8, TTTF 3I0RNIXG OREGOXIAX. TUESDAY, BEPTE3IBER 3. J91S. 0$ (Dwifawmn PORTLAND. ORE&ON. ""Enters! at Portland (Oregon) foatofflce as vccona-ciuf mtu miiller. u. Subscription rates -invartaply in advance: I By Mll -Tt!y, Sunday Included, tm year ....... 99.0(1 w jOTT,y( hunly mrlutied. -six months ..... s.. ,1 i. y Sunday included, threo months m EjZ'. y, bundy included, one moolii .. r-..::y, w ichout r" unday, one ear . ... , an without Sunday, six months ., P..y. without Sunday, one monto ... Weekly, on year -i....... - - - - ...... Sunday sua weakly ....... 3.i " (By Carrier. ) TMITt, Sunday Included, one year liaily. Sunday included, one month Iat:y, 8undy included, three moatba mur, wiinuut i .70 S. 00 1 (10 2.1.0 ..9.0 a.ss T.au .tti t Sunday, one year . wIai;y, without Sunday, Ihraa months Mialiy. wunoul aunuay. ooa moma .. - How I He Kilt Send poetofflc money or- , aex, express ur personal cnecg on your iocsi benk. stamps, coin or currency are at own- (ri nan. uivs postorrice, aauraas w suit, Cudlng county and state. Postage Kate 12 to 16 paves. 1 cent: IS to pdgei. 2 cental 34 to 43 paffes. 3 cents: &0 to tt'l pages. 4 cents: 62 to 7 pases. 3 cents: 7H to J paces, tf cents. Foreign post- a double rates. 1 Kaxtrrn Business Ofrloe Verres A Conk liO. bru&swlck building. New York; Verreo i -.('onkiin, rUeger building. Chicago: Verree al ankHn. Krea Press building. Detroit Mich.; fan Franciaco rapresealauta, K. J. Bidwall, Harkel street. -MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tb Assoclatsd press Is exclusively snti- tied to ttia use for republication ol ail news : . . ' .. wriispatches credited to it or not otherwise nair-uemocra; (really a frogresni ve ) the bride always brought them kingdom, a province or art ally aa her dowry. Their practice of sacking cities Is a return to the methods of their General. Tilly, who sacked and burned Magdeburg arid massacred 20,000 of the inhabitants in 1(31. They are three centuries behind the pres ent stage of civilization NOT PKAD. The Fresno (California) Republican edited by an eminent Progressive, late: chairman of the state Republican com. mittee (in the fateful year 1916, when California tried to go tor Hughes, but didn't), has now found new and abso lute proof that the Democratic party is finally dead.- Starling with, the premise that it is in California a mi nority party, and that the don't-cares and band-wagon boys are all Repub lican, leaving an irreducible minimum of real Democrats for the Democratic primary, it is shown that the Demo crats concerned themselves at the re cent election n the nomination, of a Governor, and the candidates were a half-Democrat (Heney), a Republican (Rolph) and a Democrat (name not important enough to remember). The primary voted nearly two-thirds for the Republican, over one-third for the credited to this paper, and also tha local ""news published herein. " "-All rights ot republication ef special dis patches herein sro a.eo reservea '.PORTLAND. TCESDAY. SEPT. 3. 1918. - SHALL JdOONEV HAXGT ' A conspicuous feature of the Labor slay parade yesterday and elsewhere, according to reports was the Mooney eTEanners and badges. Some protested I against the hanging of llooney; others asked that he be set free; and others demanded a new and fair trial. Ob- viously, labor or, rather, union labor has made Mooney's cause its own. It is inconceivable, of course, that any responsible group of men and women in America should insist that J a murderer be not punished. If he is t guilty, fie should sutler lor nis crime. I If he is innocent, he should be exoner ' ated. - So, if Mooney is guilty, not any r American citizen worth the name J would for an instant take the position that the due processes of law should e make an exception for him. it must be so, then, that the many champions "of Mooney in the ranks of labor think he is innocent, and have no thought of asking leniency for him on any 7"otTier ground. ; -YVhat is the basis of their opinion? 'ferould it not be well for them to make ' an impartial investigation of the case, so as to determine its merits on the bonis of the facts judicially ascer tained? On the one hand there is the t verdict of a jury of twelve men the J American method sustained by the unanimous judgment of the Supreme Court. On the other hand, there is J the unceasing propaganda of Mooney's friends and sympathizers who have ; set about to show that there has been a miscarriage of justice, and that an , innocent man is being sent to the gallows. The disinterested citizen who ! cieota to believe the latter necessarily J assumes that the agents of the law are n a diabolical conspiracy to railroad ; a"Mctim to a felon's death. The par. ties to such a plot would include the officers of the law, the prosecuting ' witnesses, the jury of twelve men, the judge, and now the entire bench of , the Supreme Court of California. It is not a reasonable assumption. The probabilities are all the other way. President Wilson has been persuaded kto make an appeal to the Governor of .California for Mooney. , It appears to "be taken for granted that the Presi dent has convinced himself of Mooney's innocence, ine Oregonian has not seen annj-where an authorized statement that President Wilson has interfered be- -oause he was seeklnr to save a man tG ongfully accused and .convicted. But there have been widespread reports thut he thought it a mistake to hang uooney, for reasons of public policy -Titrectly related to .the International eJiluation. If Mooney is to be pardoned i?cause there are high and pressing nionsiderations of state, very welL But !2t may be hoped that the reasons-may be . clearly understood and, at the T roper time, given to the world. Z Mooney is. or was. a "direct action" narchist with a bad record. He is an -J W. W. and he belongs with Haywood "mil his kind. Not a voice is raised Ton Haywood, who was convicted for 2-hat he said, and for what he inspired aanthers to say and" do, and not for any cific crime of