THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, .TTXY 21, 1914. 8 PORTLAND. OBEtiOX. Entered at Portland. Oregon. PostotT!ce as Second-class matter. . - Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall) Sally. Sunday Included, one year s -w t.-i-I.' included, six monthi 4. Dally! Sunday Included, three montnl.. 2.2o Dally. Sunday Included, one mon.u. Dally, without Sunday, one year.... Dally, without Sunday, alx monthi.. -o.. .. t.:.. vundav three mol.:ns 3.25 1.7S Daily without Sunday, one month -0 1. 1 w & , . 1 i' '- r": 2.50 Hun.iav' and weekly, one year -5u m CARRIEHj Dallv. Sunday Included, one year -2? Dally Sunday Included, one month .( u; Kemlt Send Postoffic money or der. express order or perional check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or "-' -T-T- senders risk. Give poatorrice mart" d i tn IS caees. 1 cent. 10 to pages, i cents; 34 to 4S pages, S cents. 60 to 60 pages. 4 cants; to . Pages. ,5 cants; 78 to 92 pages. s cents. Foreign post age, double ratea. . Eastern Bualnesa Offices Verree Conk, lln. New York. Brunswick building. ni Cagn. Steger building. tan Francisco Office K. J. Bid well Co.. T43 Market atreet. I-OFTL4XD, TVESDAY. JCLY 21. 1" BACK TO THE FRltiAL LIFE. We denounce the profligate waste of money wrung from tha paop.e by oppr tv. taxation, through the lavish appro priations of recent Republican cn"l which have kept taxes high and reduced the purchasing power of the . people ""jj V. demand that return to simplicity ana eonomy which befits a democratic gov ernment and a reduction In the numbe of useless offices, the salaries of which drain the substance of the people. From the Democratic National platform of mi The triumphant Democratic return to the wavs of simplicity and econ omy is being achieved by the present Democratic Congress in the form of the greatest appropriations ever made by arty session of Congress. Demo cratic promises are of course more resonant than sincere. The current appropriation bill will exceed $1,100,000,000. The largest nrevlous bill, made by the wasteful and nrofligate Republicans, did r -eh 1 ion 000.000. Nearly every it. 1 increased. Rivers and har bors alone makes a jump from $41, 00.000 to $53,000,000. Everywhere there la larger expenditure; nowhere Je there a consistent and efficient ef fort to reduce the burden of "oppres- tr taxation" which is "wrung irom the neoDle." . Tt.it what la to be expected of an Administration so little regardless of the DeoDle's money that it proposes to make an outright gift of $25,000. 000 to Colombia, so as to silence the Markmalllng clamor of that puny- republic? BOOSING A VOCATION. tn the nrofesslonal theory and practice of education there is one point particularly difficult lor laymen to understand. Several points arc diffi cult, bat this one Is particularly diffi cult'. We refer to the venerable pre cept that the best way for a youth to educate himself In any given subject 4. tn rtiidv something else. Thus If he desires to become a musician, let him study Latin. If he would make himself an expert In the lives and habits, both good and bad, of Insects, he must devote himself to mathe matics. And so on. Never, never should a young person ever study the subject he wants to learn. If he doea his mind will be come flabby, his brain will wither up like the flower when It Is cut down and his mental energies will utterly evunnratp On the other hand. If the ambitious youth who wants to win renown as an architect, for example. xmII diligently apply his mind to the study of cuneiform inscriptions he will acquire such aji affluence of men tal power that the rules and practice of his particular specialty will be mere child's play to him. The same principle applies to every- other voca tion. Always begin preparing for your chosen one by studying some other. This is .the educational rule at pres ent followed in most of our orthodox colleges, and it has the hearty ap proval of the older type of teachers. The economic basis upon which they have built the system Is plain enough. They have laboriously constructed a course f study and made themselves expert teachers of it. A great deal of time and money has been Invested in the established routine. The profes sors have spent years of their lives and Immense effort to train them selves In its rites. Should they admit that their pudding Is not a universal mental food suited to every Intellec tual stomach and satisfying every' rea sonable desire for education It would be the same as if a quack doctor were to confess that his nostrum might fail In certain diseases. This, of course, no Judicious quack would ever do. The Outlook for July 18 pub lishes an article which undermines the very foundations of this highly respectable educational theory- It Is entitled "The Importance of Being Interested." and Its author is H. Ad dington Bruce. Mr. Bruce makes clear to the read er one truth that ought to be shouted from the housetops. This truth is tba youth will do more hard intel lectual work anu acquire more solid Intellectual fiber by studying a branch that interests him than by trying to study one that he detests. The old maxim. study sometning mat jou hate." fares badly at his iconoclastic hands. His doctrine is. "study some thing that you like and the chances of your making a success of yourself are doubled and trebled." Nor does Mr. Bruce depend on mere abstract logic for his arguments. He draws some powerful ones from the biographies of greatly successful men. The early history' at such characters has been pretty uniform, no matter what their vocation