by want of uniform ity in state taxation, and through va rious kinds of ingenuity many who ought to pay the tax would manage to evade it. The argument against cen tralization can have no "weight with those who make a bugbear of It. Extreme protectionists do not want an Income tax. Oregon will ratify the proposed amendment, perhaps without open ob jection, for objection would be use le.r. In Oregon there are compara tively few persons who will have tax able incomes, and they will be silent. Again, there are few in Oregon now who are afraid of centralization, though of old that fear was a bug bear and nightmare here. It Is so no longer. The JePfersonlan idea has been whipped out in no state more thoroughly than In Oregon. We are all imperialists here. We look to the central government for everything. The tendency of democracy to land in these conclusions Is one of the most Interesting things In the study of his tory. When the wheel of democracy comes full circle It lands us In a cen tralized government, conducted in the name of democracy. THE PERIODICAL REVOLUTION. The frequency of Central American revolutions Is such that It is a difficult matter for the outside world to dis tinguish where one leaves oft and an other begins. For that reason the present Nicaraguan trouble fails to at tract the world-wide and general In terest that would be noticeable if the revolution were being conducted In a country which did not run revolutions In serial or tandem style. General Juan J. Estrada, firm In the belief that he would make a much better President than Zelaya. who has given no sign that he intended to relinquish the Job. has got together quite a large band of Generals, Colonels, Lieu tenants and some privates, and Is al ready giving Zelaya many anxious mo ments. Even a continuous round of bull fighting, cockflghting and gambling sometimes palls on the peppery Cen tral Americans, and the task of en rolling an army for the purpose of overturning the government is not at all difficult. But, despite the apparent impression that Estrada is making with the Nicaraguan people, he will find his present undertaking a some what strenuous task. Putting down revolutions and executing revolution ists has been almost a continuous per formance with Zelaya since he shifted from the role of revolutionist to that of dictator. He Is "the party in power," and with the revenues of the country at his command, can buy more patriotism than Estrada can se cure with promises of political prefer ment. Yesterday's dispatches seem to Indi cate that Estrada had made a consid erable showing along the coast, and, if he can secure sufficient arms, there will be some sharp fighting when the opposing forces clash in the Interior. Zelaya is not holding his job by reason of the great love his people bear him, but in money, arms and position ho has such an advantage over Estrada that It might be well for Estrada to have the cables on some of his fishing smacks hove short, or ready to slip, in case it should be necessary. to make a quick get-away when he comes scur rying out of the woods a few seconds in advance of Zelayas bayonets and bullets. Honduras. Salvador and Guatemala all have a grievance against Zelaya, but it is hardly probable that they will Join Issues with Estrada. If he suc ceeds it will be at a cost that will leave him weak enough to be willing to do what his neighbors desire. On the. other hand. If Zelaya Is successful In putting down the revolution, it will be at a cost that will leave him more tractable than he has been for a long time. So far as the United States is concerned, the only inconvenience threatened is a temporary interruption of the banana trade. As this is the apple season, it will not make so much difference, so with a fair degree of Im partiality we can say "Go it, Zelaya; go It. Estrada," and may' the worst man get lickecV TILE ROMANCE OF SEVEN. "Since the Constitution of Oregon says there never shall be more than seven supreme Justices of the state, prudent lawyers interpret the maxi mum number to be not three but seven." Thus the Bourne-Chamberlain organ in Portland. But what sort of Journalism Is this? It Is misleading; it is absolutely false. The Constitution contains no such statement. It dis tinctly limits the Justices of the Su preme Court to three, and says nothing at all about seven. "When the white population of the state," says the Constitution, "shall amount to two hundred thousand the legislative assembly may provide for the election of supreme and circuit judges in distinct classes, one of which shall consist of three Justices of the Supreme Court, who shall not perform circuit duty, and the other class shall consist of the necessary number of circuit Judges, who shall hold full terms without allotment, and who shall take the same oath as the supreme Judges." This is the fundamental law. nere is the provision for seven Justices? The number is distinctly limited to three; and they are separated in a distinct class from the circuit Judges, of which there are now twenty In the sfate. Dissatisfied with the limitation of the supreme Justices to three, the po litical jugglers of the state wanted two more: so last year they proposed, by Initiative, an