10 the aroityiyo oregoxtatt, ttjespat, October 2, 1917. i POBTLAKD, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance: (By Mail) Pafly, Sunday Included, one year $8.00 Dally, Sunday Included, six months.... 4.25 Isaily, Sunday Included, three months.. 11.25 Uu.ly, Sunday included, one month.... .75 Iaily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Laily,, without Sunday, six months'... 3.25 1aily, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 Iaii without Sunday, one month. ... .60 "Weekly, one year ..................... 1.50 Sunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and weekly 3.50 tity Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, one year. . . . . .$9.00 laily, Sunday Included, one month 75 Jjaily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Daily, -without Sunday, three months... 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month 05 How to Item It Send postoffice money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice address In full, including: county and state. Postage Kates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign, postage double rates. Eastern Business Offlce Verree & Conk lln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklln, Steger building, Chicago; San 1-Yanclseo representative, R. J. Bid well, 742 uarket street. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of a) news credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news pub lished herein. All rights of republication of special dls patches therein are also reserved. PORTXAXD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER tt 1917. GERARD AND GERMANY. By the great outpouring which twice filled the Public Auditorium the people of Portland evinced their intense in terest in the message which Mr. Gerard brings to the American people. They were eager to hear from the lips of the one witness above all others who In competent to give authentic test! mony about Germany the nature of the German government, its aims in the war and the diabolical methods by which they are pursued, and the condition of the German people and of their subject peoples, 'Without any of the arts of the orator, but with calm, though forcible. language, Mr. Gerard told what he had seen and heard In the very citadel of Frusslanism as the accredited rep resentative of the United States, in constant intercourse with the men who control the German war machine and closely observing its workings. He told the conclusions which he has formed, and those conclusions must be accepted as having been reached by a capable man whqse patriotism has been proved by his devoted serv ice, almost alone among enemies and their spies. With all the weight of authority which he acquires from this position Mr. Gerard tells us certain facts which every liberty-loving American is in duty bound to take to heart and to adopt as a guide to his actions. Germany is not a free country, but is ruled by a military autocrat and his aristocracy, who have deliberately en tered upon a career of conquest, both because they seek world empire and because they hate democracy. The invasion of Belgium was in tended not only as a step in the in vasion of France, but as the first move toward the conquest of Britain. But that, too, was to have been only a step toward the conquest of America. Prussia hates the United States even more than Britain, because we are a republic, because it covets our rich country and all of America, and be cause we have blocked the conquest of Europe by selling munitions and food to the allies. Germany, which is dominated by Prussia, would, if victorious, extend the German style of efficiency to America. The characteristics of that system are: a franchise by which one man worth $3,000,000 has as many votes as 15,000 men who have the same amount among them; a Reich stag which makes no laws and is only a debating society; an army which is under the Kaiser's sole -command and which perpetrates most monstrous cruelties, Mr. Gerard citing some strik ing examples; an industrial system under which the most skilled work man is paid only $2 a day for ten or twelve hours' work, the boasted pro vision for his welfare being no more than an American would make for his cattle; farm laborers who were emancipated from serfdom as late as 1819 and who work from before dawn to dark for 28 cents a day. . These characteristics of Germany were commended by Mr. Gerard to the attention of the pro-German and the American workingman. If the former is logical, he should wish to live in Germany, but if the attempt were made to transport him thither, he would fight like a wildcat. Then he should fight to prevent that sys tem from being transplanted to this country. For the same reason the workingman should not lose a day in helping to produce the things neces- sary to victory. Americans are thus shown that, they have the best reasons of both National and self-interest for fighting until Prussianism is destroyed, for it in cludes everything that they abhor and would destroy everything they love. But Mr. Gerard warns us against har boring false hopes that victory will be easily won by any short cuts. The blockade cannot starve Ger many into surrender; it can at best only weaken her. The submarine is not yet beaten, and we have no cause to assume that it will be beaten by any new device; it can be defeated only by constant fighting and vigilance and by unceas ing exertion to build ships which will replace those destroyed. Aircraft alone cannot win, though they are a most valuable accessory to the Army; in fact, a new arm of mili tary service. The war can be won only by su perior man power superior in num bers, physique, training, equipment and morale. A few hundred thousand, or even a million, men will not suffice. German losses have been to a large extent made good by lu .