FIRST BOSTON OBJECT LESSON 59 ings should, in a comprehensive sense, be “altered to suit tenants”? A Striking Illustration of a Common Fact The land in Winter Street, which was assessed at less than $4 per square foot in 1850, was assessed in 1907 at 1130 per squar& foot. During the fifty-seven years intervening, the income, above taxes, from the land, in rent and appreciation has amounted to an average of 150 per cent annually on the investment of 1850. Three Burdens for “Business and None for the Landlord Query. Is that a constitutionally “just and reasonable” system of taxation which constrains the business man of Winter Street to erect at his own expense a basis of taxation, pay the tax itself, and then turn over without consider ation the very basis itself to the pocket and Profit of another man? Should not the land be taxed until it is at least as profitable to use it as to hold it out of use? Leading Questions Query. Why should not Winter Street, with its concentrated business and highest land values in Boston, have the best buildings, with the best attain able equipment, elevators, ventilation, heat, light, Water, sanitation, etc.? Query. Wherever business has up-to-date accom modations, as in the Exchange Building on State Street and the new Tremont Building on Tremont