10 't THE - OREGON - DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1916. THE JOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEW8PAPES. ' K. J ACKlM ..... . ............ Publish l'ubtthel wry day, afternoon - and morning (except Sunday afternoon), at lb Journal liouomg, itroaoway ana iinuu sc.. rwt r. Wyed at tbe poslotflce at 1'ortUad. Of., foe trtseiiMion through tb mails a, second el matter. --. - ' " TLK-HUNbV Mala JITS: Boom, A-SOM. All departments rescbed to these Bombers. TU the operator what department yon want. OHKIOX All V KKTIS1NU KKl'BKHKNXATI VB Jtrnlsailn at kentaoc C., Brunswick Bui. r 23 riftb New 0rk; WIS People' Hss P-ldg- Chicago. kubacrlpttoa term, by mall or to any sui tress la tbe Cnited State or Mezteo: - UAllX (UOgNJNO OR imKNOON) Oatytar.. ...... .$3.00 1 On month C .00 . , HUN DAY. fm jrrr ,.$2.00 I On month. .....$ -23 DAlLX (HOBSINO OR AtTEBNOOM) AMD 8CKDAT One yesr. ...... -ST .60 I One month .AS ' America asks nothing for herself but what Shu baa a right to aak for humanity Itaelf. WOODUOW WILSON. Millions for defence, but not a cent for tribute, CHARLES C. PISCKSET. We owe it to a doe regard for our own rlgbta aa a nation, to oar aenso of duty as a repreaentatire of tbe rights of neutral tbe world over and to a just conception of tbe rights of mankind to take this stand now witb tbe utmost solemnity and firmness. WOODKOW WIIJSON. THE ONLY COURSE FY HE president's latest note to - I Germany was inevitable. No 'I . other course was open except a humiliating admission that American rights at sea are Bur-, rendered and age-old agreements among nations torn up. . For more than a year, the im perial government has been pledg v ing itself not to sink merchantmen without warning and to afford safety to passengers and crew. Practically every month during that period, these pledge? have been broken by the sinking of one merchantman after another with out warning and without giving crew and passengers time to es cape. The latest case is tb.o French - channel steamer Sussex. In its note on this case the imperial gov- ' eminent in effect admits that its submarine commander did not knowthe name of the vessel he tor pedoed. It admits that the subma rine sank a ship at the time and place the Sussex went down, but that he was in ignorance of whether the vessel was a liner, a transport or a merchantman. .., The captain of the submarine said It was "a long black craft with out a flag," which he thought might be a mine layer. The vessel was thereupon attacked without warn ing and without provision for the safety of the 325 passengers. There . could be no plainer proof that the repeated pledges of the past were disregarded, than is this complete admission in the official note of the imperial government. - There could be no plainer 'proof ' that, in spite of a year of promises that were unquestionably sincere, German submarine commanders do , not know what ships they attack. Insuch a situation, with tragedy after tragedy following each other In rapid succession, there was noth ing left to the president but to take the- position declared In his noto of yesterday. - - America has been more than pa tient. The negotiations seemed often to have settled the contro versy but always there were fresh offenses. . .Germany has been often de ceived by her own partisans. Thus, . when the Lusitania was sunk, the imperial government insisted that the "ship when she left New York, . undoubtedly had guns on board, which were mounted under decks . and masked." The man who de ceived Germany by swearing that he saw the Lusitania'a guns Is now ' s in the Atlanta penitentiary, a con victed : perjurer, and the German . foreign office has never repeated - the charge. -." Last September, explaining the sinking of the Arabic, Germany .-. claimed on false information that the vessel's commander attempted ' to ram the submarine. A few days later, Ambassador von Bernstorff - formally notified the state depart " ment that Germany admitted that ' there was no' truth in the report that the Arabic attacked the sub marine, and that the German gov ernment "regrets and disavows ' Commander : Schneider's act" and - offers indemnity. -. . Tbe v ms basis upon which diplo matic ! relations between two great nations can be maintained Is good . faith and the faithful adherence to all covenants made-. Without that mutual confidence and faithful per ' , formance of 'promises essential to the conduct of diplomatic relation, it la a useless formality to keep an American ambassador at Berlin ' and a German ambassador at Wash ington. - , " To . the full and ,' regretful contemplation- ot a. severance of rela tions is the length .to which Presi dent" Wilson has been driven by the eventuatlons of the past year of controversy s. In which agreements were reached only to be broken by one of the high contracting parties. The full" solemnity and gravity o: the step as felt by the president was made clear in his address to congress yesterday. The hope Is that Germany, hav ing so often; by her own pledges, admitted the justice of the Ameri can contention, will now have a solemn realization that we have reached - the parting of the ways and take action that will assure, a continuance of the friendship and mutual good will so long common to the two nations. The great resources of The Jour nal as a newspaper were displayed yesterday. Tbe president's speech of more than 2000 Words was de livered at 1:30, Washington time. The note to Germany of nearly 2500 wjrds was released at Wash ington at 2:30. The speech ap peared in The Journal in the earlier editions, and both speech and note in full with full accounts of the effect in Washington were spread broadcast on the streets of Portland at four o'clock. Only the last word in newspaper service and equipment can yield such re sults. THE PORTLAND HANDICAP THE great sum of $37,744,942 has been expended in provid ing facilities for uco of the Columbia and Willamette riv ers for commerce. Hero are the figures: Mouth of the Columbia $14,697,001 Lower Columbia "and Wil lamette 3.799,739 Upper Columbia from mouth of the Willamette 10,049,474 Upper Willamette including locks at Oregon City 1,318,728 Appropriated by state for locks 300,000 Spent by Port of Portland less $450,000 for Jetty.. 