8 W$t (Dmrmnnn PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered mt Portland. Oregon, poatofflee aa Secona-Claea Matter. Subscription Rales Invariably In Advanca. ' (BT UAH.) ! r.n Rundav Included. one year "-?? Dally. Sunday Included, six months... J' Dally. Sunday Included, tnree months t' Dally, Sunday Included, one xnontn... ( Dally, without Sunday, one year...... Dally, without Sunday. six montns. .. ' Dally, without Sunday, three montna. Dally, without Sunday, ona moutli.... 4.28 2.23 .T3 6.00 8.23 1.75 .60 1.60 X.&O f- weeKiy, one ycar te Sunday, one yei i Sunday and we ear ekly. on year. ,60 BY CARRIER.) . - . Dally, Sunday Included, one year. .00 V Dally. Sunday Included, one month ' f How to Kemit fcend Postotfice money or 1 der express order or perpenal oheck on your f local bank. Stamps, cm or currency are at the sender's risk. Give poatofllca addreae . In full. Including county and state. N Poetare Katae 10 to 14 carte. 1 cent! t to 2s pages. centa; SO to 40 pages. "nt. h 40 to 60 pagea, 4 centa. Foreign poatage. A- riouhl rata. V Kaatern Business Offl Verro Conk- Brunswick building. Chl- t- cf ? T TUoareU Co- 142 Market street. Baa f rmnvrav v m European Ozllc W:( London. No. I Begent street. PORTLAND. TIEoDAY, SEPT. 11, h f: THE JUST A"D THE' TJNJCST. ? : Some days ago when Mr; J. "W. Cul i len. of Josephine County, made the '; sweeping statement In a letter to The . Oregonian that the graduated tax ?' measure would not increase the taxes V of any moderate landowner, The Ore .'gonian remarked that Mr. Cullen's letter would have been more Inter esting had he explained by what I process of reasoning he reached that i conclusion. Mr. Cullen today gives his process of reasoning. He has writ- ten a letter that Is far more Interest- i' lng than his previous communication, but we fail utterly to find therein any thing more than a tendency to turn to ian untried scheme of taxation for re lief from conditions which made fall t ure of hU lifetime efforts to secure ' a competence, yet conditions with W which taxation had nothing whatever t'to do. I'i Our- correspondent's letter reveals ithat he is one of the pioneers of the ?'West, one who has devoted his talents ' and his energies not to self-advance-p ment. but largely to the lifting of his f fellow men to higher planes of spirit :ual endeavor. He has gone into the ' waste places, encountered hard knocks ' and has performed his duty to the race !by raising a family of ten children. He fought the Indians. He helped - preserve the West to Christian clvlli- '. zation and he defended his country In tlmA nf rebellion. Here are related briefly the details of a long and useful life, but as yet nothing has been told that in any way 'relates to the problem of taxation. ' Thfiv aimnlv show that Ur. Cullen has i." had remarkable opportunities wr uu- serration. As to education It may be I conceded that he has acquired it in f the school ot experience, if not in the li school of books. That he Is ignorant h was never implied by The Oregonian. (. Some of our best scholars know next V- to nothing of the methods by which t Oregon derives its revenues. The sin h gle-taxers have relied on this lack of information to build up a mass of M guesswork figures that give alluring ki but false promise to me men m dlnary means who are restive under an h .vor-innreasinar burden of taxation. ' Taxation Is a dull and uninviting i and the ordinary man's K knowledge goes but little beyond the V: figures shown, on his tax receipt. It j Is this ignorance, not lack of general -book learning." which the single tax " ers rely upon and to which the Ore U gonian referred. Mr. Cullen has no , cause to be offended if The Oregonian I'i implies that he is in that class. He "J has some very good and so-called learned company. J.' But let us take up Mr. Cullen's un it Buccessful efforts to found a home. H He was driven off two homesteads by y the depredations of Indians. We-can-fi not conceive that single tax or any f other kind of tax would have aided V him In repelling the savages of the plains. He lost another homestead through the unlawful machinations of ?! a usurer. Again, single tax or grad uated tax or income tax or free trade or high tariff tax would not have put ?' the usurer out of business. It ought, ? however, dawn on Mr. Cullen, as he -reflects on the past, that inasmuch as the usurer evaded or scorned the 'law our large land owners might ""evade or scorn the graduated tax law. If he will read Mr. Henry E. Reed's r article in The Oregonian, published ' last Sunday, he will find therein a ..laoi. arnns Hon of how the large i viand holders could and would evade the graduated tax. Next, Mr. Cullen encountered the L wire fence that Pete French built ; . around the outskirts of the "P" ranch ' in Harney County, -enclosing much water and large tracts of Govern i ment land. Mr. French's act also -" was unlawful, yet he perpetrated it. -i He is now dead, and his fences were , torn down -several 'years ago. The present "P" ranch Is a swamp and r the owners are spending many thou- sands of dollars in draining It and in preparing to irrigate other lands. At t its present stage It Is valuable only as a stock rancn. it wuuiu " t invite the small farmer and a small I tract of it would not now yield him tr ', a competence. Its development de ii pends on the success of the owners' 1 enterprise, not on taxation. The grad f uated tax would not hasten its segre : - gation into small tracts. That must await the completion of the railroad T:now building into the Harney Valley l' and the completion of the dredg- lng operations. The owners of the (. "P" ranch have transported dredg. ing machinery over 175 miles of i' wagon road, have gone to the ', top of a mountain 10,000 feet high to obtain fuel and are dlg ' glng a great ditch twenty-five miles i long. The graduated tax might con i' fiscate this land and all the capital i invested therein, tie