lO TITE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, SEPTE3IBER 2G, 1916. mam rORTLAXl. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance. (By Malt) SDaily, Sunday IncludeU. one year. . . . . . .8.O0 Eally, Sunday Included, six months....- 4.153 pally, Sunday Included, three months.. ii--r Oaily, Sunday Included, one month..... .75 Xaily without Sunday, one year. ....... 6.25 iJaily, without Sunday, six months 3.25 Pally, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 lJiiily, without Sunday, one month...... .00 Weekly, one year...................... l.&O Sunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and Weekly 3.50 ,, (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 Daily. Sunday included, one month 78 How to Kemlt Send posoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank, stamps, coin or currency are at senders' risk, olve postofflce address In full. Including county and state. I'ostaRe Hates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to pases, L' cents; 34 to 48 papes, 3 cents; 50 to 60 peRes, 4 cents; t)2 to 76 pages, 5 cents; 7s to S2 pages. 6 cents. Foreign pomade, double rates. Eastern ItuNinemi Office Verree & Conk l!n, Brunswick buildinK, New York; Verree 6 Conklln, Steirer building, Chicago. San Kranclsco representative, K. J. Hid well, 142 Market street. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1916. WHAT IITJGIXES WOULD NOT DO. Desperate for an answer to Mr. Hughes' exposure of the blunders, weakness, bloodshed and humiliation which have marked the Wilson Ad ministration, Democrats cry with iter ation, "What would Hughes have done?" The Oregonian does not pro fess to know what Mr. Hughes would have done in any particular contin gency with which President Wilson has been called upon to deal. It doubts whether Mr. Hughes himself would undertake to say' precisely what he would have done, but he has stated very plainly the principles by which he would have been guided. We know from his public acts that he would have adhered In office to the principles which he advocated when 6eeking office. Hence we can judge pretty accurately what he would not have done. He would not have countenanced as Secretary of State a man who pro claimed that there would be no war while he held office, who rewarded men for party service by giving them positions where the United States -v-as trustee for another nation, who toured the country with vaudeville perform ers and who gave a private tip to a foreign Ambassador that his demands upon another nation were for home consumption only. He would not have retained as Sec retary of the Navy a man who re jected the advice of experts and who Insisted that the Navy was efficient when he knew it was noft, who muz zled or removed officers who told the truth, but who rapidly changed front when public opinion gave voice and who by his later acts admitted the truth of all that he had formerly denied. He would not have kept as Secre tary of Commerce a man who smoth ered all inquiry into the Eastland dis aster and who shielded from punish ment the Inspectors who had pro nounced safe a ship that drowned nearly a thousand people. He would not have refused recog nition to Huerta in Mexico on the ground that the latter attained power by assassination and afterwards have recognized Benavides in Peru, though he became President by the same means. He would not have interfered with the internal affairs of Mexico by demanding that Huerta he not a can didate for President, nor would he have occupied Vera Cruz on the pre text of exacting a salute to the Amer ican flag when his real purpose was to drive out "Huerta. He would not have put the arms embargo off again, on again, for the purpose of aiding or injuring first one faction, then an other, in Mexico. He would not have abandoned the Americans at Tampico to be rescued from a mob by foreign warships. He would not have run for President on a platform promising protection to Americans abroad and then have refused protection. When American territory was Invaded, he would not have permitted the activ ities of his pursuing army to be lim ited by denial of use of railroads or by orders that they must move in only one direction that of retreat. When American troops were treacherously attacked at Parral, he would not have been inactive. When, they were at tacked at Carrlzal he would not have been content with return of prisoners and of bodies of the slain. He would not have laid down the principle that Mexico had a right to settle lt3 troubles without foreign in terference, and yet have violated that principle' by armed intervention In Haiti. He would not have informed Ger many that it would be held to strict accountability for the sinking of the Lusitanla and yet have permitted sim ilar deeds to be committed for a year before sending an ultimatum. He would not have accepted the platform pledge on Panama Canal tolls and then have demanded that Congress repudiate it. He would not have insisted that the Government waste $50,000,000 in buy ing merchant ships to compete with private owners, especially when every shipyard is swamped with contracts for new ships. He would not have approved the many bills containing provisions for breaking down the civil service sys tem, to the support of which Mr. Wil eon is pledged by his platform. He would not have removed trained and experienced diplomats to make room for political officeseekers. ' He would not have run for Presl dent on a platform pledging him to the single-term principle unless he in tended to aoiae oy tne pledge, nor