destruction or sabot age, or disloyalty. Mooney. who was ypenly and defiantly against the Gov . ernmcnt, against social order, and ;,cven against law, was convicted of a heinous crime, committed by some Clipdy, in the assault on the San Fran cisco preparedness parade, resulting in tHa death of many persons, against tfhorn the perpretator of the infamy eonia have had no possible personal iuievancs. Does not the utter absence st motive except that there was a treat public demonstration and that tta participants were merely indicating their adherence to a certain Xational I policy add to the wickedness and wantonness of the deed? If Mooney ciid not do it, surely somebody, inspired t- a roul and awful malignity, con ji.ceived and executed It. " ; No credible or tangible suggestion ";as to who the criminals are, if not -Mooney and his accomplices, has yet -oen made, so rar as we have noted. Snrely. an effort to uncover the real .murderer, if he is not Mooney. should '. be made by those who assert ilooney's J Innocence. If they succeed, a wrong wui have been righted in absolute ; fashion, and another wrong an out- right and awful murder will have been requited. and one-sixth for the Democrat. There fore, the Democrats voted by a major ity to deliver themselves to the Re publicans, by more than one-third to the Progressives, and by less than one sixth to stay Democratic If a party is not dead when it votes to go out of business, what is it? The Republican is confronted by a situation long familiar in Oregon. The Democratic party thrives best here when it controls Republican nomina tions in the Republican primary, re serving its own organization to a small and exclusive group. It is not dead here by any means. In California Democrats carry the process a step farther by voting for a Republican in their own primary when they cannot, or do not, vote for him in the Republican pri mary. But the Fresno paper will learn that tha Democratic party in California -is not dead, nOr even five-sixths dead. It will come to life in November, when it will line up solidly behind any can didate for Governor who has the Democratic nominatidn, however pro- cured.- It is the only American party that uniformly has more votes than it has members who are willing to pro claim publicly their allegiance thereto. The fact ef the congestion ef the pectedly in need of ready money and railroads has been impressed upon are compelled to part with their bonds every one. Ho far aa passenger auto- should avoid strangers and deal, if mobiles are used for .travel which possible, with business men with whom otherwise would' be made upon rait- they are personally acquainted. , roads, thqy are relieving the pressure 1 upon the latter. Thero is a general "So . people who had, perhaps, shortage of freignt cars and of crews scarcely glanced at the poetry of their and engines to haul them. The motof tongue betook themselves to poetic truck is performing enormous service forms to state their new emotions," in the handling of local freight. It is says a writer in Chambers Journal in hardly conceivable that manufacture an effort to account for the great re. of trucks will be discontinued except vival of production of verse since the as a last resort. Rut manufacturers war began, although it might be going who turn out both passenger cars and too far to assume that increase in the truck will be confronted with the I number of . poets Indicates an equal necessity of turning from one to the I increase of interest in poetry gener. other. Probably when the final choice I ally. It would seem that writing of is made, the passenger car will take verse has outstripped the reading of second place, in spite of its undoubted I it, for a vast quantity is being written claims where it is put to reasonaDly I that can have served no other purpose Utilitarian use. . I than to. relieve the pent-up emotions Of course, every automobile owner of the author. It is this fact of "emo- knows that our first duty is to win the I tion" that makes so many would-be war. If it seems necessary to stop poets. They lack ideas and coherence the manufacture of automobiles ror which would be necessary to the pro any other than strictly military pur duction of readable prose, and quite poses, all will acquiesce, while they eften are without the tedious technical will continue to hope that this will not I preparation whieh the latter would re be necessary. But there is one way ip. quire. So they burst into "poetry. which every owner of a car can help, I which is primitive and knows no rules. and be forehanded in doing so, and and if they do not become famous at that is by crnserving the car which fie once they attribute this to lack of in. now owns. Small repairs, which if I sight in the reader who does not ap. neglected run into material deprec'.a- predate them Ucn, should not be neglected.- The proverbial stitch in time which saves I The feat of Lieutenant Edmund G. nine should be taken. There should Chamberlain holds the palm so far do an ana to speeding, wnicn places among performances of airmen, and disproportionate burdens upon engines the story of it makes those of the and running gear. There may, witn knights of old seem tame by compari propriety, be" some curtailment of un- son. The age of chivalry has come necessary driving, governed largely by back, or rather has never ended, but the conscience of the individual. In has only awaited occasion for disnlav other words, owners will do well to of its qualities. There is. reason for bear in mind that economy is destr- gratification in the knowledge that able not only because it is economy, some of the most brilliant knights of but because the car when worn out the twentieth century knights were may not be replaceable at all. Sensible found among the dollar-chasing Amer- restramt in tcis regard is a patriouo leans. duty. . Neutral Subjects and the Draft. One point in General Mahgin's mes- SCHOOL AGAIN. sage oi congratulation at the perrorm- Pnrtinnri