MP! MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JTJXY 1914. 11, t. rUK'ILASU, OREGON. Catered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce as Sccond-claas matter, iubscrlpilon Rates Invariably In Advance. (BY KAIL) Dally. Sunday Included, one year DaJly. Sunday Included, tlx month . 4.f3 tsaily. Sunday Included, three montha-. Z.-J patiy, Sunday included, one month . . . tali. without Sunday, one year fcfg Dally, without Sunday, six montha . . . s.ZJ Dally, without Sunday, three month!.. 1.'" Imily. without Sunday, one month .... .s Weekly, one year SfSej Sunday, one year Sunday and Weekly, one year -3u (BY CARRIKR) Daily. Sunday Included, one year ? Dal'v. Sunday Included, one month TJV Hoc to Remit Send postofflce money or der, expreaa order or pe:onal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce addresa in run. including count and etate Postage Katee 12 to IS pages. 1 cent: IS to 32 pages. 2 cental 34 to 48 pages. 8 cents. 60 to GO pages. 4 cents; 2 to 78 pages. cents; 78 to 92 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rate. Eastern Business Offices Verree Sc Conk Bn, New Yoik. Brunswick building. Chi cago. Steger building. ban Francisco Office R. J. Bldwell Co.. Hi Market street. PORTLAND, SATURDAY, JULY H, 1914. THEY ARE GETTING TOGETHER. Recommendations made by the Chicago Association of Commerce to President Wilson in regard to anti trust legislation are a welcome evi dence that all big business is not op posed to law against monopoly. The President's reception of the Chicago nmm1ttoe'a criticisms on the Coving ton bill shows that his mind is open to suggestions from those wno are in apcnri! with his sreneral purpose. Thus progress is made toward that reconciliation between the ijovern ment and big business for which the President has expressed a desire. The majority of the Chicago sug gestions will commend themselves to the sound Judgment of the people. The danger Is that in attempting to define illegal practices Congress may by implication legalize others which should also be condemned. The Sher man law Is broad enough to cover all and the Supreme Court's decisions have defined many of those practices which contravene its spirit, and will define others as time passes. The Interstate Trade Commission should have jurisdiction over the acts of in dividuals and firms as well as those of corporations, for unscrupulous men are as ready to dodge the law by doing business in the former capacity as they now are in using corporations. The committee's support of the prohibition of unfair competition is, however, inconsistent with its oppo sition to an extensive system of defi nitions and with Its statement that the criterion Is not whether compe tition is to some extent reduced, but whether the practice Is fair or rea sonable and not against the public Interest. The same criterion should be applied to methods of competition. Practices which may be legitimate as adopted by one of many competitors would be held illegitimate when used to establish or maintain a monopoly. The test of legality should be the purpose and the inevitable effect of acts or practices. The Supreme Court has applied this test in the oil and tobacco decisions, for It held the methods adopted in destroying com petition to be evidence of the pur pose to establish monopoly. It can surely be trusted to continue the same rule of Judgment. The danger that in the effort to prevent unfair competition as prac ticed for the purposes of monopoly. Congress may restrict that healthy competition which anti-trust laws are designed to keep alive was well brought out by Senator Borah in the opening debate on the Newlands bill, when he said: The other day I received a letter from a gentleman who Is in favor of a trade com mission which should have power to fix prices, and In criticism of my criticism of this trade commission, and he gave me as an Illustration this situation: "Here I am engaged In a particular in dustrv. My large competitor has lowered prices all over the country In order to get rid of us small men." Doubtless It appeared to him as a propo sition that was unfair. If the prices had been lowered In that particular locality and kept np elsewhere, nobody would dispute the proposition: but, as I drew from his letter, there had been, so far aa his Industry waa concerned, a lowering of price beyond the point where the small man could do business, and therefore he wanted a regu lation of prices which would enable him to That undoubtedly would be a satisfactory proposition to the small competitor if bis business was In a failing condition; but how about the consumers throughout the coun try? Would a commission say that that was unfair competition that because a large business could afford, by reason of the saving In overhead charges, and so forth, to sell at a lower price it waa unfair for them to sell at the lower price simply because smaller concerns could not afford to sell for that price T The same objection applieg to the sections forbidding price discrimina tion betweeri different persons and forbidding mining companies to sell to all comers. They would tend to Governmental price-fixing and thus tend to destroy competition. If the trade commission in the first Instance and If the courts finally found that these practices were incidents of an effort to restrain trade and to create monopoly, they would condemn these practices in the particular circum stances then under consideration. These flaws in the bill show the need of reposing broad discretion in the commission, that