THE JOURNAL AN INPItPKSDENT yKWHrAPKB. C. . JACKSOBI PBbliabar. Published every inug laieept ODaa:r and ry Bandar aoorolnc at Tha Journal Bailo " tag , Broadway and Yamhill ata, Portland. Or. Kotered at tha poatof f lea at Portland, Or., for traiMunlaakMi jUuvagh tbe malla M second claaa matter. 1 , lEUSPHONKa-i-MalB TITS! Horn. -XU. All deMrtmente reached br tbeae number. Tell the operator what drrtmat you "want. VOKtCJON ADVKliTltUNO KKPHK8EN TAT I V 8 nn)mtn A Kestnor Co.. Bruonwlclt Bldg., 22 rifth Ave.. New rork, U1S Peoplea Uaa Bide., Chloaco. Subacripttoa term by mall or to an ad draw la the United State or Mexico: DAILY. . . Una year $5.00 I one mouth. S .50 SUNDAY. One' jrear 92.60 I Or jnotit -23 DAIIY AND SUNDAY;. . One year...... $7 .80 One month...... - . To consider no one but one self seems relatively easy aa . theory; and yet when you try to put it into practice in civilization of which the dominant law is that you must eon alder other people too, you're very like a wild man running amuck. Basil King. MAKE IT A FINISH FIGHT ENATOR CHAMBERLAIN will ne eiecieu. w ifiuioinj " 3 be the largest he has ever received. Those who are trying by fair means and foul to defeat him are wasting their time. They are wast ing their energies. They are wast ing much money. Their attacks merely make him more friends. Every assault mere ly makes the people of Oregon stand by him more staunchly. The people know the man. They know all about him. They have known him as a citizen and a neighbor for many years." They .' i -11 KA.it htm In all the public capacities in which he has nerved. That is part of the source of his great hold on the people of every walk. The other part of that source is the ability, fidelity and efficiency with which he has al ways served his constituents. As governor and senator for a doien years, his life has been an open book In Oregon. All the peo ple know all about it. That makes It useless for his opponents to try to tell them something different about it. It is an honorable rec ord of public achievement. No other Oregon man has ever stood in -a similar relation to the pebple. No other man is personal ly known and personally esteemed by so many of them. No other man'B name is so nearly a house hold word at their firesides. It is a relation that in thousands of homes approximates the tie of kin ship. Candidates who set their henchmen to assailing such a man are dull politicians. They are mighty stu'pid strategists. If they work the plan long enough and strong enough. Chamberlain will receive more votes than all of his opponents combined. But let the assaults -go on. Let DUMDUM BULLETS HAROES that the allies have r used dumdum bullets have . brought ' denials. Similar charges have been frequently made in recent wars, use of the dumdum being prohibited by agree ment of the nations. A dumdum bullet gets its name from the city of Dumdum in Ben gal. There soft-nosed bullets were first made to comply with the urglngs or British officers for bullet with more stopping power than the jacketed small- caliber projectile. It was said that such bullets were necessary in checking trie onsiaugnts or savage triDeB. Later the British complained when the Boers used dumdums. The ordinary military bullet has lead alloy core with a steel cpv ering. The usual caliber is less1 than one third of an inch, and under ordinary circumstances? the wound it makes is clean, smooth and sterile. Any bullet not completely jack eted is termed a dumdum. All sporting bullets are made with soft points so that they will mush room wnen they encounter any resistance. It is probable that dur ing the Boer war much sporting ammunition was used,' thus ac counting in part for British com plaints about dumdumB. r When the nations legislated at The Hague against bullets capable of gouging a hole the size of a tea cup at their points of exit, which the modern high-power, small cal iber, soft nosed bullet will do, it was an attempt to "civilize" war fare. A WORLD'S LOSS y HE1MS, whose historic build Kings are reported to have been destroyed by German artillery, has been a city of importance since the time of the Romans. The dathedral in which for nearly 1000 years the Kings of France were crowned has been described as the most perfect ex ample in grandeur and grace of Gothic style in existence. Hlne mar, a powerful archbishop of the ninth century, once declared that Kheims was by , the appointment of Heaven a royal city. It was here that ; Innocent II excommuni cated Henry V of Germany; St. Bernard lived in lonely exile and St. NJcaiae gave ' his life for his people. It was in the cathedral that Charles Vlt of France was ;. crowned through the efforts of Joan of Arc. . . . The first stones of the cathedral were laid in 1211, the choir was finished thirty years later, together with the transepts and part of the nave,' while -the superb west fa-! rarln riaton fmm t rio latter- Tinrr. of I the thirteenth century. ' This last was adorned with three exquisite recessed portals contain ing in more or lees good state of preservation over 500 statues: In niches in the walls in the interior was another multitude of statues and in the nave and transepts 1 valuable tapestry representing Bib' Ileal scenes and scenes from the history of medieval France. Here also hung priceless canvases In cluding the "Nativity" by Tin toretto, and "Christ Appearing to Mary Magdalen," by Titian. The famous clock with Jts mechanical figures was in the north transept. It was said to be the oldest moving piece of clock work in existence and dated from the sixteenth century, f In