amendment of the Con stitution for increase of the number from three to five. This was beaten by a vote of 60,591 noes to 30,213 ayes. Now If the Constitution already provided that the number might be seven, why the effort to amend, so that the number might be increased from three to five? This misrepresentation Is Just about as near as these politi cal jugglers and their orators and or gans ever come to the truth. The Legislature, in impudent viola tion of the mandate of the people, as well as of the Constitution Itself, at the recent session enacted that the number of Justices of the Supreme Court should be Increased from three to five. Why was this done. If al ready there might be seven? The people, by decisive vote, had but Just then rejected the proposition that the number might be increased from three to five. This style of falsification is charac teristic of the entire "reform move ment" in Oregon. But of course there Is 4io expectation of finding any cor rect representation In the paper called the Oregon Journal. Its ambition, clearly. Is to hold high place as a ro mance organ. Nobody stultifies him self by giving credit to Its statements, on any Important matter. NO TAX-BXTLT RAILROADS. Numerous remote districts In Ore gon want railroads and have seized upon the state-ownership or district ownership plan to bring them the transportation they need. They are already denouncing with warmth and even with bitterness, foes of this pro posed system as obstacles to progress and as landmarks of a selfish interest that has rail lines in Its own territory and cares nothing for undeveloped areas of the state. They are encour aged In this attitude by would-be pol iticians of clap-trap, shrieky type who think to win votes and by land specu lators who look to their own local in crements, regardless of the tax bur den and the heavy loss that would cer tainly be the share of taxpayers. This scheme of public-built and public-owned railroads will be resisted by sober, conservative citizens every where. It Is an effort to open up re mote districts by a ruinous taxing and mortgaging project. All the way from Boise, Idaho, through Southern Ore gon, to Coos Bay and Curry County this scheme has advocates. At Ban don, Curry County, Editor Kopf, of the otherwise esteemed Recorder, preaches the doctrine as follows: In Idaho and Oragon within tha last two years ten conrentlons and representative gatherings have met to consider tha con struction of railroads by districts, tha money to be aecured by bonding tha land benefited. Railroad make land more valuable. They add from $20 to t.VK) an acre to the agri cultural land, especially in the state of Oregon: where they make fruit shipments possible. In California irrigation canals costing many millions have been conatructed In thla manner. The construction of rail roads by bonding the land benefited and keeDlna the enormous values thus created In the handa f the people owning the land instead of In the hands of the Wall street speculator! may seem a little startling, but If the people are willing to let any rall roadleas district try 1U perhaps It may be a way out of paying dividends on watered stock or doing without transportation. It la up to the people. Now railroads and canals are wholly different kinds of public utili ties. Problems of building both are simple and within determined cost. But operation and maintenance of the two are very dissimilar. Few hands and little money will keep vp a canal; many men and much money are needed to run and maintain a raiiroa. This makes public ownership of rail roads a most hazardous and foolhardy enterprise. It has been successful in no state and wherever. tried has ended in loss, debt, high taxes and surrender to private ownership. When public-owned railroads was sprung last Winter at Salem It pro posed state ownership and the "dis trict" plan was secondary. But oppo sition has been so vigorous that now the advocates of this foolhardy scheme are falling back on district ownership. But this second plan is no better than the other and in some respects is worse. Next year electors will pass on the two schemes in the form of a con stitutional amendment, removing the bar, now In the Constitution, against use of the public credit for railroad building. The amendment is the most vicious of all the bad legislation that has been urged upon the people of Oregon. This state for a long time needed railroads far worse than now, but never so urgently as to justify their construction and operation through taxation. The debt-heaping power of such projects is beyond limit, also their political machinery. The many struggling communities of Oregon must rely on their resources to attract private and corporate cap ital for railroad building. If they must wait by such procedure, then they ought to wait. The less they admit government into the pockets of tax payers the better. CODDLING OLD BACHELORS. Naturally everybody will try to wish well to the gentleman who expects to make-over the old Arlington clubhouse into a bachelors' hotel. As long as we must have bachelors among us It is better to make them comfortable. Misery might diminish their spiritual eligibility and mar whatever slender hope of heaven