tiie mousing or.ECoxiAx. rniDAT. jci.t o. 1015. rOBTLANO,' OREGON. Entered mt Portland. Orason. Postofflc a lecond-claif maitsr , Subscription Rate Invariably la adTaaee: I Br Ma.lL I - Dally. Sundar Included, one year. .8.00 XJaily. Bunday Included, six months.... e.zj uany, bunaay lncluued. three montni. . jDaily. Sunday Included, one month . . . . . . - Daily, without Bunday, on year 0.tx . I'aily. without bunday, six munlbi -i . aily, without Sunday, three moiitat... ' I'aily, without Sunday, on month o Weekly, one year ia Sunday, one year ...................... 2.0 ' bunday and Weekly, one year ao0 r (Bj Carrier.) J Daily, Sunday Included, one year W.00 ' Sally, Sunday included, one month. ... . .75 How to Remit Send Postofflce money or der, express order or personal check; on your ' loal buk. Stamps, coin cr currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address in full. including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to IS pages. 1 cent: 18 '' to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 4tt pages. S cents; . W) to u pages, 4 cents; to 76 pages, a - cents; TS to tz pages, t cents. Jr'oreign post- age. double rates. Eastern Biulneas Offices Verre Sc Conk 7 lln, Brunswick building. New Torlt: Varree -A Conktin. Steger building, Chicago; btn '.' Francisco representative, R. J. BldwelL 11 - Market street. ' rOBTLASO, FRIDAY, JULY. . 115, LEAVE IT ALL TO A COMMISSION. 5 In publishing the letter from II. K. ; Pennell. chairman of the navigation committee of the Portland Chamber fot Commerce, regarding revision of shipping laws. The Oregonian 1b grati--fied to find itself in accord with the "Portland Chamber and with the great majority of other Chambers of Com rrmerce in its advocacy of a commission ; to undertake this work. All the de- velopmenta of the last few years show - that in tinkering with our shipping ; laws we have only made matters worse. They confirm the opinion we have often, expressed that the only way to reach a right conclusion is to entrust to a commission of men who know the shipping business the task of I -revising the entire shipping code. We need go no further back than three years to prove that practically all piecemeal legislation has been a blunder. The Panama Canal act of 1912 admitted to American register foreign-built ships owned by Ameri cans, engaged in foreign trade and less than five years old, but not a single ship was added to the American merchant marine under that law. The Underwood tariff granted a discount of 5 per cent on duties on all good3 imported on American ships, but the proviso added by the Senate that this section should not be held to abrogate treaties with foreign na- . Hons has been construed to grant a like discount to every favored nation, which means every shipping nation. This provision has not benefited our shipowners, but has cut $15,000,000 more from an already insufficient revenue. The law of August, 1914, admitting any American-owned ship to Ameri can register and suspending some bur densome provisions of the shipping laws, has driven more than 140 ships to take refuge under our flag, but fur ther legislation will be necessary to keep thom there. The La Follette Seamen's law, de signed to protect American seamen, to guard the lives of passengers and crew and to foster the merchant ma rine, is driving American ships from the sea or to foreign flags and Js giv ing American seamen's Jobs to Japan ese, Chinese and Lascars. But it tried to pass the ship-purchase bill at the last session of Congress and threat ens to try again at the next session. The Chamber of Commerce com mittee's plan of "aiding our merchant marine" belongs to the same category, end is open to the further objection that it is a new form of subsidy. It is also inconsistent with the Chamber's other proposal to leave the whole matter to a commission for inquiry and recommendations. If a commis sion should be appointed, it should not be hampered or influenced by any speclfio plans, but should be set free to approach Its work with an open mind. If a non-partisan, expert com mission should recommend some form of financial aid from the Government, It would be time enough then to re open public discussion of subsidies. The comparative cost of building and operating ships has been so near ly equalized by the war that, were the La Follette law out of the way, the American merchant marine might thrive as well as is possible under war conditions, regardless of defects In our other navigation laws. It is im possible to do more than speculate on the conditions which will prevail after the war, but there is reason to believe that cost of production and operation In Europe will be much higher than before the war. When the two years allowed for the commission to report had expired, the war would probably be ended. Removal of the existing legal obstacles to American invest ment in ..ships, as then recommended, could be followed by the commission with a watch over the effects and with recommendation of such legislation as newly established peace conditions prove necessary. The occasion calls for concentration of effort on the part of all persons who are interested in the merchant marine. If various groups are each pushing forward some pet nostrum, this concentration will be impossible. If all unite their forces in support of uch a commission as can safely be trusted to prescribe the best remedy, and against the adoption of any par ticular remedy until the commission reports, they will have good prospect of success and will be sure not to make a bad muddle worse. A BALANCED RATION POR MEN. The New York Evening Post has published an article which should in terest all those millions of people who .have to buy