lO THE MORNING OREGON! AN THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2S, 1916. PORTLAXD, OREGON. tained for grain without feeding it to stock f igures largely. Even at the close of the war the consumer proba bly will pay a higher price than before the war, unless some way is found of Bntered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice a 1 encouraging the meat-producing in- ecanaciM zna.il muuer. I j. a . , Subscription rates Invariably in advance, austry at aome. B? .Mal tally. Sunday Included, six months 4.25 THE FUBUO J-AYS, furdf? .,nc,lu5e5- J"? 75 Prom no source, since those fateful X5ally' without Sunday, one year 6.25 I interviews at the White House between w aunaay. six munm...... ?;r Fcesident Wilson, the railroad man Daily, without sundav on month. 60 agers and the brotherhoods, has come Weekly, one year a clearer, or more succinct, or more Sunday' and weekly"!!!"""!!", also I exact, description of the Adamson law Dally, Eunday Included, one year 9.00 Anally. unda7 Included- one month. .... -'5 How to Remit Send posolflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at senders- risk. Give postoffice address In full. Including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pases, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, 3 cents; 31 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 02 to 76 pages, 6 cents; 76 to S2 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Hm1neM Off 1 Verree fc Conk- lln, Brunswick building. No York; Verree s vjonKun, steger building, t;nicago. db Francisco representative. K. J. Bldwell, J 12 Market street. PORTUXD, THURSDAY. SEPT. 28, 1816. than the summary given by Hughes in his powerful and unan swerable Springfield (111.) speech. It was: The Adamson bill Is not a bill providing for an eight-hour workday. It does not fix hours at all. It regulates wages. . its pro visions do not require any employer to em ploy any set of men for only eight hours day. Eight-hour day laws are to avoio. fatigue and over-strain by prohibiting em ployment in excess of the requirement. There is nothing of that sort In this bill. What It does Is to provide by law lor an increase In wages for certain men. They may work Just as long as before. They may work ten hours or more." They are simply to net more nay. The act provides that in contracts for labor and service eight hours shall be. deemed a day's work and the measure or standard of a day's work for the Durnose of reckoning the compensation lor service of all employes of the sort aescrioeo. So Congress did not fix or limit hours; but it fixed wages for certain ACCORDING TO PRECEDENT, Spread of the New York strike to several trades in sympathy with the striking traction employes is a further selected railroad employes. development of that disregard of the If Congress may determine the public's paramount rights which has wages of railroad trainmen, why not been shown by both parties to the name the wages of men in all employ- original controversy. Holding that tne ments? union had violated its contract, and if Con gress is by decisive and spe- therefore could not be held to a bar- cific action to take a wage dispute of gain. President Shonts refused to deal railroad managers and railroad em- further with it, either by direct nego- pioyes out of the hands of the prin tiation or arbitration. Accusing the cinals and . settle it arbitrarily, and railways of making war on unionism -without investigation or knowledge. In violation of the spirit of its agree- I why may not Congress act in any or ment, the union flung back the charge every other labor controversy? of bad faith and called out its men. if Congress is to fix wages, why may The companies making daily gains to- it not regulate prices? How can it ward full operation despite the strike, fan to control prices -if it insists on the union resorted to picketing the any certain wage scale ? . The money roads as unfair and to disciplining mUst be provided. members who travel on them. The I The railroad wage increase will cost sympathetic strike is designed to bring from $40,000,000 to $100,000,000. The moral pressure upon the general pub- shippers (viz., the public) will pay It. lie, that it may exercise lntiuence on railway tu.i. DISCONTENTED CONVICTS tained in the effort to make the sym- Copious tears are shed oyer condi- even remotely allied to war. It ap pears that the interest of Germany in the question has been greatly exag gerated, doubtless for local political purposes. At any rate, the element in Denmark that is presumed to take its cue from Berlin has virtually aban doned opposition, according to latest accounts. .Possession of the islands by the United States will be an important factor in the control by the United States of the Caribbean Sea. Entrance to this body of water is now obtained by three practical entrances. The Windward Passage lies between Cuba and Haiti and is under control of the United States naval fetation at Guan- tanamo tind by our protectorate at Portau Prince. There is another passage between Haiti and Porto Rico, but we have a naval station on the latter island. The Virgin Passage, the remaining one, is commanded by the islands now under negotiation. It is for this reason that the United States views with satisfaction the prospect of early acceptance by Denmark of the terms offered her. Stars and Starmakers By Leone Casus Bur, among the thousands who are weary of the shifty tricks of old-style poli ticians. But Mr. Hughes,, while courageous, is not rash, for his methods are not untried. He pursued them as Gover- TTTOMAN 'phoned in to the