5,500,000 Expended by Dock Com'n.. 2,100,000 Grand total ..J37.764.942 These expenditures have laid the foundation for a great water-borne traffic. But the returns to us from these expenditures can only be se cured by putting these costly fa cilities to use. Though the great sum of $10, 049,474 has been expended on the upper Columbia, we havo made so little use of the facilities that we are suffering rank discriminations in freight rates. We do not have rates based on our favorable loca tion. We do not have rates based on the low cost of the haul down the river on which a loaded car once started will roll into Port land on it3 own momentum. The rates we are compelled to pay are the same as If there were no Columbia river. They are the came as if the Columbia gorge were a range of high mountains. Though the gorge is there and though traffic costs but little in contrast with what it would cost were the gorge high mountains, we are. forced to pay and the interior is forced to pay freight rates based on the cost of - an over-mountain haul. It is so because we are not using the facilities for providing which $10,049,474 has been spent. By not using these facilities, we are condemning ourselves to a continuation of freight rates ar ranged 'for the benefit of Puget Sound and wholly unsuitcd to ana very discriminatory against Port land. By not using them, wo are sub mitting to a freight-rate injustice that is undermining our property values, that is diminishing our prosperity, that is handicapping our growth, that is limiting our commerce, that is depriving us of the benefits of our location, that is hampering the growth of our industries, and that is, every day, every month, and every year work ing to the detriment of our city and its people. As you read the" Dresident's speech, the note to Germany and the accounts of doings at the na tional capital in your Journal early yesterday afternoon, and as you reflected that all these accounts sped across the continent by wire, were edited, the forms made up, and the papers printed before four o'clock, did it not occur to you that The Journal Is a great newspaper? THE VANISHING TURK THE southwestward sweep of the Russians through Asia Minor follows the same path that the Turks themselves took on their conquering march hundreds ef years ago. They were then a little tribe migrating from nobody knows where and seeking what they might devour. Little by little through many vicissitudes they grew to greatness and founded a mighty empire. They crossed into Europe over the Byzantine straits almost a century before Constantinople fell a prey to Ma homet II, and their arms received no real check until John Sobieski, the kingly Pole, defeated them under the walls of Vienna. Their rule has always been like that' of the locust. They have been a pest to the world, ravaging, plun dering, oppressing but never build ing. Their settlements In con quered countries have been nothing more than armed camps. They have produced generals and tyrants but no statesmen. Almost all that is left of their once wide sway is limited now to Asia Minor. It is here, in their last retreat, that the Russians iiave attacked them. : The - Grand Duke and his host come as rescuers to the Armenians, long subject to massacre and outrage by their sav age rulers.; At the samo time the British : have moved a force up from India, endeavoring to overrun the valley of Mesopotamia and Join hands with: the GTand Duke, Every victory of the Russians - makes the ultimate British victory more cer tain. - - ' -i , ' J' When the two armies are united, as they probably will be before long, they will march .westward across Asia Minor, along the road by which Cyrus the Great came to attack Croesus in his capital of Sardis, and the obnoxious Turk will vanish from the face of the earth. The Turk would have prolonged his miserable existence If ; he' had kept out of the war, but It matters little. His doom was sealed in any case. Still, there Is some excuse for the ferocity with which all in the street car glare at the man who queries, "Do you think they will ever catch Vee-yah?" WHOSE FAULT? ABRAHAM NELSON asserts on thi3 page that delay in hard su"facing Broadway east of the bridge is partly charge able to Commissioner Dieck. He charges that Commissioner Dieck is making the improvement so costly that abutting property cannot stand the assessments. He insists that there 13 no need of a change of grade. The Journal knows nothing of the merits Of this phase of the controversy. In justice to the property owners along the rotten street, it passes the charge up to Mr. Dieck and the other commis sioners. . - It stands to reason that on one side or the other, or on both, there is a measure of bullheadedness or the differences would have been adjusted and the street have been Improved long ago. Reasonable