THE OfeEGON DAILY - JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8,1917. 8 AST JHDEPESDEST XCWSPAPES . JACKSON. FnbliMMT tohliI)d every day,, afteraao cad moralD tv(H Sunday after soon) at Tke Joarnal Ti feaildle. Broadway and XaadUU etraeta, L i f arUaao. Or. y' gatcred at U poetofflce at PortJaad. Or., for t traeaaUaelua Uruug to mails a eoo4 saatteaV TELEPHONES Mala T17I; Bmm, A-O051. All dopartioenta reacted by tbeee number. Tail the operator waa I departaeBt yo traat. rOREIOX ADJEKTIS1NO SEP BESIJf TATl V ' - Beajaotla A Kaataor Co.. BraBawtck blag.. . ' Jta fifth an., Saw lark. 121 Paopto ' , te "Id.. Chicago. Suhaert prion, fruje by (Bail or to any addreaa V . is the United gtatea or Uzk: DAILY (MORNING OR imRSOOS) '2, Ot aar........4.00 I Ona axoti.......$ .SO f, i SUNDAY i Am yaar.... .... $2.80 Ona aeoatB $ .35 ' DAU.X MOBNJNO OR AFTERNOON) AND On year I Oea aaoota -as 6 E i tion vrhy; wmi senator obstinately decline to utilize them. : -. Senator L Follette has framed a bill which would par for the war out of excess war profits, taking no more bread out of the mouths of the poor and stripping none of the scant clothing from their backs. Collier's Weekly speaks well of La Follette's bill and remarks that It Is what the senate will probably have to come to in tbend. Why not come to.lt now? There is something positiTely ghoulish In the spectacle of Penrose conspiring to strip the poor of their scant comforts while the excess profit of the munitions corporations mount higher and higher. Is there any particular sacredness surround- ing war riches? MI-LADY Yen ran not pnaelbly he a broader - baaia fur any goernnient than that wblch Include all toe pvople. with all tbelr right In their bauds, and with an equal " powr to maintain tbelr rtgtita. Wllilam Lloyd1 Carrlaon. r tn l. s m THE VIGILAXTES : NEWS dispatch from Chicago say William D. Heywood, secretary-treasurer of the I. W. W., il threaten a general strike involving 250.000 laborer in retaliation for the deportation of members of the X. W. W. from their home In Bis- Jee, Arizona. A news dispatch from Butte, Montana, says: Frank I.lttle. the I. W. W. agitator " vt'srjj0--vas recently deported from Arl- Bona and who has been preaching to Strikers here, urging defiance to the 'government, was found hanging by the neck from a trestle, "dead, early ;thl morning. The old vigilant warning sign "3-7-77" was pinned to this night clothes. He had been taken ' out of bed and lynched at 4 o'clock . thl morning by unknown then Little wa an executive board mem ber 'of the 1. W. W. and waa the "right hand man; of W. I). Heywood. Tbe lynching is said to be the direct outcome of Little's speeches. In which he attacked the government and re ferred to the United States troops a '"Uncle Sara' scabs in uniform." This is a country In which there Is a legal remedy for every wrong Mr.p Hey wood's proposed retalia tlon for the Bisbee. trouble is not a .legal remedy. Nor was the lynch ing of Little a legal remedy. Nor, with the country at war, were Lit tle's attacks on the government and bis designation of boys in kbaki as ""scabs in uniform" a legal remedy for anything. We cannot afford to do these things. They lead directly to such spectacles as happened at Butte. To say nothing of federal law, I there are grim men who cannot the restrained from taking the j short cut in dealing with trea ts son and other untimely disor ders. The vigilante la himself an outrage. Bat he runs through the istory of all times of ferment. Ho was In the Civil war. He is in the background of most wars. He J ' teems an inexorable product of fate. He is unjustified, indefensible and to be opposed and resisted: But the vigilante is one force in human affairs against which we have not been able to make ado :Quate provision. ; All in all, it is no time for the jHeywoods to tempt fate by defl of 'order and government. - i i J t A correspondent writes The Jour nal thus: "Last evening I spent nearly an hour scanning the vari ous street cars bound for Council Crest for a place of safety if not .opmfort. With a prospect of neither in sight, I cast my lot with the ;xnultltude that occupied every available inch aboard the next car. It was an open car on which I was fortunate to find standing room along with an even 20 others on tbe, running board." The atten tion of the city authorities and the safety first officials and the pub lic Is called to this abuse. THE REVENUE BILL THERE is a field in which housewives can do something to help cut the cost of living. Many of them are extrava gant In their demands on delivery service. For example, they call up the grocery half a dozen times during tbe day and order first a box of matches, second 10 cents worth of soap, third a bottle of mustard, and o on. In tbe process mi-lady requires half a dozen de liveries, when by a little care she could have grouped all her orders into one and saved man power, horse power or gasoline power and saved much to the overhead of the business. All this extra service has tcj, be paid for. The dealer doesn't pay it. He must add enough to his profit margin to cover his delivery system, and the final cost falls upon tbe consumer. The delivery item has become a colossal activity. It came on grad ually, and we have not realized how enormous its expenditures have become. Its cost is said to often equal and sometimes exceed the railroad and steamer freights that an average dealer has to pay. Thousands upon thousands of times, a tiny package that mi-lady could stow away snugly In her shopping bag is sent miles across