TTTE MOItNTNO OREGOXIA5, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1010. PORTLAND, O REG OX. amtered at Port:and (Oregon) Fostofflce second-class mail matter, subscription rates Invariably In advanca iBy Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year. .. .. ..$8.00 IDally, Sunday included, six months 4.25 ally. Sunday Included, three months... 2.25 Xai!y. Sunday Included, one month -To Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.25 Daily, without Sunday, six months 3. S3 Dally, without Sunday, three months.... 1.T5 Daily, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year. .................... . 1.50 Sunday, one year. .................... . 2.5 Sunday and Weekly 3.50 (By Carrier.) Bally. Sunday Included, one year 9 00 ally. Sunday Included, one month..... .To How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender s risk. Give postoffice address in full. Including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pages, f cent; 18 to 82 pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, 2 cents; 0 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk lln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree A Conklin, Steger building, Chicago. San Francisco representative. K. J. Bldwell, 742 Market street. PORTLANT), TUESDAY. AUG. 22, 1916. THJB OVERSHADOWING ISSUE. The great question before the Amer ican people today is what they shall do to meet the conditions which will prevail when the war is over. They can Judge from experience what those conditions will be if present laws, the present Administration and the pres ent policy continue to prevail at that time. During the ten months which followed enactment of the Underwood tariff and which preceded the out break of war, they had experience of the effect of Democratic tariff poHcy on their ability to earn a living-. -Air. Hughes described those effects In his Portland speech when he said: It did not require one to be a student, a critto of financial affairs or a special ob server to know. The hundreds of thousands of unemployed walking the streets of our oltles they knew. Every one of them was a tariff expert. There were 800,000 un employed tariff experts in the city of New York alone. All through the land people were taking counsel to provide relief, relief In this great country, for the unemployed. It was necessary because enterprise was languishing, new undertakings were not starting, old undertakings were contracting their output. Instead of the drive and push of American energy there was a halting and hesitation. That was the result of the Demo cratic tariff policy. During the pre ceding fifty years, with one brief but disastrous Interval, the Republican tariff policy had prevailed. During that period Amorican industry had grown to vast proportions, settlement had spread across the continent and foreign commerce bad carried Ameri can products into every land. Those were the fruits of the Republican pol icy of protection. Only an extraordinary cause, other than a change of American policy, could lift the country out of this state of depression. Such is the great war. It gave American trade what Mr. Hughes rightly called a "tremendous stimulus" and created unprecedented prosperity, but that prosperity is pure ly artificial, the result of artificial conditions produced by war. When the normal conditions of peace are re stored, this prosperity will pass away. Unless the policy of protection which brought prosperity in peace times is adopted, the depression which, pre vailed before the war will be renewed and the streets of the cities will again be filled with unemployed tariff ex perts. Some persons imagine that the war ring nations will be so weak and en feebled that they will be easily over come in industrial and commercial competition. As Mr. Hughes showed by reference to the United States after the Civil War, to France and Ger many after the war of 1870 and to Russia and Japan after the war of 1904-5, war energizes a Nation and gives it "an extraordinary stimulus." Mr. Hughes thus described the effects of war: x You find men better disciplined than ever before. While there are large casualties reported, the larger number Is wounded, and a small percentage of the wounded fall to recover. There is a military wastage, but there Is not such a serious economlo loss as you might suppose. On the other hand, Europe In every one of these nations Is being drilled. Is being made more capable than ever. Is learning co-operation. Is Increasing In capacity. Look out for energized Europe when it turns back to the pursuits of peace. Mr. Hughes' conclusions are c6r roborated, for example, by increase in French production of iron ore six times between 1880 and 1910. Ed ouard Julhiet, a Frenchman, writing in the North American Review on "The War and French Finance," said that it would take only two years to rebuild the destroyed factories in Northern France: that factory engi neers have learned a great deal in the United States, that the knowledge gained about American machinery, to gether with necessity, "will contribute toward making over French industry and will give it a greater impetus than it has ever received before." He esti mates that the cost price of steel will be 15 per cent less in the new than in the old plants. What is true of steel is likely to prove true of other .lndus . tries in which France competes with the United States. Mr Julhiet also confirms Mr. Hughes' statement that the economlo loss by war casualties is