would he have schemed to defeat that principle before he took office and have violated the pledge by accepting nomination for a second term. He would ;ot have approved pork barrel river and harbor and pension laws. He would not have driven a bogus eight-hour law through Congress in two days under threat of a Nation wide railroad strike. He is not too proud to fight. He fought the bosses when he was Gov ernor of New York and beat them. He opposed the labor unions when he thought their demands unjust or un wise, yet he was acclaimed by the spokesman of labor as "the greatest friend of labor laws that over occu pied the Governor's chair." In the words of one of his veto messages, he was "rigorous in the demand for justice to all ... even at tho risk of loss of votes." He is not only an able man, but he is a brave, upright man who, seeing his duty, will do It without fear of consequences to him self. So '-'delicate and so accurate are modern instruments for the measure ment of energy that it is possible to calculate the total force expended in the performance of any task, and a writer in tie Popular Science Monthly points out that a simple air played on tho violoncello requires as much "work" as is done by an average la borer In an entire day, although the artist is employed only five minutes. In one test made recently, a virtuoso exerted pressure with the forefinger equal to three pounds in weight, and the pressure required to produce a Bach aria averaged two and three quarter pounds to the note. The total energy expended on the aria was 9415 pounds, or nearly five tons. Thus new significance is given to the phrase "It's all in a day's work," especially when reference is made to the labor of a professional musician. M'ARTIIIK. Mr. McArthur has completed a part of his first term in Congress with credit, and, it may be Sloped, with satisfaction to his constituents. He is an alert and aggressive man, with out right methods of speech and conduct, and with none of the arts of the demagogue nor the acrobatics of the sidestepper. He has unquestionably "made good" in the short time he has been at Washington, but he returns to find, nevertheless, a somewhat for midable contest under way for his seat. The opposition to Mr. McArthur surrounds again the Indefatigable and versatile Lafferty. This time Mr. Laf ferty, once a Republican, then a Pro gressive, then both, is an independent, who purposes to support Woodrow Wilson and who has sought to com bine in one grand ensemble the Demo crats, the labor unions, the prohibi tionists, the anti-Catholics, the German-Americans and others for his own benefit. A stupendous combina tion under the Lafferty tent if it is there, which it is not. Lafferty is everything in turn and nothing long. The amazing game he now seeks to play would be under taken only by a political adventurer of his great daring and known unscrupu lousness. He will do nothing for any of these elements in Congress, for he can do nothing. Nor will they be de livered to him by those self-elected agents of. political artifice and con venience who have sought to turn over these heterogenous masses of votes to Lafferty. They are in by far the greatest part citizens who own their own votes. It Is said that McArthur's vote on the wage bill alone in Congress will cost him many votes. It may be so; but it ought not to be so. Particu larly should It not be so if they are to be lost to such a candidate as Laf ferty. Tour average . Congressman is a coward. That is the reason there Is no other reason why the so-called eight-hour bill passed without the slightest pretense of consideration or investigation. But ho ought not to be a coward. He would not be if he was to be' rewarded by an approving con stituency for standing up to his con victions for the noble qualities of courage, candor, manliness and straightforwardness. What is, or will be, the lesson to be drawn from the defeat of Mc Arthur and the election of Lafferty? LA FOLLETTE'S F I-ITR-VLI T Y. The statement, originating in a Portland "independent" newspaper with wholly unique sources of misinfor mation, that Senator La Follette was nominated by the Wisconsin Repub lican primary with a majority of 75,- 000 has been going the rounds of the parrot press of Oregon. For example, this from a McMinnville "nonpartisan" newspaper: . . By a majority of 75.000 Senator La Follette has been renominated by the Re publicans of Wisconsin. Not much comfort here for the Hughes people. La Follette has been with Wllsun on almost all Important legislation. He voted for the new tariff bill, was with Wilson on the Mexican situa tion and was the sole Republican Senator to vote with the Administration forces on the strike legislation. It Is evidence to the effect that thousands of Republicans share tne .La .toilette views. The majority of Senator La Follette was not 75,000, nor one-half that to tal. To be exact, it was 32,596, the final figures being: La Follette, 99,- 043; Jeffris, 66,447. It may be conceded that Senator La Follette won a signal personal vic tory, but it is significant that at the same primary Governor Philipp, a conservative and a political foe of La Follette and La Folletteism, was re nominated by a plurality of 36,324. Undoubtedly, Governor Philipp, an able executive, will be re-elected. Doubtless, La Follette also will be re elected. If the La Follette triumph was a victory for radicalism, what was the Philipp victory? It is a sign, unques tionably, that the voters of Wiscon son are wearied of the vagaries and uncertainties of La Folletteism and desire