office to nor of New Tork and, although he be- I YV ask if it were proper to "wear a wildered the politicians, he won. He veiL And a edltor vls out, so dictum that Tn.hlio. office is a nublic another on told her 14 a11 depends on trust and he attacked special privilege 018 face under the veiL and defiance of law. Robert H. Fuller, And ain't it the truth? who was then his secretary, says that it had been customary for the Gov-1 Chauncey Olcott's plans may be ernor to refuse his signature to meas- a-leaned from this cleverly out little ac ures of which he approved unless the count by Mile. Manhattan in the ic6uuai.ui luicicsucu in mcui Drumitlo Mirror. Chauncev comes support measures in which he was in. terested, but Mr. Hughes departed from thi3 custom by treating each bill on its merits, nor did he use appoint ments to reward those who helped him or withhold offices from those who opposed him. Those who came to his back door prepared to trade votes for his support or disapproval of leglsla- every year to Portland and so his the atrical movements are of interest to us: "Just met Chaunoey Olcott, hurrying, importantly, to meet the noted author and manager. Geortre M- Cohan, for the acy of the National or central Govern initial rehearsal of the new clay in ment. It holding to the theory that the REPUBLICAN PART V KEEPS STEP Democrats, on Other Hand, Hampered by EmbarrsulBf Traditions. EUGENE, Or, Sept. 26. (To the Ed itor.) As the campaign progresses we think the necessslty will be seen of ex amining into the history and origin of the parties as well as the personal characteristics of the candidates who represent them. Mr. Wilson, while appealing to or claiming to be in sympathy with some or sundry outside elements or political views, nevertheless is the representa tive or agent of but one party, the Democratic, and will be held account able to it as such in the carrying out of all matters connected with its views and policies and such will be true of other party candidates. The Democratic party was established or rose in protest against the suprem- paralyzing New York's industry and Portland newspaper which, through constant criticism of the aaministra- The number who have actually struck on of that institution has wantonly falls far short of the 800.000 originally incited the inmates to resentment estimated. Estimates have been cut against proper auu fi-nm Aoir tn. Aair ar thA Hn-ir nn wbifll I line, til US tions at the Salem Penitentiary by a the strike was to begin has been put farther in the future several times. Trades where unions are bound by time contracts with employers are re luctant to injure the standing of the unions by violation of these contracts. Should the strike in which many thousands will abandon their employ ment fail to attain its purpose by moral effect, great danger exists of serious and widespread resorts to vio lence. That is the experience Of many penitentiary are no worse than those in strikes which seemed about to fail. Blood may be shed and much property may be destroyed. At the best the In jury to commerce through its sudden drop from high pressure to half speed will be enormous, and the injury will From Salem we hear continual stories of disorder and discontent at the peni tentiary. One day we read the tale oi a trusty who deserts the kitchen range of the warden for the wide, wide world be cause he had been promised a parole, only to have the promise broken. Next we hear how a convict was killed by armed guards while attempting to escape. The recent history of the Institution is a moving pic ture of official discord and threatened mutiny. It 1a a dark picture compared with those of other prisons conducted under modern methods. The convicts In tne Oregon the prisons of New Tork or New Jersey or Pennsylvania, if as bad. Yet, while we In Oregon are manning the somber battlements at Salem with sharpshooters to herd our convicts, many prisoners in those other states are working in the open sunshine without the menace of muskets to stay their flight, to their own better- extend far beyond New York City to ment and the. betterment of the state. MRS. FOREMAN'S CASE. Mrs. Foreman is a stormy petrel of socialism and anarchy; yet she insists that the state which she hates and would destroy has a duty to employ her as a teacher of young children, its future citizens. She was in constant trouble in Columbia County, growing out of her revolutionary propaganda and rebellious and seditious conduct, and lately she has been the center of controversy in Coos County. The Supreme Court of Oregon has just had occasion to pass upon the case of Mrs. Foreman. Dismissed as teacher. she had sued a Columbia County school district fbr back salary and had lost. The news dispatch to The Oregonian, reporting the Supreme Court's action, has this paragraph: In citing the- reasons for dismissing the teacher, the School Board alleged that she taught her pupils "principles of anarchy and disloyalty to their Government: among other things, that the Government under which they live 'is rotten to the core' and that there is no God and that Jesus Christ is not the Son of God." The Supreme Court was convinced that the. allegations were correct. Doubtless the court would not insist that Mrs. Foreman, or any teacher, should have an orthodox view of Christianity. It could have no con cern with the religious views of Mrs. Foreman, whether Christian, or atheist, or infidel; but it could voice its stern reprobation of any public in structor who should seek to inculcate shocking ideas of religion in her schol ars. They have no place there. The patriotic