- levies, whom the capture of two millions and the enslavement of civil populations have enabled the government to withdraw from civil occupations. German man power must be overcome by that of America and our allies. The Prussian war lords desire peace for no other purpose than to consoli date their conquests and to avert a revolution. If they were to succeed in making peace before they were beaten, they would not abandon their ambitious aims, would not make Ger many a democracy, but would only prepare for the next war. A revolution in Germany cannot come before the allies have won, but is extremely probable after that event. The Germans are united in fighting the war. The militarists, the junkers and the capitalists are determined to fight on, for they know that defeat wouIO-Aot. oaly. -make-tlielc dreama Prlaf"ntiI"rElnJir Jhlafijtuda doB& ta conquest impossible, but would de prive Germany of her past conquests. The rest of the people tight, partly inrougn exaggeration of what the allies would do to them, partly through fear of their Prussian masters. They wm not give up till their man power is broken. Review of what Mr. Gerard tells us of the tremendous effort needed to win, and of the awful consequences which would follow defeat, should convince us all that it is criminal folly to dissipate our energies in internal strife, or to temporize with treason. The united and untiring efforts of every loyal citizen and the instant crushing of every internal enemy are necessary to victory, and we must con template the possibility of defeat only to redouble our exertions. WHAT WILL WIN. The war is not to be won in the air. The war is not to be won on the sea. The war is not to be won by eco nomic pressure on Germany. The war is not to be won by a revo lution in Germany. The war is not to be won by our money or food. The war is not to be won by a miracle, nor by some new and as tounding invention, nor by good luck or good wishes, nor by waving of flags, nor dress parades, nor stump speeches. All these are needed as accessories; but the war is to be won on the field of battle by American man power, face to face with the man power of the enemy. That is the Gerard mes sage to the people of America. The sooner it is understood, the better for the republic. WHAT IS TO BE RAIXED. PORTLAND. Sent. 30. (To the Erillnr t. Lately your editorials all seem In favor of capitalism. Friday you say. It will be neces sary to give tne operators their profit, even II the yarns are commandeered, and the. operators then need not worry. The operators do not do any of the ship building; or fighting, and their profit de penns on tne workingmen union or non union so why should they protons; the. war oy haggling over the closed shop? Are they doing their bit? If they are I'd like to know what it is. vVe are crossing the ocean to fight the very thing we uphold In our own country. Why not have a mental clean-up here, then when we have fought and cleaned up au tocracy in Germany we will be on equal footing, let us hear from some others that axe In favor of the capitalist doing his bit. A. SUBSCRIBER. The statement the , correspondent cites was a plain statement of fact. No one. unless it be some Socialist, has suggested that Government expropri ate private property, making no re muneration whatever. The Oregonian has not suggested that the operators be allowed exorbi tant profits. It has first, last and only urged the workers to heed the request of the President of the United States to continue at work and to accept his pledge that they will receive justice in an investigation from a commission already appointed and about to begin work, and whose findings for any in crease in wages will be retroactive. The issue is not capitalism. Capital Is to be compelled to do its bit by regulation of profits, by a war profit tax of 60 per cent, by heavy surtaxes on incomes and by other means. The correspondent or any other is Invited to send to The Oregonian for publication a clear statement of what the workers will gain by striking and thereby delaying work on a vital ne cessity that they would not gain by obeying the request of President Wil son. THE AUDITORIUM AS A CIVIC ASSET. Portland is already realizing the wisdom of having erected the Public Auditorium. It was filled when the allied aviation mission made its ap peal for spruce lumber to build air craft. When Mr. Gerard came enough people assembled to fill it twice, and two meetings were held and two speeches made in order to satisfy all. That should remove any doubt which may have remained as to the need of such a structure. Every city of the size and character of Portland needs a great hall where public opinion can find expression, and where public sentiment can find vent. The mere possession of a building where 6000 people can meet arouses and keeps alive the civic spiritf whic'- furnishes the chief impulse to progress and development of a c By furnishing opportunity for the holding of National conventions here and for such entertainments as the operatic performances which are soon to be given, it is an educative power of no small value. Although a large part of the cost of its maintenance cannot be recouped in rent, its value to the community cannot be measured in the dollars it brings into the city treasury. Its value i3 mainly in tangible, but none the less real, for solid values spring indirectly from it. The great host which came forth to hear Mr. Gerard will doubtless be only the first of many such hosts which will overflow the Auditorium on important occasions in the future life of Portland. Having this oppor tunity, the people will come together in their thousands oftener and a