V THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL,' PORT LAND,1 SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 30. 1818. 8 s I ;t, iii I 'ASf XXDEPENDENT KCWSFAPEB O. a. JACKSON... .rublishet Pubnshwt erery r. aftsrneori end morotnf , -: Vt Bands? HMmwn) at TUe Journal Buttd int. Broadway at Tsmhill streets, Portend, Orese. - :. " . . Entered at the irtoff1es at Ttrtlnd. Orezuai, fo transmission through th mailt M aeeond eltn tter. TXLr.PHONES Main TITS: Horn. A-SOSl. All departments reached by these number. TU the operator whet department yon want. FOREKJ AOTMTMLNO BEPBBfESITATITB v Benjamin 4k Kentrnw Ca. Brumrwtrk Bsildln;, ; 22i FKtfc arenue. Kw Tort. 00 Mailers Building. Chlreao. febeeripUnn term fry null, or to any address in . the United Staeea or Meatco: 'DAILY. IsJOBMDKi OR A FTERNOON ) e year. ...... Ss.GS I One month .50 HVNDAT Dm yea (3.B0 I One month t ,2 11 ILT 1MORNI.NO OB AFTERNOON) AND SUNDAY ee mr. tT.0Ono month f .85 Tha f rraUnt men bar, been thos who ha rut their way to success through dif flcultlaa. Kobertion. THE EXPOSED PROFITEERS HAT of men who are profiteering out of the sacrificial blood of American inanhood? The Federal Trade commis sion yesterday laid before the senate the hideous details of what It termed flagrant profiteering carried on by the huge manufacturing and dis tributing concerns and monopolies of America. The commission directly charged many of them with inordi nate greed and bare faced fraud. The charge involves the big pack ers, the flour milling trade, produc ers of basic metals, oils and chemi cals, coal and lumber, leather and canning industries. The commission charges that the Bijr, Five packers and their subsidiary companies with manipulations of the market "embrace every device useful to them, without regard to law." The average pre-war profits of these con cerns during 1912-13-14 was 119,000,-000.- During the three war years these firms made an excess of $121.- 000.000 over their, pre-war gains. The I commission says: However delicate a definition is framed for profiteering,, these packers have preyed upon the 1 people uncon ' aelonably. While the sales of the companies Increased only 150 per cent, the profits increased more than 400 per ent. Morris A Co. profited 203 per cent in the war period. Before the war their profit was a little less than nine per cent. - In his late message to congress. President Wilson charged that heavy profiteering was going on in tho country. That was the reason for his request for a new taxation meas ure in which incomes and excess profits would be more heavily taxed, lie said in addition: There is. abundant fuel for the light in the records of the treasury with regards to profits of every sort. The profiteering that cannot be got at by the restraints of conscience and love of country can be got at by taxation. There Is such profiteering now and the Information In- regard to It Is available and Indisputable. On the high authority of the presl . dent himself, we have information " as to the profiteers. On the high authority of the 'Federal Trade' com mission we have the names of the men and the details of their profit eering. This nation is in tears. Its heart ' Is heavy with sacrifice. In its homes there are vacant chairs. Its people are in a struggle to the death. The previous privilege of freedom " hangs suspended on the outoome of our , , death grapple with the most malign . and most powerful destructive force J in; history. y Nobody questions the right of any , roan to make a reasonable profit by conducing his business In a skillful ana eiuaeni way. He is not a profiteer. mi. tu i . . nits promecr is mat omer man who takes advantage of the country's condition, its perilous situation, to r gamer exiraorairary proms, wRO '8 U taking advantage or his country's stress and trial to increase enor- . mously and unjustly and unfairly - hla Individual and private gains. The J0"-man who does thatJs upoh a lower . . . . . iii inorai levei man me ioreign spy... The spy is at least loyal to his nag, la loyal to njs country. Ho takes hlaIife In his hands to serve mat country. But the man who claim's the protection of a flag, who professes His loyalty to the govern ment and his devotion to the flag and at the same, time takes advantage b- of the nation's peril and the govern i ment's dire necessities to increase his '.private gains. Is infinitely lower in ' morals than . a ' kaiser or a Hinden 'berg, jVlili ia the belief, of Senator Borah of Idaho, and In a great speech in the .senate, he said: . With every .necessary dollar expended no " patriot . will find faultit to tho price we pay for the liberty we love, for the freedom we would transmit to our children. Bst if we falter in cut ting out watte end extravagance - we will receive Jind Justly the execrations of those who must meet this gigantic f debt. If we delay , one hour beyond " the time necessary to .shape tho - law to deal with the -execrable wretch, the hated :- of earth. - th alien - fronr haU who -would profit off of his . country's perils, wo will drvo what wo will receive, the anathemas and the curses of posterity. 