8 'iii u:u:co: , sundry., jou;;al. i-OiiTLAii a, cuzav . ug&UmG, sli-tember .22. , ma.. I; 1 mi 5 & ITKWSFXm ! O. . JACKSON .mbbsbar j ; JrubUshad erary day, ettoreoos iend I Mpt Bandar efternoon), at The Joeroal Build I Inc. Broadway w4 IssabJU steerta, Portland. 1 ?f. urates. a-.ntA t ha tuatafftea At Portland. OfSSOn. ( or UumMm thrown the null as second ;l IllM MUM - s i :.TXJEPHONM Main 7178; Home. A-01. ir:T All dmirtMti rasehed by 0mm number. X ri Tad the apmtof what dapertawrit yea i . TCIRKIO! ADVEBTIBINO BEPBE8ENTATIVE Bonjamla Kaotnor Co.. Brunswick BnUdtnc, Ti S25 ruth Ttniai Mew Torfc; 900 Mailar F BnOdina ChJeaao. .- ' rg ubssrrnuos tnn by suu ta Orafos Md Wmd- . t 1 lnrton: DAILY (MOHXINO na yew ., OB AFTEBSOOX) i Oh month. -,!. -1 mUWDAT 'On rwr.....HH t One swath. . . . Jt ZpASLT (XOKXCtO Oft AfTCBNOOX) AMD T ' arrwrviT iT-Ase ya,..i.T.60 I On Month .'.... . The doctrine that rectifies tba eotuciaoo. perlflea Um hrt tod producss lor, to God ad .man, is oeeassarily true, wheth.r men can comprehend all its depths and relations Of not. If it destroy sin, and makes happi ness crow oat of right living and right loving, it is the truth of God. J. B. Walker. OREGON FIRST IT iHE first ship built in America of the now widely popular motor ship type was designed and con structed at St. Helens, Oregon. It was designed by the McCormick z t 1 11 " " 1 ' " ' " lite , Company, owners of the St. Helens Shipbuilding plant. The vessel was .: we uty or Portland. Her keel was . . laid and she was launched during 1915. y. I At the same time she was some - U thing new In the marine world. There 5 & Were shipping men who pooh poohed c ,t her design. They predicted that she '.. i would be a failure. But the McCor- i j mlcks are neither inexperienced nor ' ' timid. They built the City of Port- r j land, and since she was launched ( hundreds of her type have been built .. ! in America. ' Lj. Right after we entered the war, I the ty of Portland was taken over by 'the government, and used as a general cargo carrier on the Atlantic m coast. Last month she was released . by the government and she is now to ,.' ;2 go to the McCormlcks and will by A them be put in the lumber trade on iv the Paclfie coast. On her last trip I Under government operation she car- tied a cargo of coal from the Atlan 11 tic coast to San Diego. 1'! The Allard, a product of the Mc iCormick yards, is a twin ship of the I' P.itv nt Unrt laivH She too, was taken iTfover by the government She is now in use on the Atlantic coast as a seneral rnrffn rnrrlsr Snmaftmaa fghG carries a cargo of mahogany from jjCentral America for airplane propel- lers. A third ship of the same type built by the McCormicks is the Citv ; 1 of St. Helens. She was sold on pri- .; i vate account to French interests op- eratlng as an American corporation She is now in the Pacific trade and 'I at last accounts was on a voyage irom ine orient to San Francisco. i ft no muviui mica, juru was me nrsi f shipbuilding enterprise established In the Columbia river district, ex ) cepting, of course, the pioneer ship i1! building which long ago disappeared. Construction of that plant was be gun in May, 1911. The first vessel built'was the Mult 1 nomah, now in the lumber trade on Mhe coast. Others were the Merced, wrecked off the California coast, thi & Celilo,' Ihe Wapama, the Wahkeena Mnd the E.H. Meyer. All are in tho LPacIflo coast trade except the Merced. )t One to three of the McCormick j built, owned and operated vessels enter the Columb'a river every week. 1 They carry general cargo from San Francisco to Portland and are loaded v.for the return trip with lumber ??from the McCormlok mills. They are J; fitted as passenger carriers and carry heavy freight cargoes and full pas- laatlA'AI Herd TVt aQ.a nolo aucj uaio ia&iTCUgv- ( accommodations' for 65 first" cabin, and accommodations are usually filled a week in advance. The McCoj-mick plant is a four way yard. It is now completing a I tvne. As soon as thest ar rtallvarai . I the ways will be prepared for build - ying the new. 5000-ton ships , approved f by the government and known in : the shipping world as the Columbi i river type. i In addition to the-ahip yard, the McCormicks operate two saw mills. j uuo wiiu m cayaoiiy oi zuu.uuu ana h I the other 100,000 feet dally. The i' v,market for the output is San Fran I: y fclsco. Utah and other coast . noints. It Is one t of the 'blgentertrles of Ortgon. - 1 " '"- . v i A creosote clant. .th' bntv An nt lev r r -' . , 1 importance In the . Northwest, is ,t i uvwu ; wvumuins SbHtltf, t Mhe war, 16,00000 feet of ereosoted . 1 tii.a w.ni 'ahtnnM frrtm - tha e . - - , r - wm tmw w Helen plant . to , India, where - th4 . ft. a a a m i. . a ... . . f -Avnue ,v am . eats. ud ' railroad ties f? Mimost asfast.astthey. arelald.- it, f however, leaves Vthe cfeosptedr tie .', r untouched.' " 1 1 No oil. is obtainable now for the v r.ereosotlng process, and the 'industry ..Ms at , a' stands tilL' For a time after t t we entered the war, ' oil was obtain t able ; from ; Japani ' but evenj that source of supply has been cut oft by lack of ships. ; - - - It Is a: certainty that the Industry will develop Into Urge proportion after the war; Many of the big railroads hart learned the value or ereosoted ties in desert ' sections, while? ereosoted planking in wooden ships, is a building requirement - 'The origination by the McCbraicks of the motor ship type of vessel Is another example of western enter prise. It is not the first Instance in which that kind of thing has hap pened on the Pacific coast. The first three masted, the first four-masted and the first five-masted: schooner and the