9 THE SUNDAY OREGONlAX, . TORTLAXD, OCTOBER 18. 1914. PORTLAND, OBEG05. Entered at Portland, Oregon, Fostofllca as Second-class matter. Subscription Rate Invariably In Advance: (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year ....... f 8.00 iJa'.ly. Sunday Included, six montba . .... 4.25 Jjaiiy, Sunday Included, tnree months ... ljaily, Sunday Included, one month ...... iJally, without Sunday, one year ........ 6.00 JJaily, without Sunday, six months S.io Ijally, without Sunday, three months .... 3-73 XJaily, without Sunday, one month .00 Vveekly one year ................. 1.60 unday, one year ........... .......... . 2.00 fcunuay and Weekly, one year -M CBy Carrier.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year ...... .99.00 3-aiiy, Sunday Included, one month How to Remit Send Poatofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give posioffice address In lull. Including county and state, Postage Rates 12 to 18 pages, 1 cent: 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 4 to 4tt pages, 8 cents: 6t to ttO pages, cents; tu to 78 pages, a cents; 78 to U2 pages, o cents. Foreign post, age, double rates. Kaatera Business Offices Verree Conk. Iln, 2s ew lorn. Brunswick building. Chi cago, stenger building. ban Francisco office R. J. BldweU Co 742 Market street. l'OBTLAXD, 61XDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1914. THE EASTERN CAMPAIGNS. In the Eastern campaigns along the frontiers of Germany and Aus tria the battle raging may be said to have come to something like the standstill that is noted on the Aisne. At present the armies of the Czar are deadlocked with, their German and Austrian foemen. Minor vic tories are reported here and there, first on this side and then the other, but the , general situation has re mained practically unchanged for the past ten days. In this region the Germans con tinue to fight a defensive campaign. . Their object is to hold In check the great Russian army which would crush down all barriers and advance on Berlin. In its general distribution the Russian army may be said to ex tend from the Baltic to the Carpath ians, with its center resting on War saw. Yet the line lacks the co-ordination and singleness of purpose that are found westward on the Aisne. Right wing, center and left wing really have definite and varying tasks assigned to them. It Is the purpose of the Russian right to sweep the Germans back from the frontier to their second line of defense on the "Vistula River. Early in September the Russians had made considerable progress, taking Koen igsberg and an immense slice of Prussian territory and spreading ter ror before them. This caused a re inforcement of the German line by troops withdrawn from the west. When these seasoned first-line men arrived in Eastern Prussia they struck the Slav armies with sudden fury and drove them back pell mell into Russian Poland, capturing 80, 000 in one coup at Allensteln. At the same time the Russian cen ter was forced back to a position in front of Warsaw, while the Russian pressure on Austria was relieved and the immediate danger to Cracow and Przemysl removed, the Russians be ing compelled to drop back to shield the St. Petersburg-Vilna-Warsaw ar tery of supply for the entire Russian center. Before the German offensive movement had spent "itself the Rus sian center had been driven half way across Russian Poland and the Ger mans were before Warsaw. Some re ports have said that they even got beyond Warsaw and commenced a bombardment of that important point. Again, early in the present month, the Russians moved forward on their right and after a severe engagement defeated the Germans at Niemen and drove them back on the frontier in the direction of the Vistula. Here the Russian right and German left are now deadlocked. In the center the Germans and Austrians retain theif position along the Vistula, where, after making a broad sweep, it flowa in a straight line southward in Rus sian Poland. At the south the two armies face each other from Radom, south to Warsaw, to the Carpathians south of Tarnow. South and west of this the Russian invasion of Hun gary may be described as little more than cavalry raids of no strategic importance. Before the three Russian forces can converge on Berlin, their main objective, they must hew their way through serious obstacles. The north ern wing must sweep the country up to the Vistula, while the center must advance and occupy the frontier sec tor in front of Posen and Breslau. At the same time the southern army must break the German-Austro lines on the Donajec River and reach Cra cow. At the present time the Rus sians are reported to be pounding away at Cracow, but without results. At Cracow the Austrian force defeated in Galicia has been mobilized and the Russian advance has powerful mili tary resistance to compete with. So far Russia has not seriously threatened Germany. After more than two months the Russian center continues to be fighting in Russian territory, the right wing is fighting for control of the first battleground it occupied, while the Russian left, after initial successes in Galicia, is at a standstill east of Cracow. In the meantime, Winter is coming on in n. country which is marked by heavy snows and low temperature. That the Russians will be at a marked dis advantage in Winter campaigning is assured from the