THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, JULY 22. 1910. PORTLAN D. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Fostofflce as second -class mail matter, subscription Kates Invariably In advance: paily, Sunday Included, one year IJaiiy. Sundav lDMtirieci. i months . Daily, Sunday included, three months paily. Sunday included, one month. pai.y without Sunday, one year fa'ly, without Sunday, six months... iaiiy. without Sunday three monlns. iJaily, without Sunday one month.... Weekly, one year fcunday, one year.... ......... fcundaa' and Weekly, one year S(By Carrier.) ally. Sunday Included, one year ally. Sunday included one month... Hnn tn. Rmii ilnnri nnitnfflCB order, express order or personal cfceak on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoffice address in mil, including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 paces. 1 cent; IS to 32 pases i cents; 34 to 4S pases. 3 cents; 60 to 6u pages, 4 cents; 62 to T6 pages. 6 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Lantern Business Office Verree & Conk lln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree A Conklin. Sieger building. Chicago. San Krancisco representative. R. J. Bidwell. 42 Market street. 2.25 .75 6.00 S.25 1.75 .60 1.50 2.50 8.50 9.00 .75 money PORTLAND, SATCTTDAT, JULY S2, 1916. BITTERNESS OF WAR. It -will not be the- comlbatants -who show the most bitterness after the war Js over. The men who are doing the fighting know what it is to meet a torave enemy. If they conquer him, eo much the better for them; in any event, it is only part of the day's work. Mo one knows better than a true sol , dier that the man. opposite him is in spired by the same feeling of patriot Ism that he is offering himself for the came supreme sacrifice. Only the other day, .since the drive of the allies on all the fronts began, the British troops carried on a tre mendous bombardment, followed by the customary charge. For days the Germans had been cut off, but they fought valiantly. At length their am munition gave out; the allies' effective fire prevented the bringing up of sup plies from the rear. Of two whole regiments, there were only 126 men left when the time came when there was nothing to do but surrender. It Is recorded that the British soldiers presented arms when this handful marched out, according to their enemy the honors of war. In Galicia a position of minor im portance was held by an exceptionally tenacious company of Hungarian in fantry. Charge after charge failed to dislodge them. At length one more determined effort carried the day, When the Russians took full posses sion of the trench they found .not man remaining alive who was not wounded. News reports tell that the conquering soldiers stopped in their work of reorganizing the position to give a mighty cheer. These are isolated instances in war in which the individual hero has been lost to fame. It is possible that the names of those who did not do their duty will be the. chief ones to come in for especial mention. Heroism is rather common on all sides; doin one's duty has come to be more or less a matter of course. But the fighting men value it in their foes as in their comrades. The freemasonry of danger already is welding them together gain. When the war ends there will be attempts at reprisals in trade. It is conceivable that a few academicians will discuss seriously the propriety of omitting each others' names from the rolls of scientific societies organized on national lines, though this is not the prevailing spirit of true scientists Some statesmen and a good many poll tlcians will make capital of the wreck of war. A vast number of stay-at homes will curse their former enemies for a generation or more to come. But it is a certainty that the sol diers themselves will be the first to concede that the conflict is ended and that it is time for starting over with a clean slate. It was so after our own Civil War. The Confederate Veterans and the Grand Army of the Republic were holding joint campfires long be fore some of the non-participants stopped "waving the bloody shirt." It has been so in other wars. Bravery and enduring hatred do not live in the same atmosphere. vioua years that the supposed superior physique of the lad from the farm Is not fully proved by experience. It is largely true that country boys have harder muscles, but it was found In the army in the Civil War that the eity boys withstood hardships better. Urban life seemed to have steeled their nerves to withstand a higher degree of emergency strain." The advantage of. the farm boy, if there la any. lies in his amenability to discipline and his readier acceptance of routine con ditions. He is apt to possess more re sources within himself and to be less insistent on being amused when not actively employed. THE OLD GUARD AGAIN'. A friend at Astoria finds himself disturbed by a recent article of Samuel a. Blythe in the Saturday Evening Post on the recent Republican Na tional Convention. "It does not agree," he writes, "in at least one important particular with the statements by oth ers (notably The Oregonian) that the Old Guard cut no figure at any time at Chicago. Blythe says that the Old Guard was on hand and had control of the convention and lost it through its' inability to control its own pro cured delegates, who voted for Hughes against their will, but because they felt, that they had no alternative." The Old Guard is a tradition, a relic, a fetish, a newspaper creation, a tar get for smart political reporters, a materialized ghost of