THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ., 1817. i. ((All C . JACKSON. ,,.labUaM bbllaba4 rrf ear, inimpt onir afteri miirtlnr, knaaawa . (unM -aa. SMratae; ooua) it.IM Jo"" sad YukUU sUMta, fartlaa.- C. - katar at Ua aaatatnc at f artlaod. Or., raj tfaaa&laaloa . Ufaeah Ua stalls M ..eeeaeS ataaa ajatta. -'"-, i ' ' ; urHUJ4 Mala 1WI) Hove, A-' All 4r,rUMDU reached By tkeee . lail Ut aearator wfcat an"rtBiMl yoti rBt. tviiMHi UVBaUii(a aVa4Ji A p-nj.mia 4k Keatser Co, HmnawU eUl., id rtftk ave.. Matr. Xerk. WW tfewts" oae aW... Chicago. ' - - -.!..----w'v - " SuaacripUoa tarn by mail or teasy , .- U ae Ualtad utr -flmHw ' ' ' r ' 1DA1LX iMOSNIXO OA ATTSSgOOX) ; J 0b4 ...5.00 Oae-swet.. .... :. . . SUHDAT- V- One ...... fXfttt Oaa avrnta.. -.... . tA)LX IMOKMlIiU OH ariSJUiOON AiiB . - ; --".- , susdai . v:?---::vff,';' n rif.....-..ITJ On aoatt.,.....$ We lora the land of tnr adoption, ao da , Va that af aur birth. lat er ba traa to hot at aad alware exert amnelree in maintaining tha anitr of our country, the lntrrlty of tbe rlrtll. Sarjtat Smith Prantlaii , ; - . . BROKEN HE diver Is doomed, T , It has passed the zenith of Us rightfulness. Its toll last week, was 4 only 12 British ships of more than 16C0 tons and but one' French vessel of that ton nage. . It Is the lowest record since diver frigbtfulness was Inaugu rated.; It follows five weeks of sinkings of 20 or under, one week running down to 14. It Is In con trast with other weeks when sink lngs ran far hp in the 30's and even above 4 0. To the kaiser, . it must be the most discouraging phase of the war, more ' discour aging even than the constant thrusting back of his lines along; the western front. Including the tremendous drive of 'the Italians. Civilization is 'solving the secrets of diverism. . It has been found 'that diver effectiveness has decreased in exact ratio to the Increase of 'destroyers in the sub marine zone. In the view of naval experts, the arrival in: European waters, of the American fleet of destroyers was directly responsible for the- reduction, by at least half, of the amount of tonnage sunk. 1 8o great is the confidence Jn the effectiveness of destroyers that I America Is building the greatesttfierlence to guide them may be. fleet of that type of vessels In the world.- Construction is being pushed with, such: energy that we are 'now producing destroyers 4n nan . iae lime it iooa oeiore ine war. Fast diver Chasers are being turned out in 10 to 12 months against 18 to 20 mqnths formerly jeaulred. There are now on ' the ways , more than twice, as many de stroyers as has - been guessed at In the most enthnslastlcy estimates, the 1 announcement of 'the., actual number having been withheld, of coarse, as a naval secret. A breakdown . of diver fright- fulness must "'mean eventual col lapse of Prussian morale and Prussian plans. Frlghtf ulness was the last big card on .which William II staked all. Terrorism along the British and French coasts that would withhold , bread from the . allied armies was his strategy. - The offensive effective ness of his armies was gone and a diver blockade that would starve his antaronlsts was 'the dream on which, he fed. the German people la his appeals to them to fight on and .on nd on. - Twelve British vessels Instead ; of 40 is almost another Marne. J William's pledge to his people of . what the diver would do for them ' Is broken. ,. ,;;'. $: rrr-, r i . . , .. ; i Ton. can hoard a 'street car at ' Council Crest, take a transfer and ride .to Mllwaukie for five cents. This Is stretching . the transfer privilege, and an illustration, of a point In the street car service that Is financially weak Mr. Corey . would - better"; investigate such leaks than issue fantastic ; public I statements. '" ' . -' ;.",; :" . ESPERANTO SPERANTO' Is not' dead yet, not In Portland, what- ever may have happened to it In other places. : The Xsperantlsts have called a meet ing; at the publlo library to organ, lie for the "higher study"; of their favorite language.' The " more f acuity they acquire in .Its use the more tentacles , they, will send out over, the world -to-help unite man kind in peace and brotherhood. - k Esperanto means t'the - language of hope.; Dr. Zamenhof, the Pols who invented it, beUeved '"that if all men could be taught to under stand one ? another's speech, ' en ralties would - be mltlcated and friendships cemented. , The, Esper antists ; tbe world ; over have ; kept up vigorous interchange of letters during the war. The German gov. eminent has used the' language to aid in the t spread ; of dUr propai canda. Many American disciples c f Dr. Zamenhof write regular Esperantla letters to French poilus in; the trenches. . - . - ' Since-'the war began Esperanto. like1 other ''Inf allible remedies, has been "ratHer In eclipse. Perhaps the renewal' Sot Its' stutty In ! Port land" may ..be oner sign of an early KEREXSKY ic ERENSKVS dally walk Is. a good deal like . that of Iran ian's ' Christian through the Valley- of & the Shadow of Death, With. a anagmlreonfone side and : deep ditch on the other and 'the mouth of, hell belching smoke and flame lust over his head. - He makes' his ' perilous way alone: through It all; with- deft, un- terrmed footsteps. - - - , Thus Xar he has faced ? every difficulty as itrarose with' courage and competence. ; The , socialietio fanatics met their master In Ker ensky. Against the- spectre of : the Workmens" Council