THE MORNING OKEGONIAX, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1919. ESTABLISHED CI HENBT I,. PITTOfK- Pu'olished by The Oregonian Puhliahing Co. 135 Sixth Street. Portland, Ouson. C A. MORDEN-. E- E.T'IPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated Pre.. The Associated Press is ex clusively entitled to the ue for publica Tion of all news dispatches credited to it or nit otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. $s no ' J ';5 7S 8.00 3 25 .K0 1.00 3.50 Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance: (By Mail.) Taily. Sundav included, one year . . . . Eaily, Sunday included, six months Daily. Sunday included, three months Daily, Sunday included, one month .. Daily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months . . Daily, without Sunday, one month .. . Weekly, one year Sunday, one year Sunday and weekly (By Carrier.) 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In Czeehoslavia the harvest is now on and fear of famine, which haunted the people six months ago, is definitely removed. Crops of grain and other staples are being garnered somehow but the building up of a milk industry is not a matter of a few months, and while adults now have plenty to eat. the little ones are with out the prime necessity of their exist ence. Extent of the tragedy is illus trated by the statement that in 1910 there were 3,440,000 children under 14 in Moravia, Bohemia and Silesia; this number in 1918 had been reduced to 2.848,000. In the last year of the war the death rate of babies under a year old in Prague increased from 14 to 19 per cent and in some suburbs reached 25 per cent. The armistice has only, slightly relieved the milk situation, and relief will be furnished only by large donations of condensed milk from other countries. searching examination. He had pleaded guilty and had gone his way to commit another crime which the alienists might have foretold. The Journal of the American Society of Judicature in the article to which allusion has been made, says: The fate of ono criminal Is of little eon sequence. Han? him. If you will, but next month and next year there will he- other murders committed lust as brutal. The didates, each relying on his own friends to succeed as best he may." but it seems to have been discovered in that early day that there was virtue in organization, even along party lines, "as a means of arousing a sense of civic responsibility." Colonel T'VauIt found the task of riding many journalistic horses at one time too much for. him, as perhaps purpose of psychopathoiory is to determine i other editors have done since his day. snut : xr . i . . ; . . v. v. i .i v. . GETTING DOWN TO FINDAMEXTAIS. All thewefinements of argument con cerning the cost of living resolve them selves into the fundamental proposition that we cannot enjoy possession of more of the necessities of life until we produce more of those necessities. The supposed relationship between the high price of wheat, or some other single ommodity, and the price of other ..ecessities can be discussed pro and ron until doomsday without bringing i'ie slightest measure of relief. High v ages and higher prices can continue I lei! enriieSS IUKIIJ-SW-iuuiiu nimwu, ver getting anywhere until more of ;he necessities of life are to be had. '.'he germ of whatever answer is found lo the cost of living problem will be t-reater production of necessary articles. Our chief trouble is that just when ti-.e whole world needs more food, more rlothing and more shelter, and in order to procure these must have larger I I -PS ailCl 1UUI tS 111 CL 1 1 I I I 1 1 jr n.ore labor, the output of these is smaller than it was in normal trues. Economists seem to agree that per capita production is smaller tl: in it has been in some time, i ' srtainly this is true as to ac tral necessities. We are producing, Karbert Hoover says, 35 per cent less c( a.1 than in ordinary times. The im- n ense wheat crop which was predicted lajt June will sutler a snnnnage oi r.Thaps 20.0,000,000 bushels before it is safely harvested. Manufacturers til nost universally discover the per c: pita output of their factories to be shrinking. The latter is true not only :i s to necessary articles of life, but as to luxuries; but we go on buying li:.;uries,at constantly increasing prices, j .st the same. Indeed, one of the reasons why ne- wsities are being produced in smaller quantities in proportion to demand is hat too many people who should be i roducing necessities are engaged in fi.ndamentally non-essential occupa ti ms. The cities continue to be over crowded, while the country calls for men. We can eat no more bread than we grow grain to make it from, and ::o more boef and pork than we pro-i!-.ce; and we cannot wear more clotli i, g unless we produce more wool and li ien and cotton: and shelter will be il; ar so long as the output of lumber Hid hardware continues to be rela t.vely insufficient. Who are from the point of view of t'le men concerned with the cost of life's necessities the non-producers? l or one thing, they are all of those engaged in producing things which r'-tme second, or third, to the necessi- lies. The resolution introduced in the 1 ouse by Representative Riddick of .viontana setting forth "six primary auses" of high costs simmers down t fewer primary causes than six. ' Government extravagance and waste" : nd "encumbering the federal payroll v.