nr.vrvn nnrnnVTAV. F II ID AT. SErTE3IBER 29, 1911. 1 ' SIB S B h .111 m.aBk - -w 10 rORTLAXD. OUOOS. eater.., at Portend. Oraaoo, roots'--. ce&4-''.ae Jhlatter. . aMre. crijuo Katae InTartabl-- ta Aee (BY H.l" rT. "aie,r raeiudMJ. T: fa"? 11.7. lnl:i'-.. e.m mo!B .... la :j. Funntr tnc.M'ld. eaoat ... ?! Iai.j. vltaauf Sco-lar. one 7 ' " ft 2 la.., without Sur.dar. three aft'.ata. 1 . y wiibiui Funtlajr. moot....- Weeaty. mam yea. " sm year ............ ev a4 Weakly, eae .. Ju 4 1- (BT CAX1IM.) rally. -ieaT kIi'H. Tr ...... ? ll'.T, tuidir Ir.clud 1. one l-it ' ere.'rT e.pree. .rd.r'.r p.r..i ' ? t Ir'.'ti..r.'T ; IZuZ. li'raTlac.ld", .. I rwa liiK-it to 14 pa see. I .'..'T ta at J rente. ) la mo to . (m. eeta. Tare... etse .eub.o rat. l-efe-a bmmn net-ee Verr. A C?,,V fto, stager bulldi .. Ir.pa oince Mo. S Baa-ant street. A W LsotioB. rOBTUUiD. l DAT. UT. lt- m TASOOfTTBH WX(iIi-TAI HI BHI--At th meutlr.g of the Portland Realty Hoard th other day Mr. F. W. llulity perunently called attention to th fact that the "slnglo tax" In Van couver. B. C hlch e hear so much about. 1 unlike the "single ta" pro rosed by Mr. U"Ken for Clackamas and other counties. Vancouver's buliJir.f record. Vontouvir'i prosper I'y and Vancouver's hapjine has j r4tn ran tlnuallr dinned In our cars. If on exprees doubt as to the outcome of Mr. VRen's scheme, one la advised t look at Vancouver. If some Port land property-owner emits a trroan over hlica taxes, some Kels asrent Is lmot sare to arise and point t Van couver. If som Oregon family de cides to pick up Its personal belong ings and emtrrate to Iirlt!sh Columbia there Is a chorus of CrlJges. Wagnons, JUmese and LRcn shouting. "Look what Vancouver slngl tax has don." Why doe not th Fels bureau pro pose. Vancouver's scheme of taxation. If It Is urh a good thlrg? The way Is open. W can now have any klnj of tax system w want, simply by vot ing tt Into effect. But there Is rre aected to us a thing that Is not single tax nor Vancouver tax a mongrel, a nightmare, a system never tried any where um!er the sun. Vancouver's prosperity may as well be ascribed to tho separation of the sources of state and local revenues as to single tx and can be honestly as cribed to neither on nor the. other. Vancouver Is th Western terminus of Taut rsulwaf system. It 1 at th foot of a water-level arraJe. It has a rreat harbor. It Is th natural West ern metropolis of a wealthy nation and It has as tributary country a re gion of enormou resources now be ing developed. These are the thtnxs that are making Vancouver, and sin gle tax ha not boomed Vancouver be cause Vancouver ha not a'.ncle tax. tiingl tax contemplates th taxing of no other thing but land. In Van couver Improvements on land. If Income-producing, pay a tax direct to th province. Personal property pay a tax to the province. t-very osnn. every Insurance, company, every guar antee company, loan company and tniat company, every tnlecraph com pany, teiephon company and express .emoAnv. every g.t.a company, water works company, electric? lighting com r.t n r eloctric Bower company and street railway company pays a gross Income tax to the province, Ther Is even In effect In Vancouver th hated poll tax which Mr. Vlten found nec aasary to repeal the third tlm In or der to -pav th way for sins! tax. In short. British Columbia has what th voter of Oregon turned down In th last elation In the grange amend ments separation of source of tat and local revenue. Vancouver exclude from local taxation Improve ments on land and personal property, but the province goes over Vancou ver head and taxe both, th on through ao In com tax and th other direct. Oreerx) Joe not Impo an Ineom tax. Through licensing. It taxes cor porator, but In an amount nominal compared with British Columbia's corporation tax. Oregon lmp' an eartilnxs tax on expreas. telepnone, telegraph. sieeplr.g-oAr, ref rifraior ea.r and oil companies'. The state has and oil compax.U . The state lux has a direct tax on Inheritances and so ha British Columbia, Oregon llcenie fish canneries. British Col-imbla lev ies A direct tax on their output. Put the mala tax revenues of Oregon ar collected throuyh th counties. Ore gon, la effect, tells each county how much money dollars and cent tbe county must conlribut toward th :to' yearly expenditure and th county raise the money by add ing A ufnclent levy to the rate fixed for local purposes. Brtttsh Columbia doea cot collect Its main tax revenues from th municipalities, but from th property Itself. Th ITRea measure would put th burden of state and local taxation largely upon land. Vancouver puts local taxation onlv th burden of local taxation largely on land. This U the chief die- tlcctlon. Th VRen bl'.l 1 not true i but commended A tariff-general re slng'.e tax. It preserves inheritance j vt,ion, fh, various protected Inter- taxe ana corpora. ma mn-a '-'' and proviJe for franchise taxation. True aing.e tax contemplate none or these. co-esirxvai nnr mtjijc irr alttt. rr. Wiley Argument to th Conser vation Congress in favor of A National Department of Health la strong and m , .t m .trm ailftit'fin aa coming from A man who bsa fought so ,.!,:, fo, th public health. Of what use ta It to preserve our natural rxsources If w neglect that for which thay are