immaterial fears and fancies, a superstition, a theory, a remnant, an obsession anything but a potent force in present-day affairs. The trouble with Mr. Blythe in his political outgivings is that he has not kept up with the procession. Belong ing himself to the Journalistic Old Guard, he sees the things of 1916 with the eyes of 1912, and writes of current things n the 'past tense. There was an Old Guard which ran things, in 1912, and before; there must be one now; so Blythe writes the old stuff in the old way, assuming the old facts, offering the old interpretations and reaching the old conclusions. Obviously, the Old Guard did not nominate Hughes; so Blythe has it that it had the will, the delegates, and the machine; but something broke. and it failed in its scheme to select some unknown and unnamed candi date, whom the Old Guard expected to choose after the Favorite Sons had been politely sidetracked and Hughes and Roosevelt beaten. - Why is it necessary for Blythe, or any writer, to devise complicated and impossible tale to explain a per fectly simple and rational happening T The people wanted the nomination of Hughes, the delegates were in accord, and they nominated him. That is the whole story. . , neas man of keepiDg "overhead" with. in bounds. There is a limit to the rent even a Wall Street broker can af ford to' pay. Property is valued ac cording to what it will bring, in rent, less taxes and other necessary outlays, and it is attractive for investment at a price which approximately matches the rate of interest that can be ob tained from other investments equally secure. It was well known for years in New York that sky-scrapers were being built on a basis of a 4 per cent return. Real estate took its value ac cordingly. The tremendous flood of war se curities has brought about a change in the money situation. Interest rates are higher than they were. From the time when a bond safe enough to be considered a good investment for a trust fund could be bought only on a basis that would net 3 per cent it has come to a pass when securities of the belligerent governments of Europe are offered on a basis of 5 per cent at par and are being actually sold at 98. Naturally, money is not drifting toward 4 per cent Wall Street build ings when there are more attractive prospects right at hand. The high mark for New Tork realty" seems to have been reached. It is significant also that the meas ure of security of the new offerings seems not to be questioned. No one appears to doubt that the belligerents will redeem their promises to pay, both the 5 per cent interest and the principal when due. Possibility of re pudiation enters nowhere into calcula tions, with the end of the war .not yet in sight. Faith that all of the nations, win or lose, will redeem their pledges continues strong. improvements of agricultural prod ucts are sometimes accomplished with. in the life, yes, the last years, of a single scientist. Nevertheless, ex plorations in Peru reveal the past ex- PROGRESSIVES ARK FOR HUGHES 'rward-aeeltlaa-. Net Archaic, Party Is Their Choice. PORTLAND, July JL (To the Edi- lstence of a people of profound pa-I tor.) The announcement that the tience and perseverance.- Primarily, I Democratic leader would soon inaugu to them we owe the existing series of rate an organised bid for the votes of American agricultural products. Sec- former members of the Progressive ondarily, we owe at least one of them, party leads me, as one who still sub- the potato, to the Spanish conquerors, scribes to the principles of the Pro- They took it with the Inca gold to gressive platform of 1S1J. to give my opam. r.urope was Slow in acfoptins reasons whv Progressive, cannot con- i . . . , . . i i-uuiio as roou. rianu u ursi -ere slstently vote the Democratic ticket. Eruwii as Dotanicai curiosities. 10 To heir In witn th. mV,.r of the French philanthropist is due much I pr.i . .v r.nk v..it lur lu gcunrw mumutum. of ao-ealled Imurrrnt movement iviany pernaps nave ODservea on that was r-.nnfine .ntiriv to the Re. r rencn menu cards usea in issnion- publican party. They came from Mas able cafes the word "Parmentier" in I sachusetts, where the first child-labor the list of soups. If they gave the! laws were passed by the Republican majority ana irom Wisconsin, cantor nia, Oregon and the other Republican states that have committed themselves to forward-looking legislation. - The leaders of the Progressive party had no great quarrel with the Republican party of the several states: it was the National Republican organization and the National Republican ticket that we fought. This spirit of militancy was an heritage from the great leaders of Republicanism who so successfully fought the stand-pat Democracy of '61 The Democratic party .is a party or the past. Its backbone is still voting for Andrew Jackson. It is a party of negation which offers no constructive HOW TO EEtT OUT, OF WAR, President Wilson sent -an army to Vera Cruz which fought a battle wherein nineteen Americans were Killed, but he kept us out of war. He has sent an army in pursuit of Villa, which fought bloody battles with Mexicans at Parral and Carrizal, but he kept us out of war. He saw Mexicans murder and rob hundreds of American citizens, but he kept us out of war. He sent troops to fight in Haiti and Santo Domingo, but he kept us out of war. Hundreds of Americans have been killed by German submarines, but he kept us out of war. He surrendered to Great Britain in the Canal tolls controversy, but he kept us out of war. He failed to adjust-the California