THE 3IORMXG OKEGOXIAX. THURSDAY. SEPTE3IBER 5, 1912. 1U Ht? (Dmwttan PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflea aa Eecond-Ciaa Matter. Bubacription Ratea Invariably In Advanca. (BT MAIL.) Daily, Sunday Included, ona year f"SS Daily. Sunday inciuaeu, six muu.u-.. ... Dally. Sunday Included, three montha. . z.-o Dally, without Sunday, one year o.uu Dally, without Sunday, eix montba..... Dally, without Sunday, three montna... x.i Dally, without Sunday, ona month. -V" Weekly, one year x. Sunday, one year J- eunday and Weekly, one year -" (BT CARRIER.) Daily, Sunday Included, ona year .0 Daily. Sunday Included, one month..... .5 How to Kemlt Send Pofttoffice money or der, expresa order or personal check on your local bank. Stampa, coin or currency are at the eender-e rlak. Give poatofflce addreaa In full. Including- county and atate. Postage Ratea 10 to 14 pages. 1 cent; 19 to lio pagea. 2 centa; 80 to 40 pagea, a centa; 40 to 00 pagea. 4 centa. Foreign poatace. double rate. Eastern Boalneaa Offleea Verre & Corik lin New York. Brunawlck building. Chi cago, Steger building. 6an Frand-eo Office R. J. Bldwell Co, T42 Market street. . European Office No. S Regent street. 8. W London, PORTLAND, THURSDAY, SEPT. S, 191S. VERM OXT AND CALIFORNIA. The result in Vermont contains no surprises. The Republican party has lost a. third of Its numbers to the Pro gressives, the Progressives have failed In their first deliberate attempt since the National convention to overthrow the regulars, and the Democrats have made significant and notable gains. If the Republicans expected to dem onstrate in Vermont that the Progres sive movement In the East was Incon sequential, they have failed; if the Progressives thought the forces which through habit, belief, association and Interest have stood together for half a century would be dispersed at the mere sight of the Big Stick and the sound of the Big Voice, they were mis taken; If the Democrats thought the Internal war within the ranks of their ancient enemy would give them a real victory, they are in a measure disap pointed. There is in truth some encour. agement for all In the Vermont t lec tion, but it is mostly for the Demo crats. They have heavily Increased a vote which In previous years has been almost negligible. It is impossible to misinterpret the meaning of that fact. The Democrats in Vermont, as else where, are Inspired by the hope and reasonable expectation of victory for the first time in sixteen years. They go to the polls, where heretofore they have remained away. They have many accessions through the division and disorganization of the Republicans. They have become in Vermont a real political entity. But the obvious lesson from Ver mont Is that the Republican party there Is divided into two factions, or two parties, of unequal strength; but Btill It is divided, and the house di vided against itself cannot stand. The regulars have nearly twice the num bers of the Roosevelt bolters, and they have won the Governorship and the state ticket. It must be assumed that the influences of revolt and dis integration that have been present in Vermont are at work in substantially the same measure throughout New England. If the Republican party loses in Maine, Massachusetts, Con necticut and Rhode Island 33 per cent of Its voting strength, it is easy to foresee the consequences. The normal republican majority In the other New England states Is less, proportion ately, than In Vermont and the nor mal Democratic vote is greater. What will happen in November if the or dinary Republican vote shall be di vided between Roosevelt and Taft and the ordinary Democratic vote ehall be held for Wilson? Clearly Colonel Roosevelt can carry no New England state. It would appear to be Inevitable that Governor Wilson will carry Massachusetts and possibly Maine and Connecticut. Yet, of course, the situation may change before No vember, but it is well enough to un derstand conditions "as they exist to day. Colonel Roosevelt carried California by 77.000 plurality over President Taft last Spring in the Republican primary, and he has repeated the per formance, though In minor candi dacies the Taft people have done well The Presidential electors to be nom inated by the Republicans or by a majority of citizens voting In the Re . publican primary will be Instructed for Colonel Roosevelt. The great Johnson-Heney conspiracy to dis franchise the Taft minority in Cali fornia will thus have been indorsed by the electorate, which has as little care for the decencies and proprieties in politics as their impulsive and head strong leaders have shown. It is not easy to account for the coarse obtnse ness and brutal disregard for the plain rules of common fair play that have Inspired the Roosevelt majority in California except on the ground that California is all-sufficient. As the California delegation at Chicago sought to lay down the law for the majority at the National convention, so California now repudiates the au thority of the National body to pre scribe any line of duty or c induct which a sovereign state shall follow. Thus the tail seeks to wag the dog. But the Johnson-Heney oligarchy seems to have over-reached itself strangely in denying the Taft Repub licans the right to vote for the reg ular Republican candidate for Pres ident and in confiscating the machin ery of the Republican party to accom plish that purpose. If we are to as sume that the Roosevelt majority out numbers the Taft minority two to one. it ought not to be forgotten that the minority will yet vote in November unless Johnson and Heney shall find a way to disfranchise a Republican entirely on the adequate ground that