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New York, Brunswick building. ia- cago. bteger building. . San Francisco Olflce R. J. Bldwell Co. 743 Market street. PORTLAND, SUNDAY. AUGUST JO, 1914 OUR BASIC TROUBLE. The Oregonian discovers that the Salem Capital Journal has at last un riorfaken tr discuss the several ques tions recently directed by this paper to Its Salem Democratic neighbor, And to use them as the text tor a Ions and learned discussion of the evils of protective tariff and the benefits of ftf trade. The oregonian nau sought to learn why (1) if a made in-Oregon movement Is entitled t support, a made-in-America policy i: not similarly deserving? and (2) 1 utiv nomtirratic Oreeron newspaper professing non-partisanship, had ever minnortpd a Republican candidate aeainst a Democratic candidate? Our ingenuous contemporary re-k- savintr that its editor had "supported Mr. Fulton for practically the same reasons mat ne tninhs oeu ator Chamberlain should be re elected now. viz.. experience In the National Legislature and faithful ,.-iHs.. tn his i-nnstituents." Let us hnno thnf nnr Salem friend's inten tions are better than his memory and that he will try again. Air. ruuon was not renominated in the Repub lican primary for Senator, and was not a candidate in the election, and therefore he was opposed by no Democrat. We are left to conclude that the Salem editor was indulging in the favorite Democratic pastime, in 1908. of instructing the Republi cans whom they should nominate, re serving the right, of course, to oppose the Republican nominee in the elec tion. A confession that he Indorsed Senator Fulton In the Republican pri mary and the fact that he subse quently supported Senator Chamber lain in the election tjardly satisfies the conditions of The Oregonian's inquiry, or justifies the shallow and insincere pretense of non-partisanship. The great part of the Salem paper's long article is taken up with a gen eral tariff review and a reaffirmation of the varying Democratic doctrines of anti-protection, which have ranged from free trade to tariff-for-revenue and a revenue tariff with incidental protection. Whatever the Democratic policy is now. it Is not the late Payne Aldrleh tariff. It appears to be em bodied in the Wilson-Underwood tar iff, which is neither fish nor fowl, nor good red herring, but which, nevertheless, protects amply seventy five per cent of the products of the South and leaves exposed to the ten der mercies of foreign competition nearly, seventy per cent of the products of the Middle West and the Pacific Coast. No other tariff meas ure ever placed on the statute books by an American Congress com pares with the Wilson-Underwood act in outright sectionalism and dis criminative favoritism. The present act is the product of the vicious and indefensible system of log-rolling between interested beneficiaries, op erating through serviceable Congress men, that was long most vigorously attacked by such Democratic voices as the Salem paper. Now they have utterly reversed themselves into a purely partisan attitude of defense for a strictly partisan measure. The holy indignation over the wicked political gystem that produced a protective tariff is changed to hypocritical laudation of a mongrel tariff (pro tection for the manufacturer and free trade for the farmer) evolved by Identically the same methods. Will the Salem newspaper, or any other, now repeat the expressions it was uttering a few months ago about the highly prosperous condition of the United States under the Demo cratic tariff? What has become of those loud protestations that the coun try was never so well off and its people so contented? Where, oh, where, are the ejaculatory denuncia tions of the Congressional and Journal istic calamity-howlers who dared say that factories were closing down, mills running half time, workmen dis missed, payrolls reduced, wages de clining? Where, indeed? The people of the United States were confidently assured, a year ago, that the industrial balances would be restored and all labor happily em ployed as soon as the beneficent Wilson-Underwood tariff got into op eration. Then that benign day was to arrive when the currency act should get safely through Congress. Then came another postponement and a longer painful period of waiting, until the trust bills should be finally en acted. Meanwhile the patient lingers while the doctors debate. They will learn what is the matter, no doubt, at the autopsy. A common question addressed to The Oregonian by Democratic papers Is as to whether it would repeal the present tariff and restore the Payne Aldrich act. The evils of that abhor rent measure under which, with all its defects, the country' prospered are held up to shocked contemplation and the charge is made that The Ore gonian would go back to the reaction ary reign of th wicked trusts and other protected interests. The Oregon ian would indeed prefer prosperity under the Payne-Aldrich tariff to ad versity under the Wilson-Underwood act. and so would, or should, every other Journal and every' other patriot ic citizen. But The Oregonian would avert the hazards, uncertainties and discrim inations of any political tariff, Demo cratic or Republican. It believes in, and has long demanded, a scientific non-partisan