G t:.Tti OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING; AUGUST 14, 1914. I THE JOURNAL x lynr.PENPKXT nets spa her ' -c. a. Ut.kwv .Pnblllier - t'utilUbapd every era-ulna; irfrpt Ho ad n 7 ) and rrr Sunday swwnlng at The Journal Rvilii- '1 rnaaway ana Yam.illl rortianu. ur. li Ml 4 .. ...... ... 1 1. . I .1 .4 h f I V. trammlMloo UiroUKB the nails as second f. 'daw matter. ls-UCr-UUNKa Mato 7I7-; Home. AU . drawrtmants reached by thvae number. Tell lUalltJtjK AbYKttTllSlNU Mtf UKStNTAXI hi - Ueajanilo A Kcutnor Lo.. Bruuirwlck Ul-1.. MS fifth ... Nwi Vork: 121 .."royl' ' OMliJili., Chicago. - y- S ' " ulia rliuioa term, tr mall or to auy ail it la the United state or Mexico: daily - On ytar fS.OU I Oue month I -80 SUNDAY . M Oue fr..... .12 .60 I One month. 9 -23 DAILY AND 8UNPAY Oue - roar ST.IVO 4 One eaonth. . . .. .$ . When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer address. Never shrink from doing ( anything your business cans you to do. The man who Is above, his business may one . day find his " business above blm. Drew. OAMHLIXO OX WAR SUDDEN rise in the price of food products confronts people of the United States. They are expected to accept the middleman's theory that war 'In Europe necessarily means high er prices on the necessaries of life. President Wilson proposes to use .,;ihe power and the machinery of nln mrafiW the maniuulations and ; - -extortions by speculators in food stuffs, lie has written the attor ney general a letter in which he leaves no room for doubt as to , what, will be the government's at titude toward the establishment of war prices at a time when this country is at peace with all the world. He says: i The rapid and unwarranted Increase In the prices of foodstuffs -In this country on the pretext of condi tions existing in Kuropo Is so serious and vital a matter that I take the 'liberty of calling your at tention to It. I would be greatly Obliged If you would advise me Whether, under existing laws, there Is any action the department of Jus tice could take by way of Investiga tion or legal process, and what fed eral legislation. If any. In your Judg ment, is Justifiable under the cir cumstances. I feel this matter cannot be lef pass by without our trying to serve th country. Certainly, the country Ought to bs defended. If possible, against men taking advantage of such circumstances to increase the price Of food and the difficulty of living. ' It Is the kind of letter to have been expected from a statesman whose conception of government is . that a president and congress are In Washington on the business or serving all the people. It Is timely and significant notice that, bo far ao law auu IUB ranci ui buioiu- . m'ent can prevent It, schemers and manipulators will not be permitted to take advantage of the war con ditions in Europe to speculate upon the dining tables and make more difficult the problem of living, In this country. It Is action that will meet with universal commendation, except by those who have planned to capital ize the butchery in Europe for their Own selfish purpose. It is indeed a matter of naticnal congratulation that the president will not, If in his power to prevent, . permit the peoples' bread and meat to be used as pawns in a great game of gambling on the war. . x THE PRESS AXD THE WAR FOR obvious reasons, no news paper can give continuously accurate details of the war operations in Europe. Never in history has so stupen dous a responsibility been thrust upon Journalism as that presented In the gigantic movements on the widely extended fields and in the complexities and intricacies of the war conditions. ; On the one hand, millions upon millions of readers are clamoring for the latest advices. The whole world leans listening for informa tion from the front, a front more widely extended and engaging many times more men than were ever before assembled under arms. . On the other hand the sources of news supply are closely guarded . by the captains in this vast cata ' elysm of guns and ghastly scenes. - Every belligerent seeks to hide his operations and plans from his an tagonist. A severer censorship than was ever known in war is rigidly and rigorously maintained. On the - Austro-Gerrnan side, the severed cables and the blockade by the British and French fleets of all avenues of approach to those centers from the sea, along with the stern censorship maintained by the kaiser, uUmos.t wholly closes all .sources of news from that quarter. In this maelstrom of difficulty, and amid all these storms of passion and conflicting forces, there is set before the news gathering press a task more stupendous than the in defatigable and unconquerable agencies of news have ever encoun tered.', . . ' ., 'It; la amazing- to experienced news men that It has been pos sible, under the circumstances, for a news service to meet the - situa tion and gather ! Information with the celerity, fullness and approxi mate accuracy bo far manifest. Only great organization and powerful-resources) iBuch as those in the .hands of the United Press, could achieve such a result. With the Austro-German sources of news supply almost shut, off, and with OUR OWN U N TOMORROW the hopes, the history, the aims and the power of a militant people are to be climaxed In a transcendent event to take place In theWestern Hemisphere. The opening of the Panama canal is one of the world's greatest victories of peace. The Declaration of Independence and the eventUaVtfons that followed it were the