it may, on its own initiative, discover the practices of all who are engaged in interstate trade and may apply the law and Its Judicial interpretation to each case in deciding whether there is cause for prosecution. AN INVALID. The fact that a Pennsylvania wom an lived to be 100 years old, although an Invalid from birth, shows the pos sibilities of longevity when there Is proper care of the intricate human machine that tides us through a brief span of years on this earth. It goes without say ing that the secret of this woman's long life lay In the scrupulous care with which she safeguarded the de fective mechanism which Fate ac corded her. Born an invalid, accus tomed to sickness from the hour when she first opened her eyes, she grew up with a full realization of the limitations of her frail physique. Her body would not stand abuse or ex cess, so she did not impose unusual strains upon it. So, always carefully guarding the smouldering embers of life, she crept past milestone after milestone In life's journey, outliving those who had been rollicking young sters about her and who, doubtless, had pitied her frailty even as she had envied their strength and vigor. The explanation Is that the average person of bounteous health is unlike ly to recognize bodily limitations. Knergy is spent with a lavish disre gard of health and in the end the old body cannot stand up under the pace. When physical protests from the abused mechanism Interpose many people heed them, and so live on to a ripe old age. Others disregard them and pass on prematurely. Very often It rs the breaking down of a single organ that causes dissolution a sin gle organ that has been the victim of abuse through patient years. Something of similarity is offered by the lifetime of a wagon or auto mobile In different hands. One man will get the maximum of service through his scrupulous care of the parts of the machine and a careful recognition of its limitations. An other will jam it along into an early wreck. Of course some makes of machines are more durable than others, even as some bodies are of sterner qualities. But the case of the invalid just cited makes clear that care is the main thing. If you want to get the maximum of service out of your body and live to enjoy a hun dred years of worldly bounties the secret lies in taking proper care of Its parts. HOOD RIVER'S OPPORTUNITY. It is not exaggeration to predict that each year there will be expended in Hood River County, not including expenditures for land, a new sura i equal to, if not more than, the prin cipal of the road bond Issue If the bonds carry at the election next Wednesday. It will be money that would not be expended in Hood River County but for the completion of the Hood River link of the Columbia River .Highway. In Multnomah County, alone, there are upwards of 8000 automobiles and motorcycles. As the beauties of the Journey become known there will hardly be one owner of a vehicle who will not cover the trip at least once a season. Many will make the journey several times. Without a doubt reg ular sightseeing trips will be inaugu rated for visitors and those who are not fortunate enough to possess their own cars. Add to this the tourist travel attracted by the spreading fame of the Columbia River Highway and it Is not difficult to forecast im mediate benefits. A small expendi ture by each traveler will make up the $76,000. And they are benefits exclusive of those that will accrue o a community that has latent oppor tunities, once such opportunities are offered to the appreciative eye. The Oregonian has heretofore said that the characcer of the road work renuired and the peculiar situation of Hood River County would iustlfy state aid In the building of its portion of the highway. But an acceptable substitute for state aid is now offered. Mr. S. Benson guarantees that the bond proceeds amounting to J75,000 will complete the work. In other words, he will provide any excess re quired over that amount. It is gen erally admitted that $75,000 Is con siderably less than the prospective cost of the road. But the additional money required will be forthcoming. Private enterprise and individual good-roads enthusiasm will fill the gap. The Oregonian believes that the people of Hood River County will be better able financially to construct local roads through the Hood River Valley if the Columbia River High way is first completed. MOST YICIOUS OP ALL. If there are two competing manu facturing plants in a community, each valued at $6000 exclusive of site, one owned by four men under a part nership agreement, the other owned by a close corporation in which there are four stockholders. Is there any earthly reason why one should not pay as much taxes as the other? if the so-called $1600 exemption measure be passed the partnership ninnt win he whollv exempt from taxation; the plant owned by the cor poration will pay taxes on the run SfiOOO valuation. This Is a construc tion put on the measure by compe tent legal authority. The $1500 exemption runs against ih Tierson. Each "person" is enti tled to $1500 exemption on his or her dwelline-house. household furniture, livestock, machinery, orchard trees, inoa hushes shrubs, nursery stock. merchandise, buildings and other im- rovements. Owing to the legal dis tinction between partnerships and corporations, the exemption would apply to each member of a partner ship owning any of the foregoing property, but would not apply to any of the stockholders In a corporation owning similar property. There will be a somewhat