overestimated. He says that the number of French workmen killed and seriously wound ed up to January 1, 1916, probably did not exceed 150,000. Such a ratio of loss would be more than made good by the greater efficiency of new fac tories with new and improved ma chinery and of the newly developed power of women. What is true of France is also true of Britain, Bel gium and Russian Poland. Even while the war is in progress find while millions of their people are fighting or making munitions, the allied countries have greatly in creased their exports to the United States. When this can be done while, in the case of Britain, 5,000,000 men are in the army and navy and 2,500, 000 people. Including 750,000 women, are making munitions, what may not be done when all return to the arts - of peace, with the added discipline and skill they have acquired and with the new modern machinery that has been installed? That which the Democratic party has to offer for equipment of the American people to compete with these re-energized armies of industry is ' found in the Underwood tariff. That tariff would produce in more intense degree the same effects as it produced before the war. So alarmed are the lyeuiuuiitis a. a iu its qllcv;i men. ixieir leader. President Wilson, has induced " them to throw overboard the principle of tariff for revenue only, with the denunciation of a protective tariff as unconstitutional and to embrace tim- idly and hesitatingly the Republican protective principle. The President made this change of front in a letter - to the president of the Illinois Manu facturers' Association, and he made it so suddenly that, when the letter was - read in Congress, Representative Kltchln, the leader of his own party in the House, denied its authenticity, saying: It Is impossible for any man -who voted for the Underwood act or endorsed the Underwood act, much less for one who signed it, to have conceived and expressed publicly such high protective tariff senti ments. Like a novice at a new Job, the Dem ocratic party is trying its hand at pro tection by imposing a duty on dye stuffs, by passing a law against dump ing and by establishing a Tariff Com mission, which is thrown open to the lame ducks. Mr. Hughes showed at Spokane that the anti-dumping clause was "obviously ineffective," and that the Democratic party proved its in capacity to enact genuine protective legislation when it refused to impose a countervailing duty, which would be effective. The dyestuff duty is to cease before the industry can be firmly established. Thisj nibbling at protection by a party which does not believe In it proves the truth of these words of Mr. Hughes in his Portland speech: If you want the principle of protection fairly and honestly applied. It has got to be applied by those who believe In It. and not by those who do not .believe In It. Oregon suffered as much as any other state from the effects of the Underwood tariff before the war, and it has shared only to a slight degree in the temporary prosperity brought by the war. Its lumber industry was struck down, its dairy industry was exposed to competition of New Zea land butter, Chinese eggs and Danish cheese, and its wool industry gained a respite only through a short clip in other countries and through the war. If Oregon is to enjoy permanent pros perity, it must have protection under a Republican Administration which believes in protection. MR. HUGHES AND $100,000. The New York World, which is car rying on a vehement campaign against Mr. Hughes for President, ought in fairness to cite the shade of Joseph Pulitzer to give testimony as to the fitness of the Republican nominee. When Joseph Pulitzer wrote his will he looked over the entlro field of America for trustees who would ad minister fairly. Judiciously and expert ly the great property which he planned to bequeath in trust to his heirs. He named Charles Evans Hughes, then a member of the United States Supreme Court, and fixed $100,000 as his com pensation. Justice Hughes declined the com mission and the fee. So great an amount for an easy Job was no temp tation to a man who had high ideals for himself as a Judge and for others and who lived up to them. The World has been doing other queer things In the campaign. In open or tacit ac quiescence in the Republican plan of taking Mr. Hughes from the bench, the World has been demanding that the Democrats of New York take as their candidate for Governor Samuel Seabury Justice of tha State Court of Appeals. A conference or assembly of Democratic leaders at Saratoga has agreed on Seabury, and he will go into the September primary with the sup port of the organization Democrats. The New York Democrats appear to have the idea that a pre-prlmary assembly nomination is not the wicked and monstrous thing it has been found to be by Oregon Democrats. NO EXECRATIONS. Both The Portland Oregonlan and Tele gram are loud In their denunciation of Congressional "pork," yet because Oregon did not secure a elloe of pork from the naval bill In the shape of a submarine base at Astoria they are still louder In their execrations of the Oregon Senators for not securing It. Medford Mall-Tribune (Dem.). Well, no. The Oregonlan has in dulged in no execrations. Not any. But it has been Interested in eliciting from the Senators, or from any of their supporters, Just where they stood on the important question of the As toria naval base. Will its gentle Medford contempo rary let us know Just what service Senator Chamberlain and Senator