the city by the xlellvery. A delivery is not infrequently summoned by phone to return to the establishment a similar pack age that has been delivered over a stretch of miles several days before. These are abuses of the delivery process. But a dealer must; smile and felicitate as though he were dying to render the service, be cause he cannot afford to affront the queens of the household, for they are the purchasing agents of the American homo and do -practically all of its buying with5, totals Into the billions. y The vital fact in the process is that the housewives have to pay for their extravagances with de liveries. The added cost Is a part of the monthly bills that they sc often find hard to pay and at which they so bitterly complain. "Never again" was tbe declara tion of the modern Eve who, after a day and night in the altogether in the woods of Colorado, sought shelter, food and asylum in the friendly cabin of an outing family A drenching from the rain and a near freeze were the easy cure for her folly. How fortunate if all the cranks could be so easily disll lusloned! actintiea and ia the munldpAt field in many dtles, to say nothing of hundreds of Industrial .enter prises and private employments that have voluntarily adopted tbe eight-hour principle as was done by the Tacoma mills. The meaning of all these things is perfectly plain: Gradually and steadily, the country is drifting towards the universal eight-hour day In manufacturing and many other Industries. The situation was never more favorable from tbe standpoint of workers. Tbe peril Is that radical elements in the groups that are struggling for the change may in jure their cause by demands for still further shortening of tho period of a day's work. An eight-hour day is a fair day. It can be claimed with full con science and confidence by those ho seek It. But? the premature demands for an even shorter day while the vast mass has not even secured the reasonable day may throw consternation among em ployers and be as deadly an influ ence In harming the cause as ia tbe attitude of employers who still cling to a 10-hour or an even longer day. V best way to wring more liberty out of it, ' - . i-- v Senators La Follette and Gronna with tbelr sympathisers can per haps annoy the government and fa some emergencies they may aid the enemy substantially by paralys ing the energy of our war meas ures. They cannot prevent tho United States from fighting tbe kaiser but tbey may very well make our fighting wasteful and In effective. Professedly they are working for peace but that will not be the re sult of tbelr efforts. All tbey can really do Is to increase the slaugh ter- of American boys by prolong ing the struggle. In time of for eign war a peace party at home i3 the worst enemy a country cap have. There are some signs that the German finances are crumbling There is a shrinkage in the gold reserve. That country has for three years been buying. And for the same period has been selling noth ing to other countries. The kaiser has paid out enormous sums of gold for propaganda and other work by Prussian agents In other countries. Only a tremendous fi nancial status In tbe beginning could withstand such a drain. Letters From the People SMALL CHANGE pi-y leal exaoUoatlcBav 1 sometimes11 to ' their own surprise, and found thera lv in a new world. They- have beii learning to live. Tbey have iound out what comradeship means, and the meaning of hunger.- Bom of them,! applying their hard-earned powers of , , - . . - . concentration, have advanced more i t. P the physical eaamlna- rapldly than any other type. Theyjuo- wyi make fine officers; and when they j Milk price soar, and so are tb lead their men. it It 1 their lot to die, j consumers. . they will go happy not only because ' Thu far no on hum aid anything they are serving their country, but about roaatlng ear. And he'd better becaus they have discovered an an- , wo ' J "I wer to the riddle of lif. j Tho day seem far off and dim Th boy are proud of their veter- wnm owcwm "in ngni COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF WHAT THEN? A' A MIGHTY CHANGE F i HERE is little to be said against some of the changes In the war revenue bill which seem likely to be made by tbe senate. On the other band some of tbe proposed changes are as bad as possible. Public opinion will approve of tbe additions to tho tax on large incomes. The increased tax on liquors should have no op ponents outside the saloon ele ment It is also an excellent thing to levy heavier toll on cor poration incomes insofar as that can -be done without heaping new burdens on tbe consuming public These, commendable changes ia tbe bill, are now under discussion. Some of tbe proposed changes for which, there is no excuse are tbe increased levies on tea, coffee and sugar; - If there ";were no other sources . of revenue In sight it might be advisable to Clip Jthe com forts and necessities of the poor a little closer , . ; - v But thete are plenty of other sources of revenue In sight. In very , Ulaia fifbL "It U . enrtouj. quo IVE Tacoma mills have granted the eight-hour day, and it is said that some others will do Bp. There is no mistaking the move ment of the times. We are in the midst of great economic change Things are being done that were totally unexpected a few years ago The world is thinking today more than it ever thought before about human welfare and human rights. There are captains of in dustry in America who are now defending the Drinclnle that oow: comes up from below' who ii their Industrial operations hay Always