preserved to sustain the life and health of the Nat'onT rtt what us to pre-erve the fertility of the .oil. ! It 1 a essential a part of the Pre U are i;:ow It. products to be mad . Idenf. plan a. 1 tt work of th Tariff nto poleonou compounds for human consumption? Of what use to con - oar forests. If w ailow their use. should to It that, when used, they shonld not be used o that they breed and apreaj de. Thfr are several actlvttie of th Oovercment which could well be com. tired 13 A fep-irtn-.ent cf Health. I . i a VOU 1 DS in I 'ii:iv products to be used In erecting bulM- wnicn nm. ""''-- V ' i, , .tT "ng wh-ch harbor th. ,-rm. of dl- equitable revision hherto It b. the s!.e? W. should cot stop with th. only hope of tariff reduction short of co-serration, or rather economical ' such an Irresistible, clamorous public c ' . . k, '.mm' as would be Almost revolu- cr our na-i , - ana V rin. Hospital rV-vl,e. To this threat of tariff revision ha. don. great rhnu'd b 1lel those bureau, whl.h Injury to th. business, for th. wool-d.re!-'r.y deal w:h the pubMc hlh. I grower, and woolen m.nufac urer. ar. rhem'strr and Meet Insr-c- In a chronic stst. of uncertainty a to " U. E.- i WH-.. Axa without partment. Th latter department hould limit lt activity to production from th o!L while, the. Health De partment could deal with the proper me of product with relation to health. Just a the Agricultural Department carries on valuable research work In the discovery of new plant adapted to certain soil and climate, th Health Department could carry on research a to th causes of and cur for dis ease, and a to th nutrltlv power and effect of -arlou food product on th human fram. Th former worlt ha been carried on with valuable results by the Rockefeller Instltut of Medical Research, th latter to som xtent by Dr- Wiley In th Chmltry Bureau. Th rood already accomplished by th Public Health Serrlc Is an earnest of what might b oon wnu power and resource. Th last yliow fever epidemic In th. South wa .tamped out by It. th tat of Loul- slana -olunlartiy urrenderln tt pow- r In thl parUcular to th Govern ment. It exterminated bubonic plague In Ban Francisco whn local gencie had failed. Let the work thus done by extended and th los through sick ness will bo so gTeatly reduced a to return manifold th sum expended. STRANG B BCSIXESS. Th following statement appear. prominently in on of th procured organs of Bourn publicity: pn!r unrtlD, but tnat Improbable. ' Anything that 1 "reasonably Im probable" must b cult lmprobabl indeed. But Is It? Of course a 1 Intelligent ooservers know that tho Taft renomlnatlon U aasur.!. Why tha Im pudeni assump tion that It Is noiT hy the curious pretense that the La Follett cam paign has the slightest slnoeiity or good faith? Why th propaganda for La Kollt-tte by Interests that hav sl it ays hated and opposed th Republi can party and !) wlUT It Is queer business. What would they do with La Follett if they got him nominated? Republican would not ot for him. Democrats -would not vol for him. Who would? mi- rower vispicat-ch. Th Orcgonlan nnili thl HJum'.na tlve Item stowed modestly away among th various Interesting new feature of th Salem Dolly Statesman Ooramor WVat yaatrrrfar waa Jortma ov.T XlSrZ'VZ'Z:' V.ctfc u sat tani ail in tin...' r..t dal ot mon-T. either, to bring thrm ?o th. rr.aoi if to -ill r, .!. . . .rrr tin-.. I lea.e Salem for inr it;' : :';mA.VVa;Xr;'; is2 i.l iKa ilnrairnnp lia 11 Wn I V "- v ea any bear'.rtc spin tha conduct ot in, i '. ara or not. but eanr aaiaaa that haa Xtr-'n n aJa took place hlla I haa baen eut of tha cut. I am lad ll.a maa who raa tha laat tlma ar.ra lo. atal mm undar tha n .a of tha prlaa author. ilea, aa mj pollay la Dot Injurad undar auctt olreumnsance. Runaway convicts! What runaway convicts? Do convict run away? Honor convicts? Parole convicts? Trusty convicts? Convict who hav given their word to our confiding Gov ernor that they would never, no. never, violate thuir parol, their sacred word of honor, th olemn trust reposed In them when he released them from prison and turned them out on the uneasy peopl about Salem, taking to their heels? Convict who hav been sentenced to th penitentiary for grave offense actually taking advantage of their opportunity to leave beblnd them prison rules, prison food, prison confinement, prison sentence? It ti Incredible. Only bd men would breRk th!r pledges in that way. There are no bad convict. In th West lexicon. Juet convict who lor to go back to prison at night and pray for the good Governor who turns them loose by day and for many dy at a time. Yet we hear on the Oovernofg au thority that convicts do run away. But not far. Convicts who run away and are "located right under th nose of th prison authorltlo" do not injure the Governor's turn-'em-loos policy. Not at AIL They vindicate It. no doubt. The convict who run, but who doesn't run fast or far. doesn't count. After A whll w hall probably find th Governor explaining that th con vict who doe run fast and far. and get auay, 1 a good rtddanc. Th knave would contamlnat the con vict who ar glad to tay. When w get the records of the honor convicts and parol convict who hav com and gone especially gone under the Governor' benellcent prison policy, w hH wondr more than ever