Lane performed for the naval base 7 To be sure. Senator Lane presented a $500,000 amendment to the naval ap propriation bill, but it speedily went into the discard when the Congres sional conferrees got at it. The Medford mouthpiece of the Democratic Senators describes the As toria naval base item as "pork." If it was "pork," how can they be Jus tified by any honest newspaper in voting for it? Is that the reason Sen ator Chamberlain early in the cam paign said it was no use trying to do anything about it? The Oregonian thinks $500,000 for a naval base in the Columbia is not "pork," but an enterprise of the high est expediency and soundest patriot ism. An Administration committed to a policy of adequate preparedness can have no excuse for ignoring the vital position of the Columbia River in any comprehensive scheme of National de fense. Now that wo have heard from Medford, The Oregonian invites other Democratic testimony as to the char acter of the $500,000 naval base plan. I.IM K FOR FRUIT TREES. Demand for a cheap, commercial form of ground limestone which shall be within the reach of every farmer is emphasized by recent disclosures as to the importance of this treatment in orchards that have not been doing as well as their owners seemingly had the right to expect. Cultural methods fre quently have been the most thorough, air and water drainage of the best. and other outward features of man agement without fault, and yet, par ticularly in the case of the stone fruits, there has been bitter disap pointment. W. M. Faulkner, writing in the Cor- vallis Courier, explains that many of thqse shortcomings are due to lack of lime in the soil, and asserts that it is relatively easy to overcome them. He ras had wide opportunity for obser vation. He attributes the trouble ex perienced by many orchardists in growing such fruits as sweet cherries and sugar prunes to acid drawn from tli soil by the young trees. He calls atcention to the commonly accepted statement that sweet cherries will take care of themselves after they are eight or nine years old, and explains it. The top soil is especially deficient in lime, which has been dissolved and leached through into the soil below, or ex hausted by cropping. The young cher ries suffer as a consequence until they have been so thoroughly established that their roots have pejietrated to the lower layers. Then it is true, as has teen said, that they "take care of themselves." But In the opinion of Mr. Faulkner, it is the lime that en ables them to do it His own experi ments seems to have established the soundness of the conclusion. The precise nature of the operation by which the elements of the soil are transformed by one plant into a sour fruit and by another into a sweet one is not well understood even by scientists who have devoted their lives to research, but light is beginning to break in. Mr, Faulkner in a jrac- tical way is contributing to the stock of knowledge of the subject. He be lieves that the disease of certain fruit trees known as gummosls can be measurably controlled, if not pre vented, by proper use of lime. Before planting a new orchard of stone fruits on land deficient in this important element, he would dig the holes and incorporate into the soil two or three pounds either of air-slaked or ground lime, and as the trees developed he would add more lime to meet the spreading roots. To orchards already planted he would apply lime at the rate of two or three tons to the acre. This amount is regarded as sufficient to last until the trees have thoroughly established themselves. The lime problem is one In which handling and transportation figure quite largely. It is not necessary that the limestone should be burned unless especially quick action la desired, so that this factor in the cost can be eliminated. Grinding to a fine tex ture, however, is advantageous, and any facility that will obviate unneces sary labor is highly desirable. Special freight rates, of course, would be a boon to the farmer. Even then for those who live a considerable distance from the railroad. the item of hauling Is important, but the work need not be done in the busy season. Appli cation of unburned limestone may do made to the orchard to advantage at any season. THE STRUGGLE TO KEEP AFLOAT. A week or two since the public was surprised to note an announcement that a lumber manufactory long iden tified with Portland and Oregon the North Pacific Lumber Company had gone into a receiver's hands. The sur prise was not at all lessened by the later publication of the company's financial status, showing assets worth, on the basis of present valuations, nearly $2,000,000, and liabilities some thing over $700,000. It Is said that if the capital stock be wiped out the ratio of assets to debts is about three to one. Yet this valuable and solvent concern found Itself overwhelmed with difficulties, in the present de pressed condition of the lumber indus try, and saw no way to conserve its resources and meet its obligations ex cept through a receiver. This incident in the record of a long-established and honorably con ducted sawmill calls sharply to gen eral attention the hard struggle the lumber manufacturing business has had during the past several years. There have been overproduction and. In some instances no doubt, over capitalization. There has been an un favorable customs tariff. There has been general commercial stagnation throughout the Nation; and finally there has been a great war, raising ship charters to