enhnnix rosiima, thn nrdprlv ance of American troops in battle is course of their business today, mind- Pen to criticism; , that is his sur ful of the necessities of the future, as Prise tha 'troops comparatively new well as the demands of the present. " conducted tnemseives wun - ... . . i I Rnrh rlnah nnrl Hrillia ntv " YtTVnr it m every city ana town ana oauiiei i ; - ....j and every rural district in the land, Pse r Americans were not surprised. for they expected it, though they were gratified at seeing their expectations realized. - at about this time of year, school simi larly "takes up," War or no war, education of our youngsters must am nn "Keep tlie' schools going" is the As men are withdrawn from one oc message which has come to us from cupation after another which requires overseas. England and France, not ably among our allies, have given tes timony that it is a mistake not to keep education to the fore. The message of little muscular effort, we discover how much potential male muscle has remained undeveloped which might as well have been replaced by female muscle, 'in future years we are likely SBEEB WASTE. s.,OTAea matr J T- nn mi, iAn FranrA hrnii fh t hart hv Dr. John H.' VVUA 1 J VI l.w 1 ' I . , , , . , . .. . little; but, much or little, the official iey, commissioner oi aticauon oi - - - - - . ",J ' r h. -T- record of Congressional sayings and tne slate IfteT orK on nis return doings should be a -report of actual lruui u "ulcliu lrli' auruau, discussion, and a bona fide record of D not ' tha needs of the hour, how- , . I over demanding, or Its burdens, however proceedings, no more, no Jess. heavy, or lta oerlls. however threatening or The. other rlav five rintrp rf thst I its sorrows, however heartbreaking, make rnna.A0etnnni xAAn , j . I you unmindful of the defense of tomorrow. Congressional Record were devoted to . thos. discioiines through which the m- a report Of the renomination Of Rep- I dividual may have freedom, through which T?lo-,t T-.. n-in, i I in efficient democracy Is possible, through .vUu.,..0 '"'. vurcu whlcn tha Intltutlona 0f civilization can be uuuer lilt? CAicuaiou ui rcuiiuas I perpetuated ana sirengmeneu. i .native, 1, . , ,j . . . , . Drivilere Said Mr Walsh of Massa- ondure taxation and privation, suffer and kindness to many of them, to tax away ...... -j v. i. . . orouxnfc iniQ luo wwuu wi.il U BUKII MW. Tk. ,. . . ..-,.,. ,a I only a sals nut a nappy, piacs lor tnsm. Information ss to the returns at a recent I The counsel of England is embodied primary held in Comanche County and varl- I - t ... -j x.'; ..i M ri.n ous other communities in th. great Stats "l a 1 " x 1. " of Texas. It is a personal exultation over I English Board of Education, in a State- political victory, m view of the shortage ,,.. rncentlv civen out bv the United States Bureau of Education. President Fisher said: men will have fewer opportunities to hold "soft snaps" and easy lobs. By Imposing an extra tax of only S per cent on unearned as distinguished from earned incomes, the House com mittee is extremely merciful to those who live on the profits of their fathers' land grandfathers' toll. It would be a so that they might be driven to work for the comforts of life. DrinL naoer it seems to me that such an extension ought cot to bs passed by with out comment. The Record on the same day had eight pages taken up by Mr. Treadway, of Massachusetts, in a reprint of ex tracts from speeches made by him during the second session of the Sixty- fifth Congress. These are. not exceptional instances. but are a common practice. It is sheer waste. It is more; it is a gross impo sition on the people who want in the Record a real, transcript of the actual processes of public-law-making. It is bad enough for a Congressman, to whom is assigned on request the privi lege of editing his copy, to interpolate cheers" and "applause" through the report of a speech by him as has been done but it is worse to devote the Record to an elaborate accounttf speeches not made at all. At tho beginning of the war. when first tne Shortage oi iitDor oecame spparenw In passing out honors, a big bunch is due the Multnomah Guard band, which led the procession yesterday. The members are giving their time freely in patriotic affairs. It is of record that they refused pay for serv. raid was ma le upon the schools, a great ices yesterday,- and, when 1t was forced larzA bodv of unreflecting opinion. Tho re sult ot that raid upon the schools has been that hundreds or thousands or ennaren in this country have been prematurely with drawn from school, and have suffered an irreparable damage, a damage which it will be auite impossible for us Jiereafter ade quately to repair. That is a very grave and distressing symptom. I on them, gave it at once to a worthy i cause. Having been cuffed on the right eai by the French and. on the left ear by the British, the- bocha is wondering where he will hn hit next ft 1b tri Our irrational responsibilities win not Americans' turn, and we may be sura end with the war. The vast work of reconstruction which lies ahead of us demands trained minds. And so it is decreed that, at whatever cost, tho schools must go on. that General Pershing is not organiz ing his first Army for nothing. REPORTS that neutral subjects are being- forced to serve in the American Arrny.. have caused con siderable excitement abroad and es pecially in Sweden. ' Borne of this ex uitement has been based on misinfor mation. Mostly it has sprung from a complete misunderstanding of the sit uation. , " When somewhat more than a year ago this country began its prepara tions for meeting- German militarism on Its own grounds by the Congres sional enactment of a "draft law," all ! men of military age (2i to si) were required to register, regardless of their being American citizens or not. Such a provision is clearly within the rights of any nation and roust not be con strued as' an attempt to force military service upon foreigners. In Sweden, for- instance, every