8 TTTE MOITXIXO OREGOXIAN. FRIDAY, .TUT,Y 1G, 10T3. r. p. f-i g SO al W S- Sr - a Ss 1 I a PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce as second-class matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In advance: (it J Id all.) Dally, Sunday included, one year .8.o Dally, Sunday Included, six months.... -l3 Daily, Sunday Included, three months. . It-lii Dally, Sunday Included, one month..... .35 Dally, without Sunday, one year....... B-OO Daily, without Sunday, six months..... .! Dally, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 Dally, without Sunday, one montn..... .HO Weekly, one year Loo Sunday, one year ...................... 2Mt Sunday and Weekly, one year By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year...... 00 Daily, Sunday included, one month. ... .75 How to Remit Send Postofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bask. Stamps, coin -r currency are at sender's risk. Give poatofflce address In lull, including; county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 18 paces. 1 cant; Is to 82 pages. 2 cents: 8-i to 48 pases. 8 cents; CO to 60 paces. cents; 82 to 76 paxes, t cents; 78 to l2 pages, o cents. Foreign post, age, double rates. Eastern Business Offices Verree ConR lln. Brunswick building. New Tork; Verree Conklin. Steger building. Chicago: San Francisco representative. K- J. Bid well. 742 Market street. FOBTLASD, FRIDAV, JL'LY J, WIS- GERMANY'S CHIEF ADVANTAGE. The successful resistance which Germany and Austria have hitherto offered to superior numbers is due J,o ""their application of all their energries and resources to the working out of success in war. From the beginning almost without exception they were the first to use every new device, or they had brought It nearest to per fection. They first used giant howit zers to batter down forts and the best their allies could do was to Imitate them. They first used concrete to line trenches and to make prepared bases for machine guns. They fully realized the possibilities of the machine gun in defending trenches and have three or four to one possessed by the allies. They have practically supplanted the rifle with machine guns. They were prepared beforehand with the cement, steel plates, barbed wire and machine guns to defend trenches. How Immense Is the advantage they thus gained can be judged from this statement of a German officer, who had been taken prisoner, to a writer . for the London Mail: i When we want to move a hundred men te4 another part ox the line we Just establish five or six machine guns in their place. A caretaker and his wite could defend some ot cur 'irenches. Germany has had the advantage of Initiative, not only in most of the at tacks but in the application of new devices or in the application of. old devices on a larger scale than her enemies. Whatever is done that is new. Germany has done it first, and the allies have copied her. The one exception Is in the use of aircraft, 'wherein It is generally agreed that the 'Frenclt and British are superior. The allies' are now struggling to overtake her, and in some respects have done so. The French 75-millimeter gun is one example and the Italian Deport gun is another. The allies are adding -to their machine guns, but the ma chinery used in making them takes .eight or nine months to construct; hence the Germans have a long start. Kxplosive shells in staggering quan tities are alone effective In destroying barbed-wire defenses and wrecking machine' guns which defend trenches, and to the-lack of them are due the heavy losses of the allies with small result. . : - These are facts which the American people must take to heart. It is use less to assume that we shall have no wars because we prefer peace, when some other nation may prefer war and may inflict it upon us against our will, with an alternative which the most confirmed pacifist would not accept. We must therefore be prepared with both the trained men and the scien tific, mechanical apparatus In suffi cient quantity to overcome any prob able enemy. Even though our weap ons should rust from disuse, their cost "will be money well spent, for It will be .an insurance premium on our Na tional safety. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION FOR GIRLS. The air is full of darts aimed from all directions at the futile medieval ism of the public schools. The other day we recounted Herbert Quick's at tack upon this ancient and towering fortress. Now comes Anna Charlotte Hedges, Ph.D., of Columbia Univer sity, with the accusation that the pub lic schools neglect to train girls in "progressive wage-earning ability." As Miss Hedges sees the situation, girls need economic preparation for life as much as boys. Boys get pre cious little of it from the schools. Girls get hardly any. As usual throughout this "man's world," the nobler sex has the pref erence. But if Miss Hedges can have her way he will not retain It. She wishes to see the public schools so modified that all girls shall receive a certain minimum of manual train ing along with their book studies. This she calls "dexterity in the use of tools and materials." She also demands for all female pupils practice in pre paring food, making clothes and the use ' of correct English. It is to be borne in- mind that this training is not to be restricted to wage-earners alone, but is for all the sex, rich and poor alike. But at a certain stage in their careers there comes inevitably a dif ferentiation between the schooling of the