first;, steam;; schooner ia America were all designed and built by the late A. M. Simpson at Coos Bay. The ship - from which, the Ferris type "was designed was orig inated and built at : the Kruse A Banks yard $ Coo Bay.' These examples of the shipbuilding instinct, added to the record the Oregon and Washington districts have - made in building government ships, are im portant and encouraging evidences of the bent of the western mind for maritime achievement. THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS r HE propaganda for the League of Nations to keep the peace of the world has proceeded so fa? that it begins to excite opposi tion. Hillaire Belloo has called it "dangerous" and "impossible" in an English weekly, The New Witness, This is encouraging. "When a move ment gets to the point where re actionaries call it bad names ita future is bright The flatulent species of propaganda which excite. nobody's opposition?, never marches very, far orwins many victories. To compensate for , the growing irritation of its critics the League of Nations has been approved by a significant body of men, the National Fraternal Congress of America. The congress met at Philadelphia early in September. It represents the fra ternal ideas of 20,000,000 Americans, The fraternal orders include among their members a considerable pro portion of our best, most thrifty and intelligent citizens. They are concerned with their own welfare and the welfare of the world. Their minds work Intelligently. Their consciences are enlightened. The fraternal congress at Philadelphia met in Independence Hall, the birthplace of modern freedom. Their proceed ings were in harmony with thei- surroundings. In the course of its work, the Con gress conducted a "Liberty Sing, which was so interesting that 50,000 people gathered to . listen. When the delegates finished theic singing they adopted a resolution which says, "We stand, for a perma nent world agreement and a league of nations, justice through an in ternational court and an international council of conciliation." The' resolution 'goes on to say that the fraternal orders of the world should be utilized to help organize the league and to promote its ob ject A resolution of this kind passed by the representatives of 20,- 000,000 free Americans cornea near being the voice of the united nation A NOBLE THOUGHT 0 NE of the weightiest current suggestions touching upon the subject of the League to Enforce Peaee appeared in the New Re public the other day. It does not pertain to the formation of the league but to its work after it has been formed. It deals with the question of the immense debts which the belliger ent nations have contracted, and which must. grow greater' month by month as long as the war lasts Shall each nation pay its own debts, or shall they be pooled and made a common charge upon the league of nations? ' We must consider that each of the allied countries is, -fiffhtimt for all the" rest. lt sacrifices are not 'sel f ish. They are ' for the "common benefit. France, for example, has suffered more than any other allied country. It stopped the Prussian hordes long enough for Great Britain and the United States to bring up their forces. As a matter of sobe fact France saved us all from destruction. Shall France be, left to pay for It without help? OUR HARBOR T HE excerpt from Governor West's letter published In Friday' Journal presents an instructive views of England's internal trans portation problem. It is astonish ingly like our own. Mr. West writes from London. He remarks that be fore the era of railroads England' internal freight carrying was dons through ca&als. When the railroads came Into power they took control of the canals and stifled them, just as they did in ? the 'United States. But here they made the job complete oy stining the. rlvert too. The consequence - was Identical in the two countries. Long before the war eame on the internal transporta tion systems were evidently unequal to their task. They gave, poor, alow and Inordinately -wasteful service. With the advent "of the war they : frankly broke down and th govern ment had to t take;; them-Iover for renovation. " :-. Railroads alone, no matter how well - conducted, cannot "take care of the . internal carrying business of a civilized and populous country. Slow and heavy ' goods must bo carried by water or there will be increasing delay, and congestion. Mr. West says ; that England - la about' to revive her abandoned canal. We must revive ours," build new ones, and put our , rivers in condi tion to be used. ' . . ' ' Portland's, harbor, difficulties, as Mr. West remarks,' ' are . trlfUng in comparison with those of many European citie&v particularly Lon don.v London like, PortUfid, la an inland eityr ItsMmmense harbor is more artificial than natural. But London has had for centuries the benefit of publio spirit In Its citizens. Sometime Portland will enjpy 4 the sanie3 wholesome stimulus; "-but 'as yet we know very little about It TEACHERS' WAGES A MEMORANDUM from the com missioner of education, Dr. P. Hp. daxton, i of Interest in con neetion with the small entering class at - the Monmouth and , other normal 'schools thlsjfalL vDr.: Clax- ton urge highk school graduates, both boys and girls, to enter the various normal schools and thus prepare themselves to become ex pert teachers. r He points out that many old teachers are going s Into other call ings, where the pf is better. He seems to fear that this movement will continue after the war, so that the teaching force of the . country will be more and more depleted. Unless new recruits prepare them selves to enter the teaching profes sion the outlook for our