THE DAILY COOS BAY TIMES, MARSHF1ELD, OREGON, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, .1907. Current Opinions on Live Topic The Cost of n Boy. (Chicago Tribune.) In no way embarrassed or dis couraged by a socialistic utterance In America setting It forth as a fact that It costs $25,000 to bring up an American boy "of the middle class." English statisticians have seen this estimate and gone It $500 better. They havo taken the boy "with a lib eral education" and havo calculated his expenses from the nursery to and through Eton and Oxford, with al lowance for travel and finishing touches, and thus arrive at tho fig ures suggested. It Is an Interesting compilation, tho accuracy of which It may be left for tho English them selves to Impeach. As for tho total amount In the American calculation, It Is ono of these wild and futile attempts at figures which at the best may be looked at compassionately. In tho first place, the expression "middle class" has no general significance in the United States. If It Is used at all It has intelligible reference only to financial rating and is more sym pathetically expressed by allusions to persons "In comfortable circum stances." It is possible that the socialistic orator referred In a gen eral way to a majority of fathers who give or try to give their sons a col lego education, and, it must be a's sumed that ho was not speaking of Isolated but of average cases. Pre sumably the years of a young man's college or university course are tho most taxing on a father, yet the statistics of tho University of Chica go show that expenses for the col lege year run from an average esti mate of ?39C to a liberal estimate of $GG5, whllo the moderate esti mate at Harvard is $454 apd the lib eral estimate $509. It is not contended that there are not a lumber of young men who do lans, socialistic and otherwise, Is that they build their general con clusions on speical conditions. It is altogether likely that the "actual case" In England will excite laughter among the many middle clas3 boys uho have never seen "tho subscrip tion for a London club" and the "?500 yearly traveling and holiday expenses" even in their wildest dreams. Making figures Is a pleas ant and easy diversion, particularly on the stump and to vindicate a theory, but figures which go against nil known averages are not to be ac cepted seriously or as. proof of hon est Intent In calculation. The Amer ican boy may well feel that ho has obtained the name without the game. Postal Savings Bank. (Boise Statesman.) Postmaster Ceneral Meyer is plan-; nlng to recommend the creation of a' postal savings bank system. That system has been established In most European countries and has proved a success. Therefore it seems certain it would be a success here. The public mind is prepared for the establish ment of such a savings system and the postmaster general will strike at an opportune time If he makes such a recommendation at the forthcom ing session of congress. Mr. Meyer, through his residence abroad, has had an opportunity to study tho workings of the postal sav ings banks there, and he no doubt understands the subject far better than most of our public men. His recommendation will therefore have peculiar weight, and It is probable it will meet with such popular approval that congress will be obliged to give It serious consideration. Tho postal savings bank would be of great benefit to .our people can not bo successfully questioned. Such a system affords a- easy method of people have an opportunity to make regular deposits in ordinary savings banks, while a very large proportion of thorn hesitate about doing bo when they have an opportunity be cause they do not always feel that their money would be safe. In a postal savings bank there would be absolute confidence and It would cul tivate the savings habit among the people in a manner that would be of the highest benefit to tho Individual and to the country. It is safe to as sume that the savings In a posatl savings bank would exceed thoso In all private savings banks many times over after a few years. There would bo so much more money saved by the people, and these increased sav ings would constitute a powerful factor In Improving the condition of the people as a whole. . depositing Bavlngs, and the depositor not greatly exceed this estimate, but has the assurance that they are abso- this has nothing to do with the ques- I lately safe. Ho lecelves interest and is able to build up the foundation of fortune without incurring the risk incident to financial flurries and panic3. The poor man can lay up some thing for an emergency with full con fidence that his money will bo ready for him when he may need It, and peions of moderate means will find the system a great convenience. No money is safe from being spent so long as It is in the pocket of the owner, but when it gets into a bank of any kind it is far less likely to melt away. This is especially true with respect to savings banks. There the money earns interest, and the owner is not likely to draw it out unless it becomes absoultely neces sary. But only a small portion of our tion at issue. The point is that there Is no requirement for tho expendi ture of $25,000 to bring up a boy until he Is of lawful age, and further moio that a vast majority of boys whose fathers are in comfortable cir cumstances, or "middle class," If tho expression Is preferred, do not ap proach such disbursement. It Is , manifestly unfair to take a group of young fellows either at Chicago or , at Cambridge, students who spend , money riotously, and deduce from their profligacy what It "costs" to send a boy to college. It is equally