he evolted, the more potent spectre ; of the peas ants' countrywide orga'nlzatlon.' He has , boldly undertaken to disci pline' the army. The rebel Kor- nllof t he has ' probably 1 entangled In a .net fom which there is no escape r . " ' :' Unless we tmiss our 'guess badly, Kerensky is' one, of, .those bornlt geniuses who arise In the - day of a' nation's need t4 do ' the Impos sible and break through Irresisti ble obstacles. The world's -confidence In him grows 'as he exhibit greater and greater - capability, If he saves Russia without yielding to. selfish -ambition 'he -will be an other Washington. - Coos Bay pays; her: bills. Some traveling" salesmen are receiving double orders In, comparison wjtb other days, and are bothered with no-bflls to collect for their firms.. In the midst of nature's .vast re soujees, the Coos Bay country. Is an envied region. BEWARE HE seed wheat swindler has taken - time by - the forelock. Understanding the sporadio Shortage of good grain seed for sowing this winter and next spring, he improves the shining hour, by putting at variety -of frauds on the market, expecting to humbug the trusting farmers. The department Of, agriculture is out: with a sharp warning j dose the symptoms. It would bet agalnst these diligent pests. They ter deal with fundamentals than are offering in particular a species ' apply the mere palliative that -a or wneai canea Titanic," concern-, ing which they promise all sorts of . incredible - wonders. - Farmers who have invested in Russian oats nad that sort of thing in former years will be wary of these new impostors, but others without . the teaching of sad ex- taken in. The government Is taking steps. to- provide reliable seed grain- for parts of the country where there is a shortage. We counsel farmers to invest iajio untried .seed witb ont first, writing to the department of- agriculture or the Oregon agri cultural college " for Information Every new andr oid variety ,; that is "a worth ' ' anything is known to their experts. . For the first ' time In years, every sawmill on Coos bay will soon be in operation.. The last to prepare for activity Is one that has run but a few weeks in the nine years since it was built. The situ ation is an eloquent story of pros perity. -- . :' ALIENS FOR 8EJ1TTCE THERE are sharp teeth in Sen ator : Chamberlain's bill to draft alien residents for mili tary; service. The only favor It shows even to alien enemies is permission to engage in civil work of . a national character instead of actually . ? fighting.- Foreigners exempt . from military service ; by treaty are .- given - 90 days to leave the country, unless they prefer to enlist or submit to the draft. weak brethren may argue against the .. bill on the. . ground that it is likely to stir up resist ance among some , of. our alien residents. -. Perhaps ; so, but upon the whole is better to knpw definitely and once for all who 'are) for -us and who are against , us.- - If ' there ,1s ' smoldering treason in the country the sooner we learn how much of a " conflagration It can kindle the safer we shall feel. afterward. It is better to meet danger boldly than, to wait .for it, to borrow a bit of wisdom from the copybook . . . Turning to the right and wrong Of ..theX situation, 1 Senator; .Cham berlain seems to have a good easel A man who la willing to take ad vantage ' of this . country's free r op portunities .should , also be .willing to defend it when danger- threat ens, citizen or no citizen.' perhaps we have - been . a trifle r slack in opening our doors to . everybody who , knocked, regardless? of their purpose In coming ! here or their fitness to remain.' . If Senator Chamberlain's 'policy should - weed out a motley horde of the unfit, Who .would mourn? r..; 1 . r - One of :. our most pressing na tional ' needs Is that ' of a homo geneous population. . We. "mean homogeneous -in feeling and i aspi ration as well as in. language. In the lax times of peace no doubt we could, Inour. easy-going way, tolerate the , presence of people who derided our institutions and plotted to' destroy them, v But thing are different now. " ' Americans' are confident -that their form' of , government ; bas; been so framed that It admits of steady, social 'development, without revolution. They would, .rest abet ter In' their' beds at night If they felt certain that there was nobody at hand laboring to sap ' the star bllity ol the, country that protects 'ajrfSJiiyltkVI mi. mi- in. na:i;iV;j T HE street-car company . should withdraw Its petition for a six-cent fare.- , It cannot afford to bring upon itself - and, Portland the i. odi umf of a slx-eent fare city. , For its ' own I business reasons, it can not .afford to ' arouse the wide spread Irritation that :a six-cent fare would create. It cannot af ford through ; a six-cent ;f are, to offer' high rewards lor a popular demand for-a return of the nickel-a-ride ' jitneys. , ltr cannot ' afford to - take the chance of losing more revenue than it would gain, through, a slx ,cent tare. , "A six-cent fare would drive -' business away from the street cars and -drive business away from Portland.' A six-cent fare would drive ' patrons away from' the street cars and drive people away : fromi Portland. A Portland advertised abroad as the first If not the only slx-cent-f are city In Amer ica wOuld .keep people; away from this city who would otherwise come. ' - There need be no illusions over what, a