publio schools is rather dark. Dr. Claxton does not, in the mem orandum to which we refer, hold out much hope of any speedy increase of teachers' salaries. He only - re marks that "unless salaries should be increased far beyond the present average," teachers will continue to flock Into better paid vocations. What is the use then of urging high school graduates to prepare themselves for teaching? Are they likely to wish to enteri profession which everybody else is deserting because it is underpaid? Our high school graduates must naturally be expected to, choose callings where the v remuneration bears some just relation to the time and effort they expend. Sacrifice is noble thing when there Is reason for it, but there appears to be no sound reason why any capable young man or woman should teach school for half pay. The country is rich enough to pay its teachers fair salaries. It is com monly conceded that their work I of fundamental importance. An ig norant democracy is bound to go to wreck on the rocks. Our teachers are, in a true sense, the saviors of the nation, and we pay them as if they were less serviceable than hod-i carriers. Until we can make up our minds 1 to render unto the schoolma'am a just wage for the service she does we ought to blush at the thought of urging ingenious youth to take up the teacher's calling. t DWINDLING DOLLARS E VERYBODY wants money but few care to read about it, un less in the pages of a novel. Learned works on money are the dryest on the globe. They fairly crackle with their inourab! desiccation. Every college graduate has been taught something about money. The principal thing he learns Is that gold is the divinely chosen "standard of value." It was so chosen because its own value never fluctuates. It is indestructible, port able and so on. The undeniable fact that the value of gold is high today and low tomorrow does not faze him. Teachers are not the only people who know all about money by In spiration. The banker is sometimes equally favored. When a roan opens a bank he receives a divine afflatu which instantaneously reveals to him the innermost secrets of gold, paper, bonds and everything of that sort- His situation is like that of a politician who gets himself elected to an office 'whose duties require expert knowledge. The expert knowledge descends upon . him from the sky the moment he takes his oath .of office. ' No matter how Ig norant lie was the moment before The moment afterward he knows everything knowable. Professor Irving Fisher of Yale has published a pamphlet on money. It elaborates a plan he has for stabilis ing the dollar. His idea is that our standard of value ought to life4 up to its professions, it ought not to fluctuate any. more outside college. walls than it does in orthodox text books. Dr. Fisher explains the curi ous mental twist by means of which we make ourselves believe , that gold does' hot fluctuate In value. An ounce of gold will always buy an ounce of gold. Wonderful, is it not? It is Juat a , wonderful that two and two make four. v To tell whether gold fluctuate or not yon must not eompare gold with gold. You must compare gold with , other : commodities. If one dollar would pay for a bushel at wheat ten : year ago and It ' costs two . dollars today something has fluctuated. Is It the gold or the wheat? ;It may be both, To find out, the exact truth we must 'ex amine , other "commodities.- . J Has the price "of beef ; gone up with that of wheat? Have woolen goods, cotton, lumber,' ironware, pea nuts, and Cgs all grown dearer? If they have, then, if our 1 minds are logical, we cannot escape, the conclu sion that money ,ls cheaper than it was. ''---' - - . 'All our ? dollart " ara V really gold dollars because " we can exchange them - for gold at the. treasury. Therefore, when we . say that the dollar has grown' cheaper, we mean that gold has grown xheaper Tin interesting kernel of this reasoning Is that money based on gold fluctu ates in valued precisely like money based "on nothing." We. tquote this pnrase rrom ine banters. Tney say that money based on the govern ment s taxing power is based "on nothing." The taxing power forms an admirably stable basis for, bonds and on the bonds we may securely base money. But : If the money it self is planked squarely down on the taxing power the very mischief will be to pay. -',. '."-.;; Dr. Irving ; Fisher explains the rising cost of living by the simpls formula that money Is. growing cheaper. !rAj dollar today ' does - net mean v the; same thing, as a foliar J ten years ago." means only half as much. Often It means less than half. A workman who receives elg&l dollars a day In ,1918 Jean buy no more with it than he could with four dollars In 1900, Wages are worth only what they wife buy la the way of food, elothinf, shelter. To estimate them merely in money is often to mock at the man who toils. Dr. Fisher contends that the fall ing value of money explains in part the rising cost of living. With fall ing money, wages also continually fall. Nothing but an everlasting effort on the part of the unions keeps them at a living figure. At the same, time fixed incomes fall. For that there Is no remedy. The family which depends on invested money for its income cannot raise the rate of interest by joining a union. It must cut down expenses as the value of money shrinks. Nor do -salaries" go up as the value of money goea down. The respectable middle class who live on investments . and salaries are the greatest sufferers from fluctuating money. Dr. Fisher's remedy for high prices is simple. He would clip the weight of the gold dollar as its value falls If a gold dollar is worth only half as much as it