'The profiteer I that scav enger of civilisation, that tarantula burying: Its fang in the veins and arteries of the wounded and the grief stricken, yet the ' president says he is In our- midst, that tho evidenc ts here and Indisputable. In the man. therefore, of the success of this war, in the name of every patriot In the land making his sacrifice and contributing- his efforts to the common cause, let us proceed to his destruction. We can either drive him, from his prey the American people or we can turn Ms ill rotten gains into the treasury of the United States, to -meet the bur dens Of this war. It is not Impossible that the ex czar has been murdered. The wild passion loose in tumultuous Russia has long been ready for such an enterprise. It is a sorry ending of a wasted career. - With his power and opportunity used for the welfare of his people, Nicholas Romanoff could have lived for a better fate. MYSTICAL FORT ROCK H AVE you ever heard of Fori Rock, Oregon? Vou ought to see it. And see the remarkable nature picture of which It is a part. It is a huge rim rock, hollow in the center, which rises 75 to 100 feet sheer out of a perfectly level and huge expanse of plain. This thick and high wall of rock encloses an area of 1C0 acres. It takes iU name first from the fact that there is a neighborhood tradition that it once served as a fort for white men under attack from a greatly superior force of Indians, and second, because it looks for all the world like a great grim fort on which you -see in fancy on its battlements bristling cannon, armed riflemen and all the paraphernalia of defensive war. Even more interesting than this striking tower of nature is the vast plain upon which it stands. Travel ing southward 70 or 80 miles from Bend and 20 miles north of Silver Lake, you suddenly stand on the brow of a plateau, below which Fort Rock looms and the plain on whicn it stands stretches away in magnifi cent distances. It is a wonderful panorama there spread before you. If you can imagine a huge lake 500 feet deep from whicu the water has receded you can get some idea of the nature picture there unrolled to a recent Journal wayfarer. To the west about 40 miles you could see the dim outlines of the Cascade mountains. A big but un- guessable distance to the east there was a low lying range of hills that seemed to suggest mystical country on beyond. To the south, toward Silver Li:,", and Chewaucan valleys, the distance was lost in a blue purple haze. They used in the romance of the wild west to paint word pictures of such1 scenes. Bands of Indians in war paint, daring frontiersmen on foaming steeds, an emigrant train about to be pillaged by redskins wero adornments that the fiction wrUers used to employ in firing youthful Imagination. But here in real life was the actual scene in colors and features that cannot be described. Out there on the plain were some green spots wnere irrigation wan being can-fed on, and great stretches of dry land farming, some in wheat, some in rye, but mostly without the green of growing fields because gentle rains had not yet fallen in sufficient volume to start the crops to growing. The ranch houses here and there were hardly of different color from usual ranch houses, but with the purple haze for a background they took on a striking effect. A whits schoolhbuse with a red roof, probably four or five miles distant, as it glistened in the sunlight, stood out in spectral hues. There were very few trees, and very few cases of rising ground. Scattered bands of cattle and horses grazing about were the only signs of life. The whole effect was unusual and indescribable. Probably the factor of immensity was' most responsible for its unusualncss. You could see so far that in the perspective mea dows of apparently several hundred acres seemed to be only a small green patch, the size of a dinner plate. Over it all" hung the' deep purple or violet haze, so oftn characteristic of the plains. Most water is blue. but never so blue as the deep violet blue of Crater Lake. It is probable that the wonderfully colored hue of the Fort Rock plain approximated the Crater Lake blue because deepened by the distance. Anyway, Fort Rock and the great plain out of which it rises in abrupt and sheer perpendicularity are a part of picturesque Oregon and are worth a Journey to Eastern Oregon to see Who could be more execrable than the profiteers exposed yesterday by the Federal Trade commission? The country will be filled with indignant resentment. Preying upon the dire necessities of the government and the perils of the nation Is hideous. Congress should no longer hesitate to do its duty. A PORTLAND WOMAN A PORTLAND woman has won the keen appreciation of home people oy ner service in the great cause or a free mankind. First as a worker among the broken-homed French, and second as a woman with a message from the battle fronts. Dr. Esther C. Love Joy has wbn a position of high re spect ... among Portlanders. This is shown br the , many ' honors thrust upon her during her brief rWt homo incident to her return to France. The sorrows, the depredation, the indignities, the cruelties visited , upon French and Belan"""women, as re counted in the addresses of Dr. Lovejoy, make, it clear that this fi not a war merely to make the world safe for democracy, but to make the world safe for women and children. By that token it Is a cause to call out the highest sacrifices, the fullest measure of devotion. The destruction of . families, the breaking up of homes, the separa tion of kindred, little homeless chil dren who are made ' waifs of the world, ignorant of whether their parent's are living of, dead, all these and more brought from Belgium and conquered French territory through Swftzerland by the trainload Into France, are a part of the melan choly story" by Which the souV of America is touched and the manhood of