he would vote the Republican ticket. If the Taft forces are to have no rep resentative on the electoral ticket, they will scarcely vote for the Roosevelt electors. They will not vote at all or they may be driven to vote for Wilson. The Republican plurality in Cali fornia is indeed large, but whether It is great enough for Johnson, Heney and the rest to overcome this self imposed handicap in November may be doubted. Let us not minimize the importance and numerical power of the Roosevelt movement. Let us understand that in the East it has assumed the dimen sions of a formidable minority; in California and other Western states it Is undoubtedly a majority. By and large, throughout the Nation it would appear that the Roosevelt strength and the Taft strength are nearly equal. Colonel Roosevelt will get little or nothing from the Democrats. Ver mont proves it. How, then, can he pretend to have the slightest chance of election? HOPE FOB SPINSTERS. American old maids should cheer up and not abandon hope. There is good news for spinsters on this side of the Atlantic. It is embodied In sex statistics lately gathered in England statistics which show that, while there are hundreds of thousands of super fluous women in England and Wales, there really exists a shortage in the United States. For every 1000 men in East Sussex, for example, there are 1256 girls. In London there are 1152 women - for every 1000 meij. The total surplus in the ranks of the gentler sex is 1,179,-27-6 in England and Wales. This means that women equivalent in num ber to many times the population of Portland must die old maids in the two countries named or else lie in wait for widowers. In Norway and France the lot of the old maid is little better. There are only 1000 husbands for every 1069 maids to scramble for, while in France there is a surplus of thirty-three women to every 1000 men. It is when the statistics cross the Atlantic that the matrimonial horizon brightens. In the United States there are a full 1000 men from which 943 maidens may take their pick. Canada is a still bet ter field of operation from the spin ster's point of view. There the seeker after a husband can afford to be really fastidious, since every 886 women have 1000 men to make their choice from. Ceylon and New Zealand are also pleasant,, fields for the spinster's contemplation, the sex proportion be ing about the same as that noted in Canada. In view of these enlightening fig ures American old maids will readily discern that the American continent offers them an unequaled field of ex ploration. It is our disheartened bachelors and anxious widowers who may well turn for fresh hope to the greener matrimonial fields of England, Wales, France and Norway. ELECTRICITY OX THE FARM. Installation of electrical machinery to do an important share of the chores on a farm near Walla Walla was enough of an innovation to form the basis of a news dispatch briefly de scribing the enterprise. Yet the use of electricity in. farming operations is neither an innovation nor an experi ment. Gradually, use of electricity in many ways has been adopted by farm ers in many parts of the country until the modern farm has many such de vices for reducing the scope of man ual labor. Electricity now milks the cows, churns the milk, supplies light and heat for the farm buildings, and even shears the sheep. Where it has re placed manual labor on the farm it has added In every Instance to the quality as well as the volume of the work. For instance, one electrical shearer is found to be the equivalent In performance of six shearing ex perts. Electrical milking devices are more cleanly, more rapid and pre ferable in other ways. The advantages In communication and transportation growing out of electricity have served to revolutionize farm life in a large measure. These sidelights on the use of elec tricity are all the more remarkable when it Is recalled that not many years have elapsed since electricity was the plaything of the laboratory worker. It was put to work in the big industrial centers with a -blaring of publicity trumpets, but its invasion of the farm has been quiet and not spectacular. There are already many farmers in the Northwest who merely turn on a switch in order to churn the milk, who employ an electric cur rent as chore boy to milk the cows. Eventually, in the course of Industrial evolution, the advanced farmer may be enabled to operate his farm by use of a succession of buttons, levers and throttles. Electricity, steam and gasoline will be his hired hands. - RELYING ON IGNORANCE. Mr. J. W. Cullen's letter, published today, would have been more Interest ing had he explained by what course of reasoning he reached the conclusion that the single and graduated tax measure would not increase the taxes of any "moderate landowner." Unless the graduated taxes in Josephine County, where Mr. Cullen resides, would offset the exemption of personal property and Improvements, some moderate landowners" would pay more taxes to a mathematical cer tainty. Neither Mr. Coulter, Dr. Eg gleston nor Mr. Cullen can say what the graduated taxes or the exemp tions would aggregate. Dr. Eggleston pretends to give the figures as to other counties, but they are assumptions, in spired estimates and without founda tion in fact. The single tax amend ment is similar to a proposal to buy a stock of goods 'on an estimate made by looking at the outside of the build ing which holds them. Values for calculating the workings of the amendment cannot be obtained from the tax rolls or any other source. Rep resentation by Dr. Eggleston that they can Is as base a deception as any that Mr. Shields has perpetrated. If he