six-cent fare means. to the near submerged, 'that near sub merged which- now,' comprises 80 or 80 per cent of the population. Car fares connt, as .. all ' who pay them know- They ; are a formida ble lteni, seriously considered and thoughtfully studied by, nearly; all of those who pay them. A 20. per cent ' '. addition to this . charge against the' household's ' monthly, budget l is .weighty matter. ! " ?There is a "strong chance that In the ; long 'run, the -company would profit more by inaugura tion of efficiencies and economics that would keep - the fare down than it caa possibly profit from an increased, fare. If it cannot pay going wages, there is some thing wrong . in its organization and management. The company wmi1i better treat the disease than si,.ent fare would be. and that would never be permitted to stand for .long, even -if established. - On a -basis : of population, the $25,000 asked of Oregon for sol diers' books, would be $7500, It is fashionable for Oregon jto be drawn upon in the war. of contrl butidns for a great deal more than she, gets back. It would be bet ter for ! Oregon to send her own books- direct to her pwn soldier Kav. urA frnm' tlia alicrifv with . A ZZ -t..t- .-,a Which the State S QUOta Of soldiers was made up. It is certain that she will show equal speed with her quota of books. GERMAN QUEENS - fy ERMAN Queens will get the - ' name of bringing bad luck VT- down upon the heads of their royal spouses if they "don't look out" The Hohen zollern tribe have been ominously diligent in planting their relatives out in i European reigning fami lies, Russia, Greece, Bulgaria, Sweden have felt their, pervasive Influence. The queen of Greece played the game of the Hohenzol lern - until she played her husband out of his crown. . It now seems likely that Sweden I will witness another farce of the same tenor. - H. G. Wells spoke of the Euro pean, kings and their, kin the other day as! a "set of amazing idols." Mankind has agreed that- these people are built of a finer clay than the rest of us. Just what the agreement is founded on it would J be somewhat hard to say. Have they any better brains than their fellow i men? Are .they better workers, better fighters, ' more pious, more progressive? We wish somebody would ask King George of England just why it is. that he feels worthy of what Tennyson called ; f 'that awful Isolation" in which he lives, ? Tennyson- flat tered Victoria with the phrase but it applies to all the tribe.- - PAYING THEIR , WAY. T HERE is habitual claim that the - postal rates - to dally newspapers are responsible for the annual deficit in sec ond class matter. ' ' - It is - a mistaken claim. The newspapers of the country are pay ing their way. The fact has been proven by many an investigation. and - is again - confirmed In a most exhaustive, analysis Just completed. The details are explained in an article on this page. - . ' .The .cost to s the government of transporting newspapers within a 60 mile' radius is a; trifle : more than . seventeen one hundredths of one cent- per pound.'' .The cost In, ai zone ot 150 miles is a trifle more than forty , one ; hundredths of one cent. ; The cost. In a zone of 300 miles is a fraction more than seventy-eight y one; hundredths of one cent per" pound.", J - Nearly '- the ' whole v volume of newspaper, circulation Is within a 300 mile radius. '. The .: one .cent per pound rate charged by ' the government Inore than covers the cost of transportation. r . ; It ia'the magazines and similar matter that produce the deficit In second : class postage, . The dall newspapers - arevpaylng their way and ro entitled to" surcease , from the long time contention, that they are special beneficiaries : of the postal - system. . ; '", " ' Knowledge of the Von Eckhardt Intrigues, involving ther Swedish charge d'affaires in Mexico, has been In the hands of the American government since March, 1916,; a period of IS .months, but has not hitherto been-' made public . : How. many facts of the kind are known to Washington authorities "nobody, knows. It is because of "such in formation i that : the government sometimes acts in a-way that for the time is not understood, and which cannot be explained on the spot for military' or- diplomatic reasons. . . - ' TRAVEL STORIES; OF NORTHWEST By Fred LockUy " Probably ; no other town of Its slse in all the United States is so weu known as Pendleton. IU. olUzens' love to sneak of It as the blrrest Uttie city of Its size In all the West. I lived there for several years, so X speak as a FencQetoaian as well as an One ronlan and a westerner when X say that Pendleton has something' that most communities lack, and that Is a spirit ef team-work,' a loyaHty to their home town, that transcends - self in teres, a civic spirit that inspires Its cltlxens to work in season and out of season for the upbuilding' of Pond leton, Bastern Oregon and the west. Pendleton has a ""dig-down-in-your-pocket, put-your-shoulder-to-the-wheel" spirit ' that were It possessed by the citizens ' of Portland would : give us lines of - steamers : to - Alaska.- Hawaii and the Orient and make Portland, pre emtnient ' among- the ports -on the Pa cific, ... . - .