American people's great gift of liberty to mankind. The emancipation proclamation was the Amer ican republic's ' triumphant message to the , oppressed and enslaved under every sun. --, '' A- ; ;v;;Th; Panama ,canal, with Its de&eat of isthmian diseaBe and its victory by mad over nature in a great achievement in which an other powerful natipn had failed, is another premier contribution by the American' jpeoplte to the peace,-welf are and happiness of the world. , ' It Is a mightier performance to have built the Panama canal than to have conquered the world. It is a more conspicuous service to mankjnd to have severed the Isthmus than to be the armed lord of the seas or to be the ruler over a hemisphere. It is a greater human achievement to give this enduring work to civilization than to exercise dominion over all the world's railroads or be master in authority ovtr all the world's industries. The opening' of this waterway to the world is at the moment when a whole continent is bent upon the most destructive war in the history of man. The greatest achievement of all time for the conservation of human energy is brought to ita consummation in the hour when beyond the Atlantic all accumulated power and wealth and force are engaged in a ghastly endeavor for the destruction and dissipation of the stores and resources of mankind. Tomorrow every American, whether an American by birth or by adoption, will have a new baptism of faith In his country. When the bells and whistles proclaim the final realization of an event almost comparable with the discovery of America itse'.f, and when in that triumphant .moment there comes to him the saddening thought of the ghastly scenes of death, debt and devastation among his kindred far over the seas, the-e will well up in his soul a renewed vision of the history, the traditions, the alms and the peaceful mission of his own United States. the operations of the allies much more accessible, it is unavoidable that on occasions the news reports have been unduly favorable to the allies. It is a condition that will unavoidably continue until better lines of communication are estab lished with German sources of news. But every day since war was declared, The Journal has pre sented a great mass of cable news that gave the reader a close view of the operations on all the far flung fields. On the day that the operations took place, whether a battle, a defeat, a repulse or an ar tillery duel, readers of The Jour nal, in their offices or at their homes have been given copious de tails with the highest possible re gard for accuracy. From every quarter has come commendation of The Journal for its war news service. News reports are conservatively and carefully handled, and every endeavor put forth to be fair to all the belliger ents. Extra editions are only issued when there are events on field or in camp to Justify. Sensational extras are never put out to stir up a breeze and gather in a few nickels. It Is a course of dignity, fair ness and conservatism, and The Journal has many evidences that it Is a plan appreciated by the public. THE HARVESTER DECISION T WO of three federal Judges sitting in the International Harvester Company case ruled that the company, as it exists, is a combination in restraint of trade as defined by the Sherman law. The company has been or dered to reorganize into separate units, and the officials say they will appeal the case to the United States Supreme Court. It is a momentous decision. The allegation was that through com bination the company had secured control of the agricultural imple ment business which made oppres sion of the people possible. Attorney General McReynolds in his argument before the trial court made the government's position plain. He did not assert, and the evidence did not show, that the harvester trust had used its power to oppress the people. The point at issue was whether there could be a "beneficent trust," which the International Harvester Company claimed to be. Judges Hook and Smith ruled that the theory of American gov ernment does not contemplate plac ing into the hands of a. few men the legal right to decide, by whim or caprice or good intention, whether other people's rights shall be acknowledged. Conceding that the harvester company was a "be neficent" trust, it had the power, through control of production, to dictate to the buyers of agricul tural implemens. . Air. McReynolds, attorney gen eral in President Wilson's cabinet, has Inserted the entering wedge which must ultimately upset the claims of big business. The har vester decision is evidence that federal courts do not Banction trusts, beneficent today, but which may become oppressive tomorrow. COUNTRY LIFE WHEN city bred people go to dwell in the country the first thing they miss In the country home arek run ning water and electric lights. They need miss them no longer if they will follow the example of a resident of Petersham, Massa chusetts, who, according to the Electric News Service, has solved the problem. At a cost of $1500 he . Installed in his garage a combined gasoline engine and electric : generator Which furnishes current for all lighting purposes and for a small motor driven pump which supplies the water system. It Is cranked like an automobile, produces seven horse power of elec trical energy and will run auto matically without attention. Tn addition to the light and water supply this small plant is ample ITED STATES enough to operate motors for vacuum cleaning, for fans, for