revision of the tariff. It has said, and it repeats, that a tariff commission, made up of Informed men. ought to be appointed, to ap portion the correct measure of pro tection or of no protection, to even American Industry. Because we have had no such tariff, and because American producers and inriran manufacturers are ham pered by the competition of cheap! foreign products, and because they must nevertheless maintain a high wage scale, and operate under other conditions peculiar to the United States, industry languishes, and the American producer and the American workmen are not now able to stand In the sun of prosperity. HOPE NOT YET LOST. Senator Chamberlain and Senator Lane are reported in a current news dispatch from Washington as "be lieving that the river and harbor bill will pass the Senate after the lopping off of some of the items, but that the retention of the Oregon projects is probable." The New York Sun, one of the im portant Eastern newspapers that vig orously opposed the bill in its present form, issues an appeal to President Wilson, Senator Simmons and Repre sentative Underwood, to protect the treasury by various economical meas ures. "The first action," says the Sun, "will be the amendment of the pend ing river and harbor bill by the ex clusion from it of every appropria tion except those for maintenance, payments of projects now under con tract, and for works recommended for military reasons." President Wilson nas pointedly de clined to recommend to Congress that it pass the pending bill. He does not appear to be persuaded of its merit as a whole. Hasn't he heard from Portland? But it appears now to be obvious that sentiment of the country will support a reasonable measure, ex cluding the pork. The amendment of the current bill is practicable. If Senator Lane and Senator Cham berlain will shift their support of a bill, tainted with pork, that cannot pass, to a modified measure that ought to pass, they will be com mended at home. MODERN DESTRUCTIVENESS. Reports of artillery fire directed by aeroplanes bring to attention one of the most effective wiles of modern ingenuity. Man, as a fighting ani mal in 1914, is here seen in an en tirely new light. His capacity for de struction is added to many fold. He is hurling death a mile, or two miles, or three. In an entirely new way a way that partakes more of mathe matics than of gory warfare. in airman hurtling suddenly aloft, discovers a hostile column. Through powerful glasses an artillery oincer in tvi airshin Is able to approximate the range. Completing his data with a few movements of his rangeflnder and a quick computation on a scratch pad, he presses a buzzer and clicks the information to a group of artillery officers who are hidden, with thoir imnlements of slaughter, behind a distant knoll. The men behind the cannon see nothing except the mil in ttnt nf them. Yet. reducing the wireless message from above, they send a ranging tire over tne niaocit. Another me.ssatre comes from the aeroplane. It notes corrections in the firing data. Presently the range is secured and then the field rifles belch forth as rapidly as expert gunners can operate them. The men in the aircraft, darting forward when the action has ceased, find a field covered with dead and dying. The men behind the guns con tinue tn nothinir. What had meant death to perhaps a thousand men had been nothing more to their opponents than a gun drill. RUM OLD TIME. What a rum thine time is," re marks one of Charles Dickens' charac. ters. This humble - philosopher, a t,irnirv in a debtors' prison, was con templating the downfall of one of his prisoners. "Bless my dear eyes, saia Mr. Roker, shaking his head slowly ciha tn eirir, and trazinsr abstract edly out of the grated window before him, as if he were fondly recalling some peaceful scene of his early youth, it soemt hut vesterday that he whopped the coal heaver down Fox- under-the-Hill there. 1 tmnK i can see him now a-coming up the Strand between the two street keepers, a lit tle snhereri' hv the bruising, with a natnh n' wineear and brown paper over his right eyelid, and that 'ere lovely bulldog as pinned the nttie doj arterwards a-following at his heels. What a rum thing time is, ain't it, Neddy?" What a rum thing time is: it seems hut vesterday that La Blancne whopped Jack Dempsey down San Francisco way, yet the riles or ine Oregonian say it was twenty-five years a-wn The rnlumn devoted to extracts from The Oregonian of that period the other day mentioned tnat. Dave amDbell. champion of Oregon, wno seconded Dempsey, had arranged a ten-round bout with Jim cometi, tne oung boxing instructor in the Olym- -i,,k inH it seems but vesterday that Dempsey whopped Campbell, over he Washinrton line in lewis county, ome hark to Portland and appropri ated the festooned barouche the fire- boys had expected to use in welcoming another victor. Fame in the pugilistic ring is fleet ing. La Blanche is utterly forgotten. fnrho.tt rose to the world s champion ship, surrendered the crown to an other, who lost to another, who gave up to a negro. Dempsey nas lain Mnnnt falvarv Cemetery for nearly twenty years, a victim of tuberculosis. ;ut what of Dave Campbell.' ine "whooDine" over in Lewis County changed the course of his life. He is ead, too, but