the treasury of the cathedral were preserved a number of reliquaries including a thorn from the Holy Crown, the skull of St. Remy and the most remarkable collection of gold vessels In France. If the treasures of Rheims have been destroyed it is the greatest loss of the war from an historical and artistic point of view. WHY NOT A SINGING TOUR D R. WITHYCOMBE is cam paigning in Eastern Oregon. But he Isn't making speeches. After an uproarious experience with him, the Portland "advisers" fear his speeches may backfire. They are "as afraid of his orations as of dumdum bullets. They have even become skittish over his well known production, 'A Greater Oregon." Even though It has been drastically censored, the "advisers" don't know what minute the greater-Oregon oration may go into eruption and spout up another indorsement of the as sembly or another attack on what the doctor referred to at the Moser banquet as the "new fangled gov ernment" in Oregon. The managers have even forbid den the candidate to discuss Chi nese eggs because of a haunting fear that, in warming to the theme, theeChinese as land clearers may fuss up the1 performance and dampen the occasion. The whole thing makes a very unusual kind of campaign. As a diversion for the voters, why not substitute for the candidates' campaign of si lence a singing tour with permis sion to render that rare melody, 'The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." A LONG WAR T HE military experts are pre dicting that the war is to be a long one. This predic tion is based on the inability of either side to deliver a crushing blow. If peace comes Boon it will be a peace enforced by a revolt against carnage that leads only to exhaustion. The failure of .the Allies to break throughr Sea man lines along the Aisne llnrtlies that frontal attacks wiH-play- no decisive role, says a wri&r In the New York Evening Post,, Even if the German line is forced back to the frontier the only effect would be to encourage the Allies and permit the return of the French government to Paris. To drive the Germans to their border is one thing. To follow them into Germany is another. When the Germans, if beaten in France, take up their line within their own frontier based on their fortresses they will present fully as hard a problem as they found in the Allies resting upon Paris and Verdun. With supporting fortresses unreduced flanking op erations must cease. On the other hand if the Ger mans on the Aisne throw back the Allies and take the offensive again it would mean a retirement by the Allies to prepared positions on the Marne. It would take weeks to force them away from Paris which could not be invested as long aa the Allies were in the field. The situation in the west, there fore, indicates a long struggle. It is the same in the eastern theatre. There is no immediate prospect of a Russian march to Berlin. The road by way of Eastern Prussia is definitely closed. A powerful German-Austrian army bars the road by way of Cracow. . The road by way of Posen leads through the German forces gath ering for an advance on Warsaw It is apparent, continues the ex pert, that the war must continue because the principal combatants hpve developed a better defensive than offensive. They can fight better than they can cripple and destroy. If the .niggle resolves Itself into wearing down tactics it Is more than probable that both among the combatant nations and in neutral countries there will arise a powerful demand for peace before complete exhaustion has set in. THE EXEMPTION s MALL corporations would not be allowed exemption under the $1500 exemption meas ure, the Oregonlan truthfully declares. The people making up a small corporation would receive exemption on their individua! property. If a small corporation is merely a partnership there is no reason why it could not be so organized or reduced to individual owner ship. Usually the owners of small ractory have residences m ... l : - . . nousenoia mrniture, teams and other property' which this measure would exempt. To exempt small corporations would . necessitate : pifunnHnp ' nnes. and in. most ! of cases would result in doable exemption. . One of the' objections , made to the radical tax amendments sub mitted in 1908 and 1912 was that large corporations, sky-scrapers and department stores, would be exempt, The exemption measure now pro- posed Is conservative, limited and does not include corporations, usu ally well able to bear-taxes and well advised as to how to pass on taxes to the consumer, or the pub lic when levied on personal prop erty or improvements. OREGON AND CHINESE D ECLARING that- Dr. Withy- combe was right when he in sisted in his Oregon City speech that the Chinese should have been kept In Oregon to clear the land, the Hlllsboro Independent says: The Journal pretends that Ger mans, Scandinavians and immigrants of other nationalities would have been glad to have done this work, but the fact remains that today they are unwilling to undertake the work, and that when they come to Oregon instead of purchasing uncleared land they prefer to buy at a higher figure cleared land which they may im mediately plant and reap. Or. Withy combe merely agreed with other sen sible men when he gave the opinion that it would have been fortunate could the Chinese have rendered available for these Germans and Scandinavians a larger area before exclusion stopped the work. Indeed, when the immigration that will fol low the end of the European war once begins and cleared land cannot be procured these farmers from across the seas are very likely to take a similar