f IO THE aiQItyiXG OREGOXIAy, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1917. rOBTLAKD, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Orfgon) l'ostofflce as second-class mall matter. tuuitrljjllon rates Invariably In advance IBr ALa.il XJsily, Sunday Included, one year ..$8.00 HmUy, Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 lJaiiy, Sunday Included, three, months.. 2.-5 J'aily. Sunday included, one month 75 lily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Ually. without Sunday. siK months.... 3.-5 J'aily, without bundao', three months... 1.75 l'aliy, without Bundaj, one month 60 "Weekly, one year 3-50 runda. one year --uu tsuaday and weekly 3.50 (By Csjrler.) lally, Sunday Included, one year. .... .$9.00 laljy. Sunday Included, one month.... .75 lJnlly. without Sunday, one year 7.0 J.'atly, without Sunday, three months... 1,95 Ually. without Sunday, one month no Hew to Item It Send postoffice money or tier, express order or personal check, on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are ai senders risk. Lirve postoffice address in full. Including county and state. l'ostase Kaiea 12 to 16 paces. 1 cent; IS TO 32 oases. cents: 34 to 48 uaaes. 3 cents: 0 to Co paces. 4 cents: 62 to 70 pages. S cents; 78 to H2 pages. 6 cents. orel&rn 2jslg-e double rates. atrn Afuttlneas Orfice Verree. & Conlt- lin, Brunswick buildQis. New 'York; Verree Ac Conkiln, Steger building, Chicago: San l-'ranclsco representative, R. J. Uidwell, 74 Market street. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news pub lashed herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches therein are also reserved. PORTLAND, WEDXfSDAY, OCT. 10, 1817. '0 STRIKE IX WAR TIME. All will agree, disloyal as well as loyal citizens of the United States, that uninterrupted operation of every in dustry connected with, the war is nec essary to success. The disloyal prove that they recognize this truth by their efforts to interrupt operation; the loyal should defeat them by doing: their ut most for continuous operation. Production cannot be continuous it every disagreement about wages, hours and other terms of employment is to l:e settled by a strike, ir? which em ployer and employe test their strength and endurance. That would be as if our soldiers were to settle their pri vate quarrels by duels in face of the enemy. When dueling was in fashion it was forbidden in time of war on rain of death. A parallel rule should lie made in regard to industrial dis putes during this war, for manufac ture of all the implements of war is now as essential to victory as are armies and navies. This view is evidently taken by the patriotic labor unions and employers of Great Kalis, Mont., as shown in the following dispatch: Great Falls. Mont., Oct. 7. Great Kails labor unions and employers have sent to President Wilson, Secretary of Labor Wilson and Samuel Gompers. president of the American Federation of Labor, a re quest to establish a National arbitration board and compel the submission of all labor problems to it during the period of the war. Organized capital and organized labor should be compelled to submit their disputes to an impartial tribunal, for decision on the principles of jus tice, and should be compelled to abide by its decisions. Any attempt at set tlement by strikes and lockouts dur ing war is in a sense treasonable, for by obstructing our military prepara tions it aids the enemy. That may not be the intent, but it is the effect. Further, it is an appeal to the very principle against which we are fight ing that might is right. Whatever degree of tolerance we may give to such appeals in time of peace, though they are a public injury, no tolerance should be shown when they injure the Station's cause in war. No criticism which has yet been made of compulsory arbitration is valid against the principle of attain ing justice in such disputes by judi cial means; all criticism has been aimed at the methods of applying the principle. The principle should not on that account be abandoned. Objec tion to present methods should be met by amendment in conference of repre sentatives from both sides. Opposi tion recently has come only from the side of labor unions. They should state wherein present methods are de fective and should co-operate in per fecting them, but should not reject the principle. It has been said that to compel men to work on terms which have been fixed by an arbitration tribunal is to restore slavery. This is false as to times of peace, for every man would have a part in election of the men who would select the arbitrators both officers of the union and officers of the Government and every man would know in accepting employment 1hat he did so under these conditions. He would still be free to leave his job as an individual, if he were dissatis fied with a decision; he would only be forbidden to do so in combination witli other men. Still less would compulsory arbitra tion enslave men in time of war. To say that it would is to class as a slave every man and woman who is com pelled to render any service ' to the Government in war, especially those who have been drafted into the Army. They are performing a duty for the salvation of the Nation, the perform ance of which li8s been the pride of men of every nation in every age. It has always been considered a badge of slavery to forbid a man to perform this duty. Whether a man be willing or not, the Government has the right yes, the duty-to exact from every citizen any service it requires for de fense of the Nation, whether in the armed forces, the factories, the mines, the farms, the shipyards or any other place where war work is carried on. No man proposes that it shall exercise