what a prison I for. TAFT CONLSTE-T OX TARIFF. President Taft defense of his veto of the Democratic-Insurgent wool tar iff doe not plt aso the Springfield Re publican. It -tys that th los of progress toward clentlfio revision ! would not have been great; that eci- ntlrto revision l a oreara jmpoaoium of realization: that th President la mistaken In saying that he had to be gin with wool In applying hi new pol icy; and tht if there wa to be no re vision until after the Tariff Board re ported, then there should hav been no Canadian rec'proclty bill. Th Republican assume A great.deal v.... tt tx-iB.res scientific revision 1m- ! roM)Dl, for that method ha never K Th Tariff Commission ef 4. ot collected Information. i ,,rs united their force ana tor mai bill to piece. So they would ao again If general revision were proposed. Th present Tariff Board la to collect th fact, but Congrts Is to d raft a bill based on It own conclusion from thos facts. The Prealdent doe not propose general revision, but revision on schedule at A time as tbe board report. A Tariff Commission ha ben I tried before, but not or. with uch funrUon as th prnt board xr- cue. Schedule revision haa never been tried, therefore we have no experience , on which to base prediction of failure. noara. it -i.i . t unity to legislate on th merit of each schedule without th. log rolling tonary. Ther I vry reason why th wool tariff hould first be revised. It haa been picked eut for year as th moat iniquitous by political orator, news paper and magaxin writer and by th Vradirt himself. Th continued Tart's -.nomination la not only une-rain. I la reaeonably Improbable. . . . To d.T the aituetlon baa eucn aa entirely ii (rant aaf.Mt that It la probeolr -Ithin tria ta,-ia 1 a-y that Tilt nmlnatloa. la rot la rtiHaiBir suffer m any of th consequences of re That Industry ha been e- vision. dared tho citadel of high, protection and If th citadel wr taken, th mailer forts would aoon follow. But th President I accused of de parting from hi own theory l mak ing th reciprocity agreement with Canada. The fncta In regard to Can ada wer already well known and needed no Tariff Board Inquiry. In dustrial conditions ther and In th United States are substantially th am. Knowing this to be th case, th President offered Canada fre trad. When Canada declined this offer, there was nothing to do but mak th best bargain poslsble. The offer of fre trad showed Mr. Taffg conviction that any tariff against Can ada was net too low and hi purpose In retaining any tariff was to retain something to bargain with. It I purely an assumption that reci procity was adopted to repair th blunder of th Payne-Aldrich bill. The agreement was mad when th opportunity arose In accordance "with th policy Mr. Taft ha advocated ever since he became President. Mr. Taft secured the insertion in the Payne-Aldrlch bill Itself of provision for the repair of It blunder by se curing the creation of the Tariff Board. He has pursued A consistent policy throughout since he proved -by experience tho hopelessness of general tariff revision scientific revision based on facts; schedule revuion as fast as th fact are ascertained; rcl nrocitv. and as close an approach to free trade as possible with countrle of like conditions, such as Canada, THE TKOI'BIX 1J THaTOU. It Is quite natural that trouble should have broken out between the Turk and Italian In Tripoli. The region merges on the West rather vaguely into Tunis, which has long been an Italian colony. The boundary Is merely an imaginary line which has not been delimited and tne unsemou tribes which inhabit the country carry thnlr deoredatlons back ana lorin uithn.it Tniich rrstrnlnt. Italy, like France, seeks to set up A civilised rovernment In her African posses ions, building roads, erecting engl neerlng works for Irrigation and en .nuniririr n irrlcu 1 1 ti re. The wander ing habit of the natives from Tripoli, of course, interfere more or less with these undertaking-! and In the effort to repel them Italian troops can hard iv tnin ni.iklna; their way into -the do minions of the Turk. The only lasting r(..T,r'y for the' barbarism Which has ".! even grown wor.. under Turkish role l.s for Italy to take pos- - . , . .rlnn nTU'PIn session OI in. ein.. -"" " AlBlers and Kuvpt and no doubt she j., d so before A great while. No other European nation ha. conflicting Interest In that part of Africa except Turkey, and the lack of a navy pre vent effectual resistance from that quarter. American have some faint histori cal connection with this region, inas much as Tripoli furnished a contin gent to those rlrate fleets which rav aged commerce In the Mediterranean toward the close of the eighteenth century and at the beginning of the nineteenth. Most of the European power ubmlttd meekly to hav their ship captured by th pirates and number of their subjects sold Into slavery. Reader of Don Quixote will remember what A flgur th Af rican corsair cut in th action of that tory. In the elcht year between 1785 and K 'I 1 reported that 110 American seamen and officer wr captured by the Parbary pirate, a they were rnlled, and doomed to lav ery. The Government paid $1,000,000 to ransom them. Thl ort of thing continued until the year 1816. when it occurred to our tatemn that It would