up its reclama ' tlon and discourage all similar en i deavors In the future. It might do V. this. We do not say it would. But U the ruin of Individual enterprise ! seems to be one object of the Fels - movement in Oregon. , The wagon road grant also seems ? a tremendous present wrong as Mr. Cullen looks back over the past. He .r tells us that its "millions of acres" c were virtually stolen and are now be Ling exploited by wealthy and unscru pulous speculators. The "millions of " acres" which Mr. Cullen saw tied up on his early pilgrimage through Cen- tral Oregon consisted actually of about 800,000 acres. im iuu is uu of fered for sale on easy terms and at moderate prices. One of the "unscru pulous speculators" now owning the grant is Louis W. Hill, chairman of the board of directors of the Great Northern Railway. Mr. Hill is a col onizer, not a speculator. His chief interests are the settling of vacant lands tributary to his railroad and J .- the promoting of their cultivation with the final object of moving the crops that are produced thereon. The single tax might increase his taxes, but as the land la raw land single xax would also increase the taxes on the tracts that have been sold to settlers. The owners the new home builders would have no exemption or im provements, because they have no im- Drovements to exempt. Tney wouia start under a handicap of unjust tax ation. Mr. Cullen does- not mention the Oregon & California railroad grant which includes 180,000 acres in his own county, though the Fels writers oromise that this land shall. yieia m graduated taxes to Josephine County $49,360 annually. This grant is in litigation... It has been declared for feited by one court and the case is on appeal. Forfeiture means reversion to the Government, and Congress has already declared . that these lands if recovered shall not be subject to dis position. They are to be reserved from settlement or cultivation or sale of timber: i If the railroad company loses its. grant, and the prospects are that it may,- Josephine County will not get one dollar in graduated taxes from the grant. Tet fulfillment "of the promise of $49,000 velvet Ms held out to the voters of Josephine County by the Fels agents as absolute if they will but vote for the single tax scheme. Mr. Cullen has touched but lightly on the one sound and sensible argu ment in' his communication. He de sires that the people put In office assessors who .will place an, honest valuation on land. Here is greater need than change of methods or ex periments in exemptions. Couple this suggestion with one that the people elect to office capable men who will stand fast against demands for public expenditures that are not needed or which cannot be afforded and the so lution of the tax problem is presented. To reach the "speculating capitalistic, land-grabbing water power and fran chise corporations," it is not neces sary for Mr. Cullen to vote for a measure that also would "get" his fellow pioneers who, as he, came Into the country bare-foot, and punish the men who are going on the vacant lands of Oregon with bare hands and willingness to work constituting their chief possessions. Let us not be blinded to "the effect this measure would have on the little fellow by the Iniquities committed in the past or present by the corporations or land speculators. Taxes, like -the rains, fall on the Just and the unjust alike. BIO PRIMES AND IXTTXE OXBS. A group of socialists collaborate in the preparation and publication of a vile pamphlet defaming Colonel Roosevelt, and distribute it through out the ity on the day when he is a guest here. But we only mildly pro test, and let it go. The right of free speech is not worth proteoting or guarding, so as to prevent its abuse and guarantee its proper expression. A series of dreadful murders oc curs in the state, committed by the unknown assailants of Barbara Holz man and Mildred Green, and by other villains, detected and undetected, and we are grievously shocked, and we wonder whether some one will not some day catch the unknown murder ra. Tet a large part of the popula tion applauds when a mushy Governor stays the just sentence of the bestial tv -Roberts, and refuses during his term of office to permit any omer foul murderer to hang. we are greatly mieresiuu, i, " the case of Sneed, the Texas man, whu tnnk the law into his own hands and killed father and eon, because the son had eloped with his (sneeosj wiie. and we complaoently look forward to . .iros.oful Dlea by Bneed of the "unwritten law." We would do the .am. in Oreeon. for we have acquit ted murderer after muraerer. vvwmi they are not acquitted the Governor mnrlAvpK them. Tet we satisfy our own high sense: of rectitude by applauding tne uot-ernor-s campaign to "clean up" the tnwn mid demanding that every cou- nin who appear at . an apartment house or a lodging-house, or a hotel. hall ahnw their marriage certificate, or be hauled to Jail, and that the ....l.t mrnmen move on. God knews withal we wonder at the growing disrespect of law. when we are so le nient about great onmea, mv tolerant of lesser ones. SUPPING OVB OVER FOR ROOSETEIT, The office of Presidential elector In n.nn went begging at the April pri mary. For the Republican ticket there was only one avowed candidate and for the Democrats the situation was not greatly different. The Repub lican managers advised electors to write in names of well-known citizens, and the Democratic nominations were procured after the same iasmou. t this wav Mr. Dan Kellaher ap. pears among a group of five citizens as a Republican candidate for Presi lantini elector. But now he re- ...rfin.t-.x unv obligation to vote in the nnlleee for Mr. Taft and re. quests the Secretary or aiate to iitmi on the official Danoi m w. Di-nirrs1ve. for Roosevelt." Mr Kellaher ' has not thought It worth while to give to the public a .i.i.tit of his reasons, If he has any, for this unprecedented action, but it is