and intelligent citizens of Columbia County were justly in dignant when they learned that the public school was being made, by a trouble-making and disloyal teacher, forum for treason and revolution. They objected vigorously, as they should have done. With some citizens the reasonable duty of loyalty to the state and fidelity to the flag rests lightly. But they are few in number, fortu nately for the republic. When the schools become indifferent to the wel fare of the Nation, and cease to regard service to the state as a high and honorable obligation, the American people will be going down hill. states were supreme or had tire chief lithnrttv In invci-n rrt n t a 1 m , t T ftr Art. ancient ana forgotten days or xne tn bott. collectively or Individually. tion found it locked, and they were ula nomesieaa. Air. uicoti win appear i this doctrine soon developing under compelled to state their case in full as a regular actor without a song in the tutelage or Jerrerson. rounder or view of the public in the public office, his entire system. 'Honest John the party, into its logical conclusion. , - , . i JIJ A'TJuUmi I. va. ' - ,- nIAa V1-! LUC UUCLriDQ JI DUilUlCailQn, I. C, vviien legislators opposed iiiui. w I . . " . . . : I that each state had the rlht to set not resort to oriDery, nuiiaozing nuuiauu ia . siua ui cuonueuM .mi-, uhuh aside or nullify any act of Congress or intrique; he appealed to their constiru- I assured me that the name part, which I of any branch of the Government which ents. and he almost always won, lor I fits him like the newest thing ln eel- I it held to be unconstitutional. th rMsnnn h nv kindled a back-I skin fnits. la a French vnuth of nualt- I This doctrine led to the attempted fire which brought them into line or ties sure to endear him to the matinee 8ce8sJn,of So,u,?"ollyl. J83?.""1 girl and audience, of more maturity, states, w hTch havi alw.'bn caused their defeat- nomination for office. He was nomi nated for Mayor of New York without being asked, and he declined. His two nominations for Governor were un encourage the movement for his nomi nation for President is fresh in every memory. Owing no man anything for his nomination, he is free from obli- pnt (on in pnTinuH nnv mnn's nArfinnnl wishes or interests, either in the con- young defender of the drama leaped other states. It is very sad. The" prisoners at Sa in Placing responsibility for this jem are discoritented" ! If there is critical situation and still more critical anything that touches the heart of a prospect in the country's greatest city, sniveling UpUfter it is the discontent wn u.ui in. ucyuuu of men who are deservedly incar u"'un leauc'"- J-'la "! 1 cerated in a place where the last from the rejection of arbitration by tti needed to promote reformation first one party, then the other, and warning to others are content- irom tne aesire to ngnt out tne ais- ment and fatted ease. p, y riz, irrespective . oj. puoi.c those happy carefree convicts rights. This new-born contempt for m New Tork, How they do iove tho the process of reason and justice is llfe, Qn September 21 Superintendent traceable directly to the; White House James M Carter, ot the prisoll depart- ana tne apitoi at wanington. xriere ment of that state issued a 8tatement lu, ,,,mui,. &"J'1-' ' . r-ca.ll in g attention to thirty-five escapes its first severe blow from the highest 17 nrn, i tnj. -v-v authorities of the Nation. It was re- last March twenty-two of whom are jected by the men who had petitioned stm at la Then fonows a warning 0r,.tv0?aSa.?f V10 ew.landf that unless conditions change many of and by the President who signed that the llberties enjoyed by. the prisoners law 111 ipii. xuo ueicufla uutua ujr titj President is that the eight-hour ques. tion is not arbitrable, but that law approved by himself provides for arbi tration not only of wages and condi tions of employment but of hours of since inauguration of the Mutual Wei fare League and the honor system will be materially curtailed. Says the su. perintendent: It has been my desire to see th perlments tested before submitting; fi ds labor. By not standing firm for the 1 clslon, but I have now come to a definite principle of arbitration to which the conclusion that either the new ideas are brotherhoods were committed and by calling upon Congress to surrender un der threat of a strike to the demands of the party which rejected it, the I President gave the cue for the present not workable or that lax methods are em ployed In their development. I am enclos ing a list showing the number of escapes which have taken place since March. 11416, and wish to oall your attention to this fact. Hereafter, nnless you can present to the crisis in New York and for other simi- I department sufficient proof that ample pre lar crises in other communities. cautions were used in the instance of es- , , I capes and can prove that it was beyond naa Xkir. wuson stood Iirm lor ar-I your capacity to prevent them, I will be bitration, as he COUld consistently have I forced to take decisive action and issue done, it is scarcely credible that the trtn8ent OT?e V1?? 