old bachelors may reasonably entertain. It would cer tainly blight the happiness of their as sociates. Therefore may prosperous gales attend the launching of this new enterprise and may its promoter grow rapidly and amply rich. This is a con ditional benediction, however. .It is bestowed only on the supposition that hachlnr. are an unavoidable phenom enon, not to say an unavoidable evil. If there Is any humane way to elim inate them the benediction Is with drawn. Clearly if it is possible to ex tirpate or reform them, it is bad policy to encourage their increase by making them happy. Wisdom counsels us to hrine home to them a salutary sense of their depravity by keeping them wretched. TTntll the world changes a good deal It will be the plain duty of every able-bodied man to provide for the support of a wife. Whoever shirks the duty need not feel abused ir he is derided bv the ribald and admonished by the devout. One need not accuse him of deliberate selfishness. Prob ably he is no worse than thoughtless. Rut the vision of some beauteous fe male wending a solitary and loveless way to the tomb because of his neglect of. an undeniable obligation ought to make him blush. And what, as moral censors, shall we say of this modern propensity to reward bachelors for shunning matrimony by surrounding them with sybaritic delights? Is it well to lure them down the primrose path of celibacy with wanton luxuries r iV.oTitmQTif? Wmilil It not IUJU SUll TTl'V iic.tn.i.v ... - .. be wiser to decree that every con firmed old bachelor shall live in the woodshed? GOVERNMENT BUSINESS. The Government call for bids for oats a few weeks ago specified delivery at tidewater points on the Pacific Coast. The contract, as let in Seattle Tuesday, accepts delivery of the oats at Montana points. The Government, having an abnor mally low freight rate on the land grant railroads, is thus enabled to se cure a reduction of several dollars per ton. It is somewhat strange, nowever, that Montana delivery was not spec led in tha call for bids. Montana oats are undoubtedly as good as any others, and will easily grade up to requirements. Some of the Pacific Coast bidders, however, were not In formed that the Government would "stand in" and accept delivery of Mon tana. nat In Montana, and were ac cordingly severely handicapped in their efforts to secure the business. The business methods of the Gov-oT-nment are so radically different from those of business men that It Is difficult at times to determine what. is meant. SPAIN IN SORRY PLIGHT. The position of Alfonso of Spain is anything but enviable. Titular king of that ancient and decayed mon archy, his power is disputed by an alarming number of his alleged sub jects, and his life, with that of his queen and their young children, is nnder the menace of revolution and all the horrors that this possibility Implies. He is a youthful monarch, the post humous son of Alfonso XII, and, though born a king. Is but little skilled in kingcraft. Grandson of the dissolute Isabella and her weak and profligate husband, and son of a father who died early from excesses for which his mother was deposed and exiled, the boy king attained his majority and assumed the inherited reins of power under a heavy handi cap. His mother, an Austrian prin cess and a woman bred to statecraft, managed the regency of Spain with great adroitness during her son's min ority, and hoped to turn over to him a kingdom loyal to the crown and to the dynasty that It represents. His marriage to a niece of King Edward of England was relied upon to strengthen alike the position of Spain among the powers of Europe and the fealty of his subjects. The attempt to assassinate the royal couple while riding in the ancient chariot of the Spanish Bourbons, in their Imposing marriage procession through the streets of Madrid, dispelled the latter hope. That the former will be real ized Is Improbable, since the throne of Alfonso seems to be tottering to its tall. To do the young king Justice, he has made an earnest effort to adjust himself to the exigencies of his king dom and to gain the good will of his subjects. In this effort he has been hampered by the hoary traditions of Spain, as well as by his own Inexpe rience and the arrogance of his coun sellors. - The Russian Minister of Agriculture estimates the 1909 wheat crop of the empire at 660,000.000 bushels, an In crease of 139,000,000 bushels over the crop of last year. These figures ac count for the weekly Russian ship ments, which for the past six weeks have been averaging more than 7,000,- 000 bushels. A crop of the size men tioned y the Minister of Agriculture does not seem excessively large In comparison with the American crop of approximately 700.000,000 bushels. The importance of the figures, how ever, lies in the availability of the wheat for consumption in the world's buying markets. Russia is always a free seller when the price is high, even though famine conditions exist among the peasantry, who have no money with which to purchase wheat. For that reason Great Britain can draw long and strong on the Russian sur plus unless the United States offers the cereal more freely than it has been of fered to date. Records for long-distance, high