alien land dispute with Japan, but so far he has kept us out of war. He has not induced the allies to cease their illegal blockade methods and by the Bryan peace treaties he has made us powerless to bring more than diplomatic pressure to bear. In that manner he has kept us out of war. President Roosevelt settfed the Japa. nese school controversy in California and thereby kept us out of war. He acquired the Panama Canal Zone for the United States, making con struction of the Canal possible, yet he kept us out of war. He took charge of the Dominican custom-houses, thereby pacifying San ta Domingo and making it solvent, but he shed not a drop of blood there and he kept us out of war. By speaking a few plain words to the German Ambassador, he prevented Germany from seizing a Venezuelan island and maintained the Monroe Doctrine, but he kept us out of war. There are two ways of keeping the I'nited States out of war. One the Roosevelt way gains valuable rights for the United States, settles danger ous controversies-and makes American rights and American policy respected without expenditure of a single drop of blood. The other the Wilson way sacrifices our rights, leaves contro vesies open, forfeits the respect of other nations, yet results in the loss of countless lives. The choice before the American people is not betweeD war and peace, or between militarism and pacifism: it is between two ways of keeping out of war. BLOWING COLD, BLOWING HOT. The Evening Journal has a Wash ington bureau which faithfully re fleets the partisan policies and polit ical sehemings of that active organ of "non-partisan" opinion. For example, there appeared yesterday this dispatch from Washington City: Representative McArthur " expressed tn opinion that the two House conferees on the naval bill will not oppose the Colum bia River submarine base. it this inionna tion is correct the Oregon Senators, by ae- curins the amendment in the Senate, likely have achieved a success In spite of neglect heretofore shown on the House side, where the bill originated. It is highly important to get from Congress the $500,000 naval base ap propriation and not especially impor tant which particular mem'ber of the delegation did the most or the least for it. But for the 'sake of the truth and without referring to current re ports that the Senators have been lukewarm and the Representatives most diligent, let us quote from the Congressional Record. Speaking on the naval appropriation bill the other day. Senator Chamberlain said: The r,eoDle In my section of the country have been insisting that a navy-yard ought to be established -at the mouth or the Columbia River. J have not been disposed to agree with that recommendation in Its entirety, after having- read what there i on the subject, because, while I feel it importance not only to that section, but to the whole country. I think it is not local matter. It Is a National matter, and before this vast sum of money is expended the people ought to be able to Judge from the reports as to whether or not the expen diture ought to be made at any particular place. And again the Senator who thus complained that the money ought not to be spent until the people are able to judge (from the report "of a naval board, no doubt) whether the expen diture was justified, had this to say further: Very naturally. Mn President, I espoused the Western side of that proposition, and I was very anxious and solicitous that some thing might be done In the way of the con struction of a navy-yard at the mouth the Columbia River. But after looking into It and after consulting with the geore tar-y of the Navy and distinguished nava officers on the subject I felt that it would be unpatriotic to undertake to get the Gov ernment to adopt a plan and expend a vast sum or money tor constructing a navy-yard without having rufflcient information as to what ought to be done in the premises. First he was for it and then agains it, and now he's for it again, if latest Information, from Wrashington is cor rect. name a thought it was likely to try to connect it with that of some French chef. But Parmentier was the phil anthropist who. during the French revolution, established potato soup dis pensaries for the benefit of the poor. The poor liked it, the affluent still partake of It. Today the potato has a hundred culinary uses. It is a staple of the civilized world as it was of the pre-Incas. Tet the explorers In Peru report that there now grow in Peru varieties that are superior in flavor anything produced in America. Thev havA found nntAtAM srrtvwinar at on alHtnri nf 13 nnn et Th. hin icgisisiion or no new iaea oi puum-si found them growing on slopes so steep "?,n2myiif"' J!.,fi, 1 that were one to shake the tubers loose r.....i..i or,,. from tne vines, as is a common prac- I from the "black belt." - They come from lice in this country, the fruit would that section of our country which roll away and be lost. The Spanish I offers the only serious opposition to conquerors looted Peru, but it is esti-lthe great -reforms for which the Pro- In its endeavors to meet demand for men created by the increase in the Navy, recruiting officers are calling ttentlon to the fact that country boys "make the best possible sailors." This is said to be due partly to the desire 1o make the Navy personnel represen tative of the entire country and in part financially to the fact that the Coast states alone cannot be depended upon for the. full supply. It has been remarked ln-pre- WALL STREET REAL ESTATE. A distinct shock is conveyed by the news