may have been. They began life with an unmistakable bent for a particular subject and that bent they followed at all costs and hazards. Some of them, like Charles Darwin, were temporarily diverted from their natural Interest by one cause or an other and the consequence was invar iably bad. Darwin narrowly escaped Intellectual ruin by studying .subjects that his mind abhorred. If the cur rent educational theory were correct he ought to have been profoundly benefited, but he was not. All the great musicians have devoted them selves to their art from early years. Mozart Is the shining example of this truth, but the others were like him. though few were so wonderfully pre cocious. Painters and sculptors, math ematicians and linguists, preachers and orators of the first rank have almost Invariably chosen their voca tion in boyhood and stuck to it with all their energy, often In spite of par entral opposition and the counsels of foolish friends. Mr. Bruce quotes Harelock Ellia' astonishing figures which show that out of a thousand eminent British men and women more than SOO were markedly "precocious." This means that they showed In very early youth a distinct liking for a certain vocation and carried out their preference against all opposition. An Interesting point In the case is that, although they devoted themselves steadfastly to music, natural history, mathematics, architecture or what not from boy hood to old age, their health did not suffer. The inevitable conclusion is that the early choice of a vocation not only makes success more certain than It would be under the ordinary educational practice, but that It also makes for health and long life. WATER AND ITS DANGERS. Water Is an indispensable element of life and a universal agent of com mer.ee. But it is also among the com monest instrumentalities of accident and death. It appears to be impos sible to impress the general public with the axiom that water drowns. Within a few days there have been many deaths from drowning in and near Portland. Primarily the reasons of such deaths are that the victims cannot swim. But it is a strange fact also that the expert swimmer acquires somehow the idea that he cannot, or will not, drown, and he takes many chances. He has become so familiar ized with the risks of this sport that he forgets them, it is true that many, perhaps most, professional swimmers end their careers by trying the Im possible In the water. But the majority of deaths from ilron-ninp crimp from the ranks of the .. ,l ln,vn,riiinreil The river is daily tenanted by hundreds of men and women, in boats and canoes, or in swimming, who would be utterly helpless in case of accident. Why will they run such risks? It is the duty of every parent to teach his children to swim or cause it to be done. It is the duty of every person to stay away from the water,, unless of course he is in safe hands, if he cannot swim. The young man who. unable to swim well, takes a young woman or any friend on the river. In a boat or canoe, tempts Providence. WILL BEAUTY SAVE? Were the trial of Madame Cail laux laid in this country instead of France it would not be difficult to predict the outcome with a fair de gree of accuracy. The American jurors' susceptibilities are touched by a beautiful defendant, particularly when her crime is the outgrowth of what they conceive to be an overt act against her reputation. The Ameri can public, on the other hand, while prone to applaud an acquittal under the various forms of unwritten law. with strange inconsistence thereafter makes life as miserable as possible for the acquitted. Mark Twain's story in the Gilded Age of the reception of Laura as a lecturer after her acquit tal of murder is one of his visualizing conceptions of human nature as It flourishes In America. It has in spirit if not in form been duplicated In real life In the case of Nan Patterson and others. Madame Caillaux' f"te In France will depend largely upon whether the French Jurors possess similar emo tional tendencies. There can hardly be doubt that the murder Was pre meditated, as we conceive premedita tion. Here her only possible de fense would be emotional insanity. There, too, "brain storm" as a plaus ible defense Is not overlooked by the astute criminal lawyer. In the conduct of the trial one marked difference between French and American criminal procedure will be observed in the empaneling of the jury. The story of the Caillaux hear ing reads succinctly that after the Jury had been drawn by lot in a pri vate room the trial began. In as important a case In America the examination of Jurors would drag along perhaps for weeks. Testi mony in France is also obtained by more direct methods. But the French lawyer is not deprived of re course to technicalities. Resource fulness makes a name there in crimi nal practice as well as here. The name of Fernand Labor! is as well known to American newspaper read ers as that of any criminal lawyer of their own country- THE SENATE'S FARCICAL SECRECY. The Senate has been making a great pother because it cannot keep its own secrets. It was Inexpressibly- shocked when some of the proceed ings before the foreign relations com mittee in regard to the Colombian and Nlcaraguan treaties leaked out and has adopted a resolution Instruct ing that committee to find the leak. Senator Galllnger mortltled nis highly indignant colleague, Senator Stone, of Missouri, by recalling that he had once been appointed on a committee to conduct a similar inves tigation and that the committee had never been called together. He sug gested as the reason