speed balloon flights are running pretty far back in the past. A few days ago it was reported that none of the present-day flights equaled that of Professor Lowe, who covered 500 miles in nine hours In April, 1861. Now comes a story from St. Louis that an even half-century ago Professor Wise sailed 1150 miles in an air line in nine teen .hours, a fraction over sixty miles per hour. As the contests with air ships of the type used by Lowe aad Wise run nearly back to the days of the Montgolfler brothers. It Is not easy to determine Just who holds the record for flights made under such varying conditions. With the aeroplane the uihinHnn Is vastlv different, for Its suc cess and Its records have all been at tained within the past year and noth ing aproaching a successful flight can be traced farther back than the first performance of the Wright brothers. The world exclaims against the trial and execution of Ferrer, because the trial was secret. He was accused of treason. Had the trial been open and an open defense permitted, then the world would have been able to see the conditions in Spain and to decide whether or not Ferrer had Justification. But he was tried In secrecy and exe cuted in hugger-mugger. Spain may think it her own business, merely; but an act of tyranny these days sends an electrical thrill throughout the world. Ferrer was a "philosophical reformer." In a degree he was a revolutionist, for he wanted to make Spain a republic. Technically, this was treason. But monarchy can maintain itself only In the light of day., It ought to have given Ferrer an open trial. It will re pent that it did not. Oregon will be well represented by a band of horny-handed sons of toil at the Farmers' National Congress at Raleigh, N. C, next month. With Tom Richardson to tell them where to go, and William McMurray to show them how to get there, and A. H. Averill to tell them what to use, and S. A. Lowell and W. M. Colvig on the side lines. Dr. Kerr will be kept busy telling them how we farm to advantage in this greatest section of the world's garden. Fruitgrowers in Michigan, Missouri and New York, where they think they can grow apples, and where they do so, for that matter great, big red ones, too will read iwlth wonder of a Hood River orchard selling for $1650 an acre. The tale sounds like ro mantic immigration literature, but Is merely the cold fact of a result of soil and system. There are other "pock ets" in the Cascades that will yet be the succeeding chapters of the story. Trial of the Japanese sealers who were arrested in Alaska for Illegal sealing resulted In acquittal of the men. At the conclusion of the trial at Juneau they were turned over to the Immigration authorities for deporta tion. As nothing developed in the testimony at the trial to show that the Japanese were violating the law, we may expect in due season a bill for damages from the Japanese govern ment. There is really a genuine hope in Portland that some day Jake Mitch ell will return from parts unknown and explain how much of the money borrowed from the Oregon Trust for the Order of Washington reached the treasury of that great benevolent and philanthropic organization. Explorer Matt Henson is being widely entertained by the colored population. He has as yet had no in vitation to lunch at the White House. Nor has Mr. Johnson. However, he's the world's champion pugilist all right, and will be until he meets a better, though not a darker, man. They think in New York that, next to the Presidency, the Mayoralty is the most Important office in the United States. See Judge Gaynor's speech. There Is a lot of New York people who will wonder why the Judge excepted the Presidency. While the officers of the Rose Festi val are preparing for spectacular feat tires, the ordinary citizen may, any time the next month, plant new or old varieties of roses whose blooms will make the main show in June. Jake Mitchell, Gus Lowit and other frenzied financiers who negotiated big loans with the old Oregon Trust have moved on. So has Cashier Cooper Morris. But no new pasture can ever be so rich as the old. The assembly plan will be followed, and every Republican candidate who subscribes to the bogus statement will be beaten, If effort can do It. If party Isn't to stand for anything let party perish. Mrs. Batonyl named ten co-respondents as a reason for divorce from her husband, and he responded with nam ing eleven who had been friendly with his wife. Busy family. Eastern Marion County Is the latest undiscovered country to be Invaded by a railroad. It Is surprising that capital has been so slow to enter this rich field of Oregon. Knud Rasmussen, 'Danish explorer, has seen the two Eskimos and he says they confirm Cook in every particular. Now it's Peary's turn again with the Eskimos. Over In Seattle they are supporting a Seattle man for Minister to China. Yet a Chinese Minister should have other qualifications. Dr. Cook will climb Mount McKin ley again. Just to show that he did it the first time. Cook should take along the Show-Me Club. Judge Gaynor will be given frequent opportunities, if elected, to get better acquainted with Tammany. WHERE) DR. COOK SOW STAJTDS- It I Incumbent on Him to Clear Up tie Doubts at