rrrn motixtxo ohecoxian, Thursday, MAitcn 28. 1012. 10 J7"Y Si .av dition than now. The people of Vhe f found that there was no fraud In lend f Jiltf f I nVlYlllltrTlI j whole state would decide by vote in money to entrymen o cover the Vsllv VL -V 4)V'1V I whether Portland should annex St. : expenses of proving up; that the in- Johns In spite of the constitutional centlve for Kettonbach and Kester to Inri M. bk.o. . , .,., n(1 th supreme Court ml- ' commit crime in connection with the !! -. r..-t;.r.J. Olcn. l'uto(Tlc as n : n i la Adnnct. I. in yr. 1 j . . . r ; 1 . . . - r. I l . i- i I k . M t i . y. . :r. :ui:--!. monini .. t 1... H i - I. l:irt- ro.r.ih. a- ii'tl. ii mnt ii. .j: ,-ui. , on --tr i.i u i. : ' y. rm.n - hs . . . . . ' i. ' i' r"' it..'tillis. M.-..i-t'. on ttinn'.U . 2 -i .TV , 1 'k rwi , 1 r- , 2 .V" 1 n :. -if t;;V cai.i.;kii. tr.r.u.'-.l. PT - yr. . iMk i:n, . ia. 1. in m-.ulh 9 no .71 Jl. 'f. r Hrnilt s.n.l Post.. ft. r mony or is uij r r (..-t.ou.. tn-s. n r -:-r-s. '".11 r rurrrmy r .1 t-i, r;. "i P-.sln" "" ; ,. ru... lti !m..r.ii .ountjf U'-i s;.lu. I'-iilacr Kat-!' t II P'. 1 ""'L.l? t- .s ; ,. i ..-n .. ' " e'". 3 J - 1-..VJ. :..s. ure.a JKs-mti, . q r-tt.-. M.lra :...ln-. rrire V-rr. c" V 1 .S . . :.. u:.l.. bul.dins. . 4 . - . r i-. . . . .. t.uron-an lUc .Nu. 2 flssmt trt. lillil'UWI). Till ll-lV. MH II t. (DMir XMTim MITIIOIT ;oi ikTI.ANP. in., Jlirrh Z7. I To h Mi . r- ' ir'.rh was In ' flan- HB .1 -itor A:.tn. nil h irr t-r n t 'a r l I .1 lr..i j(M':s SW'KN.-TIU M. I.i t us j;i-t a str.iicht 1. :ir iin.1. rt.in.)init of motives nr- i:T'.ir..'H h (re we cottemn .- t-. t. .1 . I t us put our x is rti.l I r.ii-!. .Mr. Sn'ii.Hrum. in the ;.. . ,i,i,.;.i pi.ii f r a iimniu't. pr. T.i't u.is ;i pnt-ct ini--t. a pri.'e.-il.in plntfurrn by a ' ;. , V ..n arty Irs a protertii-n oun !r. Th.- r- h.iil bi-cn JmmnJ for tunny . ir. ;i.!r..it: :i l resi'lut-ly evaded .-.- ir-Mi!-ti: It.niM velt. fur revision of f,-,.-. t.irif. When T.ifl became I'resi ,!. nt he ni.nuf.--ud hi.i Implicit be- f in the ir-f.nth of h! pl.itforrn i!e.i;e t. r'i-'e the t.irlff by rail nwr a to un.ier- I. ike the enMl t.i.-k ir.cre.--s was in i-ontri'l of the Ik idcrs e I: i-PuMli an party and AMrtch. I'nyne and r.mnon. They !. liberated for nmnths n,! evilve.l ; tariff. The Pn-ehlcnt v i- ti.it e.it!'i'd. and .t ;I go; but ho runiptl'.i.l ttu in to accept a provision f..r a . r.rp.i iti m tax ami a nun-parti- 4:1 t trirr 1m iini. which were lncor-t-orf.l in t'ie t.iri'T bill. He txprc.--ly r.i; I that s. hr.l ile K (wmilll was "ln ri. fersihlr." but thoiia-Kt it was a bet ter l-ill tit. in the ixi.-:inr nteiLsure. ami r. 'i;.-icg t make -ny praniistand ap peal t. the niunir), h approved ii. i'l .''r. S er.strutn inform Tho nr..-.ii:n what is the matter with th" r.i; tie-.!.!r! h act that was ;iot tiie nistt.-r i:h every other protective lit.f bill ever enacted In the United Slat..? r. es he object to the cor-'P'-r tti'in tax? !.rs h disapprove tho t.iri'T b'laril? IWs he' oppose the rev- iiue-proiliii in,;; qualities if tne mil Would be have vetoed the bill, if he It. tl been i're.-ident. defeating; cor poration tax. tariff board, mlequato revi-tiiio arul all? Irt no man who is a Rood citizen iiri'i uinil patriot condemn a I'resi-ib-iit who is aI.--o :i cnml citizen and otind patrl t for any jexecutive act aithotit full ."nd fair investigation "I'd under.tani!ln; ff Jill the ronill-.i-ir.s. rc-iuJons and jiunioses. tit iih mini: it 1 l.K. In hol'linsr that the 8t. Johns an nexation :i ll'iiral the Supreme I'ourt has construed In still another particular i-ttinii 2 cf arti.ie XI nf the st.ite constitution. Since lw re enactment In 1S10 with certain provi sions concerninK; the licenlnc reprulat tnc ami pro'iibitlnir of the sale of II Hior this K-ction V.us lux-ome popu larly known as the "home rule" mendment. It wns first enacted without the laiitor-roeuiiitinn feature to fit a 1. al ami specific situation, if lr-r ni.irv Is not r.t fault. Very soon therraftir It was discovered that it eprtvci the la t::;-latiiro of authority tr. . rente r.evv i-otir.tles. In 1910 it re nlt. .! in kii evertlow of local county i';i:on nua;irts to h- voted upn ,i the Mate at large. In 1110 the Ihome rule ;ii;ii..r irt.iion w.ut tacked tort snd lhL p'c.a.se I. as require,! two' Supreme t'ourl tlecLsions to cive the vot.r f'e.tr conception of uhat they had tlonr. A.-t ori'irif to ti e dei i-ion In the ,-t. Johns f.ie it Is fir from being; a i"ho:ne-r jt"' amendment in t.ne ini r rt ir.t partii til.vr. It U held that In .. . -rpor-xte.l c-ti.-s or towns may not . ti-o:i.' ite rxiftit by vote of all the T-eopte of the state. As the law now itir.U .1 t!:.tr;ct h.nlni; ISO inhabi tants. m.i in.-, rpornte as a town, by iit.rvln certain formalities) and vot i afirniatlv ly thereon. I'.ut once .1 ton It mnt a!was remain a town. ntnv annex nnlncorpor it.-d run i.".io:ij territory hut cannot Join ltef to another c tv. The constitution g-tyes city authority t.v enact or amend its charter but n.ot to .e-roy it. The t;e. i.nlv. niy d- th.it. A new e-uhtirb. ItXe I'nrkrose. for example, jnay re.tdiiy ireorporate b,- vote of Its s.wn elector, but If It does it I.s for- ver Kirrrd from annexation to I'ort- I. n.l unli's" the voters of the entire wt.tte . M'til thereto. According; to II. is latest opinion tha con.t!.lation t f Sen.