get- together spirit will be awakened which will accomplish great things in up building the city. WEARY WUXIK LITERATURE. There are some curious things in I. W. W. literature. An anonymous but apparently devoted member of the organization sends us a little folder, which is said to be a favorite among his brothers. It is entitled "The Out cast's Prayer," and as he adds that "You can publish this in your capi talistic paper if you want to," it seems certain that he believes the folder is a wise expression of protest against actual evils. The "prayer" is hardly fit to print and not all of it will be. But there is one passage which may cause one to wonder whether humorous journals and writers of satirical fiction do not cause as much harm as amusement: Oh X.ora, we do not understand why poodle dogs have private baths and are attended by maids and valets, are shampooed, mani cured and kissed, fed on choice steaks and drink cream, while thousands of little chil dren made after your own image live out of garbage cans. Christ never sala: "Suffer little poodle dogs to come onto me." The extravagant care bestowed on poodle dogs is one of the standbys of comic dreamland. Now the refresh ing idea has got into the movies, too, but it is yet incomprehensible that any person not below the border line of normal mentality could ever take it seriously. But the outcast by his own act Is not wholly normal. This contrast, also taken from his prayer, may illustrate: Oh Lord, deliver us from the creed and graft that exist In this Nation, and from parasites who neither toil nor spin, but bedeck their persons with finery until they glitter like a rotten dog salmon afloat In the moonlight. May the farmer plant his spuds more closely to the railroad track, and his chick ens roam closer to the Jungles, and we will ever be grateful to the all-powerful God A dead dog salmon does not glitter, but the farmer. nnfortnniiti a railroad track, and his chickens some times roam into the jungles. It is queer philosophy that which impell? the smallest parasite to pray for the downfall of the biggest parasite. It is no more the product of a normal mind than is the will and desire of the "idle rich" to perform no work of benefit to mankind. HIT THE FIVE-BILLION MARK. Five billion dollars may seem a high mark to set as the total of the second liberty loan, but that is be cause we have been accustomed to think in smaller sums and because the people at large have not been called upon to buy bonds since the Civil War. It is less by $800,000,000 than the British people subscribed to their third loan, although they had already lent their government $4,665, 000,000 out of National wealth esti mated at 8 5 billions compared with ojir 250 billions. After having raised nearly eight billions by loans, the Ger mans subscribed to their fifth loan $2,556,414,000, though their national wealth at the beginning of the war. eighty billions, has shrunk under the influence of the blockade, which has destroyed their foreign trade, while our trade has vastly increased. What the American people need in order to excel those two countries is the same fervent patriotism and the same habit of saving and of backing our soldiers with our money which they have practiced. The war spirit of this country is much higher than during the first liberty loan campaign. many people have learned to buy bonds who never bought them before, and our organization has been im proved. If we practice the habit of saving, we shall be able to absorb not only this but other Issues which will follow until victory is won. If heed be given to Mr. Hoover's injunctions, success in the war will be promoted in two ways both by econ omy of food and by saving of money with which bonds or war savings cer tificates can be bought. Every ounce of food saved will help to feed a sol dier, and every dollar saved is a silver bullet fired at the Germans. READING HALF AN HOUR IJ.VII.T. The Oregon Voter gives its readers some wise advice about reading, and adds a more or less wise word of admonition about reading too much. We say it is more or less wise, for everything depends on the reader. If he is a busy man, engrossed in his daily bread-making pursuits, half an hour a day in the "classics will do wonders for him. If he has greater leisure, or if he follows an occupa tion where he is able to employ use fully the things he learns from books or current literature, thirty minutes daily will not be enough. Yet we think so well of Editor Chapman's counsel, that we reprint his little article elsewhere. We take it that it is a reflection of the mind and method of a man who has a lot to do in the workaday world, and who has tested with satisfaction a scheme of reading for himself. No man who has had a classical education, or a smattering of it, de preciates the merit of the classical writers; or would exchange what he has got and is getting from them, for all the other authors and their works put together. But one is not justified on that account in depreciating more modern literature. There are some who find George Eliot hard reading. but to them Stevenson is a constant inspiration and delight. Was there ever a greater literary joke played on the penny-thrillers than "Treasure Island," wherein all the familiar clap trap and stage-settings of the blood- and-thunder craft are taken and worked over Into a gem of adventure and sensation? Scott has become archaic, and Dickens has lost his ap peal to some and we wonder if all enjoy Thackeray as much as they did when the strings with which he worked his marionettes were not so obvious. Now, of course, we would not awaken controversy with any lover of these great stars or their great books. If Thackeray, or Dickens, or Scott, or Hugo, or Eliot are good