be cheaper and better to de stroy the pirates than to pay them ransom. Accordingly Commodore De catur was sert to the Mediterranean and soon brought them to term. Since that event there ha been little trouble from the Barbery pirate. The Turks got possession of the In definite region known as Tripoli In th sixteenth century, taking It from the Arabs. Here, as everywhere else, their rule has been a detriment to the land. Under the Arabs there had not been very much commerce or produc tive Industry, but work Wa not en tir.i abandoned. Sine th Turkish conquest many oases which formerly grew date and alfa-grss have been dtstrted. Tribes which were then settled on farm hav taken to A wan dering life. In fact, th general con dition of the region ha deteriorated. The Italian could not make matter worse and would be reasonably cer tain to make them better. It 1 note worthy that the native Inhabitant Mf.t. to take si-lea with the Turk In the present difficulty. The chance are that they prefer to pass under the control of Italy, which ha aone so nrh t Imorove condition In Tunl. Ther 1 no natural reason for th desolate tate of TripolL Although th climat I notably drir now than it was in ancient time, there Is tlll subterranean water enough to Irrigate extensive treat and In many section of the western part living streams are to be found. In the eastern half of Tripoli the desert occasionally reaches the Mediterranean hore and agricul ture la out of th question, but ther im a litrra area bordering upon Egypt, known as Cyrenalca from the ancient city of Cyrene. which Is very fertile and would produce abundant crops If it could be tilled under clvlllxed con dition. All this wrritory formerly K.iontrpfl to Carthage. In those time it anr.norted a very large population though now It ha only two or thre .. .i.are mil. The remains of great Irrigation work constructed by the Carthaginians are to be found ..-.uhere. while the eeacoast 1 strewn with th ruin of th cities thev built. i-v.- nama, Trino'.l come from A -triplet" of large town which existed in the western part In Carthaginian time. The city of Tripoli stlU occupies the site of on of them. This place 1 imnnri.ni at present because it I th outfitting point for caravan crossing the desert to Lake Tcnao. mere u - .i.a nf "Chinook Jargon or itna-iia franca which Is understood all the way from the Mediterranean to the Interior of tne r.ouuan inn im may hear It commonly spoken on the streets of Tripoli. Since French Influ ( nredomlnant around Lake T.-had It Is Important to their Inter that the caravan route should be urur. from savagery. Hence Franc r-mx- h rxnected to favor Italian rule in -rvin.ii' Of court) Oermany. If it has anything to say, will Incline to ward the Turk rartiy because of op- nosltien to Prance, but more because of Its gr-at investments In Western Asia. Still there Is little reason to look for German intervention to stay th l-piln Advance la xnpou. t-ng land would naturally prefer to see the ) a region rtvllUed. since It merge Into Egypt on the ast without any nat ural boundaries. There La A story afloat that Engiana will permit Turkish troops to pass through Egypt into Tripoli, out mis Is Incredible. For one thing there is A warm friendship between Italy and Great Britain, while we cannot be- Ue-r. that anv move would be wel comed by the latter which would tend to rvlv dormant Ottoman claims In , Egypt. Th probability is mat j. npou will pasa Into th possession or Italy. Bine Franc now ha A free hand In Morocco, this will bring the whole of Northern Africa under civilixed Influ ence and perhaps restore to that long-suffering region something of the prosperity It enjoyed In Roman and Carthaginian times. Defeat cf reciprocity In Canada doea not necessarily mean that the grip of the paper trust In the United State will be tightened. The second section of the reciprocity Act passed by Congress is still in effect admitting free of duty Canadian wood, pulp and pulp paper, which Is not taxed for export This admits free of duty all Canadian wood, pulp and pulp paper which Is not grown on crown land. Paper from wood grown on crown land I taxed by the provinces and therefore subject to duty in the United States. Pressure may now be expect ed In Canada to induce the provinces to remove the tax on the one hand and to continue It on the other, as large American Investment ar being made in Canadian wood land and the whole paper industry 'n that cntry is being stimulated. In the United State there will be pressure to repeal the section as a retaliation for Can ada's rejection of reciprocity, but the section was adopted in our own inter-, est and Its repeal would injure us by hastening the depletion of our own wood supply. Plnchot, like Fisher, has discovered by experience the beauties or con troller Bay as a harbor. He Is having borne In on him the truth of Mark Twain's saying: "Dont prophesy un less you know." If he had gone to iiaakA. hefora denouncing President Taft for letting Ryan take part of the waterfront of Controller Bay which is not a bay ha might have indorsed the sentiment that. If. Ryan wanted the plagued mud fiats, he was welcome to them. The chief difficulty about the Alaska question Is that two many opin ions are based on Ignorance and mis