tact on both sides and a proper spirit of compromise should adjust things and permit the improvement to be made. The street is almost in the geo graphical heart of Portland. Broad way and the magnificent bridgo are one of the show features of the city, though the dirty section of street from Union avenue to Larrabee is a blight to the pros pect, a blight to the business and to the residence value of the lo cality. In two days, it will be three years since the bridge was built at a cost of $1,586,921.90. The in terest charge on the bridge bonds is $68,680 a year. The maintenance and interest charge against the people of Port land i3 already nearly a quarter of a million dollars, and, in all con science, the people of the vicinity and the city commission should get together and rid Portland of this fester spot of dust and mud. An insane man in Cali'ornla who was escaping, had his reason re stored by a blow on the head with a heavy fire nozzle. If that plan of restoring reason is to be widely adopted, it would be well, perhaps, for all the head3 to be creosoted. THIRTY-THREE CENTS A DAY THE Chicago leader of fashion who has figured out that a person can live on J 3 cents a day omits at least one necessary of life from her account, and perhaps two or three. Gaso line costs in eastern cities not far from 30 cents a gallon at retail. This leaves but 3 cents a day for food, drink and clothing, on the theory that a person consumes but a gallon a day of the great indis pensable. We dare say most men would divide up their wealth in that( pro portion, 30 cents for gasoline and three for everything else, but their diet would be extremely light. The Chicago dame who has compiled this. slender budget confesses that she has not tried it herself. No doubt it costs many times 33 cents to keep her automobile going as she makes afternoon calls on her elite circle. There are people in the United States to whom a hundred dollars comes and goes as lightly as a cop per penny to the rest of us. They spend most of their spare moments preaching economy to the poor. After all, there is one phase of running for office that is inexpen sive. The candidate doesn't have to hire a genealogist to learn of his past. RAILROADS AND THEIR, MEN THE JOURNAL cannot pass on the merits of the controversy between .the raili-oads and their employes, relative to an eight-hour day. Statements from ho parties are conflicting. The railroads contend that the concession demanded would cost the companes $100,000, 000. The employes deny it. The managers say the employes refuse arbitration. The employes deny it The managers say a strike has already been determined upon. The employes deny It. On this page is a carefully pre pared . statement of the employes' side of the controversy. It con tains some statements that cannot be successfully . controverted. Thus It contends as a principle that Ions hours -: under high tension quickly incapacitate workers. That 13 true. Tb.o managers themselves must admit It. , The locomotive engineer after a dozen hours or more . at his post can easily misread train orders and cause a costly collision. The spent and sleepy worker is not "safety flrst."r It is no longer, denied that accidents in industry are more fre quent at the end of a long. day. ' Well rested, properly nourished, alert and active workers in any ac- tlvity are safer and moro profitable to employers than are weak, unfed and spent workers. , One class Is safety, the ' other menace. One means good service, the other bad service. One means efficiency, the other inefficiency. - Thi3 13 not a discussion of the merits of the pending controversy, but the assertion of established principles in industrial life. SMALL POTATOES S" OLLIER'S WEEKLY calls L Madden of Illinois, "small po- sand more soap makers would be re tatoes." Congressman Mad-j quired and the stores themselves den Is the man who, with In-1 would profit by selling their goods credibly mean subservience to the to these employes, isn't it strange bis predatory Interests, slipped the Hfifty pound limit on the parcel post into the postal appropriation bill. He fancied he could do the .trick without being found out and check mated. He ha3 been found out but he may not be checkmated. That de pends upon the force of public opinion. Congress is usually as bad as it dares to be. When the people get anything from their servants at Washington It is by the hardest kind of hard work. But it is harder still to keep what they get With a fashion note insisting that man's attire tbfs season muet match his hair, there ara some gen tlemen we know of who are going to look like animated danger sig nals. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND Erery day la cleaa-ap day with tbe eatab llshment whose wares are presented in No. 113 of Tbe Journal's Nothing tbe Matter With Portland" series. Tbe small concern -Is entitled to as much credit. In every moral snse, as tbe larger, if It fills Its place to tbe limit of sbtlity and expands with oppor tunity. Tbe day of small things Is In no wise to be despised. There is inspiration In today' story. THE Klenzo Soap company is in a class by itself. As its products would imply, it is one of; the "clean" institutions of the city and state. It is young, but not too little to come within the scope vf The Jour nal publisher's admonition to "not for get the little ones." It turns out 1000 pounds of Klenzo soap daily, and still is In arrears with Its orders. It employs traveling salesmen to place its products in the stores em-1 braced in its territory, and these are not of the ordinary, either. Its soaps are of the finer grades, and are rsc - ommended for washing dishes, remov ing grease spots from clothing, for Use "n tho bathroom, for shampooing purposes, removing grease from fur niture, washing automobiles, wood work of all kinds, linoleum, marble, tiling, toilets, sinks, grease, pitch, paint or grime from the hands, etc. A trial will convince anyone that It is a dandy preparation, and its popu larity will increase as its merits be come known. In addition to this soap the company makes a complete line of toilet goods, Including Tar Hair j Shampoo. 