1ture ,nduot and KfAtrleirlAnB WA1-,1 J U AT I O w w " vuici vwuiu 4ia.vo put, uiieiu- i pervmon. selves more cieariy in tne wrong- by persisting in their rejection of it and by striking to enforce demands, which they were not willing to submit to such a Judicial test, A triumph for that principle in the railroad dispute Would have given it such strength that the Public Service Commission of New york would have had greatly improved ' chances of securing its adoption in the traction controversy. The great moral influence of the President would have been behind it, and its accept ance by all the railroads and their train service employes would have formed a precedent not likely to be ignored. Finding that principle con demned by the brotherhoods and thereupon cast aside by the President and Congress: finding the paramount vinterest of the public in a just and peaceful adjustments of all railroad controversies set at naught; finding the sanction of the National Govern ment given to settlements by force through its surrender to threats, the traction companies and their striking employes turned from this discredited principle to a test of endurance as a means of settlement, rendering fruit less the Public Service Commission's mediation. Should Governor Whitman call an extra session of the Legislature to deal with the crisis, his efforts to secure adoption of arbitration or of ' strike prohibition pending inquiry would be seriously obstructed by .the adverse precedent which was set at Washington Thirty-five escapes in six . months among convicts who work in the open sunshine! One of them a fellow who had clubbed to death an old soldier for the paltry J100 he carried. What is the answer? Rigid but humane dis cipllne in prisons or reward for crime reward that consists of state support with greater pleasures and more "con tent" ? min, in Vii official from his trench and said. 'Well. acts after his election. Because he is Mamzeue. you see it s line mis. pi appreciation oi tne prP" thus free, he speaks frankly right tniuncey Has :ust celeBrated bit istn " Tears been called a world from the heart and he shatters the birthday and his lovely tenor voice is 'r Its Uhe DemocraUc paTty's? traditions which, in the opinion of changing to baritone. Nobody likes position in this matter has become so politicians, should hedge about a can- baritone comedians, so we cut out the set by habit and tradition that it does didate. He is the confusion of poll- I song stuff." And then the two hurried I not seem possible for it to change, and ticians, both Republican and Demo- I along to the theater. I suppose It' cratic the former because ho will I all right, but somehow I am not fully make no deals and take no advice I certain that George M. wasn't putting which conflicts with his sense of duty, I something over, too." the latter because his speeches demon strate to every mind the falsity of their harges that he is a standpatter, a tool of the bosses or a friend of the interests. The law of supply and demand may Reasonably be blamed for most of the Increase in the price of meat. Our exports of all kinds of meat in 1914 were 455,000,000 pounds and for the fiscal year 1916 they were 1,399,000,- 000 pounds, or three times as much Of beef alone we exported 83,000,000 pounds in 1914 and 320,000,000 pounds in 1916, or nearly ten times as much. At the same time, our supply of cattle is decreasing. It was estimated in 1907 that there were 52,566,000 head of beef stock in the country, while in 1914 the number had fallen to 37, i067.000, and doubtless has decreased still further since then. This is j decrease of nearly 30 per cent during a period in which the population of the United States increased by 10 per cent or so. The obvious lesson would seem to be to raise more cattle, but : this is a practical and not an academic problem, In which the high price oh HARD WINTERS AM) HTEASANTS. Indian George, the Hood River Sage, predicts another hard Winter for 191 6- 17. Indian George has survived a great many Winters, hard and soft, and he knows all the lore of the beasts and birds, who are supposed to have knowledge of Nature's innermost me teorological secrets. It is said that the Indian prophet last year foretold deep snows and protracted cold weather. He was right. Now the moss is rich on the trees and there are billions of acorns, and the bears are very fat, and clearly the approaching six months are going to be quite trying. It is possible, of course, that the Hood River wise man is mistaken. But we will back him against any other weather sharp anywhere. He knows as well what is coming as any other human being. Possibly it is the prospect of an other dreary and killing Winter that has made the pheasants so scarce just now. Or possibly they are merely fearful of the dreadful dawn of Octo ber 1, when the open season for pheas ants begins, and they have migrated. On that terrible day ten thousand Ore gon hunters take the field, and the magnificent Oregon game bird has but the meagerest chance for his life. A well-known sportsman wrote letter to The Oregonian yesterday, calling attention to the great depletion in the pheasant supply and ascribing it to the hardships of last Winter. Doubt less he is right. It may be also that too many female birds were slain last October quite by accident, of course, for they are protected by law. Clearly, legislation is needed to pro tect and preserve the Mongolian pheasant. He is a prized member of Oregon's great game family and his loss would be irreparable. DENMARK WttLTAO TO SELI News from Copenhagen that the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States is in a fair way to be ratified without recourse to a plebis cite or to a general election, and that the people have grown tired of the question, indicates that early misun derstandings have been cleared up. It now seems that trouble and delay have been caused not so much by funda mental opposition to the sale of the islands in Itself as by bad feeling en gendered by the manner in which the subject was approached at the outset. Copenhagen is under the impression