inconceivable prices and shutting off a great part of the foreign market. Yet many mills like the North Pacific have kept going, out of pride, or in an expectation of improvement in prices, or in the de sire to keep their men employed; all these reasons together have counted. The North Pacific, under the owner ship and management of Donald Mackay and W. B. Mackay, father and son, has in a quarter of a century paid out millions of dollars for labor alone. The suspension of its payroll is there fore a serious matter. Doubtless this fine sawmill property will get on its feet again. There is no charge or suspicion that anything has contributed to its present embar rassment but the poor lumber market. With a better business outlook, any reasonable plan of reorganization ought to succeed. MAKING MEN OVER. "For every Englishman killed dur ing the war," says a writer In a Brit ish medical journal who is being wide ly quoted, "two will be created." This striking statement is not as revolu tionary as it will appear to some at first glance. It appears, as the war continues, that some of our eugenists may have been Just a little bit mis taken in their dogmatio conclusions that the effect of war on the race Is wholly bad. Experience has made it appear that there are at least a few redeeming features. Army discipline has done wonders, even with some of the most unprom ising material. Writing In the At lantic Monthly," Wilfred T. Grenfell tells of the work of the Royal Army Medical Corps, and lays emphasis on Its influence not alone on the present efficiency of the armies in the field but on the future of the men com posing them. There is no doubt, he says, that the service has made many new men, both body and soul, out of those who were anaemic, neurotic, bottle-shouldered, flat-chested, with cramped lungs and embarrassed hearts, subject to every malady that came along. Such as these are being "turned by the magic of the open-air life and the sanitary precautions taken into veritable tan-faced giants." Hun dreds who have had handicapping physical deformities have been oper ated on and cured; many thousands have had Infected, rheumatism-causing teeth and throats cleaned and re paired. These almost invariably were men who never would have had the treatment or the opportunity for it in times of peace. But there is a still more Important influence. Unnumbered thousands have learned to appreciate simple and more natural living, while tens of thousands are interested as they never were before in the things that make for true manhood. These conclusions are based on the widest possible ob servation, and are not mere guess work. They are not confined to a par ticular class, for war has proved a great leveler and the armies now In the field are representative of every branch of society as well as every de partment of human Industry. It goes without saying that it is the previous ly uneducated who have benefited most by the purely educational fea tures of the service, but the war has taught no less important lessons to many of more aristocratic lineage lessons of obligation and discipline and responsibility. There is in the light of knowledge of what all these men are doing In the emergency a growing faith in the possibilities of the human race a faith that a year or two ago seemed all but gone. Two Frenchmen, Abbe Moreaux, of the Bourges Observatory, and Dr. Charles Richet, of the French Insti tute, have reached the conclusion that the ordeal through which men are passing is developing all their latent fortitude. Df Richet sounds a hope ful note for the benefit of those who believed that our civilization had so refined men as to make them tame ppirited and effeminate, and had in duced a permanent preference for well-being to arduous effort. He de nies also that there has been any proof that the present generation is less capable of understanding the beauties of sacrifice than were its re mote ancestors. Indeed, Dr. Rlohet points out, the exact opposite is the truth. The most cultivated men, upon the whole, have shown the greatest bravery. University students have set conspicuous examples for their fellow-men. Never in the his tory of the world never in the times of Leonldas, or Spartacus, or Hanni bal the French, savant holds, was there shown so much of the supreme spirit of self-abnegation, of contempt for the results to the individual, as is now being manifested every day. Abbe Moreaux is strongly of the opinion that the generation which has suffered by this war will "find itself with new resources created by it." Many a pusillanimous creature, both in and out of the army, will come out of the war with new virtues of the kind of which heroes are made. There will be a reawakening of suppressed forces. The men who have seen serv ice, or who have performed duty in any of Its many higher forms,, or have made sacrifices, will be the better for it and the world will be the better for their experience when it is called upon to take their counsel in the recon- Fttnctive days. TOO LATE NOYV. BUT The Oregonlan on August 4 said: If H be true that the means now provided for Judicial adjustment of railroad disputes are not satisfactory to both the companies and their employes. It Is Incumbent upon tongress to provide means that are satis factory. The parties to the dispute should Indicate In what respect the present law falls to Insure Just awards and Congress should so amend the taw as to remove the defects. Having provided a tribunal In the Justice of whose