on the bosom or tne Willamette rests a trim and powerful flreboat which guards the safety of Portland's waterfront and it bears the honored name of David Campbell. Pugilism never brought real ana lasting fame to anyone. More often has brought soddenness or in neaitn , fieetinir nonnlaritv it provides en courages dissipation. If he who wears laurels avoius dnnK ne almost in variably meets a physical conqueror erected by long periods or idleness aim luxury followed by frenzied training for another battle. The fight that turned David Camp- bell from the ring made him ulti mately a valued city servant. From semi-volunteer among the cit s nre- flghters he rose by successive nrnmntinns throuarh display oi cour age and executive ability to the high- nnsiMon in the department, in a disastrous Are he went in where he would cot ask his subordinates to go an lost his life. He is numDerea am one- the oitv's unforsrotten heroes. xhns does the flight of years play i-ith the idols of men. Thus does it change the course of man's endeavor and its fateful Incidents bring fleeting popularity or honored memory. Of four men at a ringside in San Fran cisco who figured prominently in the news of twenty-five years ago, one Is in oblivion, another is a back-number, a third has long been in an untimely grave and a fourth has left a record THE SUNDAY OREGOJiTAN, PORTLAND, that is an example to the youth of the land in self-sacrifice and fidelity to duty. What a rum thing time is! THE FASHION FAMINE. A deplorable effect of the war which has not received the attention it deserves is the famine in fashions that Is likely to fall upon us with its terrible blight. Anxious souls are al ready asking "what Is to take the place of Paris fashions?" French and German wines we can dispense with because we can make them our selves. In fact, we have long been in the habit of doing so. Nothing is easier for a real connoisseur of wines than to manufacture champagne, burgundy, and nlersteiner in his workshop. It is as facile and expedi tious a process as the production of ancient masters in our art factories. But fashions are a different matter. The palate of the wine bibber is fallible and the eye of the art-loving millionaire is readily beguiled, but nothing can blind a woman of fashion to 'the origin of the structures with which she crowns her head and be decks her body. When they breathe the atmosphere of Paris she knows it Instantly either by nose or eye or by some more subtle sense organ. Perhaps it is by intuition that she discerns the genuine and condemns the imitative but it is impossible to deceive her. Nor will she be satisfied with hon est substitutes. Mr. Edward Bok and other great reformers have spoken many a timely and earnest ivuru i" behalf of American fashions but all in vain. One might as well seek to put high-toned society off with Amer ican tenors or American plays. Our affluent epicures of art and clothing know what they want and if envious fate closes the door to it they will go without rather than accept a substi tute. "Either the best society or none at all," was Jefferson's advice to young lawyers. "Either genuine Paris fashions or a naked body" is the heroic cry of our millionaire dames and dudes. With people perched on such a sub lime pinnacle of sacrifice it Is useless to argue. While the war rages Paris models are out of the question. Such gifted artists in silk and feathers as have not gone to the front are busy drilling in the reserves. They have no time for creating new bonnets and gowns and if they had their triumphs would probably be lost in crossing the broad Atlantic. The German cruisers would particularly relish making prizes of them to adorn their own fair dames, who of course are all in the same boat with our American fashionables. After a year or two of warfare a German ballroom will look as frumpish as any- in America. The women of both countries will have "absolutely nothing fit to be seen in. The rieath of h rea d-winners and the widowing of impoverished mothers are of course sad to renect upon dul it iB the plight of high society in this fashion famine that draws one's bit terest tears. THE REHABILITATION OF ADAM. An e-n-nerlition sent Ollt and main tainor! hv the TTniversltv of Pennsyl vania has been making excavations at the ruins of Nippur, an ancient city about 100 miles southeast of Bagdad, for the last 26 years. A great many thousand clay tablets Inscribed with ouneiform nharaoters have been found there and carefully transported to the university, where tney are preserveu in inviolable cabinets. Most of the tablets are broken. The pieces have heen ssi.rllv spattered bv time and chance and all of the precious cunei form writing is encrusted with the accumulations of the ages, rney nave loin in the ruins nf Xinnur ever since the time of Hammurabi, some 2500 years before Christ, and would per nor,, have lain there undisturbed until the day of judgment had it not been for the enterprise of the university or Pennsylvania. Assyriologists have made such progress in the study of the ancient language of Nippur that they are able to decipher the tablets and translate them, although not mam- have as vet heen taken in hand. This language is called the bumerian. One of the greatest oumenan scholars in the world is