heating, for cooking and other household work. A man in Ken tucky ha3 a similar plant but only of one fifth the capacity, which cost him about $500. The cost of operation is nominal. Thus, one by one, the discom forts of life in the country are being overcome by electrical sci ence. The time may come when the farmer will lie in bed in the morning, turn .on his electric switch and 'set the farm work in motion. He can then take up his telephone and listen to the news of the world and the market quo tations. At the same time he can call his dealer, Bell his products and order his supplies for the day. He can then summon his electric valet and be dressed and then sit down to an electrically cooked breakfast automatically served. The auto truck from town will then come with his supplies and take back his products which have been gathered by electric work men. In the evening he can get the day's news over the telephone and by turning another switch unroll the latest "movie" film. In those days there will be no cry of "back to the land," instead the call will be, depopulated city." back to the ' I .CAPITALIZE MOUNT HOOD F' ROM April 1 to July 1, this season, the records of the cus tom house at Blaine, Wash ington, show that 4(1 on mi tomobiles crorl Inrn n-uYoV. fZ Luuiuune3 crossea jnto British Co- lumoia. This gives some indica- best People of Oregon but th con-! When one looks over the pages of tion of the tourist travel in the 1 1 idenco &ame has been overplayed and , history, he cannot but feel that Wood northwest this summer Tr aisn!?e seems In these latter days to have j row Wilson was called at this time to forms a basis JkTI " S ! ?'SCre.dUe.d-.. HVhas iled to!be our pilot and guide through theae the number of tourists that would go to Mount Hood if it were easily accessible over good roads from both the Portland and Hood River sides. Some idea of what Portland is losing through lack of facilities to reach the beautiful cein .t , . :r,e beauful scenic spots in ; "V -LK jarQ Was Obtained the 1 other day by a prominent resident wno met an old Boston acquaint ance in Seattle. In response to his query if he had spent much time in sightseeing at Portland the Bos ton man said: I stayed there about two hours. ' I wanted to go to Mount Hood but J?Tned ,that was almst an impos sible trip so I came on north where they have good roads and where you can get somewhere. Tour people are asleep. You do not realize what a great asset you have in that mountain. If it were f. y.atd near Bostn " would be cap italized in about two minutes So it goes all alone the lin Tourists want to go to Mount Hood but they cannot because there is no good road. WThy not build one? Why not invest a few thousand dollars and make hundreds of thousands? WASTE RUN RIOT HERE is not a plant on a river and harbor project in the United States that will not suner loss and waste by deterioration if the rivers and harbors bill 13 beaten and all wa terway work plunged Into stagna tion until Congress can pass a rivers and harbors bill next year. Thus, there Is 6000 feet of pil- ing on the north jetty at the mouth nf . . moutn ! years post- by whom Emma Goldman wa8 paij bj Assails Regular Medicos, ponement Will mean that part or the wets. If Mr. Wallace cato that Portland, Aup. 12. To th. Editor of ail or It will have to be replaced 2; w,n certinly denounce Emma The Journal The efforts of Dr. Mar before the project is finished and Goldma for hypocrisy, but until 1 am,ceUus, aided by the Oregonlan, to start that in turn will mean that yZ T0nJlC,d in faV ' tne acsatIon. a amallpox scare in the Mount Scott new nllei Sll i-wf! that the I shall denounce Mr Wallace and oth- district should be checked and stopped, new pue3 will have to be driven i ers making accusation. Those who and the only way to atop it is by et at enormously increased PTnon CO heard her on the above subject can not iia-ht,ninir th nuhitu ThU 1 im,. through the rock already derwxdrerl I come to the C0Tlclusion that she is notjsible through the columns of the Ore i it . . . ucpusueu I earnest .ins v pntu , 1 . in UP lPTTv It la a .nn.l. ! loss and wtfste that discontinuation! i sauiyie oj. in v... 1 wurK, Dy Deating the rivers auu naxDors 0111 will mean. Another case Is seen in the newly opened channel along Sand Island for delivering rock by barges for the Jetty. Unless use of it Is continued, this artificially constructed channel will close. If used by passing barges and tugB, It will remain open. To open it, cost the government $75,000. It has already passed into disuse bv aeiay to tho rivers and harbors bill, 'and the olnair.0- .ffor the uplift of his people. In such a heriT. TTt,1 w tuV I! . .x.u iiii A'acsca al I this session, this channel will have i iu u upenea again at a cost, ai $75,000 whenever funds are next available. It rould be & crime against the government and the people of the United States for such a process of- waste and ex travagance to be permitted. There Is not a waterway project in the country that will not pre sent similar phases of loss, some greater some less, if the rivers and harbors bill fails. There is not a plant that will not deteriorate. There Is not a piece of unfinished work that will not be damaged by the elements. There is not a project in which the costly over head expense will not go on. But above and beyond all these is the loss to come to commerce, to industry, to agriculture and to every line of endeavor by a whole year's delay in deepening the har bors