view and wish exclu sion could have been deferred just long enough to supply them with a cleared farm. The Hlllsboro paper does the Germans great injustice. It does the Scandinavians great injustice. It does the Italians great injustice. It does the French and Austrian and other high class European born workers in this country great injustice. Thousands of acres of land have been cleared by these people. Thousands of them have bought raw brush land, cleared it of the growth and put it into the highest state of cultivation. There are no better workers in the world than these and other foreign-born immigrants, no mat ter what the Independent and Dr. Withycombe may claim as to Chinamen. It is far better for them to have opportunity to buy the raw land at low prices and re deem their fields and meadows from the wild, than to be forced, if they buy at all, to buy highly improved land which, on arrival, few of them can afford. In Eastern Multnomah county, n the Tualatin valley, in Clacka mas county, and all over the Wil lamette valley, there are German farmers who went on the land when it was covered with a forest growth, but who have converted the brush lands Into the finest meadows and fields. Along the foothills of Oregon and often far back in the remote districts, there are thousands of little homes with painted houses and an air of thrift, homes which rhave been wrung from nature by the willing hands of sturdy Ger man, Scandinavian and other old world immigrants. Moreover, there are thousands of homes of the same kind, established on lands cleared by American young men, whose grubbing machines and blasting powder have converted many a thicket Into a green mead ow or fertile field. And In , almost every one of these homes there is an- Intelligent citizen with children in the -schools, a citizen who is supporting govern ment, who Is helping to build school houses, paying taxes and is a part of the United States. Tjiey are far better for the country than the Chinaman who were here to get only what they could take back to China nnri whose Oriental wage scale beat down the earnings of our workers and almost starved- the children in our workers' homes. THE EVERLASTING CONFLICT J. B. ZIEGLER defends himself in the Oregonian against the charge made that he la an "undesirable citizen." - Mr. Zlegler Is "an undesirable citizen" in the view of some cor poration lawyers. He is "an un desirable citizen" to those, who have gotten something from the public for nothing. He is "an un desirable; citizen" to that powerful but small group of men who think public resources exist for private exploitation by a few of the select. They think Mr. Zlegler a nui sance because Mr. Ziegler, with some assiduity and courage, has, On Clivers Occasions: diarnvArr1 where public property has. by various processes, been seized and j personal liberty and equality propo put to their own use by private ' aition tendered to us by our forefath Interests. There is always a conflict be tween special privilege and the great-body of people. It nag been going on since the beginning of history It , will continue until Gabriel blows his trumpet. Whenever the people cease to be vigilant, some of their rights are taken away. It was while they slept on their rights that their lands in Portland harbor and their tldelands along the coast were gob bled. The story of the world is a narrative of revolts against those small groups who, by taking ad vantage, want, by their cunning to fatten upon the labor of the many. It is the everlasting conflict. It will probably never end. In brute life, the sfrong dominate the weakk and in the present state of hu- man nature. mriRt nf tha atrnnr h pmnr s Tin T n m cwAne a . ntn ' , --"-.; me same process. That Is why there are those who say Zlegler Is "an undesirable! cit izen.' In the eyes of the grasp ing strong, all agitators f or-! the public welfare are , "undesirable" citizens. - Portland women are raising the question of : where the $15,000 comes from that Mrs. Stubbs, of Illinois,, is going to spend in Ore gon to beat Chamberlain. They say Oregon women had enly 180Q In the fight in which' they; won suffrage In Oregon in 1912. Be sides their curiosity to know the contributors to this $15,000 and what It was really contributed for. the natural question Is, why if Mrs. Stubbs really desires equal suffrage, doesn't she spend the sum for enfranchisement of women! in non-suffrage states? Letters From the People lS"n.?UB,.c,tloM wnt The Journal ftw publication la thia department should be writ oo only one aide of the paper, ahould not exceed 300 word la length and mnst De ac companied by the name aad addreaa of tha gender. If the writer does not desire to hare the name published, be should ao atate.) "Dieeuasipn la the greatest of all reform era, it rationalicea everything It toncbea. It roba principle of all falae eanetlty and tfarowe them back on their reaeonattleneo. If tbejr hare no nuonlhUnau It mtklaul . crushes them out of existence and aet up ita j own conclusions in their atead." Woodrow n uaou. Woman Champions Criticised. Vancouver, Wash., Sept. 20. To the Editor of The Journal. A letter signed Klla M. Finney pays Mrs. Abigail Scott Duniway high tribute, which in a measure all women will indorse. Many years ago I lived in Kansas and one of the highest works I ever engaged in was that of helping in the cause that gained prohibition for Kan sas. While I lived there I read Of Mrs. Duniway in a Lincoln county pa per that was a staunch supporter of woman suffrage and prohibition. In our suffrage association we talked of Mrs. Duniway