-oJrt and A c.vt rteis.!e Is ap V.retitiy lncffet tive and prolmbly one r two ether recent annexation of ahurKs by 1-irs.-. r tow ns are invalid. It is not a re.tonable conclusion to.it the voters in adopting thus con st titior.il aitten.iVmi nt had the least thonjthr of placing upon th vot-rs at int.'.. ttio taj-k of deciding purely Jn-.tl iuentior.-. Yet literally con- Ktr'te.l the amen.lment d es Just that In ton an 1 city consolidation and co'.irtv division issues. There is a w 1 !!-i(. vt loped antipathy held by the r-'orlo at larue to the submission to t.ieni of li"l mut'ers. it win shown in the lir.'-at In 1510 of every county !i.t.i..n and county ai.ntxatlon bill. The f. H ti if. moreover. Is a proper tne. It i. impossible for thj voior k ( one ecti'n of Oregon to form an honest Opinion upon an issue that af f.cts or.ly the voters of another and remote section. The situation is therefore wholly undesirable and U ems can bo remedied only by fur ther amendment of the constitution. The result In this case also provides another admonitory lesson as to the isdom of enactlne constitutional amendments that havo not been pre pared by or submitted to competent legal S'tVlsers. Incidentally it may be mentioned hat the St. Johns opinion is one that .miild he within the scope of Colonel . ; r,rv It's proposed "Kecall of De- 1-1 ins." I!ut with that novel plan t.i force we would be in no better con- prer inir. We till would have a local is sue to be decided by the whole people. We can now refer the issue to the voters at large by Initiative, not as n matter of nverrldlnir court and con stitution, but rsj an orderly question 4n which an affirmative or negative answer would In results mean the same as tho decision under the IJoose- . , , . velt scheme. Or by no jn-eater effort we can amend the constitution to permit annexation or consolidation of , . . . l. , ,..j citiej. by vote of the people affected. Itecall of decisions would be of no more value In the St. Johns or any other case In Oregon than would a fifth wheel be to a watron. IF WK H.L MNfiLE TAX. When is the single tax not single I tax? When It proposes a sinRle (land) tax plus some other Ttind of a tax (franchise tax) and plus one more tax (inheritance tax). The singie-taxers wrou.d not put the entire burden on the rnmlt.wner. Oh, no. They would pet the coriKiratlons and the rich es- l.ttt-a of deceased persona. ' Or they say they would. But they would ex empt many, many present gourcesof lejrltlmato taxation. The sinfle-taxer would exempt money, notes and accounts. The slnple-taxer would exempt every bank and every other great financial institution. The slngle-taxer would exempt the g;rr-at mercantile establishments and Jobbing houses. The stngle-taxer would exempt man ufactures of all kinds. The glngrle-taxer would have no state Income or corporation tax. The single-taxer would exempt the automobile of the rich man; but he would tax the home site of the poor man. The slnple-taxer would exempt the saloons from any tax even license tax. The sinjrie-taxer would exempt the accumulations of wealth and property of every kind. The slngle-taxer g;ets the landowner only. ("an the farmer, the home owner and the lot-owner bear the whole burden of state, county and city taxation? Tiir rw road biij.s. The Impulse of the state Is Renulne lv toward good roads. All want Rood roads, and all realize their enormous value to the development of the coun try. Hut no two persons agree exactly on methods. It is easy enough to talk and preach good roads, but it Is not easy to devise any comprenenilve working plan of financing and building them. The West, good road bills have been virtually abandoned. The objections to them came from every quarter and were based on various good reasons. A 140.000,000 scheme embracing ten or more years, was too daring. Coun ties w-rre not willing to surrender local control. A political machine mlRht and probably would bo created through expenditure of so vast a sum of money. Now the Governor's compromise committee proposes new measures and has caused their publication for the purpose of inviting suggestions and criticisms. So far no proposal for change or modification has come from nny source. Tho public Is cither well satisfied with them or It is not Inter ested In the subject. It should be. The bills distinctly recognize the principle of local or county control; they apportion only a small part of the fund to be raised by state taxation to the exclusive direction of the State Hoard: they provide for a highway commissioner with supervisory pow ers: they remove any suspicion of an organized political machine: they make a most equitable and discrim inative distribution of state funds to the counties. The proposal now is to raise 1 1.000, -000 per annum for a period of years through the sale of state bonds for road purposes. The former measure provided for 11,000.000 per year for ten years, with an equal expenditure by the counties. The only question now as to these measures. The Orego rlan thinks. Is its to the amount of state bonds. That question the voters of the state will soon be called upon to decide. nttu. vix wrrji isrouMKR -x-ii:m:i). The practice