1 TTTE 3IORNTXG OREGOmy, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1914. K v NATION FIGHTS FOR LIFE, SAYS GERMAN Britain Accused of Combining Europe Against Rival for Commercial Field. TEUTONS ARE DETERMINED In Interview Officlaly Approved, Baron Munini Draws Allegory From America to Support Pol lev of Ills Own Nation. (Continued From First Page.) ! assented to the interview and stamped 1 it with the official stamp. ; "Germany Not Insane," Says Baron. ; "Germany is not insane," declared J Baron Mumm vigorously, "and unless ; you think us Insane how can you be S lieve that we wished to fight the world Just lor the fun of it? No, the Emper ; or's quarter century of peace give3 the lie to that impossible conception. Rus i Bia fought us because we are the out ; post of the west and she- is the out- post of the east in Europe just as you J are the outpost of the West on the J Pacific and Japan of the East. "Russia supported her Slav brothers . In Servia and we were forced to sup port our German brothers in Austria. , Race against race, people against peo ;ple, Occident against Orient, civiliza tion against semi-barbarism such things have always been, in history, perhaps always will be. But when the West, when England and France attacked us In the rear oh, the day may soon come when they regret that! British Charged With Jealousy. "We were forging ahead of England in all the arts and sciences of peace, co in our difficulty she determined to" he hesitated, then chose his words carefully "she determined to try to destroy our sea-borne commerce with . her navy. She couldn't beat our mer , chants with her own, therefore she hopes to beat our merchants with her , dreadnoughts. Ah, well," he said, "it was her only chance. English busi ness men work six hours a day of five or even four days a week three-day week-ends have become quite the cus tom over there now and German . business men work nine hours a day : six days a week. Is it any wonder : she finds she needs to subsidize her - commerce with 13.5-inch shells? "We dared to share them with her ' and so she has attacked us in our dif- ficulty Just as she took advantage ot your Civil War to fit out Confederate privateers and .sweep your ocean com- merce from the seas." "War Is Business With England." "So you think the underlying rea . sons for England's entering the fight is economic?" I inquired. ' "Certainly," he answered, with great ' positiveness. "It is strictly a business - proposition with England. It is a busi ness war, pure and simple, like all of England's wars." r "Then you do not believe it was to ' protect the neutrality of a weaker country, Belgium, to defend her against a powerful aggressor, as the English papers assert?" t "Oh, that that," he said, "is. in your expression, simply monumental. Since when have the English themselves re spected the neutrality of smaller na tions? Since their South African ad venture? All other nations in the world put together have not violated the neutrality of weaker countries one half as much as England has. Her ex isting empire of 11,000,000 square miles is evidence enough of that. She went into the Transvaal and Orange Free State because her financiers wanted the diamond mines there. We went into Belgium as a matter of military neces sity in a fight for our lives." Belgian Invasion Defended. "May I Interject," I asked, "that the German invasion of Belgium was not particularly popular in the United States?" - "I know It," he answered, "and I am sorry. It was not particularly popu lar here, either. But self-preservation is the first law. You know, for in stance, that mobilization means war and why " "Why?" I asked. "Because it's like winding up a great pring that must unwind. Germany can mobilize in a week, France in a fort night. Russia in four or six weeks. If, after we mobilized, we waited while the diplomats talked and the other countries were using that time to mob ilize against us, we would lose our ad vantage, and we can afford to lose no advantage in a war at two frontiers, with England on the sea; yet we waited five days after we knew Russia had begun its mobilization before we began ours; five days we were risking our safety in the hope of peace. Then when we saw war with Russia must come we demanded categorically from France an answer as to whether she would observe neutrality and received their answer from our Ambassador August 1 at 1:05 P. M. I quote the of ficial document: 'Upon my repeated definite inquiry whether France would remain neutral in the event of a Russo German war the