person, whether a citizen or a foreigner, has to register. Taking it all in all, the registration caused little difficulty, the great ma jority of the foreigners within our borders understanding it by reference to home conditions and obeying? it un grudgingly. The few exceptions were mostly traceable to syndicalistic or pro-German agitation, based on a com plete misrepresentation of the objects underling, the law. . As the registration was followed by the actual drafting of eligible men into the Army, neutral aliens of military age were placed apart in a class by themselves, leaving them outside the workings of the law. In this connec tion, however, there arose a difference of opinion as to the proper distinction between foreign subjects and American citizens. In other words, we had, and have, among us a class of men stand ing half way between those who owe no allegiance whatsoever to this coun try and those who have completely transferred their original allegiance to the United States. These are the men who have taken their "first papers," but who have not yet obtained their second or final documents of nat uralization. SWINDLERS AM) LIBERTY BONDS. The Associated Advertising Clubs of the World are rendering timely service in exposing a class of get-rich-quick promoters and swindlers who are now The Germans probably realize by this time as well- as does General March that 4,600,600 American sol diers can go through the German line whenever they please. They have had a foretaste of what a much smaller number of Americans can do. Passenger traffic by air across the English Channel is only a forerunner THE LOT OF THE SLACKER. The slacker who has any remaining Paying upon a new class of investors doubts as to tne universal contempt in " . " of what we mar exriect in the not dig. which he held will future. The immense develop- J1 xT"'! 'r -5 rff; their livesrind wh.tu.ve patriotically nient of the airplane industry during . . . T..T. . T. Itnvcf.H r.art nf thi.fr snrnliis in b- """"" i" " enect states. XNor is mis au. tm macninery ---' --- --- I after Deaca is restored .. .. . . I --r Vii.i ,1 u o ra avcnAr-inllv markprl fori iler pcc. in icniureu. of the War Department for the detec tion of those who shirk their duty is being perfected to a degree that bodes 111 even for those who have thus far escaped the dragnet. Remaining at home, the slacker is sure to be caught; fleeing, he faces the taunts and jeers of a contemptuous populace wherever he may be. it is not likely that he will be able to get passport for a voyage across the Atlantic; over the border on the north erty bonds, are especially marked for h- attontinn nf this eentrv. The ap peal is plausible enough; it is made Collision or an airplane with an to fit into the thrift scheme that is ; p"- "" mo enjoined upon. us. .The prospective "gnts oi a large pan oi jNortnern investor does not want to sell his lib- California, shows the need of a right k,. r,r rnnrso for natrintic. of-way law for the air. We may yet reasons; so the shark is ready with nave imaginary fences reaching miles exchange" ,nla we the suggestion that he them for the wildcat shares which he is offering and which are bound, he says, to make their owner rich. The and south there is no asylum for him. 8eller- lf tj16 deal goes through, con . ; AtrSTRIA DIVIDES THE LOOT. J In its extreme need of money to J carry on tho war the Austrian gov i ernment has' offered loot captured J from the enemy us premiums for sub- scrip tions to the eighth war loan. A J proclamation describes the immense ; quantity of booty taken on. the eastern front and. admitting that a catalogue is impossible, promises that every bl i will be distributed among subscribers. J The booty Includes all kinds of cloth- ing, crocKery. machinery and supplies. "-atored up waiting to be transported to -Austria. The proclamation says: everything er which a man can think Is -i idv uiposai or suusrnoers to tns eighth , loan, sverything from a cup to a shirt, from . aa automobile nail to a threahsr. from silk , g-icds to furnfture. from a can of paint to a : railroad: in short, everything abounds- snd In large quantttie. This supply of goods, i which cannot he depicted, will be offered soisiy to subscribers to the eighth loan. 1 These are. frankly the methods of the bandit and buccaneer, whose (chiefs held their bands and crews to "irether by the promise of rich plun der to be divided among them. That -was ever the character of the Haps--Jiurgs. They annexed province to province by force and fraud, and they -hired mercenaries, of whom Wallen jtfitn was the greatest chief, with the promise of spoils. When they mar ried they followed the precept of Ten. r jiyson'a "NorUx Country. Farmer," tot Canada will invite him to submit to its draft law or go away from there. Mexico, none too friendly to thetlnited States, has even less use for him. Even the wealthy ones who have. established a kind of slacker colony In Mexico City are completely isolated. Aristo crat and peon alike regard him as less than the dust beneath their feef. A few thousand men without a coun try who are being smoked out by the present crisis have the prospect of a whole lifetime of misery before them. verts the bonds into cash at such dis- The printing fraternity was well toward the end of the line, but Mult nomah 68's members remember when they won first prize seventeen years count as may have been created by aso. and are willing the laurels should the dumping of large quantities on the pass iromra. market. . The nroblem is 'not to be lightly Much power is wasted in the erup. dismissed with the statement that it is tion of volcanoes. It is up to some the business of the individual what he body to harness Kilauea and make him does with his liberty bonds, when he run trolley lines all over the Island of has bought and paid for them. Our wawau. erowine- tendencv to enact and enforce laws for the protection of investors The big elephant confided to his gives recognition to the principle that keeper last night that he could have snows some or tne marchers a few fancy steps lf he had had the chance, the unsophisticated are entitled to They will never be able to rehabilitate some Protection. There is, however themselves in the favor of their neigh- an even morf important aspect, and bors and former friends. The day will that is tne effect of such unrestrained k,n .,i iji "exchanges" upon the value of the th.ir. iiv t rLr. liberty bond in the open market. It The submarine commander may have -. - a.