50c a jar; Cucumber Hair j Shampoo, same price; Klenzo Face Cream, same price; Liquid Pace Pow der. J1.00 a jar, and Brilliant Metal Polish, at 25 cents a can. Each of these manufactures is well known, bona fide, and has proved itself worthy of public confidence. This 's evidenced by the great array of testi monials from reputable and well known persons who have used them. PURELY A HOME ENTERPRISE. The -concern 'is a home corporation, officered by Charles J. Little, presi dent and manager; J. W. Rose,' vice president, and D. L. Kimball, secre tary and treasurer. All ingredients entering into Its products are procured in Portland, not a penny being sent out of the city for any purpose. For an enterprise only nine months old as a corporation, though in busi ness for a year before being incor porated, this , industry has made a good record. Its output" is at this time Averaging from $3000 to $3500 'perty on Broadway, could not stand a month, a fact indicative of its j the heavy assessment that would re value and popularity, and If its sales suit from the various riders being continue to increase with the same rapidity as from January 1, its year's business will total more than $50, 000! "Our trouble at this tlme said the president, a remarkably bright young man, "is that we have had difficulty lr keeping up with our orders. We opened our factory in a small way, employing but two or three helpers, but today there are more than a dozen of us and we are all busy as nailers. A few days ago we removed from our old .quarters on Salmon street on the west side to this build ing, 371 Hawthorne avenue, where we have more than double the floor space, so w hope to keep - on top hereafter. V IF PEOPLE W6ULI3 BUY HOME GOODS. "We read in the newspapers that there are more than 275,000 persons residing in Portland. Every one of these, no matter how young or old, must be cleansed with soap, and with a grade similar to that made by us. Then, there is not a home In which there Is not use for our product apart from the cleansing of the skin. Once-jbe employed tn tne Kitcnen, it would not be dispensed with; or on woodwork. linoleum, marble, etc., and tbe auto mobilist never would forsake it if he once gave It a trial. For the purposes for which we : recommend our soap there is no better made in the world, nor any sold at a smaller price. ; Now if all who buy eastern-made products similar to ours would forego the prac tice, and insist on getting that made In - Portland, we . could add at least 50 to our payroll, their salaries would be spent here, the money would enter into all channels of trade, and elhe entire community would beuefir there- by. The Journal is" do.ng a 'good aervic to 'the community tn , calling 'attention to these facts, and It I m to t b hoped buyers will take at least some time to think thetri over for themselves. "There are several aoap factories in Portland, though none, so far aa we are aware, making- our class of goods. But we happen to know that for general purposes the products of the factories in operation here' are not anywhere surpassed, and that if their goods were sold exclusively In t the stores of Portland several tnou- . that they do not, or seemingly can- not, see this for themselves? And the same condition obtains In all other lines of Portland manufactures But you know the old saw, that "There are none so blind as those who will not see!'" And it is a gospel truth. Thousands of our people "wake up in the morn ing to the sound of a Connecticut clock. They arise and button Chi cago suspenders to their Detroit over- alls. They go out and wash their face with Cincinnati coap in a Cleve land wash basin. They sit down -n a Grand Rapids chair and eat their breakfast from an Eau Claire table, and weep because there is not Omaha beef on their Akron, Ohio, platter. Their bread is made of Minneapolis flour baked in a St. Louis oven. If they own a farm they will put a New York bridle in a Kentucky mule's mouth, fed on Iowa corn, if possible to pbtain it, and plow all day on a plot of ground covered with a Massa chusetts life insurance company's mortgage. And at eventide they will read a Bible printed in a Boston sweat shop and likely repeat a prayer written in Jerusalem. They will then crawl under a. blanket woven in New Jersey, to be kept awake air night by a dog Imported from South Dakota, or if a native of Oregon the only home product on the ranch." And it's the same with city folk. They Till not buy the stuff made in Portland, than which there is no bet ter on earth, then drain their tear ducts because there is no work for the head of the house. '"- If everybody In Portland would take a life-and-death oath that they would buy nothing not made in Portland, ! and" then have the moral courage to" stick to the resolve, there would not ' be an idle man in the bailiwick, not a hunsry stomach nor a beggar on the j streets. ( The Portland Soap Products com- pany has a payroll or ?eooo a year. IK ought to be four times that. It would be if all' Portlanders were loyal Jo Portland. Letters From the People t Communications sent to Tbe Journal for publication in this department should be writ ten on only one side of tbe paper, should not exceed 800 word in length and moat be ac companied by tbe name and address of the sender. If the writer does not desire to bare tbe name published, be should so state. J "Discussion Is tbe greatest of all reformers. It rationalises everything it touches. It robs Mt.i.iM..f .11 f . 