has perpetrated any at all. The Oregonian is not informed as to the merits of Mr. Coulter's discussion of single tax in Southern Oregon, and it is not certain what pamphlet writ ten by Dr. Eggleston Mr. Cullen has been reading. If the latter, however, is anything like the Multnomah Coun ty edition of the Fels agent's work, the conclusion must be reached that Mr. Cullen is not Informed as to pres ent methods of valuing property for taxation purposes. Calculations of tax revenues -presented by Dr. Eggleston must have been prepared with the idea upper most in his mind -that the average voter is ignorant as to this important phase of revenue and taxation meth ods. He boldly submits lists purport ing to show what certain large land owners would pay in graduated taxes If the Fels measure were adopted, when in fact he nor anybody else can even approximate the true figures. In the Multnomah County edition 232 faked calculations are given. They purport to show what each of 232 in dividuals would pay In graduated taxes. The calculatiops are based on the existing tax rolls. The existing tax rolls do not give raw land values on city lots. Much of the property listed by him bears improvements "in and under the land." No graduated tax would be paid on these improve ments, yet they are all figured in to make the desired showing of big tax payments from wealthy men. The re sults are excessive, and are calculated to appeal to all who are biased against wealth and with the additional object of falsely indicating a saving in taxes to the smaller landowner. That anybody should rely on state ments made In behalf of the measure by W. G. Eggleston Is surprising, in view of the Nation-wide notoriety and condemnation given the single-tax fraud on the voters perpetrated by Eggleston and his associates two years ago. The pamphlets now flooding Oregon are the latest manifestation in the campaign of deceit and Insidious mis representation that had Its inception in the Fels polltax swindle of 1910. The record of this campaign is amaz ing In the boldness of its reliance on belief in the gullibility of the people of Oregon. The single and. graduated tax meas ure was first presehted with an ob vious attempt to conceal the single-tax feature in the body of the act and bury it In indefinite wording. It was reviewed at length early .in the cam paign by its chief newspaper supporter and all reference to the single-tax phase was suppressed. One of Its paid supporters, Alfred D. Cridge, has declared over his written signature that single tax is not pro posed in Oregon, yet W. S. ITRen de clares the single and graduated tax amendment to be an honest, ftatfooted single-tax measure. It is supported by figures prepared by Its paid friends that they know are Inaccurate, unreliable, and wholly guesswork. It is presented with appeals to class hatred. Its supporting literature purports to show what certain wealthy men and corporations would pay In graduated taxes, but omits estimates as to their exemptions, thus failing to. show whether their taxes would be greater or less in the aggregate. In its behalf industrial and commer cial conditions In Vancouver and other localities have been cited, when In none of those places is there a tax system in force that approaches it in similarity. It is backed by assumptions, the ories and the purses of men who have no property in Oregon and of whom few ever saw the state. Its paid supporters have little or no taxable property In Oregon, and one, Eggleston; was sent here from the East as a hired press agent. If It be said of Mr. Shields that he also is from another state and works for pay, it may also be said that his salary comes from our own citizens, and not from an Eastern organization or a Philadelphia millionaire. The Oregonian believes that the Oregon electorate is intelligent enough to solve its own problems, and that, the Oregon voters are not so ignorant as the Fels propagandists assume. AN EXCELLENT BOOK. Most of our schools, public and pri vate, teach something of civil govern ment, or civics. It is supposed to cover the various sections of the Fed eral and state constitutions and de scribe the workings of the Government we live under, but usually it is pure theory. It deals with things as they would be were the Constitution an ab stract conception applied to automa tons. Of the actual processes by which elections are managed, laws passed, court decisions obtained and the citizen helped or hindered In his daily life by the operations of the Gov ernment pupils learn next to nothing at school. The ordinary individual understands but dimly the machinery of the state and Nation. To him it is a vague ' mystery. Sometimes he dreads it because he realizes that its power is tremendous. Sometimes he expects impossible benefits from it be cause he does not understand its limi tations. It is only recently that there has been any book on the market which supplied really useful informa tion about the Government In accu rate and readable form. Now such a book has appeared, and It is an admirable work. Its style is so fresh and entertaining that no reader will be wearied. The state ments which it contains are as exact as care can make them. The chapter on the Supreme Court has been certi fied to by the clerk of that tribunal. Mr. Taft has spoken for the accuracy of the paragraphs about the White House and the life that is lived there. Every Important description, in fact, has been supervised by some great ex ,rf In that particular department. The book deals with actual workings Instead of theories. It follows a mil from the day it is introduced In Con- trfaaa in Ita final i e-nfttll re Or Veto tM the