enough for him, we will agree that they should ie good enough for anybody. But we 'onder why Brother Chapman over .ooked Rudyard Kipling, and, since the war began, H. G. Wells. Couldn't he think of any American poet worth mentioning? No, we haven't in mind Amy Lowell, or Edgar Lee Masters or any of that high-brow cult; and we never read vers libre, perhaps for the same reason that some people won't eat onions. They never did, and they never will, for they don't like the smell of 'em. Yet, if we were to set about It to give advice to the man or woman who has a little time only to read every day, or every few days, we couldn't do better than the Voter has done; and perhaps not so well. There are no mistakes of commission in the suggestions. No educated man would dare to say he had not read, and en joyed, Dickens, Thackeray and the rest. HEATING THE MELTING POT. The striking fact that nearly 80 per cent of the population of New York City is of either foreign birth or of foreign or mixed parentage has been newly called to the attention by the report of Mayor Mitchel's committee on National defense, which has de cided that the imperative need of the city is "Americanization" of the people. This, of course, is to be the work of the schools, which will not have done their full duty when they have merely given opportunity to young children. The figures as to New York's for eign population are based on the last Federal census, which gave the great er city a total population of 4.766,883. The foreign-born then numbered 1.927,703. and there were 1.820.141 of foreign or mixed parentage, or 4 0.4 per cent in the first instance and 38.7 in the second. The white native-born of native parentage were only 921, 318 In number, or 19.3 per cent of the whole. But it is even more surpris ing to learn that more than 500,000 speak little or no English. These half million have a distinct counterinflu ence which is noted in the efforts to educate the children. However hard the teacher may strive, it is recognized that the work is hampered where the home influence is not American. Much is being accomplished, but more will be attempted. The action taken by New York will be generally commended, but New York is not the only city where the problem of the foreign population presses for solution. There is Chi cago, for example, whose percentage of population of foreign or mixed parentage 41.8 is higher than that of New York, and where the percent age of foreign born 85.8 la only a little less. Boston, too, looms promi nently among the ''foreign" cities oi thA-linlted. -States,. with. 8-3, es ce&tj foreign-born, and 35.9 of foreign or mixed parentage. Detroit, has 33.6 per cent of foreign-born. Cincinnati does not stand so high in the list of foreign-born, with only 15.6 per cent, but its percentage of Inhabitants of foreign or mixed parentage is 36.4. St. Louis has a slightly larger propor tion of each. Chicago, Cincinnati and St, Louis are strongholds of German Americans, very many of whom, how ever, particularly of the second gen eration, are loyal to the flag. The purpose of any educational movement, however, must be to bring loyalty as near to the 100-per cent mark as possible. New Tork's awakening is timelv. and it is to be hoped that it will set an example to others. New York is not the only large city in the United States, as the census shows, that needs special provision for the making of j.ou-per cent Americans. AX ARMADA NEEDED AS TRANSPORTS. Immensity of the fleet of trans ports which Is needed to carry the American Army to France is indicated by the estimates of men who can be carried on those German ships which have been assigned to that service. Only sixteen of the forty-four seized snips are to be used as troop trans ports, rourteen being used by the Army for other work, presumably to carry war material, and fourteen by the Navy as auxiliaries. These sixteen vessels, which include the big German liners, can carry 65,400 men and 2865 officers, a total of 68.265. In addi tion the Army has taken 100 Ameri can vessels as transports, but none of the ordinary Army transports are to be used in carrying troops to Europe, congress has provided funds for transportation of 55,042 officers and 2,033,345 men overseas, not only to tne seat of war. but to oversea garri sons. This number includes both fighting and auxiliary troops, as fol lows: National Army, 656,360; Regu lar Army, 470.185; National Guard, 456,800: replacement units for all forces. 450,000; officers, 65,0. Probably few of the American, ves sels have as large capacity as the Ger man liners, and three or four average ships may be required to take as many men as the great Vaterland. re named Leviathan, which can carry 800 officers and 8000 men. If the one hundred American vessels which have already been commandeered should carry three times as many as the sixteen German ships, the com bined capacity would be 233,000. As transports have been making the voyage in about two weeks, a round trip a month is a fair estimate. At that rate nine months would be con sumed in transporting the entire force across the Atlantic. When training or any large force in this country is completed, it will be desired to send them over much faster, and the Gov ernment is not likely to be satisfied with less than double the number now at its disposal. But that provides only for the men, such equipment as they neces sarily take with them and the limited quantity of freight for which passen ger vessels have space. Another fleet, second only to the troop trans ports in size, will be employed in carrying food, clothing, arms, artil lery, ammunition, camp equipment, aircraft, building, bridge and railroad material, to say nothing of horses and mules. We must also provide ships