that full power. To require that all Industrial disputes shall be decided by a board on which both parties are represented by men of their own choice falls far short of that. It is the essence of American democracy self restrained democracy. We see the al ternative unrestrained democracy in Anarchic Russia. The two great democracies of Aus tralia and New Zealand are as free as the United States. In both the gov ernment has been for years under con trol of the Labor party. Both adopted compulsory arbitration years ago in time of peace. They do not consider that they have voluntarily subjected themselves to slavery. To call com pulsory arbitration slavery is an insult to the free men of those countries, who have been fighting for the free dom of the world as no men ever fought. The United States still has about 22,000,000 horses, or approximately one-half the supply of the world, but there is no prospect of an, oversupply of the right kind, at leas't until the war is over. No substitute for the horse lias been found for use on torn ground, before the advancing armies have had time to make the roads fit for motor travel, and these are fre quently times when supplies are badly needed. The value of the horses we have shipped abroad during the past three years was $194,000,000, and that of the mules exported was $66, 000,000. France bought the pick of the lot, at an average price of $237; Kngland paid an average of $218 and Canada $148. The situation has brought about the organization of es pecial units for the "salvage" of wounded animals, and almost as much progress has been made, relatively, as in the saving of wounded men. Ani mals are no longer abandoned to their fate when it is possible to save them. The day may come when they cannot be replaced. DANGER TO ORECOX SOLDIERS. The Oregonian calls attention to the bad moral and sanitary conditions which are described by its special cor respondent as prevailing at and around Camp Greene, N- C. The sanitation of the camp is not of the best, but the moral condition of the neighbor ing city of Charlotte is infinitely worse. In consequence, disease has already begun to do its work among the Ore gon soldiers. The people of Oregon should speak out in no uncertain tones, and in tones that will be heard, to the War Depart ment. Protests so numerous, so loud and so persistent should be made by the relatives and friends of Oregon soldiers that the authorities will be bound to take heed. We sent our boys to the service of Uncle Sam morally and physically clean and sound. Ore gon will not patiently permit that their health and morals be wrecked in the filthy dens of a Southern city. Such a protest is not likely to come from Oregon alone, for it is probable that similar conditions prevail in other Southern cities, near which troops from other states are encamped. The word which goes from Oregon would doubtless be taken up by those other states, and the War Department would be forced in self-defense to act. ENDING THE STRIKE. The interested public doubtless has discovered, in its reading of the re ports of the proceedings of the con ferences between the operators and men in the shipbuilding strike, that there is a lively effort on the part of the union conferees to disclaim re sponsibility for the strike. For ex ample, here is an extract from the stenographic account of the delibera tions last Saturday night: Mr. Palmer I would like to state that in behalf of the bollerniakers there is not a boilermaker that would not go before you. either as individuals or In a body, and say that the president of that organization has ever told tliem to strike at any time. 1 would like to say. further, that he has on numerous occasions bejeited them to wait and be patient and see what the Govern ment would tlo. 1 have had many throw in my f3ce that I called this strike. Never theless 1 accepted the position of business agent of the boilermakers in the absence of Mr. Reed, and I wili say that at all times I. as an individual, have stood before those men hour after hour and talked to them along this line, and there was not a time that they ever got it from me that a strike would do them any good. Mr. Kerr May I ask you If that Is the attitude of each of the other members of the employes' committee'.' Mr. Mackenzie We have assured you many times that it is. Yet the strike is a lamentable fact, and it is of more importance to know who is going to -nd it than who be gan it. The union leaders, who did not begin the strike, can do a lot toward terminating it. GERMAN FREEDOM OF THE SEAS. A correspondent asks The Oregonian what Germany and Austria mean by the term "freedom of the seas." This has been a pet phrase with the Ger mans since their commerce was de stroyed and since their foreign sup plies were cut off by the allied navies. They have generally refrained from defining their meaning, perhaps aim ing to leave the impression that to them it means the same as it has meant to other nations before Ger many entered the lists as a candidate for naval supremacy. Fortunately, we have one explicit definition of the German meaning. In a speech made in New York in Janu ary. 1910, Herr Dernburg, who was then conducting the German propa ganda in the United States, said: The whole fight and all the flarht Is on one side for the absolute dominion of the seven seas: on the oilier Fide for a free sea Ibe traditional mare Ilbcrum. A free sea will mean the cessation of the danger of war and the stopping or world wars. The sea should be frc lo all. It belongs to no one nation in particular neither to th British, nor to the Germans, nor to the Americans. The rights or the nations cease with the territorial line of threrc miles from low