to TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 191G. rOBTLAXD. OKECON. Kntered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce second-class mail matter. Eubscribtion rates Invariably In advance. Dally, Sunday. lncluldfone year 'S? Dally, Sunday Included. Blx months liaily, Sunday Included, three months.. 2.2S Dally, Suuday included, one monU -73 Dally, without Sunday, one year J,! Dally, without Sunday, six montha 8.5 Daily, without Sunday, three months.. !-7o Dally, wirhout Sunday, one month.. .... . .60 Weekly one year J-2 ftunday, one year. 2.o0 bunday and Weekly 3.50 Tw rorrt. Dally, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 Dally. Sunday Included one month..... .75 How to Remit; Send postoftice money order, express order or personal check on Jour local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender risk. Give postoffice address in full, including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent; IS to 82 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 8 cents; f'O to 60 pages. 4 cents: 63 to 78 pages. 6 cents; 78 to S2 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern., Buitlnrtm Office Verree & Conk Jin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Con kiln, Steger building, Chicago. San Francisco representative, H. J. BldwelL. 742 Market street. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY. OCT; 4, 1916. HUGHES DA BO It DECISIONS. An attempt has been made to show by Mr. Hughes' position as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court on labor decisions that he is biased against the cause of labor. Examination of de cisions in which he participated or from which he dissented proves pre cisely the contrary. As a judge he was bound by oath to declare what the law is, not what lie thinks it should be, yet it may be conceded that his conclusions on disputed points of law reveal to a certain degree his mental bent. So far as his sentiments may have influenced his Judgment on questions of law, they are decidedly favorable to labor and to all that type of legislation which promotes social and industrial justice. Mr. Hughes in December, 1913, de livered the opinion on the appeal of Liltf DLUIKCfl Ou l- 11 ! II mUUUlUULUIlUK Company against Arthur Beauchamp, relating to the child-labor law of Illinois. Beauchamp was a boy un der 16, who sued for damages suf fered through injury, under a law prohibiting employment of children under 16 in certain hazardous occupa tions. He was given a verdict, which the Illinois Supreme Court affirmed, and the employer appealed to the United States Supreme Court on the ground that the law was contrary to the fourteenth amendment, providing that no state shall deprive any per sons of life, liberty or property with out due process Of law" 1101? "deny to any person the equal protection of the laws"; also that the boy falsely represented that he was over 16. In his opinion Justice Hughes said: It cannot be doubted that the state was entitled to prohibit the employment of per sona of tender years in dangerous occupa tions. , . . As It was competent for the state, in securing the safety of the young, to prohibit such employment altogether, it could select means appropriate to make its prohibition effective, and could - compel employers at their peril to ascertain whether those they employed were in fact under the age specified. The Imposition of absolute requirements of this sort is a familiar exercise of the protective power of government. . . . The classification It established was clearly within the legis lative power. California passed a law limiting the hours of labor for women in hotels to eight daily. F. A. Miller, a hotel proprietor, contested the validity of the law and, being defeated in the state courts, appealed to the United States Supreme Court. Justice Hughes delivered the opinion of the court, holding the law to be a reasonable restriction on freedom 6f contract in order to safeguard the public inter est. In support of his opinion . he quoted at length from the Supreme Court decision In the case of Muller vs. Oregon, wherein the Oregon law forbidding employment of women .in factories and laundries for more than ten hours a day was upheld.' .He quoted that opinion as saying in re gard to woman: She is properly placed In a class by her self, and legislation - designed for her pro tection may be sustained, even when like legislation la not necessary for men and could not be sustained. Even though all restrictions on political, personal and con tractual rights were taken away and she stood, as far as statutes are concerned, upon an absolutely equal plane with him. It would still be true that she is so constituted that she will rest upon and look to him for protection; that her physical structure and a proper discharge of her maternal functions having in view not merely her own health, but the wellbelng of the race -Justify legislation to protect her from the greed as well as the passion of man. The limitations which this statute places upon her contractual powers, upon her right to agree with her employer as to the time she shall labor, are not imposed solely for her benefit, but alao largely for the bene fit of all. Many words cannot make this plainer. Mr. Hughes applied the same prin ciple to the California law and sus tained the authority of the state "to recognize degrees of harm" and to "confine its restrictions to those classes of cases where the need is deemed to be clearest." The California law was later ex tended to women employed in public lodging - houses, . apartment - houses, hospitals and places of amusement and was contested by the trustees of a hospital. It was again upheld by the Supreme Court in an opinion by Justice Hughes, who gave similar rea