that our Department of State insisted upon "absolute secrecy" in the early negotiations. This was interpreted literally by the representatives of the Danish government, who went so far as to deny formally that any negotia tions for the sale of the islands were in progress. This was followed a few days later by the official announce ment that the treaty had been framed. These contradictory statements were seized upon by the opposition as the basis for attacks on the leaders of the "government party. Charges of un truthfulness to use the euphemistic word for it were freely and hotly made, and when words of this nature are bandied about it is inevitable that ill-feeling should be- engendered. It was only to have been expected that the merits of the sale should be lost to sight in the ensuing debates, which turned rather on morals and other highly personal topics. The "outs," in the nature of things. took advantage of the opportunity to start a campaign for new elections. The government now appears to have been confident of the outcome of an election, so far as the sale was directly concerned, but to have feared the pos sible outcome of an exciting campaign at this time. Denmark is too close to the European battlefield to look with equanimity upon any event that would be likely to involve discussion of topics Nor has Mr. Hughes ever sought a It am quite certain that tho newest main or chief supporter of the Demo Cohan & Harris star wouldn't deceive I cratio party, as they are today. What a trusting young nature like mine, but I ever their professions, there' is little O'Brian scarcely sounds like French evidence mat tneir position nas oeen I JUI J I. T 111 souErht and ril nnrsistent refusal to i , . . ... . " . I structive and suspicious of increases or sougnt, ana nis persistent; retusai to thJ old home . T eimpered. to see you in irsrer exercise of National authority oncr.iiT-ne-n tn movement for his nomi- I . ... . I larger exercise ot jxauonsi umoni, changed, but they are naturally ob- a role that never allows you to gush I however necessary such may be to the forth into song.' Mr. Olcott made no reply, but bent a look of stern re proach upon Mr. Cohan. That doughty carrying out of National projects or the welfare of the people in general. This accounts largely, if not entirely, for their failure to observe or maintain a national viewpoint in matters of for eign relations and their seeming lack In Other Days. Twenty-Five Years Asro. From The Oregonian September 8, 1830. St. Louis The Plant Milling Com pany was burned last night and the loss will be probably half a million dollars. President Diaz in his address to the Congress of Mexico said the credit of the country was keeping up a good reputation abroad and that banks, which have been established through out Mexico, are working well. Lee Moorehousc. of Pendleton, ex- TJnlted States Indian agent on the Umatilla reservation, is at the St. Charles accompanied by James B. Eddy, who was cashier and secretary under his administration. "Hoodman Blind." one of the best English melodramas, played to stand ing room only at the Cordray last night. T. F. Osborn has written a letter to The Oregonian from Spokane complain ing that the depot facilities in Port land are the worst in any city in the Northwest. Nat Goodwin will appear in Port land tonight in the comedy "A Gold Mine." William Wadhams has resigned as superintendent ot the Calvary Presby terian Sunday school. Russia is supposed to be advancing the money for the building of the three vessels to start the Montenegro navy. Frank Wolfs grocery store on the East Side was destroyed by fire last night. P. A. Marquam has issued invitations to residents of Portland to inspect the new fireproof modern Marquam building. Going barefooted is among the playIns ln ..Tho pride of Race." he an- Ilalf a Century Aeo. From The Oregonian September 28. 1868. hence with the newer and more Impor- I P. T. Barnum playing the role of a tant questions coming up, involving I temperance lecturer recently in BridsTa- such large or world-wide affairs, thai port, pledged himself "near again to only proper policy or procedure, other I give one farthing to any church in things satisfactory, would be to place I Bridgeport which refuses to open its that party in control which was in I doors on weekdays to well conducted touch with or whose training and opin- I temperance gatherings.' ion or views rendered it willing to ana capable of handling them. I The Kootenai mines are said to be But the same tendency is seen in the I almost wholly abandoned to the aarirr,- wnicn wiu proDaoiy De i Democratic party ln domestic aitairs i Chinese. ehicle. Last season when he was I also. It Is or has been so suspicious or Robert Hilliard is looked, upon as a 1916 vaudeville season possibility.' He is considering a new vaudeville play let. his national authority and is accustomed thousand, more or less preventives of nounced ihat at the termination of th "'" infant naralvsis that have been sug- of constitutional or governmental pow- run vl taai. piay no would retire irom the stage, but it is known that after a few months' vacation the lure of the footlights is making Itself felt with him. Nothing but love of the stage infant paralysis that have been sug gested since the recent outbreak. The author of this plan boasts of especially vigorous health, which he- attributes to the fact that he went without shoes or stockings a good part of each year era that it seems incapitated for taklug hold of or execution of many policies of a National, local or other nature necessary for the benefit of the