tifie. Any dominion exercised beyond that line is a breach and an infringement of the rights of the others. To prevent wars in the future, we must establish that the free seas shall be plied exclusively by the merchant marine of all nations. Within their territory people have the right to take such measures as thev deem necessary for their defense, but the sending of troops and war machines Into the territory of others or Into neutralized Iarts of the world mut be declared a casus belli. ir that be dune, the world as it is divided now would come to perma nent peace. Apply that doctrine to the present war, and consider what would have been the result. Britain would have been forbidden to go to the aid of France and Belgium, to have brought troops and war material from India and her colonies, or from the United States. France would have been pro vented from gathering troops from Africa and Anam. Italy would not have been allowed to send troops across the Adriatic Sea to complete the allied barrier against further Teu tonic advance through the Balkans. Indeed, the allied expedition could not have been sent to Saloniki. and the Germans could have swept on to the Aegean Sea. No British army could have been sent to protect the Suez Canal, and that waterway might have fallen into the hands of the Germans and Turks. Britain would have been shut out of the war and France would have had to rely for defense on her home troops, while practically all of the German and Austrian troops were in their home territory. We can easily picture what would have been the outcome of the war under such a rule. But we are more interested in the effect on the United States. This Na tion would have been forbidden to send an Army or any war material to France or to any of the allies, or to protect Porto Rieo. the Panama Canal, Hawaii, the Philippines or the independence of Cuba. We should have no right under that theory to maintain the Monroe Doctrine against German aggression. Any oversea al lies of Germany's neighbors would be powerless to help them, and Germany could devour them at her pleasure. The German empire would soon ex tend over Kurope and far beyond. We can judge from Germany's con duct in this war how much respect she would have shown for this new "freedom of the seas" if she had had naval supremacy. Belgium was a "neutralized part of the world" under German guaranty, but "strategic ne cessity" was sufficient cause for Ger- man invasion. Luxemburg alone con formed to the German conception of neutrality by giving the German armies free right of way into France. How soon would "strategical neces sity" be found to justify violation of the German theory? This is not the freedom of the seas which has figured in history and for which nations have fought. It is a purely German invention, designed to serve German purposes. It is a war invention intended to nullify the naval supremacy of Britain, the naval power and the industrial supremacy of the United States, for until the Kaiser finally resolved on war in defiance of British naval power he was himself tkbuilding a navy for the purpose of vriiiiiiiie uavai supremacy ana was proclaiming that Germany's future was on the sea. If he had succeeded the German doctrine of freedom of the seas would never have been promul gated. EVERY MAX'S DUTY.. CKrem an address in Congress bv senator Cummins, of Iowa, one of the wilful twelve.) If I may be allowed a personal word, permit me to say that I was not so eager to enter the war under the cir cumstances which then existed as were some of my associates, and as were some of the martial-minded men on the outside, but when Congress de clared a state of war between the United States and Germany that chap ter of the controversy was forever closed, so far as I am concerned. From that time until now, and from now until we win, there has been and will be no room in my heart for any other purpose than to employ every resource at our command to make the United States invincible in the con test of arms. Whatever may have been true at a former time, and however difficult It is to understand what safety for democracy through the world means. the truth now is, and no man can es cape it, that the safety of democracy in America, the independence of the United States, the perpetuation of the free institutions of our own country, the honor and happiness of our own people, all depend upon our success in this war. That citizen of the republic who re fuses "to give whatever he has which will aid his country in the critical hour through .which it is passing, or who does anything or says anything that will increase the peril of the men and boys who are standing between us and the enemy, is unworthy of the republic which is trying to protect him. "RELIEF" FOR THE rVClKABLIS. A physician from Des Moines opened a, subject that should serve the debat ing societies for many a long Winter evening by suggesting, at the conven tion of the American Association of Progressive Medicine, that incurable adults be permitted to end their lives when those lives seem to have become unbearable to them. The suggestion is not new, nor is there the slightest prospect that it ever will be adopted. But purely as an issue for debate, it offers the advantage that it will never be "settled" by argument. And those who take the affirmative side on the rostrum probably would be among the last to give their consent to applica tion of the principle in a case that struck home. What the Des Moines physician says he desires to bring about is a reform by which a person in full possession of his reasoning faculties and afflicted with a painful and incurable malady, may, on his request, be "killed by some approved form of