of procuring evidence of land fraud by promise of Immunity to Informers met with stern condem nation from United States Judge Iletrlch. of Idaho, when he dismissed the civil suits of the Government against Kcttcnbach. Kcster. Kobnett and others to recover title to land they were accused of having obtained by fraud. The Judge brushed aside as unworthy of creIence the protesta tions of the prosecution that Robnett had been given no reason to expect Immunity, holding that all the cir cumstances pointed to the opposite conclusion. Tho Iewiston land-fraud cases and the bank embezzlement cases growing out of them have been dragging through the courts for seven years. Accused of procuring men to locate timber land by advancing money for expenses and by making contract be forehand to buy the land, Kettonbach. Kester. Dwyer, Kobnett and other, were indicted. They were convicted, and appeals to the Circuit Court are now pending. It was subsequently tILscovered that the money with which they conducted their land operations was 'embezzled from tho bank of which Kettenbach, Kester and Rob- r.ett were officers. They were indict ed for this offense and Kobnett turned informer. He testified that, when he saw that Kettenbach and Kester were using the bank's funds for their land operations, he began to do the same and to speculate In orchard land; that he told Kettenbach 'he waa doing so and that Kettenbach consented, but warned him not to take more than S 10.000 at any one time. He stole S 33.000. and the total amount stolen by all three men waa I1J7.000. AH three men were convicted on Novem ber 14. 1911. and Kettenbach and Kester were each sentenced to five years in the penitentiary and Kobnett to ten years. On the very day sen tence was passed. Robnett was par doned by President Taft on recom mendation of the prosecuting officers. Judge Dietrich expressed his opin ion of this transaction In dismissing the civil suits. He showed that It was proved by other witnesses that Rob nett had Induced men to commit per jury; that Robnett's testimony on one occasion directly contradicted that w hich he had siren on another. He 1 1 land purchases "seems to have been almost wholly wanting." and thus dis credited Kohnetfs testimony ajruinst them. He . discussed the probability that, having been led to expect par don, Robnett perjured himself in giv- . m evidence in tne nun ci.- ... j words: , It l not to be umMl that any of the I offlrcra of the lioveriiment ulil knowln- j ,v ,ncoura!e or cnumrriaQK a faiaifiraiion of the facta by him. but beina consriona "t the far, that l; re. of th.j P'"'''; of tht bank indictments hta liberty w I lmrwrlf WIIhlo lh ,,ow,r of the Pr.erutinit ! officers, titer muit have been preaent to I an unusual lm, the atronit inaucemeni. unner s men an aeromoiire imiurin.. f.ea, to give such evidence, as In his juuk ment. itoulrt tend to Ingratiate him In the good will of thoae upon whom he waa de pendent. It la quite Incredible that he did not learn from some source that the prusecutlon. aa a rule, la not ur.itraff ul for Information furnished hy persons charged with crime, and his hnj that he might profit by such consideration prove not to have been en tirely unfounded for. subsequently to his , giving teuimnny In several cases, it is Z.XXTVy VraTA "an ,i,..iuie pardon. J The practice of procuring evidence in land frnud cases by instiKatinfr one of the guilty persons to testify against his associates, which is commonly loi lowed by land officers, has been re peatedly condemned by The Orego nian as offering a premium on perjury. Tt is now condemned for the same reasons by a Federal Judge who, having tried this whole series of Lew -Iston cases, U in the best position to form an unbiased opinion os to the viclousncss of this practice. The re sponsibility for the evil done rests with the vpeciul agents, iwho collected, and with tho prosecutors who used, the informer's evidence after having in some way conveyed to his mind the belief that Immunity whs the price to be paid him. The event proved that this belief was well founded and the men who carried out the bargain can not evade culpability. laMK.KAVT! rl-A K.l ON FARMS. How great demand there is from farmers for laborers and how much good may be accomplished in finding employment for Immigrants on farms instead of leaving them to crowd the already congested cities is shown by the work of the Immigration Bureau. A division of information has been created with a branch office in New York, and has also developed into an immigrants' employment office. Men have been sent to Iowa, Missouri, Ne braska, Illinois and other Western states In response to Inquiry from farmers and the immigration officials have received letters from both em ployers and workmen expressing satis faction with their bargain. In one case the immigrant took a homestead in Nebraska w ithin a year after he was sent to work for a farmer in that state. ThLs office is a good, practical means of placing immigrants where they are wanted and taking them away from the coast, where they only glut the labor market. The same ma chinery fur finding work for immi grants should be placed on the Pacific Coast, when the completion of the Panama Canal opens the way for di rect steamship lines from Kurope to