people or the proper growth of the Nation. Among these and one of the most im- The Astoria Marine Gazette has been discontinued, and the office and plant goes to Oregon City. The Gazette had an existence of a little more than two years. The teachers of Douglas County have organized and chosen Rev. T. P. Royal president; Clark Smith, secretary, and in his youth, although, he is careful could JnJUCB b1. as he is a wealthy portant of them is that of the tariff or G. B. Kuykendall. corresponding secre to say, his parents could have afforded "" money, xxia who was its regulation so as to promote tne tary, to let him wear Khoes. He thinks that the widow of a wealthy brewer. growtn or manufactures ana industry. . , ... . il l wiLucaa ils ittnum in cm i Trie most stvllsri rteartrtresa evr ls- uriniriiiir tilt snms ni u a lueL ill I i . . . , . . . . - , contact with Mother Earth" is a pech- Billy Sunday is so well known here- ministration. Such -position, doctrine or "he Sadows hit. a shipment of which ""-j ciutran wici.vijjr, o.uu t-Aio-i. i iiuwuia mo mci mat me vauaeviman I policy nas Deen connectea to a iarse i arrived on the Orizaba for Meussdorf wnetner mere are Deneiiciai earxn cur-i cailea "Billy Sunday Gone Wrong" is I extent witn tne geograpnieai ana o- fer'. rents or not tne experience Hardens l coming to town may be of interest. The I c,al condition or me oouin. uio wm the youth and makes him that much -gone-wrong" man Is Walter Brower. ,do.mlLat!n.EJ Ilc.1" f !?I.P.arH .1" more able to withstand the at- the 3olly 3e8ter Who is scheduled to slavery or negro question, which seems the Dispatches from Salt Lake say that Julia Dean Hayne has secured a di vorce. lacas or piague. .lie mentions tne su- appear in the first Omheum show at to he still -unsettled entirely, as well perior neaitn or tne cnnaren or tnose the Heilig next Sunday afternoon. It as other views or memories connected in poor or moderate circumstances, as I - tv.f -Rr,- .v.. I with the war and other controversies compared with those of the rich, as sta. th t . . aam of the past which still tend to hold the Bltn tho "Western Hotel proving his contention, but this does .,. -, - 1 said section apart as a political factor . Mr. Hendee has removed his studio to the corner of First and Morrison, oppo- -I ,-. -H, 4. 4-iAn V1i I naa wa uiv v UUUVJ I Uf DrOtLUCr 1 ULlUUiLl U LUCS LIUIIO. healthful as a rule, and also since. slightest pretext-heard trary. including its forbears or prede even if thfv worn tlipv havn other I b vicicai. ueu.ru i . tt-.i . 7 . . ..- - ------ Rillv Sundnv and ..non. Mlti. V" naDits tnan going nareiootea mat i ... J 7 I ties, holding to or founded upon the -L ua. wn" snouia come out Xatlonal theorv or- view of the Consti- in all his monologist glory but Walter tutlon. has been hampered by no such LINCOLN XtVER WAS DEMOCRAT An example of the misunderstanding underlying the pleas advanced by the champions of the Adamson eight-hour wage law was given by United States Those Who Follow Hla Example Con sistently Will Vote Republican. PORTLAND, Sept. 26. (To the Edi tor.) It is Interesting and amusing to Brower. Then this some one wrote a I narrow views or impediments and with I see and read the many articles By so- postal card to Brower with thin men- I tne passage of time and development of called "Lincoln Republicans," pub- -M0-M-. i ucw touuiuuiia, i.ttL.uimi a.uu vi i 1 1 -rieri ln the leadinir .Democratic orsran. "Dear Brower Why don't vou use .V""' JJ-CC," .1" T" In which the writers say: "I am a Lin- Attorney Reames in his speech to the 'ur llucnt " a puduo speaxerT btage and generally competent and states- I Democratic Women s League. He said: The man who drives tho train, who holds the lives of his paengers in his handR, Is entitled to the same consideration as a trained worker, as the doctor and lawyer. W h v shouldn't, he, hav ,lsht hours for his day? I day gone wrong." The "man who holds th lives of "If 1 coul duplicate Billy Sunday's his passengers ln his hands" already f inanc'al success," Brower is quoted as has the eight-hour day and has had it having said in Seattle. "I would be for some years. The only part which I giaa to discontinue monologlng for ex men operating passenger trains have I norting. ln the present controversy is to help folks are forgotten bv eveninc. Tell I manlike manner, as befits the-jirowth I "on. people about God. With your grip on'l and welfare of the country and. taking I I have been somewhat of a student audiences you could servo humankind." 8uch viewpoint, has been able to dis- and know something of tho political Ever since tho receipt of that postal iir ni".VfVNHo"honVf r7.n'. history of Abraham Lincoln, ana it Brower has been dubbed "Billy Sun- teresta and sections as a whole iu both teaches me that with all the ridicule. foreign and domestic af fairs. venom and criticism neapea upon nun Hence, its position on the tariff, tho by the Democratic party, nis worst war and secession questions and lately enemy never charged Lincoln with sup on the Cuban. Philippine. Mexican and porting or voting for a Democrat for other matters too numerous to mention president or any other office, of both a local and general nature at Lincoln was the real founder of tho home and abroad. Its motto under the rt-nubliean nartv. anil during his whole present candidate. "America first and ..mh-.i -areT- was a firm believer in those in the freight service to get not Helen Raftery daughter of John H fmer,c E",cJl , ""' nd an earnest advocate or a protective the eight-hour day but the eight-hour xJnlly. thTnewsp'aper m'anl' andhe M deStiny" REPUBLICAN. wotrasLinoinrwad'ld basis Of calculating wages. self New Tork newsnaner wom.n h- ? - JTi u. would be a pretense for the been stung by tho theatrical bee and I hrxgal POET HELD UNPRACTICAL' I unanimous. W. J. McCombs, ex-chairman of the I recently made her debut In vaudviiiM I I It k a sham .and Democratic National Committee, was with a young man bv the name of Spiritual Measure. However. Admitted writers of such articles to claim or as- nominated for Senator by a large ma- Davenport. Raftery and Davenport are Bo of Great Value. f" th,eyT,ar h" " 't't'i , the nrivW jority in New York Senator Martine appearlng In a singing skit which won " PORTLAND. Sept. 27.