understood that he puts forth in private the whining plea that the nomination was not sought by him and there is no provision of law by which he can withdraw, and there fore he feels justified in taking ad vantage of the situation to convert one Taft vote into a Roosevelt vote. That Is the Kellaher attitude in its best light. But Is Kellaher entitled to have his impudent and contemptible conduct interpreted In its most fa vorable guise T He has offered no ex planation whatever. He has formally taken a nomination tendered him by the Republican electorate of the state and thereby accepted all the ob ligations, express and implied, eoupled therewith. Tet he has undertaken to discharge a trust for the Republican voters by boldly declaring his purpose to deliver it Into the hands of the common enemy. H's W will appear on the ballot with four other candi dates under the common caption. "For William H. Taft for President," yet he will not be for Taft. and says he will pot be. He does not even fall back on the favorite resource of the Rnii Mooseri, by declaring that he will abide by the people's will, so that If the state shall declare for Taft he will vote fer Taft, and if for Roose it he will be for Roosevelt. Any man in Kellaher's predicament, in tending to deal honestly and can didly with the people, could pot do less. Let us suppose that Mr.' Kellaher had been nominated by the Democrats of the State of Oregon, and let us rtiv VO-RTTSn - OREGONIAX. TUESDAY, SKfXlSJllsK IT, ltna. suppose that he had protested that he was not a candidate. But, having been nominated, let us suppose that he had filed his acceptance of the nomina tion and had coolly instructed the Secretary of State to write after his name, "Progressive, for Roosevelt." It would have been a violation of good faith and fair play, comparable only to the action Kellaher now proposes for himself as the Republican nom inee. , ... Mr. Borah is the Republican can didate for Senator in the State of Idaho. Mr. Borah has not declared for Taft, . but he has indicated that he would not support Roosevelt. His attitude is not satisfactory to the. Re publican state central committee and it has demanded from Mr. Borah a more specific definition of his posi tion.. The Senator responds in this fashion: If they think I am not a Republican and thla organization will meet and ao de clare, I will decline my candidacy, ae I am now nominated, and eubmlt the question In another wa-. 1 will get off their ticket and teat it in another way. I do not want to embarrass the ticket. II my viewa oi what AnnxtltiltAn Renubllcanlsm in this cam paign are not satisfactory to this organisa tion, I wm unhesitatingly accept w diet and thereafter choose my cotine as to how I shall reach the people and we will find - out who constitutes ,. tha Republican party In this state. Senator, Borah" will have no mis understandings with . the ' men who have a right to speak, for the Repub lican party. . But we have a different brand of the Bull Moose in uregon. COJUUXJB .OHADCATES IX pCHOOM. It is- encouraging to notice the large number of college graduates who lira takinsr positions in the pub- Ho' aahools this season.' Some of them hall from Eugene, some from the Agricultural College at Corvallls and some from various aenomina' tlonal schools and they are assuming all grades of work from the primary up to the highest- These teaoners bring with them adequate knowledge of their branches, or it is surprising if they do not after the years of in struction they have enjoyed. Know ing their subjects thoroughly they are equipped with the fundamental requi. site to success In the school .room. Most teachers who fail, fail for lack of knowledge. They cannot teach wedl because they are too ignorant. This is the cold truth of the matter. Of course some fail for other reasons. but not many. Give' a young person thorough mastery of grammar, arithmetic. Latin or what not and the chances are a hundred to one tnat his teaching will be fairly good. Pu- nils will overlook such trifles hot temper. Indolence, or harshness If they see that their teacher really knows what he undertakes to tell them. But there is another side to tne subject. College graduates bring into the common schools not only an art n ii a tie knowledge of the various branches, but they bring also the Ideals of the college and in so far as these promote the genuine ' pur pose of the common schools, they are desirable. It Is sometimes oeuevea, however, that not all the ideals ot the college are precisely what the nubile schools need most. For one thing colleges aim first and foremost at a high grade of scnoiasuc instruc tlon. They seek learning for learn lug's sake and when their graduates enter the public schools they are sometimes tempted to adopt the same vlow of their work. Just as their professors taught them the bare and naked truth for the sole reason that it was truth so they are moved to teach the children in the public schools with equal zeal anything and everything which goes by the noble title of knowledge. But that is not th nurnose of the common schools. They seek knowledge,' but it is with an eye constantly on ma pratutm aims of life. Theory Is admirable In college. In the public schools what we need above all is utility. THTB U'BENTC OVERDOKp. The Salem Capital Journal has be come dismayed by the vast number of measures to go on tha ballot, under the Initiative and referendum, in No vember, and Is candidly advising 4ts readers to vote no on me enure num ber. ' The principal reason given by the Salem paper is that the expense nf nrintinsr the official arguments and of preparing the ballot and paying for extra Judges and clerks is more than the taxpayer ought to bear. The advice Is good, but the reasons of the Salem Journal are poor. The voter is not so much troubled about tha exnensa as the complicated ana onerous nature of the task inposed on him. Thirty-eight measures for in vestigation and action by him are too many far too many, jioreoveir, mere m in the list 'many bills that should not be permitted to go to, the people in fho.lr nrooosed form The antidote for u itemsm is nut more TTRenism. Yet that seems to be the only way wherein the public may find out when it has an overaose. LOVK ASD MARRIAGE. The Los Angeles young people who got married with tne written stipula tion that they separate when love died are victims of a dangerous mucoucon. tinn of the function, utility and im portance of the tender emotion usually rcfoTTcA to love. It Is not surpris ing that several preachers shied at the task of performing the ceremony, arid that Ae misguided pair came In mora or less condemnation from the pulpit, their odd contract being described as cowaraiy sna !"""'