and the fin and noble efforts she was making in the cause of freedom In Oregon, and it would have seemed to us unbelievable that she would lift her voice in favor of the liquor traffic. Many of the women of this state and Oregon regret that she has placed such a blot upon her fine work for them. But many will differ with the state ment of Ella M. Finney as to the mil lions of money saved for Oregon and its bankers. Hundreds of the good farmers of the Willamette valley who are not supporters of the saloons or their fountains of supply, can come forward and testify fto the honest work they have done,1 and the crops they have raised to feed hungry peo ple and not to make them drunk on its transformation into alcohol. During the years of depression in business from 1893 to 1900 many hop fields were plowed up and other crops planted. There were several . causes for this, but the people did not suffer Dy me cnange. Nothing was aid about the great loss it would be to the state of Oregon if no hops were raised, until the cause of prohibition was advanced and then "Ruin! -Ruin!" was the cry of those who were still interested in raising hops and also had investments in the liquor business. Mrs. Duniway is Justly entitled to all the credit she deserves in her ef forts for political freedom for her sex but to place her on a pedestal and compare her .with our Savior : is too much. And when it is all summed up it means, "Save the hop industry," in wmcn, no aouDt, .Ella M. Finney is in terested. HANNAH M. McCORKLE. Liquor and the Crime Record. Nehalem, Or., Sept. 23. To the Ed itor of The Journal Mr. Lister quotes from two authorities and one questionable authority claiming that the saloon is responsible for at least 80 per cent of ail crime, poverty, sui cide and every evil. Mr. Lister need no more authority for this kind of statlsUcs than the dally papers he reads. If he and any sane person will take the daily papers, record the first luo muraers, suicides or divorcer xouna m inem, he will have a good idea of the cause of this form of evil. He will also find that not more than 5 per cent of either is caused by the abuse (not the use) of liquors. If Mr. Lister desires to go further and do a little investigating in th prohibitory states he will find the same proportion of crime and the same proportion of alcoholic causes there as in the license states. He will find habitual drunkenness more common in the prohibitory states than in license states. He will find a greater per centage of divorces in Maine caused by rum than in any license state of I the union. He will find Just as many murders caused ty the abuse of alco holic beverages in Kansas as be does in Illinois, New fork or Ohio. : When a Judge makes the assertion that 95 per cent of the crimes comlns- before him 'are caused by drink, be shows himself either ignorant or pre judiced, for I know of my own knowl edge there is nof a court In Denver that can show such a record. And there is not a court in the entire coun try that can. The nearest approach to such a record will be' found in the prohibitory state of Maine, and 25 years in newspaper work, throughout the country has proved tp me that there is nothing in this hysterical criminal record such as Mr. Lister suggests. If the prohibitionist wants criminal court records why does -he not go to the dry states such as Maine and Kansas? But their ' records are discouraging. S. J. COTTON. Considers Drys Disturbers. Albany, Or.. Sept. 25. To the Ed itor of The Journal Being an east erner who came bere with the idea of making Oregon my home, I am al- ers in iae cuuguiuuuo, is no oemea. When ft man comes to a state which he thinks is the place for him. In vests his good hard earned money and then finds he is confronted with the fact that taxes are almost double and a beautiful chance of having them in Increased by the state-going dry well, the liberty part looks-awfully sick. We fellows back east -never worry about hops, wet or dry; we are con tented with conditions that mean bread and butter to ipurselvea and children, and these agitators who are continu ally -trying to breax CP domestlo tran quility and war-p the minds of the un seeing, are put is the vaudeville ranks along with Herr Most and the rest of the gang. Of eourse, we ".fellows who pride ourselves on the fact that we are good citizens anyway we think we are, with our shoulders , to the wheel and trying to push the game ' along, and perhaps not averse to taking ft drink when we feel -like if we axe A FEW SMILES the owner of - - - - good AJderney cow. A stranger, having ad mired the animal, asked the farmer, "What will you take for your cow?" The farmer scratched his bead for a moment. ' and then said: "Look a-here! Be. you the tax assessor or has she been killed by the railroad?" The military maneuvered. All after noon the attackers had attacked and the defenders defended, with conspic uous lack of Inci dent or bravery. Op erations were begin ning to drag when the white flag went up. The officer In command of the at tackers , stared in amazement. " "A flag of truce!" he exclaimed, "What do they want?" The sergeant-major endeavored to cover up a smile. "They say, sir," he reported, "that as it's tea time, they'd like to ex change a couple o' privates for a can of coudensed milk. If you can afford It!" A landlord returning home after an absence of several weeks saw one of uis tenants sitting on a stone wall whistling merrily. The moment that he greeted him, how ever, the man scowl ed and began abus ing Mm. "Why. what's the matter. Fat?" hj asked. "Matter is it?" was