that th,e owner of one of th most valuable pieces of real estate In New York has permitted it to go upon foreclosure of mortgage. That is to say, a margin of value which a few years ago was regarded as safe by the most careful money lenders in the world has been wiped out. The prop erty" was situated in a locality tf which it used to be said that the value of the superficial area could" be meas ured by gold coins laid on edge to cover it. This was a figure of speech, but it was meant to convey the idea of tremendous price. Each sale was made at a higher price than the one preceding it. No one seemed to be lieve the trend upward ever would change. This particular bit of real estate surrounded on three sides the famous "No. 1 Wall Street," which was said to be the most valuable town lot in the world. It was held at $642 a square foot; there are 43,500 -square feet in an acre, which made land in that neighborhood worth the stagger ing sum of some $28,000,000 an acre, in round figures. The property' that was sacrificed under foreclosure was assessed at $1,600,000. It is said that the owner valued it a few years ago at $3,000,000 and that he had refused $1,000,000 for his equity. The mort gage which absorbed it was for II, 100,000, with some few thousands in accrued Interest and back taxes. The incident is significant of impor tant changes that have taken place. One need not attach too much impor tance to the contention that Wall Street is diminishing as a financial center or that people are much less inclined to patronize the New Tork Stock Exchange when in quest of stocks and bonds. The locality will be important for years to come, but the people who do business there have found themselves under the same necessity as any other busi REAL GOLD OF THE IXC AS. Few persons find food for romantic reflection in the Irish potato. It is accepted as something perhaps com mon, but nevertheless substantial. Tet it contains both mystery and romance for those who are familiar with its history. The name Irish potato does not signify the country of its origin. Ireland, in fact the civilized world, has known the potato but little longer than 100 years. Tet centuries ago, when our own half-naked ancestors gained their chief food "from the chase the potato was the basis of a people long since vanished from the earth, a people who left as monuments the American series of agricultural prod ucts, remarkable stone ruins, decaying aqueducts and the remnants of won derful hanging gardens. The manner of this nation's extinc tion is unknown ana probably never will be revealed, but explorations by an expedition sent out by the National Geographic Society and Tale Univer sity has supplied all who may be in terested in antiquity with a fund of new and marvelous information. The results of the explorations have been published in the National Geographic Magazine. The potato is the development of wild plant, native of America, as is the sweet potato, maize or Indian corn, the peanut and the tomato. Probably we inherited them all from a people who built and thrived in the high val leys of Peru before the days of the Incas. Certainly the potato was this nation's staple food, and the chief con cern of its people was the tilling of the soil. To provide irrigation, moun. tain streams were straightened and aqueducts that clung to the sides of precipices were constructed. Without blasting powder er steel drills tunnels for conducting water were pierced. The great reclamation projects- in which we now take pride are but in consequential when natural obstacles overcome are compared with the work of the pre-Incas. Some of their aqueducts were sev eral hundred miles long and paved with stones. But the land reclaimed was not a flat, semi-arid desert. It was the steep mountain sides. Retain, lng walls of stone were built to hold the soil and the mountains were ter raced by this means as high as plants would live. Even the soil that these walls retained was in many instances transported from the lowlands. The pre-Incas had no knowledge of mor tar. Their walls were dry masonry. Stones were shaped with infinite p tience and walls were preserved by a system of interlocking. The extent of terraceai gardens re veals that the pre-Incas were numer ous. But plainly, they were under constant menace of some danger. They constructed great fortifications of stone, and wallsd cities, temples and outlook stations on the tops of high mountains. Although it is apparen they understood only the use of levers and inclined planes, they transported stones weighing as much as twenty tons for use in their houses and forti fications. That this could have been done by employment of great num bers of men is admitted, but how such stones were faced and fitted with the means presumably at hand is th crowning mystery. The joints are stil so perfect that the blade of a knife cannot be inserted and frequently use of a lens is required to reveal whether the joint Is a true one or a groove made for ornament. The pre-Incas left no written or hieroglyphic record of any kind. N tradition survives to reveal their form of government, the incidents of their daily life or the manner of their going. Only Tuins and the foods they evolved survive. The native Indians of th district, who still farm some of th terraces, ascribe the presence of th stone walls to enchantment. They are aerriculturists, too, but they have no Inclination to experiment with the food properties of native plants or to im prove the products they already know. Extinction of the ancient potato kingdom