decisions both parties can place eonfldence. Congress should then re quire that all disputes between railroads and tbelr employes, which they fail to adjust themselves, shall be submitted to that tribunal It will have the right to do so, having Insured Just awards. As the representative of the publlo, which is the third party to the controversy and the party which would suffer most by a strike. It Is the duty of Congress to guard against the tying up of the railroads. Neither the President nor Congress having done anything to avert the dis aster which has Impended for months, the President now tells Mr. Pope, pres ident of the National Association of Manufacturers: Unfortunately there Is no means now In exlstenoe by which arbitration can be secured. The existing means have been tried and have failed. This situation must never be allowed to arise again, but It has arisen. Some means must be round to pre vent its recurrence, but no means can be found offhand or in a hurry. The situation should not have been permitted to arise. It could have been foreseen long enough ago to give ample time for adoption of preventive measures. There was no occasion to do anything "offhand or in a hurry." Stanford is to try a special course to fit students for country newspaper work. Success is doubtful, for lack of resources and proper settings. How can students or faculty handle two cords of knotty wood, on which apply last and the current year's subscrip tions and the balance in cash? How can the student take his family on a Sunday to the home of a subscriber who has just had a hog killing and re turn with a backbone and shoulder and Inwardly full of good cheer to the straining limit? How can they demon strate the art of standing off the sta tion agent for the "lnsides" the night before press day when the exchequer is no more substantial than a shadow? How can they teach the student to stand in with all the candidates and extract a sawbuck from each before the primary and retain their friend ship afterward? It may be those deans and professors know the theory of run ning a weekly paper In what Editor Long up at Hillsboro would call "near heaven," but their teachings will not apply down where a county club is a Democrat and a Sheriff is a Republi can and there are columns of notices to be handed out. They would better confine the effort to furnishing high grade copy readers at $10 per and let the country editor begin, flourish and end in the good old way. The Federal Government has under taken seriously the task of exterminat ing the dogfish and other "predatory aquatic animals" that threaten the profits of fishermen, if not the exist ence of their business, particularly on the Atlantic Coast. The bill recently signed by the President provides, as usual, for investigation of methods and for experiments with a view to estab lishing . fisheries and markets. The opinion seems to be held that the speediest way of ridding the ocean of these pests is to make it profitable to catch them and then let commerce and industry take their course. In the case of the dogfish, efforts probably will be concentrated on processes for extracting the oil cheaply and for pre paring the skins for a variety of uses as well as the conversion of the waste Into chemicals and fertilizers. The Bureau of Fisheries has an approprla tlon of $25,000 for the purpose. This would not go far in an actual cam palgn of extermination, but It is hoped that it will be sufficient If devoted entirely to pointing the way to others. Royal Anne cherries are an example of the Northwestern products which have been shut out of Eastern mar kets by the Underwood tariff, which put them on the free list. Formerly about 1000 tons of these cherries, which are produced in great quantities in Washington, were used in Cincinnati yearly in making maraschino cherries, desserts and other articles. That city now imports Italian cherries free of duty in a 1-per-cent solution at 3 cents per pound, which Is cheaper than the Pacific Coast can afford to produce them for. Canada fosters its cherry industry with a duty of 2 cents a pound plus 7 per cent war tax, but the Democratic party favors the prod uct of cheap Italian labor at the ex pense of American Industry. When Premier Asquith arises in Commons to talk of peace terms his idea is to lead the Kaiser in chains at the tail of the chariot. The Salem Commercial Club will be the first to ask for return of Guards men and the entire country will join In the call. The Columbia Highway is a safe roadway. The accident Sunday even ing was not on the highway proper. A Virginian of 90 took his first and last ride In an automobile by going over a 60-foot embankment. Revelations in divorce suits do not scare people from marriage. They make them wonder, though. Even the patriotic girls think the war is over and are slow to recruit for first-aid service. Those Marsh field fellows say they will care for all who .come, and they will do it. The TJ-boats have returned from their Bummer vacation. Dry. humor is going to Coos Bay by the shipload Gleams Through the Mist By Dcaa Collins. BALLADE OK THE SHIRTS. A season ago I envied sore The chap with the nice, cool, V necked shirt. Each day I envied him mora and more As worse the edge of my collar hurt. "Oh would that I e'en as thou wert. Ana dared in such rig." said I, "to appear." This season I look upon Percy and Bert And where Is tha shirt of yesteryear! I cursed my high collar o'er and o'er. And hated its stiffness worsen dirt; Yet