was ten years ago make it half as big as it was then. The plan seems to be approved by almost every student of finance in the country. So it must be excel lent But it appears that prices must rise as long as the war in duces inflation. IN THE BALKANS T HE combined French and Serb force appears to be doing excel lent work in the Balkans. It has put -.i the Bulgars to fllgtif ana -gives oj?t premise that it will keep them on the run for some time Like their ally, the kaiser, the Bui gars are learning that war is some a 1 f 1 uiing more man a picnic. They plunged into the fray with immense exuberance. Their poets bubbled over with war' songs which exhorted the manly Bulgar youth V rape women and then murder them. with many another flower of poesy hardly fit to print We dare say the subjects of the Machiavellian Kin Ferdinand have outdone the Ger mans in atrocities. Now the tide has turned and theio own villages are feeling the scourge of the Invade By nature the Bul gars are a fine people, but the war has made fiends of them, as it has of the Germans. The world Is weary of such trans formations. It is resolved to mako this war the last that shall crimson the pages of history. To that end it must be fought to a complete finish. No halfway victory will suffice. EDUCATING THE DRAFTEES R" EADER3 must have noticed with Interest what the government is doing with the drafted boys of 18. It is not going to ship all of them to thefront Immediately. It lsK dn the contrary, preparing to send a great many of them to .col lege for education in subjects con nected with war. Their usefulness will thus be increased a dozen times over. The government pays all their col lege-expenses. The New Republic hints that the gain would be sub stantial if tne government should keep up the practice of educating large numbers of promising boys when the war is over. If universal military training could be made to mean A sound education Oft both mind and body who would object, to it? It is the military training which kills the mind that so many fear. ' . 1 The agricultural college have beet) giving young men, and women, too, just this kind of an education for years. Military training is provided under competent federal army off! cert , -v The boys -- back straighten, their " shoulders acquire s. military breadth. They become alert, obedl ent, capable of team work. " But at the same time they acquire mental power. There Is a goosestep that kill the mind. : There ' Is an education n fitness, - obedience and , alertness that quicken the .mind. : The Germans have had the former and-, we e4 the i consequences. i- The agriculturil colleges f have , been giving all tlw latter and the country has. been leavened ,with their graduates. They are capable, practical, commanding men. and - women. We -need - more of them,, .r-x ' . Wilsons new;; statecraft First to Perceive ' Rights of Both Employer and .Employe. From tha -Washington Timet -. -Woodrow .Wilson ha Invented, In him- eelf. a new American statemnjuianip. We bad public men whom their adversaria called dcmiexoa-ues. They bubbled ever wita yrrjrathy . for the -worklnaT man. The anion iru atwiay right, the em ployer always wrtmtv we trad, other' public meA-aad they are -the big majority wboee ayinpethy was all tor the corporation, the power xtu employer, nieir aaveraariee called them tool of the plutocrats. la their opinion capital waa always right and labor always wrong. - , . Now comes Wbodrow Wilson. Observe him at workv The Smith Wesson Re volver company, big employers of labor, would not permit unionism In its Blent. lis worsmen were eompeuea to apree not to join the union. The president says. Tbs Smith Wesson oonmanr has flaunted the decisions of the labor board." The government, by his order, takes over the Plant, will work It. Any Bmlth Wesson gentlemen between It and 45 that nave been exempt from the arart jMcauss they were do mar sovern ment work will doubtless have a chance to use their revolvers In the trenches. Sk aV sS Union mechanics at Brtdreport, mak- Iner Weft. nana for anldlara. want an atrtka. rerusinr to accept the .war board deci sion. The president tells them bluntlyi "You are the best paid of the whole body of workers affected, and least entitled to press a further Increase of wagee." The president cares no more for. the domin ating ariatooracy of union labor than for the aristocracy of corporation finance. He tells the striking union men that If they do not ao to work at once they will be kept out of ail other government work except employment in the trenches, which will be riven to them promptly. that they may learn at first hand the im portance of the war. a - Within 24 hours Woodrow Wilson shows the publio that union labor and organised capital look exactly alike to him when they don V behave. This coun try needed just such a president and will need him for some time to come until the end of 1924. at least He would not thank anybody for sar ins' so. But if the people of this coun try understand the national Interest they will keep at Washington during the reconstruction period after the war and for another full presidential term the man who shows himself able to deal with the great problem that will follow the war, based on capitaUstic greed and labor discontent and difficulty. a The importance of keeping- labor and capital balanced, working honestly and fairly, is well illustrated for the aver age man in Engineering and Contracting, published In Chicago. These facts Illus trate strikingly the results obtainable with capital and labor cooperating, a at present m the railroad ayatem of the United 8ttes Here W, Q. McAdoo, director of rail road of the government