fact that they must draw their supplies from three slen der railway routes, which can be kept open with difficulty during the heavy snows. The Russians vow that Win ter will not check their operations. yet it is certain to subtract from their effectiveness. Should the Russians, reinforced nnd spurred on by a fresh impulse. succeed in removing the obstacles to a converging advance on Berlin, the Germans would be compelled to draw off effective forces from the Aisne. Possibly this weakening of their line in France might require a withdrawal from the Aisne to the first French defense line on the Franco-German border. Here the Germans would be able to hold the allies in check with a greatly inferior force because of the splendid defensive position they would occupy a defensive position far stronger than the one on the Aisne. " 1AK AND MPSIC. It seems almost too much to hope for at this stage of the game that the serene realm of music should not be invaded and perturbed by the war. The Oregoniarr has already referred with appropriate sighs to the anti Wagner outbreaks in Paris and Saint Saens' unchristian sentiments regard ing German music in general. Simi lar explosions are occurring in Italy, the land of art and the native home of ong. The band began to play a Viennese .wait at Robs the other day, only to be mobbed by the out raged populace. The Italians do not love the Aus trians and we fear it -will be many years before affection grows warm between these two nations. There are too many old scores to pay off. If Italy goes into the war it will not be to help her old tyrant out of his trou bles.. England has started a move ment to "emancipate herself from German music." In the course of the business she aspires to improve her own music, which might easily be done. As for German music, "Walter Dam rosch, the New York conductor, does not speak hopefully of it. He says the Fatherland with all its soldiers, ships and guns has produced no great musician since the days of the Franco-Prussian war; that that glorious occasion brought into Germany no end of money and victorious pride, but it failed to bring out genius of any sort, except perhaps the genius for boasting. Perhaps Mr. Damrosch goes a tri fle too far in this sentence upon the Kaiser's domain, but he is a man of facts and probably weighs his words. His remarks give little comfort to the philosophers who assure us that a war now and then is necessary to bring out the fine spiritual gifts and virtues. . What it really brings out is greed and bloodlust. FOR THE RECALL OCTOBER 27. The Supreme Court interposes no legal obstacles to the recall, and the proposed election will be held in Portland on October 27. The recall is directed against Mayor Albee and Commissioners Dieck and Brewster. The charges against the three of ficials do not, if true, constitute a sufficient reason for the solemn rem edy of the recall. But they are not true; or where they have any ele ment of truth, they are frivolous. On the straight-out question as to whether the Mayor and the two Com missioners should be ejected from of fice for the reasons given. The Ore gonian registers an emphatic dissent. But the recall of Messrs. Albee, Dieck and Brewster is not the only issue. The public is called upon at the same time to elect Mr. Kennedy for Mayor and Mr. Leet for Mr. Brewster's place and Mr. Abry or Dr. Parrish for Mr. Dieck's place. There is no good reason why any of them should be elected; there are sound reasons why some of them should not be elected. The plan for a separate recall elec tion, costing $25,000, just a few daj-s prior to a general election, is unjusti fiable on the ground of expense and trouble. The people ought not to forget, on October 2 7, why they are called to the polls, and by whom. WHY AID i'O K THE SOUTH? Senator Chamberlain sturdily sup ports the Democratic tariff, and tells the people of Eastern Oregon that it is good for them. He is indeed a metamorphosed Senator, for the last bold utterance on the tariff the public had from him was his public Ldefiance of the Democratic caucus and his threat to bolt if there was to be free trade in Oregon products. There is free trade, and the Senator did not bolt. At La Grande the Senator used eggs as an illustration of his present economic theory that the interest of the consumer is paramount to the producer's welfare. Asking all who ate eggs to stand up, all arose; and when the egg producer was called upon to materialize, only a few stood. The point sought to be made was that the cheaper the eggs the better. We can give the Senator an even apter illustration: Everybody in the United States nearly 100,000,000 people uses cotton in some form. From the cradle to the grave every citizen is a customer of the cotton growers of the South. But there are comparatively few of them, a million or so, including their dependents. Ob viously, from the Senator's stand point, the 100,000,000 are to be con sidered before the 1,000,000. Evidently the present cotton situa tion is ideal, from the Democratic viewpoint. There are millions of bales hunting a market, and the con sumer can get cotton at his own price. Yet. the whole Democratic Con gressional machine "is now directing its energies to put through a $250, 000,000 bonding bill for the relief of Southern cotton-growers. WThy aid for the 1,000,000 and in difference