President. It tells how elections are managed, not how some dreamer thought they ought to be managed a nnt.irv on h a. hn.lf aa-o. The reader learns how the Department of State protects him in his travels, now tne Supreme Court reaches its decisions, how the Army and Navy are organized and utilized. The name of the book is '.'The American Government." The author is Frederick J. Haskln, of Washington. The more widely It is read the more intelligently the Amer ican people will understand the Insti tutions under which they live. On another page today will be found an announcement of a special arrangement for distributing this book among The Oregonian's subscribers. THE SILENCE OF CORTELYOU. ThA world hears from Loeb and it hears from Odell; it, hears from Roosevelt and It hears from- Penrose; it hears from Hearst and it hears from irrhhuiH' tint not a. word from Cor telyou about the Standard Oil contri bution in 1904. Some persons may remember that Cortelyou was chair man of the National Republican com mittee in 1904, and, because of his eminent services In that capacity he was rewarded with a Cabinet position by President Roosevelt. Tr -armiM seem from this circum stance that Colonel Roosevelt was In clined to play the game then in the good old-fashioned way by giving the jobs to the men who worked for them; but that is another .story. The interest in Cortelyou. who now has some kind of a corporation - position In New York, is that he Is the one man who ought to know all the facts about that Standard Oil gift. He knows, or ought" to know, what Roosevelt knew, for he is the one to whom Roosevelt sent those justly celebrated telegrams a week before the election and after the money had been spent directing that the 3100,000 be returned forth with. Mr. Cortelyou knew, or ought to have known, just what Treasurer Bliss was doing. He saw Penrose fre quently, for the Pennsylvania Senator was a member of tire National com mittee. He was in frequent consulta tion with the President, who naturally was concerned about the course of the campaign. Why Is Cortelyou silent? Just a few weeks ago he was a wltnws be fore the Senate committee, and he was asked whether he knew of an con tributions from Chauncey M. Depew. J. P. Morgan, George W. Perkins, H. H. Rogers, J. D. Archbold and others. He replied: I did not. I do not recall. I heard after the election that H. H. Rogera had con tributed to the campaign, but I do not know what amount. Yet Cortelyou is the man who told the confiding Roosevelt that no Standard Oil money, had beau re ceived, or would be received, for Treasurer Bliss told him so. Evident ly Cortelyou left everything to Bliss. But Bliss is dead. Cortelyou knows nothing. He does not say anything and probably will not. How can he? Yet the man who did not know what was going on in the campaign of 1904, though at the head of the National committee, got a place in Roosevelt's Cabinet. Prob ably that was the reason. A PROFITABLE INDUSTRY. ( The production of alfalfa seed is a neglected Industry in Oregon. There are no available statistics ' to show just how much we produce, but surely not one pound where the yield ought to be at least twenty pounds, for there are no lands in the United States better adapted to the production of high-grade alfalfa seed than thous ands of acres of our dry farming soils east of the Cascades. We do not mean by thisMhat the industry cannot be profitably pursued in the Willamette Valley and other sections west of Mount Hood. But the conditions east of the mountains are practically ideal for quality and yield. This is one of the few agricultural industries that are almost independent ot transportation lines, the price per pound being high enough to permit hauling by team for long distances without cutting deeply into the prof Its. Wheat even at a dollar a bushel will not stand a fifty-mile haul with profit to the grower; alfalfa seed is aollir wrt-tVi In p-mesa nf twentv cents a pound, hence a cost of one dollar a hundred would not cut aeep into the proceeds. This year the most ri.o.nn'a sef ni-ndlict Is hpiniT picked up at around twenty-three cents a pound, and it can safely be said that the market price never gets below fifteen cents. Ac a fair- vielrl ner acre Is rather above than below 400 pounds, and as the seed is taken from the second crop, the first or Spring cutting being used for forage, proaucing praciicany enough profit to pay for harvesting tina cnnnd or seed -crop, it can be seen that 380 per acre is not an ex cessive expectation, inaeea tne iew growers in Malheur and Harney Coun ties say that their crop this year will pay them more than that amount net per acre, and this on lands that can be bought for $60 to. $100 per acre. llaitit lnnrln Inst AS good. bilt not in a good state of cultivation, can be bought as low as $20 per acre. We are now speaking of what are called dry-farming lands, and it is the product of such lands that brings the highest price. There are hundreds of thousands of acres of deeded land now covered with sagebrush in the counties mentioned that could in two years be producing as large profits as those mentioned. In mentioning the two counties named It is not meant to exclude any of the other sections of Eastern Ore gon. Wallowa, Baker, Grant, Union Wheeler, Wasco and perhaps the others have lands just as well adapted as Malheur and Harney. We are glad to note that a deter mined and rather wide-spread move ment is to be inaugurated in Harney County next season toward seeding a good area of land to this wonderful forage plant for the express purpose of seed production. The efforts al ready made in the Harney Valley and on the foothill lands