with little money the food necessary" to sustain them for their ; day's work. It is an account of an ' investigation conducted by F. C. Gep hart, of the Sage Institute of Pathol "ogy, into the food values pf the diet : obtainable at 5-oent restaurants. Mr. ".Pephart is a chemist whose word may -be relied upon as the last utterance iof investigative science. ' Among the articles offered at the "Childs" 5-cent counters he finds that ;upon the whole the "desserts" are the ;most nutritious. The "Napoleon." for example, which is a sort of custard ' With frosting and a crust, contains 453 food units, while a roast beef sand . wich contains only 357. Most regret fully Mr. Gephart must have set down . the fact that strawberry shortcake af fords no more than ninety-one food 'units in a 5-cent portion. Dairy dishes and "breakfast foods" do not 'make a very good showing. They run ' from 174 down to sixty-three units. The point of all this is that cheap restaurant habitues waste a large part of the money they spend for food by not knowing the nutritive value of what they eat. The same Is true of families. Human beings need a "bal- anced ration" quite as .sorely as dairy cows, but they are not half so likely to get it. Dairymen as a rule under stand what to feed their stock in order to obtain a good flow of milk, while the human diner stuffs himself mis cellaneously without regard to con sequences. Our (working power is derived from what we eat. If the ration contains but a meager proportion of energy forming units how can one expect to do a good day's work? It would be interesting, and perhaps profitable, to calculate the earning power that is sacrificed in the United States every day by devouring lnnutrltious but ex pensive food. THE RIGHT TO TIPS. The right to receive tips Is now up held as a constitutional right. Illi nois, having passed an anti-tipping law, the act is attacked In court by the interests which control the check rooms in the Morrison and Sherman hotels. They -say they have money Invested and they call tips "voluntary donations" and "lawful property." We all know how voluntary are the donations exacted for hanging up hats and coats. If a person fails to donate, the owner of "lawful property- makes him suffer in endless ways, for there is a community of interest among hotel employes and the word is passed along that "So-and-so is tight." But what's the use of anti-tipping lams? They never have stopped tip ping and they never can. It will stop when human nature is reconstructed. THE SUMMER VACATION, W learn from various sources that the movement to-ahorten the Summer vacation of the public schools has ac quired momentum. Even the teach ers seem to favor it, contrary to what might have been expected. The pay offered them for hearing classes in the Summer months has something to do with their zeal for the reform, though we must suppose that they care more for the children's welfare than for money. To a practical mind something ap pears manifestly wrong with a system that leaves our great educational plant idle for three or four months every year while the human beings who might profit by it run wild upon the streets. Now that the schools have been so improved that children can attend them without losing their eyesight and deforming their spines no convincing reason appears why they should not keep open for at least part of the ordinary Summer vacation. If anything worth while is taught the pupils will be benefited mentally, temptations to delinquency will be di minished and the additional pay will appreciably help the teachers along the thorny road to happiness. A SHIPPER WHO FIXES HIS RATES. The records of the recent dealings of Congress with the subject of rail way mail pay are as discreditable In one direction as were its earlier deal ings with the railroads in the other direction. Congress formerly was ac cused, with some Justification, of be ing overgenerous to the railroads. It has now gone to the other extreme of cinching the railroads and of giv ing the Postmaster-General authority to cinch them still tighter. Not until six months after the parcel post was established, were the railroads allowed any addi tional payment for the additional weight carried, and then it averaged only 3 to 4 per cent increase. Then the weight limit of parcels was twice raised; with the effect that railroads are compelled to foster at lower rates a business which competes with their express and freight business. Railway mail pay is based on weighing of mail daily for one month in each four years, but no weighing has been done since the parcel post was put In oper ation, although about 1,000,000,000 parcels a year are now carried. It is estimated that to July 1. 1915, half of the parcel post had been carried by the railroads without payment. This situation arises from the law which permits the Postmaster-General to fix the rates he will pay the rail roads. The Moon bill, which is to be revived next session, proposes to en large this power, and Its author has boasted that under Its provisions It would be possible to require the rail roads "to carry all your parcel post probably without any additional com pensation and save many millions an nually." In fact, it is a proposal to save money to the Government by rob bing the railroads. The only satisfactory settlement of the railway mail question is to put the Postofflce Department On the same footing as any shipper and to let the Interstate Commerce Commission fix the rates it shall pay. Then the rail roads and the Government will both get Justice, and the railroads will not be starved into stopping development of the country they serve. PAYING 1-Oit ACCIDENTS. New York's workman's Compensa tion law, the administration