-(To the Kd- lorofnyPvoter to vote t or WUson. . . , "v 1 . 1 mo ravor ot xne DOOKing managers I '"r.i i isui i DUt it Is fraud and deceit to claim o majority in New Jersey. Both of these and was promptly given a route inu ii wer-o luruivny very ciuoo tt iu President, but have now Incurred his disfavor. Is there any significance in Edward People's "Tho Littlest Rebel.' the fact or in the further fact that which was played with such success the defeated candidate in New Jersey in vaudeville a few years ago by was John W. Wescott. who placed Dustin and William Farnum that it night and it was one of tho most I v.. .,T.i.,.in T?.r.n hllcan" and aa such unique experiences of a lifetime. He voto for Wilton certainly gave us a spiritual message That was not Lincoln's way. In all of great value. of hiB political contests with the Demo Looking at Tagore. however, from crRti0 party he stood for tho principles tho trained viewpoint of one who has of the Republican party, fought out ln bluuicu cui.ui.uii jiuicBoiuuaii, I the open and hit straignt l rum i .o eruro niaava uig saiuo cuur as au many (shoulder Mr. Wilson in nomination both at was eiaDoratea into a three-act play cloistered poets do. His voice Is too The attempt of our Dcmocratlo Baltimore and St. Louis? Certainly I and won additional honors, is again to I highly pitched, monotonous and lacks f.nj. tn eomnara Wilson with Lin- Democrats do not regard Mr. Wilson's I be presented in vaudeville. When color. I coin 9 for political effect, and la not ODDOsition as an oblectlon nor His fa- I oricrinallv dona ln vaudeville "Th " wa- umotunaio umi no save mca i rta-.. on truth, or oven nction. uo- vor as a recommendation for a Sen- Littlest Rebel" introduced Mary Miles fnJ.lmpl?sloj1 ,efc,,c1,en' .rul 'n coin-was a Republican and a firm be atorial candidate, rather the other way. THE POLrrlCLVN-S' I1E.SPA1R. Mr. Hughes" manner of conducting his campaign has put to confusion all the old hands at politics, just as his strength among the delegates to the Republican convention confounded the bosses who tried to prevent his nomi nation. They would have regarded as political suicide his denunciation of the Adamson eight-hour wage law, and would have counseled a candidate to skate gingerly around the edges of that entire subject lest he alienate what they call the labor vote. Mr. Hughes refused to play the game as they play it; - in fact, he does not regard politics as a game. Therein consists the radical difference between him and the old-style politician. The latter shapes his course by expediency, and professes any principle which he thinks will win votes. By the same rule, having got the votes and won, he renounces principles which seem in expedient to him when in office, for there is often a radical difference be tween the expediency of the candidate and the expediency of the elect- Mr. Hughes regards his candidacy as the advocacy of a cause and he places duty- and principle in place of expediency. He cares for success in his campaign only as the means of enabling him to do his duty by ad vancing his principles. If he were to win the Presidency by preferring ex pediency to principle,- he would con sider that he had in reality lost his fight. But events have proved that in ad hering strictly to principle, in telling the truth, with confidence that the peo ple desired it and would ardently em brace it, Mr. Hughes has followed the highest expediency. By tearing away all the shallow pretence with which it has been clothed, by exposing the real motives of its enactment and by show ing the danger to our form of govern ment and our liberties which arises from extortion of legislation by force, he has strengthened himself beyond measure in the esteem of the people. His boldness has won many admirers Appearances are MInter. starting that clever youngster knoS xmp,". Is a mass of different races and con- .,.H tnr- nd represents that party. When it was produced at the Baker I flicting religious. Britain has donT,, between the Republican Part of Secretary Redfield's advice I on two different occasions Mayo Methotl what no other nation could do in India. I nl,rtT founded by Lincoln, and the to the students of Boston University played the little girl role. Therefore, remove British rule in India pemocratlo party, now represented oy was: Get Tacts and know your job. He did not cite the case of the East land at Chicago in illustration. I and the result would be chaos. Tagoro is also unpractical about The vaudeville debut is expected of things ln this world, where authorit King Constantine . may yet win a Anna Nillsorx the moving-picture star who was the luminary of tho Fatbe serial, "wbo'o Guilty?" Jerome N. and live. organized law are necessary to FLORA M'INTOSH. race wim v enizeios in enlisting ureece Wilson has written a sketch, "Decency.1 un iii iz. oiuu j x iiiu auico, uuvuiu jiu lose the race, he would risk loss of his crown also. which Miss