children of the rich and of the poor. The latter must learn how to .gain a livelihood. The former need not, as society la organized, though all sensible people agree that it would bo far better for th millionaire's daugh ter to learn some useful occupation before she begins her orgy of dining. dancing and lovemaking. Perhaps if she did so the orgy might never begin. isut, no matter about that now. Let s face the fact that a great many tnousand girls, as well as bovs. should .toe-educated at school for a vocation. Miss Hedges believes that this edu cation can best be obtained partly In the schoolroom, partly in-the factory. The general principles of wholesome and competent work may be taught to classes in tne public schools. The de tails must be learned under the dlrec-' tion of -forewomen in actual industry. Miss Heages would thus make indus try co-operate with the schools in the great business of educating the young. The most Interesting point in her theory is that it seems to solve the perplexing question of child labor. Everybody admits "that some work is good for children, even for very young ones. The trouble is that if they are permitted to work at all In the indus tries they are exploited and their health destroyed. The right course appears simple enough in Miss Hedges' view. Keep them, she says, continually under the supervision of the school authorities.. Here may be another and most excellent use for the human machinery of the public school system. PROFESSORS SHIELD A CRIMINAL. If the two university professors who knew last Winter that Frank Holt was really Kric Muenter, the accused mur derer of his .wife, are representative, the estimate or public duty held by men of their class is deplorably low. Their silence as to Holt's Identity made them accessory after the fact to his murder of his wife, and they helped Holt to retain the freedom which he used to shoot J. P. Morgan, to explode a bomb in the Capitol and to place bombs on one or more steam ships. Yet these men are training up the youth of the country in Cornell and Chicago. What ideal of civic duty must the students form under such Instructors? . Recent criticisms of professors have been that they talked too much rather than too little, but the effect of their loquacity was the same as that of Pro fessors Bennett's and Gould's silence to destroy or weaken respect for law. Some professors have used their posi tions to propagate radical and revolu tionary political doctrines, destructive of respect for law and the Constitu tion. By their silence Messrs. Ben nett and Gould practiced what the other professors preached. Men in their position at least should have known that it is the duty of every citizen to come to the aid of the law against those who violate it. As a citizen every man is a partner in our- institutions, the stability : of which depends not only on each indi vidual's own respect for the law,, but on his active support of the law's offi cers in exacting like respect from oth ers. Mere inertia, such as was dis played by the two professors in ques tion, would, if universally practiced. break down the law and inaugurate anarchy. GOLD COMES OUT OF HIDING. Driven by the necessity of calling every ounce of gold into service for purchase of war material abroad and for maintenance of their credit, all the great belligerent nations are adopting every possible device to attract gold Into the government banks. Germany and France alike have appealed suc cessfully to their people to exchange gold for paper money, even wedding rings, jewelry and ornaments being sacrificed in Germany, and hundreds of millions of dollars have thus been added to the banks' stores. Austria Is starting a like movement and Brit ain Is trying to borrow the savings of the poor by offering to accept 6-shil-ling installments in payment for war bonds. This Is an effort of the governments to accumulate enough gold to pay for imported war materials, as exporting nations, of which the United States is the chief, will accept nothing but gold or its equivalent. But gold is needed chiefly as a re serve for paper currency, in order to keep the nations on a gold rather than a flat-money basis. Necessity has driven the belligerents to issue a flood of paper currency, which Is spreading out their gold reserve constantly thinner. They strive to conserve it both by gathering in the people's di vidual hoards and by selling or hy pothecating American securities in payment for war material. The readiness with which the French people subscribed for the bonds issued to pay the German war indemnity in 1873 opened the eyes of the world to the vast stores of gold secretly hoarded by the masses. The habit of hoarding has been on the decline in Europe, but great stores of gold have been drawn out of hiding by war finance measures. - The loyalty of IndianPrinces to Britain has even broken into the fabulous stores which they have accumulated for generations and to which they add yearly. India has been called a sink into which great quantities of gold disappear. Hoard ing in that and other countries ac counts for a large part of the known discrepancy between the annual pro duction of gold and the known amount used as money and in indus try. By attracting a large part of these hoards into the banks, the warring nations are doing the world a service. Could all the hidden gold be brought Into use, the money supply would be increased and the newly circulated gold would form the basis of two or three times Its amount