unjust to advance as an average of "total cost of bringing up a boy of tho middle class" tho sum expended by a father of wealth and corres ponding indulgence. The trouble with many statistic- WATER POWER FOR PEOPLE Government officials Feel That Compensation is Only Fair. STATES HAVE BEEN LAX Syndicates Havo Grasped Fails In Western Cities For Private Gain Only. Washington, Aug. 30. In every state in which there Is a national forest there is bound to arise the Issue as to whether or not prlvato corporations shall pay for the land privileges procured through the ap propriation of water for power iu tho government forests. The sub ject Is at this time not well develop ed, and tho forest bureau refuses to bo quoted In any respect. Privately, however, some of tho officials dis cuss it, and the trend is towards, holding that such corporations should pay something for the land privileges enjoyed. Extensive inquiry among those of ficials who are regarded as more or less expert Interpreters of the basic law involved, reveals the 'growing disposition to take advanced ground, much as municipal economists have marched forward to the dismay of thoso who have heretofore always appealed successfully to the courts on tho ground of vested rights. It Is a fact familiar to all that the "vested rights" plea has been tho . harbor of safety for every franchise favored corporation that ever was brought face to face with modernized demands for recognition of tho popu lar rights. Street car companies, iwhen asked to aubmlt to municipal regulation, control of fares, enforc ed increase of service In tne form of more cars and extended 'lines, larger taxation, and other phases of the new franchise regime, have resorted tc the courts, and the contention has been that it was "proposed to take away our property," as was argued last winter here in Washing ton, when the congress showed signs of adopting a law for "no seats, no fares." People's Rights Come First. But It has become one of the ac cepted doctrines of court interpreta tion in recent years that "vested rights" must give way partly to the rights of all the people, and, based on this doctrine, courts have swept away many of the bulwarks once uti lized by tho franchise corporation. It Is conceded that the rights of tho people nowadays are more rigid ly guarded than In former years, and this newer attitude augurs a change In conditions affecting tho uso by private corporations of water and land for power purposes. The creation of national forests has not In the least affected the ap nronrlatlon of water for power pur poses by prlvato corporations. As In tho past, the corporation files on thf. water under the state laws, even al though tho water originates on fed eral government national forests. Tho forester and his associates do not hold that this should be changed, recognizing in this Instance the line of'demarkation between federal and state rights. It is likely, however, that before long some sort of change will be made for the land privileges given to private corporations who go on federal lands to appropriate water under state laws. It Is to bo expect ed that tho officials of these corpora tions will howl long and loud rnd resist the fee-paying with all possible ardor. But It seems to be Inevitable that In time they must yield and pay something for what they get now for nothing. Claims Made to Falls. Naturally, the study of this phase of national admlnlstralton leads ono across tho lino Into the realm of the Never Was Honest. (Boise Statesman.) A statement has been issued by the Standard Oil company asserting its Innocence of the charges upon which it has been convicted. The company makes Itself foolish by such protestations. The world knows it has been a pirate for 30 years, and no amount of denial on its part will dislodge that knowledge. It has never been honest In its dealings with the people. At the be ginning of his career Its president was not honest, and there has never been a moment since when it has not violated the statute law as well as the law of morals whenever It has found a favorable opportunity to do so. At tho very outset of his caieer as an oil man, Rockefeller bribed em ployes of other homes to make regu lar reports to him respecting the business of their employers. A more dishonest thing could not be con ceived, but this man who now stands out as a financial magnate did not hesitate to employ such methods. Ho debased the railway companies when he founded tho Standard, and up al most to the present hour his com pany has continued to employ the methods he then adopted, so far as the officials thought it could be done safely. The Standard has crushed competition and driven competitors Into poverty by means that would be scorned by an ordinary bunco steer er, and yet it wishes now, when brought to book, that it is as in nocent as a child. People would think far better of Mr. Rockefeller and his company if they should frankly confess they have been law-breakers throughout their careers. If they are anxious to be thought honest, they should ad mit and ask pardon for what all tho world knows and start out manfully to lead better lives. This whining, I commonwealth and It is discovered that a strange situation exists. A given fall of water, capable of de veloping say 100,000 horse power, lies contiguous to a growing city. Some one nails up a shingle on a tree on the land at the falls notifying tho world that he haB forthwith taken that power to be his. own, and files it with the cleric of the county, pay ing $2 for a horse to ride to tho falls and 50 cents for filing the notice. Henceforth, forever, that man or his assigns claims that 