and decline of scientific agrl culture at one of its earliest seats give rise to more than one interesting spec ulation. Choice lies perhaps between some cataclysm of nature, an epidemic of disease or invasion by a human foe. The tendency of the people to build towns on almost Inaccessible places, look-outs and fortifications lends color to the last-named theory. The pre Incas were in advance of their time. Other peoples, possessing the preda ceous instincts of the hunter, perhaps looked with covetous eyes upon the granaries, storehouses and productive lands of the upland nation. What more reasonable opinion than that the pre-Incas fell victims to the avarice of stronger neighbors, who once they had conquered the land, had rather the initiative nor the industry to carry on intensified agriculture or to maintain and preserve the works they had won? Perhaps, too, when we marvel over the achievements of this "vanished" race and compare them with our own we are contrasting the work of cen turies with that of a decade. After lapse of a thousand or more years, remnants of past industry do not re veal much information as to how long that industry was employed. The works now found in ruins in Peru may have been continuing projects of countless generations. The potato may have been evolved slowly, even acci dentally, from the wild root. Our own mated that one year's world crop of the potato, which they also took with them, far exceeds the value of all the gold of the Incas. a-resstve party stood. Woman suffrage remedial child-labor legislation, mini mum warn laws and other advanced ideas are unpopular in the South. The fountain of Democratic party dictum is thus ' oolsoned by the aristocratic. THe Mayor of Cleveland has decided I caste-serving, arrogant ruling class that he is responsible for enough of I who talk patronizingly of democracy the fortune nnd misfortunes of the while they uphold and practice r vi- -.. vi thmit ,,iongarcnicai government, rii.tTncT h..JV Tilt- .Ti.i I If the new nationalism means any pleating himself in their marital af- thlnK ,t mean. tho antithesis of the fairs, and has declared that he will states' rights dogma of the Democratic marry no couples during ins term ot i party. A strong; centralized govern office. Not only that, but he intends ment. protecting American Industry to discourage as far as possible per- and American men, women and children, formance of marriage rites by laymen may be erected by Republican sue In any circumstances. He would put he entire responsibility on the clergy. Just how he expects this to relieve the ituation, which he views with alarm brought about by the growing number of divorces, he does not make clear. cess, but never by Democratic victory. Ideals can never be obtained through the "instrumentality of Tammany Hall. Underwood, Bailey, et al. There snouia be nothing- attractive to the real Pro gressive in such company. v Sincere Progressives snouia u Couples unhappily mated and unwill- pleasure in joining Roosevelt and John ing to bear and forbear still are com pelled to go to the civil authorities for relief, and the civil authorities do not inquire whether the knot was tied by a clergyman or a justice of the peace Putting the "resoonsibilitv" on the minister without eivingr him power to 1 dreamer, but a man of affairs. He Is remedv conditions looks like a nlain not too proud to fight privilege or evasion and nothing else. son in voting for Hughes. The latter embodies the best there is in Ameri canism. He comes from the people; he knows their story and appreciates their wants. His hands are not tied. He Is as fearless today as he was when Gov ernor of New xorK. ne is not. OSLT SMALL, MMBER BENEFITED Mur Worse Off Thronrh Prohibition, Asserts Correspondent. PORTLAND. July II. (To the Edi tor.) When the prohibition amend ment was submitted to the people two years ago the Prohibitionists took pains to make it clear, both through speakers and through the columns of the newspapers, that the "dry move ment" was not Intended as a "prohibi tion condition," but that tile move ment was only to better conditions by putting the saloon out of being and by reducing crime thereby. Said the speakers and writers on the drys, or was the movement one of great wave of prosperity will sweep over Oreron; all the laboring people will have money; business enterprises, due to the changed conditions, will come to Oregon." Such statements as the above, and numerous other sim ilar ones, were heard! Is the pros perity here? Are our stores, build ings and houses filled with occupants? Let the readers answer. "Was the movement to put the sa loons out of being, as was stated by the days, or was the movement one of prohibition? The last movement to change"'- the amendment of two years ago to one dryer still is a complete answer and tells the shameful story. During the dry campaign we were told that from 75 to 95 per cent of all crimes committed were due to the use of intoxicating liquors. The drys in making these estimates called drunk enness crime, and drinks were consid ered in the estimates of crimes committed. 