Prime Minister de clared France would do that which her Interests dictated." Quick Blow Aimed at Prance. "In the language of diplomacy, and considering France's alliance with Rus sia, that could have but one meaning, and so we knew we must strike as hard and as quickly as possible at France. The way in which we could strike France hardest and quickest was through Belgium, and hence we took that way. If Belgium had permitted us free passage we would have paid cash for every mouthful and left Its territory intact. But Belgium chose to appeal to the god of battles and must abide by the result. With Rus sia on one side and France on the other .and England on the oceans, what else could we do but strike as hard and as quickly as we could? "But" I reverted to the horror of it all "all this for the murder of a royal couple in Austria? Why must millions die for them now? They are already dead and cannot return to life." "Suppose," said he, "that the Mexi cans had been conducting an anti American campaign along your south ern boundary for 30 years with the ob ject of detaching Arizona and New Mex ico from the .United States and return ing them to Mexico; suppose this propa ganda was connected with the open connivance of the Mexican government and press and with the active assist ance of Mexican army officers. American Allegory Cited. , Suppose then, that the next highest official In your country, a man who cor responded to a combination of Vice- President, Secretary of State and Gen eral in the Army, were sent to the troubled region on a political mission .to report on what steps should be taken to quell this propaganda, and suppose further that he was there assassinated with his wife by a Mexican with bombs manufactured in a Mexican government arsenal and furnished him by Mexican u'uciais ana army officers, and sup pose, as I have said, this was not an outrage but the culmination of 30 years of anti-American attack, then would the American people consider a punitive expeaiuon against Mexico unreason able? "I- rather think not. They would In sist on It. The arrest of six American marines resulted in your capture of vera Cruz, did it not? The blowing up of the Maine, by causes yet unknown, in the taking of Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines? Tet Austria did not wish to take any of Servia. It officially agreed not to do so... It wanted only a cessation of this pan-Servian propa ganda of the bomb. If it did not in sist on that it must abdicate its very sovereignty in its own territory." Slav Domination Feared. "We Germans at last have learned this, and never again will forget it that, situated as we are in the middle of Europe, we must stand firmly to gether. If we let Austria-Hungary be crushed or weakened, by so much is our own strength enfeebled. Our support of Austria-Hungary is but enlightened self-interest, necessary to Germanic civilization." "What is the difference between Slav and Teuton? How would the world suffer if the Slav did press westward?" "I suppose," he smiled again, "it is natural for us Germans to con sider first how we ourselves would suffer if the Slav pressed westward into Germany. How the world would suffer by our extinction? That is a question rather for the philosopher than the politician. Politicians and people generally object to their own extinction, and if they don't object strenuously enough they are not fit to live and do not live as a sovereign peo ple. But to answer your question: The Slav civilization Is lower, more brutal, more primitive and, less complex than ours In Germany or yours in America. The individual Slav is less an individual than the individual Teuton. He is more of an undifferentiated specimen of a great agglomerate mass. He is one of a herd, a single insect in a swarm. Japanese Aims . Considered. Of course, this is true of all of us, in a measure, but it is truer of Orient als than of Westerners, and never for get the Slav is always a semi-Oriental Perhaps the Japanese have really a finer civilization than you. Personally I do not think so, but perhaps time will say they have. However, be that as it may, you in America would re sist fiercely a Japanese attempt to supplant your civilization with theirs. So have we and do we and will we resent the attempt to supplant In any territory now held by Germans our civilization by that of the Slavs. "You think we are next on the list?" I asked "The Philippines?" "How long do you think Japan would hold her hand from you," he answer ed my question with another, "if you found yourself in