maintained that power aV given down entirely from above. There are employers who have always looked out on their wora and workers with a grim, intoler ant air of no interference from without, but who are now listening to the claims of workers and are considering their welfare as a part of the success of the business. The war and its insistence on the re demption of the principle of liberty and welfare for all the races is an influence in forwarding this mood in industrial ownership. The processes of this extraor dinary change follow a period of similar gravitation that has been moving In America for two or three years. Congress has passed a law declaring that labor is not a com modity, and the United States su preme court has authenticated it in a history-making decision. Con gress has passed an eight-hour law for railroad workers and tbe su preme court has affirmed tbe con stitutionality of" tbe measure. These are tremendous advances. But tbe greatest event in the story of shortened working hours was tbe declaration of th presi dent of the United States in tbe railroad crisis last year to the effect that the public sentiment of the country approves the . principle of the eight-hour day. Added to these are tbe eight-hour day established by the law on tbe national public work, on tate activities, county N ADVANCE of a cent a quart, making the price of milk 12 M cents, will cost New York consumers 17,300,000 a year. The dairyman is temporarily in one of the most exposed 'positions to which any industry Is subjected. Except grass, everything that hi cows eat is at sky prices. And even grass is precious be cause of the demand for every available acre of land to be brought under tillage. And grass further more is an available food but a brief period in the dairyman's year. For the three years' war period, the man who produces the milk has been beset by Influences of every kind to Increase the cost of production. At the other end of the llae is the difficulty of laying down his product at the doorstep of the city consumer. If -he delivers it with his own wagons, bis routes are over a scattered ueia or isoiatea consumers, finding one in a block here and another In a home five or 10 blocks away. If he sells to middlemen, there is always the cbanco that they will combine and fix purchase prices that will take the bulk of the profit. Middlemen deny that they ever do such things, but the de nial Is in defiance of human na ture, of human experience and all natural tendencies In trade. Milk enters so fully Into human life and is such a prime necessary to existence that it seems incredi ble that the economies of its dis tribution have not been worked out and established on a scientific basis. The dairyman must have a chance to earn a living. If not, he will go out of business. How then will it fare with the bablei and the household? Four Washington Indians, while engaged in a religious celebration preparatory to the end of the world which they are expecting, beat a crippled companion to death with clubs in order to exorcise the evil spirit. The quartet will probably see the end of the world so far as. they are concerned, by tbe time the law gets through with them. ADMIRAL CAPPS R' EAR ADMIRAL CAPPS. of the emergency fleet corporation, talks like a man of sense. He declines to dwell upon the comparative merits of steel and wooden ships but has resolved to build both as rapidly as possible because botb are needed. This attitude heartens the coun try. Admiral Capps retrieves au unfortunate situation. But It Is a long way from talk to action. Ships are - what wo want, not glittering promises of ships. If the sturdy admiral make good, his fame is secure. Tbe coun try will heap honors upon him. We have had many talkers, it will be a genuine relief to see a builder at work. We have now had from the spe cial Investigator a certain report as to the wood supply. How would it do now to have a report as to tho coal supply, including offers to turn mines over to the city with power to fix, prices? (Cominasicationa acat to Tha Journal for publication ia this dapar . nt ahonld b writ ten on only aide of the paper, anould ont exreed SOu werda in length ud muat be aa eumpaaied by tbe name and address of uj aander. If the writer doca not dealre to nave tn name pubUahed ha abould so state. On Socialism Turner, Or., July 81. To the Editor of Th Journal A letter on socialism, from Bcotts Mills, In your issue of July 24, la stating "I am not a eltln of th world." In opposing Socialist for making tb oppoalt claim, takes, I think, questionable ground and - po sition that would involv serious moral lac he r difficulty. Man i a social animal, and banc ha should feel or, rather, appreciate certain re lations with his kind, not only here, but lwhre, in city, community, state or province, nation and the world of which h Is a part, a an organio whole. Th undersigned 1 a cltiien, not only of tho United States of Amer ica, but of America and or terra iirm. or world. As a certain proverb says, "He who liveth to himself dieth to himself," and sometime "unwept, unhonored and un sung." a the poet says. I am no Socialist or brother of one. In th party n. Many of their theories. em to m foolish and thoughtless. But th general idea of proper International relations I con sider fundamental to all proper par ties, individuals or institutions, and the only solution of the world's trou ble in a political sens. j As to "backing up the government as we find It," quoting also from the Scott Mill letter, I think this is all right, provided the general