12 PORTLAND. OREGON. Enured at Portland, Ortgon. Postofnc Second-Claw Matter. . , ,,....- Subscription Ratal Invariably In Advance. tBT HAIL.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year. Dally. Sunday Included, atx month.. ... Dally. Sunday Included, three month... Dally. Sunday Included, one month.... ' Dally, without Sunday, one year.. Dally, without Sunday, six month!.. .-.. Dallv. without Sundav. three monthe... Dally, without Sunday, ono month... Weekly, one year Sunday, one year.... It fin Sunday and Weekly, ona year " IBT CARRIER.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year...... Dally. Sunday Included, one month Mow to Remit Sand Poitofflc oneJ order, expreae order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, cole or currency are at tha sender's risk- dive P"'tmc addreaa In full. Including county and state. Postage Bates 10 to 14 pases. 1 cent: 18 to SS paces. 2 cents; SO to 40 page. 44 to u pae. 4 cent. Foreign postac doubi rate. Eastern BusUu Office Verre c?,," lln New York. Brunswick building. -ni-cago. Stecer building. European Office No. 1 Regent street, S. W. London. PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. IS, 1911. WET T8. DRY IN MAINE. The deplorable feature of the .latest bitter Maine contest over prohibition Is that Its results are Inconclusive, whether the official returns shall show the state to have voted wet or dry. The margin is very small. If the drys have -won, they have achieved a poor victory, for the most obvious conse quence is that 60,000 people will have undertaken to enforce their will as to the sale and consumption of liquor upon a vigorous protesting minority of nearly 60,000. Sixty thousand can not vote 120,000 dry in Maine or any where else. The prohibition law will be more than ever a mock and a bur lesque. The towns voted wet and the coun try dry in Maine. In other words, the country has attempted to prevent sale and use of liquor in the larger centers of population. Experience shows that it cannot be done. The people of Maine know it and show it in increasing numbers. A tie vote on prohibition is a mighty change from the 46,000 dry majority in 1884. It would seem that many had changed their minds more probably than have admitted it by their votes. Why do many people vote dry who know " that state prohibition Is not practicable? It is a puzzle. Some, no doubt probably many vote against their own Judgment to ease their conscience, which will not per mit them to align themselves with the saloons. Yet they bring into be ing an institution infinitely worse than the saloon the blind pig, run by the lawless and criminal rum - seller. Others think that a poor law is bet ter than no prohibitory law. Others think i a moral question admitting of no compromise. Tet there is noth ing intrinsically Immoral in either the use or sale of liquor. If Maine should be able to get out from under the blight of an ineffec tive constitutional prohibition, and enact a practicable local option law, it would give the authority of law and of a reasonable popular sentiment to real prohibition for communities that want it, and official and honest regu lation of liquor-selling for communi ties that do not want prohibition and will not have it. How can the cause of temperance be better, or so well, promoted? AS THE "HEATHEN" SEE 18. Mr.. Saint Nihal Singh, . a well known Hindu Journalist, traveler and contributor to London newspapers, writes of Americans most unflatter ingly. "A stranger meets with im pudent notice in the United States," he says. By strangers he means Asiatics since in his scathing criti cism of American manners he men tions onlr his own countrymen and the Chinese as "strangers" to be sin gled out, stared at or hooted as they pass along the streets. Upon landing on the Pacific Coast of the United States he complains that he was followed by boys and girls In droves along the sidewalks, "yelling, screaming and calling him ail manner of names." As he was bearded he was advised by these un disciplined young Americans "to get a shave;" he was told to "skidoo," and greeted with shouts of "23 for you." Being only a heathen, albeit a pundit of high degree, he did not understand the meaning of these Im pudent words and phrases, tuit he subsequently learned that they meant "get-ye-gone." ' This information In spired Mr. Singh to write as follows: Get ye gone! That was. the welcome America cave me when I landed on the continent: but that was not the last of that kind of welcome that the people of the Unlted States were to accord me during my extended sojourn In the land or the Stars and Stripe. Tha very first impression- I formed of America was its rude ness to strangers of different appearance from the citizen of the land. The vcry first conclusion I arrived at In the Vnl ted States was the fact that I would have to put up wlUi a great deal of Impertinent notice. It was providential that the very first day of my arrival on the continent, I registered a vow not to permit myself to be tormented by the ungentlemanly. and lol tha ungentlewomanly attention paid to my brown visage and raven-black hair; for had 1 allowed myself to be dlsoomfortad by American rudeness. I certainly would have seen the Inside of a lunatic asylum within the first six months of my residence In the United States. Specifying further of the ignorance and rudeness with which he -was treated in this land of the free, this eminent Journalist tells of a woman who mistook -his turban for a surgical bandage and asked him the nature of the accident that had befallen him. Another an "oldish woman" -brought a wet towel and .rubbed his forehead in the attempt to "cub off the brownish black stain." After further rehearsal of his in dignities which he suffered wherever he went, Mr. Singh, charitably and in a