1 anntltv- and throws them tack on their reasonableness. If they base no i" S"J2S-ViS: of existence and sets op its own conclusions 1b their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Concerning Broadway Improvement Portland, April 19. To the Editor of The Journal The property owners in the vicinity of Broadway are cir culating a petition against its im provement. "It is a most discourag ing situation," says The Journal edi torially. But the blame for that dis couraging situation does not lie with the property owners who are remon strating, as the editorial would have ltn readers believe." The blame for that discouraging situation lies en tirely with Commissioner Dieck and the city administration. Let me ten you why. Upon the completion Of the Broad way bridge the question or tne im provement of Broadway was taken up immediately. It would have gone through then had not some bright personage conceived the idea that the street should be widened and that a Jot of other frills should be .bung onto the improvement. The whole thing was put to the property own- who remonstrated because tne taoirod to the improvement. Then somebody vitally interested over there suggested to the city en gineer that the jog at wneeier street should be eliminated. The gentleman who owned thje jog ot course held it at a fictitious price, but the depart ment of public works apparently sided with him, because the proposition was put to the people, who again remon strated and defeated it. So the ad ministration paid for this hole out of the general fund, it seems, and af terwards have tried to collect It from the property owners. Some have paid and some have not. There is, I be lieve, litlgiation pending in the courts on this phase of the matter. The whole transaction is, in my opinion, a deliberate attempt by the city admin istration to override the will of the property owners. The city now owned the Jog, so an other attempt was made to improve the street. But did Mr. Dieck pro ceed with only the hard surfacing, as the property owners Intimated they wanted him to do? He did not. This time he tacked a change of grade proposition to the tail of the improve ment. I will state that I believe that Mr. Dieck and his offkse deliberately and purposely handled that change of trade matter in such a way as to pjill the wool over the eyes of the prop- ; jecfed to the change of grade, to the i effect that their objection ' could not heard. I will state further that , m.inrttv Af t h DroDertr owners the majority of the property owners in the vicinity of Broadway are not In favor of that change, this state ment being based upon my talks with the people in that vicinity. They do not feel that their property can stand the cost of the change at this time. I believe my statement will be con firmed when tie petitions now circu lating kill the whole Improvement be cause of Mr. Dieck s rider, the change of grade. ; V---'-- '-'- Real estate in Portland is the basis of its prosperity. Tax it. inspect it, assess nt, regulate It fanatically, as is Mr. Dleclfs policy, the basis of Port land's v prosperity -:- becomes : burdened till it topples over and Portland's prosperity is not The people who own property on Broadway .'want the street hardsurfaced, but they do PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE At any rate, "the Oerman and Mexi can crises, coming together, show good team work. Capture of Treblsond by the Rus sians Is apt to give the sick man of Europe a relapse. It Is a melancholy fact for a lot Of those candidates that the highest r raise some, men get comes at their unerals. Perhaps the psychological time is near for South America to again step in and help solve the Mexican prob lem. There Is reason to believe that ad vertising is responsible for Henry Ford as a factor in Republican presi dential primaries! Two 10 per cent wages increases in three months granted voluntarily by the United states Steel corporation are further proof that prosperity is being passed around. Judge Morrow rules that conviction of a doctor of misuse of the mails does not prove moral turpitude under Oregon laws. Now what does tile judge's ruling prove? Democratic success In Louisiana is not surprising, in spite of the fact that Louisiana got much free adver tising as having seceded from the Wilson administration. ' Bureau of mines experts see little hope for cheaper gasoline and, to make matters worse, they may have used high-power microscopes. American meat barons and the Brit ish government have reached an agreement on the price to be paid for meat seized, showing that great pow ers can agree when they want to. PLEA OF THE RAILWAY BROTHERHOODS Determination oa tbe part of tbe four great orders of railway employes of the I'nlted Ststes to present a demand on May 1 for an eight boor work day waa expressed in a referendum Tote taken early in the current year. Some confusion having grown up in the public mind as to the status of the case, a statement on behalf of the orders haa been lued In which tbe progress