100,000 horse power for his own. The question has arisen in the jurisprudence of tho country. Does that man or his assigns really own that 100,000 horsepower? What has he rendered to the state for what ho took without compensation? It Is argued by the lawyer for the approprlator of the water that he renders to the state the service of providing some public utility or de velops some enterprise, employing men and paying wages and maintain ing Industry. At this point comes In the newer philosopher and says: "Presume some man were to go, not to the state, but to that appro prlator of water, and say, "I take forwlth 50,000 of your 100,000 horsepower and, as compensation, will render to the public service In maintaining an industry." Upon what would the title of the approprlator rest to resist tho second appropriation? Certainly, title must rest on consideration. What consid eration did tho first man render for his 100,000 horsepower? It has come to the knowledge of certain federal officials that more than 500,000, perhaps 1,000,000, horsepower has been appropriated on the Pacific coast during the last five years. The power sites havo been located by tho syndicates at ad vantageous places, commanding in dustry and street car lines In most of tho larger cities. Previously Im mense numbers of units of power had been appropriated similarly. Syndicates Take People's Water. "As we havo looked into this phase of the utilization of water and land," this protestation of virtue, this ap peal to public opinion upon fasle al legations It Is nil revolting to the average mind. It shows just what abandoned characters they are. A man with any conscience left would bo willing to make frank ad mission and manly promise of reform upon being caught in his evil prac tises, or he would close his mouth and endeavor to keep out of the pub lic eye. None but the hardened criminal brazenly protests his in nocence and doggedly Insists that he is wronged when the proofs of his guilt are spread before the world. Ir AVhen AVill Directors Meet? (Pacific Banker.) According to two of the Oregon Trust and Savings Bank directors it is a case of too much one man bank ing. They say that the cashier bought these bonds without any au thority from the board of directors. This attempt to shift the responsi bility will not stand and for two very good reasons. First by retaining the cashier in his position for months after the act complained of was done they ratified it; and if as is suggest ed they knew nothing of the bank's condition until a few days before It closed, their ignorance is criminal in its density. What are directors for? Had they no idea of tho duty which they owed tho depositors? They are business men. This plea of figure head immunity will not bo accepted In this day. If they didn't know, they should have known. They held themselves out to the world as know ing something about the bank's con dition. Their names gave the bank a position it would not otherwise have possessed and they knew It, and the duty they owed the depositors was one of the most sacred that can be conceived. The failure of this bank ought to be a marked lesson to every bank on this Coast. In the first place It ought to hasten the day when directors will direct, when public opinion will force a sense of duty and obligation upon directors before they accept their positions. And this failure shows, it seems to us, a marked weakness in all the state laws we have examined and in the National law as well, In that they do not provide for such a case as this. They limit the amount of loans that can be made to any one inter est, but they do not limit the amount of other obligations which the bank can assume of any ono -interest, nor is any regulation whatever attempted of the purchases which a bank can make. Hero Is an inconsistency; A bank can loan to a company only a certain portion of the bank's capital. But it can purchase the bonds of that company without stint. WVWWWVWVSAAAAWSA a well-versed official said, "we find that during the last few years syndi cates simply have walked Into the western states and laid their hands on the people's water power, acqulrr lng without payment invaluable priv ileges; that they are in a fair way to command tho industrial situation of the future; that they will soon be In a position to levy tribute on the peo ple, utilizing as their chief asset the water which they took from the peo ple, paying absolutely nothing there for. "Have not the states slept on their rights? Havo not they sat Idly by, witnessing tho monopolization of the magnificent resources of the moun tains and hills and have not they given away privileges which some time will be, even now, in places, worth countless millions? "If there seems to be aggression by the federal government as com parted with the state governments, If there seems to be so-called encroach ments by the federal on the state, Is there room for wonderment? Shall the federal be derelict because the states have been? Shall the federal fail to preserve the rights of tho na tion because the states have been neglectful of the rights of the people of their commonwealths? ''This Is the trend of thought among many federal officials, some of whom are high up In the adminis tration. As we study the relation ship of the government lands to the Individual, often wo run up against lax conditions such as direct giving away of tho people's property and we are expected to conform our policies to such unsatisfactory state policies, or rest under tho imputation of fed eral usurpation." "iT. A Kirs MfiCHANlCA. RAWING 'MVOt Do You Want to Real Estate? 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