adjacent, as well as in the other valleys of that section, show that the conditions there are rnr b fair vleld of the choicest seed, and we expect to see this become one of the leading ana most, prguiaum agricultural industries of that section. The pretty girls in "The Pirates of ternn." chorus wore slippers of all shapes and divers hues. The heels also varied much in size ana snape. It was noticed by an observant mem ber of the audience that the prettiest girls wore slippers with low heels, while those who began to show un mistakable effects of time had heels three or four inches high, the more unmistakable the effects the " higher the heels. There is some subtle law of Nature involved in this coincidence, but we are not quite certain what it can be. There is nothing incredible in the rinr ' that n hlind woman was re stored to sight at the famous shrine of St. Anne of Beaupre, in uanaaa, few days ago. Thousands of cures f.Pa hun pnnqummflted at this fa mous shrine. All faiths are about equally well provided with marvels oi ,1.1. Trillin must he accepted if human testimony is worth anything. Their cause may oe a matter oi ui pute, but not the fact of their occur rence. . If Portland really lacks interest in the. Pacific Highway, some organized offnr-t chnuld be made to stir up a bet ter state of mind. There may be nothing in the threat to move tne roao to some route east of the mountains, oo-nin thurs mav. Climatic condi tions are more . favorable to good roads In that region tnan nere. xi indifference is added to the incubus of , Winter rains, we cannot expect others to come to our aid. That Benton has for the fifth time won. first prize on county exhibit at the State Fair does not mean that that county possesses better soil, and cli mate or better conditions, for other sections of Oregon are equal. But the D.mnn iuuitiIa know how to gather and arrange their display and always work in unity for the common guou. Thev heliefe Benton to be the best and act in accordance. ,v-Kr,flv familiar with the locality knows that the saloons are two, If not three, too many at the Oregon Electric depot. It is grasping greed thio notnrn that brines a question able business into greater disrepute and alienates support ot- imerai peo ple. . Bull Run water Is a powerful annex ation agent. Lents wants to Join the city, and the fire at Milwaukie will cause many to look across the county line with hopeful longing. Th i (t-venr-old boy touring the country and making expenses by pick ing pockets shows wnat tne Americau youth can do when started wrong. Papa Johnson has -been defeated again in Sacramento County. Son Hiram will follow the paternal ex ample early in November. The women who won prizes on jel lies, jams and preserves at the State Fair deserved all the honors they re ceived, '-i.. WEST'S POLICIES ARE ATTACKED Oregon's GoTeraor . In New Deal for Power, la Charged. PORTLAND, Sept. J. (To the Edi tor.) During the last two months I. with the other newspaper readers, have had municipal scandal for breakfast every morning until I would prefer something more palatable for my morning repast. I havebeen regaled on the : sins of Huntington; on the debauchery and poker playing at Red. mond; on how a Mayor elected by the residents, of that little city had bee'n accused of playing the American game of chance, etc I have, with wonder, read of the sins of our own commercial metropolis and of the modern fighter of wind mills who has advanced, as he would have us believe, in the interest of civic righteousness upon the citadels of sin, sweeping all before him. But as this great wind storm passes, and we can view the work Governor Wcsi has ac complished, as I think over the past two months and of the stale stuff he has caused to be published of our own and other cities, 1 cannot help think ing that he has worked wonderous harm to Oregon without any compen sating advantage. I met numerous visitors in Portland during the Elks' Carnival visitors who came expecting to find 'Portland in habited by the vicious and lewd. It will be remembered that the week be fore the carnival. Governor West donned his military trappings, called out his tried and trusty generals, and" made war on a board fence at Milwau kie, which was supposed to hide moral leprosy; caused alleged law breakers to sign a written contract to obey the law. and declared martial law to exist in Multnomah County, and as a con comitant condition he had to declare a condition of lawlessness. These matters were faithfully - re ported in Eastern newspapers, and our neighbors In the East justly came to the very natural conclusion that Ore gon had but one modern Joseph and that his modern name was West. Our state was slandered, many women were, by inference, classed as ques tionable, and our visitors looked on ui as of bad character. Following this onslaught on Oregon's reputation, our Chief Executive next got- the state into ill repute abroad by attacking in the newspapers and with all possible publicity the two little Eastern Ore gon towns. Finally, Portland was in vaded. It has seemed to me for some time, that Governor West must have some purpose In view. I am coming to the conclusion that he has been willing to do this great damage to the whole state, to trample the laws under foot and violate his own oath of office for the purpose of perfecting his political machine. I think Mr. West is too good a politician to expect to reap a benefit two years hence from his present ruth less acts, and therefore am wondering if he has favored the Mayor" and cer tain other Portland officers, in the hope or under the agreement that certain support will be rendered to some candi date