Nlllson has accepted. She will be supported by Guy Coombs and Vacant Land In Curry County. BUXTON. Or.. Sept. 23. (To tho Ed itor.) Please teli me where, I can se cure information about vacant land ln before appeared on the "speaking I stage." having graduated from the The long-distance forecasts of In dian George would indicate to ns the for a hard Winter and remembering the oTlBrlctiir school. Mr. Wilson, who its & itjw 1 ui (i uowAptiyer man, nas also written "Shrapnel," which is to be seen Herbert Standing. Jr. Miss Nlllson is Curry County, Oregon, or other lnfor- one of the new school, as she has never I mation, maps, etc, of same. poor. SUBSCRIBER. For Information as to vacant Federal lands In Curry County, write to the Register and Receiver of tho United Nobody should be deceived. A Wil son Democrat will not vote for Hughes, and a Lincoln Republican will not voto for Wilson. CHARLES A. JOHNS. HEAVY HUGHES BETTING AT 2 TO 1 Bat Wilson Men Are Holding Oft for Better Odds. (New Tork World (Dem.) Sept. 22.) With tho primary elections ln this state out of tho way. Wall street yes terday got down to the business of betting on the coming National ana state elections. If present indications Carrying coal to Newcastle is not Irne Timmlns in tho principal states Land Office, at Roseburg. Or. count for anything, this year will wit carrying coai to .Newcastle is not For information about state landa L... h. htmat betting campaigii eve a circumstance to importing wheat to I role- the United States, and only the year after we had pur biggest bumper crop, I Eva Tanguay is positively to visit us too. I this season in a vaudeville road show. write to the Stats Land Board, Salem, Or. Grand Arm y Veteran for Hushes. PORTLAND. Sent. 28. (Tn th V.Al- J.O onset some oi me nign cost oi RneoVino- of Vv it 4. Ir,t..lnr in tor. I enclose herewith J5. donated iuei. B.v liib buck, iii ret. cuu. iiatC. know that her late husband. Johnny Ford, has formed another vaudeville attachment, professionally speaking. This is his fourth since Eva left him. This newest one is Isabelle Jason, once the partner of George White. (This is not Oregon's Adjutant-General, but a famous vaudevllllan of the same name). .- tiii-st bettins: campaign ever ir, thA financial district, where ln past Presidential years i.uuu.uuu aim more have been at stake on tho out come of the election. According to Lawaia ucvuouo, wu handles most of the big commissions on tho curb, there was a perfect flood of two. There will be as much serv iceable heat and less waste of caloric In the matter of that Chicago po liceman, just dead, who weighed 431 pounds, details omit mention of his particular brand of breakfast food. to tho Hughes campaign fund. I am a . lno nr, vesterdav "Lincoln Republican" and have not for- of f hat .nf2ie.ra w trf in excess of J50.000. Wilson The weather is delightful, the ride just enough not to be tiresome and the entertainment is grand. Go to the State Fair. Indian George will make himself extremely unpopular if he persists ln predicting cold Winters for Oregon. Margaret Illlngton has a new play entitled "Our Little Wife." C. Aubrey Smith is her leading man. The play is a farce written by Avery Hopwood. Frederick Esmelton, who used to be of the Baker Players, has a role in Cyril Harcourt's new play "Tho In- Villa is planning a new raid, and truder." The play was tried out lately for a man who has been dead several I and with success, under the title of times, he is some ghost, I "Blackmail." Frederick Esmelton used to be a husband to Jule Power, a Port- The allies are making more tape-1 land girl. measure gains, and it's a long way to Berlin. I Eugene Walter has completed a new play called "The Knife"-and sold the Will the city ever let go of .those rights to, A. H. Woods, who will pro unfortunate municipal woodpiles? Iduce it this season. during the Civil War was composed entirely of Democrats. The appeal now being made to us "old fellows" of the G. A. R. by the "non-partisan' Journal of Portland and other newspapers of similar intellectual hon esty (?) may win from our ranks a few "sobbing sisters." but not many more than a corporal's guard. MEMBER OF THE G. A. R. Voting Machines Not I'sed In Oresron. FIRWOOD. Or.. Sept. 25. (To the Editor.) A question has arisen in certain civil government class in which I ani a pupil and would value any ad vice which you could give mo on the subject. The question is: "Are voting machines usevi anywhere in the state of Oregon?" JOSEPHINE DIXON". No. Real Reform's Sake. Exchange. Don't be a reformer because you are dlasrruntled. but be a reformer for real reform's sake. bettors were by no means sny. mc Quade reported that tho proprietor of a big uptown notei was tcuj w i""1-'' nn fton on Wilson at odds of 1 to 2 and that he expected to execute this com mission today. ..... Another curb broker bet I2B00 on Wilson against $3000 and L. J. Stokes, another curb broker, announced that If the odds against Wilson snoum length en to as much as 2 to 1 ho was author ized to bot for one uptown interest $100,000 at that price. Stokes doubted that the odds against the President would go to any such figure. On the Cotton Exchange $5000 was bet on Hughes against $2500. Generally speaking. Wilson's backers were in clined to hold oft ln the hope that Hughes followers ln their enthusiasm might offer better than S to 1. Although the final result in tho Cal-der-Bacon fight was still ln doubt, curb brokers were offering odds of 10 to 9 that the former would defeat McCombs for the United States Senatorshio. Backers of McCombs were insisting upon odds of 10 to 7. i