a return a safe ground. The contradictory result in Wis consin would seem to Indicate both the confusion of the public mind and the weakening of the La Follette hold upon the organization. The La Fol lette machine was overthrown when Governor Philipp was nominated and elected two years ago and again in the divided delegation at the Chicago convention. Sentiment and habit save La Follette himself; but he is a survival of other times, other pur poses, other conditions. TO UNDO A DECADE'S WORK. We have been fussing around since 1907 over the Oregon & California railroad land grant. It has been the subject of legislative resolutions and memorials to Congress. It has occu pied the attention of the courts from the district to the United States Su preme. It has served as political cam paign fodder and has brought to gether a large, solemn but ineffective conference of distinguished citizens. It has inspired newspaper articles by the column, produced consultations with railroad officials. Invited whole sale frauds for which men are on the road to the penitentiary, has caused a disturbance in Congress, and has seri ously retarded the development of Oregon. Now when the whole Issue is ap parently settled, to the liking of some and the dislike of others, along comes Mr. U'Ren with a wholly collateral constitutional amendment, which if adopted would set the question back where it was a decade ago. ' The U'Ren measure proposes that every landowner shall pay to the state the full market rent of his land in the form of taxes. The Government owns the land grant, if "the law recently passed by Congress is any good. The state of Oregon has pledged itself not to tax Government lands. The Gov ernment proposes to sell the grant to actual settlers. But how could the Government find settlers to purchase If, as soon as title passed, the state would seize the land and offer it to the highest rental bidder? Nowhere, of course. No man will buy land and pay rent on It too. Some persons, it Is true, might be willing to take a gambler's chance on the timber which is to be sold sep arate from, the land, provided the Government made the minimum price attractive enough. But the" Govern ment would doubtless rather hold the timber than sacrifice it. It cannot possibly be determined from the read ing of the amendment whether pri vately owned timber is to be relieved of taxation or confiscated. In this grant are more than 2,000, 000 acres of land, all of which is un improved. Undet1 a full rental value tax unimproved land will and must lose completely its sale value. Among other things the land and loan measure indirectly proposes is that the Oregon & California land grant, which we have striven so hard to have opened to settlement, shall be retained as a wild and unattain able reservation. HORACE I). BAMSDELL. Few men were better known in Portland than Horace D. Ramsdell, and certainly none were better liked. He was an important member and officer of a well-known firm Lip man, Wolfe & Co. and a contributing factor through many years to its suc cess. He knew the public, and he had sound ideas as a merchant for meet- ng its manifold needs and changing desires. But Mr. Ramsdell was more than a business man. He was identified with public and semi-public bodies doing community service, and he sought al ways to do his share, and a little more. A genial and kind man, he had many friends; a charitable man, there were many objects of his bounty; a good man, he was relied on to pro mote, the interests of religion through the church with which he was long associated. Mr. Ramsdell had the appearance of robust and abounding health; but for several years he had known that he was likely to be called at any hour. Yet he had to the last a cheerftH and optimistic spirit and an unclouded mind fine evidence of his courage and self-control. He led an unblem ished life and ho died in the knowl edge that ho possessed the affection of an intimate circle and the respect of many acquaintances. LET'S rSE SOME SHIPS OCRSELYES. Mr. Hardy's advice that Portland do not permit all tho ships built in its yards to pass into outside own ership deserves attention from our people. Without ships owned by our own citizens, this port is as depend ent on others for means of continuing in business as is a storekeeper who hires his competitor's wagon to make his deliveries. The British govern ment is giving the world an example of the manner in which" that prac tice works. It has first call on two- fifths of the world's ships, first for military and then for commercial purposes. Other nations get the leav ings, which are very slim. The car shortage is showing Oregon that prosperity, even survival, in busi ness is contingent on ability to deliver the goods and that delivery is impos sible without vehicles to carry them. Had the lumbermen been able to ob tain cars they would have made much money which has gone to competitors. Had Portland merchants owned ships and operated their own vessels from their own port, their coastwase and foreign trade would not have shrunk when the war absorbed Europe's ships and they would have brought home cargoes of merchandise and of material for manufacture here. Now is the time to remedy this neg lect. The world is clamoring for our goods, but has no ships to send after them. We are building ships, but are selling them to carry goods from other ports to satisfy this demand. Why not keep some of them ourselves to deliver our own goods rather than those of competing ports? the STnrcLxrs op necessity. It was to be expected that scarcity