this coast. Immigrants are most wanted in the interior of the North west to develop the land. They are not wanted in the seaports, where they would be more likely to develop slums. It Is not even now too early to prepare for their reception. AMKKKAN UKM.R Al'IIKKS. Not very many years ago an Eng lishman named Sir Lepel Oriffin made a flying trip to the United States, and on reaching his native shores again naturally gave his countrymen the ripe fruit of his three weeks' sojourn. His conclusions were finally summed up In the verdict that "Americans Inck dis tinction." Whnt he meant was that we all look, think, talk and act alike. This opinion of us is fairly common among Englishmen, even those who make some claims to superior Intelli gence. Mr. Hryco, for example, finds In Americans "a tendency to uniform ity." and mont foreign visitors to this country agree with him. Allen John son, writing In the current number of the Yale Review, believes that "so far as this Impression has been received from biographical literature It is not unfair. Too many biographies," ha remarks, "have been written by liter ary hacks who have no eye for local color or individual characteristics. Their highest ambition seems to be to rescue their hero from humble sur roundings and to thrust him into a Senatorial frock coat." But now and then "latter-day statesmen are mus tered Into wrvlce" to compose biogra phies and then "the results are not happier." The conviction that be cause a man has held office he must necessarily know a great deal about his predecessors Is only too often er roneous. Mr. Johnson does not admit that ''to the true artist" American lffe is want ing In local color. He Is impressed with the circumstance that our eco nomic and geographical conditions are widely diverse and from this diversity there can hardly help resulting a great difference of local traits. The com mon people of tho South differ mark edly from those of New England. Ore gontan have many traits which Cali fornktns do not possess, and between two states so near together as Wiscon sin and Illlnyd close observers find as tonishing varieties of speech and con duct. The older fashion of biography was to treat the career of a man as if he had been the sole author of his own fortunes and misfortunes. His envi ronment was mentioned only casually, if at all. His constituents were not deemed worth much reference if he was a statesman. The economic revo lutions which caused the divagations of his political career were lightly skipped over. The biographer stuck so closely to the llgure of the man that he lost the opportunity to explain him. This nst-thod received high sanction from Ralph Waldo Emerson, ncho said In one of his essays that "every Insti tution Is the prolonged shadow of some individual." thus reversing the actual fact of the case. Men, as we now concede, are the products of the institutions under which they live, in large part. To be sure, they react on the environment which fashions them, but before they begin to react they are already formed and fixed. Thomas Carlyle strengthened the hold of the ancient "hero fallacy" upon the mind of the world. In his view all there is of any value in civili zation has been the work of great he roes whom we ought to adore and humbly serve. Following out to Its natural consequences a philosophy of this sort, one school nf American btog. raphers has produced a shelf of freaks utterly unlike human beings. They resemble nothing so much as the mar ble figures of statesmen which one sees scattered about the City of Wash ington. Contrasted with these unfor tunate writers of biography there is anothers school which Is fully as bad, but Its badness Is at the other extreme. These authors do not permit the indi vidual to count for anything. The en vironment is all in all. In pursuance of their theory they heap up memo randa, print vast collections of "sources," shovel barrels of letters into book form, and in the end give us an immense chaos of materials from which biography might be made, but no biography. Every reader of current literature is sadly familiar with these monstrosities which pass for "lives." The "Life of Lincoln" by Nlcolay and Hay was not by any means one of the worst of them, though it Is probably the hugest, but It was saved only by Hay's literary genius. HWlnborn genius would not let him be wholly "scientific," and so he produced a biography which it is possible to read. What a pity it Is that some others were ne,t blessed in the same way. The "Life of Garrison," by his sons, is a horrible example of what a biogra phy may become when the writers of It follow out a resolute determination not to leave a solitary fact afeout their subject untold. We have passed through the purgatorial experience of reading this portentous work and can truly say that we have learned in sor row what we now teach in song. John Bigelow's autobiography is another specimen of prodigious immensity which is unreadable and half useless. Mr. Johnson believes that there is a middle course between the fatuousness of the writers who neglect a man's en vironment entirely and those who make so much of the environment that they forget all about the man. Charles Sumner, for example, can be placed in his proper setting of Massa chusetts