Christian spirit which is supposed to be quite foreign to the heathen breast, cvoncludes that "refinement cannot be expected In men and wo men whose parents were backwoods people, cut off from communication with old civilizations, engaged in rudimentary farming In a fierce struggle with nature, and who them selves have no time for anything else save chasing madly after the al mighty dollar." He adds: "When Americans have a little leisure and some .inclination to be Introspective they will doubtless outgrow their burly manner oul am ueiuro. We rise from a perusal of the esti mate that is placed upon Americans vby this proud representative of an older civilization, profoundly thankful that there is some hope for us as a people though the 'leisure' neces sary to bring about a reformation in our burly manners is not yet In sight. . Humbly we must admit the truth of the ill-manners of our boys and girls j as displayed toward the Asiatics who I tnii ,,nnn mir shores: the ungentle- I " . . . i i womanliness of the attempt to ruu away the racial stain upon the pun dit's forehead with a wet towel; the Ignorance that mistook his turban for a surgical bandage and the "male nonchalance" with which any opinion that is not original in America was Of course, we cannot be expected to plead guilty to all the sins or omis sion and commission with which this learned Hindu charges us, but we cannot ignore the fact that Asiatics are treated, at least upon the Pacific Coast, in most unmannerly fashion, and that our children, reflecting the temper of their elders, treated the dignified scholar from the Far East with scoffing and derision that ill be o, ,h r-hiiriron of a people that has spent millions of dollars in the . attempt to educate "the neatneji i" manners and morals. But we are duly grateful for the possibility, as suggested, that when our civilization Is older we will know more. TIIE TWO CHARTER COMMISSIONS. The propasal to harmonize the work of the two charter commissions should receive respectful consideration, from both bodies. It has been made with the greatest sincerity, and with no other purpose than to promote the success of commission government in Portland. Everybody can see for himself that two oposing charters are likely to defeat each other. The vote which favors commission government will be divided between them, while the vote which is hostile to the plan will be cast solidly against both. The result cannot be doubtful. The com peting charters will be rejected and the city will continue under its present defective system. Harmony between the two commis sions does not appear to be impossible by any means. There ls agreement to begin with upon a number of funda mental points. Each board hag fixed upon five commissioners. The sal aries are not very far apart and the terms of office and elections are about the same. This furnishes an excellent basis for consultation and possible compromise. It is fair and right that the people of Portland should have an opportu nity to vote upon the question of a commission government pure and sim ple. This 13 more important than any of the other questions which have been discussed by the respective boards, and if It is not carried at the election, all the rest will be of no con sequence. OONM'IriAn f-S AMONG THE STATES. The Medford Mall-Tribune ought to be happy. It has succeeded In Inveig ling The Oregonian into a discussion of its fantastic and impossible scheme for railway-rate regulation through the initiative with much consequent free advertising for the Medford pa per. It makes no difference to the Mall-Tribune, of course, that the en terprising and entirely sane people of Medford are likewise being widely ad vertised as being behind an absurd and preposterous proposal, for rail way rate-making by the initiative Is the very last word in legislative de mentia. The people of Medford can of course approve no such-thing. That traffic bureau must be either a myth or a Joke. The Medford paper now has a double-column editorial page article on the rate situation'in Oregon. It is a great deal longer than it is wise. Its quality may be Judged from Its cita 'tlon of the Federal Constitution as expressly prohibiting conferences be tween the state railway commissions and the Interstate Commerce Com mission. This from the Mail-Tribune: What does the Federal Constitution say about this? Why. this: "No state shall enter into any treaty alliance or .confedera. tlon and no state shall, without -the consent of Congress, enter Into any agreement or compact with another state." According to the columns of The Oregonian such a con ference has taken place, and this Is with out the consent of congress, as Congress ha not given such right to the Interstate Com merce Commission, who must determine the reasonableness of freight rates -rafter full hearing upon a complaint" either by a com plainant or upon its own motion, and not bv "executive session." a In the case of the reported rate conference referred to by The Oregonian. Treason Is defined In the Con stitution as "adhering to their enemies, giv ing them aid and comfort," and is not such "executive sessions." as commended by The Oregonian. as ends to fixing reasonable freight rates in enmity to the United States, therefore treasonable? All this is outright idiocy. If there is the slightest sense in or validity to this extraordinary assumption that the states have no right to confer through their delegations or commis sions, the House of Governors, in ses sion in New Jersey, is a conspiring board of traitors, the Pacific Highway Commission a company of outlaws and the Legislatures of Oregon and Washington, which pasesd uniform fish laws, a body two bodies of enemies of their country. WtTS THE DEATH PENAXTTf The Oregonian and Mr. Kern, who writes from Cottage Grove, ought