-ith hordes of unnecessary and unpro luctive employes" are a duplication. Hoarding by the war department of food and clothing is an incident of the main issue. Senator Gronna of North Dakota, who said that inadequate pro "duction was partially to blame for con ditions, struck nearer to the heart of Lhings. The "hordes of unnecessary and unproductive employes" of the government not only are contributing nothing to the supply of commodities "of fundamental consumption, but they are consuming the products of the 1 inadequate number of producers we already have. The superfluous gov . eminent job may be a fine thing for the individual holding it. but it and other superfluous jobs only postpone the day when production will over take consumption. The excess government employe is not the only economic excrescence we . have, but he furnishes an excellent ) illustration. It may be asked in all sincerity whether we have not too many professional theorists, among other luxuries. Is it possible that fche new passion for efficiency has created too many "professors" who teach effi ciency and too few graduates who practice it? We observe that certain special schools, such, for illustration : as those teaching domestic science, are - graduating armies of what? Teach- ' ers, in large proportion; workers smaller degree. The passion for the ; white-shirt job is the ruling passion ' The back-to-the-soil movement falters and comes to a halt. The professions ' are overcrowded, real workers are ; scarce, people willing to wear overall ; and to soil their hands threaten to ' become as extinct as the dodo and the preak auk. toymaners worn overtime and coal miners adopt the five-day week all down the line the output o the individual producer of the things we must have to live comfortably, o to live at all, grows less and less. At the bottom of the solution of th cost of living problem is willingness to work in the production of essential ' things: to- go without for a time, if needs be, the unessential ones. A great deal would be accomplished if every individual would take counsel with himself, as he would do if we were still Rt war, as to whether he is con tributing his share to production. Per- ; haps this is too much to expect, human nature being what it is. But however much we may theorize, and however far we may seek for the remedy in the nostrums of economic quacks, we shall get no necessary article more cheaply until we have produced more. STEEIKEAD AM) LEGISLATORS. The governor of Oregon, we trust, did not fail to read the Med ford Mail Tribune of August 5. That excellent newspaper -is always readable, to be sure, but it is not every day that a newspaper may be expected to have an article of particular moment to a governor who is troubled by a demand from a few energetic women to get the eighty-nine male members and one female member of the legislature together- in a hurry-up call to do some thing about the suffrage amendment, which it can do better in its normal time viz., at the regular session. The Medford paper is discussing steelheads. It will be asked, naturally enough, what steelheads have to do with governors or legislators. The flippant may turn a neat phrase on steelheads, wooden heads, bor.ehea.ds and legislators, but it is far from our mind to trifle with so serious a sub ject. But listen to the Mail Tribune: I in advance these enemies of soclery and them up before - they have killed. The problem of crime ts- coming to be understood as the problem of mental defectives. If there are numerous defective delinquents who cannot be made good citizens, through courses of treatment cannot he made to stand up to the normal environment then an environment must be created for them which will permit them to lead useful lives. Every crime commited by a pre viously convicted pervert is an indict ment of the system which permits him to be at large, and a .warning that there is still something wrong with our system of handling crime. The suggestion of another authority on psychopathology. that this class of criminals, and others as rapidly as our knowledge of the mental process of the criminal expands, be segregated on farms, where they can lead com fortable lives without menacing so ciety at large, will appeal to all but the hopelessly emotional. There is much talk about removing the tempta tion to crime, and not enough consid eration for the defectives who never will become normal. A constructive programme with this purpose in-view will represent an advance over present methods at least equal to the supe riority of the present over the middle ages. Detection and segregation of the criminal in advance of the com mission of crime is a goal toward which society is warranted in striving. Those Who Come and Go. Of rtunw everyone knows the melancholy career of the Rogue river fish bill, but those who know most about it. a,re confi dent of complete success at the next at tempt. And if the special seselon of the legislature is called as expected, we trust the local delegation will see that a measure is passed which will give the fishermen and people of southern Oregon the protection to which they are entitled. There it is, clear as a noonday in August. If the legislature meets, the never-say-die delegation from Jack son county will lug in the never-moribund carcass of that old Rogue river fishing controversy and try to bring it to life. It has run the gauntlet of legislative defeats, referendum defeats and gubernatorial vetoes, and yet is not dead beyond hope. They will say in southern Oregon, doubtless, that it will never be settled until it is settled right. Evidently they do not