"'. ft IKH.Itl I EM ;.,.' lr gress of the United States will be an honor to the state of Oregon. HENRY 8TANI8LAWSKY. Grows Celery at Alhaaj. Albany, Or., Oct. 9. For exhibit ing some embroidery, crocheting and tatting at the. Linn county fair at Sclo, Mrs. Rufus Thompson and two daughters have received $29 as prices. Every piece of work they sent won a prize. Mrs. Thompson got $17, Miss Ruth Thompson $12 and Miss Cassia Thompson $10.- They send exhibits to the fair every year. Mrs. Anna Lundy of this city and Mrs. Lea Rath bone of . Bostn. Mas3, two of her sisters and Margtret LAMENTS FLEGEL TESTED other bills, all of which he at once liquidated. Ha worked hard in his office during the day and spent all of his evenings at the Multnomah law library study ing until 10 o'clock at night preparing his cases, then driving the old mare for three miles during rain and storm to his home at Piedmont. Cathey, lis y ear-old daugnter of U , . and Mi4?Cecll Cathey of this rttr. V were thei'nly beneficiaries nannrl in the will 4i Mrs. Mable Slra whtrh -was admitted to probata foday Th ; estate Isisvaloed at $3S.6. Margaret ; Cathey i bequeathed $10,090. and th , rest gaj-aljto Mrs. Lundy ana Mrs. Rath bon 4i j UnabUI o do heavy work but too , energetity to be Idle, S. '. Shortrt'VW, , . Civil waftj Veteran of this city, la rook- jag good) inside money" raising -.celery onvariQts! town lots. On one lot In the hert ii of the residence district, which laly about 7 by 2V4 rods, Mr. . Shortridfiel! says he will alaan up $10$ out of hlis jfcelery. He has four slmllai patchesliljout the city. BATTLE SCENES IN THE WAR DEVASTATED KINGDOM OF BELGIUM FRIEND SAYS HE IS ABSOLUTELY TRUE He is absolutely true in every re spect. He places personal honor far above "filthy lucre." His square chin reminds one of Washington. He ii clean and upright In all of his deal ings with man. He is a defender and believer in the. purity and righteous ness of woman, and in the uplifting of mankind Paradise Lost Until a: Truer Prophet Than Nietzsche Leads the Germans, Former Business Associate Pays Fine Tribute to Dem ocratic Candidate. To elect Austin F. Flegel to the cjon- 1 ; When you see it it's SO i n our ! GREATER MAN MUST COME RECALLS HIS STRUGGLES i! Tor Long Tims tiy Xd la tb Contact of CirHliation, Only to rail to Brut Xataoda Arala. Early Career of Congressional Seakax Eloquent Testimonial to His Abil ity and Character as Man. ZANGWILL AND I SUBSTITUTION OF THE SVQRD FOR CULTURE V" ' .x " ' ' f Ml! s LIP m oyer . V.j Israel Zangwill. (Copyright. 1914, by Israel Zanrwill ) & Occasionally for me the tog in the North iiea lifts, and through the letters j or a young officer on a battleship I i iret a glimpse of how Britannia is rul ing the waves. The precise position of her trident remuins scrupulously shrouded at fist even the name was removed from the ship's letter paper but the glimpse is enough to reveal the greatness and madness of mankind. It is life at its acme of strain and exaltation life 'joyously ready to pass on the instant into death, as some un seen mine is struck or some crafty tor pedo striken. Everybody sleeps in his clothes, and half the night not at all. The great ship is bared of all save necessities. My young friend's spare wardrobe with all his miscellany of superfluous possessions, the queer gar nered treasures of the years, come eco nomically home. Why, indeed, sink more capital with the ship than is absolutely inevitable? Breaks la tb Tog. Now and again the tension of this terrible vigilance is relieved if only by a change of tension. One seeks death instead of waiting for it. There is a grapple with a German cruiser, and those not at the guns crowd cheerfully oti deck to v,at h the match, with that wonderful British love of sport. They compare, the cannonading, note with lively interest the scorea made by the rival's nhell.s. Once the break in the fog shows the return of a raiding flo tilla, scarred with glorious battle, and the other vessels of the fleet are dressed to alute its triumph; the bands are playing "Rule Britannia," the crews aro cheering and singing. But none of these principles has left on me bo ineffaceable an impression as the picture of my young