sons to those quoted from the Oregon case for Justifying the restrictions of student nurses' work to eight hours a day. One of the most Important decisions rendered by the Supreme Court while Mr. Hughes was on the bench related to the right of employers to exact from employes a contract that they would not be members of a labor union. Kansas in 1903 passed a law declaring it unlawful for employers "to coerce, require, demand or influ ence" any person to enter into such an agreement. The law was sustained by the state courts, but was declared invalid by the United States Supreme Court in January, 1915. in the case of Coppage vs. State of Kansas, on the ground that it infringed upon the right of contract and did not come within the poliee power of the state. Justice Holmes and Justice Day gave dissenting opinions upholding the va lidity of the law, and Justice Hughes concurred in the opinion of Justice Day, in which he said: Nothing Is better settled by the decisions of this court than that the right of contract 1h not absolute and unyielding, but is subject to limitation end restraint In the Interests of the public health, safety and welfare . . . The Legislature is in the first in stance the Judge of what is necessary to the publio welfare, and a Judicial review ef its Judgment Is limited. There is nothing in the statute now under consideration which prevents an em ployer from discharging one In his service at his wllL The question now presented is: Many an employer, as a condition of present or future employment, requires an employe to agree that he will not exercise the privi lege of becoming a member of a labor union should he see fit to do so? ... The right to. Join labor unions is undisputed, and has been the subject of frequent opin ions. . . . The right to Join them as against coercive action to the contrary may be the legitimate subject of protection in the exercise of the police authority of the states. This statute . . . has for Its rein of a legal right, by preventing an employer from depriving the employe ot It as a oondition of obtaining employment. Justice Day proceeded to argue that the state had as much right to pro hibit employers to require that em ployes renounce their right to join labor unions as it has to prohibit a requirement that employes forego the right to-resort to the courts, paying: A man may not barter away his life or his freedom or his substantial rights. . . He cannot bind himself In advance by an agreement thus to forfeit his rights at all times and on all occasions. The two dissenting judges drew a parallel with the case of an employer who might pledge an employe not to enlist in the National Guard, or "to forego affiliation with a particular political party or the support ot a particular candidate for office." Their opinion of such a contract was thus frankly expressed: It is constantly' emphasized that the case presented is not one of coercion. But in view of the relative positions of employer and employed, who is to deny that the stipulation ' here Insisted upon and forbid den by the law Is essentially coercive I No form of words can strip it of its true char acter. Here are three cases involving the most important features of the labor programme restriction of female la bor and child labor and maintenance of labor's right to organize. On each one of these questions, Mr. Hughes' sympathies are shown by his inter pretation of the law to be with the cause of labor. He is as progressive on that subject as the most ardent champion of labor. lie is fully abreitst of the times. He has not rendered mere lip-service. He has served the cause of labor by his acts, both as Governor and as Judge. Those acta prove the sincerity of the pledges lie now gives that he would be guided by like sentiments as President. WAR STOPPER; WAR STARTER, It is doubtless with confidence born of the success of his wholly original conception of the way to stop war that Henry Ford now points out the way to start war. War is one .of the easiest problems that Henry tackles. Recipes for stop ping it or recipes for starting it come to him just like that. To stop one, first adopt a slogan, then send a ship load of preachers and schoolma'ams to the warring countries to shout it. To start a war fail to elect Woodrow Wilson. These are the famous Ford recipes. One of them, as everybody knows and as has been herein indicated, has al ready been tried. How the Ford peace expeditionusing "peace"- to define its purpose, not its delibera tions plucked the soldiers out of the trenches by Christmas will be recalled by even the first-grade pupils in the Government's Americanization school. Here were demonstrated hard-headed sense, sound thinking, keen logic and everything else that makes for polit ical guidance we don't think.- t in spired public confidence that Mr. Ford's brain is running on too lean a mixture. Now we have his recipe for starting a war. It ought to be Just as good as the one for stopping war. The only doubt that can be raised is trace able to the ingenuity of the Wilson mechanism. Anything that has as many reverse as it has forward speeds is likely to carry an auto maker off his feet. PERDICABIS ALIVE. An incident occurred in Theodore Roosevelt's first Administration which a subscriber asks The Oregonian again to relate: On the evening of May 18, 1904, Ion Perdicaris, a citizen of the United States, and his stepson, Cromwell Var ley, a British subject, were kidnaped from their home just outside Tangier, Morocco, by Raisuli, a noted bandit. ' For their return he demanded a ran som of $70,000, the surrender of all his followers who were in prison, the. removal of the Governor of Tangier and the withdrawal of all the Sultan's troops in Raisuli's district. An American fleet, under