in bank notes. Credit would be expanded and inter est rates would be held down. Hoard ing has been a fruitful cause of high interest and of arrested , development. SOCIETY OR SYMPATHY? We are not sure that those who ob ject to the unfairness of the dual code of morals are a unit In all particulars. It is quite likely that many who pro test against it vehemently believe both man and woman should receive the same punishment now accorded by so ciety to the woman; others, just as ve hement, may be convinced that both should receive the same leniency now accorded the man. It will hardly do for those of the former opinion to approve, solely be cause of society's attitude, the for bearance shown the two Portland ' women who had smothered an illegiti mate babe. And we recall that the sentence on the young mother was suspended until the man responsible for her plight could be brought to justice. Yet on that basis, society is assumed only to be discriminatory. If society is to reform by visiting the same scorn upon the man as it now visits upon the woman the motive that actuated Mrs. Fowle and her daugh ter will still remain, in all its Impell ing force with those who continue to fall from moral grace. The woman's shame will not be lessened by her consort's disgrace. A great deal of sophistry is invoked to excuse inexcusable crimes. There are those who blame society for the murders committed by the McNa maras. There are those who blame all lawlessness upon society. But they are our -visionaries. We cannot es cape' the thought that the otherwise sensible folk who blame the'dual code In social crimes for the murder of the Fowle infant are searching mi nutely for some plausible excuse for the dual code that is applied In other cases. Woman bears all the Ignominy of social crime, but almost invariably obtains special consideration when- ac cused of- theft or murder. An unrea soning sympathy is almost universally extended to female criminals. It is very doubtful that, had Harriette Fowle's father. Instead of her moth er. placed the camphor-soaked cloth over the infant's face, iie would have had her opportunity to compromise the case by pleading guilty to the les ser crime of manslaughter, let alone a chance of parole. He would have been tried for murder. Yet If society's cruelty to a wayward girl is excuse for a mother's desperately criminal means to protect her, it is as good an excuse for a father's. Vindlctiveness in the law's behalf Is the last thing that should bo acquired by the courts, and probably imprison ment would have brought no refor mation or remorse that will not be the another's and daughter's without It. If legal penalties are to take no account of effect on others who may be tempted, perhaps there is nothing more to be said. Still let's be candid about the gentleness of their reproof. They are. women and the rigors - of the law were Intended primarily for men. Society, which sheds its tears over their error and meekly takes the blame, will,- just as remorselessly as of yore, turn upon the next erring girl who does not seek to hide her shame with murder.' JAPAN'S DESIGNS ON CHINA. The importance to the United States, in common with the rest of the western world, of the revelations of Samuel G. Blythe in the Saturday Evening Post regardlng Japan's de-1 signs on China cannot be overesti mated. In total disregard of her pledge to all the western powers to maintain the open door and territor ial Integrity In China, Japan has set deliberately, to work on the execution of a plan to assimilate China, as she has assimilated Corea. Japan appears as having used her ally. Great Britain, as a shield to ward off interference while she won Southern v Manchuria from Russia and took Klau-Chau from Germany, thereby having entered upon a policy as inimical to British interests as to those of. the United States and of other European powers. Japan alms to become supreme in Asia. If Japan were to succeed. China would cease to be independent. It would be .as completely under Japan ese rule as Egypt Is under British rule. ..Japan has been going about the execution of her plans in her usual systematic, secret- manner, and has chosen the psychological moment. Yuan Shi Kal Is organizing China Into a nation and is awakening the latent resources of her people, and, if free from interference, would soon make China so strong that Jap.-yi could have no hope of success. In fact might be In danger of punishment for the wrongs she has done to China. There fore, it Is now or never with Japan. World-wide conditions favor Japan, for her allies dare not offend her, and her enemies in Europe are unable to interfere. The United States, alone among those Interested, Is free to pro test effectually. Ever since the war with Russia, Japan has had swarms of spies in China, gathering all the information needed for military occupation and political and commercial control. The report of the secret mission she sent to China throws a lurid light on her designs. It was made before the re cent demands were made and reveals the purpos behind those demands to have been military Occupation and political control. It belles the assur ances to the contrary which were given by Premier Okuma. The at tempt to bind China to secrecy as to the demands made upon her and the attempted suppression of the most objectionable demands after China had made them public had but one purpose to' deceive the world as to the nature of Japan's alms. Notwithstanding" the preoccupation of the