for the 100,000,000? Why Government help for the Southern cotton-raiser and not for the- Oregon lumber manufacturer, or hopgrower, or fruitraiser? THE SHAME OF OREGON. In line with his attempt to ruin everyone he cannot rule. Governor West in the current campaign, as in the past, has committed peculiarly vlcious assaults upon State Senator Lair H. Thompson for his authorship of the swamp land law. In another column is printed today the full text of that law. It has been criticised wholly in generalities or in epithets directed at Senator Thomp son, such as "Swamp Angel Thomp son," and similar coarse insults. The Oregonian invites anyone to point out a single, particular in which the law is at faui. The history of the bill discloses the littleness of Governor West. , Before it was introduced in the Legislature it was submitted to him .personally. He read it over and gave it his en thusiastic endorsement in the pres ence of a third witness. Thereafter it passed through the hands of the Desert Land Board and was examined with care by the State Engineer. The one suggestion for its improvement they offered was cheer fully incorporated and the bill was given their endorsement. The bill passed the House without a dissenting vote. It was examined and discussed by the Committee on Irri gation, of which Senator C. C. McCol- loch, spokesman In the Senate for Governor West, was chairman. In the Senate it was debated and was passed- with but one dissenting vote. Sen ator McColloch voted for if. In the meantime Governor West had had a falling out with Senator Thompson, the author of the bill, and repudiating his former indorsement of the measure and discrediting the votes of his warmest supporters in the Legislature, he vetoed it. In the Governor s veto the reason offered was that the act did not pro vide that reclaimed swamp lands should be disposed of in small tracts to actual settlers. A perusal of the bill as published today will disclose that the State Land Board, of which the Governor is chairman, is given absolute powers to deny an application for permit to reclaim swamp lands. It may with hold its approval and by that -means compel any person or company desir ing to reclaim lands to submit to its dictation as to the manner of dispos ing of the lands. The objection by the Governor was not bonafide. It was pure quibble. Was the Governor afraid to trust him self as the chairman of the board that had supreme control over the disposition of the lands involved? Was he afraid to trust any successor elected under the provisions of the direct primary law and a system which has . eliminated corruption, bosslsm and corporation rule in .Oregon? That a man honored with the posi tion of Governor is traveling up and down the state using mere pretext to deprive worthy and patriotic citi zens of their good name and there by vent his spite, is the shame of Oregon. WHO IS THE PRIMARY'S FRIEND? The public continues to hear of the 'secret and sinister programme for doing violence to the direct primary of Oregon." Such an alarming statement comes from the leading Portland news paper guardian angel of Dr. C. J. Smith. It discovers behind every lamp post a masked, highwayman, alias a reactionary, waiting for his victim viz., the direct primary to come along. .But let us see how the primary has been or is being .violated. The spirit of the direct primary has been most grossly wronged by Dr. C. J. Smith and his crowd. His nomination is the di rect result of a put-up job by the West- Chamberlain machine and its news paper partner. He was nominated by a back-room assembly. He was hand picked by the little gang that seeks to run Oregon politics. He was forced upon the Democratic party. His nomi nation is the genuine fruit of ring methods. Chamberlain names West and West names Smith. .There was never a bolder deal in Oregon. Mr. Withycombe was nominated in an open primary against seven com petitors. He had an even show, and no more. There was no state machine behind him, nor any other machine, or gang, or ring. He had a modest organization, which did no violence to the corrupt practices act. There was no great corps of stenographers pre paring thousands of letters for Oregon voters. There was no organized press bureau, nor hired claqueurs, nor paid workers. There was little money, but much enthusiasm. If he had spent $50,000 and had falsely claimed that it was contributed by his friends, and had put up a hypo critical line of talk about law enforce ment, he could hardly have got more votes. He was nominated by a free primary, not a coerced and deceived primary. He strictly followed the let ter and purpose of the Oregon system and he has not been charged by any one with posing as its friend while at the same time seeking to . corrupt the voters by the expenditure of many thousands of dollars. Mr. Withycombe stands for the square deal. He has given it to Oregon voters. THE SHORTCOMINGS OF THE SCHOOLS. No doubt most of the attacks upon the public schools ought to be taken as tributes to their merits. The per sons who pose as critics commonly show little knowledge of the subject they are talking about. Their judg ment is usually- less valuable than their knowledge. The criticisms made upon the public schools at the recent convention of the American Prison Association in St. Paul seem to have been quite