and opening the channels. , When filibustering senators fight the rivers and harbors bill and call it "economy," they make them selves grotesque. A FASHION QUERY D AME FASHION is puzzled over a design for her fall gown and hat. Two years ago the task was easy. Everything was Bul garian blue and Balkan blouse. In a general way this year's styles will certainly be military but the question to be determined is whether German, Russian, French or English. Why not make it United States and set a standard for the world? Letters From the People (Comrannleationa sent to The Journal tor pnblicttlon In this department should be writ ten on only one aide of tha paper, should Jt exceed 300 word in .length and must ba ac companied by the nam and address of tba sender. If the writer does not desire to have the name pubUabed. be should so state.) "Discussion Is the grestest of all reform ers. It rationalizes everything It touches. It robe principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crashes them out of existence and aet up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Mr. U'Ken's Position. Portland, Or., Aug. 14. To the Edi tor of The Journal It appears some what stranse that Mr. U'Ren should find himself in the anomalous posi tion he now seems to occupy in his candidacy for governor. He has for many years been sving to make laws and regulations for the control of his fellows but wm to have for gotten that those laws were appli cable to himself should he be de- , tected in theii1 violation. Mr. U'Ren ! has often told us In his speeches that governing is the most profitable business in the world, and of course, no one can blame him for desiring to get into It, especially when efforts in other lines seem to result In fail ure; but ambition to govern should above all else be seasoned with at least on apparent desire for public rather than private benefit, which Mr. U'Ren thus far fails to manifest. He says In one of his many mani festos, "I am a candidate because I want the office." Very simpte, and AvTnl ,.rrnr. tm K,n' l' Governing- Is the most profitable business in the world." seems to an- swer the question as to why his am- , bition for the office. Time was W , , v. conll?en and respect of large numbers of the n.licn XT- T" T- 1,.1 M fi;un;i,Ku ua w uy iie lauea 10 answer tne ' charges of Senator Kay In regard to j only hope he will be spared to finish his deal with the widow, Mrs. Mo i the noble work he has before him. I Grath, in which she claims to be i consider our government is being Uft defrauded of J1100. or to answer the ! ed up, as it were, by our president. We charge of another widow, Mrs. Seth ; were drifting too much before toward Lewelling, with the loss of several j the rock of mammon, thousand dollars through the hypnotic I A WILSON REPUBLICAN. Influence practiced upon her hus- j uiu uu uersen. vm Air. b Ken kindly clear up a few of the many Questions of like Import that have', been the regret of many former' A. , friends who would still like to .re-!TOOrs rroneou han the idea repeat spect him if they could feel that he I cdly xPressed that the victims of Is not a wolf in sheep's clothing? Many or us nave hoped that Mr. U'Ren stood far above the average office hunter, but were not surprised when he turned the Prohibition peo ple down. He doesn't belong there, but they had votes, and so why should he not use them when they were eo easy to get? He has been equally loyal to the Populist party "took their coin," to organized labor and the single taxers "took their coin." He has worked the Socialists all they would allow, as well as the grange and t"ie Re publican party, and flirted a little with the Democrats- and Bull Moos ers. Why. Indeed, should he not be an Independent, or an Interdependent? We hope he will succeed in getting sufficient names on his petition to place his name on the ballot, and we hope he will withdraw, as he did from the race for United States sen ator when some such questions were put to him. ALANSON M. HTMES. Emma Goldman, i Portland. Aug. 13. To the Editor of The Journal In a letter in The Journal J. Sherman Wallace alleges that Emma Goldman, the anarchist, was brought down to the coast and was well paid to oppose prohibition. I believe Mr. Wallace himself never heard the lecture on prohibition and continence by Emma Goldman, Cther wlse this childish idea would not enter !a Head- 1 would 1Uie to cnaeng him to prove as to where, when and ' From a Repnblican Standpoint. I Seaside. Or., Aug. 10. To the Editor 01 xne journal as a reaaer of The : neaitn activities 01 x-ortianu a mo Journal I wish to give expression in an nopoly in violation of the state constl humble way to my appreciation of your j tution is directed, of course, to the true-hearted support of President Wll-j propagation and expansion of the crazy son In this trying period. We are in-j and impossible medical hallucination deed fortunate in having such a noble that all diseases are caused bjr high minded man at the head of ouxl"Serms." a belief that is now com government. j batted by a great mass of medical Not only now. but at all times, yotklmen; to say nothing ot the newer and have given the administration your more down to date drugless schools, most hearty support, and furthermore, who know better. Business is busi in my opinion, you, with your timely ness with the medical politicians, and editorials, turned Oregon into the WiL son column. When our president Is doing so much I and fearless manner, he needs