America aroused. In her service in the cause Dr. Lovejoy has the hearty wishes of Godspeed 'and good luck from her neighbors. Professors and instructors at the Oregon Agricultural college are to throw off their coats, bare their arms and render assistance to the farmers in putting up the hay crop. There could be no better vacation. Nor a more patriotio service. DISCOVERED AMERICA T IS commonly known that the Viking Leif Erikson, sailing from Iceland, reached the coast of New England centuries before Colum bus sailed from Palos. Few people have heard of a still earlier discov ery of this continent by the Chinese. An article in the June number of the magazine Inter-America, collects the speculations and facts which have long clustered vaguely around this interesting event Even though it may have no prac tical importance It is worth a litUe attention. We cannot always ba strictly practical. The world of adventure and self-denying dis covery has its charm, and perhaps its importance, quite apart from all questions of bread-winning and war. Almost three centuries elaspcJ from the day Columbus sailed before any great consequences flowed from his voyage. In that long interval it may have been said a thousand times that the discovery he made was 'interesting to the academic mind but of no practical import ance." It may develop before long that everything is practically important which tends to bring us into closer relations with the .Chinese. They are a people from whom almost anything may be expected within the next half century, if. travelers who have studied them intimately can be believed. Somewhere toward the middle of the fifth eentury of the Christian era the Chinese experienced a great intellectual revival. Navigation was stimulated by the invention of the mariner's compass. A considerable trade grew up with the ports on the Persian Gulf, which continued to thrive for three or four hundred years, it was finally blighted by the me of the Mohammedan Dower in central Asia. At about the same time with the invention or the compass the ex tremely intellectual Buddhist re ligion was preached in China. Mis sionaries came In from Hindustan. Chinese traveled across the Hima layas to study the new faith at its native shrine. Buddhism undoubt edly caused en intense awakening of the Chinese spirit It filled many converts with a missionary zeal that moved them to preach their faith in strange lands. Some of them, If we may credit the Chinese an nals, reached first Alaska, and then Mexico. To give proper weight to these accounts we must bear in mind that China was not by any means so isolated in ancient times as it has been for the last Jew centuries. There is plenty of evidence that intercourse between China and Rome was fairly frequent. We know of an embassy which reached Rome from Chip- In. the time of Augustus, a little before the Christian era Other embassies " passed back and forth quite as a matter . of course up to . tha date when, the overland route between Europe and China was blocked by the Mohammedan conquerors of central Asia. This is the same route by which the kaiser expects to lead his troops to the conquest first of Asia and then of the whole world. He is laying the foundations for his enter prise in Russia at this moment. The Mohammedan empire covered the whole of central Asia with much or Hindustan and swept down through Egypt along the southern shdre of the Mediterranean. It eut off all Intercourse between Europe and China, for several hundred years In the meantime the intellectual fervor ot the Chinese died out. Their character became calcified. Their national life settled down into a fixed routine. The world forgot what they had accomplished in th past and ceased to expect much of them Jn the future. But within our own memory China has under gone another mental resurrection. Our grandchildren wUK be witnesses of its results. The Buddhist missionaries of the fifth century sailed northeast- from China, dinging to the ooast as all seamen . did In ; those days. They bad a. rude form of the, compass, but it .- did not give - them courage to venture out - upon the broad ocean. The world ; saw' little deep sea sailing until the time of Vasco da Gama and Columbus. 7 The coasting trips of the Chinese missionaries conducted ; them first to Japan, - where r they , stopped- to preach the ' new faith - Then they pursued their timorous voyages to the northeast, easily reaching Kamchatka and the Aleutian islands. If the reader will take the trouble to glance at his ' map of the Aleu tian aehipelago he will perceive that it stretches in a long row between Asia and Alaska. The missionaries naturally sailed from island to island until they reached the . mainland. Thence they made their way east and south to Mexico which they called Fu-Sang. Continuing to the east they came to Central America. The Chinese annals speak of these voyages as 'eastward" always. We think of Mexico as lying to lhi south from Alaska and Central America as south of Mexico, but a map drawn on a .true projection will show that a traveler must go more east ..than south to reach Mexico from Alaska. With a similar mental twist we think, of the Pan ama Canal as running east and west It really runs north and south. To all these regions the Chinese missionaries assigned names and they also put on record more or less fanciful descriptions of the inhabi tants. Mixed with their fancies there is enough fact to make it fairly cer tain that they actually reached the American