extraordinaril. nonsensical. , Several speakers "laid at the door of the schools the blame for a large per cent of the crime in the country." The superintendent of the Indiana reformatory stated that "ninety per cent of the delinquency of the coun try begins in the public schools." In states where education is compulsory pretty nearly all delinquency would naturally begin in the schools because there is where the children of bad propensities are to be found mingled with the good. As a contemporary remarks, few schoolteachers instruct their pupils in crime," at least not in regular lessons. We .believe 'that most of them take more or less pains to train them in the ways of virtue. But the teacher's opportunities are limited. He has the child under his supervision only for a few hours a day, five days in the week. The schools are in session from thirty to forty weeks of the year. All the rest of the time the pupil is on the streets or at home. Narrow as his opportu nities are for drilling pupils in virtu ous conduct, the teacher is expected by foolish critics to take over all the dutfes of the church, the Sunday school and the family. If a boy turns out badly the schools are to blame for it, no matter how the church may have neglected its mission, no matter how incompetent the parents may have been. From some of the attacks upon the schools one would infer that the great religious agencies of the country had gone out of business altogether. What are they for if not to save children? What are family influences for if not to train up the young in the way they should go? The modern family is like a certain class of charity sub jects. Give them the slightest help and "they lie flat down" upon you for the rest of their lives. In the same way the family has too often "lain down" upon the Bchool. Teachers have their failings, but they perform their multifarious duties at least as well as some of their complacent critics. WHAT CORN CAN PRODUCE. Now that Oregon has established her position as a corn-growing state, it is time to develop the Industries which use corn as a raw material and to promote a home market for their products. Since Oregon can grow corn, it would seem absurd for this state to import products of corn from other states, when they can be made as well within our borders. While corn-growing in this state is in its in fancy, it is destined to increase rapidly now that it is a proved success. A regular propaganda is under way by the American Manufacturers' Asso ciation of products from corn. It tells of the many various articles of food, both for man and beast, which are made from corn, how they are made, their food value and how they are used. The germ produces corn oil, corn oilcake and cornraeal-cake for cattle; the body of the grain produces starch, dextrine, corn syrup and corn sugar for man; the bran added to the soluble substances makes gluten feed for cattle. Corn syrup is not only a cheap but a necessary ingredient, of candy, and the nutritive properties of corn are such that a family of five could live well on 50 cents a day by Judicious combination of corn prod i acts with, gma.ll amounts of other lood. according to Professor Graham Lusk, of Cornell. Various corn products are important components of numerous soups, breads, cakes, puddings and candies, recipes for which are given in a cookbook. If war were to cut off this country from communication with the rest of the world, we could still live well, for corn would yield all the food neces sary to sustain life and health, and we should have numerous other kinds of food. So long as we have corn, we could not be reduced to the straits from which Germany may suffer within a year unless she breaks the naval blockade which closes her in. CROPS TO BRING WEALTH. The first American to profit by the war, and the one to profit most, is the American farmer. Though esti mates of the wheat crop have been cut down somewhat, that of October 1, which may be considered final, shows it still to be the banner crop. The total is 892,000,000 bushels, an increase of 128,620,000 bushels over that of last -rear, which was also a bumper. The price is also a bumper, for it is estimated at S3 hi cents a bushel, and will bring to the farmers $884,000,000. Corn estimates on October 1 are 2,676.000,000 bushels, 78.000,000 bushels higher than a month ago. The crop's value is placed at $2,090,632, 000. Oats Improved 21,000,000 bushels in September and are estimated to total 1,137,000,000 bushels, an in crease of 15,232.000 bushels. Esti mates of barley are 197,000,000 bush els, which la 3,000,000 bushels less than the .September estimate, but 21, 000,000 bushels more than last year's crop. Improvements are also noted in the flax, tobacco, apple and potato crops, compared with September esti mates. When the unusual surplus of these crops are marketed in Europe at war prices It will go far to satisfy our foreign debts and it will pour so much wealth into the farmers' pockets that they will be able to buy liberally at home, not only of those commodities they have been used to buy at home, but manor which hitherto have come from abroad. THE- DILIGENT DUTCH. Holland is a work of man rather than of nature. Fully a third of the little country, which contains only some 14,000 square miles, has been rescued from the sea by dikes. It lies below the ocean level and the waters