Professor Stephen Langdon, of the University of rwforrl He is an American by birth and his Oxford chair, which goes by the curious title of tne &ninito phair -ivas founded bv a Cincinnati merchant of that name. Naturally Professor Langdon's intellectual cu riosity was attracted to the great mass of clay tablets which had been accu mulating for so many years at the University of Pennsylvania, and last October he made a visit to Philadel phia to examine them. In the course of his explorations through the inter minable collection he at length light ed upon a triangular fragment which instantly aroused his attention. Like all the rest, it was obscured by In crustations, but such is his vast eru dition that he was able to glimpse the meaning. He saw that he had in his hand an account of the Flood much more ancient than the one given in the Hebrew Bible and differing from it In strange particulars. Making an accurate copy of the tablet, he set himself to translate it as soon as he returned to Oxford. This ancient account of the Deluge Informs us that it was sent by the goddess Ea to destroy the race of men who had offended her in some way which either the tablet or Professor Langdon's translation does not make clear. The "waters of Ea began to possess the fields on the first day of the first month and did not abate until the ninth day of the ninth month." Evidently this is a mere ritualistic expression not to be taken literally. Indeed, another account of the flood from the Nippur tablets safrs that it rained only seven days and seven nights, which seems far more likely, if one may speak of likelihood in these grave matters. Professor Langdon finds that only one man with his belongings was saved from Ea's flood. His name was Tagtug. mean ing, "gardener," and he naturally cor responds with our Hebrew Noah, the husbandman. But this Tagtug is in comparably more interesting than Noah because in the Nippur tablet he also plays the traditional part of Adam. It was he who committed the great original sin and brought death upon all his descendants. Professor Langdon has deciphered this fact from two other fragments of the Flood tablet which were photo graphed for him at the University of Pennsylvania after he had translated his first excerpt. The Flood story in terested him so deeply, being the old est account in existence, that he de sired to piece the broken tablet to gether and read the whole of it. Be fore this could be done the missing pieces must be found. They lay some where among the thousands In the university stores, but nobody knew where to lav hands upon them. A young woman in the employ of the university, who has become an adept at piecing together these puzzling bits of broken clay, was set at work upon the task and in an amazingly short time she had done what was wanted. Two pieces were fished out which ex actly fitted each other and Professor Langdon's triangular piece as well. More than that, they were Inscribed in the same Sumerlan cuneiform characters by the same individual hand. Miss Connorton, the young woman we have mentioned, is so great an expert that she can settle questions of this sort beyond all dis pute. So there was no doubt at all that the right pieces had been found and photographs of them were forth with sent to Professor Langdon. He has found by deciphering the complete tablet that Tagtug, the Su merian Noah, committed the sin of all sins by eating of the tree of life, not by eating an apple. Hood River ought to breathe a sigh of relief upon learn ing of this discovery. The ancient obloquy of the apple must have weighed heavily upon those who cul tivate it and the common account of the Fall becomes all the more exas perating now that we find it to have been pure misapprehension. In the Sumerian account, which goes back to the very beginning of time, the ap ple is not even mentioned. The tree of life is referred to passingly in Gen esis, but it plays no particular part in the sad drama. The Sumerlan ac count brings it squarely before the footlights. Tagtug partook of the tree of life, contrary to the command of his god, and thus brought death into the world. Professor Langdon has gone farther in his investigations. He has de ciphered, with fair .probability, what "the tree of life was." It was a medi cinal plant, the cassia or cinnamon tree. Tagtug was tempted to eat of it by the serpent with whom we are familiar, so that after all the Sumer ian account of the Fall is enough like our own to prevent any rude shock to the faith of those who deem such matters Important. WORLD MAKING. Speculations about the origin of the universe are harmless and sometimes diverting. They offer an inviting field for the activities of restless in tellects, and, since they affect no great financial Interest, they are not likely to lead to war and bloodshed. To be sure, when the theologians have fixed their affections upon any par ticular fheory they are apt to defend It somewhat violently, but since their efforts are confined to language, at least in modern times, no dire mis chief results. Would that all wars might be reduced to logomachies. The gain to mankind would be great. Another heantv nf these speculations about the creative process Is their limitless variety. xnere are enuue" of them and diversity enough