a. war against three great and two little powers? Yes, England, sowed dragons teeth," he said, "dragons' teeth for the white skins 'Asia for the Asiatics' is writ ten on the hearts of all the Japanese." British Diplomacy Called Subtle. Reverting to the English, he ex claimed: "You in America are accus tomed to think of the English as a bluff. hearty, downright, unsubtle race, fond of sport and the open air. Well, all I can say to that is that t.hey are cer tainly fond of sport and the open air. There has never been a race of diplo mats their equals in shrewdness, sub tlety and a sleepless eye on the main chance since time began." "Please illustrate." "Well, then, there is no disguising the fact that for a time at least, prior to the growth of the Japanese question in your country, you considered us shall we say your chief political ri vals? Now you have shifted that feel ing to the Japanese, and all this time you have considered England your first friend." I said: "She made herself so." "Precisely my point. She made her self so; she began to talk of your cousinship with a degree of warmth in direct ratio to your degree of strength. Because she has the only thing in the world you really need to round out your boundaries." "You mean Canada?" Friendship Part of Policy. "I mean Canada. Of course I real ize It is inconceivable you will ever, or at least soon, attempt to take it. But why? Because Great Britain has real ized so cleverly that the only possible way in which she can defend it is by making you her friend and putting you on honor. "Whoever her first rival has been she has combined- Europe against him. She fought you when you .were weak, she lent her aid to the effort to split your republic in the Civil War, and now that you are strong and her dominions are yours for the taking she is your best friend. She sets Japan on us and uses Japan to guard India. "The English take credit to them selves for many excellent qualities, but of that quality in which they are su premely pre-eminent, diplomacy, ' they make little mention. They believe the seas belong to them by divine right and most of the yellow, black and brown races for exploitation. However, we shall conquer this unholy alliance against us," he concluded, "for Germany is one in its determination to live." "If you are shut from the seas," I asked, "how long can- you subsist on yourselves?" Subsistence Carefully Considered. . "Until the next harvest is in," he answered. "That has all been gone into carefully. Our enemies who have deluded themselves into the hope we shall starve will be disappointed in that as In other things. W shall lack somewhat In tea, coffee, cocoa, and other tropical prodifcts, but of bread, meat, potatoes, and sugar we have ample on hand till the next harvest. We would like some of your cotton, though, and copper. But we have plenty of hides and leather, coal, iron, petroleum, lumber, and chemicals." "How will you finance the war?" "Within ourselves, by war taxes and internal laws. For instance, we have never had an inheritance tax. Now we shalL Likewise heavier excise du ties on beer and tobacco." "You will make no external loans, borrow no money from abroad?" "No. none." "As to a war indemnity from France, if you occupy Paris?" "France chose to appeal to the god of battles," he answered. "We asked her to stay out, she chose war, and now she shall have it with all its con sequences." 34 ON LOST SUBMARINE All on Board Go Down in First Aus tralian Naval Accident. MELBOURNE, Aus, via London, Sept. 20. Rear-Admiral Sir George Patey, commander of the Australian navy. In a wireless dispatch to the government says that submarine Ae-1, which .was reported yesterday as lost, disappeared with all hands, numbering 34 men. on board. Other vessels of the fleet made a search but failed to discover any wreckage. The loss is attributed to ac cident, as there was no enemy within 100 miles and the weather was fine at the time. This is the first disaster in the his tory of the Australian navy. The Ae-1 was under command of Lieutenant Commander Thomas F. Besant- Hon. Leopold F. Scarlett also was lost. German Nitrate Bark Captured. FALMOUTH, England, Sept. 20. The German bark Ponape, from Iquique, Chile, for Antwerp, with ni trate, has been captured by a British warship and brought here. RULES FOR SHIPS OF WAR NATIONS GIVEN Defensive Armament Only Per mitted on Vessels Leaving United State's Ports. BATTLE SUPPLIES BARRED List or Passengers Unfitted lor Military or Naval . Services of Belligerents Stipulated Cir cumstantial Evidence