of various so-called industrial neces sities, brought about by the war, would stimulate the production of substi tutes, and that some of them would prove so efficient that it would not be necessary to return to the old ways. This has come to pass with potash, which furnishes a striking example of how resourcefulness Is developed un der pressure. - The demand of such enterprises as glass making was not only for potash, but in the extensive nature of the business for a supaly that should be both plentiful and cheap. Expensive potash would mean prices for the finished product that would greatly curtail Its use. The public is more or less familiar with the efforts made in the United States to provide a supply of potash of Its own. Experiments with the potash bearing rock of Nebraska and with the kelp beds of the Pacific Coast have been measurably successful, but this has been true under the influence of war prices. It is said to be a fact, also, that despite what has been done in this direction, only about 10 per cent .as much potash is now being produced in the United States as for merly was imported into the country. Early in the war American chemists called attention to the advisability of substituting the potash element by the use of soda in various medicinal sub stances, and this was done to a con siderable extent, but the use of potash in medicine is small by volume as compared with its employment in other industries. Glass making is one of these. Where glass formerly was made by a fusion of silica with potash, sodium carbonate Is now utilized suc cessfully instead of the potash, and the sodium carbonate is obtained from enormous deposits of salt that are found in the United States. The glass industry has gained in another way. FormerlyMhe United States was vir tually . dependent on Germany and Austria for Its supply of glassware for technical and scientific purposes, but now this demand is being wholly met at home. Another important departure in manufacturing has been the substitu tion of soda for potash in the making of certain grades of soaps, for which potash until recently was regarded as Indispensable. . The way In which chemical Industries are wonderfully Intertwined is well illustrated in this operation. In the making of caustic soda from salt, chlorine is liberated by the electrical process and also is used for various important purposes, among others the manufacture of chlorinated lime, a bleach for paper and for textiles that are made from vegetable fibers. Bleaches which we formerly imported in large quantities are now made at home, and as the industry grows the trade balance should be in our favor In later years. These facts are brought out in con nection with a forthcoming National Exposition of Chemical Industries soon to be held in New York. There has been much talk of the possibilities of the chemical industry in America, and some of it has been exaggeration, but there also has been material achievement. New possibilities in mln- ing Incidentally have been opened up. Formerljowe have been accustomed to look upon the miner as a delver for the commoner metals. 'In future he will be a man who extracts from the ground a great many of our necessary chemicals as well. This brings to view vast possibilities for the hitherto "waste places" of the land, for chem icals may be found without reference to the accessibility or the arabillty of the surface soil. But higher skill will be required, and the prospector of the future will do well to fortify himself with a working knowledge of higher chemistry, as well as the rudiments of metallurgy with which heretofore he has been content. Reported repressive measures in Bohemia indicate that there Is a state of feeling in that country about which the world at large may not be fully informed. The Bohemians, or Czechs, represent perhaps the highest state of culture to be found among the many races that have been amalgamated Into the so-called dual monarchy, and their pride is a factor to be consid ered in any undertaking. Bohemia Is highly developed as to its manufac turing industries, and its farmers are among the most advanced of Central Europe, as a natural consequence of which its people are inclined to a cer tain aloofness from neighbors whom they regard as their Intellectual In feriors. There have been ambitions for an independent Bohemian king dom, with a capital at Prague, and even talk of a republic, which are re ported to have been sternly kept with in bounds by the authorities deriving their power from Vienna. Meanwhile, Bohemia is contributing her full quotas to the prosecution of the war, but with less enthusiasm than some others who do not have national long ings of their own. If new inventions are to be fairly judged, the board which is to investi gate new types of machine guns for the Army should include business men accustomed to decide similar ques tions in manufacturing as well as Army officers. The official mind is too prone to conservatism, to consider that untried fields are unsafe, and that what is known is good enough without launching into the unknown. That is why Navy officers opposed steam for war vessels long after its success in merchant 6hips had been proved. It Is why the Lewis machine gun was rejected by the War Department, only to' be adopted by the British army. The present war is proving war to be the most progressive of sciences, and the nation which docs not view every new invention with an open mind falls behind and Invites defeat. The United States Army lias not experienced the reduction In the cost