to have no great difficulty about agree ing on the question of capital punish ment. Mr. Kern Is kind enough to say that he finds his views In har mony with much The Oregonian says. That is pleasant and not unmerited, we think. The Oregonian Is glad to say that It Is in entire harmony with much that Mr. Kern says. But The Oregonian will venture to suggest to Mr.' Kem that he read again the article which he criticises; then we rather think he may coincide with all The Oregonian says. The Oregonian did not. and does -not, in sist upon capital punishment for all murderers, as Mr. Kem appears to think. It did not in that article make any argument for capital punishment. On the contrary, it expressly based its nhivptinn to ' the commutation of Webb's sentence on the - everlasting meddling" with the course or justice by sentimental Governors and techni cal courts. The Oregonian would not have its correspondent thus to Understand that it does not favor capital punishment. It thinks there should be a death pen alty for crimes of peculiar atrocity and calculated horror, or of treason able significance and National conse quence. It is not easy for The Ore gonian to concede that anything less than the death penalty should have been inflicted on John Wilkes Booth, or Gulteau, -or Czolgosz; and It feels that not the slightest hesitation should be manifested or expressed about the ' extermination of such monsters as the murderers of little Barbara Holzman, or the Hill family, or Mrs. Wehrman and her Innocent child. It would be well, we think, to leave to the courts the Jury the deter mination of the punishment for mur der in the first degree. Some states give the Jury that finds the murderer MORNING OREGOXIAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. 1911. TIIE guilty the option of saying whether he shall die or go to prison for life. Who so well qualified to aeienmuo the special circumstances of a crime, and the exact accountability of the homicide, as the men who try him? If Mr. Kem will examine the wlrTa Almanac (tia.ee 342) he will find the statistics for which he asks. There is a shocking disparity between the percentages of murderers convict ed In the United SUftes and on the Eu ropean continent. In Germany the convictions average 95 per cent; in the United States 1.3 per cent. What can have made this awful difference but the universal tenderness in this country for the murderer, the toler ance of the courts for the tricks, shifts and evasions of lawyers, and the gen eral public tolerance of such toler ance? If the United States could achieve a record of 95 per cent of convictions in homicide trials, there .i.i i vnstlv fewer murders. whether the penalty were death or mere imprisonment. IMMIGRATION NOW AND FIFTY TEARS AGO. Immigration was the topic of The Oregonian fifty years ago, as it is to day. The Oregonian told or aa- vanced parties of emigrants arrivms at The Dalles and said they had not been so far troubled by Indians. A large body of immigrants was then coming west under military escort and was expected in the Willamette Val ley some time in October. The arti cle says further: Ainnma that some will Stop On the east lde of the mountains. There 1 some good farming country, ooin m Territory and Oregon, east of the Cascades. ' . .v. Min.. wtii hrlne farmers las opeuuiB ..,..- ... , east of the mountains a good market. . . . We suppose me largest yl grants will come to this valley. They can make themselves more comfortable here lor the Winter than In any other part of this Coast. Provisions are cheap, good and plenty, and the emigrant can And employ ment. Most of them should push up Into the valley. They will find cabins and houses where they can stay for the Winter make themselves comfortable, and then look round and see what they best can do to further their design in coming here. Farms can be bought cheap: wild lands can be had from S3 to S7 an acre. If purchasers should appear, the great claims whloh Injure the country can be bought up and divided among Industrious beginners a thing we should be very glad to see. . . - The mania for mining, which carries off old settlers to the mines, will give an oppor tunity to. rent farms to advantage or buy them. . , - , , Wo caution our emigrants from indulging too much in the picture that fancy has painted on thelrmind In regard to the ap pearance of this valley and the Improve ment of the country. We certainly have a 1 1 ntimat excellent timber. WU MTUO, ...... ' water and a great many other advantages. but we require laoor to u,o,u, of Oregon. Th arir-i erne on to say the Wil lamette Valley can furnish homes for 200,000, but has only 3,oou. it tens v. nnontntr fnr Immigrants in Ul t"0 Washington Territory and Incidentally mentions that there is only one saw and flour m ill In the Gray's Harbor country, and that on the Chehalls.' Though conditions have changed nmnrirftiiiv in tiftv vears. thev are the same in two respects that labor is essentlai to success snu holdings of land need to be broken up into small ones. The population of the Willamette Valley has far sur passed the estimate of 200,000 which it would support, and now we have raised the figure to 5,000,000 as the possible population. In another fifty years it may have passed 6,000,000 and a new limit far beyond that fig ure may have been set. A FOOLISH CONTROVERSY. A regrettable difference has arisen between Governor Cole L.. Blease, of South Carolina, and our highly es teemed contemporary, the New Tork Times. The fons .et origo ot tne trouble seems to have been some sen timents to which Governor Blease gave utterance In an address before the state convention of Confederate Veterans at Columbia. It was this city, the reader will remember, which burst into flames one night when Sherman was on his march northward from the