Good. WASHINGTON. Sent. 20 How Amer lean officials shall deal with armed vessels visiting ports of the United States and merchant ships suspected of carrying supplies to belligerent war ships off the coast, was set forth in memorandum Issued tonight bv the State Department, with the approval of tne president. Sir Cecil Spring-Rice. the British Ambassador, has had many conferences at the department concern ing neutrality questions but it was made plain by officials that tonight's action was not the result of any agree' ment on the subject. The memorandum follows: A A merchant vessel of a belligerent na tionality may carry an armament and &i munition for the sole purpose of defence. without acquiring the character of a ship or war. Owner Given Chances to Prove. B The presence of an armament and am munition on board a merchant vessel creates a presumption that the armament Is for offensive purposes, but the owners or agents may overcome this presumption by evidence showing that the vessel carries armament solely for defence. C Evidence necessary to establish the fact that the armament is solely for defence and will not be used offensively, whether the armament be mounted or stowed below, must be presented in each case Independent ly at an official investigation. The result of tne investigation must show conclusively that the armament is not intended for and will not be used in offensive operations. Indications that the armament will not be used offensively are: 1. That the caliber of the runs carried does not exceed six Inches. 2. That the gun. and small arms carried are few In number. 3. That no guns are mounted on the for ward part of the vessel. 4. That the .quantity of ammunition ' car ried is small. 5. That the vessel is manned by its usual crew and the officers are the same as those on board before war was declared. 6. That the vessel intends to and ac tually does clear for a port lying in its usual trade route, or a port indicating its purpose to continue in the same trade in which it was engaged before war was declared. Fuel Actually Needed Allowed. 7. That the vessel takes on board fuel and supplies sufficient only to carry it to Its port of destination or the same Quantity substantially which it has been accustomed to take for a voyage before war was de clared. 8. That the cargo of the vessel consists of articles of commerce unsulted for the use of a ship ot war in operations against an enemy. 9. That the vessel carries passengers who are, as a whole, unfitted to enter the mili tary or naval service of the belligerent whose flag the vessel flies or of any of its allies and particularly if the passenger list includes women and children. 10. That the speed of the ship is slow. D Port authorities, on the arrival in a port of the United States of an armed ves sel of belligerent nationality, claiming to be inercnani vessel, snouia Immediately In vestigate and report to Washington on the foregoing indications as to the intended use of the armament in order that it may be determined whether the evidence is suf ficient to remove the presumption that the vessel is and should be treated as a ship of war. Clearance will not be granted until authorized from Washington and the mas ter will he so informed upon arrival. E The conversion of a merchant vessel into a ship of war is a question of fact, which is to be established by direct or cir cumstantial evidence of Intention to use the vessel as a ship of war. Suspicious Acts Enumerated. Merchant vessels suspected of carrying supplies to belligerent warships: 1. A base of operations for belligerent warships is presumed when fuel or other supplies are furnished at an American port to such warships more than once within three months since the war began and dur ing the period of the war, either directly or by means of merchant vessels of belligerent or neutral nationality acting as a tender. 2. A common rumor or suspicion that a merchant vessel laden with fuel or other naval supplies intends to deliver its cargo to a belligerent warship on the high seas when unsupported by direct or circum stantial evidence, imposes no duty on a neu tral government to detain such merchant vessel even for the purpose of investigat ing the rumor or suspicion unless it is known that the. vessel has been previously engaged In furnishing supplies to a belliger ent warship. 