that the chair man or the members knew many such inquiries had been held with no re- ults and that there was no use in having another. He predicted that the proposed Inquiry would meet the same fate, saying: It will amuse the country a little; the newspapers will have some new text to ex ploit the futility of the Senate in discover ing leaks that happen somewnere ana in some wav and that must come from this chamber: they cannot come from any other source. He did not believe that any Senator deliberately and Intentionally dis closed the secrets of executive ses sions, but he thought newspaper cor respondents pieced together sugges tions obtained from different Senators. Notwithstanding this frank confes sion from one of its oldest members, the Senate ordered the inquiry. It did so in spite of the statement of a veteran correspondent that he had heard a Senator denounce the man who had given the correspondent cer tain information, the Senator himself having been his informant. Senator Borah has asked the Sen ate to do away with this time-honored humbug. He has moved that the two treaties be considered in open session. He is a member of the for eign relations committee, but has ab sented himself from its sessions In order to keep clear of any pledge of secrecy as to the Information he pos seases. He threatened to make pub lic what he has learned by personal inquiry about the Nicaraguan treaty unless the Senate permitted open de bate, and was deaf to the pleas of the horrified Senator Stone. He said he could show that the treaty was "based upon deception, misrepresentation, fraud and corruption." Mr. Stone expatiated at length on the necessity of secrecy in diplomatic affairs, blind to the fact that this secrecy has already been violated In the cases under discussion. In view of the fact that the Senate cannot preserve the secrecy it pretends, what is the use of the pretense? The Co- lombian treaty has not yet been made public by the Senate, but it has been published in the Diario Official of Co lombia and in Paris. Then where is the secrecy? Mr. Stone says no treaty has been made with Nicaragua; Mr. Bryan has merely consulted the com mittee about a tentative draft. But that draft has been published. He strives to keep secret the testimony taken by the committee, but Senator Smith has related In open Senate the story of the financial deals Involved, and the bunkers concerned have given their version. The Senate's secrecy has proved a mockery. It serves no purpose except to shield those who make public frag mentary, biased accounts of proceed ings with the purpose to promote their own ends or because they can not prevent their tongues from wag ging. Secrecy may be desirable in diplomacy, but unless it Is absolute the broadest publicity Is preferable. A DIKEllOM LOST. A tepid wave of gossip about Will iam Waldorf Astor has overflowed the New York newspapers. That emi nent millionaire long ago renounced his American citizenship and became a British subject with a residence in the London neighborhood most thickly populated with Dukes. It was his ambition to become a Duke him self all In good time. To further this laudable desire Mr. Astor became a Tory in politics and acquired two Tory newspapers. The reasons for these moves are not obscure. Toryism is supposed to lead more directly to dukedoms than. Liberalism does, for one thing, while, as everybody knows, the surest mode of ingratiating one self with royalty and the aristocracy and thu paving the highway to rank and title is to do the reactionary party a service. With his two news papers and his inflated pocketbook Mr. Astor has been doing service for years, always with the glittering re ward dangling before his eyes like the famous wisp of hay before the mule. But the wronged and betrayed mule never got the hay and Mr. Astor seems likely to miss his dukedom for good and all. For reasons not dis closed to the public he has sold his Tory" organs in hot haste. Cf course that means that his hopes are blasted. The ingenious New York papers ex plain the sudden catastrophe by a fishy story that William Waldorf is angry with his son's wife. This dame has a shrewish tongue and some of her peppery remarks seem to have stung the holder of the money bags. Out of revenge William Waldorf has decreed that his son shall never be a Duke, and to compass that frightful sentence he must of course renounce the hope of a dukedom for himself. Thus doth destiny blast the pride of man and topple to ruin the towers of his ambition. We trust that Mr. Astor does not miss the obvious les son of his tragedy. True happiness for an American millionaire is to be found in a useful life at home and not In snobbish apery of British aristocrats. ANOTHER RAILROAD WRECKED. If the statements made in the House by Representative Townsend, of New Jersey, are correct, the Wa bash Pittsburg Terminal Railway Company's security-holders have been the victims of manipulation only less in enormity than those of the New Haven road. This case differs radi cally from that of the New Haven In methods pursued, but the result Is the same enormous depreciation of the securities. The Wabash Pittsburg Terminal owns a valuable road connecting Pittsburg with the Wabash system, had contracts with the Wabash lines which should have been lucrative, and possesses many thousand acres of coal land in the Pittsburg district. In 1904 It sold i per cent bonds to the amount of more than $30,000,000 at 90 and 92 cents on the dollar, among the purchasers being many in surance companies and savings banks. Mr. Townsend charges