of the movement for the eight hour day is recorded, snd the merits of the demand, from tbe railway work ers' viewpoint, aredlscussed. The full text of this statement appears In the article sub joined. A statement has been frequently made by the railroads that the present demands of the railway train- service employes are not really for an eight hour day, but are intended to secure increased wagee. This is not true, as the employes composing the four brotherhoods want shorter hours. They want their work ing day to be as near eight hours as it can be made. To any reasonable person it will be apparent that it will be useless to se cure an eight-hour day unle&s there is some penalty attached for overtime. In all the trades where the eight-hour day obtains, there is an extra charge for overtime; otherwise, there would be no eight hour-day, the work would go one at the same rate per hour just as long as the employer cared to work the men. It has been amply demonstrated that eight hours' hard work is enough for any man and any hours he works more than eight, simply draw on his reserve energy and vitality, shortening his life and his available working years. It has also been proven that a man work ing eight hours is more efficient, does better work, and is in every way a better citizen than a man working long er hours. - The railroad train service employes, in asking tbe railroad companies for an eight hour day, also ask for time-and-one-half for overtime, but this extra rate , is merely a penalty" upon the railways and is considered an effect ive method for preventing overtime. "Overtime" is commonly called "blood money," and saps the very life out of the employes. We trust that the publir will consider the fact that it is the "overtime" and exposure that is now "wearing out" the employes and prompts many employers to set their employes' age limit at 21 to 35. In other vocations a man can work at least SO years note the difference in railway work. Considered in this way the railway employes could, in exact justice, ask for twice their present rale of pay, but the employes are not seek ing the "enormous increase," but de sir better living conditions. The physical and mental strain on train service employes, compelled to work long hours, is beyond comprehen sion by the average mind. Virtually all the accident and old-line insurance companies classify railroading as extra hazardous, many of them refusing to insure railway employes on account of the great risk of loss, and where these employes are injured there la a defi nite . limit set on the amount of the risk, and an extra charge is made to the insured. ' , In reality, the railway employe re ceives a less hourly rat of compensa tion than almost any other trade. A hodcarrier receives $4.50 for eight hours, or about 66 cents an hour. The highest-paid train conductor receives worked as many hours as the railway conductor, he would draw a larger sal- o,i -i k. v,.. .k.I railways as the "aristocrat of the labor world." - If the railways complain that "time-and-a-half means in some instances an increase, let them avoid the Increase by avoiding the. overtime, for that is the desire and purpose of the employes. The railways claim there was an in crease in wages to the men of between 30 and 42 per. cent from 1903 to 1914. This is partly true, but the price of living and the additional work required of the employes has more than offset it. Also, the said -wage increase came mostly to the employes having regular assignments and established hours for service, but the very great majority of the employes, who work in the irregu lar freight service and are allowed to work, the day if sufficient freight ship ments come to hand, but who lose the day's work if the business does not come these "irregular freight service" employes gained almost nothing, but were crowded back to an hourly com pensation, instead of mileage basis, by excessively long trains; or. in other words, the railways, to recover the 1903 to 1914 wage increase, gave each of their irregular freight crews two trains to handle instead of one, and this not only deprived other crews of a train and their day'a work, but kept the "double train" dragging along the rail way until ' it has, in many places, -become the practice of the railways to work- tbe employe th l hours and merely allow them the eight hours rest, anywhere and then continue on with his "freight drag" as it Is called bv both officials and employes. So the net. result of this is really a, not want the grade changed; th prop arty cannot stand that heavy burden. True, tb street would be less ateep were the grade lowered, bat so would several streets on Portland Heights were their grade lowered. The arrad on '- Broadway - is not prohibitive and the change is not necessary. If the city must stand for Mr. Dieck er ratic notions, let th whole city pay for that change Of grade out of the general fund, for what little benefit there will be. it will be for the Whole city. Then, I am sure, the property owners abutting. Broadwav. will nav lor tneir narasurxacing provided Mr, AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Baker Herald says of a lively neighbor town: -"Six buildings and a school house, all fire proot, going up , in North Powder, show how that hus-t tling city is progressing." j Rosebura-'s new fire truck, recently 1 purchased by the city council, will reach, that city about the middle of May. It is equipped with hose, chem ical and ladders. The Oregon state penitentiary is patriotic. Old Glory floats from a new flag