continent and left trace of their missionary preaching all along the coast from Alaska io Central America. Our school .histories pass . this subject over with a vague mention of "the traces of Asiatic Influence upon the Indians of the Pacifio coast." Scientific men know that those influences were numerous and Important. This was. particularly true of Yucatan, where there are many remains of an oriental civili zation, which must have endured for centuries. Leif Erikson's discovery of New England was like a footprint on the sand. Time obliterated it ut terly. But the preaching of th$ Chinese Buddhist missionaries to the Indians of the Pacifio West per manently affected their lives and transformed their institutions. We are thus able to account for the mysterious Oriental element which the Spaniards found in the civiliza tions of Mexico and Peru." There will be a happy lot of work ers down at the Grant Smith-Porter shipyards on the day that the first honor blue flag of America is raised to commemorate the fact that their yard excelled all others in the output of wooden ships during May.. Ths first honor flag for, output of steel ships went to the Union Iron Works at San Francisco. It is a remarkable episode that all the honors for ship building came to the Pacific coast WAR AND COLLEGE MORALS Y ALE'S President Hadley announces to the world that the war has improved the morale of college students. It has done this by endowing their studies with a defi nite purpose. In time of peace the ordinary student 6av no particular reason why he should sweat and groan under a weary load of trigo nometry, chemistry, biology and the like. He was told, to be sure, that they would stuff his mind with "culture,' but he was not particularly lured by that prospect. Now, since the war began, he has found, as Presl dent Hadley says, that trigonometry means the basis for practical work in engineering and a thousand other fields. So it is with other studies, those which are worth anything. They en chain the youthful mind as soon as they are shown to be useful In the technic of life. This is true not only of college studies but of studies In the oommop schools as well. Teachers Commonly make the blun der of putting the cart before the horse in this matter. They first In sist upon teaching the theory of a branch and then, if they get time turn to the applications. If they were a trifle wiser they would reverse their procedure and begin with the applications. Bits of the theory would be introduced as they were needed to solve particular problems Thus the science would be built up in school, as it was In history, by the process of trial and discovery. President Hadley has noticed and published a circumstance which might be made of revolutionary iro portance in all our educational insti tutions from top to bottom. It seems a pity that so many of the great truths and useful practices which the war Is pushing to the front for the moment are likely to sink out of sight again as soon as peace is concluded. THE FERFECT STANDPATTER. EPRESENTATIVE FORDNEY of 1 Michigan is a shining Ugh 11 among the standpatters. He does not like the farm loan banks. Mr. Fordney hat re cently delivered himself of a speech in which he masses his objections to them. One of his objections is so weighty that Leslie's Weekly thinks it worth quoting in . an editorial "Farmers have been - able to borrow from the government -'Who "could ' not " borrow from banks f that Inew them .and the value of JLheir. property " So says Mr. Fordney. Leslie's Weekly shud ders with horror" over It . But we seem to remember that one of the main objects of the farm loan law was to provide financial relief for farmers who "could not borrow from banks." It was understood that the existing banks did business principally with city customers. They did not understand the farm situation. They did not court tho farmers business. They were not al lowed by law to make the long-time loans which could alone retrieve the farmer's prosperity. There was a gap In ur' financial arrangements which the existing banks could not fill. The farm loan banks were institut ed to meet the trouble. Now come Mr. Fordney and complains that they are meeting it. And he does - not mean to be funny. He imagines that he is performing a statesman like act. Let us get the case clearly in mind. The farm loan banks were instituted to make loans which the banks would not or could not make. Mr Fordney brings the farm loan banks to bar in congress because . they are making exactly such loans. He brings a criminal charge against them for doing wha they were designed to do. Mr. Fordney is not the only slates- man we have who is capable or making idiotic speeches. Nor is he the only man who ignorantly rails at the farm I6an banks. There Is not a money broker in the country, big or little, nor any spokesman fpr those brokers who has a good word for the farm loan banks. How could we expect them to? MAIN FEATURES ARE OUTLINED By Carl Smith. Correspondent Washington Staff of The Journal Washlnaton. June 29. The duration of the lease and the elements Of value to be paid for on recapture of a plant are the features upon which the main battle will be waged when congress takes up the waterpower bill Just ordered re ported from the special house committee of 18. which for some time has been wrestling with the problem. Fifty years as the term of leases to be granted by the government has long been practically accepted on all sides, but the big finan cial interests