that this com pany seems to have been deliberately wrecked. He tells of the means In these words: The freight contracts entered into with the railroads were denounced, claims were lodged asainst Its securities, complicated legal proceedings designed to frighten bond holders were threatened or begun, freight was diverted from its railroad lines, the Wabash Railroad withdrew its care, lease of the subsidiary company's coal mines was abrogated, products of the mines were shipped over rival roads, and on after an other those apparently having both the power and the purpose of wrecking ttto company proceeded to exerciso that power, and the purpose was accomplished. Both the Pittsburg Terminal Railway Company and the Wheeling St Lake Erie were thrown into the hands or a receiver; defrauded bondholders organized a protective commit tee, ostensibly in their Interests, and the V received deposits of a large ma jority of the bonds. This first committee did nothing for two years, and a second bondholdens' movement was started. But through some means which it would be In teresting to have cleared up both of these committees appeared to be under the control of interests unfriendly to the bond owners. In consequence of these manipula tions the bonds were recently sold on the New York Stock Exchange at 7 hi cents on the dollar. If what Mr. Townsend says is true, the insurance companies and savings banks, in which are the savings of thousands, have been defrauded. Mr. Townsend has introduced a resolution instruct ing the Interstate Commerce Commis sion to examine into the affairs of this wrecked company. It should be adopted not only In the Interest of the wronged bondholders, but of the peo ple who are again thrown into the power of the Pennsylvania Railroad and of all honest railroad men who are brought Into disrepute by such crimes. A TEST OF HONESTY. Hearsay evidence is of great value In some quarters. It now moves the Pendleton East Oregonlan to support the assertions accompanying the $1500 exemption law that notes and accounts are exempt in most coun ties. "Multnomah County Is the chief county In the state exempting this property," says the Impression able East Oregonian. "We know that because more than one Umatilla man has moved to Portland to escape taxation on his notes." However conclusive somebody's professed excuse for leaving salu brious Umatilla County may be, The Oregonian prefers to rely on state reports. The State Tax Commission has published for distribution certain tables which give tax statistics. One of them, compiled from the assess ment rolls of the several counties, segregates the different classes of property as taxed In each county. In this table there Is one column devoted to money and another to notes and accounts. Foot notes dis close that some counties list notes and accounts under money; some combine money with notes and ac counts; some list the two classes separately. But the table show con- cluslvely, if the tax rolls and the State Tax Commission are to be be lieved, that notes and accounts are taxed in thirty-two of the thirty four counties of the state. In Mult nomah County, where money and notes and accounts are listed together, the total on this class of property for 1913 was $11,343,450. Two small counties, and two only, Columbia and Wheeler, do not tax them at all. The total amount of money, notes and accounts listed for taxation in Oregon is, according to the official table mentioned, nearly $20,000,000. The exact figures are $19,S65,362. A somewhat similar class of prop erty Is shares of stock. They are on the Assessors' books of the state at a total value of $15,278,159. Money, notes and accounts and shares of stock called "rich men's property" by the single taxers are on the assessment rolls at $35,143,531. This total Is In excess of the assessed value of all the livestock, farm Im plements, wagons and carriages in Oregon. It exceeds the total assessed value of segregated improvements on land, aside from Improvements on town and city lots. The man who has a strong sense of justice in his make-up will be con tent with the present fair distribu tion of the tax burden and he will turn his attention to measures designed to reduce the cost of government rather than to sniffings and evasions. A vote on the $1500 exemption Is a test of honesty amo g those who make Investigation. The Green Bag. a law magazine, says in a curious article on the strug gle between the early Christians and the Roman Emperors, that a strictly legal way for a convert to escape per secution was to procure a certificate from a magistrate stating that he had "poured libations, sacrificed and tast ed the offerings." These certificates were procurable much in the same way as a "booze prescription" in a dry town and were even more useful. They form an Interesting commentary on some of Paul's letters. Those who pooh-pooh the agitation for rural credit legislation on the ground that farmers "can borrow all the money they need on reasonable terms" may profitably peruse the prospectus of the American Rural Credit Association. This thin pam phlet states among other facts that our 12,000.000 farmers are paying an average of S per cent on $6,040,- 000,000 of borrowed money. The profits of farming do not justify such a burden of interest. The season for forest fires is upon us. The danger is greater tins cum mer than usual because there has been so little rain. Everything is as dry as tinder. The least spark may start a blaze and destroy life and property. The high wind that blows for hours almost every day makes