friend reading --reading at every break in his grim waters and reading not the detective stories that unbent Bismarck but "Par adlse I,ost." For the first time he has had leisure to read that sonorous epic Btralght through, and, unlike Dr. John. ton, who questioned if any one ever wiiihed it longer, he revels insatiably in the Miitoino splendors. "Man's First Slsobdlno.n Oespltn the admiralty decree, you se, he has been unable to regard his hook as dispensable they must sink or float with him. And so. In the midst of this waste of white waters and hissing shrapnel he hag found for himself i a quiet paradise of beautiful words uad visionary magnificence, and." tt exlsta for hitn out of return to the tenn and tragHr actua! " And yet what could b apte? reading than this epic , "Of man's first disobedience and the fruit of that forbidden tree Whose mortal ' taste brought death into the world and all our woe." The very first Incident, indeed, re-" corded after paradise was lost is a murder, and this fratricidal strife of t'ain ad Abel has repeated itself In every generation and given to the . phrase. "The brotherhood of man," a sinister significance. But never in all the long history of blood lust have so many millions of brothers stood em battled, ready to spike one another's bowels with steel, jor shatter their faces with develish explosives, as in this twentieth centuy of the Christian era. War's Weapons Wrong. Now, whatever be the rights or wrongs of war, on thing seems clear. The weapons are wrong. There Is a horrible expression "Food for powder" you will find it In all languages that are really civilized. It implies that the masses are so coarse in texture, are - carcasses so grosa and subhuman that their beat use is to be thrown to the gun a providential fire screen for the finer classes. Democracy will in due time take note of this conception. But In its rude way the phrase shadows forth a truth the truth that for all who have passed the animal stage, the war of tooth and claw is antiquated. It seems futile to have evolved from I r ' " f 1 1 ti f r-lafx . fm ii " " y ,t-it irij Portland, Or., Oct. 7. To the Editor of The Journal I have known Austin F. Flegel, Democratic nominee for congress from the third congressional district, for the past 24 years. I waa associated with him in business in this city for six years at a time when he was a young attorney standing on the threshold of his profession, with out a dollar in his pocket, with a young wife and two babies pulling at his coattail for bread. A financial panic existed in this state at that time. Mr. Flegel stood firm and true to his friends and creditors during all the period of this trvinr financial J panic. As soon as business improved he paid out the first money that came into his hands to his creditors. At one time he was $600 in debt for his office rent, as well as owing many FRED HAMILTON AHS SZ3. WIFE MARY SAO AJff AUOXXMEITT. Copyright by International News Service. Top A Belgian fort replying to the German siege guns at (Censor would not permit name beings mentioned.) Bottom Germans clearing up Fort Loncin at Liege which the German guns destroyed, showing the ter rific havoc wrought by the huge Krupp guns. Strengthening! in? There's, a tonic in fluence in good beer Beer that is scientifically brewed and prop erly aged. (lip is the standard of beer excellence. I' It's, brewed for ;your table. Phone your grocer OT - PORTLAND BREWING COMPANY the brute if our brain fpower only makes us bigger brutes.) "The man behind the gun" a 16 inch gun that I hurls a ton of explosive! metal for 13 miles Is a wilder and more monstrous beast than ever appeared in the ante diluvian epoch. That he should not be kept safely stuffed in an ammunition box is an in tolerable anachronism. I A world in which by one movementlof his paw he can kill off a whole congregation of Milton worshipers is aj world which should have been nippedj In the nebula. Where the German Conquered, After a civilized fashion the Anglo German contest has long been raging. and the German has been -winning all i along the line. His patience, his in-! dustry, his nice study of his custo mers, has everywhere swept the Eng lishman