-vauw.w vsiJ otiauisV, WW. I , . - . -V(,A, I t A. it will come too late. Their declining eu" . , i 5 1. Wilt -WO luiiucmicu "J wiiaiuciauwn of patriotism, and that he will convert I Perhaps it was the red head of Suppose they try filling the return Ing steamships with captured Huns. years will be one long tragedy of vain regrets. CONSERVING THE ACTOMOBILK. The order of the War Industries trated by the statement of Carl Hunt, Board to automobile manufacturers, I director of the extension division of his own bond? into cash whenever this I Victor Murdock which -got the Fed best serves his purpose. The extent to I eral Trade Commission into so much which this might be carried on is illus- trouble. Driving to church behind a pair of to be prepared to place themselves on the Associated Advertising Clubs, that handsome bays saves gasoline, but how a war basts by January 1, 1919, does an -investigation recently showed that about hay and oats? not mean that there will be no new in one county where , T30, 000,000 of automobiles for private use after that liberty bonds had been sold, wild-cat I Spain grows decidedly cocky toward date, but It does point clearly to the I promoters had- already traded their I Germany as it sees the Hindenburg propriety ot conserving to tne fullest worthless stocks lor sib.ooo.oou oi line begin to fade. extent possioie tne automobiles now these bonds. It is amazing that even in use. The War Industries Board in an era of unaccustomed prosperity doubts that there will be sufficient for many persons, so many should be supplies of raw material principally found who were utterly unable to pro steel for private use. Nevertheless, tect themselves In an ordinary finan thece may be, and probably are, some cial transaction. ' ' manufacturers in possession of partly The desire to amass a competence against the proverbial rainy day is both understandable and commend able, and those who are now being made-the victims of sharpers need and deserve protection. It will not be pos sible to teach them all there is to fabricated material which could not profitably to any industry bo recon verted to other purposes. These, per haps, will continue to build automo biles until the supplies referred to are exhausted Xienine imitates the ex-Czar in hav ing to be killed several times before he stays dead. Organized labor starts work on the call of "Time: Starts parading, too, Those not in the parade were work ing because it was labor day for them, The thought . which is impressed know about investments, but a pre upon us by the new order is that the cautionary campaign will not be amiss, automobile has distinctly passed the The inexperienced investor will find it luxury stage and that it is becoming a rather safe rule to view with sus more and more a necessity. . This does plcion all propositions which promise not refer, of course, to the ear which abnormal returns. Enterprises yield is used only for "pleasure," but, after ing from 20 to 100 per cent a year all, there are not many such. We I on the invested capital are not begging liave come to the point where pleasure for the driblets of small investors. It is incidental to the main purpose. I is a good rule, in fact, to hold fast to There are said to be 6,010,000 auto-1 the liberty bond, which is as good as mobiles in use in the United States, I the gold itself, both as to principal or about one to each twenty inhaM-1 and interest, and is sure to be tants, and by far the greater propor-I redeemed at par at maturity by the tion are employed for utilitarian pur- I Government which issued it. Above pos.es, a par nt most, of the time, Jal.. those, .who find- themselves, unex- There is everything-in a good start. and the parade yesterday had it. Twenty thousand contented workers! No strikes in Portland! " Probably they are killing more Huns than they capture, too. v. Tired this morning? working, isn't it? Worse than The man who plays the calliope had a day off. The tractor wheat, belongs with $3.S0 Roughly speaking, our laws provide that, to become an American citizen, the former subject of a foreign power must first of all file a "declaration of Intention." which, after a certain num ber of years and the fulfillment of cer tain conditions, entitles him to obtain a final decree of naturalization. The binding character of the initial declar ation is not generally understood. It constitutes, in fact, an oath of alle giance which, in Itself, should suffice to change the legal status of the man taking it. Administered to a Swede, for instance, it runs in this way: I hereby declare, on oath, that I ab solutely and entirely renounce and ab- ure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state or sov ereignty, and particularly to Gustavus V, the King of Sweden, of whom I have heretofore been a subject; that I will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of Amer ica against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same." Nor Is it enough to reeckon with the wording of this formula. Its practical effects, in the past must also be taken into consideration. In most of our states all the rights of citizenship ex cept that of voting at public elections ave been bestowed on every man sub scribing to this "declaration of inten- ion." Until quite recently most of the Western states gave him even the ight to vote on the same simple con dition. There are still six states where man having only his "first papers" is as much a citizen as one tullv natural ized as long as he stays within the state. States like Minnesota, which have only recently changed their suf frage laws, are full of men who- have lived there a lifetime and enjoyed every right of citizenship without having be come fully naturalized. -...