information. K-raetlv what amount of cantanker- ousness, or general cussedness, makes man a public nuisance juage .;- Ginn does not unaertane to uetiutr. but when the condition ha been at tained he takes Judicial cognizance oi It. He discards technloal distinctions and makes directly for the substance. It stretches the law a little, pernaps, to order a man not to make an ass of himself, but certainly the Intention Is laudable. To the lay mind it doe not appear to be a serious crime for A nurse to rise at 1:80 A. M. when the rules say- she must rU at 4 sharp. Discipline is an excellent thing, but perhaps It Is earning severity too far to oeoar a young woman from earning a liveli hood for a mere formal offense. In our opinion there Is as much room for common sense In a nurses' training school as there I anywhere else. Their la.t chanc. to reap A harvest 1 season being near. th. Yukon rnin ibudii wm.a i - transportation compaiiios " another "great discovery" and started another stampede. It easy to Into th Yukon Valley thl time of year, but hard to get out again when fact hav coolea tne siampeaers en thusiasm. Tn..,h Director Newell complain. that not .nough farmer, ar taking U land on Government : Irrigation project, a new compinvj. oo.r- to Invest minions in irnnuii .o.... tv, T-)..chutea and COlumoia Rivers In confidence that buyer will take and cultivate 1L General good nature 1 a TaluaMe asset to Dr. Grant Lyman. It not only enabled him to separate investors from ISO. 000 of their money, but to win the confidence of the hospital attendants to uch an extent that escape was easy. While Portland shall oontlnue In the manufacture of lumber, the river must be the economic highway for the raw material A great river la an adjunct of a great city. Ultimatum are in fashion. The hopmen of the Harriman road send one to the management, Italy sends on to Turkey and Mr. Epaulding de liver on in person to th Nurses' Association. -Restoration to entry of nearly 1, 000.000 acres of alleged coal land In three of the best counties of Idaho in dicates that some departmental peo ple are resuming use of their senses. There ought to b Another depart ment of the Municipal Court, rather than compel the Judge to work over time. Falling thl. how would tt do to put him under a piece scale? It 1 terrible to contemplate what might happen to Harold Vanderbilt If domestic discord should break out be tween him and the athletic Eleanor Sear after they are married. A chauffeur is dying in San Fran cisco, the result of a hot from A drunken clubman. Why a olubman, drunk or sober, should be a gun-totr 1 beyond comprehension. This 1 an activ community, with It Acting Chief of Police, an Acting Captain of Police, an Acting Fire Chief, and so on. That la how we get Into action .ometlm. A Umatilla Jury mad orn law Wednesday when it declared A rail way company la not llabl for fir caused by sparks from It locomotive. The promoters of the Pendleton Round-Up not only gave a great show, but mad big profit a well, which U matter of impl equation. A strike In the dull season la a fool ish a a lockout when buslnes 1 booming. The only difference is that the latter never happen Toung Gate ha a way of his own, like his father. To not many men is given tho privilege of a house made to order for hi wedding. of the Day Major John R- Lynch, the ranking negro officer of the Army, who has just been retired on reaching the age limit of Si years, was the center of storm in the Republican National con vention pf 1884. Th organisation pro posed Pewell Clayton, of Arkansas, as t.mnn.aru rhalrmgn. but Tflenrr Cabot Lodge, now Benator, proposed Lynch. A terrible battle on the race lssu rol lowed. Clayton being a Southern while and Lynch a Southern negro, but Lynch won by a majority of 40. Lynch wa supported by Theodor Roosev.lt. How subtly th automobile ha In vaded th field of commercial transpor tation is shown by the announcement that within a few days a caravan of touring ears will start on a trans-continental Journey from New York to Los Angeles, carrying twoscore passengers who have no Interest In the machines but who have paid their fare for the Journey In exactly the same way as they would buy a railroad or a steam ship ticket. While It Is tru that coast-to-ooast Journeys have been made be fore, they were private enterprises. But tho coming tour is conducted by . a touring agency and the participants I will neither be chosen by Invitation nor will they go to earn their salary. Three young men In a boat, to say nothing of the rest of th eutnt, are floating down the Mississippi River on a month's Journey to St. Louis, where they will enter Washington University when the Fall term opens a little more than a week hence, says the St. Louis Republic A L. Partrlde. A Sldler and E. Dixon hsve made the trip before and they think tbe rigors of a" 1000 mile trip by canoe Is Just the sort of thing to train them for a Winter's study. It wss in the middle of Au aust that the students began their long Journey near the headwaters of the Wisconsin River. Their canoe was fitted out with everything needed on the long and ardous trip and experi ence had taught them that their larder needed to be well stocked. Railroads are urged byHce Bennett, In the Railway Age Gazette, to