aside. Before his music the Briton fell In worship; his drama in vaded us triumphantly. Why was Ger many not content with this victorious congregation, with this campaign worthy of human beings? German In fluence, German culture It Is spread by peace, not by the sword. To Ger man universities shoals of Russian students flocked as to shrines, humble feudatories of German scholarship. German thoroughness. To the barbarous regions where an Ovid might still lament his exile, they carried back German methods, the cult of German science. And to me, on my illiterate island, the German cities, a Munich, a Dresden, where the theatre wan classic and inexpensive -ana tne opera a form of art and not a socit display, loomed like moaeis or civilization. Only Inferiors Bequlre Sword. Whv must Germany challenge the world in a lower plane of brute matter. It is only the inferior peoples that need the sword The Turks have had to rule with a rod of Iron they had no right but might, no gift for the world. Such races must assert inemseives in ftrn and write their edicts in otooa. But fire burns down and blood dries up and fades, and the only durable In fluence is the power of the spirit. Fatal perversity of Germany to have misunderstood her own greatness. Proud in her pseudo philosophy, she h reneated "Man's first disobedience' she has ignored the divine voice, she has listened to lower promptlngu oi the serpent. There will never be a paradise again for man till he bends his ear to a truer philosopher than Nietzsche, to a prince of peace. Till one greater man -Restore us and regain the blissful seat. Biology Is Feeling Ef ects of Great War Besoarches at Standstill Because of Inability to Secure Chemicals; "Dr. Goldschmidt's Work Undone. Effects of the European war are be ing felt In biological circles, and ac cording to Dr. Harry Beal Torrey, head of the department of biology at Reed college, they will be felt much greater and for a long time after the war is over. ! a All exchange of - correspondence and periodicals which' has been going on with German professors - has been stopped and many chemicals necessary in certain experiments and which come from Germany, cannot be had. Con sequently much research work is at a standstill. r Dr. Torrey says that Dr. Richard Goldschmidt, professor of genetics in the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute In Ber lin, has been working for the last five years on heredity in butterflies. Dr. Goldschmidt has collected eggs from various wild races ail over the world and recently made a large collection in Japan. He was taking these eggs to Germany when the war started. He is now on hi3 way to New York, where he hopes to get transportation. If the eggs cannot be kept under the proper conditions for hatching and cannot be tested at the right time, the five years of work and travel will be lost completely. In a London church tower there is clock which strikes the hours and quar. ters but has no dials nor other visible evidences of the time Mrs. Hamilton had ben looking around for a piano for several weeks. She told Mr. Hamilton that s'.u; was bound to have a piano now. for rnly $97.20 would buy a piano just like Mary James", who paid $250. Mr. Ham ilton said this was an impossibility, because he talked with one of the houses which claimed to be .stablished in 1873, commonly known around Port land as the Musical Morgue. They said that a reliable piano could not be sold at a cut price. She told her husband this was all tomrayrot; for him to go down to 388 Morrison st. and examine the pianos for himself. She told him that he would not only find 250 pianos at $97.20. but all the other pianos (old reliable makes) at equally low prices. Even the $850 player pianos for $188. So he put on his hat, she put on her bonnet, and they started down last night after supper. The first piano inside the door was a beautiful Kimball. The next on was the time honored Chick ering. Then they saw a Knabe, a Behning, a Wegman, a Lester, a Stein way, a Steck and a Weber and an Emerson, a Vose & Son, a Hallett & Davis, a Ludwig and an Estey. They finally settled on a beautiful Chicker ing piano, as Mr. Hamilton's folks had a Checkering, and his father and