to help our allies in carrying food and all the other supplies they buy in this country, to which their shipping is not equal. The history of the potato is an ex ample of the reluctance with which people adopt new articles of food. It first became known among Europeans when the Spaniards found it culti vated in Peru in 1553, and ten years later John Hawkins introduced it into England. Sir Walter Raleigh took It from North Carolina to Ireland in 158 6 and cultivated it on his estate near Cork, but it gained so little favor that. In 1663, the Royal Society of London began promoting its cultiva tion as a remedy for famine among the poor, yet in 1719 it was not even mentioned in The Complete Gardener. About that time its use became com mon in Ireland, but not till the middle of the eighteenth century did it be come an, important food on the con tinent of Europe. Not until two cen turies after its discovery by the Span iards was it generally accepted. This record does not offer much hope that Europeans will soon take to eating corn. The habit of talking is so strong with the I. W. W. that they were bound to betray the German source of their funds and convict themselves in the end. The admission made by a loose-jawed member of the order at Chicago will strengthen the suspicion that there is German money behind other internal disturbances. - M. O. Evans has been named as Federal supervisor of farm labor agents in eleven states. Occasionally this Government does put the right man on a job. The Alamo is a shrine which carries Oregon soldiers far back In history, but we shall see that they are made of the same stuff as the men who died there. With a balance around $12,000 or $15,000, Secretary Lea appears to have made the late State Fair a financial as well as other kinds of success. The young fellow who started at night school last night is on his way to success, and so, too, the young woman. If the two British armies continue winning in Belgium and Mesopotamia, they may meet at Berlin in a year or two. The meatless days in France have failed their purpose, but in Germany are helping along the great cause- It ought to be easy to recruit a regi ment of camoufleurs from the win dow dressers of the country. It is a wonder nobody has 'revived the seedless apple in these days of farm and orchard faking. "Senatorial courtesy" saves La Fol lette. A fellow Senator must initiate a movement to oust him. Get the traitors in Congress on the run. and they will not have breath, to talk more treason. As all the soldier boys do not use tobacco, why not a gum crusade? Are you eating the crusts, or do they go Into the can? Cut-out a, luxury ajifl bujt a bon.d. Mrs. John's Troubles. By Abblo Farwell Brown, of the Vigilante T CAN'T feed John on coarse, old JL fashioned country dishes, cheap cuts and those things the Lecturer says are good, though wholesome. John wouldn't touch them. You see, he goes to so many dinners: and there's the hotels, and the Club, he's got real fussy. Oh, you can't fool John on Food I guess not!" My! But Mrs. John Is proud of her husband and his exclusive taste! (There is more of John to be proud of every year of his life. She'll have to buy the Largest Size for him yet, if he keepa on living up to his Ideals.) There was a time when John was glad to get mush and milk for supper six days in the week, with sugar in his coffee Sunday, and baked . beans Sat urday night. He's forgotten all about that, it's likely. Forgotten, too, how easily he used to vault a five-barred fence: how good water tasted out of the old oaken bucket; and how soundly he slept on the husk mattress. He never told Mrs. John all that, believe me! "John can smell Gorgonzola from Roquefort in the dark! It's wonderful the taste he has! Cook had to throw out a perfectly good salad yesterday because she had put just a bit of onion In the dressing, instead of chives. John can't bear onion!" It's not so many years since John l.earned the difference between an en dive and a khedlve. Once he thought an artichoke was some high kind of Church dignitary. And he still has a secret feeling- that Frenchmen rise when the Mayonnaise is played. But John's a connoisseur now. If you can't eat simple, wholesome dishes, home products, easily procured, inexpensive that marks you as the Real Thing; different from Common Folks. "John likes the best of everything. We never skimp the table, never!" But suppose John had to cut it out? Suppose Somebody could persuade John that high living wasn't really good living: that it didn't make Culture only fatty degeneration and a promise of liver trouble? Suppose Somebody made John see also that wholesome frugality like that of France might be wholesome patriotism: and that sim plicity might be refinement? It would be a great thing for John, Madame! For all the American Johns! For America! BOOK 18 BETOXD CHILD'S GRASP Mr. Frlede Direct Attention to Anoth er Text Used In City Schools. PORTLAND. Oct. 1. (To the Edi tor.) Recently there appeared in the newspapers a controversy regarding the correctness of statements made in the study of history In our public schools. A goodly part of the conten tion was engendered by political pref erences, and by the interest in the con troversy, it Is evident people are taking notice of facts connected with the course of instruction in our schools. I therefore deem it in order to call to the attention of the proper authori ties that the teaching in the textbook, "Webster Cooley Course In English." to children of about 12 years of age is far beyond their grasp or conception. They are required to memorize sentences and definitions that would be a task for older heads. As one basis of my complaint: On page 4 I find, "The predi cate of a sentence names that which is asserted