3. Circumstantial evidence supporting a rumor or suspicion that a merchant vessel Intends to furnish a belligerent warship with fuel or other supplies on the high seas, is sufficient to warrant detention of the vessel, until its intention can be in vestigated, in the following cases: A. When a belligerent warship is known to be off the port at which the merchant vessel is taking on cargo suited for naval supplies, or when there is a strong presump tion that the warship Is off the port. B. When the merchant vessel is of the nationality of the belligerent whose war ship is known to be on the coast. Certain Coal Purchases Included. C. When a merchant vessel which has, on a previous voyage between ports of the United States " and ports of other neutral states, failed to have on board at the port of arrival a cargo consisting of naval sup piles shipped at the port of departure, seeks to take on board a similar cargo. E. When coal or other supplies are pur chased by an agent of a belligerent gov ernment and shipped on board a merchant vessel, which does not clear for a port of the belligerent but for a neighboring neu tral port. E. When an agent ot a belligerent is taken on board a merchant vessel having a cargo of fuel or other supplies and clear ing for a neighboring neutral port. 4. The fact that the merchant vessel, which is laden with fuel or other naval supplies, seeks clearance under strong sus picion that it is the intention to fi.rnt.h such fuel or supplies to a belligerent war- snip is not sunriclent ground to warrant its detention, if the case is isolated and neither the vessel nor the warship for which the supplies are presumably Intended has pre viously taken on board similar supplies since the war began or within three months dur ing the period of the war. The essential idea of neutral terri tory becoming the basis of naval operations by a belligerent power is repeated departure from such territory by a naval tender of the belligerent or by a merchant vessel in bel ligerent service which is laden with fuel or other naval supplies. 6. A merchant vessel, laden with naval supplies, clearing from a port of the United States for the port of another neutral na tion, which arrives at its destination and there discharges its cirgo. should not be de tained, if, on a second voyage it takes on board another cargo of similar nature. Naval Base Is Defined. "In such a case the port of the other neu tral nation may be a base for the naval operations of a belligerent. If so, and even if the fact is not obvious, this government Is under no obligations to prevent the ship ment of naval supplies to that port. Com merce in munitions of war between neutral nations cannot, as a rule, be a basis for a claim of unneutral conduct, even though there is a strong .presumption of actual knowledge that the neutral state, in whose port the supplies are discharged, is per mitting its territory to be used as a base of supply for belligerent warships. - The duty ot preventing an unneutral act rests entirely unon the neutral state whose territory is being used as such a base. "In fact, this principle goes further in that if the supplies were shipped directly to an established naval base in the ter ritory nnder the control of a belligerent, this government would not be obligated by its neutral duty to limit such shipments or detain or otherwise Interfere with the mer chant vessels engaged in that trade. Soele B: ros, Store Open in the Evening Until 9 O'clock 1, 2 or 3 Years to Pay Every Piano Must Go at Once This Sale Was Authorized by Order of the Court U ' BELIEVABLE. Thoroughly reliable Instruments are now being sold at unbelievably low prices and terms. Many a planoless home Is now being made happy for only 197.20 with pianos that are really $250 'to $300 value, and at onlv Sill for instruments worth $350 and more. A large number of S450 pianos are lnn being sold for In the neighborhood of ib6, some for less, and a few for a little more. ! PLAYERS ABE CUT. Player pianos at prices less than the same quality uprights. For only $266, yes even as low as $168, you can buy the $700 and even $800 Dlaver clarion. guaranteed for ten years; for $337 the $8ao player pianos, guaranteed ten years, and for only $688 the $1000 values, also guaranteed for ten years. SUFFRAGIST IS BUSY Mrs. Stubbs Gets Promises of Aid From IVIany Women. WORK BEGINS WITH RUSH Press Chairman of Congressional Union Rents Offices, Has Sllaes Made and Attends to Other Matters In 20 Honrs. with a five-room suite of offices rented and cosily furnished, stereoptlcon slides made announcing her presence and purpose in Portland, to De snown at all the moving-picture theaters, and the purple, white and gold suffrage banner flung to the caresses of the Autumn breeze