of living which was promised by the Democrats in 1912. The ration has not been changed since 1909. In 1913, when the Democrats began to rule, it cost 23 cents a man. Its cost has increased every year and Quarter master General Sharpe told the House military committee that for 1917 it would cost 30 cents. For the regular Army and National Guard this is an annual increase of $6,300,000 over the cost under Republican control. The higher cost of living for the civil pop ulation is at least as great as that for the Army. Candor goes a long way toward ob viating misunderstandings, and hypoc risy only aggravates them. The New York workmen who propose a sym pathetic strike but would disguise it as a refusal to risk their lives on "trains run by green motormen and guarded by policemen" are not thereby helping their cause any more than Is President Shonts, of the Interborough, when he puts his concern for the employes now at work at the head of his reasons for refusing to meet the strikers. Telling the truth on both sides would be a good way to begin" restoring the era of good feeling. The man who buys fruit at a stand and does not discover until at home that part Is decayed has little re course. He cannot prove the fact in court. To be sure, he might gather his friends and wreck the place before the police could respond, but that is unlawful and risky, although hearten ing. Here's a hullabaloo Indeed! A wom an alleges as reason for seeking her decree that her husband contracted the habit of smoking after marriage and strikes matches on the baby's car riage. Instead of suing, she should learn to chew, and that soon would bring the husband to his senses. Education puts a sinister veneer on the aboriginal. The buck who caused an Indian girl to commit suicide from grief at Celilo last Spring has been arrested for eloping with another from an agency school. He is a bad Indian qualifying to become a "good" one. Parallel with the announcement that Colonel Roosevelt will not visit the Coast. The Oregonian published the news that four bears had been killed recently near Wheeler. If the Colonel sees that, he will not be able to stay away. The exploit of the man who saved himself from drowning by excluding the water with a big chew of tobacco equals that of the other man who grabbed the cake of soap and washed ashore from the wreck. Wives are not so plenty in Alaska that men can afford to lose them by divorce; but when a husband uses ths) argument of choking, there is nothing left for a wife hut recourse to a pistol General Trevino may have been hurt physically in his encounter with Villa, but his deepest wound is in his vanity. Paper bags are among the goods that cost mofe. and the lunch brigade squanders money unknowingly. Another widow has forfeited mil lions to remarry. Isn't that Just like a woman? All the Wilson men have registered. It is Republicans, only who are care, less. Substitution of "condemn" for 'damn" is polite, but lacks vigor. A higher city tax is likely to affect the vote next year. Six weeks to election day. Where's your button? Make a date for the State Fair grounds. Ghosts of a Bloodstained Peace. By Daa Collins. The master of words and doubtful deeds " Heard the voice of his people rise. And he muttered hastily: "I must needs Some message for them devise That will quiet them for a ltttle term Till my place on my seat Is made more firm. And the threatening wave recedes." The master of words called forth to those "Who came with their question stern: "To know how I've served ye, ye pro pose? Then listen and ye shall learn!" And he spread his cloak as a screen before Where his broken pledges lay, -" As the people gathered to hear once more What the master of words might say. The master of words cried: "Know you then, I have given ye wealth untold " (And the blood of old Europe's fight ing men Flowed west in a flood of gold). Cried the master of words, "I have given you All things that ye asked me for. And hearken further my bounties too I have kept you out of warl" Then laughed the ghosts of a score of men Who had dlel at Vera Crux, They laughed in the hearts of the people, then: "Give heed to the master's news. We followed a quest at his behest But that which' he sent us for To the winds he threw yet he tells you true. He hath kept us out of war. And up spoke the ghosts of a score of men From the sands of Carrlzal: "'Twss the master of words who sent us, when We rode out to fight and fall; Yet though we were attain, 'twas all in vain For that which he sent us for He hath never won yet this he hath dune He hath kept us out of war." Then cried tho ghosts of the weary hosts That had died in a foreign land; Women and men and children then: "Yea. hearken and understand. Our flag no more, is tho shield of yore And wo looked td it vainly for Protection duo yet he tells you true, Ha hath kept us out of war." And the master of words and doubtful deeds He smiled with a smile benign; "From triumph to triumph thus pro ceeds This beneficent rule of mine." And laughed the hosts of tho' blood stained ghosts As they shredded in mist away. While the master spoke, as he spread nls cloak Where the broken pledges lay. WHO IS REAL FniEXD OF LABOR t Mr. WlUon Showed No Sympathy Until lie Needed Vote. PORTLAND. Sept. 26. (To the Editor.) Now is a time for labor to take an inventory of its real friends. When did W ilson aver show any sympathy witn organized labor until he became a poli tician? Addressing a class of students at Princeton June 3, 1909, he condemned the "standard of labor, declaring it gave as little as possible for wages paid and was filling tho country with unprofitable servants. At a dinner in the Waldorf Hotel. New York. March 18. 