similar application to homes. Much proper ty is owned in severalty. That is, the deed runs to husband and wife. Each possesses an undivided one-half In terest. On a home assessed at $3000 thus owned, there will be an exemp tion of $3000, for husband and wife will each be entitled to an exemption of $1500. But the homo of the wiaow, or the home owned in the name of husband or wife alone and valued at $3000 like the other, will be half-taxed. The amendment is promotive of gross unfairness in taxation and Is provocative of evasion of taxes. Its inception was quite properly accom panied by worse than misrepresenta tion. On the back of the first copies distributed the statement was made that automobiles are now exempt from taxation and that notes, ac counts and mortgages are exempt in most counties. Truth is that auto mobiles are not exempt. At the time the argument was written there were 5 000 motor vehicles on the tax rolls in Multnomah County alone and there are now approximately 8000. Notes and accounts were assessed last year in all but two counties of Oregon, and the total valuation of notes, accounts and moneys placed on the tax rolls was $19,000,000. Jokerized and born in deception, the $1500 exemption amendment is the most vicious measure on the ballot. TALKING BY MATT,, Use of the dictaphone for writing letters to his mother whose sight is falling is the practical plan adopted by a Portland man. The strange thing Is that such a plan was not brought into general use long ago. The dictaphone has been used for years as a medium of transmit ting letters to stenographers. Why should It not become a formidable rival of the letter, or even replace that instrument for thought commu nication altogether. No matter how strikingly phrased the letter may be, there Is a certain cold impersonality about it. It is a medium only a trifle less crude than that used by primitive man. Certain strokes suggest certain letters and combinations of letters suggest words, which. in combinations, convey thoughts. Very often the thoughts of one Individual are not accurately transmuted to the mind of another. especially if one or the other lacks ; skill in the intricate technique of the, game. How different is the human voice. i, i ..,.., ti.,,100 mcaninc thn 1 most escape even in the most skillful ... l use of the pen. An inflection here UDO Ji. L 1 1 1.. Jcu. . . 1. ........ ...... , . . , . i .. I 1. , an empnasis mere ana wnui mviu prove baffling in ink is as clear as aay. .extremes anu iiitei siiauco ... , .1 - J on hoi emuuuii nuu leciuig mvcoc ...... deftly portrayed. Hence it would not ho onrnrlfllnir If trip anvantaffp.s of th dictaphone should one day be recog nized to the extent that the postman will be distributing small cylindrical missives rather than the thin oblong slips of today. REFORMING THE CALENDAR. Easter, as all readers know, is a movable feast. Sometimes it falls in the last fortnight of March. Some times it glides in the most capricious mnnrtp.r nvfr Into Artril. Since the fashionable world makes Easter the occasion for displaying new ana gorgeous raiment, these changes in its date naturally cause dismay among tradesmen. A March master means great losses to the milliners, fnr oTHmnlp The national German chamber of commerce declares that March Easter costs their country million marks. No doubt other nations suffer in the same degree. But far more serious man mesc mere financial calamities are me lacerated feeliners of devout society leaders the world over, when a too early Easter dulls the hilarity of their escape from Lent. Lawless as Rneitor unnpam to be. its movements are nevertheless subject to strict ruie. It always comes upon the first sun day after the first full moon follow ing the vernal equinox. If the vernal equinox itself is distinguished by a full moon, as it is sometimes, then the next Sunday is Easter. Tho feast is an extremely ancient one and, as this rule clearly indicate!?, it was originally connected with moon worship. In Christian times its sig nificance was, of course, entirely al tered, but its old connection with the moon's changes was unhappily toler ated and commerce still feels the consequences. Perceiving the neces sity for reform in this matter, the Congress of Chambers of Commerce which met in Paris at the beginning of June warmly discussed a funda mental alteration of the calendar. The International association of learned academies also took up the "subject and actually worked out a plan of reform which the world has only to adopt to get rid of its Easter worries with a thousand others. The proposed arrangement gives thirty days to every month but March, June, September and Decem ber, which have thirty-one. me Der, wnicn nave inn ij -one. months begin on different days of the 1 . , montns Degin on umeii-ni ujb ui week, but the same month always begins on the same aav. teDruary, . . . , . . for example, always Degins wxiu Wednesday and March with Friday, The thirty-first of any month always falls on Sunday. The year nas dm days. Now Year's being blank, year day is also blank. Leap iri THE SUN COOLING? Astronomers are diligently occu pied Just now in measuring the radi ant energy of the sun. They have long suspected that the central body of our solar system was a "variable star" and their current observations go far toward proving it. The radia tions, including heat and light, some times vary as much as 10 per cent within a few days if their measure ments are dependable. But these changes are only temporary and in the Jong run they seem to