-' - a o . . . . It is not hard to become " en thuslastlo over Umatilla county. -It It is hard not to. My work during the : four or five years I lived there took me au over the county not once but many times. I know it nm Hertniston butte to Huckleberry " mountain, from Umatilla to Uklah. Wd Horse and Hldaway, Devils' Rapids and Thorn' Hollow, Cold Springs canyon and Tutu ill a, are al most as familiar as my own back gwd. I could shut my eyes and tell you every fork of the road and the lay of the country. Umatilla Isn't a large county but It is a rich country rich In wheat and cattle. In sheep and wool. In hay and timber, and richest of all In the char acter of its citizenship. Its area is 8172 square miles, which is less than a third 'of the area of either Malheur or Harney county. -i . - - .. - i a 4 . Wbn one reads the number of square miles in a county It means very little, for the average mind deals o little In square ' miles that areas are hard to grasp. One can. get a better ldecr of the size of "Oregon's banner wheat county," the bread basket of the Inland Empire by comparing it with the sizs of other well known places. It is, nearly three times the size ef Rhode Island. Ton.- could . fence up 3S70 square miles of its area and you, would have a ranch as large as the state of Delaware; run a barb wire fence around 488 square mlSes more and you would have the canal sons fence up 188 square miles to repre- sent the West Indies; cut off a pasture of 77 MUa miles td stand for K.moa- put 70 more square miles under fence for the District of Columbia; then 38 square miles, the area of San Marina: then make a corral out of eight square mllest tbe else of Monaco, in. which Monte Carlo Is located!, and yxm would Still have 48 square miles left to nee as a bonanza wheat farm and to hold the Round "Up on. At Hermlston you are but 450 feet above the sea, while at Ourdane, In the "southern part of the county, the altitude is 8350 feet, and at Meacham. In the eastern part of the county, you are 8681 feet above sea level. Tou can find almost any climate you want In Umatilla county, from tbe rainless, dry heat at Umatilla to the oaone-laden bracing- air on the John Day watershed at Albee or Lehman Springs, or the resinous, balsamic, cool, pure air at Wenaha Springs in the Blue mountains. 1 You, scan find good grouse or deer hunting- around; Buck mountain. Sorta. WUks or Bound mountain. , or on the slopes of Thlmbl e berry - or Huckle berry mountain. .Tou win find good risning in the UmauEa river and In such streams aS Tlnev Blirohj Camas, Brldre, Cable, Couse, Buck and Shim- mi e oreeKS. Tou will find a wide variety of a a. scenery ranging from the eare brush plains around Umatilla and Echo to tho soling- wheat fields of - Athena. Helix and the Indian reservation, and on to the foot hills and frosted slopes of the Blue mountains. Ton will nd plenty of life, oofflor and 'interest in vlsltiner the Umatilla Indiana v on their reservation PenjSeton or in goiner to some of the big sheep ranches about Pilot Rock, or the cattle ranches in Camas Dralrla For two or three days each year you may meet the fruit raisars of Milton and Freewater, the wheat raisers of Weston, Adams and Helix, the iitri na tion farmers from the Umatilla recla mation project at Hermlston, the sneepmen or Pilot Rook - and Skdto. th stookmen ot Uklah, AShse and Our. dane ranchers and cowboys, sheepherd. era and Indians, businessmen and strangers at i the Round-Up at Pendle-- " a - - - This is the one big event of the snear. It is unique and distinctive. No writ ten words can describe the dash and go, the thrHl and seat of this-picture of the old west. 'It is " history in ac tion. It brings back . the --vanished .west, the. heroic days' of the did fron tier, and"" makes them live again, ' It 1 worth com in r, across the continent vo -wauieas. Letter? From the People CCotnmntUcatlona put to .The lesraal tor pnbucatioa is this Opartmcat aboiUd be writ tea es enlr one side of the paper, aboald sot ezeeed 0O wards is length, and Boat be ac companied by- the name . and addrcaa of tae aebdar. If tbe wrtte does sot deaire te have tbe. name published he aboald ao state. Blachinists on the Six-cent Far - Portland, Sept.: To? th. ; Editor of ' The Journal During- the hearing before the publlo service commission considering the - plea i of the ' Portland Railway, : Light dc Power 'company for an Increase of street ear fares to six cenU, tbe chairman said there was a strange lack of interest shown by tha public in opposition to' the proposed ralae. ' - - ' . .. The union machinists of Portland, at a ; large j meeting" ? of j- their thriving lodge, unanimously condemned the efforts of the car company to furtber add to the hardahlpe of the worker. who - are tha - chief natrons of the street ... ears, by i this . unwarranted In crease . in rates, especially " at this time, when the national slogan Is sacrifice. ; we . remind the company that as the workers ' have endured uurcea . sacruices . uiese aitwj j i proved by the United SUtes commls-l" sion on Industrial relations, while the I - company . prospered, t now that tne i workers are, in addition to sacrifices I due. to undisputed exorbitant cost of I Ilvinr. ': also sacrificlnr .