by the subject," and "The copula of a sentence asserts the rela tion between the subject and the predi cate attribute." On the same page is a footnote, saying, "For the meaning of the word, see the dictionary. The defi nition will help you to understand what this word means in grammar." On page 12 I found the verbose in formation: Th. union of the copula, with the predi cate attribute, gives a new kind of predi cate. So far the predicates have contained the copula and predicate attribute as sep arate words. These same elements are to be found In predicates of this new kind, as in the first; but the difference is this, that in the second kind of predicate, the cupola and the attribute are united in one word. On page 14 is a footnote: "Look in a dictionary for the derivation of the word verb." ' i On page 18 is another footnote, par tially excusing some of the complex language by saying: "If preferred, the term attribute, complement and its defi nition may be omitted and the term predicate attribute used in place of it throughout the book." I could continue taking exceptions to the phraseology used in this book, trying to cram incomprehensible mat ter into their young minds, to which is added, in other classes, much irrele vant matter, the latest being a talk by some new laaaist on "me nuncio oi the Finger-Nails, and the Paring of the Same." I dislike the necessity of calling pub lic attention to the shortcomings of our schools, for the American parent will sacrifice more for account of public schools than any other local matter. At the same time, we have the right to expect that the administrators and teachers of our schools shall be suffi ciently practical to give instruction to our boys and girls compatible with their years, and simplified so that their education may not be parrot-like. LEO FRIEDE. KINDNESS OF DEALERS ASTOUNDS Writer Marvel at Way They Solicit Business at Which They Lose .Money. It really seems too bad that the milk commissioners were unable to get the distributors to raise the price of milk to the consumers, xney sure inca ua.ru enoueh. It seems the small fellow won't raise and unless he comes up n n V n InnnA In fArCA him up they are perfectly willing to fol low suit. And as far as the bakers are con cerned it is certainly nice oi mem m furnish (as Mr. Haynes is quoted) bread to us at a loss. They are so anxious to help us out that you see ineir wagons all over town delivering to the stores and soliciting business and one sends the wagons from house to house. They are even sending autos to Mc Minnville, a 70-mlle trip and to Dilley. 60 miles, and selling at tne same price as to us. I presume that is done to help out the bakers in the towns they pass through. For if ours lose theirs must. Then the poor wood dealer. A morn ing paper quotes one of them as saying that they were selling at a loss. Still they seem anxious and willing to fill our orders. That is very kind of them and I think we at least owe all of them a vote of thanks. H- Baby Countlen of Oregon. PORTLAND, Oct. 1. (To the Ed itor.) What are the newest counties in Oregon, and from what other counties were they made and when? Also the county seat of each? A SUBSCRIBER. Deschutes, created December 13, 1916. out of Crook County; Bend Is county seat. Jefferson, created December 12. 1914. out of Crook County; Madras Is county seat. Hood River, created June 23, 1908, out of Wasco County; Hood River is county seat. Heated by Hot Atr. Baltimore American. "Bragley says his new house 1 heat ed, with hot air." "Then it Is wall .boated. I've hear dV BrajtLey. talk.". ROOSEVELT AS PEACE DELEGATE Writer Draw Imaginary Picture of T. R. and German Chancellor. PORTLAND, Oct. 1. (To the Editor.) The talents of our picturesque states man, T. R., are Just now devoted to an Intensive patriotism peculiarly his own. It Is as brilliantly lurid as the bombs and fireworks upon the night battlefield. No stretch of Imagination Is required for a scene around the peace table in Berlin, with Roosevelt as a United States delegate. Chancellor Michaelis: "Excellenzen, our dear Emperor, loved peace and al ways sought it for the fatherland. He was forced Into this war of defense, and to overcome the evil plans of his enemies he had to take Belgium, which could have saved herself had she given us peaceful passage." Roosevelt (pounds table vigorously with clenched fist): "Michaelis. do not bluff us to believe you hold those stacked cards to play to these frentle men. We call you. Throw down your cards. We shall not sit here as long a time as the war lasted; it is idle to think you can take the pot for your master." Michaelis: "But, excellenzen. Is It that you are determined to win all from us and send our dear fatherland away penniless?" Roosevelt (pounding harder): "I tell you. Michaelis, that the armies of democracy are thundering at your gates. Do you want them to proceed or this convention? We shall tolerate no slipping of any aces from your sleeve Into this game." Michaelis: "What, then, do you de mand?" Roosevelt: "Quite simply stated, elr. Deliver all your naval vessels, arms and ammunition, aeroplanes, etc., to the allies for disposition, retaining only the small arms necessary for your domestic peace officers. Provide a eum of money, to be determined, which shall be held by the allies in trust to ad minister for the use and benefit of peo ples you have ruined. Deliver all per sons who have committed or abetted murders on high seas or on land to be tried before a court at The Hague. Dis mantle all forts and places used for military purposes. Arrange a fund to pay the expenses of allied garrisons to compel the guaranty of these things." Michaelis: "Are there other de mands?" Roosevelt: "After these are arranged we discuss other