are always ready to rush in and sub merge it. Sometimes they succeed. In the year 12 77 during a great storm thirty villages in the valley of the Ems River were overwhelmed by the waves and a permanent arm of the sea was formed which is now called the Dollart. The Zulder Zee was orig inally dry land, but in the course of the thirteenth century it was overrun by the encroaching sea. Man is now trying to recover it and will no doubt succeed, though at heavy expense in labor and money. The parts ol Hol land which have been reclaimed from the water are called Polders. The first step in the process is to build temporary dikes and then the pumps are set going. From the beginning of the sixteenth century the pumps were worked by windmills, which stood scattered over Western Holland like ghosts begging for mercy from some tyrannical demon. Now the windmills are giving way to steam engines. Diking has bees more or less con tinuous in Holland since the dawn of the Christian era. It is not so neces sary along the coast of the North Sea as by the inland waters, since the ocean itself is barred out in most cases by the long lines of sand dunes. But here and there the dunes have given way and man has been obliged to reinforce them. There is one dike on the west coast which it costs $30, 000 a year to keep in order. Piles are used to strengthen the earthwork and the attacks of the teredo ruin them in a. short time, xne son oi iioiiana makes good pasture land, and in the western and northern parts it is ad mirably suited for cattle. But there are no other natural resources in the country. It once ruled the ocean with its fleets, but it has no forests. It is extremely wealthy, but it possesses few or no mineral deposits. Every thing the Dutch have and are they have won for themselves by a bitter warfare with unkindly nature. In one way and another it has all come from the sea. The modern history of the country begins in the year 1579 with the union of Utrecht formed by "William the Silent, Prince of Orange, to resist the Spaniards. Small as the low countries are they were at that time divided into many provinces, which were torn by mutual jealousies. The only really zealous members of the Utrecht Union were Holland and Zealand, which soon after the pact was concluded made William the Silent their Count He held his office for three years and was then assassinated. King Phillip, of Spain, had set a price on his head. which was won by a young religious zealot, who thought that by murder ing William he would win heaven. The Prince was shot as he walked out of his dining-room in a house which may still be seen at Delft. The assas sin may have gone to heaven, but his passage was not agreeable. Among other tortures the Dutch inverted redhot pan on his stomach with rats under it. They burrowed into his in testines to escape the heat. After William's death John of Baraeveldt guided the destinies of Holland for many years, and guided them most wisely. His life has been admirably written by Motley, the great American historian of the Dutch. William's second son, Mau rice, was made stadtholder, or Presi dent, of the country as soon as he was old enough, but the boy had the good sense not to "dismiss the pilot," at least not for a long time. Maurice was a born military genius. He won so many victories over the Spaniards and took so many fortresses from them that he finally established the independence of his country, though it was not formally granted by Spain until the peace of Westphalia, in 1648. One of Maurice's great exploits was the battle of Nieuport, In 1600, where, under his command. Dutch infantry put the Spanish to rout in the open field for the first time in history. But the Dutch were practically in dependent from the year 1600. This left them rwith time for theological quarrels, in which they deserved many a prize. The principal -dispute was over predestination. The people took sides and fought as bitterly as if they had really known something about the subject of the controversy. It was in these senseless squabbles that Hugo Grotius, the founder of international law, was sentenced to death and made his romantic escape from prison. The uiogS brilliant jjeriod, oj JDutch history. r . begins in 1631, with the accession to power of Frederick Henry, third son of William the Silent. It was now that the island empire was founded in the Malay archipelago, Brazil con quered and the great naval wars waged with England. The Dutch fleet was the best in the world and their sailors the most expert. When Louis XIV invaded Holland, which he Intended to annex to France, the dikes were opened to flood the land and the fleet routed the invader upon the sea. De Ruyter was the Dutch Admiral in those old wars and he won laurels which will be as green as Nelson's till the. end of time. The end of Dutch naval power came in the days of the French revolution. The revolutionists made a Winter campaign when the rivers could be crossed on the ice and the dikes were unavailable for defence. The entire fleet, which lay frozen in the Texel, was captured at one stroke, like that of the Athenians at Aegospotami. Holland and Belgium were united by the treaty of Vienna in 1815, but neither country liked the arrange ment. In 1830 Belgium rebelled and set up her own government. Since then Holland has been an Independent kingdom