the V-necked sport shirt I never wore Though they marked it down to a dollar-thlrt. I feared with fashion extreme to flirt. "Perhaps next season. Ill see it eiear To don the effeminate, soft sport shirt" But where is the shirt of yesteryearT Against the sport shirt I used to roar. I cursed It with scornful curses curt. But always I envied the chap who wore Its soft loose folds, like a style ex pert. But always my courage lay inert; To wear It myself I'd always fear; And now whon my nerve has made the spurt. Oh. where la the shirt of yesteryear? L'EXVOL ' Dame Fashion drives with a stinging quirt. But always I find me In the- rear; I have mustered the nerve for a V- necked shirt. But where la the shirt of yesteryear? "Sir," said the Courteous Office Boy, unfolding a market report to throw me off the scent. "I unlerstand that, this week, the best business men of Port land are turned to bay'" "Whaddya mean?" I gasped fearing a collapse In business conditions. "I refer to Coos Bay." said the G O. B. airily, unfolding an accordion ticket for the excursion thither. "They are turned to bay because they are seeking a new field." "What field?" I said, still biting. "Marshfield!" retorted the C O. B. while 1 trapped with the lid of my paste pot for a cymbal, realizing full well that the C. O. B. could never get by with stuff like that unless he dis guised it aa a vaudeville skit. OUR POSER SOCIETY. This organization is open to all who feel a burning desire to follow the fad of interrogating the candidates for the presidency. You are allowed five posers and you can direct them at any candi date. They don't even have to be rele vant posers seldom are. Anything to heckle the candidate, la our motto. The author of the following letter. we take It, is In by unanimous vote of the society: To the Editor I desire to enter the Poser Society and expound a question to the candidates for the presidency on the Prohibition and Socialist tickets. I am sorry that I can't think of five questions, but as I am unable to an swer the one that I desire to ask. I regard it aa poser enough- Gentlemen candidates on the Social ist and Prohibition ticket, this is a critical period and I should like the answer of plain, unvarnished Ameri canism to the question which I now propound. 1 think -that there are oth ers who would like to know the an- IV0T, tOO. Number 1 What are your names. anyhow. Signed 8. O. K. YR DEAD RIGHT, HEM "Life Is real, life Is earnest." Sang Hen Longfellow, the pote. Didst thou. Editor, returnest Some small lyrlo that he wrote? "Life is real, life is earnest!" Thus ran Henry's simple song. Showing that the price of living E'en In those days was too strong. "Life is real, life is earnest!" V So sang Hen. the bard sublime. Showing how the track one bumest Chasing of th' elusive dime. "Life Is real, life Is earnest!" So Hen's song gushed from his heart. Showing how the spirit yearnest To o'ertake the grocer's cart. "Life is real, life Is earnest!" Lien, the bard, thus warbled still Very little' change returnest When thou foot'st the butcher's bill. THE OLD SOXOS. I cannot sing the old songs; Since I left school. I've found That the real words of the old songs Aren't like they used to sound. I remember the first time I saw the "Star-Spangled Banner" in print it was an utter stranger to me. From- the sound of It. as I had learned It, singing with the classes in school, I had imagined that the text went some thing like this: Tbe Star-Spanarled Banner. O shake and you sea By the darn surly light, Watso, crowd Levy hailed; That's a Trl-llght that's beaming; Ooze broad stripes and bright stars Threw the pair all us fight O'er the ram; parts me watch; . Where's the gal. auntie, screaming? And the rock, it's red glare. The bums bursting in air. Gave proof to the night That our flag was still there; Oh say, does the Star-Spangled Banner get weighed. Or the land of the free, or the home of the braid? OUR GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Boy, dust off two more chairs. We have with us today the two latest additions to the list of charter members of the Thumbnail International Geo graphical Society. Although in Russian papers I see no college ads. Still I observe the Russian burgs Have all turned out as grads. JL Compton F. (admitted to mem bershlp). They named a city Mobile, I think that shows their gall. It ought to be Immobile. For It hasn't moved at all. E. T. H. (admitted to membership by a close vote). Staking? Out Animals. PORTLAND, Aug. 21. (To the Ed itor.) How elope may one stake out a horse or cow to your line or your house? A SUBSCRIBER. Section 1 of ordinance 6925 provides that no animal shall be staked In such manner that such animal can reach the sidewalk bordering such grounds. WILSON AND HIS RECORD OX TRIAL Question la Not What Hashes Wonld Have Done, Says Writer. PORTLAND, Aug. tl. (To . the Ed itor.) In direct violation of the pledge oontalned In the Democratic platform of 112, Mr. Wilson Is now seeking re election to office. He asserts that the record he has made in the past. In han dling our domestla and foreign affairs. entitles him to re-election for another term. In other words, he and his fol lowers contend that the Democratic party displayed more wisdom, mani fested more patriotism and contributed more to the welfare of the Nation than the Republican party could have done bad It been in control of the Nation's affairs for the past four years. Just what the Republican party would have done In detail la of