penetration of the South, and there has been controversy ever since as to who started the conflagration. Some say the Confederates set fire to the town for reasons similar to those which made the Russians burn Mos cow when Napoleon was in Winter quarters there. Great quantities of cotton were amassed at Columbia which it was feared might fall into the hands of the hated Yankees. Hence there was a motive for kindling the fire, but it may not have been suf ficient to induce any of the. Confeder ates actually to apply the torch. The other story is that Sherman's troops burned Columbia either under orders from their officers or because they wished to vent their passionate ani mosity against the city and the state of which it was the capital. We dare say the controversy will never be settled. ' The event happened a long time ago. As the Times re marks, the city has been rebuilt in much better style than it ever knew before the war, and Its inhabitants are thrilvng, partly by the aid of North ern capital. A In these circumstances it seemslike a work of superfluity to revive the old dispute and seek to ex cite the fierce old passions. But Gov ernor Blease belongs to a class of men who thrive on dead disputes and fat ten . on animosities which more civil ized persons wish to see buried fath oms deep. Southern politics has passed through several interesting stages since the close of the war. Im mediately following Lincoln's death there was what amounted to an at tempt to enslave .the blacks again by indirect methods. Then came recon struction, whose barbaric reign of thievery was only brought to an end by the more savage barbarism of the Ku Klux Klan, combined with a grow, lng inclination to Justice and, common sense in the North. With the final mithirjiiial of the Federal troops by President Hayes the South began a new life. The consequences or the war were frankly accepted by the nat ural leaders, who tried to turn the people into the almost forgotten paths of peaceful industry. These natural leaders were the members of the old Southern families who had been slaveholders, owners of large plantations and foremost in poli tics up to the end of the war. But they were not to have their will with out opposition. In antagonism to them arose a new set of leaders of a far more demagogic and less admira ble type. These were men of the Till man, Vardaman, Jeff Davis and Blease variety. Originating from the "poor white" "class, they detested the old aristocracy and appealed to the baser passions of the ignorant whites for support. The men of. the best fami lies were never vindictive toward the negroes. The Vardamans and Bleases made negrophobla the foundation of their statesmanship. If It can be called by that name. Race hatred was their one and only theme. Everlastingly and continually they have yawped about the danger of "social equality," I the evils of "miscegenation," the pros- pect that the daughters of the whites 1 would be forced to wed negroes, and so on through the whole miserable catalogue of false apprehensions in- tenaea to aeceive. tace naireu race pride have responded to their wretched appeals, as might have been expected. When a poor white has nothing else to be proud of. you can always win his heart by talking about "the great white race" of which he is such a lovely sample. It is this kind : of rubbish which has made Tillman, Vardaman and Jeff Davis Senators. Blease expects it to serve him in South Carolina as well as it did Till man. Mingled with Blease's hatred of the blacks is an equal hatred for the "Yankees," though policy compels him to keep the latter under, a more or less decent veiL At a meeting of Con federate veterans he could permit it to appear In the form of a half-forgotten accusation against Sherman and his troops, in the hope that It would win votes for him without exciting much contempt. In the course 6f his ad dress Governor - Blease took occasion to berate Sherman for all the havoc his soldiers wrought on their march through the South. Such talK is non through the South, sucn taia is non- sense. Sherman was waging war, not i ii,v. 1,- 4.it atiil wnr n.iHntr'Q To.rTn Vioriv visit, and war - -J . - means devastation. His declared purpose", approved by Lincoln, was to tear the heart out of the Confederacy, and he did It. To execute his mis sion he necessarily destroyed property and deprived a great many people of their means of subsistence. But' his mercllessness was the truest mercy. Inasmuch as It brought the war to a close, or helped materially to do so. The Southern Brigadiers had taught their dupes tne aecepuvo wtictum that war could be waged without loss . Mr ; en. or property or suu-emis, row. Sherman taught the pitiful truth of the matter. Rnr m w have said, all that was half a century ago. "he past is past. Why continue to harp upon it and tear nn,n tha Vioolinc -nrotinds? Let "Old.. far-off, forgotten things and battles long ago have their place m poetry and history, but there is no reason in the world why neighbors should for ever wrangle over them. Let the dead past bury its dead. Senator Bailey will return to Texas a sadly disappointed man.