matters worse. Under these condi tions carelessness is a crime. Camp ers in the woods should leave no spark to smolder and spread. Smok ers should be on their guard. Since all the alleged dynamiters are in jail, the Chinese company building an Army hospital in Hawaii will be unmolested. It would have been bet ter, however, if an American firm did the work, even if It cost more. The chances are that, if Diogenes came to earth again in pursuance of his search for an honest man. he would not even go near the National Capital and the straight-forward Mr. Thompson would be overlooked. To sit on the track and await death by a train must require a nerve that ought to assure a man ability to keep on living, but it is a queer world and the one little yellow spot sometimes is In the most important place. Big league players are determined to be costly If they are neia to oe chattels. The threat to close ball parks Is idle. Fans are entitled to consideration, and that action will create Federal opportunity. The inventor of the phrase, "It's just one darned thing after another," must be a native of the Gulf region. With the dread of yellow fever gone, bubonic plague comes as a distressing clement. The editor of the Stuttgart Schwa bische Zeitung, who was thrashed for five minutes Sunday by two women, can get even with the sex by taking it out of his wife. If he has one. The burglars who raided the home of the head of the Union Meat Com pany showed a sagacity that deserves special mention. Their first operation was on the pantry, of course. If Joseph Knowles' experiment should succeed, the adventurous boys, who would in other days have gone to kill Indians, will take to the woods clothed "in the altogether." Home rule Is not yet for Ireland. The King's command for a confer ence as if there were anything about which to confer makes the prospect gloomy. There is no danger that Mexico will find life dull and uninteresting so long as Zapata continues his continuous-performance revolution. Now the Idaho Northern has been completed to Payette Like, access will be easy to a grand Summer resort for the dweller at tidewater. Several thousand fans will watch the news from San Francisco late to day, and the margin is too small for comfort. Some legislator-elect should exer cise his brain in devising a punish ment for the fool who rocks the boat. Here's hoping the good health the National Guard gained during the maneuvers is not purely theoretical. The man who preferred "nit" un derwear a day or two ago hastened to put the "k" Into it yesterday. Moving-picture men can get a good film by shooting all that First Nation al money In transit shortly. Hint to the housewife: The gro ceryman has a day off tomorrow and he deserves it. It is a sign of good times when our old friend. Car Shortage, appears on the scenes. Now Is the time for the forest fire patrol to prove Its efficiency. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of July 21, 1S64. A complimentary dinner was tender ed by Thomas Smith, of the Empire, to Captain Olney and his command at The Dalles on Monday. During the de tachment's first dress parade on the same day a flag was presented by Mrs. Berry on behalf of the ladies of The Dalles. Christopher C. Hewitt. Chief Justice of Washington Territory, returned re cently from Washington. Having form erly been a resident of Illinois, he was well acquainted with the President and passed many hours with him. Uncle Abe was as fond as ever of relating stories and uttering quaint sayings. A politician from Washington Terri tory, whom the President and Judge Hewitt both knew, had been a constant caller at the White House to solicit some favor, but had all at once ceased his visits and bored the President no longer. Soon after Hewitt met the President, when the latter remarked: "Where is your friend? I haven't seen his auger around here for some time." Lieutenant C. A Emery, of the Ninth Infantry, who went East to take Ridge ley Greathouse to Fort Lafayette, has been attached to the staff of General Meade with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. The State Teachers' Institute will meet in Albany on August 2. Miss Bell of Salem, and Mrs. Godley of Albany, will furnish the music Rev. I. D. Driver of Corvallis. will deliver the address at the State Fair. New York, July 19. A Niagara Falls telegram says: C. C. Clay of Alabama, Jacob Thompson of Missis sippi. Beverly Tucker of Virginia and George N. Sanders are at that pluce devising a basis of action for the Chi cago convention which shall end the war and secure a triumph to the Demo cratic partv. The propositions are be lieved to be as follows: The return of the seceded states to the Union; the assumption of the Confederate riPht- the recognition of the slaves actually emancipated In the progress of the war and the status quo ante bellum as to all others. New York. July 19. The Tribune's special says: Sunday evening our forces were seven miles beyond Stroutsburg in pursuit of the rebels, who are making rapid time up the Shenandoah Valley towards Staunton. New York, July 19. The Herald's James River correspondent, under dato of July 14, says that the rebejs shelled General R. B. Foster's headquarters at Steep Bottom that day for more than an hour, une range was o &--utn that the headquarters were moved seven times. A number of shells went through the general's tent. They also opened fire on a gunboat and the pon toon bridge. The gunboat returned the fire and soon silenced the battery. Grant was having an interview with Foster when the shelling took place. Atlanta, July 