believe. there, in the infallible judgment of the people or the final wisdom of gov- rnors. Only about a dozen members have complied with Governor Olcott's con dition that he would call an extraor dinary session only on a pledge from the legislature as a whole that it would serve without pay and consider only a single subject. The alarming news from Jackson county will, we fancy, give the mistaken scheme its quietus. MILITARY AXD CIVIL TRAINING. The Chamberlain-Kahn military raining bill has such obvious points of superiority to that of Secretary Baker that there should be no doubt as to which will be preferred by con gress. By requiring six months' train- ng by every young man, the former gives time not only for general lnstruc- ion in military science but for techni cal instruction in each man's special ine. This has become the most im portant part of training, for soldiers are now specialists in handling ma chines, all the way from automatic pistols to airplanes. But provision should be made for the contemplated reduction in arma ment, which should preclude continu ance of universal training for military Service especially. Under a general agreement the United States will be required to limit, the number of men annually trained as soldiers. Yet we have learned by the war the benefits of many features of such training in civil life.' Every young man should be instructed in care of the health, in sanitation for the common good and in organized action, and he should have large part of the physical training which the army alone gives. These could be given to all, with the mili tary features omitted, to be added only for those who are to serve in the army. This matter might be considered in conjunction with the larger question of national education. It is the part of the nation to insure that this training for citizenship be added to the educa tion which every boy and girl is pre sumed to have. Thus we may reduce the large proportion of physically un fit who are rejected at the recruiting offices and who are in a measure unfit to do their part in civil life. A NOTEWORTHY CENTENARY. The man who first gave public demonstration of the u'e of an anaes thetic in performing a srrgical opera tion was bom August E, 1.819. He was Dr. William Thomas Green Morton, a Boston dentist, and the credit of dis covery belongs to him. notwithstand ing the earlier use of ether to allay pain by Dr. Crawford W. Long of Georgia, because Dr. Long not only did not publish his discovery to the medical world, but failed wholly to utilize his opportunity. He may not have realized the vast importance of the fact which he had stumbled upon. The undignified litigation which marred the later years of Dr. Morton's life has not dimmed his reputation, as did the neglect of Dr. T.ong to give to humanity the benefits of his discovery. It is not easy to appraise highly enough the value of anaesthesia, which has revolutionized surgery and brought, relief from pain to untold millions. The name, it will be re called, was coined by Dr. Oliver Wen dell Holmes, whose achievements in medical science were considerable, although overshadowed by his fame as poet and philosopher. It was Dr. Holmes who, when the dispute over the credit for the discovery was sub mitted to him, replied with the witti cism: "It belongs to ether." Dr. Morton first made use of ether on October 16, 1846. He received a pat ent for it under the name "letheon" a month after the operation in question, but the name failed to survive. Emphasis upon publication as a requisite for credit for discovery is a recognition of the humanitarian im pulse underlying the profession of healing. Dr. Long was within his technical rights in keeping his secret, but he thereby lost his claim to undy ing fame. Morton's name will always be associated with perhaps the great est blessing which science in the nine teenth century gave to man. Nor was the situation much helped by the specious definition of "politics" which was given by his successor, Mr. Lee. "Politics, as we understand the term," said Lee. "means the science of government, and not the effervescing or fermenting partyism- or the noisy froth of. spouting demagogues." This on April 16, 1846, Just ten weeks after the first issue of the paper. But the popular American definition of "poli tics" was no more then than it ts now the . "abstract science of government," the dictionary-makers to the contrary notwithstanding. "Our paper will yet be edited to the satisfaction of at least a majority of our subscribers," said Lee, perhaps sarcastically, certainly not prophetically, in leaving the task behind him only four months after ward. There were issues in Oregon, and the editor chafed over restrictions on his pen. He said: That a paper published by Americans In Oreson and that paper, too, the only channel through which the tnieresta and feelings of the Americans In Oregon can be made known to the world, should be restricted in its publications and so conducted as to meet the approbation and save the feelings of some whose principles and views are to all Intents and purposes anti-American. Is pre posterous In th extreme and not to be thought of for a moment. Gradually, but evidently not rapidly enough, the Spectator, notwithstand ing its articles of incorporation, took on a more decided tone. Editor Num ber 3 said that "it will be our aim to give this journal a firm and consistent American tone." But Editor Curry, in his valedictory a little later, depre cated the "censorship of the press in