- xxis aaiiii- atfons7 to thP? Democratic leadership were blighted at the last regular ses- sion, even if they had not already been destroyed Dy tne taint oi omuu- ard Oil. He was out of harmony with . ... v, oif anA iiio f-riam- His renewed attempts to unt aim- ;-;,'"D i ti, law of this state per self 'at the regular session failed for aoter. u holding the ofrice of he was turned down as to the Lortmer inquiry ana was given uic,i.s down by John Sharp Williams which mortlfled him deeply. He sees that the Democrats refuse to follow him and that they are inclined to turn to WIC. . tvi2 miiint Miasissinrjlan as a Moses though Williams In the eyes of the though Williams in tne ej i Senate is but a youngster. Therefore Rniiov -r-111 eo to New York and con- Bailey will go to wew lorn auu tun- sole himself with fat Jaw lees ior nis obscurity Tne prediction mat tne f"" "" would bring hoarded money to light ...m. tn ho vprtfipri In Portland. Moldy coins from damp hiding places are flowing In. Perhaps if the $600 limit were raised a little the effect would be more noticeable. In time the present restrictions will be eased up perhaps and the banks will become as useful as they are In England. But, after all, postal banks are a minor affair. They afford a grain or two of comfort, but the parcels post ls what we really need. The .easy virtue of his parishioners has compelled the minister who mar ried Astor and Miss Force to leave his pulpit. The righteousness which consists in condemning other people is facile and cheap. Persecution lends it a shade of meanness which it might otherwise lack. Dozens of men more wicked than Astor are married every day by ministers, but since they are too inconspicuous to shed notoriety on their critics, no clamor arises. Confidence in Uncle Sam as a bank er was exemplified both in this city and Seattle by the eagerness with which depositors sought the security and benefits of the postal savings bank. Our venerable Uncle is the one custodian of savings who is not In the least influenced -by hard times and who is superior to the wiles of de faulting bank presidents and cashiers. If United States soldiers obey or ders given in a tone of military com mand without knowing the giver has authority, they may find themselves in the ridiculous position of the German troops who meekly obeyed the orders of a burglar to march away while he robbed a whole town. Anxiety of children to learn trades is a good sign of the times. A trade at one's fingers' ends is always a good thing to have, whether it is followed or not. . Germany proposes that France do all the hard work of subduing and governing Morocco and let her reap most of the harvest. Germany was never noted for her modesty. In getting rid of his wife by di vorce rather than hatchet, a Chicago Chinaman shows the merit of Chris tian Influence. : It .might be advisable for the soci ety raj;n and women to open a card index of their ex-husbands and wives. Real estate sales of business cor ners In. Portland at $250,000 show there is life in the Pacific Northwest. When even lcw J. wi r. uaia mo iJiii ford moving pictures, they must be fit subjects lor a moral oiauiiecca.ru. J . Why talk against child marriage in " , , T India when a Georgia woman ia grandmother of three at 307 Fall weather has begun early, but cheer up; Indian Summer may be so much, longer when it comes. Plans for a city beautiful would better contain a scheme or portable roofs ror rreaay weatner. ... , . Well, the rams win maae tne grass SOoTand the stock will be fat, "we 11 all have money. Late figures indicate that Maine will continue to be the "wettest" dry state In the Unlon- lis DEATH PENALTY WARRANTED Mr Kem Doubts It, and Wants to Be ' shown. pottage GROVE. Or., Sept. 11. jfha T Editor.) I have Just read wlth mucn interest The Oregonian's reDiy to Humanitarian, relative to the pardoning oi jesae - ernor. If certain things you allege are true I agree wlth you The Oregon an ays.. ThOr f nne "f hanging Webb; it does nQt want any one hanged. But It Is sure that certain and swift punish- ment of murder and of all Brartor" lenses is a oeierreui protection to society." The sole purpose of the law is to protect life and property. In order to protect life the law should hesitate at nothing that will accomplish that end. If the hanging of a murderer will protect society, then, without ques tion, murderers should be hanged. But does it? The Oregonian seems to be sure that it does. It evidently has facts and figures upon which to base such a positive conclusion about so grave a matter. I have never been able yet to secure statistics that con vinced me that the hanging of mur j - u .... t rr .vpn anv. saie- Ucrera ' as wie u----i w. guard to society. However, I am open I to conviction. If The Oregonian nas evidence showing conclusively that murder is more prevalent in states that have aoousnea uiAyiu ; - ... .1. a. r ha nOflf n than in those that still visit tne uei penalty, I, with thousands of others T,,,,-lrl Hto to have it. and The Ore- would like to have it, and The Ore gonian would be doing -the public a real favor by publishing It. Again, you say, "The consequences of manslaughter ought to be sure and terrible; there would then be as little homicide in America as there is in England and Germany." Will you kindly give through- The Oregonian the number of capital ot fenses, per capita, committed in Eng land and Germany and the number punished bv death, also the same in the United States? , j agree with mucn oi tne tsunuw article and with more information I m.ltV, all nf it I agree with much or tne eauoruu may agree -wim ,r -rrr, GRANDSTAND PLAY BY GOVEJRNOR Swedish Correspondent Condemns Com motatton of Webb Sentence. PORTLAND, Sept. 11. (To the Edi tor.) I have read The Oregonian edi torial comment on the late action of the Governor of this state, Oswald West, in commuting Murderer Webbs sentence at the last moment to prison Instead of permitting the law to be carried out First I want to assure The Oregonian that every good citizen u. """" , , ,. j TtJ can of this state agrees witn nm who ls temporarily holding the offlce of Governor avail himself of tnS grandstand play and set asioe mo verdict of the courts and Juries of this I trinViiir cniiE-hten many of your CtA1dVi roaArn on the laW Of thlS , I .t.t, in urimm Instances of this char- Governor to make t a mockery of the verdict of courts and juries anu to wait untu the last moment to attract at- tention dramatically