1 wonder If the Prohibitionists have been reading the Oregon papers of late. Scarcely an issue that does not report some horrible murder. It these murders are caused by liquor, then there is no prohibition in Oregon; if these murders are not the result of drink, then the "drys" were fooline; the people when telling them that 95 per cent of all crimes committed were due to booze. Here are conditions brought about by prohibition: There Is no loose change or easy dollars floating around. Those who now patronise the eating oints are eating- 15-cent meals Instead $1 steaks as formerly. The number of 15-cent meals has largely Increased the restaurants show a good patronage of this kind. The small vendor of sandwiches during the evenings has nearly disappeared, family and all gone, so this class of trade is now lost to Portland. A stream of boose money is flowing to California. The average man gets no beer but the alcohol consumer has increased. Have we bettered condi tions? For a few, yes; for the many no. MRS. URSULA MEISTER. $28 V, Third street. In Other Days. Tweaty-flve Years Acs. From The Oregonian July 82. 13M. St. Paul. The elerpy have Joined in the protest airatnst the Fltnimmons Hall prize fipht and a number of citi zens have appealed to the Governor to stop the gro. Henry Irvinsr epigrarcmatically char acterizes an English scheme for the regeneration of the theater as missions which propose to save the player's soul by pointing the way to the workhouse. A large number of the "4 00" of local society have signified their intention of accompanying the grand electric and moonlight excursion on the new Union Pacific steamer Victorian, which leaves Ash-street dock tonlsht at 1.-0. G. P. Rummelin is back from Alaska. He was. not able to penetrate as far Into the interior as he intended, owing to the Stickine River flood. H. S. Van Gisreh. of Paris. Is exhibit in r. at the Portland Hotel this week fine collection of French, English and Italian water colors. Mrs. Constance Ferris Lutz. the ac complished and charming young lec turer from the Minnesota W cman Suf frage Association, will speak tonisrht at the Unitarian chapeL She Is the g-uest of Mrs. A. S. Duniway. Paris. The report that Mrs. Jsmes Brown-Potter had been divorced from Mr. Potter and married the actor Bel lew la denied by the lady's parents. receives support from the death the atmosphere at Washington today, mas Upham, a Boston merchant. Above all Hughes is a man of action age of 105. His faculties were a red-blooded, double-f lsted 'iBhter Metchnikoffs theory of possible Ion gevity of Thomas at the age so well preserved that the Springfield Republican says, "To the end he could hold a vigorous hand at whist' and walked down town as late as last Winter ana underwent a major opera. tion last May. What changes he had seen is indicated by the fact that when he was born the war of 1812 had not yet begun, Madison was President, the first steamboats were navigating the rivers and Boston had a population of 33.000. During his lifetime the first steam locomotive and the first electric car ran. the first telegram, cablegram corruut government. He will remove our Government from the maze of dis trust, iincert&tntv. rldibule. mismanage ment and peanut politics that pervades whom we Progressives can depend upon to keep the faith. His words are as clear and true as hiB public acts have been fearless and decisive. CHARLES W. ACKERSON. HOW COXKLIMG BEGAN ADDRESS r.rmt Delegate Corroborates sir. Green's Version of Speech. MunTORD. Or.. July 20. (To the Editor.) Permit me to add my post tlvB testimony to Mr. A. B. Green's statement in his communication ap Senator La Follette has permitted his mind to dwell on Wall Street so exclusively that he sees Wall Street behind every policy of which he dis approves, and he opposes every policy which anybody in Wall Street favors. That is the explanation of his opposi tion to a strong Navy. nanHnar in The Oresronlan of this Gate and aerogram were sent, the first tele- j quoting Senator Conkling's opening In phone was used and the first aero-his speech nominating General Grant plane flew. I at the Chicago convention when the nnhle, 306 went down to oereat- xne quotation Is aleolutely correct. Senator uonKiing aid dcbih. Tou ask what state he halls from Our sole reply shall be He comes from Appomattox And its famous apple tree. I sat In the front row of the alter nate seats, was a Grant man Irom Iowa and stood en a chair and helped the aonlause that for 12 minutes 101 lowed that famous opening. ome 10 years aero a man dlsputeo my statement as to tne exact, woi u.-j Conkling used, and after a reference to the files of Chicago papers 1 en joyed the pleasure of gathering in few "bones ' from my rriena s pocKet as a penalty for his doubting my mem ory or veracity. With the exception or Ingerso.is speech nominating Blaine in 1878, old convention attendants referred to ConkllnE's as the greatest of like char acter made to that date, and if It has 1 he curtain rods of Pullman cars may not be designed for chinning. but they should be strong enough to bear a heavyweight Senator when he ides from an upper berth to the floor. As a passenger plunges into space, he involuntarily grasps at some, thing. Opposition of Secretary Lane and the Democratic leaders in the House to Representative Sinnott's bill requir ing that the 40 per cent of land grant I since been equaled it was when the receipts allotted to reclamation shall reporters were asleep or out ior a be spent in Oregon is an example of 'c. or course impossioie contin- what Oregon may Democratic party. expect from the gencies. Judg Langguth shows he Is a friend of the masses. To enable an offender to hold his Job, he makes a ten-day sentence run from 9NP. M. Saturdays to the same hour Sundays. Is not that considerate? WHEX THB INVESTOR pats tax Revenue Collector Holds Bayer Liable If He Makes Business ef It. PORTLAND. July 11. (To the Ed It or.) The Oregonian, commenting: on statement I made that as