anesthesia." He would extend the permission to parents of a child who may request its death under similar circumstances. Whatever may be said as to the right and wrong of terminating our own lives and we do not escape re sponsibility by delegating the act it self to a physician the obvious diffi culty remains of determining the fact that recovery is hopeless. With all the progress that medical science has made, it has not yet eliminated the mistaken diagnosis. Responsibility for declaring that a certain condition is hopeless is too great for any indi vidual or group of individuals to as sume. It would be equally difficult to establish the degree of suffering that would justify death, even if there were no other reasons against it. And the "incurable" line is fast changing. Many diseases now yield to enlight ened treatment that were regarded as hopeless only a few years ago. It Is estimated that thero are' 200, 000 unfortunates in the United States in the "incurable" class. It is a curi ous fact that a majority of the dele gates present at the convention of the Association of Progressive Medicine approved the euthanasia plan. It is probable, therefore, that an attempt will be made to obtain appropriate legislation. But the attempt will fail. The notion will prove too repugnant even for the wildest "freak Legisla ture" that one is able to imagine. CASHING IN. The people of Oregon who have waited so long for some material re turn from the Oregon & California Railroad land grant may now con gratulate themselves that the Govern ment, of which they are a part, is cashing in. All the troop movements from Ilose ville, a point near Sacramento, to Portland are provided by the railway company without cost to the Govern ment. This is under the terms of the original land grant. Oregon's share of this particular saving may not be a great amount, but its saving on free transportation of all soldiers is mate rial, when all the land grant roads are considered. There are thirty-five of these roads, we are told by John W. Kcan. trans portation clerk of the Navy Depart ment, in an article in the Railway Age Gazette. Not all of them pro vide wholly free transportation as par tial return for the millions of acres granted them. The first grants were at the stage of railway transportation when it was conceived that one com pany might own roadway and track and another company, or the Govern ment, might own and operate the trains. These early grants provided that the Government should have use of the railroads, "free from toll or other charge." The Supreme. Court held that this provision only gave the Government the right to move its own trains without charge for track rights. An agreement between the railroads and the Government followed under which the Government in such in stances pays one-half of the regular rate. The Southern Pacific, however, from Roseville to Portland, is a free road. The Government pays nothing for transportation. It is the longest and most important of the free roads. From Portland north to American 1-iko the Northern Pacific carries troops at half rate. A soldier's trans portation from Sacramento to Ameri can Lake, therefore, costs the public a little more than $2. It is estimated that within a year the saving to the Government in movement of troops, considering all land grant roads, will be 'fully $50, 000,000. What the Government will have saved by the time the war is over and the troops have been re turned to their homes, cannot be defl nitely forecast. But Oregon's quota of $50,000,000. on the basis that the liberty loan is apportioned, would be $300,000. Trobably the people of this state will be relieved of paying nearly $1,000,000 for transportation in this wa r. The value Congress placed on this "string" attached to the railroad land grants may be inferred from this quo tation from a report by the Select Committee of the House on Pacific Railroads and Telegraph, submitted in 1856: So rapid Is the fall of enow, andsn re- slstlessly do the winds sweep over those atmost oounaiecs plains. It is quite impos sible to gain a distant shelter. So with a train of ears running up the plain from Iowa or Missouri to the foot of the Rocky .Mountains, a distance of 800 miles, bow, in a storm. Is shelter, or wood, .or- wt.r. or food, to be gained? Arrested 800 miles trom Jowa In November, how is a train of cars to be relieved before May? To talk of doing business In the Winder season on a road through such a region, though every conductor was a Kit Carson and everv tra.-eler a Fremont, would seem to be idle anu preposterous. Events disclose the value of pessi mistic prophecy concerning man's ability to overcome natural obstacles. The Panama Canal seems to be do ing its duty unassumingly and effi ciently, now that it has found its stride, as is shown by recent shipping statistics. In the four and a half months of 1914 that it was in use it accommodated 357 ships, carrying l,7oS,934 tons of cargo. It was closed two months of 1915 on account of slides, and the number of ships which passed through was .1171, carrying a tonnage of 4,966,560. There was a decided shortage of shipping in 1916, on account of the war, and the ton nage passing through was only 4,931, 911, carried by 1253 ships, the number of the latter being Increased slightly, while the cargo total decreased. But 1917 bids fair to establish a record, for in the first six months of the year 970 ships, with 3,68ti,6S8 tons of goods, made use of the canal, which would mean nearly 2000 ships and nearly 7,500.000 tons of freight, if the ratio were maintained for the entire year. Certain individuals of not too es thetic tastes and not bothered with imaginations have revived discussion of the