oourse a matter of conjecture, but that it would have lived up to Its past record of conducting the Nation's affairs in a patriotic and businesslike manner Is certain. But what the Republican party would have done had It been in power during the past four years Is not the issue In the present campaign. T. he plain Issue is, has the Demo cratic party, under the leadership of ooorow Wilson, upheld the honor and dignity of the republic in our foreign relations and has It brought, to :the country a prosperity of which we can oe proua7 These are the questions that the voters will ask and they will insist upon an honest answer. Crafty politi cians In tha Democratic party are at tempting to evade an answer to these questions by trying to divert the pub llo mind to a speculation of what Mr. Hughes would have done had he been In office, but their efforte will be In vain. Mr. Wilson and his record are on trial, not Mr. Hughei. It is Incumbent upon Mr. Wilson to explain the universal business depres sion that exlated throughout tha Na tion from the time ho took office until the beginning of the year 1916, when we started to coin the blood and misery of Europe Into profits. He must prove that, regardless of the European war. tlsts Nation would have been prosper ous, for he promised In his camoalKn of 1912 to glva prosperity to the coun try. In the handling of the Mexican sit uation he must prove that It was bet ter for the Nation to allow the murder of more than 300 of our citizens to go unavenged than to have taken euch steps at the beginning as would have prevented these outr&goa. And he cannot deceive the people into thinking that he had no alternative other than armed intervention. He must show that a proper display of force and firmness at the start would have been Ineffectual to compel the Mexicans to respect us. Concerning the manner In whloh he conducted our affairs with the bellig erents of Europe, he must give a sat isfactory explanation of his discrim ination when he sent ultimatums to one side in the conflict and notes of "anxious solicitude" to the other. His contention that In the one case human rights were Involved, while the other was merely a matter of property rights. in not do accepted: as satisfactory by thinking people. To take away that which supports and conserves life la as important as taking away life itself. The paralysis of many of our Indus tries, with the consequent death rate among the workers dependent upon such industries, and the illegal pre vention of the Importation of neces sary drugs, which, doctors tell us. has Increased by the thousands thC num ber of deaths among our people, are certainly matters which Involve the question of human life as vitally as the question of the destruction of life by violence. Mr. Wilson has attempted to draw this artificial distinction, but the burden-Is upon him to prove that he did so out of regard for the Interests of this Nation and not because of a "re sponse to the impulses of his native blood." Mr. Wilson and the other Democratic party leaders may attempt to mislead the public by making false Issues, but their efforts will prove futile. The voters will refuse to be humbugged FREDERICK GROXXERT, 641 PIttock block. SO FOAM NO BAR. Three boozers were shaking the dloa. out West. As they atood at the bar, while the sun went down; Each called for the dope he liked the beat. And men said it would always be thus in town. For dice must rattle and men must drink. And manhood la seen at Its best, men think. When the beer on the bar is foaming. Three women went out to the polls, to vote To vote tho town dry, ere the sun went down; And their voices rang high with ex ultant note. And they nailed down the lid in that V eatern town. For men can drink till women have votes. Then, alas for the dry and dusty throats! Then, good bye to the beer and its foamingl F. P. WILLIAMS. THE SEA. Ah. the glistening, beating sea. Wreathing collarets of foam on the shimmering sands! Its purple mirror and bosom of sheeted blue Rest my soul and fill my life with vis ions fair. It sheds Its dross and stains. And fair aa from, the hand of God it stands revealed. Its broad expanse no place for weak ness, power or pride; Liberation divine unfurls her flag and ueckons on To unseen islands of far-off heart's deaire. We see only life and love that free from pain. Loosening our burdens of accumulated cares. Breathing the savory air in thought I turn to thee. E. HOFER. Agate Beach, Ore, August, 1616. A MODERN TESSIMIST. k PORTLAND. Aug. SI. (To the Edi tor.) The following verses are sub mitted not because the writer enjoys the sentiment expressed therein but because he believes they reflect tend encies of modern times: Have less a heart but more of wit To win a girl today; Be lees eincre live for the hour. Believe cot what you say. Vivacity will take you where Pure love has feared to tread; A graceful tripping tango toe Is much preferred than head. A cigarette, a ready tongue, A clouded Joke or two, A Joy-rids in your motor car "Will win the girl to. you. M. I WRIGHT. Muasllngr of Does. STANFIELD, Or., Aug. 19. (To the Editor.) Kindly tell me If there was not a law passed that all doss should be muzzled, wherever a case of rabies had been found within 10 miles? I am sure I read of it. If so. Is that law still effective, and Is it not a state law? Although two cases of rabies (dogs) were found here, that law has never been complied with. A SUBSCRIBER. We know of no state law on the muz zling of dogs. In Other