pole ihere 107 feet high," ws uiv asuem statesman. in poie is of Oregon fir. More patriotism. j Speaking of the 1918 Josephine" county fair, the Grants Pass Courier says: -There must be the completet cooperation In the work of preparation tor this fair. For southern Oregon is going to have a whole lot to make merry over by next September." L. D. Lynde, a homesteader near Brogan, in Malheur county, in a let ter quoted In the Pendleton East Ore gonian, says: ' The winter did us a good turn In killing all of the Jack rabbits. You can ride all day and not see one. This community bought 21& ounces of strychnine to use on the rabbits but the major part is left over." Story with a marine flavor, told by the Gardiner Courier: "Many tales are being told on the old timer of Coos Bay anent the train service, and one that struck us was on a man pre sumably from Templeton. It was:? The train had arrived and the man bought a ticket from Reedsport, then missed the train and when asked the reason, innocently said 'There was no gang plank out. decrease in the earnings of the great majority of employes, since they are forced from fastjnlles at so much per mile, to glow, long hours at the same rate per hour and handle two, and oft en three, trains where before they handled one, and many other duties added. There are some railways that require the full 16 hours' work, at all times, from their employes, and it seems that the only reasonable and humane solu tion for this practice must be the pres ent movement. The railways declare that employes are demanding a $100, 000,000 increase, ut admit that upon many lines and in many places there will be but little change. There may be some inconsiderable increase, but nothing like what the officials claim, and in the light of past experience the employes easily can predict from what source the railways will quickly recoup themselves; additional duties for em ployes is always a fertile field for re trenchment. But if the employes win what they ask for, the public will soon find them an improved class of work ers and citizens, and along with this, the public will also secure an Improved railway service and prompt freight movement. The railroads are circulating printed statements showing names of train ser vice employes who are being paid large wages, and they are doing this to lead the public to believe that, because a few men are earning large salaries, it is an example of what tbe average train service man is getting. Invariable the men whose names appear upon the lists aa examples of large salaries being paid to railway train employes are men engaged in fast passenger runs and are exceptional cases; They should not be used as examples of what the average train service employe gets, because in the present demand for an eight hour lay the passenger service is not ex cluded. The public, who do not always under stand railway conditions and railway workers, hear only the railway side of tbe story. In the railway talk of mov ing terminals there Is but little to heed. The railways can expedite their freight service and continue with their pres ent terminals if they really wish to do so. in some few cases there may be a couple of hours overtime. When an engineer has drawn a check for $263 and a conductor a check for $247 for a month's work, the railway may call attention to this, but neglect to say that these men worked 15 hours and 25 minutes every day in the month and secured most of their- sleep in a box car "caboose" out along the line. Later -when these men lay off to re cuperate, their big checks must of course dwindle and soon these men are broken down and are dumped on the "scrap heap" with the other old ma chinery, and may be taken in by some kindly relative or perhaps find room in some distant "home" maintained by the employes' organization. Thus they conclude their daysthese soldiers of the great transportation army, these men who have safely transported countless numbers of passengers and endless trains of freight. Though the engines and cars become larger and yet larger, and though the trains be come even longer, and though the hours of service become more intensely Lfierce - tl!e railway employe still meas- T . In the great railway yards the switchman whose tired feet strike the ' engine "footboard" or the. cinders all j day, or night, or the man in th , "cab" j who pulls and tnrows tne levers dsok and forth all day or night, working among countless and conflicting sig nals and endless danger and In every condition of weather these are tbe true soldiers of industry. These men should not need to ask for better con ditions. Better conditions should have been given them years ago. Twelve hours, or more, is their present, day or nlgbt, when eight hours should be their limit. ak aft Th fostering by some railways of xn ;iVhJ;;i various j"1' eoiriU lonjv "f."1 usual fulMJJ - wards improvement and their com- , plaint about unfair L0 "-,f" ZXn?! ""- v -""--" In a speech before the New York Traffic club on February 21, ex-President Taft reproved th railways for their misdeeds and their opposition to the laws df the land and to reform. He accused them of corrupting coun cils and legislatures and defying the Interstate Commerce commission and being generally unreasonable, and then warned them of a possible government ownership. The general public will give this conservative speaker serious consideration. The employe may well feel they have able counsel upon their side. t.M.nf mu.nn ha said that th workers have a right to say under I1" meeting of the East Sid Business