Oregon," and went his way. Failure of the attempt at "non-partisanship" in a typical community of ardent Americans illuminates in its own way the spirit of that time. This is perhaps the most interesting phase of the Spectator's history. The latest pronouncements of the National Clothing association do not hold out much hope for reduction of the high cost of living in the quarter from which we are clad. Our coats are to De fashioned after more gen erous lines, with broader shoulders and deeper chests, requiring more ma terial which will cost more, of course. There will be gaudy linings of blue, orange and purple, with pickpocket proof pockets which will be wholly superfluous in most cases if the wearer pays cash for his suit, and with cer tain other accessories, all running into money at unusual speed. Further to add to the expense account of the already overburdened male, vests will be cut low for the first time in some years, thus conspiring to increase our expenditures for fancy shirts. Sim plicity of design, with a view to econ omy such as would seem to be highly desirable in times like the present, is apparently the last thing thought of by the arbiters of the coming season's styles. The picture drawn by the informa tion bureau of the Czechoslavak republic is typical of conditions pre vailing in many districts, and which show that the children who have been innocent victims of the war are always TENDENCY TO CRIME. It Is a fascinating scientific pro gramme which the Journal of the American Judicature society presents in a recent discussion of the associa tion between criminal tendency and mental defect. A revolting offense against a girl in Chicago, murder of manufacturer in Xew York by two youths, both of whom, had criminal records, constant return to lives of crime by certain types of men, not withstanding all efforts to reform them, persistent parole violations by another class furnish a text for re newed urging by the psychiatrists thai facilities be furnished for the classl fication of criminals as early as possi ble in their careers. It is the dream of those versed in this branch of psy chology that the day may come when criminals whose offending lies deep in their natures shall be segregated in advance rather than punished repeat edly after commiting crime after crime. There is a peculiar type of reformer who expends all his sympathetic en ergy upon the criminal and none at all upon the victim. A particularly cold-blooded murderer the other day in New York was the recipient of loads of flowers, sent by persons -who undoubtedly sent no flowers to adorn the caskets of any of the many men he-slew. There is no convict who could not get signers to a petition ask ing that he be returned to his former status in society. It is the age of par dons, and when not pardons, of pa roles. There is failure to recognize distinctions, to realize that there is a more or less definitely determined connection between some kinds of mental deficiency and the tendency to crime. In the recent case in Chicago it was disclosed that the murderer of the girl had been arrested several years ago and fined $100 for an at tempted crime which ought fully to have disclosed his evil tendency, and for which he was not subjected to a A JOURNALISTIC XOX-I'ABTlSAJi. The Oregon Spectator, the first newspaper published in Oregon and also the first west of the Rocky mountains, began its life as an experi ment in journalistic non-partisanship. The experiment was a failure, from which the reader who understands the temper of the American people will have no difficulty in drawing his own conclusions. The founders of this edi torial enterprise had a plausible theory which did not work in practice. The theory was that people from all parts of the United States who had come to Oregon were presumably tired of poli tics, and would welcome surcease from constant discussion of the "issues of the day." But the founders guessed wrong. The first editor of the Specta tor, Colonel T'Vault, seems to have had sense of the situation, which he revealed in his salutatory, in which he related the provision of the articles of corporation, which not only set forth that "the presses owned by or in con nection with this association shall never be used by any party for the purpose of propagating sectarian principles or doctrines, nor for the discussion of exclusive party politics," but also expressly excepted this arti cle of the document rom possibility of amendment. Colonel T'Vault un dertook readily enough the editorial task, at the princely stipend of $300 a year, but we may suppose that even then he had some misgivings. He wrote: "The lumber game Is about shot away down in my country," says H. E. Walk er of New Orleans, who is at the Mult nomah, "and in ten years the lumber men of Oregon and Washington will be reaping a harvest. The timber in Lou isiana israpidly disappearing and even now we have to send to the northwest for our shingles." while In Portland Mr. Walker has been examining sawmill plants and making a close inspection of the lumber industry in this vicinity. He says that Seattle. Spokane and Portland remind him of New York. Alabama and New Orleans. The people of Portland are more hospitable than those he haa found anywhere except in New Or leans. In Portland, he says, people will go out of their way to show a straneer where a building or a street la. and this Is the way the citizens of New Orleans do; but a similar disposition he did not discover in Seattle. It is possible that Mr. Walker