tone or tendency of eame is in line of ethics and general welfare. As the old book says. ''Obey the powers that be"; also, however, that on should "oby Ood rathr than man." JOHN It. TYLER. The Slick Auto Driver Dayton, Or.. July 30. To the Editor of Th Journal I wish you would In your widely read paper give out warning to young girl to look out for automobile driver. Yesterday my two young daughters went to church at MoMinnvllle. Half way between Dayton and McUlnnville, at about 10:30 In th morning, an auto driver stopped the girl ant? wanted them to tie th horse to a fence, or put th rig In a nearby barn, and go auto rid ing with him. They, of course, told him their horse wa good enough for them. He tried very hard to get them to go with him, a stranger to them. Suppose the girl had been walk lng. They might have gone, for the sake of the ride, and, I suppose, never returned. Qirls should b warned, whether In city or country, not to go with any slick auto drivers they don t know This man told the girls he was going to Tillamook. Pernap so, and per hap not. . ANXIOUS MOTHER. '' A Mother of Soldier Portland, Or.. July S 1 .To the Edl tor of Th Journal What is to be come of or be done with the mothers of soldiers, who have to work for a liv ing, having given their boy to th country" cause? My two boy have gone and I have to ahlft for myself, with two young girls to educate. I hav been housekeeper, draimaker, cook, laundrywoman, nurse and mother for SO year, but when I apply for i position they ay, "You mast b ex perienced." I am perfectly able to work in any capacity of homekeeplng, I would like to be matron, or some thing to that effect. Will , someone solve this problem, a the question always comes up, "Are you expe rienced V M. J. B. The Elevator Site Deal Portland, July II. To the Editor of The Journal After reading the let ters of C. W. Ausman in last Satur day's and Frank Kiernan in Sun day's Journal. I am convinced that th grain elevator sit deal (should not be permitted to stand. It- Will be hard to convince m that It la a better deal for the taxpayer to pay out, all told, about $400,000 for a site and dredging when we can have a better site gratis. For on taxpayer, I are In favor of contesting the' proposition. Fire this commission, appqjnt a new on l and start all over again. It will be a sham to allow this "shameless Joke." as Ausman calls it. to be carried out. Stop it. if pessible. R. R. BRATTON. No Woodland. Wash., July 80. To th Editor of Th Journal Did Germany ever include in her peace term that-l she would pay Indemnity and give back all land taken by conquest, but J re lain me ngnt to nave a iree nana on tbe American continent? READER. an, and tho veterans, each In hi own way, a mil grimly, a little cynically. ar rather proud of themselves. Th Way of Progress Is Hard Front tba Lenta Herald Years ago when . the Broadway bridge was fought bitterly by a bunch of millionaire patriot of Portland it was alleged by them that It would not be used and wa not needed; would b an obstruction to navigation and nuisance generally. To them they at tracted another bunch of patriots who saw in the litigation a chanc to knock out th Initiative and referendum be cause it had been ordered by the peo ple with that Instrument. The city waa caused to spend $10,000 to defend the right to construct the bridge, and th two patriotic at of progress fighter spent as much', more. One lawyer In thl city was paid $15,000 to concoct a tal of wo to tell tho United State supreme court. All went down In ignominy together, for the initiative and tb Broadway bridge wer both; needed and had coma to stay. According to th report of the county superintendent of bridges on June 1, tb Broadway bridge accom modated more vehicle than any other bridge in th city, and during the month of June was opened for ships to pass but 45 times, so high abovo the river traffic do its spans reach. Burnslde bridge .opened 1069 time. Th fight against the Broadway bridge wa to prevent the change of traffic tip Washington and Morrison streets and" thereby shift the commer cial center of town. Th antl-inltla-tlve reinforcements only prevented tho Inevitable the longer. Even after the bridge wa built secret and hostile in terests prevented its being approachable with hard surface street. Only thl year is the Broadway bridge showing that It is all that it detractor said It was not. "Dropping Pills" on U-BoaU From the Wall Street Journal Th new method of attacking sub marines I nicknamed amorg flying men as "dropping pills." An officer in the royal naval air servlc said to Dow, Jones Jfc Co.: "Naval dirigibles and aeroplane keep up a perpetual patrol of the coast. When a submarine is sighted, the submarine chasers are signaled. Every submarine, when It begin to submerge, leaves a slight trail ofolL Chaser set out in pair and follow th trail until they get ahead of it. From the first evidence of oil 'pill dropping begin. At certain Intervals bomb with charge of $00 pounds of gun cotton are dropped, and are so timed as to give the chaser a ch-mc to get out of the explosion sone. In this way the sea within the assumed area of the ubmarlne become a aerie of upheaval. The tremendous concus sion shatter the submarine, and plate burst apart. "Submarine chaseVs measure from 80 to 75 feet long and are American craft, wltn Sterling and Standard en glnesVN Theee chasers have been used a patrol since September, 1315, when S00 wereimported. By "pill dropping' one station alone accounted for three submarine In a week. "For convoy work the favorite ma