the answer. "Matter enough, when your stheward is afther evicting me. bad luck to him!" "Evicted you? What for? "The old liar pretended me cabin wanted repairing, and -as Oiwouldn't let him. shure he put me out." "Never mind," said the landlord, "1 hear the cottage ye have always wanted is vacant, and I'll let you have that at the same rent." "No, thanking your honor," said Pat, "I couldn't think of it." "But why not? What is to hinder you?" "No, your honor," was the reply. "Ol'd rather have me grievance. all crazy; not responsible, in fact, ac cording to the drys. But some of us are raising large families and are pretty busy keeping things going. We are happy, and so ate our wives; our children get the highest marks in school, and we are not all Janitors, either. Thank the Lord, we 'have the Aus tralian ballot to use. On, you factories and producers, may you prosper and grow, but voting dry will never accom plish it. J. H. McLEAN. Individual liberty. - The Dalles, Or., Sept. 24. To the Editor of The Journal In The Jour nal of September 21, W. S. Hollis and W. H. Black attack Mrs. Duniway's stand for personal liberty. W. 8. Hol lis says, "There, is no absolute per sonal liberty in highly civilized demo cratic government." He should have left the word "democratic" out, for the word "democratic" means where the liberty of the individual is pre served. Further he says, "Every youth has the right to have an un polluted environment." Very well, then; let's do away with all who pol lute the "environment," by imprison ing all who swear or use vulgar lan guage, and provide the death penalty for saloon keepers, grafters and preachers who go astray. Every sane person knows that an "unpolluted en vironment" is unthinkable. You can't find two persons who will agree or what "unpolluted environment" means. W. H. Black, who has contributed much of a socialistic nature to The Journal, asks, "Does not our personal liberty end when it runs counter to the well-being of society?" It certain ly does not, if society is denying per sonal liberty in the name of "well being." Herbert Spencer has given Us ft very clear and concise definitipn of per sonal liberty, thus: "Every one may do whatsoever he will provided la the so doing he infringe not the equal lib erty of another." Since the dawn of history every war has been waged, reformers have been martyred, people have been slaughtered, and tortures have been inflicted, in the name of social well- being. It ha been a constant struggle between society (the sUte), and the individual, society seeking supremacy and the individual struggling for lib erty. I am for individual liberty. GEORGE JONES. - The Prices to the Farmer. Portland. Sept. 25. To the Editor of The Journal I have Just finished reading tbe most despicable paper that was ever printed, called the Oregonian. The editorial was on eggs. They might hAv. thA letter they refer to, nut i doubt It very much, for if they have it, it is surely written for political pur poses only. Neither I nor anyone else can believe that any person would make the remark that they quote. I was standing in a grocery store the other day and while standing there a farmer was bringing in some eggs, and the merchant in ft Joke asked if they were Chinese eggs. That brought up a conversation on the egg market. Tbe farmer spoke up and said that never had be known eggs as high, by 10 cents a rinsnn. at this time of the year as they are this year. He also said If a Democratic congress was responsible for the prices the farmers are getting for everything this year, ne nopea there would be Democratic congresses forever, and there surely would be if his vote could bring it about. I think the more that - sheet called the Ore gonian ridicules the Democratic party the better for the party. R. L. SMITH. Testimony as to Maine. McMlnnvllle, Or, Sept. 25. To the Editor of The Journal The prohibi tion history of Maine is one contmu ous page of disappointments and fail ures. Take, ror instance, us principal city, Portland, Dr. John Koren, of Boston, who. under -the auspices of the committee of fifty thoroughly in vestlgated the workings of the prohib itory legislation, says of Portland in his reportt - The city Is not afflicted with a. vicious floating population. It's inhabitants are chiefly native stock. There are no extensive manufacturing Interests drawing together large nam bers of operative of the same class. Indeed, the condition for a fair test of the prohibitory law have been and are as good as any seaport of Its sise in the country. And yet tbe failures of prohibition In this city from 1860 to today is a most disheartening picture During this time, while no distilleries or breweries were suffered to exist in the state, neither the supply of liquors was lessened nor ' their selling price 1 ! PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Nobody had succeeded In turning the flank of the Beef trust. Tha. world soon tires of a man who thinks be is always saying something cute. . j I It's easy for a woman to discover that a- man has brains if she's his mother. ( V After a man has had one drink too many he begins to think he is the real article. Every time a Vounc widow meets an eligible man another grain of hope sprouts in her heart. a a It takes ft woman to be more than glad to have friends drop in for din ner unexpectedly when she Isn't. Statesmen are predicting that the war will see the end of kings. This is calculated to alarm the poker players. a Judging from the reports South America ; would be a good market If South America had any money to buy wun. . Our advice