e . La. '4 THE OREGON DAILY K JOURNAL, - PO RTLAND, " SATURDAY, JULY 13. ' " 1918. ' . ' ait ccpgyKNPiwT wKwiy Afrm '. a S. JACKSOM.. PmbltoW .. - I I - I aiJhMitbti rntj day. afternoon end aaorntns. (- . aa, iuikl kfUtHMnl t Tha Jamil BaUd- tea, Mrooowa sad XasaoiU itmtt, Vottlud. ... . vnm . 'lLl mmmms. ,! I inui.THOneiLin im bom. a-sosi. j W AU opertawate aeehod by tboee aasibeia if. xed tea apaiatot whet ewam m . Bane KMtaof Co., Braiowiek Budin. It makes disease. It raises up unfit children. It makes citizens who cannot ! ViSaS' " """Jdo good thinking. And citizens who cannot do good, well balanced thinking. , aakooiluUea um by mail, or to soy adarea ia I t tee vane atatoe w humoi r DAO.X (MOHMIMO OK AFTIEXOOK) tr" 'M VflOMr-it.......ss.seOMBeth. s .ss j - -.-r ,.r.v. . ' -One year.. .... .ST.BO I One stoc-th. . W I an i t OOl ao eoneoTBod Oo I kovo ao plkeo; I am oonuwaod how I our fit aurooU (or oea Confaehia tuAiuxs il Buinait HE greatest industrial genius T in the world is in Portland today a. o " Jr.vJ oiv '" - ....... .,. eirlvCnno T .... IT i. ny,L,.l 1 1,00000 a year. He Is diaries .M. , Schwab. No career has been more meteoric ite. was nora m wniiamsDurgn, Fenn- sylvania, April 18, 18C2. At 12 ho began driving the suge from Loretta. With these ships you are building, Mr. Adams declared. America is ous year, tho figure bnj V.883 as corn Pennsylvania, to Cresson. Every going to have her own merchant marine. "You are going to do your own pared with $2.11 in 1916. a fair margin spare moment was spent in study, carrying trade and not depend on outside nations to carry your products per thou8nd feet m the past has been He nt1 tn nrr vi. hnv . m, h .. h M wh.t t DUnrf i. i . rooTil"l es being J. These figures for I --w v.vw .v o 5 v evwa wsu i ne arove nis stage. At. 18 he. worked In a grocery store from 6 30 a.m. to 1030 at night for $13 the Edgar A. Thompson ateel In- dustry at Braddock, Pennsylvania, in which he drove stakes and carried the chain for the engineering corps. In six months he was made chief of the' -engineering force. From that time on his rise was specucular. At he became chief engineer and assistant manager of the, works. It , was tho beginning , w-l fT ... IvIm IKIrtam . tJ e,Uao,oJ Ik .raUn: department" to handle the largest output : fn te 'worldxt "He instituted economies that sent the Pittsburg products to all, parts.; of One earth. , ' He learned every braneh of the steel- business, , At 85, seven years , Rafter he entered the Thompson plant, iihe became head of the engineering j ; department of the entire Carnegie northern ends of the road. But the p organization. He planned and built middle section was blocked by the yL the .Homestead steel works. Car- German East African colony. Th'.s ; "negle aaid 'of him about this time, obstaole has now been removed. "that youngs Schwab "knew more After tn WaT traveler can prob & about steel than any; other man in ably board, his train at Cairo in j'thel world.t' , , Egypt and not leave the car until His development of steel processes be reaches the Cape. That will be : was rapid and tremendous. The- one ' the longest continuous rail E, United States government needed road trips In the world. t f armor plate, and. after tedious ex--' The conquest of their East Afri perlrftents, Schwab provided It. The4 can colony by the British has inter fehead of the Thompson steel works" rupted a neat scheme of empinj Hdled and Schwab was selected to Nvhich the Germans were working . R take his place. That happened when ut. They had already buiit one ?he was only 8. railroad from the East African coast f - At 30 Schwab was selected - by to the boundary of the Belgian f Andrew Carnegie to reopen the Borne- Congo possessions and had projected i. Vr, stead steel works after the terrible (strike of. 1892. It was a gigantlo task, but Schwab succeeded in It. ,lt was said 'of him in that undertak-1 jlng- ihat the "Schwab - smile, -tho pScawab cordiality, the Swab, radi - ' Schwab , enthusiasm, , plus, the Schwab ii. : . 1 1 . . . - wiutf 1 iiuuumiug w. geniUS, WOni all nandSNiTid ll hearU." . . : j, At;85, Schwab vas made head of tne. uarnrigie steel oorporation. That 3 was only IT year, after.' he entered the' steel industry ar $1 a day. The 'new , position made him the best 5 known 'Industrial -"magnate Inl-the 2 country. 