to sat isfy all tastes, even the most exacting, and since one theory- is as likely to be tr,,e a another there is no lust ground for complaint or Invidious compari sons among their votaries. j.nuc .ho litre to helieve that the Almighty called the universe into being by his word of command are as near me truth, no doubt, as those who main tain that it originated by a tedious process of evolution. Some teach, that the worlds were made by a gradual collection of little nartinies whioh once floated freely through space, enjoying a lawless lib erty which did tnemseives nu guuu jnri marie them worthless for all prac tical purposes. Once brought together In the shape or a pianet. mese duuuk Korliris wore found caDable of produc ing trees, animals, human beings and Kaisers as time untolded tneir possi hiiities This is Professor See's ac count of the creation and nobody can deny that it possesses a serene oeauu quite unlike the violent surmises of La Place, Kant and sweoenDorg em bodied in their Nebular Hypothesis. It mav surprise some readers to learn that the great theologian Swedenborg nroo tho true inventor of the Nebular Hypothesis, as he was of a number of other scientific doctrines now as cribed to other men. The Philosopher Kant worked it out inuepeiiueiuij some years later than Swedenborg and La Place finally amassed the glory of It. This theory teaches that the worlds were formed from nebulas, or clouds of star dust, which condensed under the mutual attraction of their parti cles and in the course of time formed solid spheres. With condensation their substance heated to a temperaure which melted the Igneous rocks, while subsequent contraction upon cooling folded the earth's surface, like those of other planets, into depressions and mountain chains. This hypothesis runs along so smoothly that it has always been suspected of deceit. It is like a plausible politician or a dealer in gold bricks or any other merchant of false pretenses. La Place's nebular theory gained much of its fashionable hold on college pro fessors and unorthodox preachers by Ignoring difficulties. For instance, It never has been able to throw a ray of light upon the retrograde motion of the planet Neptune, but It met the emergency by closing Its saintly eyes and saying nothing, a course of con duct whose success highly recom mends it. Nobody knows what the nebulas really are. These cloudy heavenly phenomena may be collections of star dust and they may not. They may be star gas, a substance by no means so poetical as dust, but quite as big with possibilities. Recent astronomy un der the inspiration of the spectroscope has verged noticeably toward the con viction that the nebulas must be gas and that Swedenborg, therefore, and those who robbed him of his fame were wrong in their assumptions. The French chemist, Dr. J. Meunier, taking it for granted that the nebulas are gaseous masses, has devised a new theory of creation. It is a prop erty of some gases to explode when tho,- oro io-nited Dr. Meunier as sumes that the nebulas are richly sup plied with material ot mis sort, me spark may have been applied by a wandering meteor, or by a comet. We can think of dozens of possioie wave to start the conflagration. Once set going, it burns faster and faster until all the gas is consumed; in net, it burns explosively, if Dr. Meunier can be relied upon. The explosion in this case lasts tor hundreds of years, but that makes no difference. The principle is the sa,me. t-o are ant to think of every explo sion as an instantaneous affair. It begins and ends in tne winn oi an e e as far as common experience goes, but such experience is deceptive. If the earth had a core of dynamite to within a hundred miles of the surface we should all be Just as safe as we are now because the superincumbent weight of the crust would make an( AUGUST 30, 1914. explosion impossible. The force of the dynamite would be less tnan urni of the pressure from above. But that circumstance is merely curious. It is neither here nor there in our present discussion. More to the point is the fact which we are going to relate. Suppose the earth's orbit were paral leled from beginning to end with a ring of dynamite. And suppose that as you read these words the ring were exploded by a detonating cap Just be hind the earth. No harm would be done. None whatever. Whoever wishes to try the experiment may do so without any fear of consequences, because the earth travels faster in its orbit than the explosion would in the dynamite and we should therefore al ways keep ahead of the danger. But be careful to attach your fuse behind the earth, not ahead of it. A mistake tn this particular would be very unpleasant. F,rom facts of this kind we easily understand how it may require cen turies for the explosion of a nebula to be consummated. When it is all over a great variety of combustion prod ucts are left throughout the volume of the new world. They are hot to begin with, as one would naturally suppose after such an experience, but they cool off In time and thus the conditions become suitable for life. Dr. Meunier holds that all worlds have originated after this fashion and so passes on to the conclusion that all of them are substantially similar, with inhabitants as nearly like hu man beings as