adds more than 1200,000,000 per year to the pay roll of railroad worker by one single order. Even with this tncresae of wages it coats about half a cent to haul a ton of freight one mile, on an American rail road. Letters From the People ( OoaaraanicarJoiia scat to Tha Journal for paa licstion is- this .dspartaeat should b writtaa on only oec sids ot the Mm. should Rot axeaad IOO words: iabngtb and most ha slgaad by tha wrttT, whosa snu ddrat la. lull must secoa,- pany fiia contribution. J Thinks Little of Lawyers Portland. Sept. 17. To the Editor of The Journal I note with a great deal of interest '-the nqn-eseentlal industriee which are mentioned in the Evening Tel egram of this date. Now I have never questioned the advisability of even com pelling the strong to bear the infirm ities of the weak, but I emphatically do not believe in any class being permitted to ride while this is being done. I have In mind lawyers as chief among those non-essential incumbrances which were not mentioned, who. in my experience and observation, are absolutely bogus up to about 60 per cent, so far as any real good to society is concerned. But I presume there is a psychologi cal necessity in the minds of some that there should be a class mentally quali fied to skim the cream off the "physi cal workman's labors" and feed the whey to his children, that the fear of God might be put Into his beart- We are a united nation, and God for bid that I should say ought to occasion any dissension, but I do want justice for myself, and every fellow creature. I see thegreat lawyer fraternity have begun to advertise the great work they are doing In this time of real need and human Buffering. Who shall advertise for the individual who has done his duty well, even to the last drop of blood in his veins? He doesnt need it! wait and sec CLARENCE J. CROOK. Rye, to Utilize Acres Portland, Sept. 18. To the Editor of The Journal I was greatly Interested in the editorial of The Journal of the 17th. "UtUize Every Acre." and heartily indorse the idea I was surprised, how ever, that no mention was made of rye for fall seeding. This cereal, which ranks next to wheat as a bread grain. will grow a profitable crop on land not adapted for wheat. There are thou sands of acres of idle land in Oregon that could be utilized for rye produc tion that is not adapted for wheat. Sow every acre of winter wheat pes slble where winter wheat can be grown. but add thereto the many acres where rye eaa be profitably grown. thus '"utilising every acTe" Instead of only these adapted to wheat. Every pound of rye that was available for ex port was taken by our allies last year over 15,000,000 bushels; for which they paid over S30.000.000 and were glad to get It. IT every acre in Oregon had been utilised, this ould have been in creased several million bushela If it Is the patriotic duty of housewives to use "substitutes" ana conserve wheat flour, why not a patriotic duty to stow rr on land that will not grow wheat, bat will 17 y FARMER. PERSONAL MENTION Will Hake Home Here Dr. and Bin. J. Lawrence Hill, long resident of .Medford, have arrivedUin Portland to make their homo at the Wheaidon annex. Their son., A. J. Hill, Is general superintendent of the govern ment -sprues camp at Newport Another son, U B. HUl or Billings, Mont, ex pact soon to move here. Dr. Hill has participated In many civic enterprises at Medfprd and expect to extend his actiy. itles along like Unas here. . , ! Spend' Week-; End 'Her A ' Captain and Mrs. CTB. Cranahon asA Uson, Dr.'Xjaura Ewer- and Ralph Gil bert ox A tons are among the weekend guests in : Portland. , They: are vregls- lerea si me Mwinoman. - . On, Her Way .Home Mrs. Robert M. Howard of Beavertoa Or, is at the Benson, with Mrs. W. O. Hagar ot at. Ixuia who has been If ra Howard' guest daring the summer and : THE KING OF From the Book of HE who smote the people in wrath with a continual stroke, he that ruled - 4ri nattnnc In . !. ........ 4. .-a Vl J...tV The whole -earth is at rest, and Is quiets ica, me xu- trees rejoice at tnee, and "on k uia aown, no ieiier is come up against us. Heu. from 'beneath Is moved for thee to meet thee at thy coming; ft siirrcxn up mraeta lor thee, even all the chief ones of the earth; It hath raised un from their thnrtn all h Vtn Xf ihs nttlniiL All they shall speak and sy unto thee, Art thou become like unto no Thy pomp ts brought down to the grave, and the noise of thy viols; the wunu u. inreaa unaer tu ni How art thoa fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of "the morning! How -.- art. thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nationsl ror thou but said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, 1 will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount ox me congregation, in tne smes 01 the north. I will ascend above the heights of the clouds: I will be like the Most High, Yet thou Shalt be brourht down to helL to the sides of the nit - They that see thee shall narrowly look . S) a a s. a . . is mis tne man xnat maae tne kingdoms i That made the world as a wilderness, ppcaca not me nouse ox nis prisonersr All the kings of the nations, even all of them, lie in glory, every one in bis own house But thou art cast oat of thy grave like raiment of those that are slain, down to the stones of the nit: Thou shjdt not be Joined with them In burial, because thou hast destroyed thy land, and slain thy people: the seed of evildoers shall never be renowned.' . The Lord of hosts bath sworn, saying, ,Surely as 1 have thought, so shall It come to east: and aa I. have nurnmrrf n hall ft ctanri For the Lord of hosts bath purposed, nana is stretched out, and who JOURNAL