morality and commerce with out obscuring altogether his rigid. Puritanical, impossibly conceited per sonality. We may study the economic rhanges which made Calhoun flop from a strong nationalist to a burn ing state's rights man without neglect ing the traits which made him a fero cious fighter and a gallant knight Daniel Webster's fall from grace in his famous 7th of March speech is to be acounted for partly by the Inner na ture of the man, partly by exterior cir cumstances. The biographer iw-ho neg lects either factor does but half his duty. Great men are not made by their times altogether, nor do they fashion the tendencies of their age by the mere exercise of will. Most Individu als drift with the tides In which they live, and that is all there is to be said about them. But in these same tides there ia a flood on which some have the Intelligence and resolution to ride to fortune, while others never see it. The delay of Governor Osborn, of Michigan, in calling an extra session of the Legislature to pass a Presidential primary law Is another evidence that clamor for the law was an after thought. Until he saw a possibility of being nominated for Vice-President, Osborn's enthusiasm for direct nomi nation slept. When it awakened the time had gone by to make the bill ap ply to the election of delegates to the National convention of this year, and Osborn must have known this. There Is a strong alloy of personal ambition and gallery play In the patriotism of the average insurgent. Touching upon the question whether or not the church militant is intended by the Lord to be a "saints' rest," we are disturbed by a possible dearth of saints who are fitted to enjoy the pro posed nirvana. Paul looked upon the Christian career as a struggle, not a swoon. At the close of it he said: "1 hava fought the fight, I have finished my course." He had not rested much, though we fancy his sainthood was up to the mark. The "unconstitutionality" of laws to protect the health and morals of women wage-earners is substantially a thing of the past. The recent decision of the Washington court to sustain the eight-hour law is in full accord with modern tendencies. The welfare of the human race Is a consideration which, in the long run, will necessarily outweigh all others. Reward for Tornow, the Olympic bandit, dead or alive, has reached $5500, but he is not worth it. Already he has caused sacrifice of many valu able lives and will Increase the number before capture. Registration of automobiles in the United States has reached close to the three-quarter million mark, yet a good horse costs more than he did before the machines essayed to put him out of business. When the Indolent British lords as semble at 2:60 A. M. to pass the mini mum wage bill they must be deeply Impressed with the emergency created by the miners' strike. Old John Arbuckle, who died yester day, was well known by name to the coffee-drinker on homestead and In mining camps and all the kitchens in tervening. The rural delivery carrier who cov ers a specified distance in the shortest time should receive Increased pay rather than the man who drags out the day. The .Senators from the two new states will increase the membership of the Senate to an even eight dozen, but will not change the strength of par ties. The pastor who leads his flock In working on the church lawn is in some degree a worthy imitator-of the car penter's son who founded the church- Exposure to night air Is alleged to have weakened a Portland policeman. This is libel on the finest atmosphere on earth. A Chicago brewer who cammitted suicide recently left over $3,600,000. It is needless to say he had to. Republican Senators in New Mexico and Democratic Senators in Arizona will preserve the equilibrium. This is the week for the Turks to win and there Is reported great loss of Italians. Colonel Hofer's modesty is phenom enal. He is preaching "Oregon First." The Colonel Is already a bad loser. Stars and Star-Makers By Lease Caaa Baer. I 1 I Cathrlne Countiss played last week In Kansas City, at the Grand Opera House In her big success, "The White Sister," In which she tis touring this season. Jessie Shirley will close her season In Stock at the Auditorium theater In Spokane next week, and will open for a brief season at the Seattle thea ter, in Seattle. This week Jeanne Towler Is presenting "The "White Sis ter" at the Seattle, the play in which she was seen at the Baker theater last Fall. Also in the Sound City, at the Moore, is Olive Vail, starring- in "Miss Nobody From Starland," the first . musical comedy to visit Portland at the be ginning Of the present Heillg season. Mildred Disbrow, an old Baker fa vorite in stock, is appearing at Pan tages theater in Seattle in a comedy drama sketch called "Nerve." Ruth erford Davis is her partner in the act. Next week will bring them to Port land. Pprtlanders are taking . more than the customary interest In the coming of Elsie Janls next month to the Hei lig, inasmuch as this very young and interesting star has never played here. "The Slim Princess" Is her vehicle, the book of which was written by that master funster George Ade, and the music by Henry Blossom. The story Is taken from the Ade novel. Its scenes being laid In a mythical Oriental prov ince. Miss Janls