of which degenerated into something approach ing scandal and called forth an emer gency message from Governor Whit man, has come out of its troubles whole and greatly improved, if one may believe so competent an author ity as William H. Hotchklss, former Superintendent of Insurance of New York, who writes in the Review of Reviews. The amendments proposed in the Legislature were vehemently denounced by a portion of the press and numerous organizations but nev ertheless were adopted. One of the accepted changes has a striking similarity to an amendment proposed to the Oregon law which failed to carry at the last session. The labor and compensation departments were consolidated at a great reduc tion of administration cost and elimination of overlapping functions. The only other important amendment relieves the compensation department of absolute bureaucratic control. Tentative settlements between em ployer and injured employe may be agreed upon, but must coincide with the compensation schedule fixed by law or be approved by the state de part morel. The bureaucratic payments of com pensation were what led to the ad verse criticisms of the administration of the New York law. An extrava gant, top-heavy organization was built up which in spite of enormous overhead cost seemed unable to settle claims without grievous delays. Direct settlement of claims gives strong promise of economy of admin istration. Indeed the policy has been adopted by some twenty states and is working satisfactorily. It is a policy, however, that is consistent only with a form of compensation law unlike that of Oregon. MT. Hotchklss dl vides compensation laws Into two broad classes. One rests on the the ory that compensation Is a tax laid on Industry to be collected and paid out by the state. Of this type are the laws of Oregon, Washington. Ohio, Nevada, West Virginia and Wyoming. They are a form of monopolistic state Insurance. The state collects the premium and pays the loss. The other kind of law is based on the premises that compensation is a hazard of Industry and that the state's duty ceases when it has required that the employer may or must insure and sees that settlements are properly and promptly made. Twenty-four states either permit or compel insurance of compensation allowing competition be tween from two to four methods of Insurance. New York until the adoption of the amendments by the last Legislature had a combination of both kinds of compensation law. It treated compen sation as a hazard of Industry and permitted the competition of commer cial insurance, yet It attempted to ad minister the law as if It provided state insurance exclusively. It is not sur prising that an attempt by the state to undertake the detail of making payments in several kinds of compen sation Insurance should have resulted in enormous cost and long delays. To make the law consistent New York faced two alternatives. It could exclude commercial insurance and thereby erect a state monopoly such as we have In Oregon or authorize voluntary settlements. New York clung to and strengthened Its commer cial Insurance compensation law. Wken a bill providing that system as a cure for the difficulties which then beset the Oregon compensation law was presented to our own Legislature it received the scantiest consideration. Yet New York and twenty-four other states seem to like the plan. i PROGRESS TOWARDS INDEPENDENCE. Bonds of American corporations which have been held" In Europe for many years are now appearing on the American market. Decided depression of prices has resulted. This Is the actual beginning on a large scalo of the sale of American securities which has been predicted since the outbreak of the war. It Is an important stage n the revolution of American com mercial relations with other nations which Is being worked out by the war. Unloading of American securities is a sure sign that, in raining war loans. -he belligerents have already absorbed the great bulk of uninvested capital which was available. The liberal terms offered by the British govern ment for sale of S1.2SO.000.000 of war bonds are a direct bid for sale of other securities in order that the proceeds may be reinvested In war bonds. The eagerness with which the bonds were subscribed and the simultaneous In crease In sales of American securities Indicate that the scheme succeeded. Sale of our bonds in our own mar ket by European holders Is welcome to us. It Is, In general effect, an In vestment of part of the tl. 000. 000, 000 trade balance which we fiave accumu lated during the past year, perhaps a conversion into fixed capital of the profits on the war material whlc4i we have sold. It prevents us from Im porting gold which we do not need but which Europe does need. It car ries us far on the road toward be coming a creditor Nation. On current account we are already a creditor na tion, as our trade balance proves. On Investment account we are making progress In that direction by cancella tion of our debts. Our trade balance is serving as a sinking fund for that purpose. Estimating European Investments In this country at l. 000. 