balance one another so that we need not fall into an immediate panic over the cooling of the sun and the end of all things earthly. The poet Byron foresaw such a consummation of our history in one of those "Dreams" which haunted his genius. He tells us that in his vision "the bright sun was extinguished ana the Icy earth hune blind and black ening in the moonless air." Without the sun the moon could not shine and consequently the human race had no light but the stars, which proved inadequate. Nothing grew on the earth's surface. The domestic ani mals perished for want of sustenance and human beings, occupied with the exclusive quest of food, resorted to strange expedients to keep them selves alive, and each person when he found anything edible, "sat sul- lehlv aDart gorging nimseir in art gorsms iiiiiiacii. p" The end of it all was the o-lrtrtm Th a end of pTtini-tlnn of mankind and the wild rush of a dead world through space. The measurements or me sun s ra diant energy which astronomers are now making date back to an inven tion nt s P T.a.nrlev's. This creat scientist received only partial credit for his achievements aunng nis uie- time. It is now acknowledged that he was the true inventor of the aero nipnp alrhniia-h the machine which he constructed failed to fly upon trial, through some trivial defects. A new experiment with it only the other rlov T-ovealed that it was bunt on correct principles and would do all that Langley hoped for It. The in strument which he inveifted to meas ure the sun's radiations is called a bolometer. It depends upon a very simple electrical principle. When two strips of metal are un equally heated a current of electricity flows between them lr they are joinea hv a. wire. A galvanometer properly placed will register this current, no matter how feeble, and thus almost infinitesimal changes of temperature he detected. Laneley used ex tremely delicate strips of platinum in his bolometers. rney were so sen sitive that they would register a change in temperature amounting to no more than the millionth ot a ae- gree. With this subtle instrument it is nosslble to detect the differences of radiant energy in the various col ors of the solar spectrum. The neat, for exam Die. increases toward the red end. Beyond the red, where the spec trum looks dark, there is still more energy, though it affects neither the eye nor the photographic plate. Armed with apparatus of this sort, which has been improved since Lang ley's death, astronomers have of late been taking regular observations of the sun's radiations: The work is carried on at many stations by care ful pmprta and if it is continued long enough it will finally "disclose whether our luminary is cooling or not. His tory affords but little warrant for believing In any permanent change or the sun's temperature for countless thousands of years. The same crops thrive in Egypt now as in the days of the Pharaohs. So far as we can learn the climate of Hindostan has not varied within the scope of re corded time and much the same may be said of many other countries where man has dwelt for ages. Still th.,-, arp some facts on the other side of the question. In Roman times the country about uartnage was P .1 P tta nvK.,T,) fertility . i i piahp rt e ,OW It 1- a. ij rt-i icii uracil. pi. o i pretty certain again that the great I 1 m ier-ations from Asia which re- peopled Europe in the dawn of his- n,A-A ct rvincr Viv artPimtVP ell- tcrv were set eoine by extensive cli- . - - I . tin V, .. trau T?nt tha rH 1IRA O f """'. '"""s"' them may have been something very ........ ... ...... D- rjpmlnerv ppma to teach that the I c j temperature of the earth itself has nnr nltp.rp.rl much for millions Of years, though the climate may con stantly vary upon its surface. For merly tropical plants and animals flourished at the North Pole and there was a time when the State of Washington was covered with ice. Having so many and such confusing facts to reckon with, no wonder the astronomers are puzzled to decide w,hether the sun is cooling or not. BRYAN FINDS A CHAMPION. In his zeal for the honor and dig nity of Secretary Bryan, Representa tive Rainey "put his foot in it" the other day. He denounced the pro posal to make the new commercial attaches appointees of the Secretary of Commerce on the ground that they should be appointed by the Secretary of State and he remarked: "Now It seems to have become the custom nnwjuiflvs and Ihrouffhout the coun try to gratuitously heap insult upon the Secretary of State.'' ile nastenea to explain that he did not mean this was done in a personal way, but that there was a disposition to detract from the State Department He was put to confusion when It was ex plained that Mr. Bryan was quite u-illlne- to have the attaches put un der Mr. Redfleld's authority. There is an element of truth in what Mr. Rainey said, however. Mr. Bryan has been made the butt oi nearly all the gibes at the Adminis tration. Why is this? The explana tion seems to be that his department has most often laid Itself open to criticism. Critics pounce upon those who most invite criticism, and the antics of Mr. Bryan and those in his Henartment surinlv rich material. A department Is respected just in pro portion as Its head manes it respect wnrthv Wn heard no such running fire of sarcasm and ridicule at the pvnpnsp of the State Department in the days of Secretary Hay and Secre tary Root as we hear in those of Sec retary Bryan. The reason is that thev Inspired respect by their policy. actions and conduct, while he does not. Chairman Fitzgerald's economy- knife was waived aside when the House in committee adopted an amendment increasing from $300, oou p Ann onn th nnnrnnrlfltion for ex- ,.