Oxioe. New York Evening Post. Let It be admitted at once that the af fidavit of Barrill, the man who accom panied Dr. Cook on his alleged ascent of Mount McKInley. is not con clusive evidence of the falsity of the doctor's story; that a man who signs a sworn statement that he had been a voluntary participant In the concoction of an elaborate and swindling falsehood cannot be accepted as an unimpeach able witness when he swears that he lied. However fully this may be grant ed, it is nevertheless manifest that the publication of Barrlll's affidavit, to say nothing of other evidence, radically al ters the position in which Cook stands as regards his claim to the discovery of the North Pole. What that position Is should be set down in as plain lan guage as possible, and this we shall en deavor to do. Six weeks and more have passed since his first story of his exploit was given to the world. Since that time he has added practically nothing to the meagre evidence furnished in his account of the actual performance of the tremen dous task which he claims to have ac complished, with, the assistance of only two young Eskimos, after the most arduous and long-planned endeavors of all his predecessors had failed. These two Eskimos, the only companions of his Journey, have giveh a circumstantial story of that journey, according to which it was not even an attempt to reach the Pole, but a deliberate impos ture a mere dash a short way out over the land Ice, f followed by a long sojourn hundreds of miles south of the Pole. And now comes his only com panion on the other extraordinary ad venture that he claims to have carried to a triumphant conclusion, and swears that that, too, was a deliberate impos ture. Thus two tremendous feats of endurance, skill and daring two achievements each of which had been given up in despair by all who had gone before him are claimed by Dr. Cook, not only on the mere basis of his unsupported word, but In the face of positive circumstantial statements to the contrary made by every human being who was with him on either occasion. e Such a situation would obviously pro voke, on the part of any man who wish ed to retain the respect of his fellows, a demand for the promptest, most com prehensive and most thorough Investi gation possible. The Evening Post has not permitted itself to pass judgment on his case on the basis of a mere bal ance of probabilities, however strongly It may have' felt, at times, that that balance inclined in one direction. But the time has come, or will come very soon, when mere failure to press the question to a conclusion must be re garded as a confession of guilt. It Is not for this or that scientific body, or this or that newspaper, to suggest to Dr. Cook the propriety of presenting his evidence and getting an authorita tive verdict; It Is for him to demand an inquiry, to insist on its being complete, to place not only his memoranda, but himself, unreservedly at the disposal of an Impartial committee of investigation. Failure to do this and to do it prompt ly, will, we warn him, very rapidly have the effect of causing those whose opinions are worth anything to set him down as a shameless Impostor. This Is strong language, but It has been carefully weighed. We have not been anxious to have! Cook's claim dis proved; we have held out for fair play. But as time has passed, the spectacle presented by this unproved claimant to signal honors has become more and mere offensive. He has been compla cently going about the country taking in the people's money and enjoying the people's plaudits and leaving to the future the task of establishing his claim. To criticisms based on intrinsic improbabilities or defects in his story, he has been offering Indefinite or fragmentary answers. When his Es kimo companions, the only associates of his Polar enterprise, are cited in evi dence against him, he tells us that their talk was merely in pursuance of his In junctions to them to conceal the facts. Now comes the only witness of his great mountain feat, the only man whose testimony was available to him in confirmation of the Mount McKInley claim, and declares, under oath, that that claim is an elaborate lie from be ginning to end. And this witness Is not in the frozen North; he can doubtless be produced at short notice. If Dr. Cook is an honest man. he will demand that this be done, and that the whole case, North Pole and Mount McKInley both, be cleared up at once and com pletely. From now on he ought to be snending all his days and nights In the work of clearing his honor, and every dollar that he takes In henceforward by exploiting his claim when he ought to be removing the cloud on It. will be a dollar gained at the expense of his reputation for honesty. " Orators as Plagiarists. London Chronicle. Most of our great orators have, been plagiarists. Even Disraeli, who coined so many phrases, borrowed his best re membered expression, "peace with hon or," for it was used long before his time by Burke, and its real parent was Shakespeare; while Mr. Jesse Colling's famous "three acres and a cow" was annexed from a speech by Canning. Another neat phrase, used by Mr. John Morley. "mend It or end it," In a speech at St. James Hall in 1884 on the House of Lords, owed its origin, probably, to Sir Walter Scott, who in "The Monas tery" makes one of his characters to say: "My fate calls me elsewhere, to v. -.... t ahull nd it. or mend It." BUVlica wiifia . ...