which ordinarily furnish the capital for such developments have raised the cry that they cannot finance power plants unless something further is done. They asked that something be written Into the bill to grant the original lessee the assurance of an extension of bis lease for at least 30 years If the gov ernment did not desire to acquire the plant at the end of 50 years. a The bill as reported makes no conces sion to these demands of the investment bankers. It authorises a permit for 50 years, and stops there. At the end of theS period the United States, upon two years notice, may take the plant for itself, may taae it for some other lessee, or may make a new grant to the original licensee upon such terms, and conditions as may be authorised under laws then existing. If the government takes the plant, the other Important point In dis pute arises': Upon what basis shall pay ment be made? The bill adopts the plan suggested by members of the president's cabinet, which defines payment to be made for "net investment" as interpreted in the Interstate commerce commission's classification of Investment In - steam railroads, with specified additons and subtractions. What the bill does In this respect may a m best be stated in the language of O. C. Merrill, chief engineer of the forest serv ice. who has made this explanation : "The net Investment as used eliminates entirely from the price to be paid any in creases In value due to lands owned by the license, any increase in value due to its water rights over and above what It may have paid to the local authorities for them. That Is, unearned Increment, socaiieo ts completely excluded from the price to be paid. On the other hand. the licensee does not have the price for hla properties reduced on account of accumulated depreciation, except as he has been able, through the period ot the license, to write off that deprecla tion out of earnings. In other words, it Is a 100 per cent Investment basis. Whatever money goes into a project of this kind has to come back from some source, it eitner has to como back In a capital sum or it has to come back in earnings. We provide that it shall come back, if the government takes It over as a capital sum, reduced by the amount that has been retired through earn ings." Representative Scott Ferris of Okla horn a. chairman of the public lands committee and author of waterpower bills in previous congresses, bearing his name, gave notice that he reserved tho right to submit a separate report on the net Investment section. He contends that it does not sufficiently protect the public Interest. Mr. Ferris has been ac cused of being an extremist on the side of safeguards in the past. He Is not fully satisfied with the present bill, and as before pointed out. the waterpower financial Interests are also disappointed as to some parts of the measure. The majority of the committee, however, which is headed by Sims of Tennessee, and includes Slnnott of Oregon and La Follette. of Washington among its me bers, are inclined to accept It each for himself complaining that it is not what h would like It to be. a a The principle of a commission of three cabinet officers to handle the leases meets general approval, and so does the plan of combining- in one bui and under one authority the development of water- power wherever It may be controlled by. the government whether on navigable streams, on the public lands, in forest reserves or In Indian reservations. The question of a. charge also has given little difficulty. The charge fs not de fined In any way except that it must be "reasonable." It Is to be fixed by the commission and the old phrase of say ing that It shaU be measured by the horsepower developed is abandoned. The former contentions of the state rights ad herents have mostly disappeared, except that the bill, fully recognises regulation of rates by state authority, and a harm less paragraph has been Inserted sar ins that the act shall not be construed to Interfere with state laws relating to the control, appropriation and use of water. Letters From the People. ICeausuniostions Bent to Tha Journal for pab frVt in this department should be written on ale ana side of the paper, ahonld mot exceed SOS words In lenetli and must be aiened by the writer, arfeee snail address la full ssost aceosBpejty tn easstitteUosvl, . V " - .-.:The Ballot Bos v Vancouver. Wash.. June 24. -To the Editor of The Journal Regarding that much mooted subject prophesy. It Is dif HYMN FOR INDEPENDENCE DAY LORD, the people.of the land In Thy presence humbly stand; . On this day, when Tbou didst free Men of old from tyranny. We, their children, bow to Thee. Help us, Lord, Mir only trust! We are helpless, we are dust! All our homes are red with blood; Long our grief we have withstood; Every lintel, each door-post. Drips, at tidinp from the host. With blood of some one lost. Help us, Lord, our only trust! We are helpless, we are dust! On ous. Nation's day of birth, 5 less Thy own lonf-favored earth t rre the soldier with Thy will! Aid their leaders with Thy skill! Let them hear Thy trumpet thrill! "Help us, Lord, our only trust! We are helpless, we are dust! Lord, we only fifht for peace. Fight that freedom epity increase. Give us back the peace of old. When the land with plenty rolled. And our banner awed the bold! Help us, Lord, our only trust! We are helpless, we are dust! In His name, who bravely bore Cross and crown begemmed with gore, By His last imtnortil groan, Ere He mounted to His