MAN ABROAD By tit is Mr. Loekkra fortaaa to be is the ! ' ot bent draptMd is a Huo sir raid et aigtit. Ha tells hew it effected hiss, vbai it did aa dav aloud is tha Boraina km-i tntkmin. aarf haar 4 ratersa British acdoar Mi ttxmt aw raids aad ware tee pawsr that imtett tea wsr.J Somewhere In France. There are cer tain disadvantages, X find. In having the best and largest house In the village, particularly If the village is but a few mUes from the German lines and within easy range of the German guns. The officer are billeted in the largest and best housea Until recently II officer were billeted in this house, though I am at present the only person staying here. Naturally, air raiders try to make hits at the best houses, hoping to kill the of ficers who are apt to be. quartered there. One night I eame in from a hard and trying day's work for walking in the mud is tiring work, particularly in the slippery, greasy mud found here, or the equally sticky mud in the trenchea I lit a candle, shaded it, and started to write. By 11 o'clock the cannonading was so heavy and -so continuous that the win dows vibrated almost steadily. I finished my letter, which waa on the beauty of French scenery, and decided to go to bed. The night was glorious clear and cool, the air Uke wine, and the stars bright as diamonds. X-made my bed and turned In. But. lying down, the vibration was so noticeable, from th shock of the explod ing shells and from the discharge of our pwn heavy guns, that X could not go to sleep. I dressed and went to a hill top, and for half an hour I saw a won derful spectacle a living horseshoe of fire. The flash of the cannons was like the burning of Greek fire, and the con cussion from the discharge was wonder fully impressive. . I came back to my huse but solitary domicile and went to bed. - Suddenly there was a terrific con cussion. The bed quivered. Iff, frame work of the house groaned. There was a sound of rending timbers. I Jumped out of bed and ran in my bare feet to the front porch. A German airplane was passing, a few hundred feet over the house. Crash, crash, crash 1 went three more bombs. From all sides the search lights quivered across the sky and ouf own anti-aircraft gunswoke into a fury of sound. I decided that, while I had had a close call, I was safe and I could go back to bed. Around swung the Ger man sir raider and came back. X slipped Into my shoes and went down into the atone roofed wine cellar. I thought, "If he makes a direct hit I will have tons of masonry on me as a monument." Crash, crash, crash! went the bombs. while a flash as of lightning showed they were falling near. Seven I counted, and then over flew another plane, and again my eardrums throbbed with the concussion of the bombs. For half an hour the raid lasted, and st last, at about S o'clock, I dropped asleep, to wake sitting up at a particularly loud boom from a shell. a a a In the morning I went across the street where some soldi ere are bine ted. One of them said. The bloody Hun tried to ret us. He broke our windows out. but we had bolted down into the cellar to escape flying bit of the bomb. On bomb killed three horse lust a few hundred now is on her way, to her home In the Middle West a a -Over Sunday Visitor Mrs. William Hanley of Burns, Or., and Mrs. E. J. Cameron of Medford, are guests in the city over Sunday. They are staying at the Portland during then visit her. a a a Mrs. Georre Cooper and daughters. Helen, Ruth and Lura, are In Portland for th weekend. They are registered mong th guests at th Cornelius dar-J Ing their visit In the city. Misses Busts Emery and Vivian Jenee of Hood River are week-end guests In th city, registered at the Imperial. W. 1m Miller of Seattle, a business vis itor In Portland last week, waa reg istered with Mra' Miller at the Cornell ua Mr. end Mrs. L M. Moss of Racine. I Wis., touring the Northwest sre among eastern guests registered at the Port land. Mr. and Mrs It. Ok Bums of Sesttls, spending a few day In Portland, are among recent arrival at th New Per kins. T. E. Knox and Ronald C. Begg of John Day. Or, In Portland on business, are registered , at th Multnomah. 8am Lanyert of Spokane, with Mr. Lanyert are among the over Sunday guest staying at the Benson. Mrs. C. E. Jay and daughter of Klamath Falls, Or., in Portland for a few daya are at the Carlton. Mt. and Mra M. B. Waaler of Milton sre among Eastern Oregon guests at the Washington. " Miss Wei tha Trailer of Eugene, a week-end guest In the city, i (egistered at the Imperial. Mra H. E. Stewart of Gastora Or., an over Sunday visitor In Portland, is a guest at th Cornelius. Lewis P. Shacklef ord of Juneau, Alas ka. In the States tor a business visit is at the. Portland. ' ' - Merle Stecrunermaa of Manfitfleld, Or, Is among business visitor at th New Frklnv- . . D. , V. FendaU of Newberg. Or., In Portland .over Sunday, is registered at the Multnomah. : William Jones and P. EL Jegen of As toria are among recent arrivals at th Oregon. " i ' - J. p. Morris, of Seattle. In Portland on .business. Is registered with Mra Morris st the Washlnston. j , Mr, and Mr. E. Bascom, of Florence, B ABYtON the Prophet Isaiah. they break forth Into sin jinf. the cedars of Lebanon, saying, since Art thou also, become weak as we? th mmrmc h upon thee, and consider thee, saying, . . . v wv earth to tremble, that did shake and destroyed the cities thereof; that an abominable branch, and as the thfust through with a sword, that ax a carcass trndden nndr ft and who shall disannal it? and his shall turn it back? Fred Loekley yards -away. Yonder another got an Australian soldier." Another soldier Jcanjsl us and said. "It got one Austra lian, and