playing the roie of a girl who can't get fat enough to suit the beaux of her home town. In her support is Joe Cawthorn who has visited Portland as a star; Julia Frary, Oscar Ragland and Queenie Vassar, all of whom have appeared on local, stages. - s Maude Fealy, who was one of the leading women under consideration by George L. Baker for his new stock company, to play leads after the Maude Leone-Willard Mack engage ment ends, has gone to Winnipeg to play In stock. She will play a ten weeks' engagement in the Canadian city with her husband, James Durbin, as leading man. Charles Daxey, the playwright, and wife are visiting Los Angeles, where Mr. Dazey's newest play, "Captain La Fitte," is to be given a production by Oliver Morosco. In San Francisco Kolb and Dill, having amicably settled their differ ences and burled the hatcher with all due ceremony and press dispatch, are playing the second week of their en gagement at the Savoy theater in "The Girl In the. Train," the Viennese musi cal comedy. At the Cort in San Francisco "Madame X" began a week's engage ment last Sunday night; later the Madame heads for Portland on her second visit. John Cort, after the longest absence from his home in Seattle since he has been so largely Interested in the theatrical business, returned Tuesday, March 19, Bringing first announcement of what may be expected In the way of attractions on the Pacific Coast next season. To the Hellig will come: "Every Woman," Frltzl Scheff In "The Duchess," "The Blue Bird," ''The Piper." John Mason In "As a Man Thinks." "The Kiss Waltz," the Winter-Garden road show, Maxine Elliott, May Irwin, De Wolfe Hopper in "Pina fore," "Bunty Pulls . the Strings," "Bought and Paid For," "The Million." "The Rose of Panama," "The Wedding Trip." Grace George In "Just to Get Married," "Little Boy Blue," "Sum urum," "The Bird of Paradise," "The Truth Wagon," "The Butterfly on the Wheel," "Baby JWne" (star cast), and Chicago - Philadelphia Grand Opera Company, Including Mary Garden, Tetrazzlnl, .Constantino, etc. t Mr. Cort points out that the greatest event scheduled in the bookings is the engagement of the Chicago - Philadel phia Grand Opera Company. Such stars as Mme. Tetrazzlnl. Constantino and Mary Garden will be among the principals of an organization number ing S50 persons. The production, he says, will cost on an average approxi mately $8000 a day. The theatrical magnate Is the oppo site of gloomy in his view of present National theatrical conditions, declar ing that theaters now are enjoying a sudden boom which came after the be ginning of the new year. Tils own ventures, notably "The Rose of Pana ma," "The Bird of Paradise," "The Truth Wagon," "The Gamblers" and "Two Women," he says, have shared bountifully In the rush of prosperity. Grace Cameron, who starred in "Nancy" and was later adopted by the Portland Press Club after her clever vaudeville contribution at their first Jinks, has sailed for Europe. She left Monday from New York, and will visit London, Paris and Berlin to gather new material for her second tour of the Orpheum circuit, on which she starts in July. see' A lemon-colored handbill, sent by a correspondent with an acute sense of comedy, tells of the wildly exciting theatrical amusements in an Eastern Oregon town. Announces the bill: "To night. Sunday, March 24 American Theater A good clean show of 8000 feet of new film, consisting of thrilling adventures, comics and dramas. Par ties wishing to attend after church will be shown all the pictures. Don't miss this. One night only." I'nrnly Children and Fond Parents. PORTLAND. March 27. (To the Edi tor.) We notice that by persistent efforts the parent of the girl who was chastised by her teacher for an infraction of the rules at the Gresham School has been able to get the matter before the grand Jury for investiga tion. This seems to be persecution to the extreme after the matter had been threshed out in Justice Court. Now, if this young woman's certificate is revoked and she is deprived of earn ing an honest living, will justice be restored? If parents of undisciplined urchins would work more in harmony with teachers instead of antagonizing them, better results would be mani fested at examinations. F. I. GANNON. ROTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS BY TAFT. Worthy Ends Galaed and His Policies Recited Briefly. 1. Arbitration treaties with Great Britain and France. 2. Federal court procedure simpli fied. 3. Enforcement of Sherman anti trust law without fear or favor. 4. Veto of Democratic wool, cotton and free list bills as unfair, unscientific and destructive of the Republican prin ciple of protection. 6. Abrogation of discriminating passport treaty with Russia. 6. Postal savings banks established. 7. Railroads prevented from putting rate increases into effect without ap proval of Interstate commerce commis sion. 5. Panama Canal pushed to early completion without hint of scandal. 9. White slave traffic practically de stroyed 10. Admission of Arizona and New Mexico to Statehood.'"" 11. Bureau of Mines established to safeguard the lives of miners. 12. American capital and labor bene fited by extension of foreign markets. 13. " Abolition of peonage. 14. Income tax amendment to the Constitution submitted to State Legis latures for ratification. lo. Boiler inspection law passed by Congress. 