-. Many stock political phrases also which are generally uriouisa i statesmen have had a very different orl- in "Tho e-reatest hannlness of the greatest number" was first seen In a pamphlet by V. josepn x-nemiy. x u Rev. J. A. Galbraith, a Dublin professor, . , (n.-nntn, nf 'Wnme Rule." The wa.o in, ' " . . . - - words "nonconformist conscience' first made their bow in a letter sent to me Times by "A Wesleyan Minister." Goldsmith was tne tamer or measures, not men." Napoleon III first uttered the words "defense, not defiance." TM.w.,,, in "T.lttln Dorrit" Invented "red tape," and the "policy of pin pricks " nrst saw me ngm m mc umns of the French paper Le Matin. "Don't Cut No Ice." New York Tribune. It Isn't "I say unto you!" nowadays so much as it was, but instead we are daily reminded of what Epictetus or some other reconaite ancient saia. as the supporters of the Christian (and profane) Jurist would say: "This Epic tetus bloke don't cut no Ice! He's a dead one!" What the popular ear longs fni- la a resumption of the "I say unto you" dithyrambs, about the striking of the nour, tne biuw wpcuuj nmo and the "persistency of Cato calling for the destruction or Carthage." Kpic tetus, forsooth! And tomorrow It may be Boethlus or Martin Farquhar Tup- perl A Long Delivery In Post Cards, New York Herald. Three picture postcards posted five sex village near Hastings, England, a few days ago. one posicara oore me date December 23, 1904, and the other tWO LUO Ufltn i ..i ........ . , . " - - -1 were dispatched from Hastings, which is only inree miles away. PEJgDLETOVS ROLE AS DRY TOWS. Noted Temperance Worker State. Facta ae S Observed Thr-m. PORTLAND, Oct. 20. (To the Editor.) In last Saturday's Oregonlan I noted a communication from San Francisco, a re port from the hotel men's meeting, anent the much-mooted question. Dry or wet, which?" and the oft-repeated statement, prohibition does not prohibit. I have Just returned from a six weeks trip through Eastern Oregon and Idaho. Having made direful investigation in many places, and having visited Pendle ton, in particular, to see conditions there. I feel that many of your readers would like to hear something direct from the battle-ground itself. There Is little doubt in our minds as to the reason why certain hotel and restaurant-keepers are "knocking" and de claring that shutting up drinking places has hurt business. And it is with interest that we listened to other business men. But not a word about Pendleton. As the cars steamed into the station, and we wended our way up Main street, we re called our last visit to the city, which was prior to the '.'dry" condition, and the first impression was of improved appearance, cleaner streets, etc. There were no signs of a dead town. On the contrary, we found a newly-built and equipped woolen mill, costing some J40.000. $30,000 of It 'having been raised the past year; also found a new, attractive City Hall, at a possible cost of $30,000, and two new, substantial schoolhouses. A bridge was being built across the river at an ex pense of $10,000. Old wooden sidewalks were being replaced by cement ones, and on reliable authority we learned that whereas there were 200 vacant houses when the town was "wet." now they were decreased some 100, and that good houses were hard to get The First National Bank showed the fol lowing statement: Bank deposits July 15, 1908, $1,293,982.13 (town went "dry" July 1, 190S); on June 23, 1909, $1,474,459.17, an in crease of $175,337.04. Grocerymen, dealers in meat and food supplies, dry goods, Jewelry, etc., gave strong testimony of increased business and better conditions in general. The restaurants which kept open all night and catered for "wet" trade and those which were directly and indi rectly connected with the liquor business, of course, were losers, and, as the term goes, were "knockers." The contrast between Pendleton as It was. with its 28 saloons (7000 population), and the other evils that Invariably accom pany the saloon business, and Pendh'.ton as it le today, with no open saloon, with clean streets, and happy, prosperous men and women. Is so striking that no right minded man or woman could help but re joice in the wonderful change and marked improvement. That a Sodom, such as must result from 28 saloons in a town of 7000 inhabitants, could be at once transformed into a para dise could hardly be expected, and if there ara some disgruntled dealers in the liquor evil, declaring that prohibition does not prohibit, might it not be well to ask why? The very assertion that there is Illicit selling carries with it the fact that there are lawbreakers. What should every well-governed city do with lawbreakers? The answer is clear: Enforce the law. Garfield once said: "Coercion is the basis of every law in the universe, human or divine. A law is no law without coer cion back of it." It may be a hard les son for some to learn that personal rights must give way to public good, or In other words, the greatest good to the largest