moth er's folks had a Chickerlng. To say that the Hamilton home is . a happy musical one today is putting it very mildly, for at 3S8 Morrison st they found everything which was adver tised and a great deal more. Store open evenings until 9 or 10 o'clock." But, remember, this is the last call. Sale closes Saturday night at 9 o'clock. (Adv.) A Gridiron Hero of 1930 111 ! lip I The "Can't-bust-'em" Series ft Who wouldn't be a bop again ? Here are bargains galore tomorrow for eager lads, as well as abundant display of new suits and overcoats- at very moderate prices. Every specially priced article has been reduced for tomorrow's selling. 50 for boys' $1.00 felt Hats; tan, brown, navy, gray and maroon. A great bargain. 35 for boys' $1.50 Sweaters; turtle-neck and V-neck styles ; gray, navy, white, cardinal and brown. 7 to 14 years. 5Jy for boys' 75c flannel blouses with military collars. 6 to 15 years. 75 the garment for boys' $1.25 and $1.50 two piece natural gray wool underwear. 8 to 16 years. 1 $1.50 for boys' fine $2.00 French flannel blouses in beautiful stripes. 7 to 16 years. 79 for boys' $1.00 K. & K. Blouses; new stripes in madras and soisette. ti to 16 years. Bogs' Ruffneck Wool Sweaters, $1.25 to $5 Bogs' Pajamas, $1.00 to $1.50 Clothes for Boys To clothe your bdys properly and economically is not merely an incident with this store it is one of the vitally important duties that receive constant, painstak ing attention by a corps of men skilled in this work. You'll find here the largest stocks and the best makes. Boys' Norfolk Suits in Newest Weaves $5 to $12.50 Extra Trousers Free Boys' Balmacaans $8.50 to $15 Children's Balmacaans $6.50 to $10 Second Floor Elevator BEN SELLING Leading Clothier Morrison Street at Fourth 8:30 A. M. Ready for School 1 1 lit. TJJ an a. ana a v . to- "X" morrow and let him slip you into one of thse classy Bal macaans. m . They'll keep out l&st, rain, hail or wind they 're nighty good to look at, either forl or aft, star board or port. Full-cut, deep andiirOomy, they'll envelop you at once with a feel ing of comfort anbT good appear ance. ; j ; Tartans, mixtures, fit weeds and novelties, in new color bl endings; handsome and thorough!" effi- cient. m : Suits, Balntacaans and Rain bats :M0tEIR First and Yamhill Second and Morrison r- Third and Oak Open Saturday Event n g U n t i I 10 J?SO(Ufnl( "Roman Meal pound for pound, has a greater food value than meats," iMc PER LB. )itlitadL - - WcPERLB. That is not our statement. It is the ver dict of scientific nutrition experts whose names can not be used publicly because of their official positions. Ask any physicianyour own preferred. He'll tell you of Roman Meal's superior, health promoting aiid regulating qualities. ROMAN MEAL in the 3 lb. package costs 83c per pound; the average cost of meats is 20c per pound. - can be prepared by anyone in a variety of delightful ways. It is nature's food for youth, maturity and old age. Roman Meal contains whole wheat, rye and de odorized flax with all their native strength elements left in, not exhausted by over refining merely to please the eye. Roman Meal is unusually rich in tissue building protein, ettergy and fuel creating carbo-hydrates and -mineral salts which will supply wasted one and muscle. The endurance and vitality of the old Roman soldiers who conquered the world were established by eating food of this character. More than that Roman Meal BANISHES CONSTIPATION IMPROVES DIGESTION ii by supplying the necewiry bulk to promote the natural muscular movement of the bowels, the deodorized : flax supplying: natural lubricant. Your own doctor will know about Roman Meal; ask him. The most persistent and stubborn cases of (constipation are positively regulated by the use of Roman Meal. Si;!." Roman Meal makes A most oalatable breakfast mush digestible and nutty-flavored hotcakesdelightful cook ' ies, muffins, gems, ginger bred and puddings; 1 also fruitrocks, the semi -confection for the growing child. ' j; ' -:. ' The price is 25c per package more pounds! more food. At all grocers. Ask yours for a package today. Insist on your grocer supplying you with Roman Meal Bread, Baked Exclusively by Log Cabin Baking Co. '4 i . ' i- 4