to himself by set- ting aside the righteous Judgment pro- Bounced and jury and shielding him from paying the penalty ror nis aiirutiuua i.n.c. Ad now iisten to the explanation and reason given by Governor Oswald w fnr interfering with the law and west for interfering wun tne ia.w aim justice In this case: e aia it on o- I ,,t anneals made to him by his count of appeals made to him by his little daughter, and he further adds Ll.i.w th, nooniA of this state dis approve of his action they must maae tne)r COmplalnt to his daughter. What I . n-io-ht t-intesmnnllke utterance this. No man, ever aeservea biiiis iu . gallows more than this murderer, Webb. The crime which he committed In the City of Portland, and County of Mult nomah, cries to heaven for vengeance. Can the public conceive of a more diabolical crime than the one com mitted by this same murderer who has been spared from paying the penalty. Poor Johnson, lured to a room, plied with liquor, murdered, cut up and his body packed in a trunk, and carted to the depot to be shipped away, to avoid detection. This is the foul crime com mitted by Webb for the $1600 that poor Johnson possessed and which, rep resented his life savings. For this crime Webb was sentenced to be hanged and rightly so after trials which cost the taxpayers of this county many thousands of dollars, but West, the Governor, . steps in and prevents this murderer from paying the penalty. Has he by law a right to do this? We ask The Oregonian to publish this letter and answer this question, and oblige many of its Swedish readers. Kindly answer also in your paper when the term of office of Oswald West expires as Governor of this state. ALFRED PETERSON. The Governor has the legal right to commute the sentence of a murderer no matter how atrocious - his crime. Governor West's term of office expires January 11, 1915. Election Rlshts of Convicts. WOODBURN. Or., Sept. 10. (To the Editor.) Please answer these ques tions: SUBSCRIBER. Has a convict on parole the right to vote at the city election? No. Has a convict who has been pardoned without having his citizenship rights restored, the right to vote on any muni cipal law? ' Yes, unless the pardon shows on its face that It does not restore his voting right. m . . If complaint is made against such convict's registering, should the com plaint be made against Che registrar also? If there ls objection to his register ing, it should be made to the County Clerk. TVatn Snltleet to Lien. PORTLAND. Sept 10. (To the ErH' tor.) Please answer mo iuuuwm6 questions In The Oregonian. OLD SUBSCRD3ER. Can a man driving and tending to a team take a lien on or attach the team to collect wages overdue, provided said team has already been mortgaged by another party? Jn order to collect the wages he can attach It subject to the mortgage, the same as any other kind of personal property can be attached. Is there.any military organization or society known as veterans of foreign service, or veterans of Philippine serv ice in Portland? menj 1 J . Veterans and Order of the Carabou. There are the United spanisn war i I T.ntiA Grant Anneal. PORTLAND. Sept JO- (To the Edl- tori Please state whether or not the tor. I Jf... .a ,nn(1 .nt caaa haB wr.i DO . Oregon-California land grant case has been appealed it so, to wnai ram i. SUBSCRIBER. The case has not been appealed, but probably will be after It comes to trial. The a P. Company filed Its answer laBt I week. Many Kinds of Lsod Scrip. , n . , -k-,- 11 ITn rhA 7TH ( . i , v -Diaae., atnta whn.t use can he i wr.j " . , j i r7,i tB35tittZ land scrip by paying for it with cash? SUBSCRIBER What kind of land scrip? There are probably 100 kinds. VERY soon F. Hopkinson Smith, au thor, artist and the engineer who built a Government lighthouse ana iw sea walls, and the foundation for the Bartholdi statue of liberty, will cele brate his 73d birthday. He has again come into .the limelight Just now. as the author or a iirsim u IXiZ-i, the South. "Kennedy Square." in which he pictures the South of 60 years ago Baltimore of his boyhood. He , r" j.h. ,h tmosohere Has caugni very " ' 1 of Southern gentility, and has a more 1 than interesting u ; . character remarkable for his strength being the hero's uncle, St. George Wil mot Temple. It ls refreshing to read of tha delightful relations existing be tween the oid-fashloned bachelor Tem ple and a nephew whom he practically adopts as his own son. Together they read the poems of Edgar Allan Poe, Ind entertain the poet-who is drunk TemiVie'sr'bank fails, and he is com .. . .ih iii favorite hunt- pelleu co pan. -7- - . ins guns. he family loving cup and his dogs. This latter scene has . real nobility in it: bounding- o,li- naws scrap- his lap Dig J-"--J .n a. row to the carpet. - lowing his evory movement. Tnriri savs you eat too mucn, uu " " rascals"' Temple cried lu enforced sayety. leanTne fofwJrd shaking his finger in their faces. B "What the devil do you e":0 inic into a. gentleman's private aP"tments and eating him out of house and homel and that's what you re u '"-,; '"no J- to ; mLT8a'i that's what you deserve: to aea. fc Fl0e you dear old dog gie you nice Floe! . . . Here. Dd flupert Sue!" They were all In his arms, their cold nose, snuggled under his warm chin. But this time he dldn t car e w oat they did lo his clothes nor what he did to them. He was alone Todd had gone down to the kitchen only he and 'he four com ianlons so dear to his heart. "Come here, you imp of the devil." he continued rubbing FloV. ears-he loved her bet-Pinn her nose until her teeth showed patting her flanks, crooning over her as a.,wma.0"? over a child, talking to himself all the time. Anthony Hope, whose latest novel. "Mrs Maxon Protests," was published last May, has returned to London from a tour of the Continent. This month he goes to