000, 000 and assuming that the war will continue for two more years and that our favorable trade balance will continue to be $1,000,000,000 a year while the war lasts, we shall have redeemed half of our debt before peace is made. At an average of 4 per cent, this would mean that we should keep at home 1120.000,000 a year which Is now paid to foreign bondholders. In striking our annual trade balance, we shall place this amount to our credit and It will assist in the continued process of liquidating debts. That the unloading of American se curities will continue may be inferred from the act that the belligerents are already going beyond the capitalists to reach after the small savings of the poor. Germany did so long ago, there having been over 2.000.000 subscribers to her second bond Issue. France be gan issuing small bonds very early In the war. Britain now has made pos sible the purchase of a S25 bond by paying Installments of SI. 20. When they resort to such expedients, the na tions will surely offer terms which will tempt almost the last American bond out of hiding. CAUSE OF HOLT'S CRIMES. The crimes of Frank Holt are as di rectly traceable to the attempts to in duce the United States Government to abandon its neutrality as the assassin ation of President McKlnley was traceable to unmeasured abuse of him by yellow newspapers. The pro-German propagandists doubtless had no more thought of instigating the as sassination of J.' P. Morgan and the blowing up of the National Capitol and of ocean steamers than had the traducers of McKlnley of instigating Czolgosz to murder him. But the tirades of both prompted men of ill balanced mind to translate words aimed to Influence the peaceful action of governments and parties into vio lent individual action. In both cases the authors of the propaganda were reckless of the effect of extravagant statements on such men. There never was a more illogical and unjust agitation than that againxt the sale of war material by individual Americans to belligerents. Interna tional law forbids a neutral govern ment to give or sell arms and muni tions to a belligerent, but it asserts the right of a citizen of a neutral country to sell war material to any nation which will buy. Germany her self permitted her citizens to follow this practice In the Spanish war, the Russo-Japanese war and the Balkan wars, and it was a German shipment of war material to Huerta which caused .the American occupation of Vera Cruz. Early In the present war the German government formally con ceded the right of American citizens to sell arms to either herself, her al lies or her enemies. Not until the propaganda against the sale of arms to Germany's enemies was begun by Representative Barlholdt and Herr Dernburg was this right questioned on behalf of Germany, and It has never been denied officially. The propaganda which pretends to defend American neutrality is there fore in reality an attack on our neu trality. Were the exportation of arms forbidden, we should cease to be neu tral and should become unneutral. We should aid Germany by depriving her enemies of an advantage which inter national law grant them and which we. as neutrals, are forbidden to with hold. Those who demand an embargo on exports of arms on the moral ground that these exports are to be uaed In wholesale slaughter of human beings corfound the duty of the United States Government with that of Its Individ ual citizens. It Is for the Individual manufacturer of guns and shells to decide this moral question for himself, as it behooves every citizen to decide questions of right and wrong which arise In his dally life. Some believe this traffic to be morally right. The Government has no obli gation to take sides against trie latter by forbidding them to do that which Is legally right. More. It is the Government's duty to protect them In the exercise of this legal right, which they believe they have a moral right also to exercise. At this point appears the pernicious Influence on men like Holt of those who, when defeated In argument on the legal question, shift their ground to the moral aspects of the case. They cause excitable, ill-balanced men like Holt to Imagine that. In committing a monstrous crime, they are correcting a moral wrong and are therefore doing a virtuous act. Holt's letters betray an Insane belief that he waa an In strument of God for this purpose, a belief which was plainly engendered by reading and brooding over writings against traffic In arma Had the men who conducted the propaganda against this traffic regard ed the war only from the standpoint of American rights and duties, they would never have begun it. If all dis cussion of the war from any other standpoint were to cease, there could be no further question of the rectitude of our Government's policy and there would be no further Incitement to men like Holt to murder citizens and to destroy ships and buildings. Every American citizen, native-born or foreign-born, should cease to be. In his public utterances, either pro-German or pro-ally and should be simply pro-American. There must be something In merry making and amusing the people that enables the entertainer to retain his youth. For example, there Is George Primrose, now at a local playhouse, whom men who are now grandfathers remember as the star In the combi nation of Barlow. Wilson, Primrose and West. They did the classics In burnt cork In the days when the world seemed young. There were many oth ers of like talent, but they have passed. Jack Haverly Is dead. So Is G. Swayne Buckley, Billy II orris whis tled his. last "Mocking Bird" Jean ago. Eph Horn no more makes a horse laugh. Lew Docksladtcr lives, but is getting old and lazy. Primrose is about the last, and he has the sav ing grace of the old-time ginger. When he shall retire, blackface minstrelsy goes into the discard. Oregon welcomes eighty-three new lawyers to the bar this Summer and hopes they may ail find plenty of room at the top. Lower down It la a little crowded. The law la better supplied with practitioners than the public schools. Home say we need a thou sand new teachers yearly. The Mon mouth Normal gives ua a couple of hundred. Very likelv the news via Rerlln of a rreat Austrian vlrtorv nvr tha wurv and business-like Italians will bo mod. lllcd by later reports. Italy la playing a Fabian