circumstances permit. On a huge planet like Jupiter only dwarfs could dwell, while Mars may very probably be populated with giants. Gravitation would crush a John L. Sullivan on Jupiter, but on little Mars he could frisk about like a Spring lamb. THE DRY SFBLL. Oregonians now know by experi ence what a "dry spell" really means. Never before have we had such a drouth, or at any rate hardly ever. Tne oldest Inhabitant racks his mem ory in vain to find the like. The rec ords of the Weather Bureau blush for their inability to produce a parallel. Since early in June it has not rained. A few miserable drops have fallen now and then. Just enough to make us want more, but nothing like rain. The ground is dry deep beneath tne surface. Usually by digging a few feet moisture is reached, but not this Summer. The farther you go toward the center of the earth the dryer the soil is. Trees with long taproots, like the oak, ash and walnut, keep their leaves fresh, so there must be damp ness somewhere in the depths, but no common explorer can hope to find It. Walnuts only nine or ten years old, whose taproots are not yet fully ex tended downward, feel the drouth and long since ceased to make new growth except in favored localities. Acorns and hazelnuts have ripened weeks be fore their due time. Filbert trees matured their crop In Jul-, and a very good crop it was, considering the season. Apple trees standing in a dust mulch continue to grow a little and their fruit is maturing normally, but those in grain fields and pastures suf fer terribly. The leaves are falling prematurely and some of the new twigs have positively withered up as if they had been scorched. Let the orchardist learn a lesson and attend to his cultivation hereafter. But there Is a bright side to the picture. When the parching wind is still for a day or two the attentive ohservcr ran detect new shoots put ting forth on apple trees and walnuts. Their fresh, cool green contrasts sharply with the somber foliage that has stood the heat and Duraen ot tne d-outh. Well-watered gardens thrive bounteously in the warm days and fresh nights. There is some mois ture in the air after sunset wnicn tne .roos ohoorh thrnneh their leaves, and If a little more is wisely provided by the husbandman all goes wen. me. encashes tomatoes and corn are full of promise wherever they are irrigated Judiciously. THE GREATER DICKENS. It is wonderful how Dickens' fame is growing. Not many years ago we were told by extremely wise people that he would soon be forgotten. Tre mendous geniuses like Kipling were to put out his light forever. But it Is Kipling's light that is failing, while matrons1 hnrns briehter than ever. His fame Is not only Increasing; it Is assuming a steady splendor wnicn re minris one of the stars of the first magnitude. The world is. ransacked for scraps of his manuscript. His letters are sacred, his most trivial paragraphs are treasured. It was once supposed that Dickens' views upon the condition of the poor were mere sentimentality. They grew out of his emotional nature, we were told. Some even questioned thni. sinoerltv .tfistirina: us that they were part and parcel of the "Dickens stagecraft," Or the "Dickens pose," as oomo oaiieri it Now a manuscript has come to light which -proves that the great novelist had made a serious study of economics. There is no trace of socialistic philosophy in this short production, but it leaves no doubt that Dickens was perfectly conversant with the conventional economics of his time. If that phase of the science was transitory and mischievous, he could not be blamed for it, any more than Dante could for working the Ptolemaic astronomy into his poem. A collection of Dickens' letters as yet unpublished has just been ac quired by Charles J. Sawyer, a London collector. It contains, among the rest, one written not long before the final breakdown which closed the novelist's marvelous career. He was then giv ing his "Farewell Readings." The let ter was written in April. It says, "I am in a different place every day and shall have no rest until after the 12th of June, when I finish for good ana all." Rest came sooner than he ex pected. The messenger called him on June 9 and he read no more in this world. What is he doing over yon der? Has all that wonderful light gone out and all that beautiful power failed forever and evermore? OIR CALL TO COLORS. 'There is a call to colors in Amer ica, but it Is In the ways of peace. The war in Europe haa opened the door to commerce with South Amer ica and an enormous trade is ours if we will but meet the several condi tions that are necessarily imposed. R. G. Dun & Co. present figures showing that one-third of exports of manufactured articles from the coun tries at war goes to South America. This one-third amounts to nearly $1, 000,000,000 annually. Of the total ex ports and imports of the South Amer ican countries the United States has had not more than 10 per cent. The conditions that must be met Include the organization of a credit system on lines different from those pursued in the United States, the erection of branch banks to take care of the financial business, the estab lishment of a merchant marine and the introduction of goods by agents who speak Portuguese and Spanish. Perhaps the most serious obstacle