details and conclude such conventions as will enable the democratic elements of Germany the uninterrupted rights to life, lib erty and the pursuit of happiness. Do you now understand, or do you still thing your treacherous emissaries are at work In every country on earth?" Michaelis: "Urn verzeihung. I under stand, we shall proceed here, excel lenzen." ROBERT C. WRIGHT PAPERS AND CROPS ARE OBSERVED Returned Traveler Writes of Impres sions Gained In Middle West. FOREST GROVE, Or.. Sept. 30. (To the Editor.) After an extended visit to the Middle West on which I took oc casion to read and compare such news papers as the Denver Post, the St Louis Globe-Democrat. Chicago Tribune and many other great dailies, with The Oregonian, I am fully convinced that the people of the Pacific Coast are to be congratulated on having such an ex cellent newspaper at their service. I find The Oregonian second to none in news service and far ahead of any of the other great newspapers in many important respects. In a local way The Oregonian covers the field far better than the papers mentioned. Edi torially it Is safe, sane, patriotic and loyal in every respect. It was. indeed, a pleasure to return home to find The Oregonian continuing In its even tenor, giving all of the news in a clean-cut, modest way, without the display of flaring headlines or undue sensation as seem to have beset the former staid old "back home" papers, which seem called upon to come out with full-page, wook-type headlines every morning whether or not there is .any special news to print. Since our return home we have been asked many questions as to crops and Dusmess conditions back East. Until we reached the Minnesota line travel ing East we observed that the crops were not good. In Montana, the Da kotas, Kansas and Nebraska light crops prevailed. In Minnesota. Illinois and Iowa there are abundant crops. Illinois had one of the best oats crops ever harvested. The corn is the best ever produced. The hay crop was good and while the wheat crop was light it was of good quality. Many wheat fields were plowed up early in the Spring that might have made good returns as those that were left to mature far exceeded expectations. In Iowa the corn crop is very good. Business conditions in the Middle West are fairly good, yet I found peo ple complaining of high prices just as they are in the West, A. E. SCOTT. AMBIGUITY SI ".EX IX ROAD LAWS Only Selntion. Is to Appoint Mayor of Each Tovra Road Supervisor. PORTLAND, Oct. 1. (To the Ed itor.) At th present time the law pro vides that all county roads shall be under the supervision of the County Court of each county wherein said road is located. Each County Court shall have authority and it shall be its duty to Improve, maintain and keep in re pair, etc, all the county roads in the county. The law also provides that every in corporated city and town shall consti tute a separate road district, and the County Court shall not have authority to divide such territory or Include any of it in any other road district. Fur ther, it provides that 70 per cent of the road money received in each dis trict shall be expended on the roads In that district. The question arises as to who should spend the money In the incorporated cities. There are some incorporated towns in Oregon that have no county roads in the towns, these roads having been transferred from the control of the County Courts to the control of the cities by appropriate legislation. In others it is an open question as to the authority over the road, whether It be longs to the county or the town; but In towns where there are no county roads It certainly is a peculiar position that the County Court should spend the money inside the corporate limits. The only practical solution I see is for the County Court to appoint the Mayor of each town road supervisor in that district and allow the Mayor to disburse the money. This question is presented in some form at the present time in every Incorporated town In the state of Oregon. A. KING WILSON. Mayor of Oswego. Newspaper Vouchew for Diary. RIETH, Or.. Sept. 30. (To the Ed itor.) Some people claim your "diary of a U-boat commander" as being purely fiction. Can you kindly answer In your columns as to Its author or who was the original German writer of this diary? F. S. LYON. The suicide of Lieutenant-Commander Hans von Tuebinger, of the U-13, after his vessel had destroyed the schooner of his sweetheart's father, causing her death, was recorded in news dispatches In The Oregonian sev eral weeks ago. The authenticity of the Von Tuebinger diary, now running in The Oregonian, is vouched for by the New York Herald. The statement Is made that the crew of his vessel smug gled the commander's diary and effects to a friend in one of the Scandinavian papUala. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of October 2. 1893. Sylvester Pennoyer addressed BOO people at Roseburg yesterday and he renounced and denounced the Demo cratic party. He declared in favor of the People's party, free sil-ver, paper money, income tax and all. Skyrockets. Roman candles, fire crackers. Chinese bombs, red fire and pyrotechnics of all kinds made Port land's principal thoroughfare luridilast evening. Several hundred Republicans, many in uniform, armed with torch lights and flambeaux and accompanied by brass bands, opened the Republican campaign m this city. A force of 40 men is at work upon the scenic effects for the operas "La Cijrale" and "The Mountebank." to be presented by the Lillian Russell Opera Company at the Marquam Grand. Chief of Police Spencer has issued orders to arrest all motor men who run their cars faster than eight miles an hour. He says cars are run fre quently from 15 to 20 miles an hour and he proposes to put