is to be sure that you can whip your man before you tell him that he Is as crooked as ft cross-eyed gimlet. a The averaee man thinks housework is one continuous round of pleasure until his wife is ill and he tries to get nis own oreaiciast. The most artificial looking man in the world is the one who not only dyes his mustache but .has the nerve to curl it with hot Irons. a "Is Christianity a failure?" asks a contemporary. Not at all. but just at present it does seem to be suffering from a lack of patronage. a a Dr. Hideyo Noguchi of Japan has been made a member of the Rocke feller Institute, becanse of his success in finding germs. But we seem to have more germs already than we know what to do with. YOUNG James Stewart In Chicago Herald. This is the story of Thomas Taper ser. American citizen, aged 9, "going on" 10, and how he showed the self reliance and efficiency that are the American boy's birthright, and that the normal American boy shows so often because they are in the air he breathes in this happy land. It comes from the offices of the American re lief committee in London. Though American born, Tom Taper ser is of Hungarian descent, and last summer before the war began was sent on a visit to relatives near Budapest. When It was time for him to eome home, because school was about to be gin in Philadelphia, Europe was at war. A little matter like that did not, however, worry Tom. He went to the Budapest station and took the train. He arrived in London the other day. He is now on the ocean on his way to America. It was a considerable feat for a boy of 10 to mak his way acros war stricken Austria and Germany and through Holland to London all alone. This specimen of self-reliant "Young America" did it. and more, in tne railway station at Budapest be found vwilriarrl Hungarian wiaow ana six children. The husband and latner. a naturalized American, had died wmie the family were on a visit to the ota country," and they were trying to, make their way back to America. Tort took them in charge and nrougnt tne whole party safely to London. It had been an expensive trip, and Tom was Just about "broke" when he arrived In London. He went to the American relief committee orrice, made out a draft on his father In Philadelphia In the most business like manner, and obtained the casn for it. Then he Interpreted tne taie of the "Hungarian widow, who could not speak English, and obtained aid for her. Then he went to tne steam PERPLEXITY OF FOREIGN INVESTORS By John M. Osklson. It seems that our corporations can beat the, Dutch. Recently two committees with headquarters in Amsterdam have had to consider what to. do for a good many Dutch investors who have found themselves faced with serious situa tions. One group of Dutch investors wants to know whv. after they have bought a first mortgage bond of an Ameri can railroad, they should be asked to pay an assessment equal to 40 per cent of their holdings u oraer mat a reorganization may uc kuh through with some hope of putting the road on a paying basis. The Dutch say that one-third of the total issue of those first mortgage bonds is held In Holland. In the case of the Rock Island, Dutch holders of a certain issue of bonds called "collateral trust bonds," have also formed a committee to in vite holders of the securities to de posit them and. see what plan may be worked out to protect themselves. If that first committee Investigates the facts It will find that whoever sold disturbed; only their quality became much inferior. Open bars existeo. in great numbers. The apothecary shops supplied liquor by the bottle as fre quently as called for. There sprang up pocket peddlers, whose number was estimated at zoo. it was not possidib to suppress their business. Not less than a dozen saloons were clustered about the Grand Trunk station or in its vicinity. Moat of the . frequenters of the illicit saloons were young men, some of them boys between 18 and 18 years of age. Occasionally small girls had growlers filled. Older girls were present to drink and talk with tha men." W. J. BISHOP. Questions Concerning liquor. Portland. Sept. . 23. To the Editor of The Journal I can't for the life of me see why liquor is Just the thing. When every paper we pick up has so many tales of the destitution wrought by It. One day last week in The Jour nal there Was a story of a drunken man slashing his wife's throat, and ft whole list of minor offenses commit ted by people under its Influence, among them the story of a girl who didn't know bow she got ft coat, on ac count of ! her being drunk, and there are Incidents of a similar nature every day. Whenever the news brings re ports of tbe soldiers in tbe present great war brutally treating captives and sacking the towns they capture, the. explanation is given that Jhey had become drunk on the liquors seized in the Inns of captured towns, and got beyond control of their officers. News dispatches tell us that many of the officers try to destroy the booze sup ply, while the kaiser j. has forbidden anyone te sell or give liquor to his soldiers, i ' " f ,r Now, If liquor is so necessary, why all these evil reports? Why can't it be sold to minors? Why are women kept out of saloons? Why the rule G, of railroad fame? Why is the saloon be- AND-NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Citv .Treasurer Crossan of Salem reports assessments on' city improve- 1- .nnJ .hoiu Tha, lotoa ara r-rimtncr . in ana the money stringency nas not affected his office collections. , , . . , I The Saddle Mountain club, recently organised at Astoria, is making an et- fort to increase