game In the war and not risking any more than she must. She may have had a reverse, but It Is not likely to be very Important. Think of. riding all the way round Mount Hood and back to Portland on a good, amoolh road. The Idea would have seemed preposterous to the pio neers, but the reality Is now in sight. Good roads will be the making of Ore gon. The faster they come the better. Superintendent Alderman's "two- group" plan for administering the pub lic schools has many of the merits of the Gary system, from which It is de rived. It will Increase efficiency and save money. With a fair trial It is pretty sure to win Its way. A cow la Polk County kicked over a hive and was stung to death. That's where she missed It. If only she had bad rheumatism she would have been cured rather than killed. Any num ber of cranks can prove the statement. The United Ststes of Serbia sounds bigger than the nation will be, if or ganized. The whole works could be dumped Into the State of Texas and room enough left In which to roll up big Democratic majorities. Spain may be arming with a view to having a hand In the division of the spoils- By the time the great powers have finished fighting, their armies may be so small that Spain's army will look big by comparison. The sellers of Illicit whisky In Ari zona made the mistake of using the tomato label on the cans. They should have used the peach label, for the canned peach is the favored food on the rangea. Huerta seems to think he ia such an elephant on the Government's hands that he will be set free on his own terms. He is a wily old Indian. The wreck of the Emden will be a prized trophy In Australia, but the Antipodean will need to guard It against another Holt. The harvest which Canadian sol diers will reap In Canada will be more profitable thun that which they will later reap In Europe. Possibly' yesterday's early rain waa sent to provoke the women folk on the even-numbered sides who are per sistent sprinklers. That Russo-Japanese alliance may give the Kaiser an opportunity to look the yellow peril in the eye. There are no rules to govern the conduct of tornadoes and there Is no use lu dodging them. Will city officialdom need more au tomobiles to cover tha Linn ton and St. Johna country? The war aeems to be a deadlock on Gallipot! Peninsula aa well as In France. Huerta wants to get out. It might pay to let him go, with a fair running start. The drouth Is Woken and Jamaica again has "in,er." Holt looked like It. European War Primer By KsIIsmI Ceegraphleal Ss-rietr. THERE are numerous things of priceless value to tha world upon the threatened frontiers of the warring countries, and among the richest of these treasures is Venice, the dream of generations of tourists, of students of art and history, and of lovers of ro mance and beauty. Few cities In the world receive veneration from more widely scattered sources, and few stir so many pleasant anticipations on the ve of a first visit to them. Tbls year, however, the city wiil be deserted by Ita visitors. Venice, a honeymoon ob jective and tha tourist's earliest scroti- aspirations baa become an objective for Auatrlan air fleets and battleships. Something of the charm of this city of world-pllgrlmage is told by one of Its most noted friends. Karl Stieler: 'Before the Campanile, we realise for the first time the widespread power of Venice, that fairy city which sprang not from the earth, bat the sea: still touched with the glamour of the East, and yet mistress of all Western culture ao rich In arts and arma. In loves and hatreds! Venice la a sphinx whoee enigma we never wholly penetrate. Jn vain we strive to find an Image that shall express her mysterious essence. The unique brooks no comparisons, "As in the old times, even so today, the center of life and movement is the I'latia of St. Mark's, although It offers but a pale shadow of the life of former days. Here on sunny mornings all the foreigners assemble; here lounge the ciceroni, and on the neighboring plas setts the gondoliers. Itinerant vendors of-all kinds push their way among the chairs that are set out In front of the cafes under the open arcade. "But toe most brilliant spectacle la at night, when hundreds of gas Jeta are alight In the huge bronae candelabra, when the gold sparkles In the Jewelers' windows and the sound of gar music Is borne across the piazza. Then the crowd gathers from all aldca. Here come the noblll with their wives. The gondolas throng to the plassetta, and the mercerla seems far too narrow for the press of people. "The noise and the passion, which runs through the publicity of Italian life continue deep Into the night: then last hasty worda are spoken, yet one more stolen glance is shot from beau tiful eyes, and the happy Individual for whom It la Intended understands the farewell. Around the etepa of the piarietta all of white marble, so that you cannot miss them, even at night the condoles Rather again and then separate on their different wave through the dark and dead-silent canal. "St. Mark's stands alone among all the temples of the world. Although age and the moist aea air have spread their veil over these wall, yet the brilliant coloring and the mighty outlines shine through all the gray dimness of the past. The bronae horsea above the Brest door are rearing; the cupolas and arches stretrh their great curves In In tensity of power: each portion of the sre;it building seems alive and ani mated; yet In the whole reign the pro found and noble peace proper to the house of God. "It l nnw exactly t veara ago since tha building of t Marks waa completed: Ita ecclesiastical eanctlty Is bestowed on It by the relic of the great evangelist: It historical sanctity consist In It Intimate connection