may decide to stay in Ore gon and get Into the lumber business. Tve told my friends back in Con necticut that I want to see Crater lake and then die. I'm leaving for Crater lake in the morning." announced H. M. Davis of New Haven, at the Multnomah. "This is the fifth time since March that we have visited Port land. We like It Immensely out here on the coast and we have looked over Alaska, Washington, California, the na tional parks and as many slchts of in terest as- we could find. You know that poem. Out Where the West Be gins. Well, that expresses my senti ments. The people In the west are so different from those in the east. I don't know why It should be so. but it la. Out here people are more friendly and thoughtful. They don't appear to be so money mad and they seem to enjoy life more. If nothing interferes we shall be In the west many, many times again. Western sheriffs are supposed to sport two guna. have a star attached to the'r vests and go cor.tless. They are aluo supposed to wear boots, knee high, with trousers tucked into 'em. Likewise, their headgear ia supposed to be of the larg. broad-brimmed style. All these traditions are shattered by the collection of western sheriffs who are mobilized in Portland attending their convention. They may have star, but If so it is concealed, and there probably isn't one shootin' iron in the posse. W. A Gellatly, who represents the-peace and dignity of the county of Benton, Is one of the many sheriffs In town. He is putting up at the Perkins. "Portland should be advertised aa summer resort, assert A. L. Gordon of Winnipeg, who with Mrs. Gordon is summering at the Hotel Washington. The Gordons have been visiting the national parks and the beaches and when they arrived In Portland the town looked so good that they determined to pass the rest of the warm weather period here. Mr. Gordon la delighted with the coast country, and is partlc ularly enamored of the city of roses, even though it Is somewhat late for the rose crop. Judse Max Sloss. who for the past 14 years has been on the supreme bench of California, and for five years before that was a trial judge, left for San Francisco last night after spend ing a few days at the Benson. While here he has been entertained by mem bers of the bench. Judge Sloss re signed recently from the supreme court. Mrs. Sloss has been accom panying him on his visit to the north west. More Truth Than Poetry. Br Jinn J. Montame, The main objection to making Haig and Beatty earls is that their fame will be hidden by their titles. Many a great commoner has thus sunk into lordly obscurity. There was once a cabinet member who bore the plain name Bob Lowe, but . who was an oratorical fire-eater. He was kicked upstairs into the house of lords under the title of Lord Sherbrooke. After period of silence, he had one of his characteristic outbreaks. Everybody asked, "Who is Sherbrooke?" and much diligent inquiry was necessary in order to discover that he was the once-famous but long-forgotten Bob Lowe. Perhaps that is why Gladstone refused a peerage. The government cannot dodge re sponsibility for the railroad shopmen's strike, for It has been considering their demands since January. If the demands were just, this is denial of justice. The government should be able to decide such questions within a month after they arise, and its failure to do so does not promise well for its success in running the railroads. There must be a fascination aside from the profit about the bootlegging business, else so many men would not persist in spite of frequent arrest. It cannot be the whisky that is carried, for those who. have tasted it agree that the quality steadily grows worse. It was pretty well proved by the war that the nation which controls the world's steel supply controls the world. That being so, the significance of American purchase of steel works in Austria and Bohemia can be understood. A large majority of the citizens of Ore gon are emigrants from the Cnited States, and for the last twenty years fiolitics there have been the order of the day. . . Hence it is to be presumed that a portion of the citizens of Oregon have brought with them their views of policy entertained while re siding in the United State It might also be expected that the Oregon Spectator would be a political paper; but reason and good sense argue differently. Situated as we are remote from the civilized settle ments of the United Slates, and at this time having no protection but that which is afforded us by the provisional government of Oregon, and having but one Interest to represent and that interest the welfare of Oregon tind the citizens unanimously . . It would be bad policy to break open old wounds and in doing so to create new ones. to discuss politics in The Spectator Here the editor was overcome by his own predilections, perhaps by re alization that an assertion of princi ples was necessary to a successful newspaper, for he concluded, half defiantly: notwithstanding that we are now. as we have always been and ever shall be. a democrat of the Jeffersonian school. This was the first editorial political declaration ever made in Oregon, and it appeared in an article contending that "reason and good sense argue differently." Polk was then president of the United States. Political dis cussions were rife everywhere. The abolition issue, which a few years later almost defeated Oregon's aspira tions for statehood, was looming on the horizon. The people of Oregon were at the time of the birth of the Spectator, February 5. 