edibility of the woodchuck, on account of its possible bearing on food conservation. A good many country boys know that the wood chuck is "good to eat," having par taken thereof in the period of their lives when a fellow will try anything once, and there are no objections to the animal on the ground of unwhole someness. He is discriminating in his choice of diet for himself, and is far more nice in his ways than either the chicken or the lobster, which we ac cept without question. But unless we happen to be camping out, there are certain difficulties in the way of hav ing the woodchuck prepared for the table. Few housewives would be willing to undertake the job, any more than they would be willing to dress and cook a gopher or a rat, which the woodchuck slightly resembles. Uruguay is not a big nation, but stands for her rights. The German charge will not be allowed to leave until her representatives in Berlin are safe, and this may be the means of defeating the purpose. Germany has little regard for 'one life, whether Teuton or foreigner. Germany and Austria are reported to have a peace offer raady, but as it omits such items as disarming, throw ing in the fleet and several billions, surrender of the Kaiser and a few other important things, there is no likelihood of acceptance. Motorists who have essayed nego tiation of the road to Hillsboro past Orenco will rejoice to learn that will bo the route of the Pacific Highway. That locality has wallowed In mud for years, but the end Is In sight. Here is an example: A Chinaman and two white men were arrested in a Chinese lottery. The Chinaman was able to furnish $50 bail, but the white man had to go to Jail, which shows who gets all the money. A local restaurateur named Unter falkberger has refused to hang liberty lean posters in his windows, and, with that name, can you blame him? If you have space and heed Food Administrator Ayer, you will buy and keep a cow, provided you have none now. By keeping a German diplqmat as a hostage. Uruguay shows some slight suspicion of German frlghtfulness. Government motor cars are not re quired to pay the license fee, but arc amenable to speed and other laws. No wonder Roosevelt has an affec tion for Judge McGinn. The way they go and the way they do are similar. If Clark's son is to bo exempted, then the sons of the cook and scrub lady must not be forced to go. The Reichstag makes as much fuss about its . debates as though they amounted to something. The American patrol vessel did not intend to hit a friendly submarine, of course; but it scored. What has become of the young fel lows who registered as "farmers" to avoid the draft? The frost is on the pumpkin In the Middle West, but most of the fodder is in the field. Contracts have been let for 14,000 liberty airplane engines. That is just a beginning. Who recalls the days when torpedo boats and a destroyer were built in Portland? Why not a liberty bond with ruffles and such things to appeal to women? Do not wait for liberty week. Buy a bond now, and another next week. Policemen are asking more money, but do not threaten to strike. The weather is kind to the wood-, pile. Howdy do, McAdoo? How to Keep Well. Br Dr. w. A. etiiu. Questions pertinent to hygiene, sanitation and prevention of diseases, if matters of gen eral Interest, will be answered in this col umn. Where space win not permit or the subject is not suitable, letters will be per sonally answered, subject to .proper limita tions and where stamped addressed envelope is Inclosed. Dr. Evans win not make diag nosis or prescribe for individual dlsesses. He quests for such services cannot be answered. (Copyright. 1916, Dy TJr. V7. A. Evans. Published by arrangement with the Chicago Tribune.) WHAT WE LEARX FROM SOLDIERS. Soldiers are neither fat nor thin. There is no obesity among them, or only little. On the other hand, there are a few men who are much below weight. It is true that the entrance examinations weed out all men who are constitutionally of the lean and hungry Cassius type, but it does not weed out those who tend to get obese as they get older. There is very little stomach tremble among soldiers. As compared with ci vilians they do not have activity of the stomach, sour stomach, dyspepsia, neu ralgia of the stomach, stomach ulcer, nor their share of the stomach ills which civilians talk about by the hour. The reason is that they have a care fully worked out dietary. When they are in reserve they have a ration con taining the right number of calories and the right proportions of fats, starches and proteins. The American ration is short on su gars. In consequence, you always find American soldiers buying ice cream, cakes and other sweets and trash from tent3 around the camp. The greater part of this tendency is due to the fact that the American eats too much sweets. The Army dietitians know it and regulate diets accordingly, but the soldiers buy on the side what their pampered palate calls for. But a part of the desire for sweets has a better basis. The Knglish recognize this and add a liberal allowance of jam to their ration. What the soldier teaches the civilian is that if he will eat a ration propor tioned for his needs and will not make the caprice of appetite the basis of his diet he will be fat enough, but not too fat and he will have far less dyspepsia than he now enjoys. The soldier uses canned milk in his coffee. The teaching of this custom is that unless you can be certain of the safety of your milk It is better to use milk powder or condensed or evaporated milk. The soldier drinks no water unless he knows it to be safe. If the water supply available is not safe he sterilizes it with chemicals. If civilians were as careful as to the