throne. Make our sacred cause Thy own! Help us. Lord, our only trust! We are helpless, we are dust! Published In 1863 Author Unknown. JOURNAL MAN ABROAD By Fred At the and of a Derfact day. Mr. l.ockltj. Th Journal itff correspondent tn Franc, its him down and tails Journal readara ot tha man, man tliingi that entered into that dar perfectneaa. And that day was Mothers' dar; hence it was superperfect. ) Somewhere Jn France This is Moth ers' day Bunflay. May lz. it i uu. but I am going to finish my day with a brief account of how the day was cele brated here. In every hut In France spe cial services were held and a specially prepared Mothers' day booklet was given out Where 1 talked the Y. M. ?T A. hut was a bower of beauty. The hut was of rough lumber, thatched with woven straw. Extemporised vases stooa an about the room and on the writing tables. Thev were filled with French clover, deep red Vnd heavy headed; daisies, water lilies, wild pansies, violets and other wild flowers. I doubt if anyone in Fortiana has put in a more strenuous Sunday than I have. Last night I came here by auto! a two hours' ride through a beautiful country. We drove for miles along a road as straight as a yardstick. It is one of the famous mlltary roads made by Napoleon. We passed through numerous villages, through turpentine forests, past aairy farms and truck farms and everywhere. In spite of the war, there was thrift, order and beauty. I gave my talk on A Westerner's Im pressions of France." met a lot of west ern men and turned in, on an army cot well supplied with army blankets. Before supper I had met the secretary of the Foyer du Soldat at a nearby French camp. I made an appointment to moot him Sunday at 7 a. m.. so I was up and on the road this morning by 6, for a three or four mile walk. I had walked about three miles when an army truck loaded with, aviation officers overtook roe and gave me a lift to my destination. I found my friend on the aviation field. The evening before he had introduced me to a French pilot. The French machine was being, prepared for a flight. The pilot Invited me to take the place of the machine gunner, so I stepped in. It took me three quarters of an hour to walk to the field from the Red Triangle hut ficult to understand why any one versed in history places serious confi dence in it. It can be considered only as miraculous. Thus it is outside all bounds of human consideration. The ancient prophets were discredited during their own time and by their own people. They lost influence, prestige, and favor through the nonfulfillment of their predictions. Later prophets tried hard to explain why their predecessors had failed but explanation did not satisfy. Prophesy lost caste and was succeeded by apocalypses, which through vague ness, ambiguity and aJlegorlal veiling of fered a much safer shelter. Again the apocalypse Is rational In degree as it embodies some sense and ap preciation of natural evolution. If we today could awaken and feel that we are the people, and that the voice of the people is the voice of God. we would realize that we are God's prophets who ordain future events through an oracle known as the ballot box. AMOS. Lost Liberty Bond Portland. June ZS. To the Editor of The Journal Please Inform me through The Journal how to recover in case a Liberty bond Is lost or stolen. A? OLD SUBSCRIBER. If a reels tared bond, report loss r theft to the treasury department tbrauah any local bank tor adjustment; If a coupon bond, there ts so redress. 1 swv w. s. a. PERSONAL MENTION Seid Back Entertains At the Multnomah Saturday night. Seid Back. Chinese attomev of Port land, entertained a number of Chinese students who are returning to their homos'' In San Francisco and Oakland after studying in colleges and universi ties of the Northwest during the past school year. e Shsngle Here From Wrsngell R. o. Sbangle of Wrangell, Alaska, is registered at the New Perkins. Mr. Shangle is most optimistic regarding the outlook In the northern territory and expresses the belief that the devel opment of Alaska has not yet pro gressed to a degree that begins to In dicate the possibilities of the country. Development of coal mines, cattle-raisins; and agriculture are the most press ing needs, he says. . Dry Weather in Benton According to F, S. Appelman. agent of the Oregon Electric road at Corvallia, crops and pasturage In that section are suffering from drouth. Many ranchers of that vicinity are selling their herds on account of the poor pasturage, says Mr. Appelman, and gardens are ruined by aphis. ... At the Portland over tho week end is a party of Calif or nlans from Pinole, who are spending a part of the summer In the Northwest. They are Mrs. E. M. Downer and son. E. M. Downer Jr., and Mrs. I. N. Gates. Mark A. Fullerton, Justice of the su preme oourt of the state of Washington. Is at- the Benson over Sunday. Frank H. Shepherd of Corvallls, an instructor at the Oregon Agricultural college, la at the Imperial while giv ing a course in military training at the Benson Polytechnic high school and 'the training camp there. . - . ,( ' Frank1 Deckeback Jr. and Frank.: J.' Chapman of Salem, OrP are guests where I had spent the night. It took a little less than three minutes to go back. As we emerged from the edge of a cloud out popped another airplane. It shone In the morning sunlight like a silver swallow. I enjoyed my ride so greatly that Ute pilot took me for a half hour's ride, and what he did to show off the paces of his aerial steed was a