number. All tho old argument as to personal rights is a misconception of our relation ship to each other and to our country. Prohibition of the liquor traffic does not prohibit, when law is respected and offi cers will do the duty they have sworn to perform. Oregon will be free from the curse of the saloon. God speed the day. LUCIA H. ADDITON. SUIT. PROPOSED THE SUPREME TEST Could Not Klxk the Mistake That Might , Wreck Their Lives. Chicago Tribune. "Stllllngia," said the young man, his voice tremulous with suppressed emotion, "are you going to put me on the pazziz? Is this where I get off?" Unshed tears were In the lovely maid en's eyes. If she had shed them they would not have been in her eyes. But let that pass. "I have not said so, Geoffrey," reluc tantly she answered, "in so many words. But'' "Listen, Stllllngia!" he burst' forth Im petuously. "Is there any other guy that's got the inside track? Am I play ing second fiddle to some snoozer with plastered hair, an ingrowing chin, and a pull at the bank? If so " "No, Geoffrey, but " "Then why the Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego are you stalling me off! I may not be a pampered child of fashion, but I'm on the dead lev. I've never been caught with the goods. Girlie, ever since I was a kid you've been my one best bet, and you know It. I'm Old Faithful from Kleengonvllle. I've trailed along in your wake like a night police reporter on track of a lovely holdup, or a bug collector after a gorgeous butter fly. All my life I've been building bunga lows in the air for you to move into some day. I'd rather look at your tin type than to eat four square meals. You are the niftiest, peachlest dream that ever" . "Geoffrey," interrupted the beautiful girl, standing erect'bofore him, pale, but calm and resolute. "I know you love me, and I am touched as never before by your devotion, but something seems to tell me that we are not truly mated" Here her voice faltered. "Geoffrey," she said, recovering her self, "we must not make a mistake that will wreck our whole lives. I must ask you one question!" Well?" "Which side do you take in this North Pole controversy ?" The Withered Staff of Aeacnlnpliis. New York Medical Journal. Aesculapius was always represented with a staff, a symbol of the support needed by the sick; around It was en twined the ancient symbol of eternity, the serpent Throughout succeeding ages physicians carried a stick, which during the Middle Ages was usually surmounted by a small metal box containing aromatic herbs which the doctor sniffed as he con templated his patient to counteract in fection and the universal stench of the sickroom then prevalent. Later on the stick shrunk into a cane, and during the regency had above the handle an eyeglass, a survey of the Invalid through which must have conferred an ineffable look of wisdom and profundity. In early Vic torian days a climax of bad taste was reached in the use of carved ivory or bone skulls as cane handles, an example of the ethical advertising of the period. Finally the doctor's cane has followed his black coat and high hat into ohlivion, and more and more must the practitioner rely upon his brains for prestige. Lost Engagement Ring In m Neat. Camden, N. J., Dispatch. In a chestnut tree felled on James T. Brinker's farm at Jacksonville. N. J., there was found a bird's nest contain ing Mrs. Brinker's engagement ring that disappeared 15 years ago. There were ten other rings in the nest, stick pins ar.d a gold brooch. The first love letter Brinker sent to his wife when he was courting her was also found in the nest. Cellar Work for Mnalc Lessons. Chicago Inter Ocean. In a New England weekly newspaper appears the following advertisement: "A stonemason or his daughter may receive one quarter's music lessons in exchange for work on a cellar." Life's SunnySide At a diplomatic reception in Washing ton Mrs. Taft, on being co.nplimented on her exquisite French, told a little etory about a Senator whose French (acquired In 12 phonographic lessons) is by no means exquisite. The Senator, fresh from one of his phonographic recitals, pounced upon an under secretary of the French Legation at a dinner. "Monsieur," he said, "eska ah eska voo eska voo voo-Iy ma voo voo-ly ma dunny " "My dear Senator." the secretary ln terupted, "do, I beg you, stop cpeaking French. You speak it so well ah. so very, very well it makes me homesick!" Kansas City Independent. e s Here is a Tennyson anecdote which we recently found in a French literary paper and which we believe will be new to a great many of our renders: The laureate, of course, was in the hahlt of receiving a large number of requests for his auto graph. As a rule he did not reply. But one dav he was much Impressed by the letter of the young daughter of a coun try gentleman, and he sent her not only his autograph, but an original quatrain. The girl was naturally delighted. Hr father, however, did not allow her to thank the poet, but assumed that re sponsibility himself. He sent the follow- "Dear Sir: I have shown your versen to the schoolmaster. He finds that the tails of the g's and tho upper part of the h's are very irregular, and that you also forgot to cross your t's. 