lust such kind words as youc editorials A FEW SMILES Two Pullman portersj representing; different railroads, met off fluty and progressed from friendly gossip to heated argument. Their Quarrel, cen tered about which one worked for the better road. Their claims, figures, and arguments came fast and furious. At last the talL thin porter setiieu ihe aiiate with these classic words: "Go on, man; we kills mo people den you fellahs tote." "What's your time?" asked the old farmer of the brisk salesman. "Twenty minutes after five. What can I do for you?" "I want them pants," said the old farmer, leading the way to the window and pointing to a "Given away at 6:20.' tictiet marked J Harry Lauder tells a story about Rah McP.eth. a friend of his. who went up to Glas gow once to see a brother off to Amer ica. They said good-by" on board, and then Rad went ashore, and as the great ship slowly drifted away from the quay Rab continued to shout part ing words of advice and encourage ment to his brother standing on deck. "Good-by Wull!" "Buck up Wull! "See an behave yerselT Every time he shouted the ship waa a little farther away, and Rab ac cordingly kept raising his voice more and more. The other people who were shouting good-bys were dumfoundel, and their good-bys were hopelessly drowned in the roar of Rab's voice. . When the ship was about haJf a mile away Rab let himself go with a final tremendous shout: "Mind and write hame, Wull!" A man standing near went up and touched Rab's arm. "If Wull doesn't write wehn he gets to America," he sugested, "you should Just shout across to remind him." The Ragtime Muse IiOver's Leap. "Tes, this Is the place," the native said. "He lep from here to the lake be low. But be he alive or be he dead Well, really, I dunno! All that I know is he is gone, A fine young man, and I like him well, My darter Jane he seemed stuck on Such things ain't hard to telL "I reckon that I was stern and cold. And he was sort o' soft and rash, And when I began to snort and scold About his lack of cash Well, he was proud as proud could be. And I reckon he was fond of Jam Tes, here Is the place, as you can see; It gives me a sort o' pain. "We call It the "Lover's Leap this spot. What's that? My darter was his adored? Well, maybe; but that's as tar's he got Before he jumped his board! He jumped all right; a month he owed. I liked him, so he got in me deep. He jumped and the same time Jane, she blowed; So this here's the 'Lover's Leap!'" nave elpressed t0 lm hlra up an(J Tisbten hi. pathway in the many sad te ar to rollow. Thelr famUy llfe was eo compiete true wife, com- panlon mother doing so many kind, .HttiM. wh- i fh.r . t. i representative of American woman ! hood " ' ' very important and trying times. xtie Loss of Drinkers. Portland. Or ast iSt mi. e ' t ' v,- liquor are only a trifling few worth less characters, against a great num ber of moderate drinkers benefited. These ideas come from willful ignor ance and blind self interest. By active police work and the fact that late at night is the "drunkard's hour," we keep the fact partially hidden; but drunkards are numbered by thou sands. Every neighborhood has some. It Is conservatively estimated that the United States has above 1,000,000 confirmed drunkards, of whom 300,000 die each year, not mentioning the in nocent victims of drink nor the many injured irreparably, including thou sands of children doomed before their birth to death or degeneracy. But supposing the number to be cnVy one half of that estimate, 150,000 men dying from liquor every year. That means a Titanic disaster about twice a week. How the whole country was stirred at that terrible loss, and hastened to have laws passed to pre vent another like It. We sacrifice men to liquor as though we were In a constant state of bloody war, and there are no honors for the dead. The "temperate" drinkers, too, are suffer ing harm constantly, medical science assures us. To what purpose Is this awful waste? To line the pockets .of. beer and whiskey makers, who would hire four times as many laborers if en gaged in any other line of manufac ture. Let us conserve men. brains j and effi dry- efficiency in Oregon by making it MRS. C. L. PRATT. gonian, because of its strong pro-med ical proclivities and hatred of -everything anti-medical. The efforts of the medical machine In - control of the "scares" or panics a regular program laid out by the medical trust must be started in order to frighten the peo ple and reap a vaccination harvest, for vaccines and serum must b aoiL ! because the doctors are large stock PERTIN ENT COMMENT flMAjJi CHANGE i Better a foggy present than a misty past. Mlserr la the only real pleasure a pea si ml at haa. e After soma men start they are too laiy to stop. The more a wise woman thlnaxa the less she la apt to say. True lov never finds It necessary to express Itself in words. Some women Just have te kiss each other to remain unklsaed. If a woman decline to tell her age give her time; time will tell. Don't think that Just because a man Isn't In Jail that he must be honest. A widow Mays that one husband on earth Is worth two in the other place. a oagnnor wouia ratner noia a 150 pound girl than a 10 pound baby. A poetic genius in one who la ahla to convert his stuff into real money. No man's education la complete tin he can tell when a woman's hat is on straight. Every woman haa a tender spot; It may be In her heart or It may be on her toe. It's easy to gauge a man's Intelli gence, Draw him Into