1907, he said: "We speak too ex clusively of the capitalistic class. There Is another as formidable an enemy to equality and freedom of opportunity as It is. and that is the class formed by the labor organizations and leaders of the country." His "History of tho American People" is full of similar sen timents. Now, as a vote-seeker, he tries to change front. Just as ho did on Panama tolls, and woman suffrage, and free sugar, and preparedness, and the tariff commission, and Mexican embar goes and a dozen other things. During the very years that Wilson was denouncing the labor organizations in Princeton and tho Waldorf Hotel and elsewhere. Hughes was making his roc ord as Governor of New York. Review ing that record, an organ of the Federa tion of Labor in that state declared that he siiowed himself "the greatest friend of labor laws who ever occupied tho Governor's chair in Albany, and that during his two terms as Governor he signed 56 labor laws. Including among tnem me Dest laDor law ever enacted in this or any other state." But he never hoped or indulged in palaver. He never dodged or changed front. There was neither demagogy nor vacil lation. He is the same always, whether as Governor, as Judge, as private citl sen or as Presidential candidate. Hon est labor asks no Judge to make the law on the bench. All it asks is honest Interpretation. Judga Hughes, when he gave the Danbury decision, against labor, gave the law squarely and honestly. Just as he did in the case of the Chicago. Burlington & Quincy Kallroad vs. McGuire. and in his dis senting opinion in the case of Coppage vs. the State of Kansas, when he sus tained the contentions of the labor unions. Wo have a true Index of his character in his declaration: "I won't sign any bill because it Is popular. On tho contrary, I will sign anything think in the interest of the people and will veto anything I think is not their Interest. I stand for two things first, for tne principle of fair, impar tial, thorough and candid arbitration and, second, for legislation on facta according to the necessities of the case and I am opposed to being dictated to either in tho executive department or Congress by any power on earth, before tho facts are known." Here is shown tho type of man worthy of the trust and confidence of any patriotic citizen who asks for himself nothing more than fair play and a square deal. Under a Washington data line of Sep tember 8 the press informs us that the President, stung by public critlclrm has definitely committed himself to future programme of legislation on the strike question, the first item of which calls for "compulsory investigation of railroad disputes along lines of the Canadian commission plan." as Garrett son. Stone. Carter and Leo. represent ing tho brotherhoods, have declared that "since the abolition of slavery no more effective means has been devised for insuring tho bondage of tho work ing man" than this samo "Canadian plan." it will be interesting to tee tho President wiggle out of the trap ho has fallen Into In nls attempt to bam boozle the labor vote. CHARLES B. MOORES. Woasd to Her Pride. Atchison Globe, Tho wound to your pride Isn't apt to be mortal, but it may hurt worse than the other kind. Junt Keep Smiling. Atchison Globe. A cheerful man is the greatest ag gravatlon to a grouch. CEMETT BRAND IS EXPLAINED Rltnllthlc" Kind Is "I" Grade As phalt, Says Clnnde T. Hire. PORTLAND. Sept. 25 (To the Edi tor.) Last week I noticed in The Ore gonian that Commissioner Dieck in- ends to demand a forfeit from Gleb- Isch & Joplin unless they complete the paving of East Tenth from Going to Alberta streets without further delay. Thia is practically tho only mention that The Oregonian has made of this contract, yet it is one in connection with which much of importance to Portland taxpayers has taken place. Tho insertion of the word "bltullthic" in specifying the asphaltlc cement that must bo used has cost the property owners of Portland much money, for it has enabled the Warren people not only to get their royalty upon the ardage laid but also to increase tne price which tho contractors must pay for the asphaltio cement used, as only Warren Bros. Company can sell, brtu- lithvc cement, for they alone can say what is and what is not bitulithic cement. Bitulithic cement is merely a erm that this company applies to whatever binder It finds It expedient to use in laying bitulithic pavement. In some parts of' the East it is nothing but common coal tar. In other parts it Is something else. Hero in tho Pa cific Northwest it appears to be nothing but D' grade asphaltio cement from the Richmond, Cal., refinery of the standard Oil Company, as well-in formed independent engineers fre quently have maintained. That the so-called bitulithic cement Is nothing but "D" grade asphalt seems well shown by the fact that In all physical and chemical tests the two give identical results; moreover in con nection with this East Tenth street contract Walter B. Warren showed clearly that neither he nor his engi neers can tell so-called bitulithic cement from any other asphaltic cement when they lose track of the refinery numbers that they claim are bitulithic ref inings. From the middle of June to tho mid dle of August the Warren people kept tho Public Works Department of Port land In a turmoil In regard to this East Tenth-street contract- They as serted that Giebisch & Joplin were about to do the