with the fortunes of the city and her ruler. It was the theater of their triumph and the refuse for their cares: all that he ha achieved and suffered Venire ha done under the protecting wing of St. Mark. "The Churrh of Ft. Mark contains trophies from all part of the world: every atone has a history. Those two Brent pillars at the erttrance to the baptistery were part of the booty of Acre. The bronae folding doors were onco In the Church of St. Sophia at St am but. The marble columns, which stand right and left of the main portal. re. said to have been taken from the Temple In Jerusalem. The famous croup of four horses, which stand above the main portal, I of the antique Roman period and we for a long time In Hytantlum. the capital of the Empire of the West. The Dose Pandolo. at tha age of 9i. led on the Venetlnn to the storming of Constantinople. (ltnJl. He was nearly blind, but a fiery life still Klnwed in hi vein. "What St. Mark' I a the expression of the rcllgloua spirit, that the Iucal Palace In for the secular power of Venice; It ha acarcely n rival, even In Italy. The Doge Palace, a it now stands before us. wan begun In the 14th century and completed In the llih after a loni Interruption. Here every line In classic. The very position of the palace. Its relation to the Church of St. Mark, Its two fronts one com manding the piasxetta and the other the sea declare the Inner significance of the building: It la the foundation, the very cornerstone of all Venetian plendora. "But yet a little shadow rests on these splendor. A elleht shudder mars the enchantment, for the handa of Venice are stained with blood much noble blood sacrificed to unworthy pas sions. There la the Bores dr Leone. Into which envy threw Ita secret ac cusatlons. Here sat the Council of Ten. Consigllo de' Died. That was a word of terror to all cltisena of Venice. In thla tribunal aha had a power which could only be compared with that of Robespierre or the bloodthirsty Marat. "Tha complete truth about Venice ennnot be learned In the lofty Ducal Palace, where the ceilings are full of gold and where art. free and untram meled. created her masterpieces. We must ao down even as far as the Pozal. Into the dungeons below the level of the water, or we must mount Into the hot leaden cell the Plombl): then we begin to conceive what wan the secret canker gnawing at tbe root of all this beauty: then we feel with unspeakable horror what la the shadow on the con science of the proud Quren of tha Adriatic" Xablsi Rates Callfersila l.tae. COBLE. Or.. July 7. (To tha Editor.) A says the only difference between the first and aecond-claea passenger, traveling on the Beaver and Bear, la that the latter have cabin on a lower deck. According to hi understanding they all have the same deck privileges and eat together at same table. B. while not disputing the statement, falls to see reason for difference In rates when tha only segregation Is In the sleeping quarter. ri decide. INQL'IRER- A Is correct except that all having cabin accommodations, whether on the upper or main deck, are known as first-clasa passengers. The higher rate I for rooms on the upper deck, while those on the main deck with porthole are slightly higher than those Inside which are ventilated - through large kylfchta. All travelera have the aame fare and era served In the main aa loon. There Is another class known aa steerage, the quarters being forward and the occupanta are served separate ly. Incidentally being carried at a much lower rate. Divorce sad Reaaarrtage. PORTLAND. Or.. July S. (To the Editor.) (1) If A. while a resident of l.laho. should marry B. a resident of Idaho. In Oregon two month after di vorce In Idaho, would the mirn.ee In Oregon be valid? t) Would A be guilty of blssmjr by reason of fact that he had not been divorced six months, as required by Idaho laws? HEADER. (1) No. (I) TeaT" CHAMBKR'S STAl os nirriG rsrttase Be4r rTsrs KwlKbf lisars. tee aad t'esuilulea t Revtae Laws. PORTLAND. July (To the Ed- Itor.) Referring to the editorial In The Oregonlan June Jl regarding ac tion taken by the Portland Chamber of Commerce In forwarding referendum vote to the United States Chamber of Commerce) relative to proposed lesisia tion In the Interest of t'nlted fetate merchant marine. I beg to stats that 1 do not believe you fully understand the action taken by the Portland or ganisation. Tbe chamber's action was the result of consideration of proposed legisla tion by Its navigation committee and board of manacere. The United fetates Chamber of Com merce referred to different Chambers of Commerce throughout the L'mted 6ta:ea the several principles that will undoubtedly be presented at next ses sion of Congress In the form of bl.: asking for an expression of opinion by referendum vote from the different commercial bodies throughout the coun try on the plana for aiding our mer chant marine. - All the different propositions had been previously referred to a commit tee appointed by the United mate Chamber of Commerce and their re ports and recommendation were aent out. together lth blank ballots, which were to be returned as an expression of opinion of the different Chambers of Commerce, and the Portland chambar practically indorsed the recommenda tions of the I'nlted States Chamber ft Commerce, but In several Instances modified its vote with eueaeaiions which Its committee thought proper to make. The Portland Chamber of Commerce I In accord with your ideas of navlng the present ravlgatloa laws cf the United Sta'.e reviaed to meet the prer-t-ni-oay needs of commerce and snlp t'ltig. In connection with a cemmu alon to renae the navigation lavs. tl. e t i.itea States Chamber of Commerce recommends a permanent shlp.i- cun: mlsvicn. u; only for the revision of ravlgation laws, but to codutt our r.ieichsnt tcarlna affaire generally in a manner somewhat similar to the way the Brttit Board of Trade now ton ducts tbe merchant marina in O-eat Britain. Aa far as subsidising oversea freight ers Is concerned the Portland cham ber's committee's Idea Is trial, under existing conditions, no subsidy or gov ernment sld Is necessary for (he sup port of oversea freighters, but that it la neceaaary to assure Investors In ersea tonnage that in normal time their property will be sate asalnet un due depreciation through unequal and unfair competition. With thla In mind the committee favored a rlan whereby the commlssixon. when appointed, would establish foreign freight rate on t'nlted btatea products from port In this country to fortgn porta. These freights to be en a basie of assuring American shipowner Insurance, dr is olation and Interest en money lnvestc.1 In oversea carrier built and operated in the I'mte.l fttatee. To illustrate what the committee hd In mind e lil eav that under normal conditions the freight rate on lumber from the Columbia River te Melbourne. Australia, would be per l00 fert. B. M. The commission might nam thla aa the normal rale. t'ndcr exist ing abnormal condition vessel in being chartered for a Ms a a s per 1000 feet, hence the statement that at present I'nlted Mate tonnate need no artificial aid a an Inducement for apttal to be invested In It. but hcti trade and commerce resume tlirir nor nml condition, owing in foreign co-i-l-etltlon In ship, the freight rate be tween the Columbia River and Austra lia on lumber may drop to rs ad or 4i-u per loe feet, in which cae cur own ships could onlv pa operated at a lo. but they would enter the trade, make their fretshtlns contracts ac cording to competitive rates, forward their documents to the commission and be Imburaed for the difference between ti.e rate established by tho Govern ment and that at wrtlcri they had been compelled to take the business In rum-S-etitlon with the foielzn ships. The Portland Chamber of Commerce's committee believed that. If American capital could In eome way be assured of protection against absolute loss li normal times, trtere would be no diffi culty In having local Interest tub scribe sufficient capital to build up the necessary tonnase for at least a portion of our oversea trad. There are comparatively few people In the L'mted Mates who have bad any real experience In overaea transporta tion, owing to the fact that ao much of our population la Inland. 1 believe, however, that the majority of our peo ple tll concede ihs fact that ships ow ned and controlled In this country are absolutely necessary for our prog ress and development and that pubilo opinion will thoroughly indorse and support any measurv which la for the bonertt of the whole and -not conceived for the purpose of aiding any class or selfish Interest. 1 know that The Oregonlan haa never been favorable to ship subsidy, hut. after viewing th situation from many angles, it seem to me that properly administered subsidy ! the only uy in which to induce United Mtatc capi tal to enter the Industry of shipping m competition with the worlds oversea freighters. Our merchant marine left to Itself In competition with foreign tonnaite will simply follow the law of "the survival of the fittest. If It waa a more fair competition ours would soon be again what It was formely. -the nttest." out It la no longer a direct competition of ehlp. but to a great extent a competi tion of governments aa to which coun try will make Ua oversea carriers the fittest, therefore J would like to see our country take the lead In this, pro vided It ran do ao by fair and practi cable means. Kreak legislation, how ever, will not accomplish the purfoae. hence the recommendation of fie Portland Chamber of Commerce for a competent commission to (be appointed and given power to present th situa tion to the country from a practical nonpolltlcal American viewpoint H. C. 1'KN.NKU. Chairman Navigation Committee, Port land Cl amber of Commerce. 1 . KXII.KD. The mountains are a-calllng me: The deep fern, and the balsam tree; The pmy rlugea. reaching op To meet the clean blue sky. I'm weary of tha pavement. I'lrt. and dust and trolley car: Heart-slek of hearlr.g newsies shout: "Kztra! All about the war P' I'm wistful for the stream that flows From' off the distant glacial snows: Kor quiet pool In flickering shade. Where trout at noontime dose. The nurj chipmunk's noisy scold. From upon it lofty perch. Te me I music sweeter far Than the choir of city church. In tboueht I batbe In rainbow spray. Where fern and vine and alder away. Down in the gorge beneath the fjll Midst ancient boulders grsy. With head on arma 1 yearn to lie. And dreamily feel the breese. That gently comes a murmuring And whispering through tbe trees. I long to scale lb roeky height. Where proud the eagle takes his flight; L'p. on th eyebrows of the world. L'p in the biasing light; Leaving behind th petty cares Of man's weary rule and rod: Feasting my soul in the high land. Where all thing are close to God. . SARA n. WRENN. GRESTIAM. Or, July T. To the LJ Itor.) Would the marriage of a J. vorced person nine mile at sea with in the statutory alx month be !! in this state? READER. Twenty-Five Years Ago (Vent The Oreorila J'7 . tMt Charlea Bellesardc. a Frenchman, known as a sport and gambler, shot and killed Charles H. Hewitt, a well known Portland attorney yeterda-. and then locked himself in M room and committed auicide. Bellsarde lived at Ninth and t'mat'.lla street. Sellwood. where he owned an emtio block. The two men w-ere alone In ifp house when the sboctir.g occurred. It is learned a woman figured In the