yet to announce himself for some important office at the coming elec tion? Considering that all of the al leged immoral conditions in , Portland should be charged to the Mayor and his underlings, and that Mr. West has at tacked the city officials in Huntington and Redmond, I shall watch with in terest the coming campaign and If pos sible learn what the Mayor is to do for this Immunity bath. One thing is certain: the commercial bodies have spent immense sums of money trying to attract to Oregon good citizens from the East, and these two months of braying through the press by Mr. West has done more harm to the development of Oregon than can be undone with many dollars care fully spent in telling the East of our resources. Has Governor West in one single instance. Improved conditions? Has he closed the roadhouses? Shall he drive the immoral from Portland? If he' does, where are they to go? Are any of his acts of a lasting nature? If he had really desired to benefit Oregon, would he not have first gath ered his evidence in a quiet and seemly way, and in like way have presented same to the proper officials and re quested action? Has he done this? Has he presented to any officer, spe cific evidence of anything or done any thing except to try to besmear a few men whom he couldn't handle or whip into-his political menagerie? GEORGE H. LAW. CAPITAL PUNISHMENT DEPLORED. Correspondent Says It Has No Place In Modern Civilisation. PORTLAND, Sept. 3. (To the Editor) Please let me explain why I think we ought to abolish capital punishment. At the various stages of human develop ment various methods are necessary to restrain the criminal instinct. The matter which Is the most efficient for such purpose at one stage becomes a drawback, and hindrance at another stage. Capital punishment has now, in most of the civilized countries, outlived Its usefulness, and tends more to pro tect and breed criminality than to pre vent and cure It. It makes the con victim of a murderer much more expen sive than necessary and also more un certain because it disqualifies a great many citizens from Jury duty. This is especially the case when the murderer Is a rich ana influential person. I have noticed that the percentage of sub penaed Jurors who do not believe in capital punishment is generally large In such cases, and this percentage will increase as "time goes on. The cam paign against capital punishment is a religion which already has got its foot hold and will continue to grow. Therefore, it seems to me it is now high time we adjust our criminal law so it will be more efficient. A life sen tence to hard labor or solitary confine ment Is a much greater punishment to the murderer. But It Is more In accord with our present stage of consciousness, and therefore a better remedy at this time. PAUL C. PAULSON. Effect of Single Tax. PORTLAND, Sept. 3. To the Edi tor.) I am considering the advisa bility of buying an unimproved lot in Ladd's Addition, price $2500. I am to pay down $250, balance in monthly payments, with interest. Before buy ing I would ltk to know how single tu.--'! if it should carry at Fall elec tion, would affect taxes on it. Would they be increased or lowered? If I buy. it is with the Idea of making a home there as soon as I can pay for it. CITIZEN. Inasmuch as single tax would mean the surrender of the public revenues now derived' by taxing improvements and personal property and the increas ing of taxes on land to make up that i ...... toy tar hnrdftn On an UD waa, n - improved lot than is now Imposed would be mevitaoie. jno one can j Just what the' increase would be under any assumption as to needed revenues. No assessments have ever been made on a single tax basis, and no assess ments have ever been made, from which, by any mode 'of calculation, prospective assessed valuations under single tax can be definitely estimated. Consuls In Mexico. niWQ Cr Kt 5 (Trt the Ed itor?) Kindly let me know whether there is an Americm uonsuiate at Hermoslllo, Sonora, Mexico? If so, please give Consul's address. If not. Is there an American Consulate in any other town in the state of Sonora? SUBSCRIBER. American Consuls are located at Acapulco, Chihuahua, Ciudad Porflrio Diaz, Ensenada, Durango, Matamoras. Mazatlan, Mexico, Monterey, Nueve, Laredo, Progreso, Tampieo and Vera Crux. FIRST EDUCATE THE INDIVIDUAL Check Graft by Teaching Cttlaenshlp In Schoola, Is Ararwed. ' REDMOND, Or., Sept 1. (To the Editor.) I am glad to note that The Oregonian recognizes the fact that a large part of the evils from which society is suffering today is due to our standard of morality. The Senator who takes a bribe from "Big Business," the steamship owner who fails to provide enough lifeboats, the policeman who takes money from the redlight woman, the grocer who gives short weight, and the milkman who waters his goods, are all grafters of the same kind: they differ only in degree. There is graft of the city of 5.000,000 people and In the town of 500 people. It is in the Senate of the United States. We cannot have honest government unless we have honest of ficials, and why should we expect to have honest officials if the body poli tic, from which they are chosen, is dishonest? In medicine this is the age of pre vention rather than of cure and it should be so in the affairs of society. The improvement of our standard of morality lies- In the education of the individual. That part of the character of a man which is not hereditary is largely acquired between the ages of 7 and 14 years, or while the child is In the grammar school. Furthermore, it is in the public schools only that the state comes In contact with and ex ercises any influence upon the