water they use typhoid fever and bowel troubles would be far less frequent. The present day soldier drinks far less alcoholic beverages than does the average person in any other group. A few years from now, when the Army has had time to get rid of some of the old drinking traditions and the in fluence of some of the old and other wise most helpful sergeants and cor porals, drinking by soldiers and sailors will be unheard of. Even now the average consumption of alcohol by 1.000, 000 soldiers is far less than that of 1,000.000 civilians, and the health, wind and endurance the fitness of the soldiers are Increased by it. The lesson for the civilian is that drinking makes against health and fitness. Effert of Starch. Etc. Mrs. L. writes: "(1) What effect has food containing starch on the human system, on the nerves especially? (2) Also sugar? (3) Also vinegar or any acids? (1) Also tea and coffee? (5) Please give a list of foods containing starch. (6) And one of food which contains none or very little starch." Reply. 1. Starchy foods produce health and en ergy. If taken in excess they may cause Indigestion with fermentation, also obesity and diabetes. .Bread, the staff of life, is a starch food. SSugitr Is closely related chemically to staich. It needs little change In order to be absorbed. It produces heat and energy. Un der certain circumstances and within limit's I- is an excellent food. Katen in excess it destroys appetite, harms digestion, produces obesity and diabetes. It is too concentrated to be nn Ideal food. :i. Vinegar is a condiment rather than a focd. taken in excess It Injures digestion. 4. Tea and coffee have very little food value. Their effect :a due to caffein, a drug. Most people stand ne or two cups a day without difficulty. More than two cups a day is harmful. A. Hrcads. cereals, pastries. potatoes, bcr.ns and peas. 6. Meat, eggs, milk, good gluten, breads. Itetnedy for Nervousness. G. L. offers a remedy for nervous ness: "The best bit of advice for the nervous person is this: "You are one person; the other per son iH only one person, too. As a per son, he has the right to be the kind of person he is; as another person, you have the same right to be the kind of person you are. If he is talkative, all right; if he is quiet, all right; if he is self-possessed, all riprht ; if lie is nervous, still all right after all, he is only one person. "If you are talkative, all right; if you are quiet, all right; if you are self possessed, all right; if you are nervous, still all right after all, you, too, are only one person. If you are a nervous person, no matter: that Is your char acteristic. Whatever you are, you, like the next person, are fulfilling your destiny you are doing one person's work "in the world and that is all that is necessary. "If the nervous person would ponder this thought and live it, he would cease to remember his nervousness and thus would overcome the trait." Reply. Many persons who lnck poise are so be cause of a lack of proper valuation of them selves and others, out of this lack various emotions and mental states flow. Your philosophy can euro some of these. 1 am sure. Walton makrs use of the same prin ciple In the methods advocated in his help ful books. PIONEER'S SAflK SHOW-D STAND No Good Reason for Chanel" Deala; naiion of I.ownsdale Street. POKTLAXD, Oct. 9. (To the Kdltor.) A few persons living in a hotel on Ixvnsdalo street have petitioned the Council to change the name of the street to Fifteenth on the ground that it is easier to direct strangers to a numbered street. This change should not be made. As The Oregonian rightly says. "There are too few monuments now to the pioneers of the city." No one has complained, of the name of Park street or West Park street or Chapman street, all of which are north and south thoroughfares, and it v only recently that the Council changed the name of Seventh street to Broadway, yet these streets are easily located by strangers. Lownsdale street has so been named for half a century and Lownsdale street it should remain, in spite of the whims of a, few newcomers. READER. AVaate of 'I I n. PORTLAND, Oct. 9. (To the Editor.) I have seen nothing in the news papers to the effect that our country does not face a shortage in tin for the purpose of canning foodstuff. If this shortage is real or even threatened for the future, why are the tobacco man ufacturers still using tin packages? Nearly as much tin is wasted for to bacco packages as is used in canning foodstuffs. This is indeed a deadly wrong if a present or future shortage exists. T. W. II. QUERIES ABOUT STREET RAILWAY Conunlsslea Cast Raise Rates in Spite of Franchise Requirements. PORTLAND. Oct. 9. (To the Edi tor.) In discussing the 6-cent fare tindT date of October 7 you say "the commission" has not done very much about it." What could they do, in view of the contract existing between the company and city? This company's precarious position, which no one believes, would appear under another coloring if the car service could be properly segregated from the light and power side. Kverv business has some line of endeavor which is carried on at a loss. How many grocers sell coffee and sugar at cost? Eliminate the bridge tolls? No, because these costs are more easily carried than would be the mainte nance of bridges and tunnels. If this company cannot adopt the commission's suggestions without the vote of the people, by what method of reasoning did they hope to rescind their contract with the city without such a vote? Managers are employed to work for the stockholders, not their employes or the public, and this company's managers are no exception. You speak of others who hold a more or less logical opinion (or is