Western world with the war, secrecy was necessary to Japan's suc cess. Without . It, the world might have been kept In the dark as to the extent of the peaceful . penetration of China- which Japan would have ef fected, had all her demands been con ceded. By the time the other powers awakened to the truth and found themselves In a position to block the game, the silent, stealthy but rapid process of assimilation would have gone so far that its. undoing would have been a herculean task. President Yuan has proved himself in this crisis to be one of the ablest of the world's statesmen. Powerless to resist by force and having no hope of armed assistance from any other nation, he used the only weapon available publicity. By publishing Japan's demands, he put the United States and Britain on their - guard Japan attempted to lull them into se curity by concealing the -ten most vital demands, buriall reached the two na. tlons most deeply interested in keep ing China free- and open. The British commercial world raised a storm of protest. The United States notified Japan that no agreement would be recognized which did not accord with the open-door policy to which Japan, In common with the other powers, was solemnly pledged. Japan drew In her horns and did not insist upon the most Important demands, but she did not withdraw them. They are to be made, the sub ject of an exchange of notes, accord ing to the Japanese version of the ne gotiations. Unless vigorous steps are taken by other powers, .they will doubtless be .Insisted upon at a more convenient season. Meanwhile the process of peaceful penetration will continue. Spies will keep Japan in formed of every move of China and of European and American diplomats agents and commercial men. Agita tors will continue the effort to stir up the Chinese against the United States by dwelling upon the Indignity of ex clusion... The way will be prepared for another advance toward the ac complishment of Japan's ambition that China become.' In the words of Mr. Blythe, "a Japanese dependency Instead of a sovereign country. The Interest of the United States In these developments of Oriontal policy is Immediately commercial, but it is more. We should not submit to ex clusion by Japan from the rich mar kets of China or to admission on such terms as Japan, as doorkeeper, might dictate. But all our Influence should be used against the transformation of China into a great military machine in the hands of Japan. Japan is be fore all things a military nation. She has shown that her guiding principle is "might Is right." She is the Ger many of Asia in military and industrial efficiency. Her ambition would grow by what it fed on. With China in her grasp and with millions of armed men at her command, she would seek to gratify her lust for conquest not only In Asia but in America. Her pride wounded by our exclusion policy, she would seek revenge on us. Looking at rich Mexico torn by revolution ana seeing vast areas of South America thinly peopled and undeveloped, sh would treat the Monroe Doctrine as a scrap of paper and would seek an outlet for the teeming surplus popu latlon of Japan and China on this sld of the Pacific. The United States may well be on the alert against dangers frorr th conquering nation of Asia, as well as from whatever nation In Europe. may conquer Discussion of the needs of the farm ers always comes back to the need of good roads. Myron T. Herrlck says they should co-operate in buying, sell ing, borrowing and lending, but co operation requires meeting frequently to discuss affairs of this kind. . Farm ers are averse to driving miles over bad roads in the evening, so they don't meet and Kn't co-operate. The first essential is to smooth the roads, then co-operation will follow. Mrs. Zehner's recipe, for the high cost of living problem Is wise and practicable. "Live - within your means" is her maglo formula. We have nothing to add to it except the precept, "Make your means adequate, as soon as you can. to a healthy and happy life." It might not be a bad I flea, for General Goethals and Mrs. Zehner to get up a Joint lecture on wages and family expenses for next year's Chautauquas. The children of a New York father have been bitten several times "by unmuzzled dogs," and he says "It is nough to try his patience." His erenity under provocation reminds us of Mary's' father. Mary, you re member, poisoned her mother's tea. Her mother died in agony. Her father really was quite vexed, and said: Well. Mary, now what next?" We can't all be calm, but we can all ad mire calmness. The voice which Mrs. La Course heard In the night watches may have been her son's. The mysterious word came to her at about the time of his tragic death.- The records of such oc- urrences are numerous and credible. Telepathy may . account for them Perhaps the explanation Is more oc- ult. When the soul of a young man parts from his body Is it strange that the first visit should be to his mother? Suppose, gentle reader, that Paris, London or Vienna must be destroyed by aeroplane bombs next week fend that you had to say which one of the three It should be. What would your choice be. and why? Probably Paris. London, Vienna and Rome are more oved by mankind than any other four cities. Rome Is not endangered by the war Just yet. All the others are. The Morning Enterprise, df Oregon City, Issued yesterday Its annual prog ress and anniversary edition in maga line form of forty-eight pages. The men who make things go and local enterprises and resources are exploit ed in text and halftone. Placed lin the right hands, this number is going to do great good to the manufacturing city. The Welsh coal miners have chosen a strangely unpropltious time for their strike. Their grievances are doubt ess Important, but. to patriotic minds. they can hardly outweigh the public welfare. A strikeiof this kind, at such a moment, might? be worth more to the enemy than a great victory in the field. It Is but a fleeting glimpse of Colo nel Roosevelt that 4s vouchsafed to Portland, but It Is better than nothing. We" cannot see much of his splendor in twenty minutes, but what do you expect?. The brightest meteor shines but a second or two. The lightning flash Is gone almost ere It begins. Dr. HIllls' lectures to pay his nephews' -debts are in the same cate gory as Mark Twain's lectures to pay the debts of the publishing firm he founded. Both men valued good name above money. If the sort of patriotism which pre vails among Welsh coal owners and miners were general throughout Brit' aln, there would be nothing for Ger many to do but go In and take posses sion. The pleasure of old men like Levi W. Myers is to be able to look back on a life of activity and usefulness, in which they have done their part toward making the world better. In future parades let us put the Grand Army men In automobiles. They will be spunky about It, but they have done enough marching to entitle them to ride In chariots. If Austria tVlU send ships, the United States will sell war material to her. If she cannot send the ships, 4 Is Mars, not the United States, who plays favorites. Ex-President Roosevelt will be in the city Monday for twenty minutes. An hour's stay and he would be the Colonel, and if it were five hotfrs. ou own Teddy. Young America showed Its pride in the Liberty Bell by marching behind two generations of veterans, those o the Civil War and thone of the Span Ish War. . After having got Austria into thl war by his blundering diplomacy, the least Von Berchtold could do was to take a hand in the fighting. Georgia Is putting the "Jim Crow' Into its schools, public and private. Georgia Is Georgia, one of its kind in almost all things. Really, the polymurlel costume for women that can be worn on all occa slons is not so new. Eve had one. If the sun will only shine, we will cinch that billion-bushel wheat crop, Watch Ed Lyons have the time of his life "shooing" the trains today, Old Vesuvius thinks it about time to take a hand in the game. Professor Krohn marched as if he enjoyed it. and he did. Przasnyz is the latest German cap ture. Spare us! Every little chap and every littl girl helped. The musicians all drop harmony fo discord. . After Seattle Portland. eh, what? Why, Roseburg's new railroad seems to be assured. The bell was everlastingly "shot-" Talking of football already. Take the town, nobles. Thank you, Ir. Beals. Stars and Starmakers By Leone Can Bser. With the thermometer snooping way down around "the hundred and tens here at Billlngs-on-the-Tellowstone. the belles ot the city are wrapping their throats all 'round with these dinky almost-cat furs. And I reckon next Winter they'll pack their fur neck pieces away In moth balls and to bacco and expose their throats and necks as usual. George Alison, once a Baker leading man. 'has been engaged by Henry Miller to play the leading role in one f the three companies of "Daddy Long Legs" which he will send out next Summer. Mr. Alison's wife. Gertrude Rivera will have an important place in the company. They have been play ing In stock at the Crescent Theater. n Brooklyn, for the last five years.' Since August 1. 1914. more than 10 war plays and sketches have been pro duced in America and England and heaven only knows how many more are In process of manufacture. The American list Includes "Inside the Lines." "The White Feather." "Marle- Odile." "The Hyphen. "Moloch." "Across the Border" and "War Brides." while In the English list are "The Right to Kill." "Der Tag." "The Day Before the Day." "Armageddon." "War. Red War." Remember Belgium." "When There Was War." "Soldier's Honor." "The Bride of the Battlefield." "In the Hands of the Huns," "Margaret of the Red Cross." "It's a Long Way to Tlpnerary." Mary From Tlpperary." "The Man Who Stayed at Home." "In Time of War" and "Son of a Soldier.! a Daphne Pollard has registered a suc cess with the 115 edition of "The Passing Fhow" at the Winter Garden. In New York. The show Is bow In its seventh weekv Little Miss Pollard was one of the original band In the Llll- putlan Opera Company and since the breaking up of that organisation she has been with California musical com edy companies and In vaudeville over Pantages circuit. With "The Candy Shop." Maude Fulton and William Rock's musical comedy, little Miss Pol lard went East as far as Chicago and after the run there she made the return trip West as far as Seattle, when aha received a call from New York to come on and Join the Winter Garden players. She Is Just the size of the proverbial minute, can dance like an acrobatic thistledown and was the type they needed. Eugene and Willie Howard are the principal players In the company, George Monroe ia an other Important one and to. is Juliette Lippe. see E. H. Sothern will return to the stags next season in a repertory of modern plays. By arrangement with Win throp Ames. Mr. Sothern will occupy the Booth Theater, In New York, for the entire season under the sponsor ship of the Shuberts. In making his reappearance Mr. Sothern will make a departure from the usual type of plays wWi which his name has been asso elated In the past. His leading woman s to be Margaret Dale, the brilliant and lovely young actress we saw with George A r lias in "Disraeli." see One of the novelties in Flo Zlegfeld'a new "Follies" is a corn-motion picture act in which a -director stands in the orchestra, and. as he directs, motion pictures appear, players come and go andrtalk back to him In pantomime. Mae Murray plays the role of Mary Plckcm. the Oakland girls, a sister team, appear as the Onion sisters, bur lesquing the Gish girls, and Will West is again Jennings B. Ryan. Reviewers say that one of .the best scenes of the score Is the burlesque on "Androcles and the Lion." In which Bert Williams adds to his fame. Professor Barker wishes to take a moving picture In the jungle of a lion leaping on his prey. He takes Bert Williams Into the Jun gle with him to be used as bait. The professor finds a convenient tree near which lions roam and ties Williams to a stake at the foot of it and then climbs the tree. The lion appears and. Just as he is about to spring on Williams. ho recognizes the "bait" as a man who once had done him a favor. They shake hands and then Jointly turn on the photographer. Phil Dwyer, who ap peared In the Granville Barker pro duction of "Androcles," plays the part of the Hon. Ina Claire haa one of the leading roles and does a dozen of her clever Imitations, including a new one of Mrs. Vernon Castle. Leon Errol, once of Portland, staged this show, as he does all of Zlegfeld'a Follies. Errol plays a role as Rip Van Winkle In tho production. Al Jolson. who Is coming to th Helllg the week of August 8 In "Dan clnir Around." might almost be called a Pacific Coast product, tor although he did not actually begin his career in San Francisco, It was there that he developed bis talent. The story of Al Jolson's career be gan in his teens, when he left his parental roof in Washington. D. C. to join a circus. It was what Is known as "a wagon show." and It moved from town to town by the maln-trav-rled road, the performers sleeping In the band wagon, on top of the cages and anywhere they could bestow themselves. In addition to acting as general utility man about the lot. Jol son clowned, did acrobatic stunts, sold song books and appeared In the con cert which followed the "big show." In this latter feature he was announced by the ringmaster as "Master Al Jolt-on. champion buck and wing dancer of America." After his act he washed up, helped cook the supper and carried water for the ponfcra not the kind of "ponies," however, that surround him today i-i the Winter Garden extrava ganza, but the four-legRwd kind, which eat baled hay. Jolson then went Into vaudeville and It Is rather singular that he never at tracted any particular attention until he went to California In 1903. His first appearance there was at the Orpbeum In a slurring, talking and dancing act called "A Little of Everything." This sketch was billed as "Jolson. Palmer and Jolson" one ef the Jolsons being his brother. Harry, still In vaudeville. After playing with this trio he final ly returned to San Francisco in 190 and appeared alone In a tent theater called the National, on the corner of Steiner and Post streets. It was then that Jolson began to shine He re mained in San Francisco three years and during that time played In every 10-cent theater In town. He began at a very low salary, but he finally re ceived as high as $300 a week. What added greatly to his development was an engagement in stock at the Globe Theater, in the Mission. WORD IX BEHALF OK THE TRUSTS Fanners Prsdsr Handled br Tkeas Brings Best Price), Says Writer. PORTLAND, July 15. tTo the Ed itor.) It is considered the proper thing for writers In newspapers and magazines to Inveigh 'against the trusts, and the producer on the farm and range Is among the loudest crit ics of these great business organiza tions. As a producer tn a small way it has coma to my attention that the two articles of produce that the farmer has to sell that are handled by what are designated "trusts'' he gets the best prices for. In other words, the difference between the prices ho gets and what the consumer Iiys is smaller for these two articles than between thoie articles In the sale ot which no trusts intervene. Grain and meat animals are the two articles that the trust handles and tn small Is the profit that It gets the tarmer cannot aflord to grind his own grain for the uses of his household I id is and he finds It pays for him to buy his meat or the butcher. on the other hand, how does the producer of apples, say. fare? A box of fine apples that the consumer will pay S3 to 14 for has brought the grower a. gross price of 1 or very little more. As for the other things tho farmer produces, such as one finds in the public market, un less he sells theni himself direct to the consumer. It will be found that he rare ly gets half the amount paid for them by the consumer. When the producer has grain or cat tle or hogs to sell he can imd a cash market with the "trusta" at anv lima. Mis money Is ready for him. Whethtr his wares are good, better or best, ha gets a price. Let the a-rower nt an. plea, pears or cherries try It and he will nna no market to which he en send his produce that wiu take It regard less of the supply exceeding the de mand and allow him by return mall a fair price for it. It would be a great advantage if a trust were formed that wouia u such produce and if tli fruit received today is not irmid enough for table use. then utilize It n older mills or canning factories all be longing to the trust, the producer to receive a price for his product th.t would recompense him according tn Its value. The specialty of the Government of touay In this country seems to be to nnht tho trusts. The rallroa.ls. tho telegraph companies, the banks all have come In for their shaking up. One reason why the Germans have made such tremendous strides Industrially uurinu me past quarter of a century Is because the government has encour aged such Institutions an we denounce aa trusta. jt xt TCTTIJ- 'BEE HEXT RP.SrO5E IS iiLOW Applications for Vacant Jbark Net (iraitrd aa Readily aa Uealred. PORTLAND. July 15. (To the Edi tor.) In the letter. "Whv Hand nt Charity la Slow," C. B. M. explains why the response is slow on the part of many thinking peopl. I have read many appeal that prove to me the weakening effect of accepting a liv ing by donation, rather than to earn It. My admiration goes to the father and mother who are willing lo rough It in a tpnt on a tract of land lying Idle. The Alberta Woman's Improvement Club -has made repeated appeals for the empty chacks. many of them with windows gone. If the windows had been taken out to be used elsewhere, even that would not have been so much to be condemned, but the broken glass tells In silence of wasting energy exercised long enough to leave a mark of destruction. Letting people who are having a hard time to keep the upper hand In the struggle for maintenance into these places helps them to retain In dependence. The benefit is threefold: In that the bnfortunate family is shel tered, the property is taken care of and improved and the neighborhood advanced In the cleanup. We. too, have to report a slow re sponse to our appeals for the use of these places, and If C. B. M. and others holding like views will assist our club In trying to interest owners of these places to donate their use, they wi'.l be contributing their time to a work that builds, up independence and keeps people from falling Into the hands of temporary relief organizations. JOSEriiNE R SHARP. ADDITIONS TO AMKHICAX NAVY. Appropriations Tbla Tear and Strensth Compared With Other .Nations. NORTH YAKIMA. Wash.. July 13. (To the Editor.) What appropriations has Congrcs made this year for the maintenance of the Navy, in new bat tleships, cruisers. torpedo-boats, sub marine craft, and what is our com parative naval strength at present In number of fighting ships? A. McD. Congress at the last session made appropriations for two battleships, six destroyers, 1 coast defense and two seagoing submarines and one fuel ship, but made no-provlslon for cruisers or torpedo-boata It is impossible to tell accurately the present comparative strength of navies. On account of looses and additions made by belligerents but kept Secret. The relative atrength of tho principal navies at the beginning of the war In first and second line fighting ships was as follows: Modern Wattle Older l.sttlo- rrull lsi'e- Nstlon ship. era sblpa rttt Britain H.t J ;i i;rtrscy .........- s '. I niifl fciiftts 1 Frsn. e 14 . . 1 i Jnpan f ' i K ! 4 B lilv 7 .. r Austrla-HunicarT t Pat riot lane la ?lrred. PENDLETON. Or.. July II. (To the Editor.) As a subscriber of The Ore gonlan I want to express mv appre ciation of your very able and timely editorial In today's paper, viz.: "In the Interest of Feace." and at the same time and that it will be very unseason able, for anyone -to "pass" out any "plednes" while the Liberty bell Is so journing in these parts. The thou sands of patriotic people who had tne honor of viewing this sacred relic to day attest this fact. The Nation la extremely fortunate In having so few of the John Haynes Holmes caliber. Your attitude In the past has been along right lines and the people are with you. with the exception that you are giving Bryan a lot of free advertis ing. If you will stop printing his name It will soon be forgotten. SUBSCRIBER. (rntralla tilrl'a Injuries. CENTRALIA. Wash.. July 14. (To the Editor.) Please correct a state ment which appeared In -The Orego nlan Thursday. July S. "Girl Hurt In Auto Crash." My hip was not afflicted from birth, but was the result of an accjdent early in life. The successful operation mentioned was performed three years ago. MISS DORATHEA ABBOTT. Umln In City Population. VALE. Or.. J-uIy 13. (To the Editor.) I would thank you o state how murji Portland gained In population with the addition of Llnnton and St. Johns. READER. About 7000. No. SALEM. July 14. (To the Editor.) Did W. J. Bryan charge admission to hear him speak during ,his first cam paign for President T A SUBSCRIBER. Twenty-Five Years Ago From The Orecnn!n of Ju'y 15, 1S0. Washington. July 15. Senator Dolplt early In the session. Introduced a bill creating another Judicial district, to be composed of Oregon. Washington and Montana. Today he was notified by the sub-committee having In prep aration a Judicial bill, that it would take his view as to th size and ex tent of the district which he would create. The 6ml!on of 1,1 .tho ani Wyoming will probably make it necessary to Include, them in a new Vestern district. Senator l"olph says that Oregon and t'ashlntton and the territory east f these Mates Is suf ficient to make a larae enough dis trict, should they be included. A dispatch from Washington List night eald: "Mr. James Teal and daughter, of Portland, who have Wen I v"1 Jto visiting In Boston, w ere in ashir.g- today on their way home.' At least ten dozen of young grouse and pheasants were displayed for ale yesterday at the corner of Third and ashineton. and during the nay as many more were received and were speedily (imposed of to epicures. The birds are rather lnrger than usual t this season, beir.p about half fcrown. but rt will be well for the next Legislature- lo extend the closed rcasoi to August I at least- L-att evening number of hunters were seen w.tn their dogs and guns rcturr.inc from the first shooting of the season. From now on. grouse, pheasants and ti'.ia;l will Jo we'.l'to roost htKh or lay low. Work on the Mad ison-street bridge Is progressing rapidly. The iron cyl inders have been placed around a'.! the piers except four, ami cever.il of them have been filled with concrete. The concrete is hoisted to the top of the pier by a derrick and poured cown an iron chute that reaches to the bot tom of the river, so that the concrete Is not damaged by falling a long tiis tance through the water. The grill ace of the pivoted pier is resting flat on the pilinsr foundation made for it and when the other piers are filled with cement the iron cylinder forming the upper part of the pivotal pier will be filled. One of the bents of the brlrfpe is frame-d on tho East Side ap proach and the false work for it Is in posjtu-n. Another bent Is belOK framed and Ihe bridge will begif to make an appearance before lonn. One of te daily entertainments for the louncrr at the rortlaDi Is to watch Tom Fltsglbbons fondle h'.s new meerschaum ripe, given to hiin by Charlev Hughes. If the old savlr.tr is true that the watched pot neve boils, then It Is doubtful whether Tom's ef forts to color his pipe properly will meet with success. Chief Homily, of the Umatilla reser vation, has taken unto himself an other wife a forest maiden of IS Sum mers paying seven soo.l cayuses for the prize. Homily no boasts of three "Klooiclimen." In November. 1S89. the cities of Se attle and Tacoma cast 10.11S votes. In June, 18!0, seven months later. Port land. East Portland and Albina cast 11.475. This comparison would indicate that there are about as many people in Portland. Eust I'ortland ar.d Al bina, which are in reality one city, ss there are in Tacoma ard Seattle, so that if the census enumerators find 7S.O00 people In Tacoma and Seattle, they ought to fiaJ as many in I'ort land. East Portland and Albina.. From the Ketchum Keystone Every, body in Idaho knows the familiar face of The Oregonlan. the Ion s-est ahlisheC and prosperous Journal of rortldnd. A quarter of a century apo It was found In nearly every miner's camp In this territory, " and all through the Northwest it was, and still is, taken as a representative Journal of the Co lumbia River country. One of the pro prietors. H. L. Plttock. and wife, are now stopping at Geyser Hot Springs, being of the Portland party. Including ex-enator H. W. Corbett and son. Col onel W. M. Sewall. K. P. DeHart and family. Samuel Lowenstein. Colonel Flelschner and others. Mr. I'ittock is visiting the springs for his health, be ing somewhat troubled with rheuma tism, and is now Improving. AVe acknowledge a very pleasant ca'.l from the gentleman. Carelessness of Pirnlckiera. PORTLAND. July 15. (To the Edi tor.) The writer wishes heartily to Indorse the letter ape"earing In T"ie Oregonian regarding the debris l"ft bv picnickers. It Is more than a pity. It Is an outrage that all of our beauty spots, and particularly our wonderful Columbia Highway. shoulj be so marred. On Sunday last. July 11. the around at both Gordon and Multnomah Kl.s was covered with unsichtlv trash. At. Multnomah the view below the beau tiful concrete brldce across the falls was practically spoiled by papers, pasteboard boxes, paper plates and t.n cans. Let the press tk up the Rood wor and let u all Individually do what wc can to cure this evil. W. Inlraala That Hibernate. PORTLAND. July 14. (To the Edi tor.) To settle a Oisrussion between two of your readers, will you kindly answer the following question: '.When a squirrel or other isroutid animal hibernates.' Is the burrow open or closed r' C. P. RICE. The habits of hibernating animals vary greatly. As a rule it Is only by chance that the burrow of the warm blooded hibernating animal closed True squirrels do not hibernate In the sense that they lapse Into torpor for long periods. The North American grey squirrel, which Is an Intermittent slumberer In Winter, offers the near est approach to hibernation among squirrels. Price raid for Cola. Al'RORA. Or, July 14. (To the Ed itor.) On my trip to Austria a few years ico I received In a bar.k c-f Llnz a $3 piece of sold of I'nited States money of the year 1854. Kindly inform me if this coin is of special value. FRANZ KKAXBERGER, Collectors list tho 3.50. coin at about Water Witching.. PORTLAND. - July IS. (To the Edi tor.) Is It an accepted fact that so called water witches can locate water under the ground? A STTBSCRIBER. The practice has no scientific recog nition. Come in, I Have Them Now, Mr. Manufacturer, that is a sensible thing to say. isn't it Just the kind of an invitation that any sane merchant would give. Verv well, are you always alert to sav It WHEN PEOPLE WANT TO HiAR IT? Do you watch the newspapers? Eo you show goods when the manufacturers advertise them in this newspaper? Do you get the benefit of that ad vertising? If nbt. are you really doing what you should be doing to Increase your business?