encour age the creation of small Italian farm colonies along their lines, where labor ers on th. road can Invest In small farms and continue to work on the ..tirnari ch brvs that In many In stances Italians have worked In this way until the farms were paid for and then gave-up work on th. railroad, but they attracted others to begin In the same way. She says: "Not Infrequent ly has It be'en true that a whole town In Italy was evacuated as the result of a letter from a fellow townsman, who had sent back a glowing account of his axDerlences In this country." She says that the railroads already begin to feel the danger of a labor famine, and suggests that they choose an Ital ian of practical farm experience, who will choose a gang from his own com munity. They will establish a farm colony which will draw others from the old world. The hurricane of August 17 and 18 off the South Carolina and Georgia coast Is takeh by Walter L. Moore, chief of the Weather Service, a the text of a bulletin calling attention to the need of wireless weather reports from ooastlng steamers. These would make posslbl. reports of a hurricane three or four days before it "reached f which would save much P property. The Atlantic hurri- the ooast ana ename people o . . . observed to be forming aa can. o cooraln to .ntrie. " ..... ...... .,t. iv aaaala' ton. but these reports only reached the Weather Bureau by malL No wireless report, were received from vessel, at sea In the region traversed all by the storm, although a number of , .. A I ai.V, Fi. W..pp. " port- "" ' " t storm , ' , ,ea. No lnformatlon j , wnaievr Is at hand until t.ne mu stations are within the Influence oi th storm. Mr. Moor says In his bul letin: . That this storm In It. full intensity shonld ..ft'Sff th. Bouth Atlantic Coast or four iPp,,n. orti been i.v-atrraDh from V-MI1 outhrn wHL-ii. tifta Bucn rv has teen In operation alnce July . V'1'-'- Soma raluabl. reports have been received but neceaearily this service Is not as af- ...;.. . it. would be were obaorven em ployed rexulsrly aboard a number of our coait-wlae veeaal. at rail salary who would reoort twice dally to this office. Prelimi nary invaatlsallons looking to tne eatabllsh mant of auch a aarvlca are undar way and. If arrange men tl can be made, auch a aerv lce will be out Into operation. The same dlffloultioe are encountered tn forecasting storms on the Paclfla , Coast and it is to be hoped that. If arrangement, ar. made for wireless weather resorts from vessels at sea. they will extend to th Paolflo . well as the Atlantlo Coast. It Is to th mutual Interest of shipowner, and hip captain to hav for.oaat. Senator La Follette begin hi auto biography In the October number of the American Magaxlne. He deals with the most interesting pert of a man's life who has filled a large plac. In the publlo eye hi early .trugglea. He tell, of hi. labor to gain an educa tion, hi. beginning law practlo., his lection a. District Attorney and Rep resentative In Congress, La Follette was evidently a politician and an In surgent by instinct, for it wa. only flv. month, aft.r h. left college that he ran for office. In so doing he "bucked th. machine" and beat it and he did th. .am. when he ran for Con fraes. A man of auch posltlv. char acter naturally won as warm friend, a. he mad. bitter enemle. and a fin. trait of th. Senator. 1 hi. frank acknowledgment of th. debt he owe. bl. friend, and th. unstinted praise h. glv. them. One need not b. a fol lower of La Follette'. to admlr. him . a man of strong convictions snd a gam. fighter and th. remaining chap ter, of hi. autoblogrophy will be read with Interest Of th. vast fors.t of cedar that one clothed the mountain of Leban on. .In tb Holy Land, only too remain. They are 'carefully . enclosed and watched over to prevent their destruc tion Ilk all tbe rest. Of the 415,520 emigrants from tha British Isles in 1909, 233.2SS came to the United States; of these 141,681 were nil. and, L5I Xemales. Gleanings Writer Believes It Deterrent ef Orime and Morally Right. PORTLAND, Or., Sept. 26. (To the Editor.) A short time ago I listened to a discussion in regard to capital punishment. There were three In the party, yet it was not a three-cornered argument, as one seemed to be neutral. One was in favor of, tbe other opposed to capital punishment for the reason, he said, that It did not do any good, and that the man who sprang the trap was as guilty of murder as the man who committed the crime. Just why any one who has given the question serious thought could say that capital punishment Is not a deter rent of crime Is more than I can well make out. Can any country abolish capital punishment and keep down crime. If Denitentiaries such as we have In the States, where the Inmates are well fed and the work no more arduous than falls to the lot of the ordinary day laborer are maintained? There is also at any time the proba bility of their being paroled or par doned. Another good turn done that down-trodden, long-suffering class Is tho large portion of the time off for good behavior as though the people In charge of those institutions were not there for tha express purpose of see ing that they did behave. True, they do have to work, but that seems to be the failing of the great majority of us outside