its membership. Fifty j cents makes anyone a lire member. The principal objects of the club are a better trail, n annual club climb and that Saddle mountain be made a national park. Baker Democrat Georso Ebell of ; "The fines" yesterday captured in a trap a, brown yearling bear weighing i. .. . . e tr- i &uuul low uuu us. r ui nrxci a i iiiui u- Inn MV Vh.ll tnrA Vila hlva. j short distance from his houe die- turned. Accordingly, he set a trap. tie orougnt tne meat into town anu disposed of it to one of the markets. a Thirteen children from the rural schools of Wasco county will oh next Monday and Tuesday nights present at the opera house in The Dalles a play entitled "A School of Long Ago." The play is of home authorship as well as home production, and is designed to illustrate advances in school meth ods. a a Seaside Signal: The spirit of im provement prevalent in Seaside the past two years sedms to have ex tended to all public institutions. The rpening of the schools is attende-i with more worthy preparation for a succesHful year than ever before. The talk of a new school building is right In line with the go-ahead spirit. The Ironsides correspondent of the Baker Herald reports extraordinary behavior and high mortality among the coyote of that vicinity. They visit the chicken houses in daylight, help themselves- to fowls and instead of running off with them, devour them on the spot. They seem tdr be starv ing. When fired at or chafed by dogs they seem unable to run. Large num bers of them are being found dead in the bills. It Is not known whether they have hydrophobia. AMERICA ship office and arranged for passages for the whole party. The officials of the -relief commit tee say that none of the thousands of people who have applied to them for help has shown more intelligence and self-reliance and general competencs to deal with the situation be confront ed than this American boy. He is very plainly the sort of boy his coun try has a right to be proud of and of whom his father and mother should be very proud, as undoubtedly they are. We hear a great deal about "Young America" every now and then. Wht-n the social critics run short of ot'.-.er subjects they fall back on thia, and discourse at large on tne "freshness," the "disrespect for elders." the "irrev erence" of American youth. Prettyi nearly every foreign observer who writes a book about America has re proaches for the conduct of American children, and about how they are "spoiled" by their parents. Well, we may admit that American children are not perfect They can not very well be, since they are hu man, Just like the children of other countries. We may admit that a lot of them might be better trained than they are. However, there is some thing about American Institutions and the American atmosphere that makes for self-reliance. Anyone who has had opportunity to "observe -the children of many lands will back the average American boy of the normal American environment to show higher power of meeting emergencies. ' What is the effect of daily example what is breathed in with the air of America 'comes out in the deeds of its people, young as well us old, when the occasion-confronts. The story of Thomas Taperzer shows how It comes out, and should make all American parents careful to cultivate, rather than repress, the individuality and the initiative of "Young America." the first mortgage bonds of the rail road as a typical security of thin class was taking liberties with words. The road wasn't built It was a mere promotion, which failed. If the second committee tries hard it may find that the Rock Ialanl "bonds'' are not and never have bee.: bonds in the true sense. They wer.i never anything but deposit certifi cates for stock, with the difference that the "bonds" were debarred from sharing pro rata in any possible pro perty of the road. Of course, the corporation practices ! which could beat the Dutch were quite good enough to beat the American in.; vestor. too. A great many more mil- lions have been lost by our Investor in Rock Island, 'Frisco Wabash. New I Haven and the rest of the roads that j have gone into and to the vre of bankruptcy within a few years thn have been lost to English, Dutch and French buyers of our railroad securi ties. It has come to be almost a safe rule to follow, however, that what our corporations are selling abroad shoulJ be avoided by our investors. ing driven out of the residence dis tricts? If, more boose is used In dry territory than wet, why should all the brewers and distillers bowl? How grand for them If every soft drink place handled their goods free from restraint? But there's a reason. Com mon sense says vote dry. S. L. LYON. Call It "Aln." ' Portland, Or, Sept. 25. To the Edi tor of The Journal Please Inform me how to pronounce the name of the place where the main German army and the allies are fighting spelled "Aisne J. C. WHITNEY. Armageddon. From the Omaha 'World-Herald. A reader of the World-Herald who ays- be Is "past 80" writes as fol lows: "I have seen several Armaged dons in my lifetime and several ends of the world, that is. according to tbe prophet of the time, but I am es pecially interested in tbe present Armageddon, and would like to know just how the armies of the world are aligned." Up to the present time the alignment seems to be as follows: On one aide are the armies and navies of Germany and Austria and on the other those of Great Britain, Russia, Francs, Servia, Belgium, and Japan. There are several other nations wavering as to whether they will go "into the fight or not, prominent among them being Italy, Holland, Greece and some of the Balkan states. If they do take a band, they will all be against : Ger many and Austria. Mexico may also he considered ft part of this Armaged don, but they are 'engaged there la killing each other and destroying their own property, they do not attract mo much attention. The old gentleman says that be ex pects that .