from the front window of room 344, Pittock block, Mrs. Jessie Hardy Stubbs, National press chairman of the Congressional Union for Wom an's Suffrage, is "all ready for busi ness." These preliminaries were accom plished within 20 hours after Mrs. Stubbs' arrival Friday night, and were in the nature of mobilization lor me unrelenting warfare which for the next 42 days she proposes to wage on the Congressional nominees of "the party that has refused to recognize woman," as she refers to the Democracy. Union Relieves In Doing Things. "Those are a few of the things I did." said Mrs. Stubbs yesterday, sit ting behind her big oak desk. "Xou see, the Congressional Union believes in doing things and doing them right away. So when I' went out yesterday morning. I said, iust to propitiate tra dition and satisfy convention, 'What a beautiful- city and what a lovely cli mate,' and then I got busy. And there have been a hundred, and one things to do. "Besides getting my base of opera tions established. I have had many telephone calls from women who are anxious to help In the work that must be done between now and 'November, but first of all I called up Mrs. Abigail Scott Dunlway. honorary chairman of the National Council of Women Vot ers, and was pleased to learn of her good health." Turning; Down Women Is Cause. Mrs. Stubbs puts emphasis on the fact that the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage is not "after" any Senator or Congressman for personal reasons, nor merely because he Is a Democrat, but because he is a member of a party that has "turned down" its chance -to submit a constitutional amendment enfranchising women to the Nation. "We want to make this clear to everyone," she said. "A man is a mere cog in the party machine when he gets to Congress. This is a government by parties, and largely a government by committee, and nothing can get through Congress that is not fostered by the party In power. "We understand fully, for Instance," Mrs. Stubbs continued, "that Senator Chamberlain Is a suffragist. But he must stand or fall with his party on the tariff question, the tolls question, and on this question, the question of whether the women not only of Ore gon, but of the Nation, shall have the $1 Down $1 Per Week Failed, Jz? PlayerPianos jkf 1 J?- " Now $188. yTQglfl 0 Grand Pianos j Jf jT J; Now $337. - $600 and $700 Pp 7g? I" . AS - Electric Piano3 , O RAN OS. Grand pianos now for less than the same quality uprights would cost at any other time: $700 values now $337, $800 values now $446 and $950 values now $518, all old reliable established makes Also many other pianos not listed above, and I want to say to you right-now that you can secure almost any make of piano you desire. But to appreciate he true value of these greatest bargains ever offered, you must see them.. Electric pianos of the hignest quality, instruments that have been In operation around and In Port land for years, can now be had at $88. $166 and $278, and the very best and highest price electric pianos, usually selling for $600 to . $1000, now go for only $3S8. right to vote. The party is greater than the man." Mrs. Stubbs insists that suffrage Is essentially a political question, and the livest political question In the country. Mrs. Stubbs plans to make a series of speeches throughout the state. Heart-Broken Mother Seeks Son. SALEM. Or., Sept. 20. (Special.) Announcing that the young man's mother is dying of a broken heart be cause, she has received no word-from him for more than two years, D. C. Phipps. of Pona City. Okla., In a letter received by Governor West today, asked that a search be made for Ev erett Hayes, 22 years old. Mr. Phipps wrote that Hayes, after the death of his father, in 1910, came to Oregon and had not been heard from since early in 1912. Wounded Briton Praises Germans. BERLIN, Sept. 20. By wireless to Sayville, L I. Hon. Aubrey Herbert, member of Parliament, who was among the wounded in a German hos pital and taken back by the British, expresses his thanks for the courtesy showpi him In the German hospital and praises the humanity of the Ger man soldiers. Y. M. C. A. Night Schools Open Tonight ! This jf1Bll j Training will .,: jj get it for yau,.j-j ' This Sale Au thorized by Order of the Court 388-Morr Br03 J KOTHIXC HELD BACK. All talking machines must go. Co lumbia, Edison and Victors, and any number of records of all makes. We must also sell all desks, chairs, safes, music rolls, racks, stools, benches, cabinets, typewriters, numbering ma chines and In fact complete office equipment, for very little money. Fl'RTHER PARTICULARS. Some particular values that we have to offer and that we would like to close ' out quickly: $1100 Weber Pianola Piano, $537. This is the finest and best ever made by the Aeolian Company; also. The Behning, the acknowledged best of all; a $1500 com bination Lester Grand-Pianola, $666; $500 combination . Burmeister-Planola. $218; $600 or $700 Kingsbury Player Piano. 