16. Bond issue to complete irriga tion projects in the West. 17. Maintenance and extension of open door policy in China. 18. Peace maintained in Cuba, South and Central America by friendly warn ings and intervention. 19. Government business methods modernized and reformed by economy and efficiency commission, saving mil lions of dollars annually. 20. Nonpolitiral methods used in taking the thirteenth census 21. Bucket shops and get-rich-quick concerns destroyed. 22. Parcels post recommended 23. New treaty with Japan, ending racial., controversies on the Pacific Coast. 24. Further extension of safety ap pllance art. ' 25. Postofflce department made self- sustaining. 26. Canadian reciprocity. Rejected by Canada through fear that the United States would derive the bene fits. 27. Publication of campaign funds and expenditures. 28. Indorsement of committee's re port and proposed bill concerning em ployers' liability. 9. Reorganization of customs serv ice, corruption eliminated, frauds ex posed and punished and millions of dol lars recovered. 30. Court of Commerce to review findings of interstate commerce com mission. 81. Nonpartisan tariff board to re port on the difference in the cost of production at home and abroad. 32. Corporation tax, yielding $30,- 000,000 annually: government examina tion of corporation methods provided. S3. A deficit of $58,000,000 trans formed Into a $30,000,000 surplus. 34. Nonpartisan judicial appoint ments. 35. Further control of railroads through extension of powers of the in terstate commerce commission. 36. Workingman's compensation act brought to successful issue in the Su preme Court. 37. Stock and bonds commission; valuable and exhaustive report sub mitted as basis for legislation. 38. Extension of civil service by ex ecutive order. 30. Practical conservation acts. 40. Court of customs appeals; un dervaluations stopped. Pollelea of President Taft 1. Peace with all the world through just dealing and preparedness for war. 2. Neither race nor creed a bar to appointment to office 3. The upholding of a righteous ju diciary. 4. Economy and efficiency, including care or superannuated employes. o. Penny postage through postal economies. 6. States' rights when not in con flict with Federal authority. 7. Extension of practical conserva tion acts. 8. Parcels post. 9. Federal incorporation act. 3 0. Revision of currency laws and prevention of panics. 11. Protection of American citizens at home and abroad. 12. High standard set in Federal ap pointments. IS. Scientific study of industrial con ditions. 14. International investigation of causes of high cost of living. 15. Scientific revision of the tariff on a protective basis through non partisan tariff board. Single Tax Measures. WAMIC, Or., March 24. (To the Edl tor.) Kindly Inform me just what the proposed single tax amendment Is. as it will appear on the ballot next Fall. Is It Henry George single tax? A SUBSCRIBER. Slngle-taxers have not yet prepared their state-wide measure and,' it is said, are undecided whether to present one. It is impossible to 'apply the Henry George plan fully In state or local taxation. Certain Indirect taxes such as Import duties and Internal rev enues Imposed by the Federal Govern ment cannot be abolished except by- Federal enactment. In the Clackamas County measure franchise taxes are substituted for government ownership of public utilities, which is an essen tial of the real single tax. Henry George advocated taxing land to its full rental value. The Clackamas measure does not specifically so pro vide, but some opponents assert that that result would be accomplished with out further legislation through the de preciation of land values caused by an excessive tax burden. Makers of Plaster Board. GRAYS RIVER. Wash., March 26. (To the Editor.) Could you tell me if there are factories on the Pacific Coast that manufacture any plaster board? A READER. Sullivan Fireproof Partition Block Company, 84 East Water street, Port land, manufactures plaster board, and GiUen Chambers Company, of Portland, also manufactures an asbestos plaster board. The Western Lime & Plaster Company and the Central Door & Lum ber Company both handle plaster board. - '. Gold on Deeded Land. LAKE CREEK, Or., March 24. (To the Editor.) A discovers gold on B's land that has been deeded as agricul tural land for over 30 years. Who has the first right to the gold mine? M. D. BOWLES. When one takes tip land he gets the gold and everything else in it. The only exceptions are the cases of rail road or other lands where exceptions are made In the jgrant, so that the mineral does not pass with the land. Even in case A found the gold on railroad land he could not probably hold claim to it without a lawsuit. De-e-lighted By Dean Collins. He sat beside his desk and from The Outlooks walls the outlook viewed; And watched the fleet occurrences With which the moments were im bued; And often some event he sighted That made him softly roar "de-e-lighted!" The months flew by. Nine Governors Before his door their cards let fall. He smiled receptively and said: "In sooth, the sovereign people call." His hat into the ring he shied. And once again, "De-e-lighted!" cried. Dakota spoke, and when her call Came o'er the wires a-humming free. He wiped his brow, but gamely still The same expression shouted he. Though the "De-e-lighted!" which we quote. Perhaps, has some Sardonic note. Now comes New York, and it says "Taft." Say, will he fling his scorn at gloom In word and type, or will he phone Up into the composing-room: "Take all those galleys of De-e-lijrht. And chuck them some place out nf sight?" Portland, March 27. Half a Century Ago , From The Oregonlan of March 28. 