Admiral Chadwick, was. sent to Tangier to back up the efforts of the American Consul to secure the release of Perdicaris. The British government took similar action, but the bandit made fresh de mands and negotiations dragged until June 22, the Sultan making only in different efforts to satisfy this gov ernment. On June 22, Secretary of State Hay, under instructions from President Roosevelt, - cableS to the Sultan of Morocco: "Perdicaris alive or Raisuli dead." The captives were returned In safety to Tangier three days later. j One American citizen's life was then more precious than 500 now. Na tional honor was maintained, Ameri can lives and property were made safe abroad not by making war on an of fending bandit but by threat of re prisal against the country that har bored him. And still President Roose velt "kept us out of waf." NOTHING MUCH TIIE MATTER. The habit is growing we had al most said ingrowing -to ask "What's the matter with Oregon?" and then to supply all manner of lugubrious answers. Better service would be done to the state by telling what is not the matter with Oregon and by dwelling on that feature of the case. It is well enough for a state, as an individual, to practice occasional self examination in order to discover and correct faults. But that practice should not be permitted to degenerate into morbid self-introspection, which magnifies faults instead of curing them. ' We are informed by the Portland Association of Credit Men that Oregon is under-populated, is top heavy with cities, has only 8 per" cent of its area under cultivation and that our lumber industry, though more active, is not profitable. That diagnosis has been made before in varying terms; the present question is the treatment. We want more people on the land, but thy must have both a home and an outside market for their products, or they will not come. Manufactures will- make a home market, for their products, both as raw material and for consumption ' r by employes. To reach the outside markets we must have more cars, which the railroads and the Railroad Commission are striving to build, and more ships, which are now building at a fairly rapid pace, thirty-three being under contract on the Columbia and Willam ette rivers. The next thing Is to re tain some of these 'ships in our own service. That is a matter to be taken up with some of our moneyed men. Prove to them that there is money in it and they will bite. With half a dozen shipyards In operation, we have made a good start at establishing new Industries, but they are drawing others. First cornea authoritative announcement that a steel works, which will disburse $4000 ft week, in, 3vagest is to. b erected is Portland. The steel trade Is over flowing its present homes and is spreading to the Pacific Coast, and other industries will come in its train. We are getting the smokestacks and the ships, and they will bring the farmers to feed their employes as surely as the magnet attracts steel. The main- thing that is the matter with Oregon is that too many people are asking, "What's the matter with Oregon?" In nearly every other re spect Oregon Is all right. AUTUMN LEAVES. In October the smoke of many bon fires rises all over the land as the householder disposes of the Autumn leaves that have fallen on his lawn and garden. "Rake and burn't is the motto of this second clean-up time of year. It is quite natural that it should be so, for however beautiful the Au tumn leaf may be in its place on the tree. Just after the frost has nipped it and cold nights have begun to ripen the sap and turn the leaf to its varied and beautiful shades of red and yel low and golden brown, once it has fallen it becomes only rubbish. The leaf-strewn garden undoubtedly is a slovenly affair, not to be tolerated by the dweller who has suitable regard for good appearances. Tet Nature did not intend that these leaves should be removed from the ground where they fell. In the primitive forests she made her annual attempt to restore to the soil at least a portion of the elements of which It had been divested by the growth of trees. Leaves furnished not only hu mus, which contributed largely to physical texture and enhanced moisture-retaining properties, but they contained fertilizer needed for plant growth. A scientist who enjoys com piling statistics has estimated that in the country 10,000,000 pounds of fer tilizer are destroyed annually by the burning of leaves. This is 5000 tons, for which the growers of gardens Would pay more than $2,000,000 if they bought it in its commercial form. But the destruction is so widely scat tered that it falls on no one heavily; its loss is to the people as a whole. The garden rake is a highly neces sary implement, and in the city It should be used freely. There is no simple way of avoiding the waste thus indicated, but the gardener should re member that when he does his annual Fall cleaning he Is disturbing the bal ance and that this should be restored if be is to get results. At least as muchTfertillzer as is removed by burn ing the leaves should be applied, and a little more for good measure will do no harm. I.ETIINO GEORGE PAY IT. The trouble with Mr. U'Ren's letter, which he writes for the comfort and reassurance of the farmer and which The Oregonian publishes today, is that it does not tell the whole story con cerning the operations of the proposed single tax or Confiscate and Divvy measure. It is Mr. U'Ren's theory ' that the Improved farm will pay less taxes than it does now and that vacant land? speculator's land and val uable land in cities and towns will make up the deficit in tax revenues. But one must start with the premise that the amendment proposes to in crease tax revenues at least 50 per cent. That i3 to say, only two-thirds of the