88-note. now $335. We could go on enumerating bargains like this indefinitely. The Kohler & Campbell, FORESTER'S PLANS TOLD MR. GRAVES EXPECTED IN HO QUI AM EARLY NEXT WEEK. Question of Elimination of Olympic Monument Fnn National Forest Will Be Discussed. HOQU1AM, Wash., Sept. 20 (Spe cial.) Chief Forester Graves, after a trip of a week tnrough the Olympic Mountains, during which he expects to cross the range from east to west, coming out at the Qulniault, will ar rive In Hoquiam either Monday. Sep tember 28, or the, following day. The Chief Forester will spend the remainder of the day here and while here will be the guest of the Commercial Club and will hear the question of elimina tion of the Olympic monument. According to information received by C. D. McClure, secretary of the Com mercial Club, from District Supervisor Fromme, of the Forest Service at Olym pla. Mr. Graves will leave Seattle on Wednesday for Hood sport. He will be accompanied by District Forester Ce (Everyone Invited.) 1S0I1 Store Open in the Evening Until 9 O'clock Chickering Kimball Knabe Behning Wegman Lester Steinway Weber Steck Emerson Schuman Weber Pianolo Pianos and IVIany Others Never Such a Piano Sale the Chickering, America's oldest and best; Steinway, Steck. Wegman, Schu man can all be secured now at un believable reductions. As above stated, practically every make that you car possibly think of Is here, and must be sold at once. TERMS OK a. 2, 3, OB EVEN 4 YEARS. This means payments of as low as $1 per week, and all that we ask Is that you pay $1 down t show good faith. Player Pianos and Grands, $2 per week. For the benefit of those not being able to call during the day, our store is open every evening until 9 or 10 o'clock. C. E. Lucore, agent and credi tors' representative. Soule Bros, have failed and theit entire stock is offered for sale by order of the court. Must be cleaned up immediately. A chance only once In a lifetime. Makes no difference as to price or terms. Store open even ings. 388 Morrison street. cil, Mr. Fromme and F. H. Standard. From Hoodsport they will go to the south fork of the Skokomish River and will view some mining property there, viewing especially several large manganese veins. Then they will cross the range and come down the east for'c of the Qulniault. They expect to ar rive at Lake Qulniault Sunday, will spend the night there and come on out the following day to Hoquiam. Mr. Graves' visit is made as a result of a campaign begun by the local club three years ago for eliminating the Olympic monument. In this it has been supported by various commercial bodies of the peninsula and by Seattle and Tacoma. Alleged Insult to Be Probed. SALEM. Or., Sept. 20. (Special.) Governor West said today that he had referred the complaint of Mrs. C. A. Moore, of Portland, that she was in sulted by saloon-keepers and other residents of Klamath Falls, to the city officials, the District Attorney, the Anti-Saloon League, the Woman'f Christian Temperance Union and vari ous women's clubs. He asked all of them to make an investigation. Mrs. Moore is a traveling saleswoman, ac cording to her letter to the Governor. Night Classes Class Sat, Accounting Advertising (Course). . .120 Algebra 5 Assaying (Course) 30 Architect. Drafting 10 Arithmetic 5 Arithmetic Commercial. 3 Automobile. C o m p 1 ete Course 61 Automobile (No driving) 45 Bookkeeping 7 Boys' School 5 Business Letter Writing. 3 Business Law 3 Carpentry & Woodturn- Ing 10 Calculus 5 Chemistry 10 Cost Engineering (Course) 10 "i'ii service (See Edu. Electricity ". '. English for Foreign Men English Grammar and Heading English Literature Freehanrl nr&vlnr French 7 ueomeiry 5 uei man ................ History Latin Machine Design Mechanical Drafting.... Penmanship Pharmacy Phy. and Com. Geogra phy Physics Plan Read'g and Estim. 7 6 7 10 10 4 30 10 20 (.course; Public Speaking. Reinforced Concrete Construction Rhetoric Salesmanship (Course).. Spanish Shorthand 15 15 t 35 7 7 15 Show Card Writing 13 ieiesrapny ec uispatch- Ins 15 Trigonometry 5 Typewriting 7 Vocal Music 3 w 1 r e 1 e s s xeiegrapby Course WRITE FOR FREE C A l'ALOtil E 50 u T En 10-4