- "this will be the lftst Armageddon I will see, although I ex- BATTLE OF BIG GUNS From the Scientific American. I In actual battle the guns of a bat tery are lined up and one loaded cais son is placed next to each gun. The tnure Oattery is behind cover, and , , ""ji ee tn targets, in rlr s directed by each gunner aiming ,a designated aiming point, with an instrument t at n ,rt.i.. fo that the gun will ac tuaJlv nnim ml the tara-Vt -rS 7 aIXZ?,?!? ' At h .i.ri".r.i iw -- !h'.etby trlangulation method by the j alter' commander, who is located "?me distance away from the battery either on elevated ground, on a ladder. or in a tr. Th nrman obtaining the deflection is to measure me angles carefully, by means of in struments, thereby attempting to make . l . . - - IlTSt ShOtS effective: WhiU th tendency of the French system is to estimate the first deflection.' fire quicKiy, and by observing the shot, make necessary corrections for suc ceeding ahots. Th, ranges are ob tained by self contained base range finders, which are accurate within 200 yards for 5000 or 6000 yard ranges. ' Within the last few years the sub ject of equipping the field artillery with large calibre siege guns and how- lr toas been K,vn extended studies. The object of howitzers Is mainly to fire a heavier projectile, with a lower velocity at a much higher elevation and longer range. Assume, for in stance, the enemy's infantry en trenched behind embankments. With a high velocity the trajectory of the projectile for a given range is very flat, so that tbe troops would be able to sit behind the cover and have all projectiles either strike the embank ment or pass over their heads. For thin emergency a battery of howitxern , is caller into action. By reducing the charge the projectile may be started at a higher elevation, which causes the projectile to fall to the ground in a much more nearly vertical path, and enables it to be dropped back of the embankment As a concrete example, assume the enemy's infantry behind earthen cover at 8000 yards. The Mope of fall of the French projectile at that range would be about 7 de grees, or 1 on 8; this gives a consider able space behind a wall that would be practically immune, from the ar tillery fire. By calling a 4.7 Inch howitzer battery for this work, the artillery commander may fire a 60-pound projectile with 900 feet per second muzzle velocity, which would give him at 3000 yards a slope of fall of 1 on 4.8, or he may remove some of the powder from the charge and fire the projectile at 620 feet per second muxzlo velocity, which would give him a slope of fall at 8000 yards of 1 on 1.8, with which it would be practically impossible for the en emy to remain behind the cover. Another object- of these heavy can non is, that a battery can be put In position to sweep a large field, and with its long ranges prevent the en emy's lighter artillery from coming within effective reach. The velocity of these howitzers is practically the same for all countries, and is about 900 feet per second for the longerst zones, while the ctdibrea Bre approximately 3.8-inch witk ' Pounrt projectile, 4. (-Inch with with a SO 60- pound projectile, and 6-lnch with a 120-pound projectile. HOO'S H00 By John V. Carey. Whose moniker is written high on Boston' architraves almost as high as tf.at of one U. Stalllngs of the Braves? Who's known to fame as chairman of the Wilson banking board the grand exalted ruler of the common people's hoard? Who served a term and made O. K. as aid to McAdoo, which shows the money game to him is not exactly new? Who landed on the Job at that sorne n1'"11'1' Indeed without one word or yHble from Senator Jim R'dJ VVno et8 12'0o;) bones per year and erve a twelve-year span what most of U3 would al1 "some Job?" Thai Charles S. Hamlin man. The Ragtime Muse Times and Seasons. The eeasons come, the season go. Winter and summer, spring and fall Bringing their meed of Joy and woe . I see no difference at all. For every season, gooUneas knows. Is scarcely here before it goes! Likewise the months: I do not see Where one is better than the rest; They all seem Just the same to me; There is no worst, there Is no best. Indeed, each one of them seems woral When bills come in upon tbe firstl , I have no favorites In the weeks And all alike to me they seem; Each one with labor fairly reek. So I have little time to dream. They have a scarcity of fun. With a blue Monday in each one! But days behold a difference there! Some days of lead, some days ol gold. Days that are burdened down witl care And other days of bliss untold. But of them all best is the day On which a fellow get his pay! pect to Jive 20 year more." In thai he is probably right, for it takes about 40 years of hard work for the nation to prepare for one; 20 years to repair the damage and 2t more to pay th expenses of the next one. The worll has been diligently at work on that sort of . program for several thou eand years. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper,, consists of Five news sections replete wftb - illustrated features. -Illustrated magazine of quality. 1 Woman's pages of rare merit'' Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section. : 5 Cents the Copy" : OF -rvm Ii f WILSON 11 I BAKING-