-their -very i lives for the maintenance of the in-1 stltutlons ef this country, by the grace of which the company exlsH and makes private profit from a Pb Wo . necessity, therefore the company should practice a little of this patrl-1 otlo slogan. ,Wi say to the public service com-1 mission that the lack ,f protest Is I due to the fact that the public still has I some little degree of confidence in its J percent, it Is true. . But the ante officials, . and deems it ; unnecessary I bellum imagination was never satisfied to protest at this stage against auch a manifestly unfair and unjust , de- mand as the company makes, and think that the commission . needs no whip of publlo protest. ' I We ' call ; to , the attenUon of the i conimlssion the fact that mun owned car lines are a financial sue-1 wii,- ua mil eunscuro in um. j u-mi only a question ox wmcn avi In 115, with 16 miles of lines, the j ator. how far he fell and how dead he profit was tl.500.QOO. i SeatUe's eleo-1 trie light plant is a revelation in tne possibilities of municipal ownership. By owning its electrtoj plant the cost of ' electricity has been reduced from 20 cents per kilowatt hour to s cents. It seems to us the plain duty of the commission to recommend the aequlsition by the city of the street raflway lines as a solution of the problem. - And the time is especially fortunate for both city and company, as the publlo will refuse to pay th increased fare, and j the , company would no doubt be exceedingly glad to sell at a very reasonable figure, as It contends that It i is. operating- at a loss. The company ha-long soSght for private ownership jof pubUo.opla- ion." by persistently ! handing each patron a printed .leaflet relating the I tribulations of this i publlo service IndlvTduarte us. It the- Smatd?ub?ra SS Itl. Sealed Sat government demand publlo ownership of the car maT bo rmnr maraslne publishers lines. - . r -r cents worth of service for X cent, bat As believers in democracy, we de- u ,s not truo that the newspapers are mand that it be practiced and the po- ,mportant peneflolarles of this sub lice be required to .pay their car Hidy. ' The 8,000,000 annual postal fare', the $16,000 yearly resulting Jeflclt on 1 cent postal rata- is not therefrom would also; help solve the chargeable to newspapers, problem. I - t a We further uphold-the contention Painstaking lnvestlgaUon orsee- of Qty Attorney Xa Roche, that the ond class postal costs shows that the commission lacks authority to raise newspaper industry Is pavinar Its own the . it would h . vtnintion way. The cost to the government of of the city charter and the laws of the state, which particularly grants I this power to the municipalities. Lastly, we condemn the short sighted spirit that has led our fel low workmen; the . union emoioVe- of to ISLtion thT at " .Ii the car company. tempt of the company to fasten the cost of ' the 'Increase of their wages on their fellow working: men and women, he general j public. Instead rk Via In'f'Isitshtfv ' rFftf It si fh tryy r " : 7'rr, M ri ;" rived from. Lodge 63, International Association of Machinists. . . ; - Per. . LOUIS HONSTEIN, : President. roTsr ana wneat costs Portland,' Sept. 6. TO the Editor of The Journal In your issue of wmoer wui w. warren or iiouana, Or wants to know how much corn a . During the last , 20 years tbe so pound of pork Is worth. That Is some- called bounty to publishers .- has la thing like tbe puzzle about the age creased from 30,000,000.t nearly 190, of Ann. But as I have fed and mar- 000,000. ' ' : keted many, thousands of pounds of ,! m, e " - - ,u ' , . pork, I can give him some facts asf. a basis. - . . , . Anyone sowing' and feeding r hog. vssaa svw v , ss as visas. kv , yvuuusj ns as 14f Ta as I VS ka llMa maIm w th clov.rand alfalfa nasturV at a S? fSStiffirtiiZ th Kim.i nut inn th r-.t.ni .M !. .jlff f55 Kg" 160 pounds in 76 days. ' That Is but! two pounds perclay. (I have made a gain of three pounds per day). Es timate this corn at If per bushel or a fraction over 88.70 per 100 pounds. At maturity we have, or should have, 800 pounds gross at a cost of T27.50, and marketed at $14 per hundred pounds, or $43. That leaves the feeder $14.60 to the good. t ,v. hu mii t ... hogs, give them clean quarter, and keep the feeding floor clean. Feed three time, a dav. lust what th.v win clean up, and no more. If Wheat or rye 1. fed, finish the last SO days on corn to firm the flesh. Keep 'wood ashes and salt before them at all times. ... , j Also, keep the government's 'rem edy for prevention of cholera, as fol lows: One pound pf !. wood- charcoal,' 22L "thJV Jt soda, two of sodium byphosulphlte. one of sodium sulphate, one of antimony, sulphid. Put in a dry place and let them have. free access to lt As these animals are penned andl.v. ki mT,A mm nn tnnbtL or -t can't help themselves, the caretaker must be on the Job continuously I notice1 some farmers are kicking on the price the government has set vu wown. am m possession or es.a sssy i.w aaaw vvse-vt aLTTCaUll eMlU putting wheat from the field into the mill or granary. Before the advent of th binder I had the care of a largo thing was paid for; in cash. horse feed, board of men aad all. Ten men and water boy were - In the - field when cutting- the wheat; . wage. $Z per day.