plenty. t At 8 o'clock I was eating breakfast at the French Y. M. C. A. From there I went to a nearby hydroplane station, and at 9 o'clock o a little later, I was visiting the school of aerial gunnery and proving that a westerner can shoot ac curately with a Lewie machine gun. At 11 a. in. I was addressina a large group of soldiers on the theme of the day "Mothers' day. My text was Kipling's poem. "Mother o' Mine." After lunch I went around and got acquainted with a lot .of the soldiers I had talked to, and found them a splen did group of men. One of the men told me the secret of why the soldiers listen to me so patiently. It ia because I am one of them, that I am a good shot with a rifle or a machine gun, that I will ride a camion or an airplane to keep an ap pointment and that when I sit down with them at mess I can stow away as much army grub as any of them. Some of the men who fall to be invited to re turn to talk to the soldiers are "big guns" and have reputations as orators, but they look down to the men patron ise them and it doesn't go. They feel that because they can sign "B. A." after their names they are superior to the com mon run of humanity. I fail to under stand how any civilian, no matter how much of a big gun he is at home, can put on superior airs over soldiers, who are willing to risk all they have their Uvea, - At about ip.ro. 1 got aboard a private railroad called the "Galloping; Goose" and went to a smalt nearby village, where I met a group of soldiers. I caught a train from there and reached base headquarters and took care of my mall, and now I feel that I have earned a night's rest, having traveled during the day afoot, by army truck, toy airplane, by private railroad, on the government rail road and by street car. . at the Oregon hotel, where staying over the week end. they are Charles Hun lock, one of the desk clerks at the Multnomah hotel, leaves Monday for Vancouver barracks. Wash., where he will enter the army. S. R. Powers a well-known farmer of the Walla Walla district. Is at the Ore gon hotel while In Portland for a few days, II. W. Aldrlch, a lumberman of Mill City, Or., is staying at the Benson while visiting In Portland. Dr. and Mrs. 01. Hallman of Taft. Or., are among the week-end guests registered at the Imperial. Mrs. M. Davenport Engberg of Bell- ingham, accompanied by her two chll dren. is Benson. a guest Over Sunday at the Peter Wise of Bingham. Wash, is at the New Perkins hotel. Mr. Wise Is in Portland on a brief business trip. L. Nelson of. Harlan, Iowa, is reg istered at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thurman of Washington. D. C. are spending a few days In Portland. They are registered at the Multnomah. Frank J. Jones of Baker, a well known Eastern Oregon business man. Is among the guests registered at the New .Perkins. Charles E. Heard of Pendleton, Or., an auto dealer o'f the Round-Up city, is stopping at the Bensdn. H. Losler was a Norton ia hotel visitor from Camp Fremont durtnr the week. O. B. Pershing of Albany Is at the Cornelias on a brief business and pleas ure trip to Portland. Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Hice of Medford. .H1 r wniie ur. nice iooks attar DUSiness ar- fairs In the city Dr. F. L. Fleebert of Tacoma la among the guests of the Oregon hotel at the week-end. V. Myrick is a Pendleton visitor at the Carlton hotel. Jack McNeff of Yakima. Wash., Is registered at the Cornelius. R. Scott Weaver, hotel man of Rose burg, Or.. Is a guest at the Benson. J. C. Burton of Pendleton Is among the Oregon's guests. Walter Thoma of Falls City, Or., is at the New Perkins. H. M. Relff of Baker. Or.. Is at the MultnomaVh for a few days. Lily W. Anderson of The Dalles Is stopping at the Cornellua H. D. Kipper of Seattle was down during the week, quartered at the N'or tonls. John W. McDonald Jr. of Astoria is at the Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stead of Harlan Iowa, are guests at the Carlton. Frank J. Jones of Baker ia at the New Perkins while in Portland. Mrs. J. James of Eugene is spending a few days at the Portland hotel. J. P. Smith of Silver-ton is registered among the gueets at the Imperial. R. W. York of Boise. Idaho, Is stopping at the Cornelius. . Axel Etickson of Clatskanie, Or.," Is a guest at the New Perk In a a Melly of Seattle is staying at the Oregon. John Hedberg of Amity, Or., ts a New rerklns guest. Dr. J. H. Lssatnr of La Center. Wash., is at the Imperial. Among tha Oregon's guests Is A. W. Hoose of Oakland. CaL Mr. and Mrs. B H. Lennox of Tacoma are at the Carlton. " L Ok Snyder and O. V. Snyder of Clats kanie,. Or., are gueets at the Cornelius, staying over Sunday in Portland. - Lockley Ragtail and Bobtail 8toriee From Everywhere" A rRIEND of both men. says '"Oirard" " In the Philadelphia ledger, tells me nw aiory: wuuam H. fags, now our ambassador In England, said to Edward dok some years ago : "Do you ever write a letter to a man who does a consptcu- ously meritorious thing V On the spot . u,r emerea into a compact to try it. At a famous New York church Mr. Bole heard a sermon that stirred him. He ' promptly wrote to the pastor, telling him so. About six months later he went to ? the same church again. An official met nfm n ...... phiar- "Tea.