to acquisition of the South American trade Is the lack of ocean carriers, but the Government Is devising means to fill this want. The Government. It Is to be presumed, will rise to the occasion. In South America payments at ninety to 120 days are considered cash. The Electric Railway Journal tells of a Brazilian paper dealer who recently attempted to place an order for 10,000 tons of paper in New York. He had been importing from Ger many at ninety days' draft, but could buy in New York only on confirmed banker's credit or a gold basis. He did not buy. If American manufac turers or Jobbers had had an estab lished agency in Rio de Janeiro to look up this man's credit a valued customer might have been acquired. Personal representation is said to be essential. It would seem likely that numerous agents who heretofore ronresented KuroDean houses would ! now bo at liberty to acquire new con nections. These are men familiar with the ways and languages of the country In which they are established. They would be invaluable if their services could be obtained. Suitable representation is not a serious prob lem to the large manufacturer, while several small concerns, each of which could not alone afford to employ traveling salesmen, could combine in that particular. Indifferent packing has been one serious complaint against American shipments, but It la a fault that is readily remedied. There is no factor In this Hat of conditions that cannot be met. Amer ican enterprise and ingenuity are broad and big enough to dispose of them all. The prlge is an immense one. Once all trade obstacles were overcome the United States would have practically its own way in South America so long as the war lasted. Thereafter friendly relations thus es tablished and the favorable introduc tion of American goods ought to In sure the retention by this country of at least one-half the trade. No more toys from Germany until this cruel war Is over. The last cargo reached New York last week. Toy making Is a great industry in some German cities. It keeps the peasants of the Black Forest busy on Winter nights, ekes out many a scanty income and gladdens the heart of childhood everywhere. But war cares no more for childhood's Joys than for men's lives. It "cares for nothing, all must go." If thunderstorms sound like artil lery at Coos Bay and floating trees suggest wrecked battleships at Sea side, how must even the passing clouds affect the people within strik ing distance of the fracas? Swiss children will harvest the crops while the men lie about in military camps on the frontier. The Swiss army gets all the bounties of war without having to fight for them. An aggregation of New York women in deep mourning will have a peace parade. How the spinsters ao nate to see the already Inadequate suppu of men reduced! American expatriates in London ap peal to the United States to save them from English drafting officers. uj all means send them to the rront, our verdict. Park board engineers subtract 241 feet from the reputr-.' ru-lght of Mult nomuh Falls. The beauty of the falls, however, still remains Intact. Colonel Osnoblchln says the Rus slan armv will march on to Berlin. Of course, if dear old Osnoblchln aays so it must be true. A fine Philadelphia cow brought $5010. Why, that's enough money to keep a family in milk and butter a whole year. Adiournment of Congress is now susreested for October 1. Regular will o' the wisp is this 1914 adjourn ment date. T h Japanese cruiser Is unable to get any clew to the whereabouts of the Leipzig. Perhaps tne i-reipzig a her first. It Is charged that some of the com batants are using dum-dum bullets But the censors remain dumb on the subject. The British army Is sending no news to London. And this Is one case where no news is not good news By the by, what has become of that reduced cost of living tne Democrats were promising us some time ago 7 In these exciting times, every man who looks like a foreigner in a Euro pean country is a suspected spy. And not a word for nearly a week now as to whether Jack Johnson haa been diapatched to the front. Dearth of imported toys In conse quence of the war will start a boom for the American toy industry. About time for Villa to show his hand with that mysterious mobiliza tion of 40,000 fighting men. There is a strong moral in the story of the man who put $3000 in a box and withdrew a flatiron. However, the word "peace" will be gin to sound mighty good in Europe before a great while. Incidentally the war correspond ents have fallen back on covering po sitions at London. The Germans threaten to surround all English soldiers in France. All four of them? It Is reported that forest fires really have done little damage. Except to our eyes. Tourists are cured of their wander lust and return, singing "Home, Sweet Home." County fair time looms on the hori zon. Italy watched the cat jump. And stiU no rain. Gleams Through the Mist Br Deaa Colllna. The AeKenturew. Sins aU your songs of Livingstone. Of Gordon or of Drak. Of fame that Marco Polo won. Or Pear)' sought to raaka; Sing all your bold advanturars Upon tha Seven Seaa I will advanture, gentla sirs. I've out-advantured these. Though one the Orient might know. And one mlglii " to Mexico. And one where langled Jungles srow. And one through