a discussion, and if ho agrees with you he's sensi ble. The so-called better half of the matrimonial combine never ceases try ing to find out how the other half lives. WARS AND LANGUAGE DIFFERENCES Prom the Boston Globx When you look at a language map of eastern Europe, such as may be found In some of the books on philol ogy, showing In different colors the different languages and dialects, and when you notice that the political and the linguistic, boundaries do not coin cide, you are not surprised that the folks in that tempestuous and more or less unhappy region should fall to agree, though living aide by side. How can they agree If they do not understand one another? Authorities vary as to the exact number of the 30 or 0 languages, dialects and Idioms spoken In eastern Europe, There are more languages than nationalities. All except three Finnish. Magyar and Turkish, which are of Tartar origin belong to the Indo-European family. Each tongue has a number of dialects. The Ser vians In Austria-Hungary speak the same language as the Servians in Servla, though they write It with a different alphabet, but the dialect Is so different that Illiterate people un derstand one another only with diffi culty. In the Austrian parliament business is conducted in aeven different lan guages, and the eonfuslon Is even greater In the Hungarian parliament. Under . such circumstances It Is not strange that now and then both the language and the proceedings should be unparliamentary. That Is nothing new, however, in parliamentary his tory. Although the members of the British parliament In Queen Eliza beth's day all spoke what was called English, many of tnem oould not make themselves intelligible to the others, nor could they understand them, so great was ne difference In dialects. Diversity In speech Is exceedingly interesting to the philologist, but It is surely one of the obstacles to peace and progress in southeastern Europe. If during the past few cen turies, since the barbarian Incursions ceased, all the peoples In the Balkans had been ablo to understand one an other readily, they would certainly have united politically long, ago and taught the Turk a salutary lesson or two. A llnguistlo Frenchman who trav eled through Turkey and the Balkan states some years ago amused himself by making a collection of the equiva lent of "I love you," In various lan guages and dialects. In some that beautiful thought was expressed In THE SEESAW By John M. Osklson. When the big corporation whioh de pends upon brisk business for Its earning- power finds It hard to sell bonds, you will find that the city tn whlcn you live haa very little trouble in borrowing-. Such, at any rate. Is the story the figures telL Take the the six months of 1914. According to a careful esti mate, the railroad and Industrial cor porations borrowed less than in the first six months in 1913 more than 48 millions less. By contrast the cities of the United States borrowed more than they did In 1913, during the first six months over 100 millions more. You see, we have had the money to invest no trouble on that score. We've simply become chary of the cor porations of their management, or their earning capacity, of their stand ing with the government. We've said no to their appeals for money to build and extend. Instead of lending to the corpora tions we've been unusually willing to lend to, municipalities; we've felt by doing this we're sure to get our money back anyway, and a sure, if low, rate holders In the factories. Smallpox is a disease of Internal and external filth, and is "caught" from improper living, and Is Just as "contagious" as a red head or a broken leg. But the people must be hocus pocused and scared stiff if possible. . I am Informed on good authority that Drs.' Lockwood and Wheeler have examined several of these alleged ''smallpox" cases and pronounced them chlckenpox, which, like any other dis ease, is "infectious," and can be con tracted by personal contact, but never "calght." You notice that the doctor never "catches" any of these diseases, and if the "germs" are carried in the air, why the senseless and useless quarantine? Can they quarantine against the air? The shameless attack on Mrs. Lora C-Little, charging her with belrre the cause of this alleged outbreak because she advocates anti Vaccination, Is a fair example of methods employed by the medical pol iticians in order to get a strangle hold on all the people. It Is a matter of record and fact that wholesale vaccination la Invariably fol lowed by epidemics of smallpox, chlck enpox. mumps, tetanus, diphtheria and scarlet fever, and serumizing, especial ly for typhoid, with vaccination, de velop and cause cancer and tubercu losis. The best medical men admit this now. . It Is time the medical in competents were put out and set to work for a living, for If this fool fad of AND N EWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Laplne State bank has been In corporated, with capital stock of $15, 000. "Baker county farmers," says the Baker Herald, "are now watching their third crop of hay grow, and also watch ing hay prices advance." ' It is the opinion of the Standard that "Stanfleld's excellent public schools will bring several ramiliea to this city this year provided houses can be ob taiued for rent." a Rev. J. Quincy Biggs, pastor of the Christian church at Baker, has re signed his pastorate to accept the pro fessorship of oratory and dramatic art in a Spokane Institution. Salem Statesman: In an article boosting the San Francisco exposition, the press bureau of the show Is to the front with a list of organizations to be present, anion which is "The Cherry Pickers of Salem, Or." The reference is to the Cherrlans. Roseburg Review: A postal card received here from Miss Elsie Bene dick, and postmarked at Wheeling, W. va., says tne weather is very warm there and thunder storms are frequent. Miss Benedick says she longs to re turn to Oregon, where thunder and in tense heat are unknown. a Game law officers of Umatilla coun ty report the coming back of the prairie chicken, of which 500 are esti mated to be in the Heriniston district, thanks to the protection now sfforded by law. The sage hen is also Increas ing. "The prairie chicken," says the Pendleton East Ore-gonlsin, "Is a native bird in this county. a,ni years ago abounded in great numbers. They were slaughtered In such great numbers, however, by hunters that they were almost exterminated." one word, while In others three or more words were necessary. When the Frenchman tried to reduce the spoken words to writing he met with great difficulty, for many of tnose strange Balkan words were quite inimitable by a foreigner and as in capable of being reduced to alphabetic writing as are the notes of a canary. How can one master them all? That would be as difficult as it Is for a man whose name is Nedeljo Gabrinovlcs to understand what a man named Knezi Bezpecnosti is say ing, or for Leghatalmassabbak to com prehend the speech of Soukhomllnov. They are as unintelligible to one an other as they would e to ua. What eastern Europe needs Is a big international language smelting mllL where Great Russian, White Rus sian, Littl Russian, Finnish. Lettish, Lithuanian, Polish, Bohemian, Magyar, Roumanian, Servian, Bulgarian, Alba nian, Montenegrin, Greek, Turkish, Armenian and Yiddish and all the oth f.r languages and dialects might be fused into one. It matters little what the resulting speech would be. Any tongue is preferable to a confusion of tongues. It would probably be largely Slavlo, and the young Finns, Magyars and Turks would have to make the long llnguistlo leap from their speech to the new tongue. Unfortunately, languages are not made deliberately and consciously. They grow by aji unconscious process, exhibiting all the rich variety which life Itself manifests. And it is a peculiar fact that there Is greater diversity In speech than In race. The peoples in southeastern Europe are not so very unlike one another. Their speech separates them more than their racial character. You must speak a man's language before you can really understand his thought. All languages deteriorate, decay and die. Our own English will one day be a dead language, very Imperfectly understood by perhaps not more than half a dozen scholars in the whole world, who will vainly guess at the meaning of our simplest words. And every modern European tongue will go the way of all flesh. It Is not Im possible that some historian In the dim and distant future, seeking to an alyze the causes of the European wars in the nineteenth and twentieth cen turies, will argue that language differ ences must have been a contributing cause, and that peoples who could not understand one another had no other recourse than to fight It out. OF BONDS of Interest on it while It was In use. Follow the history of bonds over a series of years and you will discover that there is a slow seesaw between corporation and city bonds In prioe and popularity. When one class, is in favor with the investing public, the price of the other class goes down and the yield goes up. If I wanted to keep In mind one profitable fact concerning these two classes of bonds it woutd be this: It will pay to buy corporation bonds (good ones) in a period when they are hard to sell and sell municipal bonds In that period. But when our great crops are har vested and the money gets into the hands bf manufacturer and the rail roads, the story will have a dif ferent flavor. I predict then that the prices of corporation bonds will go up and the prices of municipal bonds will fall. There's always In this eountry a bigger demand for money to be bor rowed on bonds than can be supplied. Competition among borrowers Is a natural result. Quite as natural Is the competition among corporations and cities for your lendable dollars. Remember that. "preventive medicine" la allowed to continue the blood of the people will be so rotted that they will die off like sheep. W. A. TURNER. Member Oregton Health Defense League. British Defense of France. Portland, Aug. 13. To the Editor of The Journal War is the present topic, and every man has- his sympathies with one or the other of the mighty hosts. One question seems to puzzle many minds: Why did Great Britain demand that Germany ahould not close the north coast of France to com merce? Simply thus: The great truck crop of France, to say nothing .of eggs, fruit and other supplies for the British markets would be closed, as most of these crops can be moved by women while Frenchmen fight. As eating is the first rudiment of existence, the ex cuse for acting thus might be that of the stomach. Maybe some of your readers might see my point of view. AN ANGLO-CELT. Yea. Portland. Aug. 12. To the Editor of The Journal Can a legal -voter swear in his vote according to the law now in force, or -must he or she register? Please answer in these columns. A SUBSCRIBER, An unregistered voter may "swear in" his vote. The affidavit must be attested by six freeholders. There has been no recent change In the law. IN EARLIER DAYS liy Fred Lockley. 