------- amlnatlon of land by the Geological I i...p (noltv rlpfpfltprl the I - - - - Survey, but he finally defeated the increase "y "c .. I ,. ,i , thtc nnrl Flenrp- rsmu sanev " v...- sentatlve Raker, of Colorado, made a linchlne- argument for the increase n-han h p said the survey had to de- termine the character of land sought as reservoir sites ana mat men nau been held up for three or four years by delay of surveys. tie citea an example, saying: There 1m a case at hand where a man came to Washington a short time ago. and his claim had been held up three yeani. There was plenty of water, plenty of land over 1000 acres plowed; no water to put on It. because they would not permit him to put in a dam to hold the flood water, which was running to waste, because there was no examination made by the Oeological Survey. This man had to go out and expend from 110,000 to 116,000 to buy hay over the coun try, when he could have raised it on his own ground and Improved and developed the country. It was only during the last two or three weeks that he got the thing through. But there Is plenty of pork for rivers which are not and cannot be navigated. A statement is going the rounds of the press that "within the past week seven carloads of Oregon wool were shipped from Madras to Boston." In the main this is correct, except that more than half the weight ordinarily Is dirt that would better for all con cerned be extracted and kept In the state for use as fertilizing material. The freight bill, of course, would be much less, and there's the rub. Here Is something for the school boy to paste in the back of his "Jog raphy": A high school professor, drawn on a jury, was late in court and the judge made him stay in dur ing recess. a . l. aPI,,-, aya in ha PrrPlP(l .viuauit cuiLuia o-1 for disclosing military secrets at Pan ama. .IUHL a.3 1L Lilt? ljvjvb px.L.wat didn't have a full statement of our comic opera military assets. The Navy has developed a wonder ful new explosive, the secret of which is worth fortunes. Bryan and Dan iels should put it under the hammer. Still Miss Hobbs ought to be quite an expert In the Tumalo Inspection, having qualified as an irrigation ex pert at Copperfield. There Is to be a double style in coats this Fall and a change in mid season. Is Fashion trying to bank rupt us? Suizer is said to be a menace to Teddy. Not to mention what Teddy is to Suizer should he decide to run. An Albany widow who refused a pension and went to work should be awarded a niche in the Hall of Fame. There must have been something wrong with Mexico's second city if poor, old Obregon could capture it. It is up to you to say whether all the poor little folks are to get a trip to the country this Summer. The Senate passed 122 bills in three hours. Getting desperate as vacation time approaches the zenith. The big cooperage concern locating at St. Johns does not mind the arid signs in the skies. Next time the Colonel goes hunt ing, let htm come to Polk County and get a bear. Now the public market is on a practical basis, with best prospects of success We recommend Miss Hobbs for Ad jutant of the West-Hennessy cavalry regiment. An Invalid lived to be 100, while the athlete very often' fails to pass the 40 mark. There was "Katy Flyer" away. no McDuffle on the and the bandits got Th 'FIVr who must stay at home Is casting a longing look toward Denver. Tj .. t,1 hi, the hlcrrptfit nf All drenrT- xj ' cwm - noughts will be a new Oregon. Half a Century Ago : From The Oregonian of July 11. 1804. Baltimore, July 7. Intelligence from the region about Maryland Heights and beyond warrants the be lief that the rebel force this side of the Potomac and on the line of Virginia is not less than 30.000. Governor Curtin telegraphs to Washington that 20,000 rebels had crossed at Point of Rocks. New York, July 7. The World says It is understood that nothing the rebels can do in the Shenandoah Valley will induce Grant to send any portion of his army to Its defense. Chambersburg, Pu., July 6. Rebels, supposed to be Bradley's or Johnston's brigade, entered Hagerstown this aft ernoon. The Federal force, after a spirited resistence, was compelled to fall back on Greencastle. Petersburg, Va.. July 2. Today wit nessed one of the most exciting artil lery battles of the war. After two hours cannonading, the rebel batteries were completely silenced and the rebels driven from the place. At 3 o'clock P. M. the enemy again opened fire, but after two hours' Are their batteries were again silenced. The bombard ment of the city is steadily doing its work. A large number of buildings are already destroyed. New York, July 7. A committee headed by Admiral Anson has been formed in London to raise by general subscriptions a fund for purchasing a handsome sword to replace -that which Semmes lost by the sinking of the Ala bama. It is reported that a consider able sum has been raised in London for the same purpose. A correspondent describes a trip to the Santiam mines in company with G. H. Jones, of the Oregon Cavalry, and Commodore Bryant. They camped one night at Indian Prairie under the branches of four gigantic fir trees. where a bark and bough shelter had been prevlouusly constructed as a matter of necessity, as would appear from the following notice posted on the premises: "Notice! All persons visiting this camp pitch in and take good care not to burn this house down, as