-. The Wheat was sacked and hauled a mile and a half to two mile, to the mm. -The total expense was a fraction over : 40 , cents per bushel. Even . with the Increase in wages, the cost at -this time should not exceed this. with a fair yield, t thus leaving a fine profit to the grower at govern ment prices. . R. N. CURTIS. PERSONAL . MENTION' Coenr d'Alenes Are Prosperous in rv., -ii.... . w . . . u . w k.vuo mi v orawmg -a uauy oonu. or i.z. re- xcttl Moore Arrives ports . Dan . Greenburg of . Wallace, aioore Arrives Idaho, travelinr representative of tfai WUlJMoore. nV4J"t Day Bros. Unterpsts, j who was at the in- wa itmmS Portland . today. Mr. Greenburg -was, or of customs in Oreg on tc uccd formerly connected with the Press- JadJhom" ? ' wV. ki- Times of Wallace, He say. conditions Tity Thursday to take over Ills' new in Northern Idaho are good. "There PoalUon. -. . were some -I. W. W, disorders.' said j Amedee Smltlv vice president of the Mr. Greenburg, i "but these have been -Realty Associates of Portland, ac quitted vend ; a big majority of the companled by Mra, Smith, left Wed mlner. are patriotie men who - are nesday evening for a pleasure trip of eager , to see that nothing; u done -to ..bout a month's duration..- They, will hamper the government." . go first - to Minneapolis, and af ter . . ' i ward will visit several other -points - Will Visit in Portland . - farther east- " After bringing" hi. family to Port- Dr. May Agnes Hopkins Is registered land, where they wlU remain for some at the Portland hotel from Dallas, time; E. B. Deming. president of the Tex. - . , ' ' Pacifle-Amerlcan fisheries ' company - Hector Macpherson 1 of the Oregon and of the Perfection Cannins: Ma- Agricultural college faculty is regis chlne company of BeUingham. left for tered at : the Multnomah from; Cor his home last eight. Mr. and Mrs vallls. ; ''' Deminr. Mrs. F. L. Deming and Iisi Mrs. W. B. Shaffer and Miss Wilms Van Etaden reached tbe . dty -last Shaffer are? at the JMultnomah from Tuesday. , - - " WaitsburgWash. r c " . ' . " - Mrs. A. M. MacLeod and daughter, , "Jjone Star" Diets In Town . - Lot., are at the Cornelius from Gold- . WlU lam H. "Lone tar Diets; Indian endale, "Wash, . - coach of the Washington Stats Agrt- - Carl E. Fischer, merchant, is at the cultural college football team, arrived In Portland- this: morning from tbe COMMENT AND . 4 SMALL CHANGE J ' - ," ' - r ' '" And are tou "rotor to : attend th ! atreet car S-ent fare mau meeting tAa . Auditorium toniaht ? Auaiwnum,iomuu The - Woman's "party -wlU be rreatly disappointed r It national suffrere , Is rranted In spite of their methods f uemandlnr it. . Two y p.nm, in rvMn OMnn. have succeeded In maklnr a palatable wine from banana Juice. - Just ar If the banana were not bad enough when merely stepped on. - - ' 5 t . t. comes . to a ; matter ' of two presidential - booms In the state of Illinois, you can put your money on on w o Fire ships out of S3 is a good larre wn anr sucn low score xor wie men n,V?eTgs. are never wbenthey are ust " "r. J . Joropes rues witn 11 Passen- r""1" V .A." whenever there wasan aviation meet. was wnen no was picasa up, NEWSPAPERS PAYING THEIR .WAY - kterlaa Pew. la the Bolter sad PubUeber . - . ' - . For the first time In the prolonged debate of the question of the gov- trnmnt's policy of v "susldlzing- pub- Ushers by granting t cent per pound Postal rates, the Issue has been clearly drawn in congress between the xnaga- ta" nw"p?-, v.--. --;Aiaiougli members ot contrw hz W U? iLf.! h,!- 1. ven were receirlng stupendous gifts iAJ Jrui BL?. hnof tte wts! ar ZL Zi.VZ,F?t: Tv hVV ,ftt of newspaper publishers , who in a . 7 tran8portinc newspaper. ,withta a SO - lation basis, is a trifle more than seventeen one-hundredths of I cent per pound. The cost In a sons of ISO trifle more than forty one- hundredth, of 1 cant and the coat in a one of .00 miles Is a fraction more than seventy-eight one-hundredths of 1 cent per pound. Therefore, on the vast bulk of news- I srmF,I aAicva c&0 itvnsyayvi viwueVivH lately limited to a oo mile radiusj the 1 cent per pound rate charged by the government more than covers the cost of transportation. Second class postage brings to' the government about fll.000,00 per an num. The cost is said, to be around A . K A AAA 1-1 . & . n I TTni. c.m ma ooo.ooo snrt eiasa I mall m&tlr a t S cant, nar onnc, tiro. Sep-Iauces about $80,000,000 annual profit i to the government. ln ins senate last ,weev wnue speaa- ftg i iilsise ..y-a -a. a . v. i , I . ww a - wa V aT fM a M W Elfu are -making .publishers, year I J -tSf. Vanrenfen?PriiaUam I hills under t this arrangement. . I am S? tSrl: wefltlanowK ffi " "v 7 v HOW TO BE HEALTHY GOLD TEETH ANDuOERMirv-rs-qnentry caps and orowns on teeth are cauJK of um infeotlon- Xl lB"eer oenusrs were anxious w u I work of this -sort, merely to cover up tooth when It was slightly decayed, " yre thought -artstocratio. to have I gwo. leetEu. uw, wi wwm, "- rLrfJ?I5 lStJrSSS KV1Q leOUl 6UUW1UK CUtU lOVUM wa with substances that resemble the oris. fnal teeth themselves. Another reason why caps or crowns have gone out of style Is that experience has proved that i ! Afftilt to keen the rum- and tooth socket of a capped' tooth in hhyltion: vene best-fit- tins: crowns have been found to- har bor pus-forming organisms and these t Zrin ZT mimt. to ottiar oarta of mto the digestrve tract, xray picture of the teeth and thi, roots is an economy, as we know that infection may lurk r within the I gamm and tooth sockets wltnout glvins; south, en route to Pullman, to begin the season's work. Diets -has been in He Is registered at the Multnomah hotL : "; . ; - John Cochran Return. John W Cochran, newspaper man and political writer of Portland, who has been on a vacation for several weeks near Detroit, in Linn county, i e turned to Portland Thursday and has resumed his residence at the Cor nelius hotel. Mr. Cochran has been with his brother, who runs a logging camp not far from Detroit. , . a a a Dalles Hotel Man in Town J. E. Darnielle, proprietor of the Albert hotel at The Dalles, Is regis tered at the Nortonia hotel wita ms I family. i ' e e I Cornelius from Bpnngiieia. itt. - Mr. and Mra. ..William Hendriekson NEWS JN BRIEF .: ' - OREGON . SIDELIGHTS . " 4 - Baker's high school football squad Is training under a gentleman named Bough, , - a a " - - Tha Budget reports a. very great in crease In the school enrollment at As toria, necessitating the seeking of ad ditional, rooms. .