of those institutions. But, said one, they have abolished capital punishment In some of the states and It seems to have maae no difference. The answer to that would seem superfluous. Governor West's action In the Webb case would seem to be sufficient answer. The law Is so eeldom enforced that it becomes a Joke. True, seven of the states abolished capital punishment, but two of them, Colorado and Iowa, rein stated it after a short period, evidently finding by a little experience that it was not best to abolish the measure. But let us Bee if Oregon, or any other state for that matter, has capital punishment as one of the retributions for crime. The average number of murders committed for the 20 years from 1885 to 1905 was 6597.' That Is equal to one homicide victim to every 14.400 of population. Oregon has ap proximately 700,000 souls and at that ratio there would be 48 murders In this state annually. What per cent of that number Is executed during the year for their crimes? Statistics show that we convict 1.8 for cent of these cases. So with that showing and with the record of our present tender-hearted Governor, we have evidently abolished capital punishment and It Is up to us to wake up to that laot, Italy is the only country of Im portance that has abolished capital punishment, and that, I think, would exolaln au!te clearly why she tried over S600 homicide cases In 1906, while England tried 818 and Germany 667 for the same year. Was It because Italy's population was greater than those countries? No, it Is less. Then why? The only logical conclusion which I could reach was because that any one who wished could take life at will and live. We would Just as well erase from the statute books laws that are un used as we would drop from our dic tionaries words that have become ob solete. When the law becomes too lax It Is only a question of time when the good cltisens are stirred to action and they rise in a body and Judge Lynch Is placed on the bench. In 18S there were 8667 convicted murderers in the States. Ninety-eight of that number were executed. In . states the people saw there was a laxity of ths law and so they lynched 176 more of them. It Is good to know that only a small proportion of the population of a country is born with criminal Inclinations. It Is this class that do crlm. stealthily and for per sonal gain in some form. It Is for thl. class That the law must be enforced to the letter, and no punishment meted out today by clvlllxed countries Is too drastic when dealing wtlh capital of fenses. the Another class commit. ' . t e th moment or Jnn. them. a real or lmaginaiy "'"" - - -This class do a violent act openly, and as a rule go and surrender themselves "d a?, willing to take the conse quences. But th. great majority need no law to P; T grelt law c apltal " everyon. the e, 4-1 IT-St. WtllCn K1VOB OVWXw"- ability to distinguish right from wrong. One', whol. being shrinks from taking . h,o crime has been com- mitted such "a. th. W.rhman murder at Scappoose. 'men it "' duty to see that swift Justice Is dealt the perpetrator. It Is a duty he owes to himself and his fellowman to rid " world of a menace to humanity Th. conscience will be at . rest, for to do one's duty la to do right, and to do iVnyonTwho ha. given gjj- "iht - that it would make no ' . . ,h number of homicide punishmei difference ;"'" , ,,hn caoltal offense France again Pun'sneB r!mber aown Lb d8ath and keeps the timber aowu to 19. iiiau. . ROCK OB MOSES FOTJIfD Anttanur 8r " "tlT One Prophet Struck. cii.awrt Tribune. Preaching today at Westminster Ab Deyt Arohdeacon Wllberforce astonished the congregation by fl"0"n" T-V,, known anuqu-' " studied stones, aa .. . daatinv." saying that the hlch for. slx cen- v.. .-nn.n beneath the corona- .. .i.o the rock from which Mo... truck water for th. thlr.tlng children of Israel. The name of the antiquarian was i not -,? a k- archdeacon Wllberforce. UltDLIvUCU jw . . . but he was quoted a saying that he i,i that the stone was w" J" t" " h.. r.mow. After it use such It was considered sacred and was carried from place to place by the Israelites In their wandering In th w"?en.!".!- ...-A- .bowed to the Arch deacon a cleft In th back of th rock from which b said he believed that the water had gushed after Moses had Btruck the stone with his staff. , The stons. it Is believed, was takeq to the' temple of Solomon, and, after its destruction, to Jerusalem From Jerusalem it was n.nn it reached Titus to - Ireland, later 'was taken to Bcotland and was brought to London by Edward L Negro Fighter 1st England. . PORTLAND. Sept. Z7. (To the Edl to; observe the criticism in The Oregonlan today relative to the law in terfering with the Johnson and Wells fight in London. In the Interest of fair play. I think It only right to say that It is more likely the Judges of law and order are following the example of this country In preventing the fight than through fear of black supremacy. J am prompted to say this, as some years ago. Just after the fight between Peter Jackson and Slavln. I was In London and- saw the black man who won the fight, occupying a place of honor the box seat of the National Sporting Club coach, going to the derby. This always struck me as being Prt8; manlike, and hardly bears out the