. Now that they have found a Justice of the Peace with no scruples m .tt.r. r whose scruples were over. hadowed by need of the fee, their progress will be watched with mora or less interest as they ply the sea of marital life in a frail craft that may be wrecked by the first gust of mis ..nriat-standins:. Love, that compelling emotion which results' in matrimony, Is not a sub stantial thing, nor is It necessary to happiness, once the married state has haen entered into. The glamour .,m about the feeling by clviliza tlon has gained a most powerful hold on the imagination of the young; hence the inexperienced are apt to conclude that the tender passion la ,h. nea of life and happiness. On tha other hand, there are those ex. periepced persons who will Insist that the married state aues j. okihoo toother tolerable until there is t total elimination of that peculiar state of mind which leaos w me mar. mur ine tha first few months of married life the contracting parties invariably note a falling away in the intensity of their tender passion. But more substantial sentiments replace Thar comes a genuine affection. combining of interests and viewpoints, a. readjustment of character, a re education of both parties to the re qulrements of the wedded state. Where neither party to the arrangement has serious defects of character or points of ineomrjatabillty. the changing proc ess in mild, nleasant and certain. But such harmony of soul frequently does not occur and hence the ; estaoiisn ment of conjugal equilibrium is marked by tempests of greater or lesser Intensity. Now and again, the marital barkr Is wrecked. The Los Angeles couple are start ing out with a state of mind that menaces their married life at the out set. Obviously they have- been too deeply impressed by the glamour ,ot romance and sentiment that has been thrown about love. They evidently expect to have life proceed as a con tinuous spooning bee, a protracieu period of billing and cooing and arT dent devotion. There is the danger that they will be watching for that falling away of prenuptial passion which is certain to occur, and that they may misunderstand its sig nificance. There is the danger that they will misinterpret the first squall that besets their frail craft and so decide love is dead. Unless, when dis illusionment comes, they see the folly of th.eir chimerical Ideals, separation is a foregone conclusion. DECENCY AT COTJUTRY FAIRS. Great changes have taken place in country fairs during the last three or four decades, and almost every change has been for the .better. One ol tne changes that marks an advancing civ ilization was the cutting out of the pool selling and the betting ring, fol lowed bv entire prohibition of bet ting. Another was stopping tne saie of ajRoholic llauors on the grounds. Perhaps these two reforms have had more to do with bringing our lairs up to what they ought to be, For years it was maintained that elimination of betting on the races would keep all race norses irom mo fairs and make every meeting a fail ure. The same was said of liquor selling. The rum sellers were held up for an exorbitant tax to do business during, the few days of the fair, so thev had to resort to every conceiv able means to meet expenses. With out this ble license fee It was averred the fairs could not be held,-the loss would be so exeat. Tet with rambling entirely elimi nated from all fair grounds, at least in Washington and Oregon, the races grow ietter, more Interesting and more largely attended .year alter year, wnne the farmer who has a good driver and a faster horse than the regular race track devotee) gets the purse. There aa no longer urunsen men and crooks on every hand. Children are as safe at one of our country fairs as at a Sunday school. They are now real educators, every one of them. Tear after year the exhibits oi agricultural and horticultural products and of live stock increase in numDcr and in quality. Decency, pays on the fair ground the same as it pays any where else. Invention promises to transform the streetcar out of recognition be fore a great while. New York's two story cars are really mere adaptations of the London bus with seats on top, but they are a startling novelty in thla country. Boston comes into the game with a Jointed car, built like a centipede on wheels, which swings around sharp curves with unconscious errace. By and by we snail nave street cars of many stories, from whloh pas sengers can step Into skyscrapers without descending to the ground. Automobile owners will learn with Joyful expectations that a German chemist has made ' artificial rubber tires In his laboratory whlon nave run 4000 miles without giving trouble. He noaa not claim to be able Just yet to oomDete with the natural gum, hut he has overcome the initial dlfficiil ii.. whlrh are always the worst ones. The rest will follow in due time and prices will feel the salutary eiieci. Now for a genius to invent artificial gasolene. Tha loss of Midlothian by the Brit ish Liberals in a by-election must be mfla noublv bitter by tne recqiiecuou that it was Gladstone's stamping ground. In Midlothian he made his hiKtorle campaign when everybody