it is a good place in a rain storm for a poor, wayfaring traveler. We built this in a terrible rain storm and hope no person will have as wet bodies as we had that night. Signed. Cooper, Newman, Williams and others. June 16, 1864. The bark Helen W. Almy. now lying at Couch's wharf, has a little the larg est samples of big guns that ever did in Pnrtiund The Inrsrest are two 15-inch Columbiads, 18 feet long, 4 feet in diameter at the butt, taper ing down to 25 Inches at the muzile. Two others of 10-lnch caliber are on the same vessel. These guns will be dis tributed to the various works for forti fying the mouth of the Columbia. We have been placed under obliga tions by Mr. Dufur. of East Portland, for choice samples of the product of his dairy. It Is but a very few years since there were hardly buildings enough north of Vine street on Couch's Addition, to de fine what were lots and what were not. With few exceptions the whole section was uninhabited and some say unin habitable. Now everything has changed and steadily the city has pushed out ward until it has extended rearly over the entire space and we see fine or chards, comfortable homes and the pleasant surroundings of life. Four very valuable homestead lots were sold at auction on Saturday by A. B. Richardson. The lots were on block 231, between Seventh and Park and Washington and Alder streets. No. 1 and 2 sold to E. Mllwaln, the first at 1800, the second at 1560. Lots 4 and 5 sold to James MeCown, the two at $936. Charles Freeman, long connected with the County Clerk's office, goes into the employ of Captain Flavel at Astoria. The Ainsworth Mill Company com pleted its organisation by the selec tion of J. C. Ainsworth. R. R. Thomp son and D. F. Bradford as directors. Captain Ainsworth was elected presi dent and George M. Murray secretary. ONE WOMAN'S PLAINT. To visit lands across the seas; To see the Alps and Pyrenees; To know Paris and hear its din; My heart's desire has always been. To cross the Ocean wide and blue; And Monte Carlo visit, too; The peasants know in country home; In fact abroad Id love to roam, instead at homo I calmly sit; Do housework, plan, tend babes and knit; Make all the clothes for youngsters five, And keep my husband's love alive. While my mind is in fair Italy, a h heat and hrpiln are o'er the sea. I scrub the floors, make beds and sweep, Mend hubby's socks, put babe asleep. Sometimes at night I steal away, And travels read; then dream by day That I am in some foreign clime, With heaps of gold and scads of time. Perhaps, some day, when I am gray, And ace has ta'en desire away. The chance may come when 'tis too late; To grant my prayer. Ah! cruel fate. Her Neighbor. I've seen the mountains and the trees; I've seen the valleys and the seas; Castles and shrines of every style; The pyramids, the River Nile. I've braved Sahara's desert glow; I've dwelt in Russia's Arctic snow; Have climbed the Alps, the Jungfrau too; Lived 'neath Italia's storied blue. Tve met the Scotsman on his heather; Dared. London's fog atrocious weather; Have toured Glengarry, Dublin, Cork; Spent seasons, too, in old New York. But not one spot that is my own I care to give the name of home; No dainty girl or sturdy boy To fill my lonely heart with Joy. Oh, God! Take all the wealth I have; It is not gold or fame I crave; Just grant to me the ope great good The Joys and cares of motherhood. Horace William MacNeal. AVIATION LESSON FROM BIRDS. Airmen May Learn Meckanlcal Balance From Creatnrea Without Brain. Berlin Cor. New York Times At a recent meeting at Dresden of the Society for Aeronautics and Avia tion, Professor Conheim, of Hamburg, lectured on the problem of balance in the air. T- Pnnnn Pnnhalm HrPW il narallpl between birds and aeroplanes. He gave a demonstration witn living aoves oni Daaviiiia fmm which the cerebum magnum had been extracted and showed that Balance witn tnese oiros muIm m Ah a n !a 1 Having hppn ttpa puicpj, i . . v 1. " deprived of their brain, the birds could exert no will power, ana mainiamea i.Bi, hoianoe simniv hv reflex move ments of the head, tall and wings. jrroiessor uonneuii pigueu num liho pvnp It mle-ht ha nnppihlp in flipp rn ..... it. uiiau. " 1- i --- -- Invent automatic machinery which would Keep an aeroplane suiuje wtri out requiring any attention from the airman. REASON FOR MARRIED TEACHERS Schoolmarm Type BMM t Tesich Sex Hygiene. PORTLAND. July 10. (To the Edi tor.) The discussion at St. Paul as to teaching sex-hygiene in the public schools emphasizes another argument in favor of having married teachers. There is a disposition on the part of too many of our female school teachers to assume an lgnorantly prud ish attitude with regard to sex and to think that therefore they somehow assure for themselves greater "purity" and a mystic superiority. So acuta has this attitude ot mind become on the part of a good many women teachers who have been in har ness for a considerable time that a dis tinct type has been created. It Is the species known as "schoolmarm." some times called the third American sex. The word connotes a rather slender fe male, considerably faded, with a prim face, and the corners of her mout'.i drooping downward the outward signs of a stunted, embittered, arid in ner life. For such, as Rosa Mayreder, the Austrian feminist, has well saia, me natural invariably denotes the impro per. The origin of the morbid "schoolmarm" estimation of life's com parative values can beat be explained by the Freudian psychology, which makes clear most mental conflicts and hysterias. Perfectly