theory of British fear of black supremacy. N. Nitts on Game Birds By Dean Collins. Nescius Nitts, sage, scholar and wit Of Punklndorf Station, a fresh mouth ful bit From his plug of tobacco; a fly that had lit On the toe of his boot, with great deft ness he hit With a nicotine stream, and discoursed for a bit On the game bird, and things that re late unto It, Tm minded how we had an argumen tation On buying of gam birds, in Punkln dorf station. When Pamuel SprouL for his fust oousin Pete, Jest come from the city, wa plannln" a treat. And was goln' to buy mallards from Romulus Pickens, Who raised 'em at home, right along of his ohlckensr "Wen, one Zenas Smathers, he argued with Sproul Twas wrong he should purchase them mallards at all, Since they was game creatures; and he plumb forgot Them mallards was hatched right In Perkinse's lot By an old Plymouth Rook, to be peddled some day To some of the meat markets up city way." "Well, Sam fln'ly give In, to -rave belir 'noyed. Whereat Zenas Smather wa plumb overjoyed;' But several nights Jater an uddlny, Pickens Heared quite a commot'on out mere 'mongst his chickens. And rushln' outside the fust thing that - he seen was, Ketohed fast by his coat to A paling . point. Zenas." "And half of his mallard wa hung In a sack That Zenas was oarryln" over his back. You have foul suspicions "gin me. I regrets.' , Say Zenas, T wanted them mallards for pets, But I would have paid." And Sam Sproul's cousin Pete. When corned from the city, got corned beef to eat." Portland, September 17. Conntry Town Sayings by Ed Howe When ambition beckons to me, I say to It: "I have ambition; send ge nius. A reader asks what I think of Can adian reciprocity. I have ohanged my mind about that three times, ana am again on the fence. T sutjDose she Is as happy as other people," a woman said, speaking of a friend. How happy are people gener ally? Ever think about It? Are the people generally tolerably miserable? Or do they have a pretty good time? w-n.n a. wife says: "Sshl The chil dren Wirt hear," occasionally the hus band replies: "I don't care if they do; the truth will do them good." when Borne women "entertain" they work so hard that you can x enjoy yourself for being sorry for them. . The neobl often accomplish thing for themselv.. and give "leader, the credit. No hu.band hear, half hi. wife .ay! that's on. rea.on ne aoesu s more by her good advice. Some people think it 1 all right to ask for anything they ean get. A roan suddenly beoornes mighty po lite and considerate tor the publlo when an opposition buslnes Is started In his town. K After a man tells A woman no - her, she thinks she pug" to W. Shakespeare Pare Db Nobody knows what Lord Baoon would have done if he had been con fronted by the necessity of settling with the driver of a New York cab. but what William Shakespeare did In such an emergency was discovered the other night, when he arrived from Eng land. -The Mr. Shakespeare who has come to town l a singing teacher of LThe'nflrst intimation of Mr. Shakes peare's arrival came in conversation wafted through the entranoe and up the stairway Into the lobby. "I shan't, I won't, I'll be demmed If I shall. I shan't pay It. I won't pay If it's a er what do you call It? holdup!" And Mr. Shakespeare burst Into the hotel and hurried up to h desk, looking as nearly apopleetlo as might be expected of a Briton asked to pay for what In "London Is less than a H-s hilling fare. He was told that the regular fare la 8. "Oh!" said Mr. Shakespeare solemnly. "Oh! Why, they told me on the boat It would be only $2 Foreign View of American. London Chronlole. Will th. Americans make us revert to pegtops? Anyone standing at Charing Cross can deteot the American men by their trousers. They ar. made very wide and come down on the top of the shoes to absolute tightness at the ankle. Armed with side whiskers, these Amer icans would look exactly like one of Keene's early Punch drawings come to life. The costume has beoome a sort of uniform shoes, pegtop trousers, loose Jacket, straw hat with turned up brim and a camera slung from the 'shoulder. That Is the American of the present season, and he wonder, why the news- -paper sellers at Charing Cross when he passes call out the name of a New York paper. a Land Grant Cane. VANCOUVER, B. C Sept, 26. (To tha Editor.) Will you kindly Inform me what was ths outcome of the ap peal in the case of the people vs. South ern Pacific Railroad? The last Infor mation I had was the decision nanaeo down by Judge Wolverton giving ths railroad 90 days to appeal. By giv ing me th. desired Information, you will confer a favor. H. GRAHAM. Judge Wolverton's decision wa. on a demur. The company had 90 day. In which to appeal or answer. It elected to answer on the merit, and th. case 1. tlll pending. Balatrlea of Governor and Postmaster. PORTLAND, Sept. J7. (To the Edi tor.) Pleaso state . what salary tha Governor of Oregon receives; also the Postmaster of Portland, and whether there Is any commission on the sale of stamps. A READER. The salary of the Governor is $5000 per annum; Portland Postmaster. $6000. There Is no commission on' the sale of stamps. Not a Full Day. New York Sun. Knicker Is Jones a gentleman of the old school? ' Bocker No. a gentleman of the part time school. .