a private investor, who was investing his own funds for his own profit and not for the purpose of reselling securities so purchased, says that I was probably compelled to pay a tax for doing the same under some provision of the state "blue-sky law." I will say that the tax I was compelled to pay was brokerage license, and the same was paid to the United States Collector of Internal Revenue at Portland. Or. 1 would further say that I am no more a broker than 1 am a grocer, as I buy groceries for my family; or clothier, as now and then I buy clothes. The point I was making is that there are at least loOO people in Oregon who are as much liable to this tax as I am. and I venture not 15 know of it and they will be stuck for a penalty as I was. INVESTOR. The United States internal revenue office In Portland holds that 'occa sional' purchases on one's own ac count do not involve tax liability as a broker, but that where the person makes it a business or a part of his business to purchase such securi ties,, either for his own account or for that of another, he must pay. Just what may constitute "occasional" purchases and the point at which such buying becomes part of a man's regu lar business Is not specifically defined, and it is stated that each individual case must be determined on Its own merits. The Portland office la bound in Its actions by its instructions from Washington. FOOD VALVE FOUSD IJf RATIO Watte Flear of Today ot Same as It Was la .Civil W ar Tunes. PORTLAND. July tl. (To the Edi tor.) The Government ration issued to our soldiers on the Mexican border, as stated in letter of James T. Beach In this morning's paper, would be bal anced and sufficient if the bread were made of whole meal, or if the hardtsck were Ry-Krlsp or the "Swedish health bread. Then it would contain the- nec essary alkaline bases to carry on the vital processes of digestion. Using modern white flour to make the bread and hardtack, the ration should contain tar more of onions, potatoes and beans and less bread. Studies of the disastrous effect of foods deficient in the salts and vita mines, as white flour is deficient, have appeared within the year In the reports of the Public Health Service. If the various departments of the Government were properly co-ordinated, the discov eries made in the Public Health Serv ice would be available in a practical way in the Army, in which esse white bread would be banished frqra Govern ment rations. The discoveries referred to. by the way, are new to the doctors of the Public Health Service, but the fscts have been long recognised by many private food chemists, physicians and health eulturlsts. 1 a word, organic soda, iron, pot ash, sulphur, phosphorus, silicon, mag nesia and other salts found In all nat ural foods are required for the diges tion of ttn foods containing them. In grains, these, salts, and what are called vitamines (bodies lately discovered, yet concerning which little seems to be known beyond their essential charac ter as food elements) are contained for the most part Jin the bran and germ and outer layers. The gradual-reduction process of milling, which came into use In the late '70s. makes our white flour a different article from the white flour of Civil War days. Modern white flour contains, the merest traces of the elements mentioned, is by Itself a starvation food, and if used at all must be supplemented by large amounts of vegetables or fruits, in which the salts are conserved; otherwise the con sumer suffers. The diseases of food deficiency are many, among them pellagra, beri-beri, rheumatism, paralysis, anemia, neuras thenia and even infantile paralysis, as Dr. Simon Baruch points out in a late article on the latter disease. Whatever interferes with oxidation and elimination as lack of these ele ments does must pave the way for dis ease; the form the disease takes will be determined by other factors in the life of the subject. LORA C. LITTLE. A Matter of Taste. Detroit Free Press. "I"d rather play golf than eat." "But what does your wife say to that?" "Oh, she doesnt' care. She'd rather play bridsre than cook." Lord Crewe gave good reasons why Britain undertook the Mesopotamia expedition, but they were also good reasons for ensuring its success and for not exposing it to a disastrous repulse. CREDIT TOR WORK OX HIGHWAY Tunnel Was Idea ef Mr. Bowlfey, Who Overcame Opposition to It. ' PORTLAND. July 21. (To the Edi tor.) I have read articles In severs different magazines on the Mitchell Point section of the Columbia River Highway. Some of these articles give Samuel C. Lancaster credit for engineering- this piece of work; others give Henry L. Bowlby the credit, while 1 have been told by people In Hood River that it was J. A. Elliott who con ceived this idea and located this sec tion In the face of a great deal of criticism to the effect that it was an Impossible piece of construction work. Will you kindly inform me which one of these engineers is entitled to the credit, as every Ane who has seen this There is one excuse for Mr. and Mrs. Dick's neglect to see the Columbia River Highway. A couple on a honey, moon care only to see each other. Later some couples would rather see I wonderful tunnel realizes It is one of anvthiner or unvbodv than each other- I tne most eKinrui pieces or engineering wurn in ixie tniieu Dimes, ir not in The effect of the proposed muni- L.n who'i entitle to th. .i-Ht tions tax on tne nascent lnaustry of I it should have It. making potash out of kelp is a good demonstration of the Democracy's fatherly interest in infant