chil dren. Let us. therefore, direct our atten tion to public schools. The churches are losing ground and in any case reach only a small part of the people. To depend upon them for moral educa tion is futile. The improvement of our schools is simply a question of money. Teachers should be provided for every 20 pupils Instead of one for 40 or 50, as is. often the case at present. Teachers' salar ies should be large enough to com mand the best material. Americans have been accustomed to view our educational system with pride and to brag about the amount of money spent upon it and not to question its efficiency. The time has come to make a much closer investigation into what it is really. do ing and to awaken to a much greater realization of its importance, respon sibilities and opportunities. JAS. BAKER. JOSEPHINE! MAN IS CONVERTED Correspondent Criticises Mr. Shields and Approves Single Tax. MERLIN, Or., Aug. SO. (To the Ed itor.) I am a Republican since i860 T a a .nh.i.Hhiir n Hnri N Mffl- stant reader of your paper, and would liKe to Deneve mat ju pui pwo give publicity to fair and truthful statements of the issues to come be fore the voters in the November elec tion. I noticed recently under the head ing "Single-Taxers Slipping" statements purporting to having been made by Charles H. Shields, secretary of the Equal Taxation League, which are so grossly misleading and foreign to the truth that, in the interest of truth and fair dealing, I am constrained to protest. I was present on the occasion of Mr. Shields' discussion with F. E. Coulter, alluded to by him, up to- which time I was strongly biased by reading "Mr. Shields' Single-Tax Exposed," against the single-tax movement, but after hearing the plain, straightforward statement of Mr. Coulter and reading the text of the proposed amendment as set forth in the pamphlet published by W. G Eggrleston, set over against the confusing and misleading statements set forth in the yellow-backed pam phlet published by Mr. Shields and, aft er listening as patiently as I could to his bewildering evasions of the real issues involved, I was convinced that the "graduated single-tax and' exemp tion amendment" is directly in the in terest of every voter, without any ex ception, who is not the owner of fran chise, right of way, water power or land values in excess of the assessed valuation of $10,000, and all of the pre tense of Mr. Shields, or any other per son, that it will Increase the taxes of any moderate land owner or farmer is a wilfully misleading statement. If Mr. Shields, or anyone of like views, has a particle of confidence in his false statements that the circulation of the literature favoring the afocesald amendment will have a tendency to defeat the measure. I hereby challenge him to send me 500 copies of each of said publications, and I will guarantee their faithful distribution among the voters before election and risk the re sults. J. W. CULLEN- Fencing An Acre ot Land. PORTLAND, Aug. 29. (To the Edi tor.)I am a subscriber to your valu able paper and would -like information on following subjects: 1 Suppose a man buys an acre of land and fences it, and later another party purchases the adjoining acre, can the first buyer compel the second to pay for his share of cost of fence between them'' No. 2 Can a woman under the Oregon law make her will and in it ignore her husband, with whom she has not lived for several years, she owning Property (money or real estate) in her own right and name? No. , , 3 When a person reaches the age or. say 50 years, is it right to say he or she has reached his or her 50th birth day or 51st birthday? I claim the lat ter is right. Fiftieth birthday is right. Birthdays note merely the les of birth. INQLIREK. Dower Bights. PORTLAND. Sept. 3. (To the Edi tor ) What is a widow's right in the estate of her husband? 2. Can the other heirs force her to accept a dow er' 3. Can she take a portion of the property in lieu of a dower if the other heirs oppose such choice? A. T. H. 1. One-half from the estate during life. 2 and 8. Either widow or tne otner heirs may apply to probate court for an order fixing the value of her life Interest and awarding her a portion of the property in lieu thereof. The or der is Issued if it is shown that such course is for the best administration of the estate. ' Willing Of Property. ROSEBURG, Or.. Aug. 29. (To the Editor.) Will you please answer the following questions: Can a husband who has children, lawfully will his property to his wife, not giving their children anything: Yes. Can a husband and wife make a Joint will, that in the case of the death of either party will leave the use of the property of both, to the survivor dur ing his or her life. Questionable B . ' SUBSCRIBER. No. PORTLAND, Aug. 31. (To the Ed itor.) Would you kindly answer the following question In your paper: "Did Mr Rushlight, since he has taken of fice, leave the city to Investigate or find points on commission govern ment?" T. W. ANDREWS 1008 East Eighth St. North. Propertr Right of Women. ALBANY. Or., Sept. 2. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly atate what the present tatna of married women is as to prop erty rights in this state. A. C. B. Women, and men have the same prop erty rights in Oregon. Yea. PORTLAND, Sept. 3. (To the Edi tor.) Can a foreign-born Chinese or Japanese legally own property in the United States, and have title vested in his own name t W. S. L. The One" Point By Dean Col lima. "Whence came It?"' Thus taith Theo dore the Great; "Whence came that campaign cash? Alas I hate My ignorance before the world to. blow But I confess, I really did not know; I paid no 'tention to such things you see; Maybe the trusts put something over me. "Maybe the cash so far as I can tell, Like dripping manna out of heaven fell (Fragrant with perfunie of the Stand ard Oil), ' An unsought boon to ease our cam paign toil; I know not whence it came nor where, it went. Else I had never given my consent. "Nay, ask me not; 'Whence came it?" Oh be sure I was so wrapped in meditations pure. The Int'rests, with maliciousness un kind. Taking advantage of my absent mind. Probably slipped up. with sly villainy And dumped some tainted money onto me." L'ENVOI. Oh Theodore, although the world may question, I am inclined to follow thy suggestion. I'll ask no more, but, without any doubt. Accept the explanation you hand out For Io, in this broad universe below, I've found one thing you don't profess to know. TEDDY HOT AFTER THE VOTES. He Playa to All Parties for Support, Saja Writer. PENDLETON, Or., Sept. 2. (To the Editor.) There Is a mistaken idea that Roosevelt is very popular personally, which I think is easily explained. He has played to all parties, he has de manded Immediate reduction of the tariff to catch one so-called progres sive element, he demands protection to catch the regular Republican. He has adopted nearly all of Bryan's silly Ideas and will get many Democratlo votes thereby.. He downed the Southern ne gro to please the Southern Democrat He has played to the Socialists and in an interview published in the New York Call, a Socialist paper, he In dorses Socialism and goea ao far as to promise to put Debs and Haywood In his Cabinet If elected. That interview was published the first day of May last, and he may deny that interview, but it was a great help to him in the primaries which were to follow soon. Who fails to see Roose velt's cunning in the interview? It would be easy for him to deny that In terview; at the same time it got hlra thousands of votes at the primaries which he will not get at the November election. In our own state, by the assistance of the primaries law Democrats and Socialists gave him a plurality which will disappear at the November elec tion. Roosevelt's real weakness was shown in the elections of 1910. He canvassed the state of New York and he made more noise than a rock crusher. Two hundred thousand Republicans stayed at home in that state and the Democrats won. In the United States 2.000,000 Republicans did not vote and his dom inating egotism was the cause. Champ Clark could see the point in giving advice to his party. He told them Democrats did not win, although Republicans lost. If the Republican party abandons Re publican principles, what can we do? Stay at home? Look over the election returns for 1910. The Democrats have no larger vote than in 1908, but the Republicans' vote was 2,000.000 less. Can we win without that vote? It was not apathy that caused them to stay at home, for I believe they are the best informed men in the country. S. P. HUTCHINSON. River and Sea Level. FORT STEVENS, Or, Sept- 2. (To the Editor.) 1. How many feet above sea level is the Willamette river at its normal stage in Portland? 2. Are there any corporations or firms in Portland who furnish lunches free of charge to their employes? If soi please give their names. T READER. 1. The zero mark on the Govern ment gauge on the Morrison Street bridge is one foot above sea level The river September 4 was 6.6 feet above zero or 6.6 feet above sea level 2. Several companies furnish lunches to employes at reduced rates averaging about 10 cents a meal We know of none supplying lunches free of charge. Dancing Floor on Springs. PORTLAND, Sept. S. (To the Edi tor.) In reply to an inquiry relative to special floors for dancing in Port land, I note that you advised a corre spondent that there were no floors In stalled In any dancehalls in Portland supported on springs or chains. As lessee of Murlark Hall In this city. Twenty-third and Washington Btreeta, I wish to correct this statement, in view of the fact that the maple floor in Murlark Hall is built upon twenty six heavy railroad springs, . and the dancohall proper ia constructed sep arate and apart from the main build ing. This is the only floor of its kind west of Chicago. F. W. PRASP. Sweet Pea Society. PORTLAND, Sept. 3. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly state where I can find out all about the Oregon Sweet Pea Society of America, and oblige, ONE OF THE MANY. At the recent distribution of prizes by the Sweet Pea Society, O. M. Plum mer, 461 East Fifteenth Street, N Portland, was elected president. No. HOLBROOK, Or., Aug. SO. (To the Editor.) To settle a dispute, will you kindly tell me through the columns of your paper the answer to the following question: If a man finds a bee tree on another man's property has he the right to cut It without the consent of the owner? A SUBSCRIBER. Widow's Dower. HARRIMAN, Or., Sept- 1. (To the Editor.) In Oregon does the wife re ceive one-half or one-third of the hus band's property, both real and per sonal? A READER. Ti, nm thn narannnl nrnnrtv the widow is entitled to one year's "keep." she also receives une-imn bi come from the estate during life. Six Months. HARRISBURG, Or., Sept. 2. (To the Editor.) Will you kindly inform me through the columna of your paper how long after getting a divorce a person has to wait before getting mar ried again in Oregon. A READER. Straw Hat Cleansera. rnttviT.T.m rr KpDt. 3. (To the Editor.) Please publish receipt for cleaning straw hats. READER. Preparations, with Tecelpts for use. may be obtained at druggists. Yes. ' MARQUAM, Or., Aug. 19. (To the Editor.) If a man dies leaving a wife and no children, does the wife get all of her husband's property?