a bit of the flying metal tore an eye out of another. Tour hovs a-ot It- the worst, though. They are new to it and they dldn t know that when a Boche machine is about, the best thing Is to He quiet Tou mustn't run about nor stir, even. If you are hit : for if Jerry' knows there are troops there he will drop more bombs and kill a lot of your pals. The first Jerry over last night dropped a bomb. A lot of your lads ran out of their dugouts to see where it had hit The pilot of the Boche plane saw them runlng about and dropped a flare. It lit up the whole blooming nlace. and showed him a lot of your chape standing aooui, or, uae ground squirrels, looking out of the mouths of their dugouta He swooped low and swept them with his machine gun. I was just over. One of 3sur lads was dead and another died while I was there." X met a British officer a few moments later and asked him where he was din ing the raid. He said, "I stayed in my room, a hundred yards from your billet" T suppose you are used to sir raids by now," I said. "The more you see of them tho more you fear them." he said. "I have seen so many men torn to nieces and mangled by aerial bombs that I fear them more than anything else. I have to fairly hold myself in bed. I lie there and sweat with apprehension for fear the next one dropped will crash into my room ana mangle me. it Is one's cursed helplessness that hurts most Tou cant do anything but wait and take it Those three bombs that lit near us last night might Just as weU have snuffed us out as some other poor beggar. Tou never can teu when jerry is going to drop on that has your number on it Ne. sir; no on ever get used to them. The man that tell you be rolls over and e-oea to sleep again Ilea It Isn't in nature to be Indifferent to the menses of them, par ticularly when you bave had several years of It and seen what they can do. Sure, we stay. We fight all th harder to defeat Germany so that our children shall not suffer from what we are going through. When I think of the old daya a peaceful river, a light rod. th trout rising to the fly. It seem a if what we sre going through must be some fear some nightmare and ws shall wake up to find it isn't true. At other times it seems as if X couldn't remember the time I hadn't been in the ruck and the muex ot it stayr Of course we 11 stay, Stay till Germany has been brought to her knees and taught that the day for the mailed fist for sword rattling and devilish brutality has gone by. When that day arrives what a breath of relief wiU go up from the war-weary world. I may Uve to see it I hope I do, for I log to see my fair, broad seres once more and I hope to go to my final rest in my native land, but if I have to be thrown into an unknown grave, some nameless trench or sheU hole, as many a better man has been. I will feel I have borne my part In winning the fight for peace for my children and my children's chtl dren. War, the sport of kings, is doomed. No man who has seen its horrors will ever again talk about the 'glory of war." Or., are among week end guests stay ing at the Carlton. . Mra D. D. Howard, of Springfield. Mo, Is registered among th guests at th Oregon. Donald W. White of Salem Is among state capital guests at the Imperial. Mra Charles M. Devlin, of Medford. Or., is among the guests at the Cor nelius- J. Fellowa, of Burns. Or, In the city on business. Is a guest at the Portland. E. F. Delsney, of Wsrrsnten. Or, is among recent arrivals at the New perkina a. i omiia, or Mm city. Or, in Portland over Sunday, la at the Mult nomah. George Dremedge ot Dee Mofnea Iowa, is registered over Sunday at th ocnaon. W. Moran of Clatsop, Or, ta Portland on Dusmess, is a guest at th Oregon. R. o. Moss of Seaside, Or, Is among rveem suTirais at u Washington. A. Panyer of San Francisco Is a guest at we tarjion ior a xew oay. Gale S. HOI of Albany, Or, Is regts- terea st tne imperial. Ray Wilcox and 8. KeaU ef Clatsop, Or, are at the New Parkin. J. A. VanWie of Minneapolis, Minn, is at the Benson. C. M. Keep of Washougal. Wash, Is at un irregon. - d. Trugman of Ban Francisco la at tne canton. J. B. Chang of Eugene 1 at th Wash tngton. Tennyson's Vision of Today From Xeektlay HaO." Written ta ISIS. For X dipt, lata the fstsre. far es Saw the TiatasTIj tha' war Id. aad sS tha that weald bei Saw the has as fin With at ass sis sail. Beard tha baasoa fill with shewnac. sad there - rsia'd e sfaastt daw. Frees the nauons airy as rise frspphag is tha tar aloac the world-wide wbfaper ef the seets wte twahias warm. - With tha staadatde- of the bsbbIss pleseto TBI we waoereat uapssa ae ' battle (la as were fort' Is the earaassaM si sua, the feasraUes ef the -.wild. II : - L - ' . ' (." - u . . - . . r ' Ragtag 'and Bobtail S ) H - -. I I anorte from Everywhere ; I Yeu-re AU Seen Thi Kind ff TNCU3J BILL, hearing aa explosion la W '. the lmmadlata toatarhlwu-tiAari. l4 to his smaJl nephew, sftting la the auto mobU beside him: "Oet out,; Jimmy. ana loox at the tire and see IX it la Oat- . , ;. Tt looks pretty good. said Jimmy. upon Inspection : "It's ear fiat- on the bottom side." Simplicity Itself i 'k ? Sho waa. a very careful woman and when she noticed that th little v boy wa rather indifferent a to hi personal appearance, says the People's . Horn - Journal, it worried her. 