under the descendants of the House of Orange. Queen Wilhelmina ascended the throne in 1890. Perhaps William the Hohenzollern has William the Norman In mind as he forges toward the North Sea and almost sees the white cliffs of Albion. The Norman won England in one bat tle, at Hastings, and the ground where he did It Is still there. When will the Hohenzollern tread it? If we had more Gardners In Con gress our military helplessness would not long be so pitiful. Congress has been the obstacle to a potent mili tary policy commensurate with the power, wealth and actual needs of the United States. The American Sherifr at Naco sug gests raising 500 American cowboys to deal with the Mexicans who are firing into American territory. Such a force would give full assurance that the outrages which President "Wilson merely smiles at would be ended. The peace propagandist who wants the war fought to a finish is a prac tical idealist. Premature peace, such as some misguided peace advocates have tried to bring about, would only Intrench the war god more firmly than ever. Another Mexican general threatens to attack Funston. But these Mexi can generals always have a sober second thought. They trifle with our spineless diplomacy, but take no real chances with our few fighting men. Democrats may read their fate in the Oregon registration figures this year with the Republicans solidly united in the interest of good govern ment, good times and less extrava gance. England will recruit anything down to five feet four and be glad to get it. The "sawed-off" makes the better campaigner he has less dead weight and is less conspicuous as a target. Students of the European situation will recall that the Confederacy had the Federals almost whipped to a standstill for a few years a half-cen tury ago. The new League of Peace has the best of intentions and it may do some good. It will at least help dissolve the military hypnotism that enthralls the world. And yet another $59,000 pruned from the budget. They may yet get It down to where we will be able to pay It without mortgaging the old home stead. ""he campaign in Poland has come to a standstill. Slav lack of initia tive thus gives the Teuton armies a breathing spell in the Eastern cam paign. British officers report the Issue to them of worthless revolver ammuni tion. So old General Graft has been detailed In the British supply corps, eh? Przemysl. which may be pro nounced any way from "Chemise" to "Premyzistle," has been relieved of everything but Its impossible name. A London hotel has dismissed all German help. To make the Job com plete all German viands should be scratched from the menu. The routed Belgians, after their flight to France, are said to be anx ious to meet the Germans again. What fiends for punishment! Belgian soldiers in large numbers have reached The Hague. It might be well now to garrison them in the peace palace. Another Socialist organ has been suppressed by the Germans for be ing out of tune with the national spirit. We haven't enough troops to leave behind as a garrison for one of the strategic points after capture. Lights are turned out of nights in London. Trying to keep its location dark from the Germans. King Albert says he will die at the head of his army if necessary. There's a real King for you. Men on the Franco-German firing line sleep in dugouts. And other wise revert to type. At Ostend the Germans are almost within cannon range oi London, yet It is a long way over. Another British cruiser torpedoed. One by one is the German naval plan. The baseball fan will go into hiber nation very shortly. Mexico continues to drift toward utter dissolution. Well, did you finally register? Also plant your roses early. . One Yenr. PORTLAND, Oct. 14. (To the Edl tor.) Is any definite time of residence required by the state of Oregon before a petition for divorce can be legally mada.1 - . ams. ai, ti, s, TIME HAS COME TO FACE FORWARD Problems Created by Fact That Per Cent of Orrtii IB tm Gerrranrit Costrel aad Intaxed Confront the People Millions Loot to State De velopment by Official Iaefflcteucy. While Newly Proposed Policies aad Political Indifference Threaten Farther Setbacks. B Y AND LARGE Oregon is a great state. It is 375 miles long and 290 miles wide. It Is nearly one- half as large in area as the German Empire in Europe and nearly one-half as big as France. It is a state of bound less resources and. magnificent dis tances. Belgium, now occuDyifg the interest of the entire world, could be set down in an Oregon forest and the entire Prussian army would have dif ficulty in finding it. It Is considered pleasant to .contem plate the boundless possibilities of the state and figure that the deprivations we now may suffer are In the Interests of a glorious future, but probably not one man in a hundred in the state real izes that in area which Oregon can call aer own the state la not ranch bigger than Indiana. The remainder is there with all its resources, but it is not ours. , Approximately 60 per cent of the land area of Oregon is either governed from Washington City, 4000 miles away, or Is in litigation. The other day 5000 men congregated in Alder street and watched an electric core board. On the same day another 1000 crowded Into the Helllg Theater and followed the course of a mechan ical ball around, a diamond-shaped field. In these crowds were