13. The enemy are re-crossing the Chattahoochie on the right in the rear of Roseville. A por tion of the Yankee army is on the south side of the river. San Fran'-isco, July 20. A dis patch from Rldgeley Greathouse, of Chapman piracy notoriety, announces his escape from Fort Lafayette into Canada. Ran Francisco. July 2n. Yesterday's private telegrams say It is reported that Atlanta Is capturea. A very handsome specimen of gold bearing quartz was on exhibition at the Dennlson House yesteruay. wnicn waa taken from a late discovery tn the Eagle Creek mountains, Baker County. Married In, Pacific County. W. T, at the residence of the bride's father on the 13th inst.. by Hon. John Briscoe. Henry K. Stevens and Miss Annie Wirt. The Imperial Standard Mills, among the finest on the Pacific Coast, are situated at Oregon City and have lately passed from Daniel Harvey to Mr. La Rocque of Butteville. for $31,000. Savior, Burnside & Co., of this city, purchased a half interest. The Portland fruit market is at present supplied with the choice varie ties of early harvest apples. NO DESIRK TO SELL PROPERTY African M. E. Church M--h IVanta Place to Wortiliip, Snys I'astnr. PORTLAND. July 20. (To the Edi tor.) Please allow me a little space to repudiate a few statements that have been made against the officers and members of the A. M. E. Zion Church, df this fity. I noticed In The Oregonian a few days ago that certain Individuals in the neighborhood of First and Halsey street, where we now arc preparing to erect a new church, accused us of attempting blackmail, and that we were buying property in districts not desired in order to specu late and make money out of said deal. Such statemepts are untrue. We are only trying to erect a place of worship for ourselves and havo not at any time been actuated by any other motive. Neither are we wanting to sell our present holdings, and If by any re mark let fall by any official of this church anyone has been led to believes that we were desirous of selling. It Is a gross error and misinterpretation of our intentions. We have no desire to be a menace to the comfort and tranquillity of any one in this city and trust that wc may only have the same consideration at the hands of the public as other Ameri can citizens. We are not loud Holy Rollers or a boisterous mission outfit holding mid night services until the wee hours of the morning, but we worship and sing and pray as Intelligently as any of the congregations of the city. W. S. DREW. Pastor steward. A M. E. Zlon Church. Lay of the Parlor Cave Man By Dean Colllua. In days of old. when men grew bold. And came down from the trees. And through the forests, uncontrolled They roamed as they mignt please. Their garb was mere, plain atmos phere. They had no soap nor match. And had they one. It Is clear They had no place to scratch. But In the woods, sans earthy goods, They lived a carefree round, And scrambled for their livelihoods About the mossy ground; While men today In dire dismay Would shrink from such a life. With ne'er a grocer's bill to pay. No pants nor pocket knife. Some few brave souls, like Joseph Knowles May dare the forest rough; The rest disdain the timber boles And back to nature stuff. And I admit, when pressed to it. Though wild my life may be, I never felt impelled to flit Shy of my B. V. D. My heart rough with caveman stuff. Primordial my soul; But when somebody calls the bluff, My name's not on the roll. I like the wild, harsh mountains, piled Where rugged scenes entrance; But more I like my bathroom tiled, My shoes, my soap, my pants. HINDI POET SEEKING ENTRANCE One of India's Ret Writers Imnng 400 ImmlirrnntR at Vancouver. PORTLAND. July 20. (To the Edi tor.) Royenda Ranet Is one of the best writers in India He is one of the 400 Hindus that are coming to Canada. If the English government drives those 400 Hindus back to India he is going to make a talk to the English people In India He is the author of the book entitled, "How Long Are 20,000 Englishmen Going to Rule Over 400, 000,000 Hindus?" In introducing this writer to the American readers. I shall translate in prose one of his poems, which Is "The Mother and Her Child." which happens to be the only writing of his which we have In our possession at the pres ent time. The Mother and Hrr Child." A little boy asked his mother once, saying: "Mamma, where was I and whence I came, and how did you find me?" Gently the mother kissed her little boy, and smiled. "You were in my heart," she said, "the essence of its pleasure, and you were with me when 1 was a little girl, when I used to play outside in the dust and mouUl images tn the semblance of those my father worshiped. So you were in my imagination when I was a little playful girl and you were in the very same temple of my family, and I used to worship you whenever I used to go in to worship. You were living in my hope and love, and in the llfo of my mother. You were nursed many, many centuries ago by the immortal spirit that reigns over our tribe. You were a dream of a sweetheart that passed before my vision at night, and when 1 waked up I found you flying around me like a little bird, and now for fear that you might go away from me, 1 stretch my arm around you and ask, 'Oh. what charm or secret power would haply strengthen my feeble arms to keep this valuable treasure!' "The End. "The ship of death is lifting anchor, mamma, and I am going to sail aw.iy; good-bye! When the night throws his dark wings and the whole world is dim and dark, and you stretch your arms to And your sleeping boy, you will hear a voice