thnnirht he was too old to be danger- o. ann returned triumphantly to of- n. a "the Grand Old Man." Now It rnn to the Unionists. To be sure they win by thirty-two votes ouiy, uul in this case a miss is worse than a mile, The Republican vote at the primary in King County, wasningiuu, " wak was more than 33,000, The Bull mi nrlmarv vote a few days pre viously had been about 8000. Tet Seattle, which is In King County, is the place where the Bull Mooser3 say they swept the spring Pmij ii Roosevelt by a vote oi aeven iv v.. John L. Sullivan Is out for the Colo nel We shall iook ior bhuikm an nouncements from Jim Corbett Bob Fitzsimmons, Jim Jeffries 'and -the rest of the. hasbeena. eiiow teei- ine is strong among memoers ot me once-were fraternity In tracking down the leaders of the murderous Allen gang the authorities resorted to effective strategy. They shadowed the house of a young wo man of whom one of the oesperaaoes was enamored. Twenty - two German battleships and multitudinous accessories maneu vering in the North Sea are not so much a defiance of Britain as display of the chip on the Imperial shoulder. Lillian Russell is to be ambas sadress to the Court of St. James if Teddy is elected. The "if" that inter, poses itself should be noted In big black letters a foot long. - Roosevelt dined with Pinchot Sun day and Taft was the guest of Aunt Delia. There will be no campaign controversy as to who got the better meaL ' 'The usual healthy Increase in school population was shown yester day morning and Portland can take care of lt- Work awaits 1000 men on Federal irrigation projects at good pay. Soap box meetings, however, continue full handed, ' Ealazar may find himself at the hot end of tha stick in holding an American for ransom. The high winds gave the apple trees needed thinning, although ratner late for best results. Wilson's Itinerary Is now taking him west. It will taka him south, anon. . " Dan Kellaher is finding himself at last.' SINGLE TAX AD A LOVO LIFE Sir. Cullen Seeks tat New Scheme Sur cease From Many Disappointments. MERLIN, Sept. 14. (To the Editor.) Under the caption, "Relying on Ig norance, The Oregonian, replying to my letter criticising the misrepresen tations of Mr. Charles H. Shields, says that my letter would have been more interesting had I explained by what process of reasoning I reached my con clusion that the graduated tax meas ure would not Increase the taxes of any moderate landowner. If you will grant me space I will endeavor to supply that lacking feature of Interest. First, as to implied ignorance. 1 plead guilty to lack of educational ad vantages. Nevertheless, I Have had some opportunities of observation, hav ing walked and driven loose cattle across the plains in 1847, when all tne vast territory from the Missouri River to the Pacino Ocean was tne heritage of the common people. I came down the Columbia from The Dalles to the Cascades on a log raft, the best means of transDortation at that time, and from The Dalles to Portland on a Hud son Bay batteau. I trampad, - bare footed, hundreds of times where fort- land now stands, before The Orego nian was born. Have passed through three Indian campaigns and served as a commissioned officer through the CIvU War. On the frontiers of Oregon. Idaho, Utah and Nevada I helped to wrest and hold this vast domain from the sav ages. I have served as an itinerant Methodist nreacher for over 80 years on the frontiers of Oregon, Washing ton, Idaho and California, largely at my own oharges, laooring, wun nnu and brain while raising a family of ten children, to establish the institutions of Christian civilization in a wilder ness; have bean twice driven from my filings on Government lands by In dlans, and once by money sharks and landgrabbers, who not only robbed me of my homestead on which I had spent $1000 and over and spent two years, but also robbed me and my family by an unlawful usurious Interest of 20 per cent per annum of the fruits of 20 years of hard toil and hardships on the frontier, thus proving themselves a more heartless and relentless foe to the pioneer than the savage Indiana Again, while fleeing for refuge to seek a new home, with the little rem nant of stock we had left. In 1892, we were un against the famous "D" ranoh In Harney valley wnare fete r rencn had stretched a wire fence 75 miles Ions- Inclosing all of the water and thousands ot acres of Government land and notified the common people to keep off the grass" under penalty or losing stock on the first offense and life on the second. After Daying tribute, for driving through this Inclosure, we came to the notorious wagon road grant where mil lions of acres of land were stolen from the people while we were fighting to preserve-our Government and hold this herltasre of the people from savages and plant the Institutions of Christian civilisation in this vast domain, jau lions of acres of this land, which has been virtually stolen, are now being exploited by wealthy and unscrupulous speculators and corporations who hold it t nrlcea Drohlbitive to men of ordi nary means to be used for agricultural purposes, unaer present conditions their taxes are merely nominal, while they are reaping the enormous profits resulting from the enhanced prices due to the Influx of population. -If the people get wise to the power the graduated tax measure will put in their hands, ana put men in onico wnu will honestly assess such lands at the values these men are demanding for them, and cease to put the burden of taxation on productive industry, there can be no question as to the results being favorable to the eommon people, nf whom T am nroud to be one, and atrainst the speculating, capuaiisuu lanii e-ratabinsr. water power and fran chise corporations, and, because they know this to be tru.they are Bpendtng thousands or aoiiars to put suuu inc.. as Mr. Shields In the field with his misleading literature, to fool the peo ple. But he cannot fool