quar rel. Judse J. F. Sullivan, of Pan Fran Cisco, president of tho grand council of the Young Men's Institute, will be in the city tomorrow and will be ten dered a reception by the Institute cf Portland. Kail Portland 'and AIMna. Grand Lecturer L. D. Peine made ar rangement for the reception at a pe cial meeting last nleht- It Is understood that Aaae.or Har row, whose term of office does not expire until Jsnusrr. will tender his resignation to the County Court today. Should he do so. George C. Peer. Assessor-elect, will be appointed to the vacancy. Elsie Leslie In "The Prince and the Taupcr." I now ranked as one of the tandard attraction of the country. The production ia one of l'anlel Froh man's enterprises. Martin Wllklns, of Kusene. on of Oregon's rommlSMOners to the World a Fair at Chicago, has Just returned from a meeting of th commissioners In Chi- raao. Mr. Wilkin urges the Portland Chamber of Commerce to take In hand the matter of an Oregon exhibit there and see that a big display I made. The first party of the season at the beach was given the other night at Sea view, at the home of Louts Dammaach. Amnnj those present were Mies Kssie Tittle. Miss Minnie Tittle. Mr. and Mrs. It. K. French. Mr. and Mrs. Pam masch and Ferdinand Pammaech. and a number of other. Pr. George F. Koch ler. w ho has been connected with some of the largest F.u ropean hospital, haa been appointed resident physician and surpeon at St. Vincent's Hospital. Speaker Reed recentlr appeared In the Ileum In nesllgee shirt and with a generous ah lied around hi ample walat. Impreetve retemonle marked the laying of the cornerstone of the Cen tenary Methodist Kpix'opal Church In Kt Portland Monday. On the plat form among other, were Bishop Tay lor. Rev. M. C. Wire. 1- II Janney. R. Krllerman. Itev. Mirk. G. M. Pierce. C. K. Kline. D. O. Ghormley. .. J. Joslyn. C S. Cramer. C. C, Hate man tiki J. W. Rushong. Judge Caplea delivered an eloquent address. atlLITxRY Ktri'-HTir . D rtlTIt Hewer lletaaad. Men r-beald Reaala la I . S. ftervlc at Thla Ttaae. PASCO. IV'iilu. July T. iTe th Kui tor.) Considerable attention has been called lately to th apparent ft that officer educated and trained by the I'nlted Mate Government are being Induced to leave Ins service for bet ter pay by private corporations te su perintend th manufacture cf imple ment and munition of war for foreign nation, and It la ucsrted that our Vivernment cannot refuse to allow ex pert Army and Navy men to resign. If tbe tboie aie facia It is time to alter them. Wo are not at war and It I th earn- eel hope of every true American that everything honorable possible will be dona to avoid war. but with the frenty In Kurope and on our southern border, who ran ' that we will not be com pelled to fiKbt for the honor of our Nation? i:ery officer graduated from our Army an-l Naty school ha cost tha tiovernment thousand of alollar each before becoming efficient innnhtri of their profession, which Is prised and honorable. The remuneration Is amply sufficient to maintain their positions with credit to themselves and the Na tion. Unlike other employes, Ihey can not be discharged without cause anil trial, or suspended when business Is lark. They struggled to obtain their posl tiona with the certainty of the emolu menta and advancement their ability would warrant. And it would seem that when there la the faintest possi bility of trouble with a foreign roe. the officer who would resign cen by implication to asalsl a possible enemy of hi country should be ortraclned a a traitor and a heavy penalty exacted from those who would attempt to se duce him from his duty and obligations. W. P. UR AT. Sale Delivery. PORTLAND. July . (To the Kdi tor. ) A la a merchant who haa for sale a cash resiater. It call and ex channel even up a aafe for the cash resiater. B ask A to deliver the cash resiater In about an hour and get th aafe. A give It bill of aale for cash ref iner at 1110 on one of hi recular statements marked "Paid. and B give A similar bill of sale for af for 1110 marked "Paid." R leave the tore. ee : who haa a cash register for sal and getting a better deal makes a deal wltb C. gets the realster sn.l deliver the fe to C He return to A. saying he (Hi ha changed his mind and aa a bluff ay he never owned the aafe. What recoure has A? H has a bill of l to A' cash register marked "paid." la H obtainlnc money under false pretense by selling the safe? B claims no delivery was made. A claim delivery of bill of vale for regis ter was sufficient. What do you think of It? OLD M'BfCHIBnit. A ran bring a civil suit to gain possession of the safe. B I not crimi nally liable unless be really did not own the aafe tn the flrat place. The bill Of aale clearly gives A title to the safe. Delivery Is a minor detail and la not necessary to th consummation of a deal. 1 lease riwtsirspkr. Mesgendorfer lUattcr. Father There, now look pleasant, boys: here's a penny for each of you! (Aftar the picture la taken! Finely done; now give me the pennies back again. Kiawsle ef the Meek Owe. Puck. Th Meek One My wife says Pm a "worm." The Friend Why don't you retaliate? The Meek On Why, If 1 -turned'' she'd be sure ef tt Follow the Leader Think of the name ef th leading breakfast food, baking powder cor sets, tea. roofing, safety razor, soap r-almoil anything you use and you think of a NKWSl Artll ADVfc-K-Tl-i;i It RAND. Look up the name ef the leading storea In America and you find these name svnonomous with America's leading newspaper advertisers. Ioe u occur to you. Mr. Mer chant and Mr. Manufacturer, that newspaper advertising was the heavy artillery that helped make these thing leaders? Newspaper advertising makes sale and aalea are the foundation of big busin. 1 0