polar sleet; Sing helsh: Sing ho: And be it ao! I care not what they find, for lo, I have discovered more, I know Upon an evening street. Then sing your gallant buccaneers. Who found the Indes Isles! I found a man who shared his beer. And one who always smiles. Then sing your daring captain's dash Tu find the polo In snow! I found a man who gave me cash. Although his cash was lo. 1 found a beggar with a smile As bright as gold of lnd; 1 found fresh laughter, free from gull. On lips men said had tin lie J. I found a friendship, burgeoning In calls where felons He, I saw the flitting fire of gprlug In a painted woman's ye. So men the distant lands may know. And high and low o'er earth may go, Their lots in distant realms to throw In all the Seven Seas. I let them go and laugh: Ho-no!" Adventurers? Well, be It so: Beneath the evening street lamp's glow. I out-adventure these. e e e "Sir," said tha courteous office bur. "it la hard, la It not, to figure out soma of the Naitonal peculiarities In the present conflict?" "How ao?" I aaked. preparing to ba Instructive. "Well," said tha C. O. B. "when tha Kalaer'a aon left Uerlln ha waa a Ger man, wasn't ho?" "Yea, my aon, go on!" "And yet dispatches comliisT later tell ua that ha went through Uelgium with hta army, a-ruhin' " And thereupon tha 0. -. IS executed a turning movement and harged iluwn the hall with flxad purpoae, bef r 1 could mobllUe a battny of I'apar weights. e It la with aome hesitancy thnt we ra vert to a MW forgotten Incident, but regarding that Noah conrovaray of last week. It haa occurred to us that, if Father Nosh lived tods). The ark ivouid hard!) pass. With experts in the naval pla. As one ot dreadnought class a a a Intrrrmting Mnllallra. In I'ortlaml yesterday Tl'SS peraong constructed indif fereutly poor Jest on the foundation of tian. Shannon's Justly-celebrated remark about the usseu lial nature of war. If tha 72tS persons MMstlotiod wera standing on on another's shoulders their combined atature would be equal to the height of tha rlillculoua aud would upproxlmata the depth of ban ality. Furthermore, It la computed that tha originality of their wita combined would bo equal to .UU3 of the length nt a chickudee'a upper leftliaiul inciaor. e At this Juncture wr move that tha colyum rulea be suspended Mild that wa return to the previous motion long enough to note that: If Father Noah lived today. Out few miles coulii lie float. Until ome cruiser crossed his ay. And got poor NoaJi'a goat. Forecast for September. t'rofeaaur O. rythaairns Uinielark. the prominent rag-tlrm astrologer and aeer, submit the following disserta tion and foiecaat for Se it ember; The Sign of the dual rulea MM be ginning of the month and ociiin tha deatlniea of a large portion of tha hu man race, eapeclaily that of the peo ple of Belgium, which la at present be ing used aa a back alley In wlih li ill the other power of Europo can llnt out their dlsputea. Aquarius, the Wateroarrltr. NMI Into prominence In the first week and th prohibitionists will llitieuse the ac tivity of their campaign. The Sign f the Flshos following at MsM indicates a strong comeback from the "weta." Tha Sign of Taurua In mid -September will probably Inflluenc the activities of many of tho war correspondents who are down near tha scene of action In London or the Bermuda. The month cloaea again under tha dominance of the Goat, who etlll coti trola the war situation and the deatlny of the Ultimate Conaumer ft Importod goods in the Knit'd Statea. September was named by the Komana from the word "aeptem." which means "seven." and probably haa aome occult connection with th aavan-up same that the earlier patrician sport a uaed to pull off In the Etruscan hopyarda In thla month. Tha cuatom haa baen tranaplanted and flourlahea today In Oregon. see s We are really aahamed to rafer to th matter again, but th Crawfiah Editor auggeata tlxat: If rather Noah lived today. It Is my firm bIIf. His cargo of wild beasts would pay Much la than canned chipped beet THE COST OF W AR. There la grief lu many a hamlet All along the German Rhine; There la aorrow in brave Belgium. Where the aceaa ut vaioi .run., There la weeping in old Austria, Where aons and alrea have died, That tho glory of the Hapsburga May bo upheld In lrld; There le weeping in the Ruaalan homea. In Scrvla aa wen. O'er the carnage of the demon Who escaped the Jawa of hell; By many a Frenchman's fireside eaSke Hitter te.ira are aheil. Since In the claalt of nation Gallant aona have fallen dead And Britona. too, have suffered As they re added to tne iiooa n the toll that war haa taken Of tho Britona' braveat blood. Rule Britannia" rends the heavens. im .itl. er-kia Wncht am Rheill." .Mingiiue -- r While the "Marectllalae Is ringing With a meioay nmne. But all military glamor Never, never can atone For the mlaery war engenders In a million siricr.cn i Charles K. Sawyer. Thouund-lVot I.lncr Next. Indianapolis Nwa. - r wtt a.nlrtr directors of th erne 1 - -- Hamburg-American Lin aald re'ently hat although the Valeriana is p ii ong. another ten year waa likely to lapaa before a thouaand-foot llnar vould ft hullt. First Kmlly Acroaa. Judge. n.-.moton IHnwlddow told m hl tamlly 1 a very old on. Thy war on of the first to corns acroaa. Rhodas Not at tha grocer's.