-.... Under such circumstances.it seemed only just to those , who framed bur original measures of military prepared ness that men who had readily for sworn foreign allegiance in order to obtain the principal rights of citizen ship might also be expected to accept the duties incumbent on everyone hav ing become an integral part of the Na tion. In other words, men having pb tamed their "first papers", were made subject to military service under the draft law. From those immediately concerned few protests were heard. The issu thus raised was taken up with consid erable determination by the Swedish government, which, it must be admit ted, made out an excellent case on the basis of the old treaties between owe den and the "United, States. The legal correctness of its contentions was granted at Washington and awhile ago the draft law was amended by Con Kress in a manner designed to meet all protests. Under the law as amended liability to military service still falls on men of military age who have filed their declaration to become American citi zens, but such liability can he escaped by a withdrawal of the declaration In other words, a Swede of 25, say, who has previously obtained his "first pa pers." need only report to the proper authorities that he wishes to return to hls original status as a Swedish citizen. He Is then automatically placed outside the provisions of the draft law. But If he avails himself of this privi lege, a record of his case is taken and filed for future reference, so that, if he should ever again try to obtain Amer can citizenship, it may be used against him. Under an additional provision of the draft law no man who has escaped it by a withdrawal of his original declaration of intention" can ever be come an American citizen. There can be no question about the ustness of this provision. The man whose oath has proved of. so little worth in the past cannot be expected to prove more faithful in the future. A man who is not willing to stand by this country in its hour of need cannot hope for any consideration when the crisis is past. - Here and there a voice of protest has been raised among the naturalized Swedes of the United States.- It does not represent the feelings of the over whelming majority of the race in America I have more than my own feelings to offer as basis for this opin ion. Since the beginning of this year have visited our largest Swedish set tlements. ' I have talked with Swedes of every possible class and trade and type and position, from leaders like ex Governor John Llnd. of Minnesota, or Chief Justice Harry Olson, of Chicago, own to obscure but clear-minded and honest-hearted workmen and farmera I have asked them what they thought of these young men of Swedish blood who a little while ago were so eager to be classed as Americans and who to day at this moment of supreme Na tional emergency have suddenly dis covered that they prefer to remain Swedes politically as well as racially. While the answers received have dif fered widely in form, their spirit has been identical in every case. 'The statements of tne other men with, whom I talked were to the same effect. It all goes to show that . al though 'there may have been a few de faulters among the Scandinavian peo ple in America, men of -the-same -blood as themselves have straightway risen up In wrath to purge themselves of the reflected discredit. TOUCH z'-OF INTlSf ATK COIRTESV Portland Omtdld All Others la Its Re ception ( Grand Arsay Men. TWIN FALLS. Ida. Aug. 30 (To the Editor.) All the cities that have en tertained annual gatherings . of the Grand Army have been abundantly hospitable, especially during the later years; but it remained for Portland to add certain touches of intimate and af fectionate courtesy of an almost per sonal character that have been hith erto unknown. The way in which the incoming guests were met at the trains, sorted from the crowd, escorted to waiting autos and taken to their re spective hotels, or to the wonderfully manned (and womaned) headquarters of the local committees at Liberty Temple (itself a happy Innovation), was one of them. Another was the opening to them of the delightful homes of your city and their prompt assignment to quarters therein, with Boy Scout or other immediate convoy thither. Another, the presence at Liberty Temple . and in hotel lobbies of sweet-faced bearers of baskstjt of beau tiful roses and other flowers, for which Portland is famed, and which were continuously and lavishly distributed among your visitors. Another, the con stant service of private autos, volun teered, most frequently with the lady owner as driver, for that purpose. Still another, the attendance each day tn the lobby and upon each floor of the hotels a bevy of pretty girls and a sprinkling of men and women wearing a badge with the cheerful query, "Can I do anything for you?" Considering the fact that the head quarters of five different organizations from each of 40 different states, to gether with a national headquarters for such organization, were scattered through "the numerous floors of the various hotels, this looked mighty en couraging to the stranger especially When, on stepping from the elevator at the nth floor, the badge was em phasized by the musical voice of the smiling lassie who wore it, saying, "Is there anything I can do for you?" Taken altogether, the visit to Port land, with its shipbuilding and spruce lumbering Interests, Its charming drives and magnificent scenery and, above all, its warm-hearted and hospitable women and men, is likely to make the 62d en campment of the Grand Army a red letter event in the mind and memory of every one who had the good fortune to be present during the few remain ing years