a contract an illogical opinion) that the company should carry out its contract. Can The Oregonian tell us how much this company paid for the Mount Hood Railway and what was its actual value? How much the P. R.. L. & P. Company has paid in dividends during the eight years, ending 1916? How many kilowatt they are now selling the Southern Pacific, Oregon Electric, United and other roads? How many kilowatts they now sell their com petitor, the Northwestern Electric Company, and at what price? How much has their legal department cost, and how many unavoidable accidents have been caused by faulty trackage and obsolete rolling: stock? When, if ever, did they voluntarlly raise the wage and better the condi tion of their men? Who wrote this editorial, anyway? Before answering read the last para graph. There can be no possible pride or philanthropy where a manager and a board of directors keep their men at 27 cents an hour. You speak of the next election. In what way do you imagine another election will help? S. H. BRAJKEL, 119 Holgate street. This correspondent submits questions that have doubtless come to the minds of many persons. For that reason they will be answered in considerable detail. All of those material to the issue are answered in the findings and or der just issued by the Public Service Commission. The following informa tion is taken from that document: Valuations and operating costs of the car system and the light and power service have been segregated by tho Commission. The Commission cites three decisions of the United States Supreme Court to support the conclusion that "any attempt to compel the unprofitable op eration of the street railway system on the theory that other departments of the utility are earning sufficient revenue to make the business profita ble as a whole would, if resisted, fail." Aside from the legal phase, it finds that the light and power department is not in a position to carry the rail way system. In regard to the company's contract with the city to maintain a 5-cent service the public utilities act empow ers the Commission to regulate rates regardless of franchise requirements. Its Jurisdiction In that particular is supported by a line of Itgal decisions, and is asserted by the Commission In its findings. Cost of the Mount Hood branch is not stated in the Commission's order. Neither valuation of the Mount Hood rail lines nor the fares charged there on were Involved in the hearing. Valuations and fares only on city lines were in issue. The Commission's figures on the company's profits go back only five years. The net income in 1912-13 wa 6 per cent. In the next year 5.3 per cent. In the next 3.6 per cent, in the next 2.3 per cent. In the last 2.8 pr cent. The percentages apply to the values found by the Commission. Electric current sold to other com panies is supplied by the light and power department, and as already ex plained cannot be legally considered In fixing rates on the railway system. Tho law expenses of the company Tor the year ending June 30, 1917. were $10,776. The Oregonian does not know whether this Item Is the total cost of the legal department or whether pnrt of such cost Is Included In the Hems or (21,018, salaries and expenses of general officers, and 131,05$, salaries and expenses of gen eral office clerks. The company has raised the wages of its men 10 per cent since the first of the year. The company has no trainmen re ceiving as low as 27 cents an hour. Beginners receive 2S cents, and after six months are raised to 29 cents. Wages now are Increased each year until the fifth year, when a maximum of 31 cents is paid. As heretofore stated, all the fore going information is from the find ings of the Public Service Commission. Company representatives assert that there has not In recent years been any serious accident due to faulty trackage or obsolete rolling stock. The accuracy of the statement can he checked up by anyone so minded by applying to the Public Service Com mission, which investigates all acci dents. The correspondent says: "Tou speak of the next election. In what way do you imagine another election will help?" The Oregonian has not said it would help. On the other hand, it has expressed a doubt In that particular. The election was referred to for the reason that the Public Service Com mission suggested that the railway company's difficulties be composed by relinquishment by the city of bridge tolls, paving costs and other extraor dinary charges. Neither Commission nor company has power to abolish such charges. They are fixed by, city char ter, which can be amended only by vote of the people. What Doea Germany Mean T ALBANY, Or., Oct. 8. (To the Edi tor.) Can you tell me just what Count Czernin and central-power statesmen In general have in mind in their con stantly recurring demand for "freedom of the seas"? Have they something definite In mind, or is this simply a plausible catch phrase? M. H. E. This letter is answered in another column. As It Passes On. Florida Times-Union. "Where am I?" "In the hospital. Vott were knocked down by an automobile." "What make was it?" "A Blank Blank, the finest car made." "Ah. 1 remember! It struck me as a fine car," In Other Days. Half a Century Agro. From The Oregonian of October 10, 1S67. State Fair, Salem The scalp of an Indian is exhibited here bearing this in scription: "Killed by a friendly In dian." Queer friend, that! Express Ranch Last night about dark two Indians came into the field at this place and stole two horses out of a band of five. A dispatch from Salem states that the game between the Pioneers and the Willamettes yesterday resulted in 92 runs for the Pioneers and 25 for the AVillamettes. The new steamer Lewiston eailed from Umatilla for Wallula on the elev enth to take freight for Lewiston. The boat worked well and the proprietors are sanguine of the success of their en terprise. At the preliminary meeting of the Pioneers of Oregon at Salem on Monday, Medorem Crawford. Sr.. was chosen tem porary president and W. H. Gray tem porary secretary. Another meeting was set for Wednesday evening for the purpose of completing the organization of the society. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of October 10, 1S02. City Surveyor Hurlburt has just com pleted a set of blue prints of nil the additions to the city of Portland for use In his office. On Wednesday evening next The Oregonian will distribute at least 10. 000 copies of the special fair issue, to be published on that day at the exposi tion. Lillian Russell, who has deservedly held a high position in the esteem of all admirers of comic opera, appears to night at the Marquam for the first time as prima donna of her own company. Contractors have been taking advan tage of the late fine weather to push the work in hand with all possible vigor. The fourth story of the A. O. U. W. Temple Is finished and a number of etone columns, which are to orna ment the fifth story, are nearly all in place. The Female Politician. By James Barton Adams. SHE arises in the morning, eats her breakfast with a rush, scans the columns of her paper as she downs her oatmeal mush; not the thrilling war dispatches nor the stirring local news, but the doings of conventions and the leader writer s views. She will nibble at a biscuit and will swallow down a. sup of the stimulating coffee that is steaming in the cup, but her glances never wander from the closely printed page as she smiles with satisfaction or her teeth she grits in rage. She's the female politician who ha3 dreamed she has a mission Purifying politics from base to dome. As around the town she's tearing while her worser half is caring For the little ones at home, sweet home. Every sweet domestic instinct has been smothered in her brain, just a thought of household duties gives her a. Quite hefty pain; she has loftier am bitions, has an eye on public life, and she almost hates the fetters that have bound her as a. wife. She is chummy with the schemers and the plotters of the wards, smiles upon t'ae old wheel horses who manipulate the cards; sees no line of demarkation 'twixt the party sheep and goats, gauging character en tirely by their skill in getting votes. When her Jaws are oscillating and her agile tongue vibrating. How the opposition heads she'll fiercely comb. And you'd think to hear her talking so vociferously shocking That she never knew a home, sweet home. The exalted right of suffrage every maid and dame who has reached the ago for voting should in proper manner claim, should discuss the vital Ques tions in their own domestic hall, or when out among the neighbors they arc making social calls. Thoy should go and cast their ballots in a quiet, modest way. cheer and swing their pretty bonnets when their party win;i the day, even jotailarly guy the beaten voters of their sex, telling them how sharp they got it in their graceful, swcnlikc necks. I But the skirted politician who believes she has a mission To reform all public systems base ta dome. Would command more admiration, more outspoken commendation. As the mother-queen of home, sweet home. LEADERS NOT MEN, ALL TO BLAMM Many Workers Would Ahnadon Strike Except for I'rnr of "Business Asrnln." rOr.TLAND, Oct. 9. (To the Editor.) The present shipyard strike was called through a iiihps meeting of the unions involved. The question nt stnke were the wage and hour, with no reference to the open or closed shop issue. Immediately, however, when the union powcra found that they bad the weight of an active strike behind them, the wage and hour dispute took a IihcIc neat and the open or closed shop lssuo came forward. The recent letters of the strikers committee, as reported in the papers, leave no doubt as to this being the) burning question. Do the majority of the men now "out" subscribe to this? 1 liavo followed carefully the prog ress of the strike, and know personally w great many men now out of employ ment throuRh the strike tuition mem bers). Many of them are opposed to further continuance of the strike, since their ends as originally demanded have been gained, but thoy are afraid of the powers of the paid "business agent." who with the proportion of radicals' and rabid "union uber allcs" members would promptly brand them as "scabs' were they to voice their true opinions. Will Messrs. Bottomley & Co. call :v mass meeting of all who are now on strike and take a secret or written vote, not a rising or spoken vote, to decide yes or no as to a continuance of the strike under its present changed front? I will answer my own question. They will not. This is written in justice to a great many unfortunate victims of a very vicious and tyrannical system the unions as now handled not against the right of workmen to organize for legitimate reasons and purposes. A VICTIM. Krewh Toaatora All Winter. PASCO. Wash., Oct. S. (To the FJd. ilor.) I notice a short Item of advice to those whose tomatoes don't get ripe to "put them in a dark, warm cellar." After the first frost I gather all to. matoes, put them In shallow boxes, or other receptacles, not more than two deep, and store them in the kitchen, storeroom or cellar. The tomatoes will ripen according to warmth of room and will furnish ripe ones for continuous use. Those In the cellar will be pale, t sold tomatoes for New Year's dinners and used the last for Washington'. birthday. As long as they are not frozen they w ill retain their flavor. W. 1'. UltAT. r