many who were versed in the averages that Inter est the baseball enthusiast. Among them were those who, as the telegraph in strument flashed the play across the continent, were able mentally to com pute the resulting average of the base ball player mentioned. To how many of these Is the state ment significant as bearing on their own welfare that but little more than one-third of the land area and the im provements and personal -property sit uated thereon pays all the state taxes levied on general property in Oregon? How many of them are awake to the fact that less than 4 per cent of the total area of Oregon, together with the Improvements aad other property located on that leas-thnn-4-per-cent, pays more than one-half the taxes as sessed for governing the state? Do the cold figures impress you? If not, glance at the map on page 12, section 3. As a diagram or propor tionate showing of the untaxed area of Oregon it is scientifically accurate. It was prepared by a competent en gineer and draughtsman from Govern ment documents and other official data. This map does not disclose the exact location in each county of the land that pays no taxes, but it accurately pre sents In understandable form the bur dens of government that are imposed upon a state by the. expanse of public domain. National forests. Government reserves and forfeited land grants within its borders. The remainder pays the general property taxes of the state, but produces the general tax revenues for schools and county and city governments. . It has been stated that the area of Oregon that actually belongs to Oregon Is not. much larger than the State of Indiana. That which does not belong to Oregon, but la s source of constant expense In devious ways. Is aa Inrge aa the combined areas of Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey. Vermont, Connecticut. Delaware and Haode Island and then some. The immense acreage of unappro priated and unreserved publio lands, forest reserves and other Government controlled areas in Oregon Is a bur den to the present generation, though a potential asset for the future. Its existence is of timely consideration because of the influences at work to commit the state to certain policies without regard to the conditions that confront the people. In the 60 per cent of the land area of Oregon not now under state control are more than 16.000,000 aires of un appropriated and unreserved land. This land is subject to settlement. Time was when the major portion of the net proceeds from the sale of public lands was by law required to be expended within the boundaries of Oregon for reclamation projects. The irrigable land is available. The water resources are abundant and the people are hun gry ior larms. act tuts law was re pealed without a. protest from Senntor Chamberlain. Already six to eight mUlion dollars that would otherwise have been expended in Oregon hns been used for reclamation purposes li other states. Nor bas Senator Chamber lain proposed any relief to offset this raid upon Oregon's assets. Laws affecting the disposal of the 16,000,000 acres of open publio lands are of grave and lasting importance to Oregon. Senator Chamberlain was in line for the chairmanship of the public lands committee in the Senate, in which position he would have had weightier voice in publio land legisla tion than any other man in Congress. He declined this chairmanship, so lm portant to Oregon, in order to accept the chairmanship of the committee on military affairs, which carries with it greater social prestige and considerably more patronage. Oae-fourth of the land nren of Or gon la open public lands. Oregon's li terest In mllltnry nf fairs Is Inconse quential. Called upon to decide 1 twees service to his state and the homage of Washington city society, Senator Chamberlain chose social pleas ures. Another one-fourth of the land area of Oregon is in the Federal forest re serves. Oregon derives a small Income from these forests for the benefit of schools and roads. In two years the revenue has amounted to about $96,- 000. In the meantime-Oregon has ap proprlated $76,000 for forest preserva tion. A few days ago a statement was issued with gusto from the Forestry Service showing the activities in Ore gon in the past year. It was declared with pride that matured trees subject to sale had In one year been spotted on 150,000 acres and that the same diligence would be continued until the National forests of Oregon had all been covered. There are In round numbers 18,000, OOO seres In the forest reserves of Ore gon. At the rate of 130,000 acres wear It would require more than one hundred Tears to spot the matured trees In these forests. Before the re serves had all "been covered countless trees now m a t u red would be desd nnd new forests, If properl- conserved would have arrows age. to merchantable Oregon, in respect to its National forests, may be likened to parts of Eu rope in feudal days. A great part of the land is withheld from use and the people pay to support the horde of re tainers that administers it. On the rescne of Ores on from the light of Plachotiam, Senator Cham, berlaln has nothing to say. On the re. very for reclamation of the funds to which Oregon Is Justly entitled Senator Chamberlain Is silent. Of no less vital Interest than the proper use and conservation of Gov ernment holdings within