1846, grouped into parties, the alignments of which were as complex as in an older and more populous community. It seems strange now to read, as Professor Woodward has told in his history, that "the missionary party was rather looked upon as representing the aris tocracy and vested interests of the set tlement from the United States." Nev ertheless, it was so. But on the whole there was lack of leadership, and fail ure to crystallize public sentiment on any Important issue. Tieie vers ."can- Harden's plea for clemency to Ger many on the strength of its change of heart comes too early. Nations do not change so suddenly, and better proof must be given than is yet apparent. Package goods increase the cost of living, but they are what the consumer prefers, and this leads to a question that may answer itself: Is not lazi ness of people one big reason for high prices of foods? In Other Days. THE FAIRY FI.EKT. It won't be long till old Jack Frost comes sailing from the skies, palette underneath his arms, all smeared with glowing dyes. And seats himself beside a stream to tint with brilliant hues. n many a gaudy camouflage the fairy- folks' canoes. And when the bending boughs let through the autumn sunlight's gleam. The fairy-folk will launch their craft. and hurry down the stream. You've seen them passing oftentimes when Idling by the shore; You thought the zephyrs picked them up along the forest floor. And tumbled them upon the waves for then you never knew. That every little painted leaf bore up a fairy crew. Or that the fleet the little stream swept happily away Was peopled with a viewless host upon a holiday! Staunch boats are these that skim along and dance and dip and veer. And catch in eddies by the shore, or pause In mid-career. To set a. little scarlet sail to tack across the tide. While fishes watch them overhead and swiftly dart aside. And if toe close above the dam a dere lict should float. . The fairy-folk leap overboard and get another boat. And o. when brown October comes and on the trees o'erhead You see the leaves turn suddenly to gold and glowing red. Just watch the stream that runs along almost beneath your feet. And presently you'll see it bears a many-colored fleet. And though you may not see a soul in any bright canoe Yju'H never, never doubt again that fairy tales are true! Now It's m Traced y. Returned travelers say that the Eng lish telephone system is a Joke. Ours used to be. Call In the Jankers. Erzberger says "brutal measures" are needed to bring out hidden money for taxation. Well, nobody knows any more about brutal measures than the Germans. Hrnrj la o Exception. There are a lot of people who wouldn't care whether or not thev knew the difference between Arnold Bennett and Benedict Arnold if they were making titty or sixty million dollars a year. (Copyright, 1W1B. by Bell Syndicate. Inc.) TweBly-flT Years Ago. From The Oregonian of August f. 1RH4. Washington Al ter long weeks of de bate in congrese over the new tariff bill it Is expected by everyone that an agreement will be reached tomorrow. E. McNeill, receiver and general man ager of the Oregon Railroad & Naviga tion company, returned to Portland late Tuesday, accompanied by B. Campbell, general freight agent of the line. Two daring chimney-sweeps yester day succeeded in replacing the hal yards on the courthouse flagstaff, malt ing the climb up the pole before a great throng of spectators. The butchers are circulating an agreement to close their shops August 15 and attend the grocers' picnic in a body. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of August 9. lSf9. Des Moines Twelve astronomers were here and viewed the eclipse of the sun on August 7 through 11 large tele- ecopes. The third regatta took place Satur day. The Monnie was first and the Nettie second. It is said that more than IS. 000 bush els of new wheat has been received and stored in Albany to await shipment. The water in the Willamette is said to be as low as at any time last year and boats have ceased to run to Albany. .MRSERV INVITES INSPECmOaT The Baby Homes. By Grace E. Hall. Not everybody can make a thousand dollars an acre in loganberries, as has J. H. Hoffman of Marion county, but many can try and come near that fig ure, to their and the state's benefit. The old battleship is running true to name. Practically dismantled, the Oregon is being rushed together for the reception. Will she be ready? S-a-y, "was she ever otherwise? Seattle complains that its army ba con is "all fat." Humph! Fat is mighty good. Perhaps Seattle expect ed the hind legs of the hog. If the Roumanians shoot every man in Budapest who looks like a bol- shevist, the barbers will do a booming business. When today you see a fellow wear ing a convention badge, and you have a spare seat, ask him to hop in. The old south must smile in derision at discrimination against the negroes in the second city of the north. If you like watermelons, now is the time. You'll never get them cheaper, unless you steal 'em. Robbing a jewelry store of dia monds in San Francisco must be easily done, according to the news report. Says the Beaver to the "Climb out o my wayi"- Si wash: Save your buttons. There has been a. aharn advance in these useful disk and the prices are going still higher. ho that there is a prospect of pin comlnc into fashion as a substitute. J B. Haffen and J. A. Pilcher, who rep resent one of the biggest button man ufacturers in the country, are arrival i- ih. Multnomah. Thev tinned off th information that buttons have