all the people all the time. What littlo I have learned I gained in the school of experience. t naM dearlv for tuition and have my diploma The common people have already paid an enormous price for tuition. It is to be hoped they have n-ottea their education and graauateo. J. W. CULLhlN. PEACE) SUGGESTED TO "FRAT" MAN Stand Tak.cn That Law Be Respected and Agitation Ended, TrTTT.ATsrn. sent. 13. (To the Ed' Itor.) Having noticed and read the letters published in The Oregonian late ly concerning High School fraternities In Portland. I believe a little sound ad vice would do the writers no harm. a a nrohablv know, a period of three or four years has elapsed during whioh the fraternities have been for bidded by act of the Legislature. If the fraternities succeed in evading this law It will only be a question of time in oma new bill Is passed and the present one will be void. But the next hii nnnnhtedlv be flawless. What then can be done? And are the frater -i. i.. .mini to the occasion? Just what the ultimate solution of ,him will be I cannot prophecy, though several ways are worthy of con- t n.nv event, remember, men. keep a stiff upper lip and do not give up the good fight. We are in the 11 But If In the end we are defeated and -ii fforta nrove of no avail, let not then any man rise and propose that . ... . e.m. iliInU wa ara we defy tne i&w, o.a ........ now doing, vve aro i ln.u-, novamment and all order, like any liquor-crazed mob, but decent Americans, and. as such, let not a man cultivate a contempt for all la -w. Now, men, let a ubb' e"v j this agitation. It does harm if any thing and Isn't becoming the gentle- a . .v. . i ,r v, Bv,nni ru men who maB up " "'b- " r " ternities existing m "ri. PEACE. Pitch Springs In Greece. n....ir and Trade Reports. On the island of Zanite, Greece, there are to be found what aro locally called pitch springs. -They are at the south ern end of the island in a broad swampy baskn shut in on three sides fcy moun ...r' or,n on the fourth side to the sea They are really springs of crude petroleum which according to analysis is of a very high degree of purity. ... from tha earth Tne peiru.Tu. ------ ;:-,,. in water basins, ouhhib up iu-ui-b-- mu d in drops wnicn Dreaa auu h aurface ol tne water. . iim i. .r olow In the several springs, not amounting to more than a few gal lons a day. The springs were mentioned v.- nrocv historian some four cen turies before Christ. They seem to have been considered merely as a curi osity until aOOUl BU years ubu. Science Surrenders to Romance. London Corr. ai Tama. Crtchton Crowne, a dis tinguished British alienist, scientist and eugenist, in an address at Sheffield, de clared that science takes a back seat In favor of romance and that he believes in love at first signt. no amu. t .m k hailever in the love match, not only from a romantic, but from the ei'ieenic viewpoint. I feel I am on firm a in rornmmendlDS a return to Nature in relation to marriage, end with a due allowance for those natural forces that are, pernapa, mora w sighted in tha future of race Improve ment than we see witu wi .BtlAn anaotanlaa. "Love at first sight of the right kind is a physiological epoch, corresponding with the installation tt new ....u.io ... h. hi-ain There Is nothing more beau tiful in the world than the love match. It Is sacred, divine. METHODS OF EDCCATIJIG Ml'TES Lip System Is Set Down as . Havln Many Defects. PORTLAND, Sept. 15. (To the Edi tor.) In The Oregonian' is printed an Illustrated article concerning the oral Instruction ot deaf children in local schools. This city has a population of about 100 deaf mutes, and you may be surprised to know that many ao not look with favor on such Instruction. Tiiii oral instruction of deaf child ren is "as old as t4 hills" so to speak. Ever since me eaucation ot uw umi mute was begun In earnest by Samuel Helnlcks in Germany" and the Abbs d' V Epee in France, about 200 or more years ago, the oral and manual meth ods have -both had strong and able ad herents besides equally strong and able foes. It Is not only the adult deaf mutes who have, almost without exception, been through the mill of both oral and manual instruction, but hearing men and women who have spent most of their lives in Instructing the deaf, that look with disfavor upon the em ployment of the oral method exclusively in schools for deaf children. The reason is broad-minded and hu mane. No personal gain on advantage accrues therefrom. The oral method alone falls to restore deaf, people to society; It falls to give them the edu cation thev would sret If the combined system were employed." The combined system is a union of all methods, and the slogan of a majority f the ablest educators of the deaf today is the one Invented by Richard Otto Johnson, su perintendent of the Indiana State School for the Deaf. vizl "All methods for arood results and wedded to none. Nearly every state' fn the Union has a state school for the deaf, Oregon among them, and in nearly every one tha combined system is employed. The mentality of children is as varied as that of adults, and in ever- class of haa-lnnara In every school each Fall there are some who can be taught nrofltablv bv the oral method and some who cannot. It IS useless ior tne orai- iats to araue that all deaf children can be tautrht successfully ' orally, because there are thousands of examples that nrove tha claim to be false. I have been eduoatea DOtn oraiiy ana manually, have taught for seven year In schools for the dear tnat employ tne combined system, therefore should know what la best for the coming gen- ratlona of tha deaf. The deal you win lwava hava with vou In the proportion of one to 1000 or the population, ana we doubt if the Burbanking of the human race ' will materially change thesa figures. - - As the article today says, it Is a fact that deaf children are not necessarily dumb, and they can be. taught to speak, but. Lord, how many neanng peopio