normal impulses, supposedly "mastered," are really only temporarily repressed, and take their revenge by coming to the surface of consciousness again in all sorts oi p normal, fantastic and vagarious forms, recognized by the alienists as obses sions, delusions and phobias. That the nresence of a large num ber of "schoolmarms" In our publlo schools has become a problem, is rec ognized by a distinguished educator. Prof. J. McKeen Cattell. of Columbia University. New York. This authority, referring to a preponderance of "de vitalized and unsexed spinsters." pro poses a possible drastic remedy. In the Popular Science Monthly. January, 1909, he throws out this suggestion: "The ultimate result of letting the cell- bate female be the usual teacher has lipcn such its to make it a question whether It would not le an advantage to the country If the whole school plant could bo scrapped." We shall never have sex-hygiene successfully taught in the public schools until our society, including school teachers, becomes sane, whole some and natural in Its attitude to ward sexual subjects. At present most of us. and especially a large percent age of public school teachers, are still suffering from the uncleanllness of asceticism. To overcome this unfortunate condi tion perfectly healthy, intelligent, cap able and sympathetic married teach ers can contribute more than single teachers ever will be able to do. (MISS) M. M. OFFICIAL PARSIMONY I CAPITAL Rf-llrn of WHaon Deprlvril of Mall Service by Erotaomlxlnc Demot-rata. WILSON, Or., July 7. (To the Edi tor.) To Bhow how the Democratic Administration is practicing economy take the case of our postofflce, which has been established for over 20 years. The contract was to be let this Spring before July 1. The former mallcarrlcr took the contract before the parcel post was established at about $700 a year for a trl-weekly service. The route is 25 miles long, over the summit of the Coast Range, which sometimes has a depth of seven feet of snow, and every year has snow so deep that a horse must go over it every day or the trail will be blocked. The parcel post at times has been a great burden to this carrier on horse back, but our great and generous Gov ernment was making a record for econ omy out of him, so all was well. But when the. new contract was to be let no one could be found who would take It as cheap as those, sitting In tbelr fine offices in Washington, considered right. No thought enters the mind of those sleek city men of the poor mail carrier out in the rain, cold nml snow, struggling along to make 2 a day and pay for his own utid horse's keep. No welfare commission looks after these poor, ill-fed, ill-clothed servants of a rich Government. One man applied for the contract at $800 a year for twice a week service, but the wise men in the Postofflce De partment said it was entirely too much, and would not give him the contract. Then they advertised for bidders for the once-a-week service, but no one would bid, so since July 1 we have had no mall. The Department Jias notified the postmaster here that he will be al lowed to hire a carrier himself, but must not pay him more than two-thirds nf hla own compensation, which Is about $40 a year. Thus the matter stands. We have no mall service. The Glenora Weather Bureau Sta tion has been kept here without pay for 22 years. It will have to be dis continued if there Is no way to send out the reports. Such a long record through such a term of years is cer tainly valuable, as the chief observer In Portland assures us It Is, but the Democrats must economize. There are 20 or SO people near here who will certainly go to the polls this Fall, rain or no rain, and do all they can to put Republicans Into office. Nothing makes people more angry with the Govern ment than to deprive them of the mall. Wo settlers would surely rather do without the parcel post than to be de prived of our letters and The Orego nian, but we are helpless in the hands of the officeholders In Washington. MRS JENNIE A. REEHER. WAR OF BLOOD IN OLD MEXICO Astee Kingdom Based on Butchering of Captives, and General Ruin. Pittsburg Dispatch. Based on conquest as the Aztec king dom was. and with the most blood thirsty religion the world ever saw, the nation was, above all, a fighting com munity. To be a tried soldier waa the road to honor and office, and the King could not be enthroned till he had with his own hand taken captives to be butchered on the war-god's altar at his coronation. The common soldiers were promoted for acts of daring, and the children of chiefs were regularly trained to war, and Initiated by being sent into battle with veterans, with whose aid the youth took his first prisoner, but his future rise depended on how many captives he took unaided in fight with warlike enemies; by such feats he gained the dignity of wearing colored blankets, tassels and lip-Jewels, and reached such military titles as that of "guiding eagle." The Mexican military costumes are to be seen In the picture-writings, where the military orders of Princes, eagles and tigers are known ty their braided hair, eagles' beaks and spotted armor. The common soldiers- went Into battle brilliant In savage war-paint, but those of higher rank had helmets like birds and beasts of prey, armor of gold and stiver, wooden greaves, and especially the ich capllll, the quilted cotton tunic two fingers thick, so serviceable as. a pro tection from arrows that the Spanish Invaders were glad to adopt it. The archers shot well and with strong bows. though their