property owners along this street irreparable injury by using ordinary asphaltic cement and not their miraculous bitulithic cement in the paving mixture. Giebisch & Joplin asserted that they had bitulithc cement at their plant for tho work. Warrens asserted the contrary. Tho bureau of standards reported that tho cement in all physical and chemical tests ap peared to he bitulithic cement. Com missioner Dieck bucked and filled, stopped the work, ordered It to go on. called in the aid of tho City Attorney and for weeks kept everything In a tangle, simply because he always took the assertion of (lie Warrens as pre sumptively true and as many times as sumed that tho contrary statement of tho contractors was untrue. Finally a special session of the Council had to be devoted to unsnarling the tangle. In this hearing, August 11. Walter B. Warren told the Council that by lot number, physical and chemical tests, he and hid engineers were certain that tho cement in question was not and could not be bitulithic cement. Hepooh- pooned the possibility that his engi neers and chemists could be mistaken In this matter. Yet within five minutes alter this assertion of his it was shown by records of the bureau of standards that the very, same lot numbers that were upon the barrels at the Giebisch & Joplin plant had been reported earlier in the year by the Warren Company itself as bitulithic lot numbers. In other words the Warrens have finally hanged themselves by their own strap. For Immediately upon this revelation the attorney for Warren Bros. Com pany asked for adjournment and later in tho week tho Warrens cams forward with the proposition) that they take this cement back, barrel for barrel, without cost to the contractor and re place it with dyed-in-the-wool bitu lithic cement. Surely it is high time that this term bitulithic cement bo taken out of Portland's specifications and that they he made to read as do the Multnomah County specifications for bitulithic pavements, in which tho cement used only has to stand up to certain physi cal and chemical standards and docs not have to have a monopoly trade mark to qualify It, This will make the cost of bitulithic pavement somewhat less than at present, for tho independ ent contractor - then can buy his asphaltic cement in the open market without paying royalties to the. War rens a second time. But unless the people of Portland get busy themselves nothing will bo done in tho matter. CLAUDE T. RICE. BIRD CATCH IXC 'Slid the many scenes of childhood that come drifting back to me. There's a barefoot boy. With radiant Joy. And & heart brimful of glee. With salt in his breeches pocket he chases the lark or quail. As he tries his best. With a childish lest. To put salt upon its tail. Wo draw full many a lesson from "the little things of life. There's the bird of fame We should like to tame. So we enter the dizzy strife. Wo labor and sweat and struggle and then In the end wo fall. For that bird roosts high. And he keeps his eye Peeled back on his precious tail. The dove of pure life lures us, and with faith In ourselves wo run. And our bare feet pass Through the tangled grass As bravely we struggle on. But tho sea of life is stormy and our bark of effort frail; We helplessly strand On the bleaching sand. And no salt upon its tall! NTw, there Is tho bird of riches, and It flaunts Its .plumage gay With a peacock's pride. And a taunt beside. It dares us up and away. It flutters Just beyond us and we strive, without avail. And we make a pass With our salt. Alas! It never touches Its tail. Our .Senator George creeps slyly on the bird of Oregon. With a hungry greed He doth coax and plead. "Hold still, little Pelican!" But our proud bird moans in anguish and shrieks with an awful wail: "George, what are you 'bout? You've pulled 'em all out. And I haven't got no tail!" There's a game old bird that perches on tho staff where "Old Glory" waves. And poor Woodrow tries. With tears in his eyes. To capture the prise he craves. But our eagle laughs as he rise aloft on his feathery sail: "Woodrow, It's no use. For Charley Hughes Has put salt upon my tall!" DICK POSEY, Ashland, Or. He Is m naptlst. PORTLAND, Sept. 23. (To tho Edi tor.) Kindly publish whether or not the Republican candidate for President of the United States is a Catholic. MRS. EDWARDS. Dr. S. K. Smith Wrote "America." ST. JOHNS. Or., Sept, 24. (To the Editor.) I notice the question: "Who wrote 'America'"? Dr. Samuel F. Smith wrote it, MRS. PEARL LASKJ2Y. In Other Days. Twenty-live Years Ago. From Tho Oregonian of Sept. 26, 1S91. Berlin, Sept. 25. The Czar has re quested that his passage through Ber lin on his way to Moscow, whither ho is going because of the death of tho Grand Duchess Paul, be strictly pri vate, with no reception at railway sta tions. The Ciar arrived here late to day and was received by Prince Leo pold on behalf of Emperor William. After dining, ho resumed his journey. Chicago, Sept. 15. England and Ger many have each applied for about five acres of space in the World's Fair buildings for their exhibits. At tho close of lee first week of school yesterdav there were 7137 chil dren enrolled in the public schools, 4138 on the West Side and 2999 on the East Side. The gain this year over last is 349. W. H. Kennedy, engineer In charge of the work of making the survey of tho railroad from Goble to Astoria, is in the city. Tho survey Is progressing favorably and the two parties engaged; on the work will soon meet. The peo ple along the line are displaying great liberality in the matter of donating tho rights of way. Tho new town of Whlteson, In Yam hill County. Is named after Henry White, a pioneer of 1S01. upon whoso farm the new town Is being built. Mr. White is now 80 years old. Half a Centnry Ago. From Tho Oregonian of Sept. 26, 1SS6. Washington. Sept. 24.