chine ar th Porte Babies. These were built by Lieutenant Porte, who Intended to cross the Atlantic in the Wan a maker machine a few years ago. A lighter machine 1 known a th Blimp. "England is building big machine of the battle cruiser type, and the out put is consequently small. Most of the light American aeroplane are be ing used for scouting. In the school and for training work." trals." Thy ar now all belligerents. or Urey haven't got any rights. Germans ar in straits for food, to be sure, but the worst is yet to come if. as appear, they have not yet been forced to eat dried codfish. If the cynical Napoleon were utter ing epigram today, he might say something about Providence being on the side of the heaviest summer rains. Holland's excuse for neutrality un der extreme provocation 1 that ah is between th devil and tho deep ae. But she has really u batter Alibi than that. 6bo 1 between the devil and his angel. If Kerensky make good with Rus sia, he will be the very man to return Mr. BUhu Root' call a soon a the war 1 over. The good old U. S. A. probably needs some of the Kerensky stuff as badly a Ruseia needed what Mr. Root carried across. "Marsh marigold, pokewood sprouts, smartweed, pepper cress, lamb's quarter, sour dook. and pusley (high brow, purslane), which are among the wild vegetable now In season, all make excellent greens," says the pi curiah Boston Glob. That fine, but mostly 8000 miles away. Who will page the edible weed of Oregon for us? of OREGON SIDELIGHTS Tb Bcout eayai th lumber bul ne around Union l Improving and nor mill runping witn nigger pay roll. .1 in oroer i "- . t tn. tha. Tl rkB. on a mva .n. la uiAlntr law yer making two for townand who would consent io " lie or city attorney. "(!.,.r,l wise men In th upper val )..- ..v th Rune Register, "are vlr Aina and Other Wis "V"r,f vrhn STho watch the ex eVrtment with avfew to doing like wis.- i Thl ,1 the Haine Kecora lae. ' fruit, vegetable, animal or fowl too oont Jut let it grow. If you don t th. jinn hn will be so muffled next eopl may winter that a great many p. not be able to pear it at alb Fahlon not from the Dallas Item earing a dress tha reached nearly to the sidewalk was sees on tne Dusine irv "uo th firt of the week. She attracted imnet aa much attention a a man and a 'woman who were out driving with a hor ana nuggy iai ouuuu Here' 1 a tory. from the Sheridan Sun. that shows what can be dono with bees; "Walter Graves cut a bee tree Am nn tha NT W Connor Dlace last Sunday that yielded over 100 poundb' or noney. idb waa in an ash tree and the comb was a aolld cylinder eight inches in diame ter and standing ight feet high. Some of the honey first made was so old it was Dure black. He will extract the honey and keep the comb for use- on his pee I arm. AD.VICE TO WOULD-BE, EXEMPTS By Carl Smith, Washington Staff Corr potxlant ef Tha Journal Washington. Aug. 2. If you ar a drafted man, and believ you should b exempted, or want to know anything about the exemption rule, don't write to. your senator' or congressman, and don't write to the provost marshal general. If you are an employer of men who are on the first call, and want these men retained In Industrial pursuit because of their skill or particular usefullness, th same advic holds good. Don't tell your troubles to Washington. This is th word that eome from Provost Marshal General CrowdW office. Letter from individual and about particular case will be returned to the writer, with a request that the matter be presented to the near est local exemption board. Not even question from exemption boards will be answered, unless they com through the governor of th state. Adoption of strict rule on this line wa deemed Imperative because of the avalanche of Inquiries already re ceived. Large numbers of these ques tion can be answered by the local board a well as from here. Many others relate to suggested case of ex emption, particularly from th heads of corporations appealing for release of number of their men. General Crowder answer to these appeal is that th district boards must pass upon all exemption, and that each case la to be decided upon the circumstances surrounding It No class exemptions will be made and the district board will have no advice from Washington as to how to; decide any particular case. Instructions will be given only on the broad lines al ready announced, a to whether the man can serve Ms country best in the military Bervice or in some other way. Exemption letters and inquiries to congressmen or to the war department will only cause delay, as such letters will be returned and th questions must be asked over again of the dis trict boa'rd. If the member of the district board are unable by study of the regulation to gtve an answer, they will writ to the governor of the state. If the governor la puzzled, he will sub-1 mlt th question to the provot mar anal general. Rullngson matter thu brought up by the governors will be issued irom the office of the provost marsnai gen eral in bulletin form, and sent to every district board In the United States In a short time, therefore, it l ex Dected that about every matter of doubt will be covered much more ef fectlvely than could be don by indi vidua! letter. All board will thu be put in pos session of uniform rulings. As to any influence working from Washington to excuse men In particular employ ments or in particular establishments it Is positively announced there will be no uoh thing. Receipt from the national forests during the lat fiscal year reacnea $3,450,000. the largest sum so far at tained, of which over $1,600,000 wa derived from timber Bales and over $1,600,000 from stock grazing permits The expense of the forests stood at ap proximately $4,000,000, or about 5&U, 000 behind the receipt. Another year gain at the same rate will en able the forest service to report that it ha become self-sustaining. . Almost every month announcement comes from Secretary Lane's office of the classification of large areas of public land, and of the restoration of Large bodies to entry which had been for one purpose or another withdrawn In Secretary Lane' four year In of fie almost 26,000,000 acre hav been examined, classified and restored to unrestricted entry. During the same time the withdrawals for all purposes have amounted to 6,000.000 acres. Tho net result is a reduction in reserved lands of the United States from 7f, 672.851 acre to 56.470,213 acres. Dur ing June nearly 600.000 acres were re stored to entry, including 465,000, acres heretofore held in coal reserves In Moiattna, and 101,000 acres held In oil reserves in California. The .depart ment also accomplished during the month the designation of 813.000 acres for settlement under the enlarged homestead act, including substantial areas in Fremont, Boise, Owyhee, El more and Adam counties, Idaho. h6w to be. healthy w t. 1917. Keeley. Nothing1 Doing Till Then From tbe New York Eranlng Poat If the chancellor's move for peace has had a conflicting and generally hostile reception, the fault lies in the language which he used. The speech appear In part to have been one of studied ambiguity. And Dr. Michaell never once came to the scratch and pronounced the name of Belgium. That word has now become a sort of touch stone for the whole world. It is a test of German sincerity. It 1 th central thing In the cause of the allies. "No forced acquisitions" is too vague. Tha nation wait for the magic words Belgian Independence and Belgian res EAR WAX PROMOTES DEAFNESS. The wax that form so rapidly In the ear with some people, while ap parently not a serious matter,' mayi however, promote inflammations in th ear canal whleh may result In chronic changes in the ear drum and thu lay a foundation for deafness. Often the plug of wax luelf causes temporary deafness. The habit of scratching the Inner ear with toothpicks, head of pins and with the finger nail is distinctly harmful. It may result in ear ab scess and permanent injury to the hearing, or the mechanical action It self may Injur th ear tissue. Whenever there is itching or little roll of wax may be taken out on the finger It Is indication of the neod or toration. Let the German government a physician s services. It is seldom plainly utter them, and it could not I necessary to remove the wax by any be long before there were mediation painful instrument. Small syringes or negotiation to bring about a peace, 'are available for injecting sterilized CRYING FOR PEACE T HE report that Senators 0ron- na and La Follette have defi nitely joined the "peace prop aganda" is not reassuring. It means that they have allied them selves with the less intelligent, and patriotic element of our popula tion It they' -were . wiser ther would Join hands to teach the peo ple whal the war signifies and the Veterans at the Front From tba Chicago Herald Among all the correspondence from Fort Sheridan has been no mention of two types of veteran the military and the oclaX And yet they ar numer ous and picturesque. Youth rules, of course. But among the young fellows here and thr one marks a stouter, older figure, with a harder eye. Some of them are even fattish. They drilled from the begin ning, nevertheless, with that precis ion shading into nonchalance that only come with year of training: they moved with a curious swing that the boys envied; they lay upon their bunks silent In the bus of technical talk until they were appealed to, and then ettld th dispute, sometimes, with th single senteaoe of authority. They had been through th Boer war som of them; en at least hadrvd la tha Balkan. w These are th military veterans. Th social veterans are very different. Per haps th name Is misapplied. They are the men who hav lived solitary In crowds. Assistant in libraries, law clerks who hav plodded slowly up th ladder, bookworm; wfien the call 'came they felt a sudden flush of blood. They wer tired of tbelr lone ly llv. of choice though they might year bafor have bean undertaken. They took -off their spectacle, stretched their leas legs, paased the But until the German government gives this sign of repentance, thl pledge of restitution, the allies and th United States must cease not In their preparation nor spare their energies. The people of Germany know how they can hav peace. President Wilson has told them; Lloyd George has told them. If they really Intend a peace without annexations, with Belgiurg re stored, all they have to do is to make their government say so definitely. Hoover's Single-Mindedness ' Hugh Gibaon in tha Century When Herbert C. Hoover has a Job n hand, he is apt to have a rather ingle-mlnded purpose. In Belgium he developed the idea that the reason be waa ther waa a life-preserver for th Belgian people. Few men have ever had th temptation that wer given Hoover to throw down a task. When the situation became completely hope less. Hoover was wont to remark, "But we must remember that we are her to feed the Belgians," and grit hi teeth and go on working. Sometime the provocations became so intolerable for som of th other Americans that fter working upon one another feel- warm water into the ear opening. This softens the wax, and