find pleasure In listening to their voices? Writing will be founa more nleasant and better understood- inose who depend upon lip movements re quire a great deal or repetition, uu how many people of the every-day world will stand for that? If at the Buckmah School signs aro forbidden and penalties Imposed for their use, more harm than gooa is aone. naf children will learn signs anyway. Tt Is the same In all oral schools for rn oaf. I or.ee Daid a visit to one of the biggest oral schools for the deaf in the country the Pennsylvania In- ntitntinn for the Deal ana uumo tine official title, hut what a misnomer!) and thene the children used signs. How ever, shSuld the Authorities succeed in preventing ennaren irom using eigne, hnr cannot Drevent them after reach ing -maturity. As birds of a feather flnclc toe-ether, deaf people naturally seek out their kind, and since signs are the means of communication ins oraiiy taught soon learn, and, what is more, they see the virtues of the combined system and espouse it. The oral method la a single method, narriw, bigoted, refusing to see any good in any other method. All the adult dear or tne country-, about 90,000, so far as we know, are against this method. They are be- BlmnlTir tO tOln TOrCeS. tO UaiLB, UU, sooner oij later-, .the propagandists of the Volta Bureau, -an institution in CTa-himrtnn. T. C whlon pUDUBnesanu sends out literature extolling the oral method as the thing, will meet strong opposition. In conclusion, I wish to express my sympathy for the children attending local day school for the deaf! They will never get the education a state school for the dear gives or is capaoio of giving; they will never be able to "take their place with people of the .r.ro.div world:" they will be out of place among those of their kind be cause of their ignorance i m tlonai sign language; tney win never fit anywhere, hence their lot in lire will be sad and lonely. Of course, there will be exceptions.- It's the rule I'm speak'ing of. The great majority of deaf- children will never be benefited by a narrow, bigoted, single memuu i instruction such as, oralism is. Mra Seng's daughter may be the exception, and it is erroneous to conclude the rule from an exception. My wife Is an expert lip reader, being abla to read the lips Of nearly every talks with, but she is never aoie to take her place In the hearing world. It would be just as reasonable to try and regulate or make conditions such that a flsh cannot only live but' enjoy living on dry land. W. F. BUrlISl!ill-'t!irt, uoi m"" 429 East Forty-second street North. GLASGOW'S STREETCAR SK.KVIU.. It Is In Many Ways Inferior tp Our Own, Says a Patron. PORTLAND. Sept, 14. (To the Edi tor.) I read an editorial in The nr.niti todav. signed "Commuter, contrasting the service of tne looai streetcar company wun mat oi vi gow. Now. I do not wish to infer that our local company should not give better service, but 1 ao oeueve tuey bio en titled to their due on either side. I have ridden on many of the Glasgow streetcars, or tramcars as they call them, and I have also ridden on many of the streetcars of London, Liverpool, Belfast and Dublin, and I would much prefer our local system to any of them. " , . you can only ride a few nlocks for 1 cent in Glasgow, and usually the charge is 2 cents, and' as none of these companies issue transfers your Journey will very often -cest you 4 cents. I'll g-uarantee you cannot get a ride in any of these cities as long as from Monta vllla to St. Johns for less than 6 cents, and more likely It- will be . where as here It costs but 5. Now. to make a Just comparison be tween our local company and any of these others, we must take Into account a man's earning capacity, which is about H times greater here than there. The Belfast system, as well, as the Glasgow. Is operate4by the oity, though Belfast gives no. Tides for 1 C'one feature of the service that I do admire fh these eltles, and which I think shoUM be adopted by our local eoncern. is cars night and morning for WOrk?elf 0nlateL5ANfBRENNAN. Rubles and Diamonds. . PORTLAND, SepvJ 14. CTo the Edl tor.)I a genuine ruby more ex pensive than a genuine diamond The ruby is muchmore valuable than the diamond, particularly when the gem Is one carat or more In size. " Willie" Pa Dcflnes Lawyer. New Tork World. Little Willie What is a lawyer, pa? Pa A lawyer, my son. Is a man who induces two other men to strip for a fight, and then runs oft with their clothes. THE BENEFITS OK" FRATERNITIES They Are I'pheld as Valuable to Col legia Students Only. . PORTLAND, 6ept:.' 14. (To the' Edi- . tor.) As a' member of a college fra ternity I regret very much the at tempted sarcasm In the answer of "Fra- t ternity" to your ecitoriai oi ruesoay, . published In -Friday's paper. While I regret it, I can unuerstanu tne reel ing that prompted It. college rraterni- , ties have so many limes Deen tn object of uncalled-tor criticism and un-- merited abuse that members have be-,: come supersensative, so to speak. ' Prejudice and ignorance generally have actuated the attacks and reason has . failed as an argument in reply. So where silence would .be - the' better- course, the impulse Is, to striae oacK blindly with ridicule ami sarcasm, inis is a world-old error of youth. ' But The Oregonian s comment was directed against high school fraternl- ties only, and 95 per cent ot college fraternity members the country oyer will support a policy of abolition in their case. , The charge of developing and fosteHng snobbery la admittedly well founded . against such organiza tions. The college fraternities have learned this through the bitter prob- . lems of dealing with their own mem bers taken from the high school or ganizations' ranks. Some college fra ternities even have louna it wise to pass constitutional amendments against the admission to membership ot any young man who has been: a member of a high scnooi iraternity. The underlying principle or