- Secretary Seward has recovered and was at the State Department today attending to his olllclal duties. Chicago, Sept. 24. Interesting ex periments oft projectiles upon iron as material for a permanent fortification are in progress at Fortress Monroe. We are Informed by our Dalles cor respondent that the number of horses and mules stolen by Indians from Camn. Watson recently was 79. The latest news from the place was brought by a Dr. rooks. William Qulgley, early last Spring. discovered upon the Pend d'Oreille rive loads of silver-bearing quartz. The test of some of the samples now shows a value of I2000 per ton. The ball at Oro Flno hall, given by the Washington Guards last night, is hailed as tho most attractive aflalr of the season. It is estimated that tho yearly in come of the Atlantic cable will be near ly 4, 500. 000. RAILROAD MANAGERS DISTRl'STED Printer Say They Are Not mm Tractable ai Employers of Ills Craft. BAKER. Or.. Sept. 24. (To tho Edi tor.) I have read the editorial entitled An Example to Labor Unions" in Tho Oregonian. I am a printer a union printer and as such cannot restrain a feeling of prldo at your laudations of tho mem bers of the International Typograph ical Union, Individually and collect ively. However. I don't think tho compari son of railroad an.l printing conditions Is fair. In January. 19i6. to be exact, tho union printers throughout tho United States united in a demand that eiKht hours constitute a day's work. A larse proportion of the members of tho I. T. U. were then enjoying that boon, and many more received it on demand, but many employers, who erroneously believed the union was "trying to run their business'" remained obdurate and . it became necessary, in a number of cases, to call strikes in order to en force the demand. I belonged to a small union, which found it necessary to strike. We lost, as did many other small locals, but In tho main it was possible to reason with the employing printers, most of whom had fought their way up from the ranks, which eventually resulted in the adoption of the eight-hour schedule by practically all of the masler printers within the Jurisdiction of the I. T. U-. the exceptions in most instances belni; due, not so much to the arrogance of the employers, as to the assinity of unorganized printers, who did not and would not understand the great prin ciples of unionism In general and as applied to printers in particular. However, had the employing print ers been egotistically and arrogantly unfair and discriminative as are tho railroad managers, not only to their employes, but to the general public. I am sure there would not now be tho feeling of co-operation that exists be tween printers and employers, nor would there be arbitration. Arbitration consists of a fair and equitable adjustment of differences, but who can honestly state, basing his orinion upon treatment he has re ceived at tho hands of railroad man agers, that he believes the managers would even consider arbitration if they did not feel certain they would re ceive all the benefits? A railroad of ficial's idea of a square deal is 99 per cent advantage on his side, the re maining 1 per cent to be divided be tween the other fellow and thedevit. A railroad magnate respects only power, be it political, strategical or financial, and superiority in any of these is the only club with which he can bo subdued. Who ever heard of a railroad mac-j nate conceding anything to anyone without coercion? And does anyone believe that had the brotherhoods con sented to arbitration, the bosses would have stood by the decision of the ar bitration board had that body conceded the eight-hour day to stie workers? The eight-hour work day in tho march of progress, is bound to become universal, but like all other great strides which civilization has made, it will encounter obstructions placed by our "leading citizens," who ought in reality to bo pushing ahead Instead of pulling back. W. J. M CULLEY. SLOGAN NOT FOUNDED ON FACTS Peace Due to W 111 of People, Not to Deeds of President. PORTLAND. Sept. 25. To the Ed itor.) Under our form of government all powers are vested In either the ex ecutive, legislative of Judicial depart ments. The duties of esch are measured and limited by the Constitution. In which Conefress is vesttd with the authority to enact laws, the Judiciary to construe and the President to enforce them. Among other thinps section 8 of article 1 of the Federal Constitution provides "that Congress shall have power to declare war." "to raise and support ar mies." "to provide and maintain a Navy." Under the Constitution the power to declare war" is vested in Congress and in CongrehS only. Why then should anyone vote for President Wilson un der the claim or pretense that "ho has kept us out of war?" The people of this Nation did not want war and it Is for such reason and for such reason only that Congress has not declared war. Whenever the people of this Nation want war Congress and not the President will 'declare war. It Is our form of government and not President Wilson that should have any credit for keeplrg this Nation out of war. No person should be mislea or deceived Into Toting for President Wilson on the theory that "he has kept us out of war." Wo are living under a republican, form of government. CHARLES A. JOICCS.