Overstrand, where he has a small house, and will occupy it with his family for the next two weeks. Anne Warner French, of St. Paul, Minn., who ls preparing to take up her permanent residence with her family in England, has written a love romance called "When Woman Proposes," which will be brought out with col ored Illustrations and decorated text pages for the approaching holidays. Anne Warner's best known book ls "The Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary." Margaret Deland'is in the heart of the Maine woods, and will not leave camp life for her Boston home until after her new novel, "The Iron Wo man." is published. In less than three months since its publication, Henry S. Harrison's novel, "Queen," haa reached 60,000 copies, al though it is the first book by this author and has had to sell on its own merits. Wells Hastings is an example of the business man in literature. He ls di rector in four manufacturing compa nies. He wrote in collaboration with Brian Hooker, his classmate at Yaie, "The Professor's Mystery," one of the fictional successes of the spring season. Another mystery story, the exclusive work of his pen, will probably be ready for publication late In the. FalL "So you have had a long siege of nervous prostration? she said to the haggard author. "What caused it? Overwork?" "In a way, yes," he answered weakly. "I tried to do a novel with a Robert W. Chambers hero and a Mary E. Wil kins heroine." Life. ' "Which would you rather be, a poet or a musician?" "A poet. People aren't so liable to be disturbed while you are practicing." Washington Star. ,, Jeffery Farnol, author of "The Broad Highway," 'is at work at his home in Kent, England, on a new novel, but this probably will not be ready for book publication until the autumn of 1912 and it must appear serially in some American maganine. William Dean Howells is dividing his vacation between Kittery Point, Me., and Europe. He expects to reach Spain a country he has not visited for years. "A Living Without a Boss," by an anonymous author, is brought out this week by the Harpers. It is a message of hope for the unsuccessful profession al man growing old in the city, with the fear of the future always before his eyes. The book is a human docu ment of the experiences of a man who left behind him the slavery of a city life. His trained mind found over looked opportunities in the country, where his activities, met with little competition. The author points out in a helpful, practical manner paths to independent living in the country. Howard Pyle is in Florence, where he exoects to remain several months, devoting most of his time to writing rather than painting. He ls engaged upon a series for "Harper's Magazine," which he will illustrate. Hundreds of children have writte 'to Mrs. Burnett expressing their appre ciation of "Little Lord Fauntleroy," but she says that she has never before re ceived so many letters regarding a book as are now coming to her In re gard to "The Secret Garden." These letters began with the first install ment of the serial In a monthly maga zine ahd have continued in an unin terrupted stream. A few of them are the usual crank letters, but most are from children, full of artless enthus iasm, while a considerable percente comes from adults who like the opti mistic thought of the book. The fifth anniversary of Garibaldi's entrance into Rome falling September 20. it is hoped to bring out by that date the concluding volume of George Macaulay Trevelyarr"s biography of the great Italian liberator. Sir Arthur Clay, Bart., has completed "Syndicalism and Labor in Europe and the United Kingdom." The object of the book ls to ascertain what effect "Syndicalism" (the French doctrine of the general strike) is likely to have upon labor disputes in England. William F. Kirk, a New York news paperman, the poet laureate of those famous aggregations of baseball play ers known as "Giants" and Yankees," has prepared a volume of poems and imitation poems based upon baseball life that will be found highly amusing by devotees of the National game. The volume, which bears the exciting title. "Right Off the Bat," is illustrated by H. B. Martin, an associate of Mr. Kirk in his newspaper work, as well as in this literary venture. The book is ded icated to John McGraw, "the school master of baseball." William De Morgan's forthcoming novel, which has been announced as "Blanca." will appear next month un der the title ol "A Likely Story." VEHICLE LAWS ARB CRITICISED Contempt Proeeedln.? Not Inspired Br Enemies of Administration. PORTLAND. Or., Sept. 11. (To the Editor.) It has been suggested that the recent -contempt proceeding grow ing out of the enforcement of the ve hicle ordinance, which involved three of the city officials, was brought about by enemies of the present administra tion. Inasmuch, as the writer was one of the attorneys in the attack on the ordinance and who instituted the con tempt proceeding, he knows such a con" tention to be erroneous and absurd and serves only to prevent the responsibil ity for the city's troubles from settling; where it should. The merchants who operate free de livery wagons for the benefit of the publlo have fought these ordinances be. cause they have uniformly violated practically every principle of taxation. If vehicles of all descriptions must be licensed, there ls.