allotted. c. I longlet, - Co. C, JUh Iowa VoL Inf. In Other Days. Twenty-five Year Ago, From The Oregonlaa September S, 1893. WASHINGTON. O. C. Sept. 2. The Senate passed the day in discussion of Senator Dolph's bill appropriating SSOO.OuO for the execution of the Chi nese exclusion act. Graduates of the Keeley Institute of Oregon held a reunion last week at Forest Grove. The graduates were noticeable for the neat blue badires that adorned their coats and thlr happy and smiling countenances. W. H. Roach was elected permanent presi dent, Mra M. S. Burrell has issued invita tions to the marriage of her eldest daughter, Miss Helen Strong, and Lieu tenant Gordon Voorhees. U. S. A., on Thursday, September 14, at the Church of Our Father. The regular opening of the Mar. quam Grand dramatic season takes place tomorrow evening, when , the Charles Frohman company will play "Aristocracy." William Faveraham. Blanche Walsh and Maurice Barry more are to be in the cast. Fifty Yrars Ago. From The Oregonian September 3, 1SS. Memphis, Tenn. The editor of the Memphis Appeal tells ex-rebels In an article of July 80: "Go on, boys; swear to murder Northern Huns. Arm your selves and organise. Be ready to re spond promptly when called on." The farmhouse of Sol Durbln in Sa lem, valued at S1000, was destroyed by fire last week. , The City Council granted a petition to Kd J. Ryan for the use of a part of Third and Oak streets for building pur poses. ( Atlanta, Aug. 31. The Georgia Sen ate has unanimously passed a resolu tion authorizing tha Governor to Issue a proclamation disbanding armed re sistance throughout the state. WHT SPLPIHRIC ACID IS KI.VCJ OBJECTS TO OXE-TVAf TRAFFIC Writer Cannot See How Congestion WUI Be Reduced by Proposed Flan. PORTLAND, Sept 2. (To the Edi- tor.)j It would seem from observations during the past 20 years that whenever our city authorities are out of anything else to do, they then proceed to "regu late" the street railways. So we have had stop "after the crossing," "before the crossing," and now we have a com bination of both. Also we have a scheme to thin out traffic by sending it along two streets instead of one. Just how this will reduce the amount of traffic Is not clear. If four and four make eight en one street, how can we add them and make seven or six on two streets? If It requires four cars on Morrison street and four on Washing ton street to carry a given amount of traffic under the present system, will it not require eight cars to do the same when run around the loop? lf when there are four cars running the same way on a street, and the first one is delayed unduly by the exigencies of the traffic, it would delay four cars. If eight cars were running in like manner, would not eight be delayed? Would this add to or lessen the con gestion of traff.c? Another matter that fails to be no ticed is that the collective man who pays his 6 cents to ride Is entitled to something for his money. Speaking of the Mount Tabon-Sunnyside line, which It is proposed to run around the loop through, the ruck of the public market, we wisn to can attention to tne. tact that the present routing was adopted alter, many protests against such routing as that proposed. A great many of the patrons of this line are employed-during the day in business iud.I nf Thir4. In.ot -Itiaf hnnriit will help congestion of traffic to put several sulphuric acid, The factor which best thousand neoole off at Third and Mor- represents the economic prosperity of Light Also Thrown Upon Importance ol Platinum In This War. When the chemists clamor for mora platinum, and the Bureau of Mines says we are starving for platinum, and the person who wears a platinum-set jewel is branded as a slacker, the Inyman naturally sits up and asks, "What's all the talk about platinum? What Is it used for?" And the an Bwer is, "Sulphuric acid," says J. J. Willaman, a prominent member of the Minnesota section of the American Chemical Society. Now platinum is a many-sided metal. It is not corroded in moist air; It is not oxidized by electric sparks. Hence II is used In contact points In many electrical instruments, as tele phones, telegraphs, radios, signal in struments on shipboard, etc it Is not affected by most chemicals or by high temperatures; therefore it is ur.'.l in certain parts of big guns, in chemical analyses. In electric furnaces. t is very costly, therefore it is in iK uind for Jewelry by persons who i not know for what else to spend ! iiuir money. But all of these uses are overshad owed at the present time by its use in the manufacture of sulphuric acid. Platinum is absolutely essential in making sulphuric acid, and sulphurio acid is absolutely essential In making high explosives, textiles, war gases, dyes, many foods and medicines; in fact, hardly a substance can be named in the manufacture of which sulphuric acid does not have to deal directly or Indirectly. The '.ate Robert Kennedy Duncan, founder of the system of fel lowships in industrial chemistry at the University of Pittsburg, speaks of it as "suiphric acid, oil of vitro!, the king of chemical products." Very recently,- a French authority in commenting on this chemical said: "If called upon to decide Which of all the manufactured products; the in dustrial creations,- has been- the most necessary and useful to the country since the war, without which defeat would have been rapid and inevitable, I should answer without hesitation. rison every morning and evening, either to transfer or walk: to their destina tion, does not seem plain to those -who are by such regulation deprived of the transportation for which they pay. We believe that it would avoid a congestion of traffic to let. the present routing re main. Just how it will" lessen congested conditions by running some 20 extra cars per hour through the street mar ket from Third to First on Yamhill street does not appear. - ... X. G. ROBISON. 