the presaur of the water from the syringe dislodges It and it often comes out in one whole lump. The operation 1 simple and usually free from discomfort If skill fully performed. Sometimes th wax ha become so hardened and adheres o closely to the drum that It Is necessary for the physician to supplement the work of the syringe by the use of a little "loop" for reaching In and dislodging the wax. If a person who has a ten dency to rapid wax formation ha it attended to at proper intervals, how ever, nothing more than the syringe will be necessary. After a hardened mass of wax Is ijrst taken out sometimes the hearing is slightly blurred for a short time. This quickly passes away. A .ltUe plug of cotton may b worn for a few houra. The formation of lumps of wax Is aided by sticking the fingers in the car, which instead of getting the wax out simply serves to back it up Into a solid mass. There is no known way of pervent ing th secretion of the wax, and the flnly resort, therefore. Is to regularly visit a physician, who may keep the ear in a clean and healthy condition. Tomorrow: ! When Baldnea Is Cur able. Rag Tag and Bobtail Stories From Everywhere fTo this column all readers ef The JoaroV ar Isvltad to cootrlbuta arisiaal matter u tery. In versa or ia pniioaopbjcal o bap rT alios or striking quota tlona, from any source. Odd, trtbtttlooa of ctcaptioaal merit wiU be ali foe, at U edltor'a avpraUal.) . When Our Army Needed Lead PEOPLE who worry about U-boat and varioua other war nightmare may console themselves, say th Philadelphia Evening Ledger; With th thought that there were- mor formid able, more seemingly hopeles worriea to be encountered in thlstty In a wai that was Just as important in making the world af for democracy a th present one. The problem that beset Washington In the Revolution swoj essentially the same as our trouble namely, the difficulty of getting sup plies through a blockade, with failun certain if the upplle were held up. This anecdote, told by Richard Peters, was repeated many years after bj Henry Simpson: "I waa commissioner of war (U Peters) in 1778. General Washington wroto to me that all his powder wv wet and that he Wa entirely without lead or bullet,, so that AhoulJ tho en emy approach him he mut retreat When I received thl letter I was go ing to a grand gala at the Spanish ambassador , who lived In Mr. Chew' fin house In South Third street. Th spacious gardens were ' superbly deo orated with variegated lamps; th edifice Itself was a blaiVof light; th showwas splendid, but my feeling were far from being In harmony with all thi brilliancy. "I met at this party my friend Rob ert Morris, who soon discovered th state of my mind. 'You ar not your self tonight, Peters. What's the mat ter r asked Morris. "Notwithstanding my unlimited con fidence In that great patriot, it wa some time before I could prevail upon myself to disclose the cause of my de pression, but at length I ventured to give him a hint of ray Inability to an swer the pressing calls of the com mander-in-chief. 'The army 1 without lead, and I know nof where to get an ounce to supply It; the-general musl retreat for want of ammunition.' i , " 'Well, let him retreat,' replied th high and libral-mindcd Morris. bu4 cheer up; there are In tho Uolkar prl- vateer, Just-arrived, 00 tons of lead, one half of which Is mine and at youi service; the residue you can set by applying to Blair McClonachan at Hol kar, both of whom are In the house with us "I accepted the offer from Mr. Mor ris with many thanks and addressed myself immediately to Ihe two gentle men who owned th other half foi their consent to sell, but they had al ready trusted a large amount of cloth ing to the continental congress and were unwilling to give that body any further credit. 1 Informed Mr. Mor. ris of their refusal. 'Tell them,' said be, 'that I wilt pay them, for their ahar.' This settled the business. The lead was delivered. 1 et 300 or 40u men to work, who manufactured it into cartridge bullets for Washing ton's army, to which It gave complete relief." Personal Mention 3 Newspaper Man Returns for Visit F. A. Carle, formerly an editorial writer on a Portland paper, and? now with the Minneapolis Journal, arrived In the city Wednesday. He Is staying at th Portland. Norway Party in tho City Mr. and Mrs. K. Bachte. A- Boerre sen and Fljr C. Andresen of Chrl- tlanla, Norway, are in tne city on business. Mr. Bachte represent the Scandinavia Trust company, with of fice in New York The party ar rived In the United State about May 1. They will go from Tortland to San Francisco. . a Java Man Seeing Friends i . , 4.4ri th tira. r H. D. Kod. rerresenuni me iiotio v. n. . .t.n th. .hni hnm... .. Rlrni comDanv of DJember, Java, 1 punishment to th Germans or to som t th Cornelius, having arrived In the et ot prona But it never wnt any city thl. morning. He i here to visit farth.r than that, for a few word, from Wende. . dwW go on to New York, Hoover wer always enough to put r",rul" mi-h i- in : wvj i i i ,. to ia back to Java. HI home 1 in v.