- "Well. sir. I want to tell you about the letter you wrote to our. pastor. As it happened, it reached htm on a "blue Monday He -was sitting in his study discouraged. He had almost reaohed the conclusion that his ministry ' was a failure. Your letter came and It changed not merely his day but his de- cision. It gave him a new heart of grace to go on.? Said the man who told me the story: "Both Mr. Page and Mr. Bok have de rived Incalculable happiness from their plan The results have more than Jus tified it. Never frown down a good im pulse. If you fail to act on It at once, It may tantalise you for months." Pstrlolie Prrsuaioa "They say that money talks." "That's right. Mine has Just per suaded me to exchange It for a Liberty bond." Psychological Victory An Interesting explanation of i ft. moua Canadian victory la given by Howard Wheeler, who says: That same day. as we were tramp ing over the road we had come, I' glanced back at Vtmy ridge with Its monument on top to speak of the hero ism of the Canadian troops, that cap tured It. It seemed Incredible, a mira cle, that human flesh and blood could mount those steep, churned slopes and ! drive an enemy from defenses con- i structed painstakingly and considered ' Impregnable. ; "When we reached our autos I asked I the British officer about this. "When all is said and done and all the figures ! are down. he said. It will be found I that Vlmy ridge was captured with as- i tonishlngly small loss to the British. You see,' he said with a smile, 'it was what you might call a psychological victory. Each day the British guns set down a terrific barrage on the ridge. Ten minutes each day. That was all. Ten minutes' barrage and no attack. Each day. of course, the Germans ex pected an attack. But It didn't come. Then on the eleventh day, the 10 min utes' barrage, and when it llftad there were the Canadians walking up Vlmy ridge. Frits offered but a compara tively feeble resistance.' " Great Lurk "Smith Is a lucky man," said Brown. "He certainly Is," agreed Jones. "He has rsised six daughters and he doesn't have to support even one of his sons-in-law." Surprising the Missus A minister from the trenches was re counting some of his experiences to a party of friends and told of a wounded Irishman whom he found in a deep state of dejection. Upon being asked If he would like to dictate a letter home, his face brightened some and he assented. Immediately the minister brought writ ing materials to his bedside snd signi fied his Intention to take down the let- ' ter. He waited a few moments, but Tim appeared Incapable of speech, so the minister said: "Come, come, my good man; I haven't very much time. We must make a start. What shall I say?" But Tim remained tonguetted. "Shall I begin 'My dear wlfer "Tls.' 'assented Tim. grimly, "put that' down. That'll amuse her." The Way it Felt Dentist You say this tooth has never been worked on before. That's queer, far I find small flakes of gold on my Instrument. Victim You have struck my back collar button. I guess. One Reason "Why are you opposed to your wife's voting V "Because, judging from her house cleaning orgies, she will go in for too many sweeping reforms." Some Hookey Business When Mike Flaherty abandoned South Boston for Lynn and hired a cottage with a bit of back yard the first thing he did was to -hurry back to the Hub of the universe, says Everybody's, and purchase a monkey. "Dlvll a wurrd" of his scheme would he disclose to his old cronies in Boston. But afterward he let out: itv . fit,, tvt. T j.fclmJI eViA nutnlr j to atlck In me y alr-rrd, and tie coal thrains do be passin' all day ferninst. and on Iv'ry carrr do be a brakeman. In one walk, begorra, I had two tons of coal In me cellar, and the monk never wanst hit" , The Initial Misstep . First Burglar What led yer to take , up dls business. Bill? Second Burglar Try In to hook pen nies outer me bank when I was a kid. Natural Suggestion I ran over in my new auto in half an hour." "Over how many?" A Prayer O God of ricbt. to The today We ran ia aw oar ferreat prayer! Grant etetary nnto the smea Who tight for freedom oeet Ovare. ; " B,rr pTw jrtn. zx' i Of 1'ruamJan eTrraaBy sad crae And to areas a plundered land. Today we aeek Thee ia tha fkhtV Ttay mtsnty ana of wrath ma da vara; Lord God of hosts. Thy cane wdem And rtfbt tha w rent I This t our prays., James W. Wise of tha Viftlaata. L'ncle Jeff tsnow Ssys: Of course we all want bigger payrolls in Oregon, and Al G. Clark, who Is pushin' this Idee most determined, has It doped out about straight enough when he tells us the place to spend your'pay roll Is in the place you live and -want It to be bigger. One of these days Al will be teUIn' us the whole truth, and that is that If you want bigger and better payrolls in Oregon, quit finln" folks for settln' up factories and homes, and get: rid of the land spec" la tor, which spites 10 times more'n he gits, by drivin' off peo ple that wants to start payrolls la Oregon. Journal Journeys One Thousand Mile Tour Full of Scenic Interest Oregon's two most scenic routes, tha -Columbia river highway and the road to Crater Lake may be included In one au- '' tomoblie ' tour of approximately lOOOL.1' miles.' ---. . You may' go via the Columbia river C highway via The Dalles and Bend and f return by .way of Medford and the Pa cifio highway or vice versa. If a shorter v trip is desired yon can sloop over the - ' McKensle pass road. The attractions of any rout ara too numerous to mention. -Opportunity is given to u and study both Eastern and Western Oregon which - siret uksliit nnuKOk . mar iurrru v , - . . . tion regarding routes, rates of fare, time " schedules and other detail,-call on or address, "Travel Bureau, 'Journal BusJ- w i iice. - - aniormatton tree. m 1.