industries. Molalla is getting ready for the teasel harvest. That section of Ore gon has the distinction of being one of the few places in the United States where the teasel grows. Evidently the British bulldog intends to keep close on the trail of the Ger man dachshund as it dashes between the Virginia capes. THOMAS G. HAYS. Credit should be given H. L. Bowlby for the construction of the Mttchell Point section of the Columbia River Highway. He first conceived the idea of the construction of the tunnel and he fought for the plan In the face of strong opposition. As State Highway Engineer Mr. Bowlby alfio superin tended, to a certain extent, its construction. Mr. Baraee Also Explains. PORTLAND. July 21. (To the Edi- Latln may be learned in a week, but! tor.) Lest the public gain a false lm- the ordinary supply can be obtained from the back of the dictionary in a minute. Oregon s norseless cavalry are an eloquent commentary on the War De partment's bpast of successful mobill zation. Oregon bathers should worry! A nine-foot shark has been killed in San Francisco Bay. - The City Commissioners have not as yet insisted on an extra fire hazard tag on the red-haired man. If a mother's mall-order catalogue is missing, it may be found at the nearest engine-house. If it were not for an occasional hanging in San Quentin, people would lose hope. pression from the letters by W. C. Ayls worth. secretary of the city central body and Moses Barltz of the dissen- tloners, regarding Socialism and party organization, published recently in The Oregonian and the late controversy regarding myself be taken as evidence of general disruption in the state So cialist organization, please allow me to state, unofficially, that this is far from being the case. In fact, in my 16 years of first-hand knowledge, the state within itself and with the National party, has never been more solidly united. The little flurry regarding myself has burned out and a minor election is now being held, prob ably, as a consequence. The note by secretary Aylsworth was. no doubt. Intended to apply to the Portland management and to my very favorable co-operation. The city man agement was never so well organised and managed as now. These well-intending but dissenting comrades never did. sentimentally, belong to the party organization. Their over-enthusiasm will finally burn itself out and scien tific Socialism and party organization The Deutschland may be waitine- r-fr I be advanced thereby. a fosr. . - C. W. BARZEE. What the Realty Dealers Said About Their Home Towns in T.he Sunday Oregonian Stenographic reports of the 26 five-minute Epeeches, given in a prize competition before the real estate dealers' big convention in Portland this week, will be printed in full in The Sunday Oregonian. They present the commercial and social attractions of 26 communi ties in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. The oratorical contest was one of the hits of the convention and the talks, in which a strict . time limit was kept, are concise, breezy and convincing. Read them tomorrow. SOME TYPICAL MEXICANS This is a full-page description of a few of the strange characters that the traveler meets down along the Mexican border. There are vaqueros, peons, Indians, sheep herders and dark-eyed senoritas. The story is illustrated by artists' drawings. The whole provides interesting and timely study. HOW UNCLE SAM FIGHTS DISEASE One of the most important activities of the Government growing out of the threatened diffi culties with Mexico is the precaution taken to protect the Army ' from disease. Every branch of the service is guarded and constant vigilance is maintained. An Oregonian correspondent has just pre pared a detailed story illustrated describing the methods pursued to keep the soldiers well. GERMANY'S GREAT FORTRESS This is. a story of the remarkable protection that the Berlin government has thrown up along the Meuse. An artist's drawings illustrate the tale. WHO IS ORIGINAL AMERICANIST? This is the question that Birsky and Zapp are tnying to answer this week They can't decide whether it was Wilson, Hughes or Roosevelt, and Montague Glass provides the reader with a lot of fun on the subject. MORE POEMS TOMORROW Another page of "old favorite" poems will be printed tomorrow. The Oregonian continues to receive con tributions. Send yours along. It wjjl be printed. THE IRON CLAW Here is another installment of the popular motion-picture drama running in The Sunday Oregonian and at some of the leading theaters. SKETCHES FROM LIFE; Harry Temple has produced three more realistic drawings illustrating some of the dramatic incidents in every-day life. WITH THE OREGON TROOPS The Oregonian is the only news paper that has given an adequate account of the activities of the Oregon soldiers on the Mexican border. Tomorrow the latest news of the camps will be published, with illustrations. PRESENT-DAY KLONDIKE Frank G. Carpenter has reached this most interesting of all the Alaskan regions. He will tell tomorrow how dredges and hydraulic giants are gathering gold overlooked there by the miners in the great rush 20 years ago. HERBERT KAUFMAN'S PAGE Many Oregonian readers are prof iting mentally by reading the editorial contributions of Herbert Kaufman which are an exclusive feature of the Sunday paper. OTHER ATTRACTIONS Under this head may be included the sport--ing section, the fresh reports from the mountains and beach resorts, the motion-picture department, the automobile section, the comic section and the usual variety of entertaining features. i