- ; - . : . . . . ' 101 weather : is not melancholy in Eastern -Oregon, the Pendleton East Oreronian says.-probably with special reference to the Round-Up. ; . - A carload of Alaska marble for the interior of the new court house - at Grants Pass has been received; .there are yet two canoaosxo w. t; , The open seasen for the man who cAmnlilni ahnllt tha rain bSlnr .about due to open, . the Sugene Register thinks a likely-sised bruutDai is aooui What's coming tphlm. j . t nun onnnt. rioia not nrooose to feed hnnM.rrara or other violators Without a Just return, and so the county court, the Harbor says, has ordered the men put to wora on tne roaos. r : P!ait vat or aeven years we have thought., says the Pendleton East Ore gonlan. "that perhaps the Round-Up would fall down in attendance and eaofc year for seven years the attendance has been sufficient to make the grand stand bulge and this time will b no exception.1' - - - delphla own and publish thrte papers that I know of. -One Is the Saturday Evening Post, the second the ldles Home Journal and the third U the Country Gentleman. ' The government, by way of bounty, under the pre.ent flat rate. pay. to that company tn the way of transportation of its -paper known as the Saturday Evening Post a little more ,tban $3,000,000 per year. Altogether these three cost the United States rovernment for transportaion as second class matter about $4,300,- 000, and about 60 per cent of the mat ter in those papers Is advertising matter.' . Senator MeKeuar then stunned many of h)s colleagues by bringing out the facts in regard to the difference be tween the position of tbe newspapers and that of the magazines, in the mat ter. 'While the magazines depended in large measure upon the postal de partment as a circulation medium, the newspapers, as an industry, were gen orally paying their own way, according to transportation cost. e a a ' It "wa. Senator McKellar who pre sented to congress the newspaper memorial, signed E. B. Stahlman of the Nashville (Tenn.) Banner; Louis J. Wortham of the Fort worth iTexas) Star-Telegram; Robert Ewlag of tne New Orleans (La.) States; Urey Wood son of the Owensboro (Ky.) Messen ger, and Lafayette Young of the Des Moines (Iowa) Capital. This striking document set forth that as "many statements coming from varloue sources and unwittingly ad mitted in a way, even by the publish ers i of newspapers, that the govern ment had favored newspapers in the matter ot postal rates," an lndepend ent investigation of the matter was begun last May by a member of the committee, for the purpose of a seer talnlng the exact cosv to the govern ment of the transportation or news paper malL as distinguished from magazines and periodical' malL The figures were' ascertained through the cooperation of officials of the Dostal department and John A. Moon, chairman of the house commit tee on the postoffice and post roads. The result of the Inquiry, on a lib eral basis, allowing 40 per cent, for ail car. returned empty, fixed the cost of mall pay one way, 100 pounds, CO foot car basis, as follows: " Cent. per 100 lbs First aone, SO mile. - .0.17 8-14 Second zone. 160 miles ......0.40 6-14 Third sona 800 miles 0.78 4-84 akin a; the average cost for tbe first two zones 0.J cents per 100 pounds and for tbe three zones 0.48 6-S4 cent. per, 100 pounds. any manifestation of Itself. Even the dentist may not be able -to detect the condition without tbe X-ray. . People who have crowned teeth should clean them several times day. Otherwise little particles of food lodge at the base of the crown and lime from the food stays thane and fastens Itself on permanently, as also do deposits from the saliva and some times other deposits due to blood con ditions. These deposits gradually build their way up under the gum and carry with them germs which they harbor. Gum and tooth socket infection also results in tone of the teeth. More teeth are let from pyorrhoea, which Is the name for this infection that attack. tne gum atus destroys the tooth socket. than are lost from decay of the teeth themselves. The great , preventive is tnorougn and frequent and intern gent cleaning of the teeth and massage of the gums But to make sure that infection is not getting In, despite) tnese precautions, the tooth sockets should be X-rayed pertodlcelly. -Tomorrows Diarrhea. and Mrs. George X. Moyer of Astoria are In the city. Autolng from Los Angela, to' Den ver and back home by way of Port land, Mr. and Mrs. H, fl, v Williams, Hal - Williams and Miss Anna Fer guson of Los : Angeles are registered at tne canton - for a few days. - ' i On a sightseeing tour of the coast, Mr. and .Mrs. C. M. Chllds and daughter of . Chicago are staying . at tne wanton ior a xew days. - ' V. H,- Teaton. breeder of Guernsey catue on the: Chelsea stock farm at IlwacorWash .la registered - at the Carlton, r s - - A. C. Anderson of the firm of Tolt it Anderson, Nehalem, and Mrs. An derson, are at tbe Carlton, . - To spend the winter In the states, Mr. and - Mrs. A, Ti Dobey of Tukon. Alaska, are in Portland and staying at the nortonia for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. , H. A. Thomas of Hood River are at the Nortonia. t F. W. Konold of Salt Lake is regis tered-at the Nortonia. ? Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Nelson are reg istered at the : Nortonia from Scap- SOOSe. - " Dr. " D. W. Kuykendali Is in the otty from Eugene. ; ' Mrs. E.vP.'FuUer of Ketchikan, Alaska,, is at the Multnomah. Q. W. Burrow, Rldgef ield, i Wash rancher, is at the Cornelius, , ' - s Harrison H. Schley . of Waukesha, Wis., is at the PortunoV ' C. J. McCarthy of Honolale is reg ister ea at tne A'oruana . . James Hill is staying at the Port land from Pendleton. - E. S. Snelling-, attorney, is registered at the Perkins from St.. Helena John Van Horn, stockman of Fossil, is - at the Perkins .1 - s - Mr. and Mrs. W. A BJ.zler of Sac ramento, wax, are at the Washington. t r.. -.; u. wiiiiams is at the Washington from Eugene. - - Mrs. J, E TutUe of Eugene Is at tne wasnington. . - . . , - - - F; (spinning, stockman. Is at tha Ferkln. from Dufur. Ratfar and Bobtail i Stories From. Everywhere are burned t eoeuibnta ertrlaat issttaets : tory, la vara or U shUeaopbiesi ba laOoe l . ih cuubi in mam Tt. ZZTJT " ."wmi awrti tu ss aaasaaa s w u aaias aninw'a m nuaa laa i a . . mm An Insinuation ji professor was hearing the close - uiaiwy lecture, ana was, in dulging: in one of those rhetorical cli maxes tn which he delighted, when the hour struck. The students lmraedltely began to slam down the movable arms of their lecture chair, and to prepare to leave. . .-.i-.-ri-rffj,--;-The professor, annoyed at the. inter- ' ruptlon of hi. flow of eloquence.' held up hi. hand. - ; ; - "Walt just on. minute, gentlemen, X have a few more pearl, to cast. . - WlMt naprwsted to Trtink ,V ' Recently the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chrlstraan, near Gooco Mill, , cooper county. 'Missouri, was de stroyed by a tornado. . They have just received, say. Capper". Weekly, a let ter from Miss Blanch Zeh ot Kallers- vuie. iil, saying she bad found a mar- rlago certificate which belongs te them in a pasture near her home. The cer tificate was in a trunk that was -blown from the Christian home the night of me storm. Keilersville Is more than 200 miles from Oooch Mill, . i The Proper Order''-'-,- 4 - T wonder." said the f.t clumhip "who was responsible for tha aa-rina- about the red-beaded girl and tbe white nontr. .. . ; "Tou've got It twnted. the thin ear. penter observed. How twisted T 'It Is a white horse and a,' paflJiaa-j - girl." . r "Whaf s the difference' V-. t "When a man sees a white horse h toons tor a red-headed glrL" ; "But the man who sees a red.tta&ded giri never iooks any farther." The Doc Knew; "When I was a boy the doctor said If X didn't stop smoking cl carets I would become feeble-minded. i .' well, why didn't you .topr?-' (. . ;- And How About the PoIecatT ' One day last week, after era wlln under a barn after a polecat and at- i tempting- to pull hi. shotgun in after him. Clay Richard., on the Richards i arm near quiver, say. the. Madras . Pioneer, accidentally discharged : th. weapon, biowlnc off the end. of two : linger, rrom hi. right hand. -. t .., Quite Exasperating, in Fact I -A most annoying accident, save the Kansas City Star, befell a Chicago housewife who. suffering with the heat, sent her husband for an elec tric ran. Hurry in. on the way to the .tore, the husband was- overcome with the heat and fell dead. Oh, Isn't That Nice for Them I The golf link, lie so near th. mill - a nat aimost every aay 7he laboring children can look out Ana see tne men at play. -Sarah N. Cleghorn ("Portraits and Protests"). , Uncle Jeff Snow Sayst Some of these here Portland rela tives of mine that don't raise. nuthln 'ceptin' a lawn is in a hnrry to have tne price, of flour reduced, and done seem to have no feel in fer the millln' trust and all the little trusts that ride. on it like little 'possums ride the mammy 'possum and hang on with their tails to her' tall. One of these big trusts alius has a lot of little fellers trailln' along. ' THE RIGA MILESTONE The relation of the fall "of Riga to the Pan-German ' dream of aggrandizement is . set forth in an article by Frank H. Simonds, in which the interpretation of the" larger aspect of Germany recent conquest is quite r; assuring. The Sunday Simonds arti cle is a commanding feature of The Sunday Journal, and next Sunday's article is -traordinarily strong, contain-: ing adequate answer to the very questions that are!up permost in the public mind. MENDING WAR'S BREAKAGE ' A visit to a base hospital "somewhere in France" has inspired Jeff ery' Famol,; thet celebrated novelist, 4 write ' in his able fashion an account of the wonder work being performed by army surgeons. THE WAR IN PICTURES Newest phases of the great V conflict are set forth in pho tographic :-reiriew..-,;;Well se lected photographs that; vis ualize events of the war for the- discerning reader. AT GAMP GREENE ' ": Camp '' Greene, Charlotte, r ? N.J C, where the national - guard' units - from Oregon,' " Washington, Jdaho, Mon 4 tana and Wyoming will con- -l tiiiue their training, will be' 'described- in ; picture and; text as well as Charlotte; the, ' metropolis of the cotton belt, THE SUNDAY - , -JOURNAL : : Five' Cents Everywhere. the' Copy NEXT SUNDAY