1862. Florence This Is the embryo town of Salmon River. It consists of five log houses, three of which are occupied as stores and two as whisky mills. General Wright writes to The Dalles that a military force will be sent up to the Nez Perces mine to protect the miners. A correspondent of the New- York Tribune, writing from Washington, says: "General Stone was arrested while in bed at 2 o'clock this mornins. The substance of the charges is as fol lows: "First For misbehavior at the bat tle of Ball's Bluff. "Second For holding correspondence with the enemy before and since the battle of Ball's Bluff and receiving visits from rebel officers in his camp. "Third For treacherously suffering the enemy to build a fort or stronghold since the battle of Ball's Bluff under his guns without molestation. "Fourth For a treacherous desiarn to expose his force to capture and de strurtlon by the enemy, under pretense of orders for, a movement from the commanding general which had not been given. "A court-martial will be speedily ordered." The following delegates were elected to attend the Union County conven tion from Bethel precinct: George Filers, George Bell, Amos Harvey, Dr Warriner. C. C. Walker, W. B. Walker, J. Puroine and William McCarty. The Union voters of Dayton elected the following delegates to the county convention: James McDonald, General Joel Palmer, Stewart Hanna and D. M. Jessee. Circuit Court Considerable merri ment was excited during the examina tion of witnesses In the divorce of A. J. Culbertson vs. Martha Culbertson. ano no little scandal was brought out. In reply to a question, one of the wit nesses said: "Ef you talk to me. I want you to talk in plain Missury lan- ffllilrA T trtn't unilal-.lanrl ani.lhlnff about your grammar lingo. That word percure, 1 don t Know wnat it is. He evidently came from Pike. "Richard III" will be put on the stage tonight. Queen Elizabeth will be represented by Mrs. Forbes. Mr. Beatty will appear as the Duke of Gloster, Mr. Forbes as Henry VI. and Miss Lawrence as Lady Anne. "Plzarro" was played to a fair audience last night. Don't let your smile become a jnkr; many believe that is what started the present revolt against Mr. Taft. You can usually tell when you are welcome; and get out when you are not. Occasionally the guards appointed to watch the devil, raise the devil. Every biff Republican politician talks as naturally about "me and Lincoln'' as every Democratic politician talks about "me and Jefferson." How proud the old Revolutionary patriots were of their country. In J776; but if they could see their country now, they would burst with pride. Possibly the most pitiful sight in the world is a fool who is mistaken, and in dead earnest. There wouldn't be much excitement were it not possible to fool people -0 or 30 times in the same way. I'm becoming very tired of Leaders who can't lead, and of Freemen who are not free. It has always seemed to me that the last item in the list of wrongs of women is that they are not permitted to vote. This isn't the best that I can do; I'm now at work on that. Stare Ridicule of Nationalities. PORTLAND, March 26. (To the Editor.) The news from Denver In your issue of today regarding assur ances received by Rabbi Friedman that 'derogatory characterization of the Jew" will disappear from the theater in this country is interesting and sug gestive. . The writer could wisn mat "Vindic tive and venomous buffoonery" engen-' dered by race and ereed prejudice and contributing largely to Its perpetua tion might be removed from stage, press, pulpit, platform and film in all countries. It would be gratifying to believe that the action of the theater managers was inspired by something loftier than the box office or by the fact that no great difficulty can be anticipated in this reform bv a profes sion so stronly represented' commerci ally and artistically by the race in question. It would be wen ir tne uritisn-oorn Americans and those proud of their Anfflo-Saxon stock were sufficiently numerous and enthusiastic to make it unprofitable to ridicule the race which originated all the finest characteris tics constituting whatever of nation ality can be ascribed ethnologically to the citizens of this great country. "CITIZEN-BY-INTENT." Citizenship and Foreign Service. PORTLAND. Or., March 27. (To the Editor.) A citizen of the United States enlists in a foreign army and after serving the term of enlistment he re turns to the United States. 'Is he now a citizen of the United States or does it become necessary for him to be natu ralized? F. H. N. If he swore allegiance to the foreign country at the time of enlistment he became expatriated, and it Is neces sary for him to be naturalized, as any other alien, to become again a citizen of the United States. As "Ed" Howe Sees Life A