Joined the high cost of living. W: M. Gace. who has lived at Co quiile about as long as the Hotel Bax tor ha existed, or longer, is an ar riei at th Perkins. Coauille is in terested in the concrete highway being iairt hetween that place and Marsn field. Two coni'rete mixing plants are laying the stuff at the rate of aoou .. . , . e a mile a day. and unlefi mnthiiKT ernes wrong, the job will practically be completed this season With the known price of wheat, it 1 v to figure what David Nelson o DunHistnn will tret this year, when it iiiH that his crop will ru innrnYlmatalr 40.000 bushels. Nor 1' thi. nil Mr Nelson, who is registere o kA Mntel Portland, has an alfalfa ranch in Montana which will net him substantial income. And yet friends of Mr. Nelson refer to him as "retired There is a crreat era of building ac tivitv in Walla Walla and unexpected wheat yields are responsible for a more optimistic feeling than has been noted for Eome time past, reports n. n. ir shall, nresident of the People's Stat bank of the southeastern Washington metropolis. Accompanied by Mrs. Mar shall and daughter. Miss Virginia, th banker motored to Portland and will spend several days visiting trienas. Eastern Oregon people flee that sec tion when the warm weather comes thev can. which accounts for so man found in Portland at present. Mrs. V. Burcess. Miss Madeline Burgess an Miss Thelma Thompson were at th Imperial yesterday, having been spend insr a few days at the base of Moun Hood. They were on their way to Sea side. Mrs. R. H. Johnson of Walla Walla is at the Hotel Washington. Her husband is the former secretary of the county fair association and has been active in the frontier days show which was put on by the association. Mr. Johnson is a grain buyer. One of the early birds of the National Editorial association to arrive In town yesterday was George Jr.. Hosmer of Denver, who is chairman of the legisla tion committee of the N. K. A. Mr. Hosmer Is at the Imperial. Laurel, headquarters for 150 people in Washington county and which has a daily mail, has two churches and two sawmills. The nearest railroad is about seven miles distant. W. L. Stevens of Laurel is at the Perkins. Motoring from Butte. Mont., to south ern California. C. E. Moline and family have arrived at the Hotel Washington. They have been traveling leisurely across to the coast, visited Puget sound cities, looked through Rainier park and are now headed for the south. Mrs. Lillian Templeton and Miss Helen Templeton are at the Imperial from Brownsville. Or. For years the football teams at the university of Oregon had a member of the Temple ton family on the eleven, and the Templeton boys were regular world beaters at the game. Heppner wants a hospital, but the drive for the hospital is being held back until money is raised to float a hotel enterprise. As soon as the hotel is a fact, the hospital proposition will be put before the people. Albert Bowker of Heppner Is at the Hotel Oregon for a few days. President of the Tum-a-lum Lumber company and former president of the commercial club of Walla Walla, J. M. Crawford of Walla Walla, Wash., is at the Hotel Portland with his family. A. M. Bolter, who with F. H. Lewis operates a sawmill at Holbrook. is in the city on business and is at the Imperial, . They call for love oh. thousands call in vain. The little babes that came without desire To fill strange homes, where mothers do not reign; Nor fathers rule. The baby eyes inquire By mute appeal of strangers who pass by Why they are left unloved to laugh ana cry. When homes unnumbered lack the vital thing Of "atmosphere" that only children bring. They call for love oh. every day they plead. With smiling lips and lifted hands. their need Of that great gift which human hearts crave most: And yet there passes by a silent host The strange, untouched, uncaring crowds that sursre Through childless homes, though con scious or the urge That nature in her wisdom ra to each The untuned heart-strings baby fingers reacn. call that none They call for love may smother: They lisp to strangers oft the name of "Mother": , And, yet. in state upon a cushioned seat. The bulldog rides each day upon the street- While hearts that long for love and parent care Are left alone to sicken in despair. And long years hence, with bitterness and sneers. To scoff at mercy which ignored their tears. In Grays. Blacks and Whites. Boston Post. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson has always af fected in her dress the grays, blacks and whites and they are most becoming to her. When she came home from Paris she wore a gray gown, chic gray hat and cloak of gray and white striped material. In the senate gallery she wore a costume of black satin, com bined with navy blue. On her head waa a "picture" gray hat. She very often plays golf In the morning and long auto rides In the afternoon. She frequently visits a vaudeville theater. I Fund to Be Songbt to Provide Faeili tie for I' nf ortunateo. PORTLAND, Aug. $ (To the Ed itor.) There was a letter in a Satur day evening paper. July 24. calling at tention to conditions in the Albertina Kerr nursery. The inaccuracy of the statements Is so marked that the board of directors conditio iaily invites the writer of the letter, as well as anyone who is Inter ested in the home, to visit the Institu tion at any time and see how many ba bies there are and how they are cared for. as well as all the conditions in the nursery. The books of the Albertina Kerr nur sery are kept at the oiTice at 195 Burn