Oregon's bor ders is the proper use and conservation of the comparatively small area that Oregon calls her own. v Dr. Withycombe, with personal. Pmctieal. experienced knowledge of the problems that confront the state. Is held up to ridicule by the Democratic press because ha earnestly discusses a Grr Oresoa" and lets the dead and gone political issues of assemblyiam and Chinese labor rest In peace. A sincere effort for the greater prosperity and well-being of the people of Ore gon is belittled, caricatured and derided because he Ignores abstract political questions and others not in Issue Largely from the same sources comes the demand for more reservation of resources and the imposition of greater taxes on the small area of land that now bears the brunt of the cost of state and local government. If the Government land In Oregon were consolidated in one portion of Oregon and a high wall built around it the state would be far better off In the current administration of Its affairs. But the Government lands are scattered. Their existence Isolates the lands in private ownership in count- less cases. The administration of justice Is hampered by long distances. Schools must be built and supported in little settlements surrounded by the wild erness. Highways to market produce must traverse stretches of land that bear no portion of the cost of construction or maintenance and contribute nothing to their use. New railroad construc tion must be for the benefit of widely separated localities and traverse in terveming territory that produces no traffic and promises no immediate ton nage. The state is retarded in growth by the unpromising returns on many private investments and its own ad ministration is made costly by the magnizcent distances which give to the thoughtless a pride to contemplate. Orecon has gone ahead creatine new commissions nnd new boards aad adopt ing every governmental eoavenlence that older and more settled states that control their entire area have con ceived. This has been done without reference to duplication of depart ments. Coat of government haa mounted higher nnd higher until the people are ready to rise In protest. But what Is the relief offered in lntiated measures? One is an amend ment to relieve from taxation much of the personal property and improve ments in the state and put higher taxes on the small land area of Ore gon that is now taxable. Retrench ment is not offered in any sense by the $1500 exemption. The amendment propones n legal evasion nnd provides that much more of the cost of support ing a great state shall be exacted from land constituting but little more than one-third of Its nren. There is another measure proposing a sur-tax or extra tax to be exacted -from the men who are developing Ore gon's land resources as well as from the few who are holding land for speculation. There is another measure which pro poses to add the unsold tide lands and the unused harbor areas of the state to the reserved area, relieve it from taxation and preserve it, raw and un improved, until a wiser generation has been born. Submerged - lands which cannot be destroyed but add to the state's wealth when Improved are to be bottled up. The lumber, fish and other Industries that require frontage on waters that will perhaps never be needed for commercial harbors are to be denied development in the fancied interests of our unborn children and grandchildren. " There are two other measures, one purporting to provide for proportional representation, the other for abolish ment of the Senate, which combined would deny counties like Klamath. Lake, Crook, Josephine, Malheur and others whose area is untaxed in major portion .all voice in legislative coun cils and permit other counties to de cide upon th volume of biennial ap propriations. Of the 29 measures on the ballot. 19 came from the people and 10 from the Legislature. Of the former here la Just one assail bill that promises a reduc tion in taxation and that an almost In consequential amount. The measure to lengthen the terms of certain couuty officers would shorten the ballot and thereby be a slight economy in election costs. Two other measures propose consoli dation of departments, but they are personal grievance bills in the drafting of which economy was not a consider ation. They promise no benefits. Among the 10 measures proposed by the Legislature is one and one only that promises economy. Even that one is contingent upon future action and affects only Multnomah County, which it permits to be consolidated in govern ment with the City of Portland. The map of Oregon printed today Is preseated as providing at single glance the answer to the Important qnestloni "Why are taxes hlghr It speaks loudly of neglected opportuni ties In the WstJessl Congress by Ore gon's senior Senator, now seeking re election. It Is a fortified indorsement of the need of a Governor committed to more' prosperity and less polities. It Is an unanswerable argument In Multnomah County for the election of those legislative eaadldntea who are pledged to n programme of economy. It is an nnnvoidable obatacle in the path of those In pursuit of tbe rainbow of tax evasion. It Is nn exhibit, that ought to shock: the voters Into a real isation that November 3 is the oppor tune day to protest against official derelictions nnd lay the fonndatlon foe a greater .Oregon.