829 Belmont street nation is -Its consumption of sul phuric acid. True, in time of peace. It Is still more so in modern war fare." What does this king of chemicals do. in the process of making explo sives? The chemist says it is a re hydratlng agent That is. it has a tremendous affinity for water. It will abstract water from the air: it will take' water from anything with which it comes in contact. If water is not to. be had already formed. It will take from some available source the ele ments which go to make, up water and combine them. It is this lat ter act which is utilized In explosives manufacture. Glycerin and nitric acid are rather harmless after tney are mixed. But if sulphuric acid Is added to the mixture It will Immediately take an atom of hydrogen and-one of oxygen from tne nitric acia, una an atom of hydrogen from the glycerin. combine them Into water, and then take the water unto Itself. This leaves the nitric acid chemically united with the glycerine and we have nitro glycerine. Similarly we have nitro cellulose, or guncotton, and trinitro toluene, the famous T. N. T. of the present war. Sulphuric acid is made irem air. water and the fumes from burning sulphur. These are all cheap, com mon materials, but they won't unite without strenuous provocation ordi narily. Platinum furnishes a mild provocation, the mere presence of a trace, of it causes the oxygen, water and sulphur to Join hands chemically, and the king of chemicals is horn. At the present time in tha United States more than half a million tons a month is being made. ' His Opinions Regulated. ; Washington (D. C.) Star. "There are bound -to be differences of opinion." "Yes," replied Senator Sor ghum. "It is an. unfortunate fact thst a man's opinions are largely' regulated by what happens to be good for his own particular business." TRUE CONSERVATION OF SUGAR War Mother Telia How She FUls Jars Notwithstanding Restrictions. CORVALLIS,-Or., Aug. 30. (To the Editor.) I notice, in . The Oregonian that Reader, having a family of five, has already used 100 pounds of sugar for canning purposes, and wants more. It seems to me that the true spirit of conservation must be lacking .in this case.' Many of 'us did not happen , to get sugar during the few days that we were allowed to have 100 pounds. When we went to get it we found that we could have only 25 pounds. Now, I am filling my jars just as rapidly as ever before, but hot using a third as much sugar. I have made several quarts of jelly, and measured very carefully, never using more than three quarters as much sugar as juice (after the juice has been boiled down a little). I have made both jelly and marmalade by substituting one cup of light Karo syrup in place of one cup of sugar. It a true that Karo costs a trifle more, but it eaves sugar. We find either TTarn nr tinnnv nerfectlv natisfactorv I on breakfast food, and have finally HOME HEWS OJT THE FRONT LINO learned to enjoy our morning coffee without sweetening. . I'Serions Want Appreciated by All Who My main way oi saving sugar is in I . the drvlne- of fruits and vegetables. I " Xj'Kr Our drier (an apple box with four I To no oerson who has ever Deen shelves), occupies one end of the range stranger in a strange land" will a move- and is now in daily use. Jast year I ment now under way. to supply Amer- drled apples, berries, peaches, pears lean fis-htimr men on land and sea with and prunes; also green beans, peas and I newspapers from their home towns corn. in using: uneu. iiuu tiierw ja H I seem trivial, says a. ... great saving in both sugar and cans. I The very fact that our soldiers on the Try canning pears this way, and you other side in camp, trencn and noepitat will prefer them to the old-time rich are constantly appealing for "more preserves: Wash and halve the pears. I home newspapers" indicates a seriou Remove Btem and core, but do not! want that should be supplied, livery- pare them. Bake in a pan In the oven, bodv realizes how necessary it Is t Prepare a kettle of syrup by boiling to- sustain the morale of the Nation's d gether three quarts water, half a cup fenders. Nothing has been more potent of sugar, half, a cup of Karo and one! to this end than cheerful letters from pound lemon Juice, tms quantity tor i fatnilv and friends. six quarts . of pears. Put the baked I gut many soldiers and sailors are not pears into Jars, fill with the hot syrup hiessed with inspiriting correspondence. and seal. I and to tbeee newspapers, either the Our family numbered five, too, for 1 dailies or weeklies, from the localities many years, and now, for the sake of 1 n which they have lived are an excel the) two dear boys in tne service, x want to urge Reader and others to be more thoughtful and considerate in their use of sugar. Let us be glad that by these self denials we are helping our boys to win over there. A WAR MOTHER. lent substitute. And even those who receive letters regularly find in the home papers many bits of interesting news which the letter-writers do not cover. The "Home raper service." ini tiated by Colonel William Boyce Thompson for men who have entered . the Armv or Navy from Westchester County, New York, is thus a most com- PORTLAND. Aug. 3L(To the EdI- Von has. on h7s' own sponsThi,: ity. undertaken to provide over blOO men In the service with home news papers and expects to lengthen the ros ter. This enterprise might well' become Nation-wide. In every community committees made Pension of Soldier's Widow. tor.) If the widow of a soldier of, the Civil War marries again and her sec ond husband dies; can she obtain a pen sion on account of her first husband? AN OLD PIONEER. There Is said to be an Instance in this state where a pension has been I up of business men, club members and granted under the conditions named, parents of soldiers and sailors could You would better write to tne Commis-i ce rormea ana tnese, witn tne co-opera- sloner of Pensions, Washington, D.-CI tion of the local publishers, would see stating particulars of the case you havej that the "boys" lrom their vicinity got in mind. : I copies or the local journals. t