revenues from the land-rent tax will be available for Government operation; the other third is to be lent to persons of limited means. There is in the amendment no in telligible method of assessing the vast timber resources of Oregon which now are heavily taxed. The most reasonable construction is that they are to escape taxation. ' There is no certain method of tax ing the intangible values of railway property which now contribute large ly to the cost of government. They, too, under a reasonable construction are to escape. Can any sensible person imagine it possible that Improved farm lands, timber land and railroad property will pay materially smaller taxes, that tax revenues will be boosted 0 per cent in the bargain, and that vacant lands and town lots will assume these sev eral burdens? It is preposterous. They could not do it. They would not do it, either if retained by the title owners or confiscated by the state and leased to others. And there are other losses to be considered which must be made up somehow by imposition of rent tax on lands. In every city there is a fringe around the business district, one around the wholesale district, one around the factory district, one around the shipping , district, one around the railway terminal district, that have a high potential value a speculative value, if you please which is taxed year in and year out. But that potential or speculative value would not be taxed under the pro posed amendment. .. - Many lots on he West Side in Port land are vacnt or covered by old buildings that produce a return but nominal when the price at which the lots are held as suitable apartment-house sites or the value placed upon them by the Assessor is con sidered. They are not now covered by apartments, because apartment building only keeps pace with de mand. This property would be taxed under the proposed amendment on the basis of what it would lease for for five years. It would lease for about what the old buildings now occupying it pay In rent, not what an apartment house would nay as ground rent. There are dock sites, factory sites, wholesale-house sites, terminal prop erty in a similar condition. Their value - is strohgly potential, but that potential value is incident only to ownership. Their annual rental value on a five-years' lease would be less than the present taxes. Nor can Mr. U'Ren truthfully as sure the farmer that the lot In Port land which yields the owner $18,000 a year in ground rent would yield the state that amount if the conditions of his amendment wej-e applied. The ground" rent of the lot was fixed upon assumption that private titles and methods of acquiring land that are the outgrowth of centuries of expe rience and usage would remain undis turbed. Mr. U'Ren proposes to revo lutionize that basis for determining the actual value of lajid to the user. If the vacant property adjoining the lot which pays $18,000 ground rent is also to be taxed at $18,000 it must be on the assumption that a similar improvement erected thereon would yield as great profits as the improve ment which pays the $18,000. Tet any Assessor would know that the vacant lot would not lease for $18,000 unless the Improvement on the lot ad Joining did notmeet the demand for the kind of service it performed. It is common knowledge that ' business buildings adequately supply the pres ent demand. The, Assessor. If. the amendment should prevail, will not be permitted to assess vacant business lots on the basis of what adjacent improved busi ness lots are now paying the owners in ground rent. He must disregard all improvements, under the express Instruction of the amendment. He must estimate what the improved lot and the unimproved lot would pro duce in ground rent if all lots were used. "He would have to conceive districts fully built up with structures of practically uniform type capable only of supplying the needs of the community for offices, stores, banks, theaters, newspapers, factories and other business quarters. He would then have to estimate what these vtzuallzed buildings could afford t pay in ground rent and fix the tax accordingly. What the outcome would be we shall not attempt to say, but it ought to be apparent to the farmer that there are no $18,000 plums to be shaken from fifty-foot city lots. State and local governments must be main tained, one-third of the tax revenues must be set aside to form a loan fund for the benefit of persons who have less than $2250 worth of property. With speculative values untaxed, and with timber and railroads relieved, and total tax revenues increased, the farmer can determine for himself, without use of pen or pencil, what chance he would have to escape the tax collector. Dr. Katharine B. Davis, who is one of the leading spirits on the women's special train now touring the country in advoeacy of the candidacy of Mr. Hughes, is famous for the reforms she set In motion while Commissioner of Correction of New York. The peni tentiary on Blackwell'B Island was chosen as the basis of her most recent experiment, because of the fact that it has a great variety of prisoners, in cluding many who are not hardened criminals. Her plan, which is being put into effect by her successor in of fice, was to establish a receiving sta tion at the island at which the cul prits should be assorted, the able bodied ones being sent to another in stitution, where work suited to their abilities would be found for them, and they would be taught useful accom plishments if they proved receptive. The younger ones are to be assigned to a state farm, where they can live a wholesome outdoor life and learn something while doing hard but healthful work. The idea of reform rather than punishment is to be fol lowed as far as possible. The strong religious feeling