'Your conduct troubles me very much. she said.' "New tell me how I can get you to wash your face regu- lanyr- "That's easy, ma," the boy replied. Just let me go in swimming every day." Well, They Get iW- An Right "What 'are the Hua shock troops, pa? "Those who got one when they meet th American, son." A Dry Summer of Long A Sixty-three year ago this summer. ays the WUlamlna Time, wa th year when th big forest fir took place la the hills and mountain west and north west of town. Unci Jo Tharp. who was then a boy. tails that th season was dry. and the atmosphere wa so dense that candles were used In th daytime. It was la th midst of huokle- ' berry time, andjmany Klickitat Indians had come ever to get berries. Tho poor savages were hemmed In by th fir and forced to take to a small mountain tsk and remain in the water until th fire died down. It was so hot for them at times that they took mud from the lake bottom and smeared over part of their body out of th water, n Wild ani mals ran halter skelter to escape, Aa old squaw saw a bear with th hair burned from his body. The Tharps were then living on the donation land claim of 400 acres that Uncle Joe's father took ' up. The family, are residing on and working the old farm today. 'My Liberty Bend and I Mr liberty bead aad I doe'i ippaar to aaesat to much ; Bet eddas wate mllUona, win aid the rests Of ssilast C. 8. soosasofe serosa tee sees blse Matfl Te slva tea kaiier e bitter put test wSTesrel Buks him anaasa. Thaa. to fcsaa tha boys seppUa. e Mast sB ay still sum hoods, Aad to help or ssilors fears' tea treses that te to hek the Baas. ' S U w do not tray thtsk as ear sstscisaee ws srast, Onr saQon, ships sad Boidim vta be eresunel lata dust. Thaa the Boshes lrul be ever hate to toB SB what to do; It's tha well sit risbt dowa aad wfea that wa had bovebt a fsw o Ut ss set toeether as Jesj ftfht -erar the top With Liberty beads aa War gtaswa, aa keep thaw ee tha hop. As thaa ws'U be soppUad with, Ssasas to wis tha war easaptote Aaddteteta to tha kalaer as he's eowarias at est Kow tat s en "bey the feaitk bead," whisk we hope wul be tha last Of tha ksisar sad his braul hordst, whese day wiU soos be past , ' 3. Shmitte, Peruana, Septesuwr 1. Uncle Jen fJnew Sayst I knowed a feller down In Texas onoet that kep skunks all around the house, and his neighbors didn't like to call on him. Finally he killed 'era all off and built a new log house after th old one burned down, and, ho was a pleasure to talk to. He found skunk Plts didn't pay as weU as chlckena Some ot those cities back East that havo ter go out of the saloon business will find life a heap more satisfaction. with no mourners fer the saloons left to weep in a year or two. His Last Furlough By aUriaa Mattes atertee Kortea to bet 11 san aid. Baa is tha daoshter ef hU aad Ha S. C. Morton af St. HaVsea. Mr. Morton to eoanty totes af Cohrabie eeanty, aa aditee aad pubUsher ad tha St HeWaa Mist I Tha twtita-at vails ware despeetssi The birds had (eaa to rest: Asd a toother sat by the window Iika s bird with aa eatptr east Tha UtUa Maa star la tha window Maeat bar Jar. bar haea. bar lava. aad she prayed to that srsat rather wee waa uateains vnsra apeae: Oh. keep Mas safe, saw ratbar, Aad brief hue bees to sm Whoa ba bat dons bto doty For the world sad liberty. And if say bias star tares oidse. Oh. saake ase brara to bsar i Make m tree, stood ana aeon ror ssy eaa who to erer there. And saw. Greet One, wha wetebas Over the batxla sad bom. Otst the rolOBS prairisa And erar tha aeasot foass. Over tha little white crams Where the white rraeefc lutes stow, Wsleotna bias when ho eatsst to Jo Os hi last fartoasa." She who had wetehad hiss auwutsea, She wha ha watched his grow-. She wondered toateht bow aha woedsrae If he'd (ooa oa a last twtewia. THE PUBLICATION MEASURES Titles of Two Initiative BUI to Remove a Publio Burden. On the ballet to be voted at the gen- oral election In November wiU appear -the titles of two initiative measures de signed to rellsve the people of Oregon of burden born under existing law, namely, tho publication of th del in- - o.uent tax list and the payment of ex- : passive onarges xer tne pueiicaaon ex . legal notices and county advertising la newpapera These measures will to pre sented on the ballot undsr title and with numbers, respectively, a follewes . wrrtATrvB nnx pnorogED by xxrru- laMaia Vi G. L i serine aad m. W. Biased, r TJtara Vas Uos BiaPerposa J f e ra- . peel iiissim laws ravainsj aars-apapar eararos . BMat ef sailaenaat taxes and tajtee thirtst pro- . rldfn that tax eeUester abaU, after tease ba- .' eoeie eauaesast sack rear Basil by tetter to saeb ewsar ef real property 4 address fursUbi -by him and aotad-ao roU, a errktes settee eon-; Ulntna .dasertotiea. iseiant; of taxi, rets af tetarast, pansitias sad -data est asd after erbJati " aarUfieata af SsUaaeaaey aba tssoe: peaaidias :'. lor Bosttes daUaenant bats sad proof Vl orrtjf..; cateof saiuns end peat ins, aasHne seek ear- tU taste anstrreaire sriiisM taeraaf. sad sebteet- lea eeUaetoe to oaesef stistaiBsq ue leuere t . - eserpty with act - A e IT m ' If yon believe in this measure vet Tea . wrrurrnf nx FTtoor.D bt nmiA-. -' TIVK FETfTOH Initiated by a B. Jseeses, 1 Sahees straet, Peruana, Onsen, end K. W. Bseed, 11 Xast Darts strset, Fortlaad. Orseoa Fbitnf Coss psnsaUon tee PebUeattea ef Iatal Katlois Far- -: suTsit1rii?iwsiTsi'-V"sttri yTo of asst steiawams. taperte. prooaadiaes. and all V oOmt iaaai edrarttossaaaBl ef whatsoever , kind -r, wbiats sow ee baraaftee amy be raeetrad pob- nahadl previa the aawspesan assy eostrae fee tower fetes; that pabheattae proof -ef eeak v lasai seUeas ebaU iaelada . eaiosat ahaxsad ior pabUeatioaj that Weal sdrerUstng Msuirad for terisaftosu seneei end road distrtou bo awhilM tn leeai nepetsrssisriitinr gartiss 20 Lord s Oracoa Law, by ateaaUyte sowpessts pat eke. . ssoos w eaeausa as - lay ,vou ar a baMtaats; rijushnf Saetloa Ilt Vot, Lews aad Chapter St a, Aawa . I s Oreaoa- I' "1 17 - - T" er ov i, It you keUev la tills fseasur vpt Tev ? -i ta- - V V -,