from behind the darkness, say ing, 'Your boy la here no more.' I shall become a gentle brecxe after my departure, and I shall klBS you when ever I blow lu the dawn, and I shall be the waves of the water that sur round your body, when you bathe, and shall kiss you with every ripple of the water, and when the wintry wind blows bard, and the drops of the ram fall on the leaves of the trees, and you are in your bed, listen, and you will hear my voice in the wind: look and you will see my smile flash In the lightning, and If you watch the night. wailing and thinking of your missing boy, 1 shall let you hear my singing above the stars: "Sleep, mamma, O mamma, sleep.' "And when the full moon sheds his light. I shall slide down his silvery beams and enter your room, rest upon your bosom and lull you to sleep. And I shall be a dream and lind my way through your closing lids until 1 come to the chamber of your heart, and If I frighten you and you wake suddenly, look and you will see me a firefly humming around you in the darkness. And in the holy day of Jalyla. when the children of tho street gather around tho . house with their instruments, I shall become the harmony of their songs, and I shall touch your heart to 1111 it with Joy.. "My aunt may come to visit you on this holiday, in her hand the present that she often brings me: she will ask you, saying, 'Sister, where Is your boy?' Mamma, answer her gently, 'he Is. In the pupil of my eyes and in my mortal body and In my immortal soul.' " NAJIH KHI'RV. VARIOUS ISES MADE OK N FILM Complaint Made I'hnt It Dorin'l tt Furn Backbone of Public Men. Kansas City Star. Concrete was used by the Humane who also Invented the celebrated Roman nose, which Is still used with such great success. Concrete is com posed of cement and broken stone, which are mixed with water by a tired man in overalls and a red flannel shirt and converted into a sort of geological Irish stew. The mess Is then atuf fed into a wooden mould and when it dries it is so hard that when time attempts to nibble It with Its Justly famous tooth is has to go to the dentist with a low shriek of agony. The Romans wasted their concrete building bridges, coliseums and ro..i Had they built their emperors of this material they would have been more durable and tho empire WOUld hnv lasted longer. A re-enforced concrete emperor wolld have been less fatal to the populace, while tha sight of a Praetorian guard pecking away at the impenetrable crushed stone ttiorav of his ruler with a valuable sword In an effort to create a vacancy on the throne would have been highly divert ing. Nowadays concrete is- used uitli Ere.it success in building houses, skyscrapers. bridges, baseball parks, pavements, sidewalks, wormlesa tombs, boats, arti ficial legs, telegraph poles, water tanks, artificial pipes, false teeth, cathedrals, smokestacks and eating-house sand wiches. Concrete has. In fact, become the most useful thing In the world, and many a mountain which has only been an obstruction to traffic will be ground up In the next few years and sold in sacks to men who have cities to build. Thomas Edison has recently Invented a method by which concrete houses can be poured to order by two strong men while the family is unpacking the fur nlture. This will be a great boon, and before long we may expect to buy our house at the store by the gallon and to draw a cute little Queen Anne garage out of a faucet and take It home in a pall. Concrete, re-enforced with steel. Is the strongest material yet Invented; but science thus far is only building bridges and skyscrapers with It and has not yet used It In providing prac tlcal backbones for public men. When this has been accomplished the grade of statesmen available will be vastly Improved and the old stylo office holder with the gutta percha spinal column will wabble into oblivion along with the wooden hotel. Cotton Staple Cloth Material. Chicago Journal. Tho world's production of raw silk increases little, if at all. Japan show a considerable gain, which is offset by 1 ..-s In other silk raising countries. The world's wool clip Is stationary or declining. The festive goat of Angora persuasion Is multiplying his offspring and his fleeces, but it will be many a day before mohair takes a leading posi tion In the textile trade. Meantime, the population of the world is Increasing, and the average Indi vidual uses more clothing than ever before. This condition throws a heavy and Increasing burden on cotton, which more and more is becoming the staple clothing material. Our Southern plant ers are ready to bear this burden for a consideration but It Is not a healthy state of affairs for the world at large. Viewing the situation broadly, one can understand why any experiment which promises a new cloth making material is followed with such eager Interest by scientists, manufacturers and govern ments. ' Where Encyclopedia May Be Consulted. PORTLAND. July 20. (To the Edi tor.) I have the McKadden Encyclo pedia and will gladly show it to M. M. B., who recently asked where one could be consulted. H. NOLLAN. 328 ft Mill street. Twenty-Five Years Aro i From The Oregonian of July tl. 1WI4. Chehalls. W. T.. July SO. The Che halla Flume L- Aqueduct Company Is finally organized and ready for busi ness. D. L Stone, the millmar, baa purchased a body of land at Hie haod of the flume from the Newaukum River and contracted to furnish the lumbw Salem. July 10. Articles of tncorpora tlon were filed today by the Bank of Oregon; place of bualnesa. Albany; In corporators, II. Bryant, J. W. Hlaln and H. F. Merrill. Salem, July 20. The Suite Board of Agriculture was in session h-re this morning. There were present President Da Laahmult, Apperaon. Gallon i. Looney, Wilson and Richmond. Aaton .. July $0. Jacob Kamtn la about to build a sldewheal steamer to run between Portland and this city. New York. July 20. Tha new North American halt Company occupies two columns In the eveniiMJ papers with ad vartlalng. The prospectus atatea that arrangements have been made for pur chase of nearly all the salt-producing properties on the North American con tinent. The company Insists that It la not a trust and as proof says that any body may buy stock who m ill pay for It, On July 14 Eugene and Etta Brar man. of Salem, completed their quarter centennial of married life, and tha oc casion waa celebrated by a gathering of the most intimate friends of tha large family connection. The family connection Included Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur Breyman, of East Portland; Mr. and Mrs P.. M. Watte (the laat a Me ter of the Breyman brother). Mr. and Mra.. William Brown ttlie Inet a daugh ter of Werner Breyman , also Mrs. Ilol gate, of Yamhill, and several young ladies of different branches of tha family. John K. Sears, bookkeeper In tha Con troller's office of tha O. R. N. Co.. died Friday at Denver. Peter Duber. aged 74 years, died sud denly laat evening. Dick Emmons, the newly appointed In spector atloat for the Dlatrlct of Alaska, has returned from his first trip. On the evening of the l!th at Aa- torla, Colonel James Taylor and his esti mable wife celebrated their golden waa ding. Eugene C. Protzman has returned from Grays Harbor. The Misses Hadle and Jeanette Mar qiinm. accompanied by Mra. Da Warren and the Misses M linkers, of Salem, will spend the Sabbath at Seaside. The sawmill of John H. Joneg ft Co. on tho Macadam road, next to tha real dence of Hiram W. Terwllllger. was burned last night. Loss about 120,000 Yesterday Richard i:verdlnga at torneys. Judges Williams and Watson, obtained from fudge Shattuck an al ternative writ of mandamus calling up on District Attorney McGinn to sign Mr. Everdlng's complaint In a BUlt to oust Joseph Simon from tha Polios Cajajj mlsslonership Meanlnat TORTLAND. July U (To the Edi tor.) To settle a much mooted ques tion I wish you would enplaln to nv the exact meaning of the "S. o, 8." alg nal used by wireless at sea when ship is In distress. Is It 'Shipwrecked at sea"? ri u-r.H Tho following Is frtuii the inagaxlne Ocean Wlreleas News: In talking with the wireless rater man y passengers ask the meaning of the three letters used In tha distress signal. "S. O. " There eeema to be a general opinion thai tho letters are the abbreviation of ihr. soparate words, with a dfinlt meanlas Persona of an Imaginative inn.l -r mlal will tell you that the letters stand tr " eur ohlp." "Send out succor." "Sink or swim." or some other surh meaning, far from It. gentle reader. Th three letteie signify nothing but tl:at a ship Is In distress and in need of aaelstai.ee Tho call la uoed by ail natlora as a universal code, so that any wlreleas operator, regar.lleen of the language he speaks, ran Immediately la ter). ret the call of diirrss Inasmuch aa the call la In use by all countries It can be seen that the signal can have no meaning la anr one language. The character of the code makra It a call that can he picked out easily from other signals, being compoeeci of the combination, three dote, three daehes. three dots. 1 nine of International EshlbM. BMTWUBIA Belgium, July S. (To tha Editor.) Aa the time for the Panama -Pacific Expo.-ltloti approaches, perhaps Oregonlans will be Interested In read ing about some of the effects of elhlbll lllg at expositions, as they lnv reifne under my observation In France and Belgium. In both of these countries, when pen pla bam that I come from Oregon, they frequently aay, "Tou II va near British Coflitnbla, then, where they raise the line fruit?" I admit that BrM lah Columbia la. comparatively apeak ing. quite near to Oregon, and that very flue fruit la grown there; but I hasten to add that fruit or equal quality Is produced In Oregon and Waahlngton This never falla to astonish my ques tioners, who regard mo with a look of Incredulity and at once change the sub ject. After this had occurred several times I began to ask such questions how li happened that they all knew about Canada's fine fruit (It waa particularly apples that they mentioned), but ware unaware that we raised good fruit In Oregon and Washington. The responses are Invariably tha same: "Canada hlblted fruit at the Brusaels Exposition of 1910; If you raise such fine fruit, whv didn't you .xhlblt also?" (MISS) BEATRICE YOl'NG Ulvnree and Insanity. PORTLAND, July 20. (To the Ml tor.) la It possible for a man to pro cure a divorce from his wife who Is an Inmate of the State Insane Asylum? INQUIRER. Insanity la not ground for divorce In Oregon. Foreign Buyers During this month the commis sioners of the big stores and tba manufacturers are scouring Europe In search of noveltloa. They do not go ao much to buy great quantities of gooda aa ther do to aecure "ideas" and Vamplasj" for home reproduction. When these buyers return their storlea will be of great news Inter est to every American woman. They will bring tho meaaage of tha new shades and shapes and colors tha harbor of tha changing waist line. And the first news will coma in the advertising columns of the good newspapers. This In part explains why moman are such careful readers of news paper advertising. It glvas them the facta they want to know.