-.,.. K.fa- I,.t m-A . to ro Daca to Java. nj "'uuu' """" , TV,- Rlrnl. nnmMflv la large coffee growing iirm. cause them to wonder that with mil lions of Innocent lives at stake they could have thought of anything so pre posterous as abandoning the great work they were privileged to share In. Onr Country's "Glory" By Louisa A'hmunty Nash. All hall to - our dear country's flag; Red, whit and blu Its colors. Then count Its star, so pur and whit Gainst bin, that make there tlyvrs. When one the foe bad cut them Jut, a breeee blew strong from heaven. Then lifting up their cnimpled folds Th star appeared all golden! Now in the suffering sister land. Unfurling our "Old Glory." Grateful mothers bring us flowers. And hl the dear child-story They see th flag and reverent kneel. With lov to u Inspired, . When crossed th ocean for their aid To help them, we deslredl NashvUla . Or. V. Wednesday afternoon from San Fran cisco Included Mr. and Mrs. Brockway Metcalf. Miss Marcia Fee, Phillip i' Paschel and K. C. Porter. Mrs. W. Haldeman arrived at the Imperial late Wednesday from Paw nee, Neb., to meet her son, C W, Hal derman of Astoria. St. Helen, Wash., guest at the Washington include Mr; and Mr. W. J. woodman. A prominent lumberman In th city from Vancouver, B. C, Is P. n. Brook Eugene, Or., guests in the city in clude Miss Zora E. Lee, who is regis tered at the Washington. Neal Halg, prominent in the hip- building business at San Francisco, and well known member of the Olym pic club there, l at th Multnomah. Salem, Or., guest at tb Imperial include George M. Brown, attorney generals for th tate, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. MUler. Mr. Millar 1 chairman of th public service com mission of Oregon. B. F. Laughlin of The Dalle 1 at the Perkins. Miss Mabel Bell la a Washington Philadelphia Officers Here Captain R. E. Btrawbrldg and Cap tain John R. Valentin of Philadelphia, both of the United Stat reserve, in th quartermaster department, are. at th Portland. Mine Owner From Waldo Jam T. Logan, on ef th owners of th Logan A Cameron nine near Grants Pass, 1 an Imperial guest Mr. Logan lives In Waldo, Or. C. H. Streett, a prominent lumber man of Minneapolis, ia reentered at the Portland, i A. A. Rogers Is at th Nortonla from the Mount Hood lodge. Chris Christiansen of Salam 1 jt.t the Ferktae. - AnottMr .party- arriving la the city I guest from 111 lis bo ro. A C Condon, Or., motor party at th Multnomah include L. E. Fry, Mr. C, A. Fry, and Miase Elsie and Oral Fry. James Carty and family are guest at th Imperial. Mr. Carty is a prom inent sheep man la Morrow county, and live at Heppner. Mr, and Mrs. Henry whitson ar at th Nortonla from Bols. Representing the Log Cabin Syrup company, H. T. Mill 1 at tbe Imperial from St- PauLf Among the recent arrivals at the Nortonia ar Mr. and Mr. F. a. Scober of Mullan. Idaho. T. A. Bell of Calgary, Alta ia a Washington hotel guest. C P. Williams of Gaston, Or I at the Perkins, t : Dr. I Dechmaan Is a Seattle gut a ttve Imperial. : i . . - ' i Departed Heroes Dedicated to our ti,tiuir ami im.i,ii a.. a i Lone lit cemetery.) Our pioneer, I liken thee (jnto a mother: there hath ban Conceived and brought forth A jitate a nation. Our soldier, I liken the Unto a father who hath Given his all to protect Our state, our nation. Here lie builder, who wielded The tool, of time To erect for us This City of Roses. Shall we forget the hand That toiled so unceasingly to rear ana give to u A home? No. never! Shall we forget the long, long road That led away to wlldernesseu. And left behind Home and mother? No, never! Shall we forget the battles fought. The blood they spilled Or virgin soil, to give to u Liie7 No, never! Shall we forget the lonely hut Hewn out or tne rorest? No neighbors near, alone Ill or well? No, never! Shall we foriret the graves Thev due tit-side The long. long .road tbey traveled, Baa ana weary j rso. never: Alas! Our pioneer, our mother. .iles sleeping uhdor The tangled grass. Neglected? Yes, and forgotten. s Alas! Our soldlor. our -father. Acn undr the towering weed". Neglected? Yes. - And forsaken. Shall we dpnv to fhnsn Who wrought thi land of woalth. Our far famed City of Knss, A tidy resting-place?' No. ir-ver! , Helen Warren. Heroic Sitting Ifen When It come to the faithful-unto-death business. It Is difficult, say Capper' Weekly, to surpass th Bit ting hen. Two refused to budge from a biasing chicken houee at Lawrence, while the firemen put out the blase. Two other hens, blown' away In th Menoken tornado, were found attend ing to business tho next day in their box nest nearly a mile from home. - Deat! Beat! Drums! Beat, beat' drums! Blow, bugles, blow! Through tbe windows through the" doors burst like a ruthless force Into the solemn church and scatter the congregation. Into the school where th scholar 1 studying; Leave not the bridegroom quiet no happiness must he have now with his bride, Nof the peaceful farmer any peace, plowing his field or gathering hi grain. So fierce you wfilrr and pound, you arumsso snriii you ougie eiow. Beat, beat! drums! Blow, bugle, blow! Over the traffic of cities over the rumbl of wheels in the- streets; No bargainer' bargains by day no brokers or speculators wouia thev continue? Would the talkers be talking? Would th alnirer attempt to SlngT. Would the lawyer rise tn th court to state bis case nerore uie juage; Then rattle quicker heavier, drum you bugles wiiaer piow. Beat, beat!, drums! Blow, bugles, blow! Make no parley stop for no expos tulation. Mind not the timid mind not th Mind not the old man beseeching the vounar man. Let net th child a vole be heard, nor tb mother" entreaties. Make even tb trestles to ahake th aeac wnr iney u awaiting to hearses. i -, So strong you thump of terrible drum so loud you Dtigiea mow. . . iWalt Whitman. Uncle -Jeff Hnovr-. Says: ' . Lot of chap ever summer keeps house while thelr wive goes, to the seashore, and they're mighty : keerful not to keep it too wli, . 'cause it pleases th missus' to think she If the r only on that can do houekepln Jlst -like it had ert to be done. f ft