-no Just reason why the burden so Imposed should not be distributed in proportion to the benefits received. The merchants who operate free deliveries for the accommodation of their customers should not be com pelled to nav as much proportionately as the man who charges B0 cents or $1 for the same service. Neither is there any reason why one merchant should pay for operating free delivery wagons and another merchant pay nothing for the same privilege, yet this is the effect of the ordinances that have boon de clared invalid. Instead of the city profiting by the errors pointed out in the first ordi nance, the two subsequently drafted and passed were subject to the same criticisms. In fact the manner in which the latter were passed manifested a wilful disregard for the court's decrees declaring them unconstitutional. For Instance, one of the grounds on whii'ti Judge Gatens declared Ordinance No. 22.9S5 Invalid was because it excepted those persons having paid and obtained a license under Ordinance No. 14,053. Even before the decree was formally entered the Council passed another or dinance, No. 23,56::. containing the same clause, with a word or two added, which did not change the effect. Now who Is responsible for these blunders which have proved expensive to the people on both sides of the fight? And were the blunders repeated through wilfulness, ignorance or In difference? The last three attempts have been masterpieces of discrimination and in equality. Of course It is difficult to conform to all the principles of taxa tion in this kind of a tax, and for that reason the Council as a body could not be expected to go Into the legal phases of the question. However, it occurs to the writer that If the City Attorney,, who, we will assume, ls an honest and" patriotic public official, had devoted as much time to these ordinances before they were passed a he did afterwards, the difficulty would have been elimi nated long ago. Let It be eald that the three officials who were haled Into court, were In the performance of their duty. as they saw it. They were merely the victims of bad advice. Of course the public burdens must be met and the streets must be kept up, but there ls a right way and a wrong way, and If the City refuses to see the light there are breakers ahead. It might be suggested further, that there are other methods of taxation and other property that might be taxed, that would not only raise a generous revenue but would be far less oppres sive and obnoxious. The telephone, telegraph and electrlo light companies are using the streets more than vehicle owners and It ls to be regretted that they are not paying a license tax for scarring the landscape of our olty with unsightly poles. M. W. SEITZ. EDUCATING DAUGHTERS OF -400n Occasional Deterioration of Young Women on Leaving School. Miss Clara B. Spence. head of the fashionable school which Miss Made leine Force, Colonel Astor's fiancee, attended, has written this letter to the New York Evening Post: "Permit me to thank you for your editorial in regard to the 'selling of daughters to worthless Inheritors ot wealth or rank.' Not only should we be Indignant with the arranged mar riage of a young girl with a 'notorious roue," but the so-called leaders of so ciety, who, perfectly understanding the terms of the marriage, continue to send flowers and congratulatltons, must share with parents the responsibility of encouraging a marriage which can lead only to unhappiness and scandal. "Many schools in our country are earnestly and fearlessly trying to de velop In their students the virtues that it seems impossible to graft upon tha character of some of their parents. One of the most pathetic results that a ' faithful teacher occasionally pees (one. ls grateful that it occurs so tc,l dom) is the deterioration that comes to a young woman after she has been for some time in the worldly environment of her mother. "With indignation and sorrow the teacher sees the pupil who in Bchool was so receptive, so responsive to every good and high resolve, brought Into a world of fashion and vulgarity, and whose daily life is made a round of display and amusements, both degrad ing and wasteful of energy. "Every good school is trying to train Its students so that their lives in the future may be of service in their hormrs and in the community in which they live. Although every earnest teacher has this idea in mind, unless the home gives co-operation it is alt .ost impos sible for a pupil, on leaving school and its standards, to take a worthy part in the great struggle' between good and evil. "With deep gratitude we recognize those parents of high standard and no ble life who do keep the young com mitted to their care unspotted from the world, and who gladly Join with our noblest teacherB in imparting to them the principles on which right living rests." Deportation of Foreigners. ASTORIA. Sept 10. (To the Edi tor.) Can a foreign-born sailor, dis charged from a vessel in an American port, after taking out the first citizen's papers, be exported from this country? Furthermore will the State of Oro gon recognize a declaration of inten tion made in California, and after compliance with the requirements, is sue full citizen's papers? T. B. A foreigner can be deported at any time within three years, if it is found he has violated the immigration laws. He can be deported for a crime at any time within the statute of limitations, which varies according to the national ity. To the last question, yes. Licenses for Private Still". BUXTON, Or., Sept. 10. (To the Edi tor.) I would like to ask if a person ls allowed iy law in this state to dis till his own products for his own use without a license, and if not, what is the price of a license? C. H. S. A person may not distill without a Government license. The price of a Mcense varies according to the capacity of the still. Information can be ob tained from David M. Dunne, Collector of U. S. Internal Revenue, Portland. A Child's) View ot It. Chicago Record-Herald. The childish daughter of the house had been sent into the" parlor to enter tain the unexpected guest. The woman Inquired, by way of making conversa- tlon, where was the child's brother. ; "He's gone to the school of ministers to be pastorlzed." she was respectfully;, informed.