what conditions they will worfc ThMen club. Th ex-UUsman bad said , railway employes merely ask that the public approve their effort for a rea sonable condition. Dieck noes not tack any mor riders to th Improvement. ABRAHAM NELSON. An Exception. From the Grand Rapids News.. It is claimed that two Jobs are seek ing every man In this country at. pres ent. However, , not two presidencies. Cause and Effect. J From Judge. "She says ah is very .lonely eve nings." - - "Yes. her husband never goes out!" TKgDnce GUer SO FAR AS I'M CONCERNED these baseball magnates and boosters and other accessories- may dispense with opening day after this. f And of course I don't know how but there ought to be seme way of getting started without it, because it seems to me tb home team nearly always loses. and it's cold. and It rains. If And if some one who has th : habit of sfwrtinar tblrcrs Ilk E. P(eaceful) Rosenthal or Herman Ut hof f win start a League for th Abo lition of Opening Days III join it. - JAnd I suggest that" it would b a whole lot better to let the base-' ball season get started the' best way it can. JAnd latere after the team gets to winning and the weather gets good have antopening day. - so that there'll be some chance of having & pleasant time. II But I went to the commencement exercises out at Vaughn street Wednesday, and sat in box 43 right in front of a man who kept predicting evil frr the home team. JAnd right In front of me sat Rosie Rosenthal whose initials are A, A. and who is not to be confused with E. P. Rosenthal. who is for peace at any prlc. ' UNo. J Rosle says he's for peac Lit rignt, but not at any price. JHe wants to see what it's been marked down from. JAnd' there was a pitcher for our side named Win Noyea. but he didn't. JAnd he looked like there might possibly be something in a nam. when he i started out. but by the fourth he was scarce- -Iy a sound. - and by the fifth his name was silence. J And we all sat there with our collars turned up and hoped for the best. . and while we wer" hoping Salt Lake made three more runs. JAnd the soft' drink boy came along and said he had ice-cold drinks right off the ice. and we all Bhivered. J And he seemed grieved that no-, body bought. JAnd Frank McGettlgan called the boy to him. and said "My son you're using the wrong record." ffsAnd pretty soon the boy cam back. and said he had hot roasted pea nuts. and nobody bought. s: And I looked all around for Bill Stokes the Oak Grove grocer. because if Bill wasn't there as he said he wouldn't be I'm going to get a wrist-watch. and wear It no matter what hap pens. jBut Bill went fishing up at Ore gon City. JAnd everybody caught big salmon" except Bill. - TAnd he came back to th at ere. and called up central and got th score. and then spilt a box of tooth picks. and his day was spoiled. JAnd of course I've got to get the , wrist-watch but - J LISTEN There's a person out at Oak Grove who says we need a lot of other things a whole lot worse. . THE H0ME-GB0WW XUBE. Humanity. ' Be tied a can to tbe old dig tall. Laughing In glee to see bis frlgbt. He tessed bis sister and tore ber bat. And threw a big atone at the cat. Whistling then In his reckless way Down tbe road he chose to stray. Straggling- there upon tbe ground. A dying sparrow-it waa be found. Then this lawless lad knelt down By the fallen sparrow be bad found. And stroked its wings with a band so browa. While a big tsar on his dusty cheek rolled down.. On fbe wings of truth a thought comes to me. As was this lad. so all humanity. 11. hi. 8. StoriGr gr "Pigs Is Pigs.' CC. CHAPMAN says he went out to the family farm near Dayton last Sunday and during the day set out a complete hundred ef strawberry,; plants. Meanwhile Mrs. Chapman was searching through a labyrinth of tangled undergrowtn ror a motner pig (is that sufficiently euphonious) and ber little ones, xne maternal in stinct in this Instanc had tbe usual swinish contrariness and apparently bad resulted " in a determination to rear the young ones apart from civili sation's Influences. Mrs, Chapman found the mother pig and her brood but met stubborn resistance against returning to th pen. So she leaned over and scratched tbe mother pig's back. Th sow (th word has been struggling for utterance) grunted sat- i.faction. Mrs. Chapman started away knA the pig followed," eager for more , ,. r . ;. i - o v - 'T thl. newari7ty of moral suasion the group waa returned to horn and pen. Then Mr. Chapman tried to draw a lesson from the incident. "How untroubled would be our domestio fe licity, how harmoniously you would always get your own way. If you used the same method with me,", be ob- Merva. "But, retorted Mrs. Chapman, with a woman's last word, "the pigs were amenable to reason." An Indignant Father. CW. MEADOWS' vehemently called. down the ex-senator from Mult- inomah county, Dan Kellaher, at tn was sure would b found In th Rose bud parade. Rising to a question of privilege, the Indignant father scath- i lngly denounced the allegation and de- fled th alligator, ao to apeak. "lie i not fit to hold th position of a census-taker," declared Meadows. "He is no enumerator at all. It is a, wonder be keeps in business, with such . a poor Idea of number. X have 1 children, all living, and two of tbem married, an the married ones ar going to do still better, and' they wilt all be in tbe Rosebud parade." After prolonged applause, the hum bled Daniel arose and apologized. H explained ; that four of th Meadows' kids were all h had personally met, and that he hoped to see them all in th RoBebud par '