Days. Half a Century Ago. Prom the Oregonlan of August 22, ISM. Washington. Aug. 20. The President has completed plans to go to Chicago to attend the laying of the corner stone of the Douglas monument- He will leave Washington on the morn ing of the 2Sth of August, attended only by Seward and a select company. In the car used for the Lincoln funeral train. New York. Aug. 20. The steamer Great Eastern and others of the tele graph fleet were spoken on the 20th. bound east to attempt the recovery of the Tost cable. Judge Brockway and Colonel Hay ward yesterday visited Oregon City, the future Lowell, and Oswego, the future Pittsburg, of the Pacific states and territories. They were accompanied by Colonel John McCraken. W. S. Ladd. Judge M. P. Deady and other citizens of the metropolis. A party of gentlemen and ladles came near being drowned at Salem last Thursday evening while out pleasure seeking In a email boat. The boat sprang a leak and was rapidly filling when parties on shore, learning of the situation, went out and rescued them. Washington. Aug. 20. A meeting of Army officers favorable to the Presi dent's policy was held at Wlllards Hotel yesterday. General Stedman pre siding. The meetinir decided to call a National mass convention of soldiers eA Chicago on the 7th of September to rat- iry the proceedings of tho Philadelphia convention. Twr nt T-f I ve Years Agio. From the Cresonlan of August -2, 33. There is no better Indication" of thi movement In improvement than tha number of cement an.1 bituminous side walks being put down. The sidewalk on the Morrison-street side of the new Marquam building Is finished and tha walk on tha Sixth-street side will be completed within a few days. Tha need of a new city Jail has never been more forcibly Impressed upon tha police officials than at present. Now that the three cities have consolidated, the old mouse-trap of a Jail has to make room for the desecrators of the city's peace and dignity from both, sides of the river and often It Is crowded to Its utmost capacity. Tho stage from The Dalles to Bake oven was stopped by a masked man Wednesday afternoon. He demanded the mail pouches, which the driver handed him, and then disappeared. This Is the first stage robbery in that sec tion for many years. At the matinee today at Cordray" "Tho Black Flag" will be played and this will be the bill for the comlns week. Saratoga, Aug. 21. President Harri son and his party arrived here at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Tho whole train was elaborately decorated and an Immense crowd of people thronged the streets, piazzas, windows and roofs of the buildings. Upon reaching the hotel, the President faced the throng and waa formally Introduced by the village President. N. Nitts on Posers II y Dean lolllna. Nesclus Nitts, sage of Punklndorf Sta tion, Emerged from a season of long occul tatlon. Bit off'n his navy plug adequate ration. And launched, lu a monologue, this speculation Concerning the late fad for Interroga tion. I eee by the papers some authors has rla Dlrectln' at Hughes an ex tenolve-llke Quiz, Demandln' an answer at once and com plete. To each question ejked and they's numbered them neat And say in': "We hates fer to ask you all this; But a patriot's duty you know what It Is!" Which minds ma of how Zenaa Back- ett. ha Cone In Punklndorf Station in Seventy-one. Jedge Wiggins wa Mayor, and he noped and expected That, come the next 'lection, he'd be re-elected ; So he and his friends they all looked pretty black at Our party which xput up for Mayor. Zenaa Hackett. So eome of the friends of Jedge Wig gins comes through And gits up a hand-bill; "Us good men and true Ain't stirred by no Impulse of partisan seal. But we feels we should know, Hackett. Jert how you feel On the following points" and they listed 'era o'er And posted 'em up there in Hlgglnses' store- And. every day they would come round and grin. When the crowd gathered there as the mall sack come In. And say; "Zenas Hackett ain't answer ed us yet. And the peepul demands his position, you bet! Wo ain't out to etir up no partisan racket. But we waits for an answer from you, Zenaa Hackett!" They kept a-Hisistln. Inqulrln anew; "We wants fer to know what you plans fer to do I" Till one day HI Hlgglna remarked, in the store When they was a-conning the whole matter o'er; "What he plans fer to do? Pm a son- of-a-gun He can't possible do less than Wiggins has cone!" And we sud.len-Uke thought of how Jedpre WiKglns had Spent a year doin" nothln" but getting In bad With the nelsrhborln towns. And then Philomel I.ove Ho looked at that handbill a-stlcken' above And cleared out his throat and re marks; "Tt se'ems queer They ain't nskln' no questions of Jedge Wlirglns here!" "I hates." remarks Phil, "to see press In" in this. But a patriot's duty you knows what it Is! And It seems that these questioners lnlpht sn.1 a letter To Winains rind nsk; 'are you goin' to vlo better?' " Which sentiment met with our full approbation For we Mtod Zene Hackett in Punkln dorf Station. Qualifications of Voter. PORTLAND, Aug. 21. (To the Ed itor.) Can a foreitm-born person who takes his final citlzensnip papers cut now vote at the residential election. next November? I took out my first papers over five vears n o but have not taken out the ' final papers. AN OLD SUBSCRIBER. Yes. if you will have resided in the st.-.le for six inonthe preceding election. KlRhfrmen'i Lock. Judge. Jones How are they biting today? Green On the neck and legs mostly.