a stop to this dangerous practice. The Southeast Portls.nd Improvement Association met last night to take measures to open up certain tracts In the southeast part of the city and a resolution was adopted calling upon Mr. Ladd to open up the tract known as Ladd's farm. Half n Century Asro. From The Oregonian of October 2, 1SB7. San Francisco. Senators Corbett and Williams, of Oregon, left for the East yesterday. It is thought Will lams will return to this Coast to par ticipate in the Presidential campaign. New York. Sheridan's reception to night was a grand affair. The mili tary procession comprised five divi sions, including one division of colored soldiers. Enthusiasm was immense. Chicago. Cholera has been prevail ing in St. Louis to an alarming ex tent, but the local papers do not men tion the fact. Private letters say there have been over 100 deaths In one day from the disease. We learn that a steam sawmill Is being erected at Wheatland, Yamhill County. Notice has been given in the Lewis ton paper of a meeting to be held at that place on the 26th ult, to take Into consideration the propriety of annexing- Northern Idaho to Washington Territory. WHAT A BUSY MAN SHOn.D READ Much May Be Had From Dipping Into Classic. Oregon Voter. As a man reads goes he ahead. Readers of labor papers and socialist organs seldom get ahead. They think the world owes them a living, when the fact Is they owe their families far better care than they cive them. Of modern periodicals, read the technical journals, trade papers. the "Man" articles in Saturday Evening Post. American Magazine and McClure's (not the slush), and get wide general in formation from World's Work, Review of Reviews, Current Literature and Literary Digest. The editorial page of The Oregonian is worth reading dally. The young man who substitutes the above for labor and socialist journals will win more for his family and him self. Though these be stirring times, every young man should devote at least half an hour a day to reading history, biography and science. Get in a dash of philosophy and law. A good historical novel once In a while provides enter tainment. A few times a year clean up a volume of Hugo, George Eliot, Dickens. Scott or Thackeray. Stimu late your mind occasionally with Carlyle, Macaulay and other essayists. Get an Oxford Bible, an Oxford Shake speare, an Oxford Milton, an Oxford Byron and an Oxford Tennyson and never make a short trip without one of them In your pocket. Following the Ideas in the last para graph will give you ten years of dell clous sampling, and for the rest of your life you will need no guidance, for the rich storehouse of classic litera ture will ever beckon aright. Thirty years of half-an-hour-a-day of solid reading accumulates precious treasure in the mind, and enriches every day. Anyone can devote a half an hour to such, without Interference with per sonal ambitions or family obligations. Some are tempted to go far beyond the half-hour. Do not do It. Too much reading saps vitality from the springs of action. "Be ye temperate In all things" except work, but work like a dynamo, and you'll get ahead. But be yond one limit never go, even with work never rob your loved ones of time and attention. Those who lavish upon you the devotion of their whole being- are entitled to more than spare time and languid caresses. Man's life is short and full of obliga tions, every one of which he can ful fil If he has the manhood to do It. SUSPICIOUS PHASE OF STRIKES Only Essential War Industries) Involved and at Time of Nation's Crisis. PORTLAND. Oct. 1. (To the Editor.) The rich and the captains of industry are morally responsible for the welfare of the poor to the extent of providing for the laborer suitable employment at a living wage. The neglect of this duty has universally oppressed the poor. The offense, like willful murder, cries to heaven for vengeance and amply justifies the organization of labor; but the conduct of labor unions should be governed and restrained by certain plain principles of justice. No qualified laborer should, at any time, be denied the right to join a labor union and, under uniform laws, par ticipate in its benefits. This is a self evident truth. Its adoption and pro mulgation, by all labor unions, should be regarded as a condition precedent to a decision on the question of a closed shop. If the power of a closed shop should be conceded to the union It should give guarantees that that power will not be abused. Before the adoption of that principle the demand for a closed shop Is premature. But there Is a far greater reason that the Issue of a closed shop should not now be raised. We are at war and loyalty to our country forbids it. Our friends, our brothers and our sons have ventured forth at the call of our country, "Why stand we here Idle?" The apprehension that the strike attempts to paralyze only the in dustries which are essential to provide the sinews of war must fill every pa triotic heart with dismay. It is laid bare to the suspicion of disloyalty by the time which it has chosen and by the industries which it cripples. The throttling of these industries must be the paramount issue in the minds of secret instigators and abettors of these strikes. It must be evident, even to the feeble-minded, that a pro-German will not now decry the strike. Whether among the employers or the employes his secret prayer is to "keep the good work up" he knows it aids the Fatherland. Labor, at all seasons, is worthy of its hire and it should enjoy a propor tion of exorbitant profits where such exist; but in the interest of home and country it should manifest a spirit of self-denial. It should not. at this crisis. lorce tne issue or the closed shop. JAMBS B. CARR. i 08 Everett street, .. --..-!