arrows were generally tiDPed only with stone or bone; their shields or targets, mostly round, were of ordinary barbaric forms; the spears or Javelins nan neaas oi onsiaian or bronze, and were sometimes hurled with soear-thrower or atlatl. of which pictures and specimens still exist, show ing it to be similar in principle to tnose used by the Australians and Eskimo. The most characteristic weapon of the Mexicans was the maquahultl or tisna wood," a club set with two rows of large, sharp obsidian flakes, a well directed blow with which would cut down man or horse. Twenty-Five Yea- Ago Fr im The Oreonian of July It. IMS. Ellensburg. July 10. The loan offices havo been crowded all day with people anxious to mortgage property for money to rebuild The leading agencies have no hesitancy In negoti ating long loana at 1 or 9 per cent net on gilt-edged business property, soma even going as low as 7. Salem, July 10. Thomas Ksy. chlaf projector of the woolsn mill, who has been in the Eastern states and Eng land purchasing machinery, arrived here today. A company will be or ganized on Monday and the contract let for the building of a mill. Victoria. B. C. July 10. F. J. Bar nard, one of the early plonoors of Brit ish Columbia, died this morning. In the early days of mining he carried the malls to Cariboo and subsequently or ganized Barnard's Express Company, which still, under the name of the British Columbia Express Company, runs stages Into the old mining camp. Yesterday morning the grand lodge of the Ancient Order of United Work in r n for Oreeron and Washington Ter ritory assembled at Grand Army Hall. First and Taylor streets. The follow ing officers answered the rollrall: Grand master. E. L. Smith: grand fore man, T. A. Stephens: grand recorder. Newton Clark; grand receiver. R. L Durham: grand .guide. Oliver Hull; grand I. W., Ira A. Mills; grand O. W . C. K Stephana Two new men have been selected for the East Portland pollca A. M. Cox and Ambrose 8. Cummlngs. of Irvlng's Addition. Last evening as Officer Harvey was passing Fourth stre.-t. East Portland. In front of Scbmltfa gun store, bis dog bit Schmitt's child on the facs Mr. Harvey st once shot the dog. but did not hurt him much, as tne animal trot ted up the street with a sort of what -the-racket expression. John E Sheppard. the representative of the Oregon Immigration Board at San Francisco, Is in the city. Some time ago the Methodist Chutvh at Oregon City presented handaoino chair to the Portland Hoeptta! Re cently Mrs. Peaae. of that cltv. a ven erable lady of 4 years, mothar of Cap tain George A. Peaae. mada a pretty silk and satin cushion and cover for the chair, which she forwarded to lira Dr. H. M. Whitney The many friends of Rav. T U KM will be pleased to laarn that Harvard University has conferred on him the degree of D. D. The i . U N Compnny'e ateaflMT T. J. Potter arrived from Tacoma last evening and will make her Initial run on the Tortland-Ilwaco routa Satur day. Charles S. Leland. of the wall-known Leland family of New York, who have a world-wide reputation for knowing how to keep a hotel, la In the city The object of hla vlalt la to ex amine the. new hotel. Ha Is very IMMfc pleased with the building and It probable that he will accept the posi tion of manager. N. Wheat From Arganllaa. AZALEA. Or.. July . (To the Edl tor )To settle an argument can you tell us if any wheat waa Imported to the United States from Argentina lal year and how muchT a saaaai y OERALD PICKETT The Commerce Department's report shows that no wheat was Importr-.l from Argentina In the fiscal year . Ing June 30. If 13. In the preceding year 71 Dusneia ...... urea are not avaname ior ,m. - June SO. 1914. More Women Juagee. London Tlt-Blta. Egypt and Sweden now have women Judges. Emrralsa In ET- Tathflndar. Emeralds are still found In Knypt- Some Features of THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Hear Colors See Smells A unique color page f future, dealing with the ultra-marine bine strains of the violin and I ho frf granee of your opal rings. On a Visit to the Moon Some extraordinary things are going on up there, as observers are able to note with the aid of power ful glasses. An absorbing full page in strikiug colors. George Ade Again He has written some new fables for Summer readers, and you will not want to miss them. The first is the fable of Susan and the daughter and the granddaughter, and then something grand. It has all of Ade's compelling humor. Where Hen Marry Trees An illustrated special article from a realm of the queerest cus toms, where girls are widows at 5. A Mountain Oirl The true romance of a miss who went alone to New York and with pluck and native common sense won out against heavy odds. Americans in Mexico Why they are there and what they have been doing, both good and bad, is told by a special cor respondent of The Oregonian, Charles M. Pepper, who u now in Afexieo. A Streetcar on Wings That describes the newest and biggest aeroplane. With photo graphs. A whole page is devoted to newest scientific discoveries and remarkable facts. The Postscript A complete short story, by Helen Parker. In Holland Harrison Fisher's "American Girl Abroad" is in the land of wooden shoes in the drawing for Sunday. Unintentional Clews An expose of the methods of crooks, whereby they invariably leave some trace of their identity in their manner of working. The Fold-Upa Another entertaining cut-out for the children, together with a full page of illustrated stories. Scores of Other Features. Order early of your newsdealer.