'My mother's uncle, William Mat lock, who had taken up a claim e tween Portland and Oregon City, about . where Gladstone now is, wrote us auctt encouraging letters about the WiUam ette valley that my parents decided to ' go to Oregon," Bald Mrs. Wiliam Edi rls. of East Portland, a pioneer of 1853. "My father, George Carson, and my mother, Nancy Matlock Carson, with their six children, started in the spring of 1853. My mother s cousins, William James and 'Doc' Barlow, had come to Oregon some years before, and were doing well. We children looked forward to the trip with feelings of unmixed delight., It was a trip full of adventure and Incident. I remember on the Platte our passing through m district where there was a perfect plague of crickets. As the horses and cattle walked along ftbe road the crick ets would Jump up and light on their legs. They made the cattle frantlo. All of we children got heavy sage brush brooms and walked ahead of the . wagons, beating the road and the brufh beside the road to make the crickets jump out of the way. The crickets were as large as my thumb, and black or rusty brown In color. "We had in our party one wagon we atways called the "batcheor outfit.' Four young men,-Tipton. Craven, Mor ton ana Jones, had gone in together to come to Oregon. Bill Jones was about 21. He whh one of the best natured and most powerful voune- fellows I ever saw. He was several inches over six feet tall, weighed over 200 pounds.and he really didn't know how strong he was. I remember the Indians used to be astonished at hia size. One time a number of young Indians came to visit us. it was Saturday night. They claimed to have an Indian wrestler who could throw Bill. He bet them $10.00 he could throw any Indian ln the bunch. He threw several of them. They said that If we would stay over a day, they would bring another In dian, whose teepee was a few mile away, who could throw BUI. Next day was Sunday, so we stayed over to rest , our stock. The Indians, came back with a score of husky young braves. Bill wrestled with different ones. He won 75, and was not thrown a single time. The Indians wanted us to wait two days more, eo they could send for another Indian wrestler 30 or 40 miles away, but we couldn't waste any more time. "There was another wagon we called the 'old folka' outfit.' The occupanta had celebrated their golden wedding, so you can fee they were pretty old. They were coming out to Oregon to stay with their children. They had five children In Oregon. One of their sons met them on the other side of the Blue mountains. Their children had taken up a place near Pleasant Hill. Mrs. Davis, the old lady, died the day after we got to Oregon City. Her hus band could neither eat nor sleep. He died from grief three days later. The : old folks never saw their other four children whom they had come so far to visit. We stayed for three montha w-ith relatives, the Barlows. William Earlow bought the four mulos father had brought out, and used them on a horse power threshing machine, one of the first to be used In that district. "Father settled 15 miles south of Corvallis, at what in those days was called 'The Hole In the Ground.' I used to'row across the Long Tom every day in a skiff to go to school. Father had but little book education, so he bought and gave Sarah. Anna, George and myself scholarships in the Wll- jiucene university. .-aittn. Anna ana Geoige made use of their scholarships, but I had to stay and help mother, so couldn't go. "William Edris. who had driven one of our wagons across the plains, went with my brother Issac to Eureka, CaL They mined on Scott's Bar. He came back with my brother to visit us after spending three years In the mines. He stayed at our house six weeks, anl when he left he and I were engaged. We were married a year later, on June 26, 1860, by Rev. Flrebaum, from the Belknap settlement. Father gave ua two wagons outfitted with everything we needed to start housekeeping. He also gave me seven head of Percheron horses to start us In the stock busi ness. We went to Scott's Valley, Cali fornia. We hsd our seven Percheron horses stolen soon after we got there, and we never did see hide nor hair of them again. We were, there 14 years. In about 1876 we moved to Eugene, where my husband bought the flour mills. Three of our four children have been graduated from the state univer sity. Will Edris, our son, was the postmaster of Spokane for four years. I have lived In Portland most of the time since my husband's death." HOO'S H00 By John W. Carey. Who has no eyes by which to tell the night time from the day, and ye sees more than most of us whose James are all O. K.? Who lacks the ar that others need to catch tne passing sounds and yet hears much of mirth and song upon her daily rounds? Who wears the smile that won't come off and scorns the shroud and pall, and thus shows up the grouch that knows no peace with senses all? Who puts to shame our able-bodied, long-faced hoi polli this deaf and jdumb evangelist of happiness and JoyT v no gives tne laugh to misanthrope and pessimist and churl with two good eyes and two good ears? That Helen Keller girl. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists of Five news sections replete with illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's pages of rare merit. Pictorial news supplement.,.. . Superb comic section. 5 Cerjis the Copy";