of the Russian people, extending to all classes, is curiously illustrated by an incident reported from the southern part of the country. The proprietor of a large bell factory had sent three sons to the front and made a vow that if they returned safely he would do nate every bell in the factory for the purpose of making cannon. Recently they reached hqme, one of them bear ing a decoration for heroism, and the father, in fulfillment of his vow, sent every bell he had on hand to the rail way station covering all the available railway ground and extending far onto the green beyond. The effect of this has been far-reaching, and monasteries and churches all over the land have taken to- giving their bells to the fatherland for a similar pur pose. One bell about to go" to the melting pot has a history that dates back to the time of Ivan the Terrible, in the sixteenth century, and others have almost equally romantic associa tions. To our other troubles must be added the growing cost of authorship. One struggling author complains to the New York Tribune that postage at letter rates is out of proportion to the returns received. He finds that it costs 20 cents, on the average, to mail a manuscript, which must be ac companied by an equal amount for its return. More frequently than not it comes back, and sometimes several efforts are required before a sale is made. If he gets $20 for the work he considers himself fortunate, and the postage amounts to 10 or 15 per cent of his remuneration. This, It is argtred, is far out of proportion to the postage tax on other mall-order merchandise, and he makes a plea for relief in the form of a postal regu lation classifying manuscripts as mer chandise, which would prove a boon to a large and not wealthy class. This is an opportunity for vote-getting that the Administration seems to have overlooked. The death of a Clackamas farmer from lockjaw caused by stepping on a rusty nail emphasizes the necessity of giving "first aid" treatment to what seem trivial cases. There are prep arations in every drugstore which should be kept in the family medicine closet and used when occasion arises. They will suffice until the doctor is visited. "It is better to be safe than sorry" applies to cuts and scratches as well as to dislocations and frac tures. The movement starting at Kansas City for an earlier Thanksgiving day must not be encouraged. Oregon had an experience once that resulted in two Thanksgiving days in the same year. Why fool with a time-honored custom? ' The Jitneur whose propensity for girls under age was brought to a stop the other day gets off easy with a year in the County Jail. He might have gone to the morgue. If it costs'a man $97.60 to put his arm around a girl in San Francisco, how much more would be the tax to bite the little brown freckle under the left ear? To the average man all Chinese look alike unless seen in a bunch, but this did not hinder local detectives in arresting one wanted in Boise for forgery. Seating a Japanese delegate in a labor convention in California may be the beginning of the solution of a vexing problem. Concerning the irruption in the lo cal Civil Service Board, Mr. Caldwell is silent and the Mayor is dumb. The school lunch at a nominal price is, of benefit in teaching children properly to eat- The man who keeps up his mem bership for seventy years, is a real odd "fellow. Bishop Hughes brought the dove of peace, trimmed its claws and turned it loose. More Democrats than get Into print will support Hughes. Time is short for paying that last halt jf, the tax, - - .. A PLATGBOC5D IS REAL NECESSITY Sooth Portland Needs It for Safety. Sanitation and Boslaess Reasons. PORTLAND, Oct- 3. (To the Editor.) The excellent article in The Ore gonian relative to Commissioner Ba ker's commendabla, effort to secure the much-needed playground for South Portland, is deserving of further eluci dation. No one, familiar with the conditions existing in the one really congested residence district of Portland, will gainsay the necessity of a playground for the children In this locality. All drivers of vehicles realize the neces sity of exercising special caution in driving through the streets of this dis trict, owing to the large number of children forced to play in the streets for want of a safer place. The large number of accidents, and in some cases deaths, resulting from this condition has aroused numerous and emphatic protests from societies, associations I and prominent men and women of this city who have the safety and welfare of our children at heart. The South Portland Improvement Club, with & membership of more than 2000, has worked unceasingly for a betterment ot these conditions. Others indorsing the playground project are the People's Institute, by Mrs. Helen Ladd Corbett. president: Mrs. Alva Lee Stephens, of the Parent-Teacher Asso ciation; Judge M. G. Munly. late presi dent of the School .Board; the Portland Kindergarten Association, the Council of Jewish Women, the Laurelhurst Club, the Neighborhood House, the Master Plumbers' Association, the German-Speaking Societies of South Port land, the Fulton Park and Failing School Parent-Teacher associations and many doctors and other business and professional men of this city. Although the arguments along the "safety first" and sanitary lines In favor of the playground project are sufficient and unanswerable, there are other points worthy of eerloua consld eratlon which I would like to bring to the attention of The Oregonians read ers, namely, the aesthetic and business point of view. It is now generally conceded that one of the best invest ments ever made by this city was the money ($250,000) expended for the Terwilllger boulevard, the only crltl cism ever heard regarding it being that obstacles were permitted to remain at the very entrance to the boulevard which shut off all view of the entrance to this highway and give the impres sion that the head of Sixth street can not be the entrance' to it. Perhaps the low. squatty and, in a large meas ure, unsanitary and unsightly row of buildings of the foreign quarter, which fringe the east side of the entrance of the parkway, receive the bulk of adverse criticism as being offensive to aesthetic taste and marring and dis counting the otherwise beautiful BCenic road. The relatively small cost of the proj ect, as estimated by Commissioner Baker, would be amply justified by the results, which would not only give us the much-needed playground. but would also remove the obstacles and objectionable features enumerated, be sides making it possible to utilise the now useless surplus ground in Marnuam Gulch, donated to the city by the O.-W. R. & N. Company as a part of the playground and parking scheme advo cated by Mr. Baker. Since this quarter of a million was expended for the bene fit of the whole city, these much needed Improvements ought to receive the undivided support of all that have the best interests of our city at heart. J. B. LABER. OREGON' TROOPS NOT MILKSOPS They Remember Fallen Men ot Cnrrl aaU Parrel, Vera Cms. PORTLAND, Oct. 2. (To the Edi tor.) Permit me as a Spanish-American War veteran, and lately with the Third Oregon at the Mexican border, to reply to the editorial in the Port land Journal, entitled. "There and Here." The editorial for a welcome home smacks more of a talk to babes at their mothers' breasts, of milksops and mollycoddles than of men who were willing to play the game and take the chances because' they believed the hon or of their country was at stake. Yes, we are back ssfe. But how about the men who followed Captain Boyd and Lieutenant Adair and fell with them at Carrlzal. attacked on the arders from the Carransa government? How about the men who fell at ParralT And how about the brave lads who fell in the streets of Vera Crux? And fell why? The answer can only be that they have died in vain. They have been an absolute loss and all to no purpose. Why? Because of their Government's useless demands and its lack of cour age to enforce them. If Justice de manded our intervention in that grief stricken country it certainly demanded our sticking until we obtained what we demanded, especially when the lives of our own people were in the balance. No, as a regiment we are not for war simply for war's sake, but as in telligent human beings and wide-awake Americans we stand for principle. We believe in duty and In honor as against this weak and pusillanimous doctrine of "safety first." Yes, Canada, Australia and New Zea land are giving their thousands for the British Empire. They are not forced. An incident will illustrate the Spirit of those people. About a year ago I met a gentleman In a dining-car in this state. He was spending his vacation here, but told me he intended enlisting on his return to British Co lumbia, I said to him. "I admire your grit." "Someone has got to do it." was his response. The mothers, the wives, the daughters, the sisters believe It. They believe that Anglo-Saxon citi zenship is superior to any In the world. They believe that democracy and self government are at stake. They be lieve that small governments have equal rights with the great nations. They are fighting for a principle, and have counted the cost. As Loyd-George says. "They are playing the game and doing it without a whimper." And what Is more, after they get through you will find their work has not been for naught, and the tears of those mothers, wives and sisters will not have Been In vain, as have those who left their dead at Vera Cruz. Par- Lral and CarrizaL to say nothing of tnose who were murdered. Yes. you kept the country out of war, but oh, the cost! That song might go for campaign material with babes, milksops, and mollycoddles and those who live in luxurious idleness, but not with men with red corpuscles in their blood. The Third Oregon Regiment con sidered the cost when it left here in June, but because the lgnominous re tirement of our Government at every turn finds us at home whole in Septem ber is nothing for pride, or to our credit. A. HOWITZER. New Proces Inable. Kansts City Times. A new process for extracting ferro alloys of manganese and silica from slag, hitherto - considered practically worthless, has been discovered by two students of, the Carnegie Institute .of Technology. This discovery means a great saving to steel manufacturers as the prices of these two materials have more than trebled since the beginning of the war. , Surveyors TTae Addlna- Machines. Exchange. The United States coast geodetic sur vey announces that surveying parties are now using adding machines almost universally in making out reports and recording data. That they are superior to the old methods is shown by the statements recently made that enough time and money is saved in one sea son to more than pay. for the ma chines, - '-. tlf lX. MAKE A GUESS. There la no calamity which a great nation ran Invite whlrb. ei ualn that whirn follows supina submiMlon to wrong- and injustice, and the conse quent loe of National eelf-repert and honor, beneath wbU-h are shielded nnd eWended a people's safety sad The foregoing are the words of a distinguished American. Who was he? Under what circum stances were they uttered? What was the result of their utter ance? How much do you know about American history? Can you answer the foregoing questions? The Oregonian has invited sub-' mission of essays on this quota tion, but its authorship is plainly a puzzle. Let us now make it a guessing contest. Who said it? Whom does it sound like? It ought to be easy. FARMERS TROUBLES ARE SHIFTED Mr. U'Ren Says Slnsle Tax Law Pnts Burden On Others, PORTLAND. Oct. 8. (To the Editor.) From the illustration used by your correspondent. Melvln Fenwick. and his fear that the old couple who have worked all their lives improving a farm would lose It under the People's Land and Loan Law, it is quite clear that he has not read that law. He supposes a case of a tenant farmer raising 3000 bushels of wheat and pay ing 1000 bushels for rent of the farm on which the owner has made all the improvements. Ninety cents a bushel will be a good average price for that wheat. The buildings, clearings, fences and other improvements on such a farm in the Willamette Valley will require an investment of not less than $10,000; 6 per cent interest on this is $600; maintaining the buildings and im provements will cost $200 a year, and all of this $800 the owner will keep under the proposed law. because the Improvements in this case are his, and the $800 per year is for rent and upkeep of his improvement.. That leaves only $100 for land rent, which will be the greatest possible amount of his land rent tax under this full rental land value tax bill. This is less than he pays under the present system for taxes on his land and im provements, livestock and machinery. It is cfear that the old farmer who has worked all his life will have more net Income from the rent for his improve ments, after paying his taxes under this bill, than he has now, paying taxes on .everything. On the most highly Improved and cultivated farm the full land rental value tax will be exactly the same, acre for acre, that raw land, equal in fer tility and location, will rent for in the same vicinity. The second and third sentences of paragraph (f) of the law expressly provide that "land rent" shall not Include any charge for improve ments and shall not be Increased be cause of any additional improvements that miy be made on. in or under the land. For every cultivated farm there is in the same vicinity enough vacant and unimproved land to make one or more farms just as good for use as that in cultivation, but held out of use by speculators. Under this law the speculator must ray Just as much tax on the vacant land that he keej?s as the farmer pays for what he uses, and the farmer's buildings, clearings and other improve ments aa well a his livestock and machinery will all be free from tax. This law will reduce the farmer's tax and finally drive the speculator en tirely out of business. It will not take from any farmer the rental value of his land, because from 75 to 90 per cent of the rental value of his farm is for improvements, and not more than from 10 to 25 per cent of the total rent is for the land. Every farmer can prove this from his own experience and accounts. Where will the revenue come from? Chiefly from the very valuable land in the cities and towns. There are single lots in Portland from which the land lord is collecting $18,000 a year for the use of the bare ground, the tenants owning the buildings. The lot U 5 by 100 feet, and the $18,000 rent per annum for such a lot ia equal to the land rent value of ISO auch farms as Mr. Fenwick supposes for his example of the poor old people who have worket industriously all their lives, and whom he thinks the People's Land and Lout Law will rob of their savings. He never was more mistaken. W. S. U'REN. DISTINCT WARNING AGAINST SIN Christian Science Tcit Boole Horn Not Overlook Its- Consequence. PORTLAND. Oct. 3. (To the Editor.) In a sermon recently published in The Oregonian a clergyman or this city attempts to define the attitude of Christian Scientists toward sin. His presentation so far perverts the teach ings of Christian Science that I re spectfully request space for a needed correction. On page 407 of "Science and Health With Key to the Scriptures" Mrs. Eddy says: "All sin Is insanity In different degrees. Sin is spared from this classilication only because its method of madness is in consonance with com mon mortal belief." Now no one can logically deduce from this that Chris tian Science in any way leads men to let sin "sit lightly on our minds." The inevitable consequences of sin are dis tinctly and emphatically set forth in the Christian Science text book. Indeed. Christian Science is the greatest of all correctives of sin in that it demands of the sinner that he recognize and ac knowledge the sins of his own,mortai mind and depart from them. It makes no compromise with sin. Sin must be cast out as the first requirement of healing sickness, want and woe. for "the belief in sin is punished so long as the belief lasts." ("Science and Health." page 497). If Christian Science departs from the common- teachings regarding sin, it does so just to this degree: that it shows a man exactly how he may rid himself sclentiflcaly of the sin which causes his suffering; how the licen tious may be cleansed, the inebriate made temperate, the sinner purilied, the criminal turned into a good citizen. An army of regenerated intemperates who are today, as a result of the healing efficacy of Christian Science, leading clean, honest and contented lives, ac knowledging and glorifying God. will testify as to the erroneous nature of sin. For them Christian Science has. Indeed, "relieved the situation." Our brother prefers the convict's cell to .the insane asylum. Sin leads to either, or to both. Christian Science declares that the divine mind is uncon scious of sin, as did Habakkuk when he said: "Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity." It would not be "trifling with reality" to be healed of sin on the basis of its being unknown and thus unreal to divine mind, rather than to continue In it as a sad reality to the senses until one finds himself either in the convict's cell or at the asylum. F. ELMO ROBINSON. Committee on Publication. Like Many Others. Exchange. Edwin Booth, the actor, although an incessant smoker, could drink very lit tle, and was promptly affected by the smallest draft of liquor, a fact which once led a friend in a waggish mood to present him a cup in the bottom of which was a compass. "The gift came," said Booth later, in referring to the incident, "from some one who knew xae. . -, In Other Days. IlaK a Centnry A so. From The Oregonian of October 4. IS San Francisco. Oct. 3. Queen Emma, of Hawaii, visited several public schools of this city yesterday. Subsequently she visited the Mission Woolen Mills. She visited the fortifications in the) harbor on the steamer Shubrtck. Her Majesty was more than pleased with, what she saw and the attentions paid her. Washington, Oct- 3. S ant a Ana's re cent visit to Washington and his ef forts in favor of Mexican independence did not appear to meet with any sym pathy from the American Legation. Dr. Giltner. of this city, has received from Governor Woods the appointment of visiting physician at the Insane Asy lum. The $55,000 shipped yesterday on the steamer Oriflannue for San Francisco by Meesrs. Ladd & Tilton were silver bricks. 29 in number, from the Pof rnian mine. This is certainly substantial evi dence of the richness of that celebrated mine, of which so m ucl- has been said and written. Washington. Oct. 2. The household effects left at the Arlington mansion by General Lee were recently delivered to the parties authorized by General Lee to receive them. This was done under an order from the President. Twenty-Five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of Octooer 4. 1SJ1 Berlin. Oct. 3. Charles Murphy, a special agent of the United States Agri cultural Department, is here for the purpose ot bringing to the attenvon of the authorities the value of Indian corn as an article of food. A committee of officers from the medical and commis sary departments of the Array has been appointed to Investigate the matter. Washington. Oct. 3. Senator Mitchell was interviewed today on the matter of Oregon's choice for President. Ho said Harrison had given the country a good Administration and the people felt very kindly toward him. yet Blaine had a great hold upon the people of the West. Everything is about ready to estab lish the paid fire department on the East Side, and it will probaoly be dona durinjr the coming week. Some delay may be caused in arranging the sleep ing accommodations in Pioneer engine house. 11. 11. Holmes has been appoint ed assistant chief engineer for the Eat Aide by the. Fire Commissioners. One of the most interesting of the special days at the Expo4tion will be the Wedding day. which occurs Wednesday next. On the evening of that day three different couples will be Joined In matrimony, the ceremony taking place in the muslo hell. Whence Came "Com Bayf" PORTLAND, Oct. 2. (To the Editor.) Apropos of the historical discussions as to where Oregon points- aerived their names, the latest development in this line is the Coos Bay derivative. A perusal of the treaty of '55 recalls that In that time the bay was commonly called Cow's Bay. Another treaty be tween the Indians and the Government has it Cowe's Bay. and now we have that much more rhythmical gem. Coos Bay. Some would assert that some canny Scot with a nasal twang wandered into i-ne Bay district and gave us the new name, but an investigation of the Marshfield district shows that the Irish predominated even in that time, hav ing today a plentiful progeny of O'Briens, Malontys. FKinagans, Ben- neis. The chanae of the original name is due, doubtless, to the desire ot the younger generations as elsewhere in Oregon to soften the outlandish and uncouth names and to replace them with some euphonious designations. J. B. COTTIXUHAM. N. Nitts on Fearlessness II y Dean Collins. Xe.?ciui Nitts, cage of Punkindorf Sta tion. Emerged from a posture of deep cogi tation. And haltcl his rythmical, swift masti cation To check with his quid a black ant's umbulation. And then upon fearlessness made an oration. I see by the papers that Wilson arises Indorsln' his stand in the late railway crisis. And pintin" with pride how he firmly withstood By yleldin' with haste while the yieldln was good. ' Which same parallels, in affairs ot the Nation. A crisis we had here in Punkindorf station. Hi Biggins' delivery wagon was uruv By that petulant jarty called Philomel Love, And Phil comes one day and he blusters and glowers And 'lows he must have some more pay and less hours Or else he'd quit drlvin' that wagon. and neither Would ho let nobody else drive the thing, either. Jedge Wiggins was Mayor; and the populace begs To save the deliv'ry of butter ana eggs That he take some steps to have that thing adjusted Fore the peace of the city is totally busted. The council It met in the office above The 6tore. and it argued with Philomel Love. And Hlggins he 'lowed he'd done all that he could; But Philomel firm In his attitude tood; And the Mayor says. "We hain't got no 'thority now To make legislation about it nohow r And PhiL says. "You'd better, or Sat urday night. As sure as I'm here. I'm a-startin a X fight! "I'll prompt quit the Job and. clean tip yer town," Says he. and gives Wiggins a threat- enln frown. And Wiggins, he say. "In seen crisis." sczzee, 'Til have to declare It an e-mergency." So the council it went into session once more. With Philomel bellerin outside the door. They passes an ordinance whereby they guv The concessions demanded by Philomel Love. HI Higgins he yielded, but put up the price He wr.3 chargln the public for crack ers and rice; And the Mayor says. "I give myself high approbation Fer savin' a crisis ia Punkindorf Eta-