'Apide from that, I thank you for your effort." The Bookman. e Moyor Stoy. of Atlantic City, was praising the remarkable efficiency of hts corps of life guards. "These men have presence of mind," he said, "the right kind of presence of mind. Not the wrong kind everybody ha 9 that. "I used to know," Mayor Stoy con tinued, "an aged duck hunter that we called Old Presence of Mind. "Wo called him Old Presence of Mind because he once went duck hunting in a sneak box with a friend. The bay rough ened up, and the friend fell overboard. But as ha was sinking In the Icy water he managed to clutch with his chilled hand the edge of the frail little sneak box. "The old duck hurter used to conclude this thrilling tale with the words: 'And. gents, if I hadn't had the pres ence of mind to unship an oar and whack him over the fingers, I'd have drowned as he was." "Washington Star, t ... Attorney H. A. Kelley onoe caused un told embarrassment to the late B. A. Handy, general manager of the Lake Shore Railroad. The two were sitting side by side in the theater. Handy hap pened to glance up into the balcony and noticed a leering, fishy-eyed person wearing genteel clothes and a particu larly ruddy specimen of night-blooming highball blossom on his nose. "Kelley." asked Handy, as he pointed out the man upstairs", "who is that drunken loafer there that I see about town so much?" "That fellow," repeated Kelley, oh, that's old So-and-So, a cousin of mine" although he had never seen or heard of the fellow before. Handy was stunned with mortification. But he did not attempt to apologize. "Well," ha observed, "I came right to headquarters for my Information about him. didnt I?" And Kelley didn't relieve his friend s chagrin until a week or two later when he owned up that the "cousin" feature was faked. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Just before the late election John D. Archbold, of the Standard Oil Company, confided to an Intimate friend that he was in a certain sense In the same boat with a mother who had a "little dear' by the name of Willie. "One day." said Mr. Archbold. the mother missed her little boy. When he ahowexl up again she inquired: " Where have you been, Willier " 'Playing postman,' replied her son. 1 gave a letter to all the houses in our road. Real letters, too." "Where on earth did you get them?" questioned the mother. ' They were those old ones In your wardrobe drawer, tied up with a blue ribbon,' was the innocent reply." Judge. A certain young man, wishing to be very thrifty", quit eating meat. "Frank lin abstained from meat" quoth he, "and so will I." . But he didn't stop to consider how prices have gone up since Franklin's day, and especially within the last few years. The result was that when he hadn t eaten meat for about six months he was so much money to the good that he lost his head and became one of the gilded youth. The outworn ideals of yesterday should be taken, up very guardedly, if at all. Puck. e The modern Sherlock climbed through the window and entered the kitchen. "His wife Is away." ejaculated Sherlock as he surveyed the room with the critical eye of Sootland Yard. "I shall find out how long she has been away." And then Sherlock began to count the soiled dishes piled up on the shftlf. "She has been away exactly 14 days, he commented. "And how did you find that out, chief?" asked his assistant. "Why It's dead easy! Married men never wash their dishes when tlvMr wives ar away, and there are Just 42 soiled plates on that shelf. That means three plates a day for 14 days." Chicago News. Doea Hie Part Thoroughly. Judge. In order to avoid an argument with a woman suffragist on the subject of her hobby, a happy bachelor gallantly ac quiesced In the truth of her assertions. "But, sir," sternly remarked the spin ster "your admission is anything but creditable to you. What, for anstance, have you ever done for the emanclpa- ,11 1C1H.1 . "Madame," responded the gentlemani with a polite smite and a bow.'I have at least remained a bachelor." I'se of Taxation. New York Journal of Commerce. "Wine," said a sarcastlo Frenchman, "may be made from many things, even from grapes." Taxation is now reach ing such a development that it will soon bo pertinent to remark that taxation mav serve many purposes, one of the Incidental services rendered being the provision of money to defray the pub lic expenses. Helping Ont. Dallas Itemizer. A man and 11 children came In the other day to help increase the popula tion of this part of the country. The HlUs of Rest. Albert Blselow Pnlne. In Harper's. Beyond the last horizon's rim. Beyond adventure's farthest quest. Somewhere they rise, serene and dim. The happy, happy Hills of R&sU Upon their sunlit slopes uplift Ths castles we have built In Spain While fair amid the Summer drift Our faded gardens flower again. Sweet hours we did not live so by To soothing note, on scented wing;; In golden-lettered volumes lie The songs we tried In vain to stng. They all are there: the days of dream That build the inner lives of men; The silent, sacred years we deem The might be, and the might have bsen Some evening when the sky Is gold I'll follow day Into the west; Nor pause, nor heed, till I behold The happy, happy Hills of Rest, v