side street and are open to inspection by the public at any time. This is the slate-aided institution which cares for the babes of unmar ried and unfortunate mothers. At the present time there are nearly 40 babies in the nursery. Some of these babes are suffering from the sina of their parents and are sick babies in conse quence. The buildings used by the Institu tion were constructed for dwelling houses and are consequently not as well fitted for a nursery as a specially designed building would be. There are many demands made from different quarters for places for new babies. For all these reasons it is very desirable that a fireproof building be construct ed, with much more room, in order to allow segregation of the babies and to provide tne best care possible, in or der to meet the constant demands for a place for unfortunate babes who ab solutely require care. The plan of the board of directors is to conduct a state-wide campaign in September for a fund of $60,000 to buy a site and construct a fireproof brick building with a capacity of perhaps 100 babies. There will be three wards In this new building. One will be for the normal, healthy babies and one will be for new babies who come to the in stitution. There will also be a ward for the feeble-minded babies. The Pa cific Coast Rescue and Protective so ciety is the first institution in the state of Oregon to meet the serious demand for a place for defective babies. ' The state institution at Salem will not take defective children under 6 years old. The consequence has been that private institutions have had to take care of defective babies in the same quarters as the normal and healthy children. This has increased the work of the nurses and has been a great dotriment to the normal children. A couple of years ago this society built what has been called the Eliza beth cottage in connection with the Louise home for abandoned mothers, but this cottage is full and more space is needed. As soon as the new, fire proof nursery is built tne present Elis abeth cottage will be used as a mater nity ward of the Louise home and there will then be one fully-equipped institu tion for the care of defective children under 5 years of age. There is no doubt but that this is the most Impor tant feature of the new institution a suitable provision for defective and helpless babies. Everyone familiar with the work- of this society realizes the great need of greatly enlarging the quarters for the nursery and providing good accommo dations for the well babies, the sick babies and the defective babies and also to meet the growing demands for these unfortunate little ones. The letter questioning the fitness of the present quarters and the efficiency of the nurses invites at least a response from the officers of this society and an invitation to the general public, es pecially all lovers of babies, to come to the nursery and see the babies and Inspect the Institution at any time. MRS. R. E. BONDUHANT, President of the Board. THOMAS WYNNE WATTS. Secretary nf the Board. THE AMERICAN LEGION: The G. A. R. of the Future Theodore Roosevelt Jr., that virile leader among the service boys who will be in Portland in September, says, "The American Legion exists to put something: in the government and not to take something away from ic." You know what the Portland post is doing here at home in the way of welcoming the boys home and finding positions for them. You are wondering what tremendous influence this organ ization is going to wield in the future. There will be a timely article by George Palmer Putnam, formerly of Bend, in The Sunday Ore gonian tomorrow. ALCOHOL AND RUSSIAN HISTORY When Peter the Great, great est leader of all the Russians, went down to Holland to buy boats for his own ports he sealed the bargain with a pint of Flemish beer. Intoxicants have ever played a part in the dealings of kings and emperors. History shows that alcohol has seeped its sinister way into the heart of every important transaction of the Russian nation under the old regime. An interesting chronicle of the influence which alcohol has had on Russian destiny is one of the features of tomorrow's magazine section. THE WAR AND LITERATURE Are you thinking of writing the "great American novel"? If so you will want to know what the reading public is going to want, and what effect the war will have upon the desires of the readers. Are we to have a deluge of war novels such as followed the civil war, or are the people anxious to forget it all in the delights of fantasie and romance? Five of tfce leading English authors have contributed their thoughts on this timely subject for the readers of The Sunday Oregonian. IDEAL SUMMER MOTOR TRIP Many Oregonians are planning motor trips during their summer vacations. Such as are well want the latest information on a route to the Klamath Falls section and return, recently logged by a party of Portland Elks. The trip out lined is one of the most wonderful trips possible in Oregon, in cluding visits to Crater lake and Mount Hood. THE COMPLETE SUNDAY NEW'SPAPER Important exclusive fea tures are being published each week in The Sunday Oregonian. Frank A. Vanderlip's third article on reconstruction problems finds an important place tomorrow, and to the thousands that have been following this masterly series no further word need be said. And do not forget the Sunday colored supplement, enjoyed so by the kiddies and by the grown-ups. All the News of All the World. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN.