10 THE 3IOEXIXG OKEGOXIAN, THUKSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1917. " PORTLAN D. OREGON'. Znl'rfi) at Portland Oregon Fostoffiea 11 second-class mull matter. Subscription rates invariably in advance: (By Mall.) pally, Sunday Included, one, year $.rtn Dally. Sunday Included, six monthi 4.m Daily, unaay Included, three montha... Taily, Sunday Included, one month..... .7.j Iai:y, without Sunday, one years 6.00 Tjaify, without ft;nuy. aix montha :;.-."i Ially. without Sunday, three montha . 1.75 rily. without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year Sunday, one year fcuoday and weekly (By Carrier.) .fi'i 1.5") 3.00 lally, Sunday Included, one year. ..... .f9.no I-ai!y. Sunday Included, one month....- .70 X-at!y. without Sunday, one year ....... 7u 3,ai!y, without Sunday, three montha.... 1.1-' Ijally, without Sunday, one month ...... .60 How to Remit Send postofflce money or der, expreea order or personal check on your local Dank. fctaraps. coin or currency are at sender's risk. Oive postofflce address in fu:i, including county and atate. Postage Rates 12 to i pafrea. 1 cent; IS to 32 pages. - cents; 114 to 4S pagJ, 3 cent; to ti'l pages. 4 centa: -' to 76 pages. 5 centa; 7S to ti- pases, ti cents. Foreign post age double rates. Kantern Business Office Verree & Conklln Brunswick builoing. New York; Verree A conklln, otexer buildlns. Chicago; fcan r ran Cisco representative, it. J. .Bidnell. H- Aitir ket street. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news Credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published Herein. All rights nf republication of special dls patehea herein are also reserved. PORTLAND. THl'RSDAV, SEPT. 27, 1917. FOR THE NATION'S WELFARE. The great work of shipbuilding in and about Portland is practically at a standstill because the men are on Strike. They have assumed the heavy responsibility of holding up the Gov ernment's war ship programme, so far as Portland and its vicinity have a part in it, because they insist upon recognition of the unions. They say they will not return to work except as union men and unless all non union men are excluded from employ ment. They will not accept any tern . porary adjustment pending full ex amination of their claims and griev ances; and they ore not willing to place their case in the hands of Presi dent Wilson, or of any board appointed by him. That is plain statement of the situ ation, made without prejudice or pas sion. The Oregonian thinks that the first essential to the settlement of any controversy is a clear and candid un derstanding of the facts. If misunder. standings may bo cleared away, a set tlement may be reached. The men have, of course, thought they would win, else they would not have struck. How? l)c they think public opinion is with them? Let them make an impartial inquiry. They will learn that it is not with them, but it is with Presi dent Wilson. Can a strike be won without a fair measure of public ap proval ? It might be won, indeed, against the general wish, with the aid of powerful hands, such as the President's. But the President has given no sign that he sides with their demand for a closed shop. At the same time he has given many evidences that he is in full sympathy with the proper aspira tion of workers everywhere for a good wage and agreeable living conditions. The men think, perhaps, that the President must eventually side with them. He may, indeed, but is he more lively, or less likely, to take their part as against their employers, when they refuse to accept his mediation, and when they plainly show that they do not trust his implicit assurances of fair play and prompt action? Do they think he will respond more quickly to coercion than to persua sion? Will they get more from him, or less, by doing nothing for him and for the country in this critical hour, when he has promised to do much for them? A decision by the President for the closed shop here leads inevitably to similar action everywhere in all em ployments in which the Government is concerned. We will not argue fo'r or against the merits of the open or closed shop, but only point out the difficulties of the President's position. The barriers against requiring all concerns having Government contracts to employ only men belonging to unions ara insuperable. The Presi dent will not undertake it. He will rot plunge the whole Nation in a con troversy over unionism when the work of every hand is needed to get ready for war and to sustain the men al ready at war or soon to be. A grave mistake, for themselves and for the Nation, has been made by the men in rejecting the President's fair offer and in taking the extreme meas ure of a strike. It ought to be recon sidered. They ought to place them selves right with the public, as the men at San Francisco have done, by accepting a temporary adjustment, and going back to work, while the questions between themselves and their employers may be fully inves tigated and settled. The concern of The Oregonian and of the public, in this grave business, is not unionism or non-unionism. It is the country and its welfare. WHAT THE FARMER 18 DOING. How much the American farmer is doing to feed the world is illus trated by a map with an article in The Nation's Business. While it purports to show business conditions, the text shows these to correspond closely with crop conditions. With the exception of small patches, all of the Eastern. Southeastern and Middle Western states are colored as "good," and all of the rest as "fair" except the Western Dakotas. Montana, Northern Idaho, a strip of Eastern Washington, Southwestern Oregon, Western Texas and Southeastern New Mexico, which ara "poor." Notwithstanding these blots, the writer of the article forecasts a crop of 8,800,000.000 bushels of corn. 725, 000,000 bushels of wheat and 12.500, 000 bales of cotton. The number of cattle and hogs is increasing, though sheep still decrease, cattle-growing is extending in the South, and rain has greatly benefited pasture and made planting of large forage crops pos sible. Some 400,000 silos, to which constant . additions are made, have stored 31,000,000 tons of feed for Winter use. Kail plowing is very general under most favorable soil con. ditions, and gives promise of a great acreage of Winter wheat for next year, and all changes in the condition x.iap ere from "fair" to "good. ' lhie is sound logics in the defense that is made for the American farmer against the criticism that his yield per acre is less than that of Europe. Intensive farming cannot be prac ticed in this country aa in Europe because we have less man-power, and t'.ic problem in this country is that of using machinery on a large scale to compensate for the scarcity of men on the farm. Our unit of production in agriculture io per m? n, and in this the American farmer excels. His growing: prosperity and the larger supply of capital which has been placed at his disposal by the rural credit system enable him to make greater use of machinery, and thus to enlarge this unit of production with out more men. As population grows, a" country life becomes more attrac tive and as farms become smaller, the supply of farm labor will Increase and more intensive cultivation will be practicable, adding still more to the unit of production. ONE GREAT PfBLlC ASSET. The Oregonian supposes that the Multnomah Athletic Club would dis claim any purpose to assume the role of a reformer or of a factor in the various uplift movements which have been carried on in the city and throughout the country during the past several decades. Yet it is a fact that at a time when there were 300 or 400 saloons in Portland, and when liquor was considered an indispensable factor in the attractions of other or ganizations, there was no bar in the club, and there were no bottles or demijohns jn lockers. Within recent memory, too, there has been public gambling in the city, and there has been much of the same kind of sport under cover. But never at the club. That organization took its stand against liquor and gambling twenty six years ago, at the very beginning, and has faithfully lived up to its prin ciples ever since. Other athletic clubs were not so strict, but the Multnomah hewed to the line. What an immense contribution to clean and wholesome ways of living. What a valuable force in the finer life of the community. Of course, it is essentially an ath letic club, but to make young men and young women sound physically, it set about to give them correct sur roundings and influences. The Multnomah Club has acquired a membership of approximately 4000 members, and it needs 1000 more if its work shall be carried forward at a high standard. It owns real estate and equipment of the approximate valuation of half a million dollars. The institution has lost approxi mately 350 members who have joined the Army and Navy. It is at present engaged in a vigorous campaign to increase its membership and to re place the missing men. The club's loss is the country's gain. Its mem bers were physically fit, intellectually competent and morally acceptable. ,The enlistment of these members is a high tribute to the efficiency of the organization. Sixty-five per cent of the applicants for military duty are rejected on account of physical and other imperfections. This fact has aroused the interest of the people of this community and has impressed upon them the necessity of improving their physical condition. It is caus ing large numbers to join the ranks of the club, if The present low initiation fee of $5 will be increased on October 1 to $25. Already 675 applicants have sought membership. The institution employs the best instructors in physical train ing, swimming, boxing and wrestling that can be obtained. It has provided classes at convenient hours for the business men, women and children. The club ha,s always cheerfully given the free use of its athletic field for worthy purposes. It has given free instruction In military training and is widely known throughout the United States, and is a credit to the city and the state. THE TEDDLER NEXT? Portland is headed toward first principles in the sale of fish at the Ad Club's market, but the point has not yet been reached. Older resi dents of Portland can remember when it was not necessary even to go to market to buy fish. The peddler with his untuneful horn announced his presence daily in the residence dis tricts. In still earlier days the In dians, if memory is correct, peddled their catch the later peddlers were men who bought from fishermen. Fish peddling continued until a much later period in the Puget Sound cities. The canneries were not estab lished so early. Indians brought sal mon by the canoe-load to the docks, and one who would go there could obtain sockeyes or silversides for about 25 cents a fish. Today one would pay about $1.50 for the same sized salmon at the reduced rate at which tho Ad Club market is selling them. It is not Intended herein to imply that the increased price is wholly due to change in methods of distribution. Increase in number and capacity of canneries, development of cold storage and refrigerating transportation have greatly extended the Western fish market and materially influenced prices. But Portland is close to the source of supply, and it can hardly be disputed that a gain of 600 or 700 per cent in tho price of fish on its way from fisherman to consumer is not exorbitant. Why the fish peddler should have gone out of business we do not know, unless his demise was caused by the appeal to the fastidiousness of a peo ple able to pay. Today the particu lar fish purchaser goes to the market where the product of sea and river is handsomely displayed in a glass and white tile cold storage compartment. He may there make his selection and have it delivered to his home with out coming in contact with stale odors. But the. Ad Club's experiment indi cates clearly that there are thousands of persons in Portland who- are not fastidious about such things when economy is offered in the place of them. They will not only go out of their way to buy cheaper fish, but will carry it home, We imagine from this that the pub lic would welcome the return of the fish peddler and his unmelodious horn. The peddler's chief problem is sup ply. If he goes to the wholesaler he cannot greatly undersell the regular dealer, although those vegetable ped dlers who buy on Front street seem to make a living, regardless of whether the householder saves much by pur chasing from them. In a way the peddler is a solicitor as well as sales man. His mere presence at the door recalls to mind the product , he has to sell. But a fish peddler ought to be able to buy at the source of supply. For the lowest prices quoted the people are now getting cold storage fish and not the freshly caught fish for some kinds of which, according to reliable testimony, the deep-sea fishermen are well contented to re ceive one cent a pound on the docks at Newport. Granting that it takes considerable money to buy ice and to ship boxes to and from Portland, it is quite inconceivable that this ex pense is more than 300 per cent of the original cost of the fish. A profit of 25 per cent to the retailer is suffi cient to keep any man out of bank ruptcy! and the quantity that can be sold daily is sufficiently large to pay several men more than wages. Where is the enterprising man who will make another fish-selling experiment? ABOUT SECRET DIPI.OMACT. , The diplomatic conspiracy by which Germany, and Austria plunged the world into war has led to much con demnation of secret diplomacy which ignores the proper limits between se crecy and publicity. There is cer tainly a sharp distinction between the secrecy of the Austro-German con ference at Potsdam on July 5. 1914. at which the ultimatum to Serbia was agreed upon, giving the latter only forty-eight hours for a reply which might cause war, and the secrecy which .surrounded the negotiations for the purchase of the Danish West Indies. In the former case the nations con cerned had absolutely no voice in. the matter before they were so far com mitted that protest was useless. Their sovereigns had exclusive power to manage foreign relations and to de clare war and make peace, conceal ing the correspondence until long after the event or publishing only such a garbled or mutilated version as would support their own policy. The correspondence between Germany and Austria leading up to the war has not even yet been published. The only restraint upon such sovereigns is the possible determined opposition of their people, but the first inclina tion of any nation is to stand by its government after war has been de clared. The governments of the cen tral empires also, through control over education and through press cen sorship, had trained the minds of their people to approve the policy which they undertook to carry out in 1914. They suppress or distort news which is adverse to their policy, and permit publication only of that which fa vors it. In a democratic country, on the other hand, no government ventures to pursue a definite diplomatic policy until it Knows beforehand that pub lie opinion will approve. Questions and discussions in Parliament or Con gress elicit the lines of policy and voice public opinion on it. Congress in this country. Parliament in Great Britain, has the sole power to de clare war, and not a dollar can be spent on war until it has been voted by the people's representatives. For several days before Britain declared war the course of negotiations regard ing Belgium was announced daily in Parliament. Within a short time after war began the governments of Britain, France. Belgium and Italy published the entire correspondence. Every dis patch which passed between this country and Germany during the sub marine controversy was published im mediately on its receipt, and the en tire discussion was carried on in the open, much to the displeasure of the Prussian militarists. When the Presi dent asked Congress to act, that body knew as much about the merits of the dispute as he did, and so did the whole Nation. , But publicity could not be given to all negotiations without grave injury to National interest. For example, in the case of the Danish islands it was known. that Germany, would do her utmost by the most unscrupulous means to prevent the sale, for she had induced Denmark to refuse ratifi cation of the treaty made by Presi dent Roosevelt. Public opinion was known to approve the purchase, for it had been plainly expressed on two former occasions when it had been attempted. Under such circumstances publicity would have-served no pur pose except to thwart, instead of to ascertain, the popular will. It would be as impossible to bring about a diplomatic agreement as to close a business deal if every step were to be made public what was said at every interview between the Secretary of State and a foreign Ambassador. The people act when the Senate decides whether a treaty shall be ratified or not. Such affairs cannot be made public without the consent of both parties until some document results which may properly be regarded as a public paper of each party. FRANCE DEFENDER OF CIVILIZATION. Rally of one nation after another to the alliance against Germany's con quering armies and the barbarous methods of warfare pursued by Ger man armies suggests a comparison of the present war with that in which the Hun invasion of France was stayed, and with the later war in which Charles Martel drove back the invading Mos lem hordes which had already sub dued Spain. From the time of the Roman empire beautiful France has been a lure to the barbarians who strove to advance westward uritil they reached the ocean. Practice of the allies in styling the Germans Huns is justified by the devastation and bru tality which mark the latter and by the fact that they advance from the east to overrun the west of Europe. Vague tradition tells that the Huns, who inhabited Central Asia about the beginning of the Christian era, began to move westward after an attempt to invade China had been repulsed. One body of the tribe, of which the Bulgarians may have been an offshoot, settled for a time near the northern end of the Caspian Sea in Southeast ern Russia. Thentje they started far ther west about 372, conquering and forcing into their service various other tribes, until they came in conflict with the Ostrogoths and Visigoths, over powering them also and extending the Hun kingdom to the Danube and the Carpathians, occupying the whole of Southern Russia and Roumania. At tila became King in 433 jointly with his brother Bleda, who died about 445, and conquered Media in Asia, advanced to the gates of Constanti nople and into Greece and tripled the tribute which his father had exacted from the Eastern Roman Emperor. He extended his dominions through out Central Europe, and for twenty years ruled from the Caspian Sea to the Rhine and Rhone rivers in France. For more than a century the Ger manic tribes, under constant pressure from the Huns and other barbarians in the east, had been moving west ward by alternate colonization and aggression into France. They entered into alliance with the Romans, and, when the Huns crossed the Rhine in 451, their army joined that of the Roman General, Aetius, to stem the torrent. Attila abandoned the siege of Orleans when the city was on the point of surrender, retreated north east' and met the Gothic-Roman army near Troyes, on the plain of Chalons, in what proved to be one of the de cisive battles of the world. They fought all day in a conflict which the Gothic historian Jordanese describes as "ruthless, manifold, immense, ob stinate." words which fitly apply to the battles of the present war. Theo dorie. King of the Visigoths, was killed, and the slaughter is estimated anywhere between 175,000 and 300, 000 men, but victory rested with the armies of Romans and Goths. Attila retreated next day and crossed the Rhine to his central dominions in what is now Southwestern Austria and Hungary. The Goths.. Franks and Burgundians were themselves bar barians, but had already begun to adopt Christianity and civilization from the Romans, and they were the means of saving Western Europe from the unmitigated barbarism of the Huns. Attila in 452 ravaged Italy, but after his death in the following year his sons quarreled about the di vision of his empire. The dependent tribes rebelled and defeated the Huns in a great battle, after which the na tion dispersed into several hordes, which settled in various parts of Southeastern Europe. Nearly three centuries later another peril threatened France, when the Arabs and Moors, equally ruthless with, though less barbarous than, the Huns, invaded France after having conquered Spain. Charles Martel, the Frankish King, had only recently es tablished his authority over . all of France when the Moslems, under Abdurrahman, overran Narbonne and advanced northward. Charles met them near Tours in October, 732, won a great victory and drove them across the Pyrenees. France is now for the third time a rampart against conquering hordes, in which the instincts of barbarism have broken through the veneer of civilization. The deeds of the Ger mans in Belgium and France prove their nature to be akin to that of the Huns, and the description of Attila as a man who "walked with a proud step, darting a haughty glance this way and that, as if he felt himself lord of all," well fits the Kaiser. As the great barriers of the Alps have been obliterated by the soaring military airmen of Europe, so will be those of the Rockies and the Andes, the Himalayas and the Caucasus. Communication will be so rapid and easy that all nations will be brought into close intercourse, each nation will of necessity learn the languages of other nations, all will mingle so freely that mankind will become prac tically one nation, and the confusion of tongues worked at Babel will be undone. This war, which we now re gard as a curse, may yet be hailed as a blessing through having incalculably hastened the conquest of the air. The United States seems destined to take the lead in air means of communication, as it did with the railroad, the telegraph, the telephone and the automobile, for it leads in inventive and manufacturing skill and in supply of all the necessary mate rials. Of what account will be dis tance then? Rio Janeiro and Buenos Ayres will be as near New York, in point of time, as Chicago now is; Portland will be no farther from Philadelphia than Pittsburg now is, and men will fly with easo from Rio Janeiro to Lima and Valparaiso. Embargo on exports of gold comes at the same time as an increased use of paper nfoney in the United States. Gold is now a munition of war, and must not be permitted to strengthen the enemy. The great accumulation which the United States now has came chiefly from the nations which are our allies, and will be used as a basis of credit in financing the war, both for ourselves and for them. Pa triotism demands that the people of the Pacific Coast overcome their old prejudice in favor of hard money. Castor oil is the best lubricant for aeroplane motors as well as for small boys' insides, and is extracted from castor beans, which come mainly from India. But Britain needs all of that country's product, and American farmers must produce the supply for tho great air fleet which the United States ia building. A good crop was raised this year, but a far larger one will be needed in 1918. The scene .of hostilities is no place for a Congressional junketing or smelling committee, and President Wilson did well to squelch the scheme to send one to France. The idea of a junket to ' the field of such terrible business as war is repulsive, and France in 1793 and Russia in 1917 supplied warnings against political meddling with an army in action. The sentence of General Soukhom linoff, the Russian traitor, to life im prisonment illustrates the repugnance of the revolutionary government to taking life. If ever man deserved the death penalty he does, for his treason must have cost hundreds of thousands of lives. The resignation of a Eureka pastor because his salary was insufficient is gentle reminder to all churches that' it costs a clergyman as much to live as the layman. A contented minister is a good investment. Douglas MacMonagle, the San Fran. Cisco aviator on the western front. wanted to "pass out fighting and doing his best," and so he did. October 9 is the anniversary of the Chicago fire forty-six years ago, and that is why that date is chosen for Prevention day. Currency as substitute for coin has one great advantage. It can be hidden in more ways from the predaceous wife. The moderation shown by the local carmen Is commendable. There is a hint of firmness in it, however. Illinois elected Billy Mason. J. Ham Lewis and other "celebrities," but "Bill Thompson will make it gag. Keep the name of Lownsdale street. Portland has too few "monuments" of the men who made it. What's the use? An argus-eyed Deputy Sheriff can spot a container a block away. Trains all day to Salem, and some so late returning that nobody can miss them. Happy is the man whose job is not subject to a strike, and far happier is his wife. Toleration of La Follette inspires "Burgomaster" Thompson's ambition. What can "Billy" Reidt adopt, now the Third Oregon has gone? Portland day at the State Fair. Go early. Hay isn't hay just now. It's money. Last word: Go to Salem. Stars and Starmakers. Ujr Leone Cass Daer. Louise Chalfonte. prima donna de luxe with Kolb and Dill at the llellig in "The High Cost of Loving," was a newspaper girl in Los Angeles. She still finds time while on the road to grind out little stories and when she gets time they're going to be woven to gether into a big story. Speaking of Kolb and Dill, the man ager of the company is Bill Jacobs, one of the best known newspaper men in California. He went from newspa perdom into active dramatio work, and his appearance here on the Orpheum a few seasons agro In his own sketch, "When Caesar Ran a Newspaper," was one of the richest riots of a season. Waldemar Young, another newspaper chap, appeared with him in the sketch as Cleopatra's press agent, and Miss Ethel MacFarland was Cleo with the original jewel story to land in the first edition. Since that day Mr. Jacobs has been writing scenarios, and now he is anchored to a life job and one he likes, as manager for the come dians, Kolb and Dill. Robert Cleckler, leading man of the Baker a season or so ago, is playing in "Mother Carey's Chickens," a com edy by Kate Douglas Wiggin, with Edith Taliaferro in the leading role. Baker Moore, who was juvenile three years ago with the Baker Players, has enlisted in the Medical Department of the United Statss Army and will soon sail for France. . Lora Rogers started things off nice ly for the new Alcazar company mem bers by giving a big dinner party at the Multnomah Hotel on Tuesday night in their honor. The entire company was present, plus a few additional guests outside the profession, and the event was a gala one, with flowers and music and toasts and all the flub dubs that go with a big get-together party. e Walter Kegan, who was with the Baker Stock Company two seasons ago, is now in the cast supporting Billie Burke. a Warren Jackson, Portlander, who played bits with the Baker folk a sea son or so ago, and who wandered from our midst as a bit of atmosphere with the "September Morn" company, is now stage manager with "Oh, Boy," in the Eastern company. st e The premiere of the new play in which Mrs. Fiske will appear this sea son will take place next month under the joint management of Klaw & Erlanger, George C. Tyler and Arthur Hopkins. The play will be concerned with the life of George Sand and will Introduce the French novelist at the beginning of her love affair with Alfred de Musset. Philip Moeller, one of the directors of the Washington Square Players, is the author of the play. e e Joseph Ritter, New York manager, has received a letter from Mary Ander son (Mrs. Antonio F. de Navarro) which defeats for the present the plans he had entertained of bringing the actress to America for a serias of per formances in "Pygmalion and Galatea." a drama in which she formerly ap peared. Madame Navarro writes In part: "I am now engaged far ahead and cannot accept any offers." m m Nella and Sara Kouns, the Orpheum prima donna sisters, are rowing with their stepmother in the courts here over the estate lert by their father, the late C. W. Kouns, general manager of the Santa Fe Railroad. The estate totals approximately $200,000. Mrs. Kouns has been named as administratrix. The principal point of contention is the family Bible and a set of Fennimore Cooper's works which were their father's. The girls maintain the old family Bible containing the record of the comings and goings in the Kouns family for many generations past should come to them as the direct de scendants of the family and that the stepmother has no right to it. The courts are being asked to settle the question of who shall have the custody of the family record. Jean Haves has formed a partner ship with William Dale (late of Bob and Dale), for the writing of special material for vaudevillians. Dale will devote himself to dialog and Harvez to the lyrics. A staff of composers has been recruited. They are located in the New York theater building. New York City. e II. A. Gillespie, husband of Chrystle MacDonald, has suffered a nervous breakdown and all plans for the pro duction of a new musical play for Miss MacDonald have been called off. Last season Miss MacDonald appeared un der her husband's management in "The Little Missus." m Billy Pangle says that some day he's going to invent a telephone book In which the first name you look at is the one you want. William Powell, who played Juvenile roles with the Baker Players about four years ago, is appearing in stock with Vaughn Glaser in Detroit. Mich. Fay Courtenay la playing the leads op posite Mr. Glaser. Brandon Evans is with the Somer ville Theater Players in Somerville. Mass. He was a great ravorite there last season and la returning this year. Myrtle Gram, known on the stage as Betty Gram, is one of the cast in the Ralph Herz musical comedy "Oh, so Happy." Miss Gram has a song and dance number all to herself in the new piece. It is now running in Chicago at the Powers Theater. The piece was originally entitled "Good Night, Paul," but has been rechristened "Oh, so Happy." t Out of the Months of Babes. Cleveland Plalndealer. The teacher said: "What kind of an overcoat have you, James?" "I have a woolly overcoat," answered James. "What kind of an overcoat has your dog, Charles?" "My dog has a woolly overcoat, teacher." "Peter, pan you take your warm, woolly overcoat off?" "Yes, I can." "Frederick, can your dog take his warm, woolly overcoat oft?" "No, he can't." "Henry, why can't a dog take his warm, woolly overcoat off?" "Because, teacher, God only knowi where the buttons are!" WHY EAT LESS MEAT AND BREAD f Writer Assumes Campalca Is Directed at IllEB Coat of Lirlns;. OAK GROVE, Or., Sept. 28 (To the Editor.) Who gets the benefit of tho meatless and wheatless days that are now advocated? . Why deny ourselves the thingR we want unless we can really benefit some needy one thereby? Are we saving anything by doing with out meat and using in its stead more vegetables, more sweets, or other things? Something has to be substi tuted. I believe In conservation of food and in reducing the high cost of living, which is oftener the cost of high liv ing. It did not take this wartime nor high prices to make me think of ton serving food. I have advocated for years that the American people learn to be more saving of foodstuffs and that the American women learn to use the coarser parts of vegetables that are usually thrown away the little leftovers that can be used in many ways and make tasty dishes, but are too often discarded because there is not sufficient of it for the whole family. In so many little things women of America should become batter enlight ened to reduce the high price of food stuffs. Only a regulation in prices for the producer, the commission man (if there really must be one), then for the retailer, will help. To use judgment In buying and using what we need will help in the cost of living, but until we learn to live within our means and not try to live a little better than cur neighbor will the high cost of living be reduced? Then will we be conserv ing food, together with learning the use and preparation of such as we now discard. As I stated at first, when we deny Ourselves something and use the amount we would have spent for it really to help a needy one, and don't substitute any other article of food for it, then will we be beginning to consetve. V. G. B. The primary purpose of the campaign for meatless and wheatless days is not to reduce the high cost of living, but to conserve those articles of food which have keeping and transportation qual ities and of which there is a world shortage. Substitutions are recom mended, such,' for example, as fish, poultry, fruits, vegetables and eggs, for beef, pork, mutton, sugar, bacon. Reform in eating habits and preven tion of waste is to be commended at all times and is now particularly urged on ty o grounds: That by use and econ omy of all food resources there may be a greater conservation of articles of which there is a shortageand that the economic burden of the war may be as readily borne as possible. But even if a person saves nothing on the cost of his food he is helping the needy the armies in the field and the hungry civilians of Europe if he deprives himself occasionally of meat and white bread. STRIKE DIG TO GLIB AGITATORS Such Is Correspondent's Opinion After Reading of Sunday Meetlujc. PORTLAND, Sept. 26. (To the Ed itor.) The action taken by tha ship building unions is a disgrace to the Americanism of' Portland and a deter mined attempt, apparently, on some body's part to help the Kaiser. The majority of tho working men at the meeting Sunday night, at which it was voted to go out on a strike, are Americans and patriotic, which was shown by the applause and cheering of 1'resident Wilson's message asking the men to continue at work on shipbuild ing, when it was read. Had a motion been put to a vote at this time without agitation to continue shipbuilding. It would have carried with an overwhelming majority. But no, that would not have given the J4.ai- ser s friends a chance. Tr i - a well-known far.t tha.t tha ma jority of working men are easily led. They will ait in a meeting, such as that of Sunday night, and never say a word. but will let tneir minds, tneir tnougnts and their feelings be swayed by some gllb-tongued agitator, without a thought for the future prosperity of themselves and family, or tho welfare of their country, and invariably will vote In the affirmative. The man who suggested the proposition to strike and to turn down President Wilson's appeal should be investigated. Will American working men never learn to cease being the dupes of agi tators? AMERICAN. PATRIOTIC JEX3IEN. ' By Everett Earle Stanard. O, some must march to the roll of drums. Somewhere the gray ships steer. Must halt the desperate foe that comes To smite the world with fear. But other heroes, loyal, brave. Our equal praise demand The writing men who warn and save, And bid the country stand! All honor to them who wield the pen To combat foes at home. That battle line of earnest men. Far flung on freedom's loam. Into the light they hale the tribe Whose only thought and care Was leveled taunt and venomed jibe At those who cried "Prepare." Year in. year out, the treason ran. Preached by the pacifiist. That not until the fight began Need soldier boys enlist. For a pacifist could see no doom Upon the ocean path, His blindness could not pierce the gloom Nor ken. the day of wrath. Said he, "Preparedness is just A snare the magnates cast. Let all the rifles choke with rust; This war scare cannot last." But hero thinkers flung the truth Abroad on every breeze: "America must train her youth Upon the lands and seas." So honor we them who smote the lie Dead in the traitor's teeth Editors, poets, men who vie Not for the warrior's wreath. The men who march not with the drums Or where the gray ships steer Make battle with the foe that comes To smite the world with fear. Not all the battles are at sea Or on a foreign strand. Someone must fight for liberty In our own native land. Inside the walls the traitors lurlc And chant fair words of "Peace." But for the German cause they work And Germany's release. So honor them who wield the pen To combat foes at home. Staunch battle line of writing men Far flung on freedom's loam! Style and Wedding; Clothe. Pathfinder. "I suppose you are busy having your wedding clothes made?" "Oh, no! If I had them made now they'd probably be out of style." A Look Ahead. New York Sun. Knlcker Didn't know you could af ford a car. Backer I- may be able to next year and this is next year's car. In Other Days. Twenty-Five Years Aso, From The Oregonian September 27. 1802. New York Grover Cleveland has written a letter accepting his nomina tion for President on the Democrat!", ticket. William ITaworth's new spectacular drama, "The Ensign," was presented by I.itt & Davis at the Marquam Grand last night. A pressed brick manufactured by Robertson ec Alexander, owners of the Portland Pressed Brick Works was submitted yesterday to a test at the. Portland Iron Works and came out with tho world's record badly beaten and the limit of the hydraulic praaa, 20.000 pounds, reached. The brick showed no signs of weakness when the highest pressure possible was applied. The world's record heretofore was 16,000 pounds. Work has been started on the ex cavation for the new City Hall. Among the attractions at the Port land Industrial Exposition is a mode) of the great battleship Oregon which, will bo completed in 1S94. Margaret Mather, perhaps one of the best-known of the legitimate stars to day will appear at the Marquam Grand next week, She will offer the curtain, raiser "Nance Oldfield," the Ellen Terrs version of Charles Reade's sketch, "Art"; for those who like the intense style, her latest successful tragedy. "The Egyptian"; "Romeo and Juliet' and "The Lady o' Lyons." Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonian September 2T, 1867. Owyhee The last clean-up of the Morning Star mill will amount to more) than $8500. Seventy tons of ore were, crushed. Olympia James Biles was elected grand master of the Masons at the) conclave here last week. The roan marc "Nellie" defeated tha sorrel horse "Attila" in an exciting race at Ilillsboro yesterday which went five heats. The mare won by 12 feet her time being 2:53. The fastest heat was the second made in 2:45. Mr. Welch, through Jamison's Kxpress. furnished us with an exciting account of the race. "West of the Mississippi" is the title of A. D. Richardson's new book which has just reached the Library. It is the compiled letters written to the New York Tribune with some additional notes. It contains an engraved picture of Portland taken in 1S5. DRAFT SEXT FOR SIIU'BI ILDIXO Xavy Man Advocates Making Men Work or Go to Trenches. PORTLAND, Sept. 26. (To the Ed itor.) For some time past 1 have been desirous of expressing my opinion as regards the strike in the different ship yards and this morning seems to be the right time to do it. If the United States Government cart draft men to serve in the Army for $30 per month, why can It not draft men to work in the shipyards? If it can compel a man to serve on a jury at $3 per day, why can it not compel a man, to work in a shipyard for $3 per day? True, the cost of living has gone up, but has it gone up any more for men employed in shipyards than it has for men in the naval, or military service? Besides, the "high cost of living" in Portland. Or., is not more than one half of what it is in the Middle West Montana, for instance. In Portland one can rent a six-room modern house for $3 or $10 per month. In Montana one will have to pay from $35 to $40 a month for the same kind of a house. Kverything else in proportion, snd in that section of Montana that I hail from the men are not striking or ask ing for a $6 per day minimum wage. Also the shipyard workers use the excuse that a man in the Army or Navy can send $23 or $30 per month home and that the Government will provide. Well. I have parents partially depen dent on me and I don't see the Govern ment providing for them. I send $23 per month out of my pay home and these men in the different yards can do the same. The real solution of the strike will be: . The Government to draft every man. Give him his choice of the ship yard or the Army and make him work, if he refuses to work in a shipyard for a fair wage, put him in the Army. I'll volunteer to guard a half dozen of these fellows, either to make them work in the shipyards or to keep them in the trenches. And I won't ask any; extra pay either. NAVY MAN. MR. LA FFEHTY TAKES IT BACK Finds That He Made Mistake In Dm clnrlnn for LaFollette. PORTLAND, Sept. 26. (To the Edi tor.) May I have space to say that while I have always admired Senator LaFollette and have done all I could for him in this state, I desire especially to repudiate his rfcent declaration that we had no grievance for the present wa r. While many of us would have like! to have seen the war settled by the force of intellect rather than by tha fc rcn of the bullet, I crave the oppor tunity publicly to assert that the war was justified a thousand times over. A. W. LAFFERTY. The concern of Mr. Lafferty arises doubtless from his statement, in his latest pamphlet announcing his newest candidacy for Congress, that "I am still for Woodrow Wilson, but I am also still for Robert Marion LaFol lette. I believe that they are both, honest and patriotic that they merely differ in judgment." Mr. Lafferty'a declaration for Wi.on and LaFollette followed the latter's tactics in opposition to the President's course, including his (LaFollette's) vote with the "willful twelve" in op posing arming merchant ships and his vote against conscription and his other vote against a declaration of war with Germany. The man who is for Wilson and LaFollette would in the Civil War have said that "I am for Abraham Lin coln, but I am also still for Jefferson Davis." Duration of Food Control. OREGON CITY, Or., Sept. 21. (To the Editor.) As I understand it. tho food control law recently passed by Congress Is in effect for the duration of the war. Is the price of the 1918 crop of wheat guaranteed to be $2, whether the war terminates or not? W. W. HARRIS. The food control law, under which the President may requisition supplies and fix prices, ceases to be In effect "when the existing state of war be tween the United States and Germany shall have terminated and the faet and date of such termination shall be ascertained and proclaimed by the President," but such termination does not affect any right or obligation accruing or accrued under the law. Section 1, which deals with wheat prices provides that the guaranteed prices for the several standard grades for the crop of 1918, shall be based upon No. 1 Northern Spring or its equivalent at not less than $2 a bushel at the principal Interior primary mar kets, that the guarantee is absolute and shall be binding until May 1, 1919.