tne ira ternity system is the supplying bf aa Influence and a relationship to replace the family circle from whioh the youth Is separated on going to college. The high school student lives at home, and this principle Is lacking. The high school student la under parental direc tion and it is proper at this period of life that all character moulding snouia be under parental direction. The only excuse of the high school organization Is "society. It maKes tne social nio complex and tends to' Interfere with and nullify hosne' Influence ' without ' giving anything in return except, per haps, "society advantages, iuc .nul ls the natural product of the coodl- tions. College fraternities, too, have some snobs. But tney are launs i !. tlon and not of development. t,nspoiica' material will never be tainted by the; college fraternity's influence and -most frequently faulty tendencies oi mun men are .corrected. Some, with nar- row principles Imbedded too deeply ' from birth, overact the democratio . pressure and remain narrow.' Syca are . born snobs. . "; As said bofore, the foundation reason for the existance of college fraterni ties is the supplying of an influence and association to replace the family circle. A fraternity, laying aside, the , Greek mysticism and the secrtoy, ia nothing more than a group of 80 or 25 young men banded together for home purposes. They live together as a family and members supply to each other the . ties and associations that are given up when the-home ties are parted fpr the while. Mutual aid and assistance based 6n a common oath of mutual help and support, and a purpose to pursue higher Ideals, be tha tanants of the association. It Is In this college home .life thal;. the benefits of .'.he fraternity are re- . ceived, and without it, in the modern college, they are purposeless and existr without reason. In early days when colleges were limited in curriculum and short in teaching staff, such or ganizatlons found a field of action in debating oontests and other lines of literary development, .and in delving Into other fields of knowledge not covered by the college course. Now voluntary organisations, of the pupils are not required fori such things. The colleges and universities in their courses of study offer much better op portunities for such study and develop ment The college homellfe becomes the broadening . influence at .the time when a man's real character Is being built on the foundation ' laid by the family training. Toleration is tausi't by the association, ' for toleration Is . necessary when such a number" of young men are gathered from as many different waiH-a-ui uia -r . vironjpenta to live together In the Intimate relation indicated by the name fraternity. The ties formed are last ing The faculty members of the chap ter 'are -frequent visitors at the house and the close association between treachers and students, not possible now In the classroom In the great In stitutions, thus becomes possible for a large part oi tne iummn uuuj. True, fraternities In college run to society In a marked degree. But tha social training received is an essential part of college, as the young men are training themselves for their part in, life. Who will oeny w " " Is deBlrable? In some institutions this social "life is carried to extreme, but not where the faculties exert the proper Influence that comes from kindly ap preciation and understanding of the organizations. The undesirable phases of fraternity life in nearly every oasa only develop to a harmful degree, where the natural good atrlbutes are stunted by faculty oppression and mis understanding. This applies to the oharge of immorality that often is brought against fraternities. Normally, the fraternity is an agency for proper development of its members. Clean Ideals Will develop in any normal bunch of young men bound together by the ties of any National "iraternity now existing if allowed to follow their natural course. If now and then, a chapter does seem to -lose Its proper bearings and sinks to a lower scale, such condition cannot last long for the alumni mem bers and the National organization will soon see that there is a change. I tn continuing " m of my college aays - fraternity are the greatest Joys of my life, even after many years and the memories or college the dearest. 6. M. GIRLS AS HUSBAND HUNTERS. Experience Proves They Don't Wan Help In Choosing Life Partners. New Tork World. ' . To the many fads of vooatlonal train ing In the publlo schools a new one was proposea at mo Institute In Cincinnati by Dr. Holmes, a psychologist of the" University of Pennsylvania. . He says: "All teachers should teach their girl pupils bow to distinguish a real man from an imita tion one. When a girl marries she la married to the family of the man for fiva venerations back. If hl9 grandparents were deficient she will have to expect trouuiu wnu i- dIThere is a certain sex partiality in the Inference that the proposed In struction be given only to girl pupils. Surely, on equal grounds, boys should be taught to know a real girl from an Imitation one. A boy may not have to marry a girl's family five generations babk, but he certainly has to accept the old folks, and If he has been careless he will have to expect trouble With his mother-in-law. V : But "waiving the Issue of partiality and considering only the vocationr-of the girl as a husband chooser, very little Veflection will bring out the well nigh hopeless absurdity of the pro posed education. Nearly three thou sand 'years of experience recorded In tales arid histories proves - that the more a girl is taught and educated to marry a particular man the more she doesn't do It. And who shall decide between what Is the real man and what the Imitation? Can any school teacher do It better than the school girl of marriageable age? a' Girl's Opinion of Talk. - New Tork Press. -A girl knows enough to let any man do most of the talking, except her father. -