2. At, 33 he concluded th.e sale of the f Carnegie properties to J. P. Morgan F! at t4W,000.000. , That was the no- 'gtnlng'of the gigantic Um'ted States ' L': Steel v eorporalion, they hugest cor r po ration the world had seen up" to j? inn urn. . - uiierea a salary of 111100'. a year, In the position. he refused and accepted - a commission of two ; per. cent of all .the mbnev J earned over 70,000,ib00 , annually; vand li made more than. his million a iyear. r3r av i; h9' 'Became head of the -. Bethlehem Steel corporation," an organisation e.11 his own. The oon - 3 oern,T with Its subsidiaries, employs over 60,000 men. It is as great a pro- 7 duce.r. or war enginery as the famous 3 Krupps 'of Germany. . . I .The ; progress of the steel industry of America owes more to the" genius of the tnan in Portland today than : to any: other American. The German . tutocracy, though ; he Is a German by ancestry, has no. more powerful adversary ia that Industrialism which Is the heart of this: conflict than Is Charles M. Schwab. The "Influenxa" which - was re t-mv'' - . . ;: ported , lo be ravaging Spain some weeks agd has now lahl hold of the " , German army. It; Is ? not a partlcu- larly; - fatal dtsease,lut It 1 keeps - - men la bed.::"We; may perhaps find . . in the lnfluensa'One of the reasons why Hindenburg does not hasten' his A WONDERFUL -MESSAGE ORTLAND, as on expert on city building sees it, was pictured In words at. a (Camber of. Commerce luncheon yesterday. You vlsloned it with the same photograph which the photographer blemishes. There were the ujfly soots. ,00k mL ' The word painter .was Thomas Adams, whose life to the" present has been spent as a professional city builder in England and 'Canada. Mis ho,ino- rofpAehfn onit orlirvln fi I -address was charming, refreshing and are a dangerous element In a self governing nation where the people make the. laws, execute the laws, and administer the government. All th la was ul1 hv Yfi AriamO have population herded together in population with a high percentage of iui uiaic9 vujsivotij it, lur wie tnui iii r . . . tninimi in no. aona dt uir nennip - " the war lords. But he warned that in Britain, the people must be given a housing to think On both Sides Of a question. If not, by and by, tho - "have nots" will make troubles for the "haves." England, early In the war, Mr. Adams said, discovered that the munition output was cut by working employes too long hours. It was cut by work- ln thm An fianiivi Tt ova a c mtih h imnnAAM hmt.iio. iht it. government went to work and built houses for,, the employes from govern- ment funds, with the result that the total production was greatly accelerated, and is now sufficient for all the requirements of the army. One iMtv Af finm ftr,nlaAn w&o hniu hv th .nv.mm.nt ir, ..j : "vr.s, lV.:': wiui cuuuuruLoie iiwuBes, oaurcaes. every other convsnlence provided. Another city of 15.000 Includes 10,000 glrls working In munition plants and Its appointments are so complete ana its aaieguaras so aaequate mat as If she were in the bosom of her England has TBund-durlng toe war that the way to get the fullest nd best production is to take full care of the workers who are ttw principal instrument Of production. That Portland would probably have three times its present population and three times its present wealth within 30 years was the offhand guess or Mr Annma i n ntQAiirriia wirnin thfi .dvantaaeflua location, are the facta For '"on, ht wed that th9 tlc w iunco i w,uw iu families, the need for the extra houses which would prove to be permanent. And if the city provides proper NtoMlng for this added population of b permanent residents. 0n tne othftp hand hfl Ba,d the cUy coud get WOfkerg fQr tt ,QduslrtC9 eVen with bad housing. But they would not be desirable oitizens. They would not be the healthy kind, or the kind, or the contented kind of people. v t va weaw tvwf w wsw a0 a wt permanent industries and port planning and other things to prepare for lnlB new Phase of American enterprise, The-address was a wonderful message to Portland. There ought to I rise up in this city a universal determination that there should nvr f D9 orowaea lenemenis nere, ana inei oomioriauie nomo. - offensive. Almost every great war has been followed by some sort of a piague. Aiier tne r ranco-UBrraan war of 1870, for example, there woo on riMomlA Af emnilnriT which kulcd more men tnan had falleQ ln Mttle. Medl0al Bclence hM lm. proved Blnce theilt but lt is t(J w w D8 0Q . . THOSE AFRICAN COLONIES N iOW that Eastern Africa has been cleared of the Germans the 'Cape to Cairo' railroad will j probably be "completed before great while. Before the war the British had built the southern and I several others. Their plan was to I make thorough railroad, connections i up to the Congo region, mass their troops on the frontier and then fight their way across to the Atlantio in pne grand njsh. It was a replica j which they actually carried ' out. 1 , T -.11-. .j. Tt 1 k I V. L nuppii; iuc oniuu iuicrcucu iu time to block it. But if the Ger- I mans should recover their African I possessions ty tne peace treaty wo 1 know what to expect. They would resume their old game of empire .building and Africa would presently heturned Into a shambles again. It is" already feasible for a traveler to make the trip from east and west across tropical Africa without much nardship. He goes by rail to Lake Tanganyika and takes a steamer to Jts- western shore. There he again I takes the train: on a Belgian, railway alto tne congo river, wnere a sieam- boat awaits him for the rest of the I w&y to . the Atlantio coast. I This is - the reverse of the , ever 1 famous Journey; which Stanley made I through tropical Africa, but most tof the adventure and some of the romance has now ,, vanished from it. Any globe trotter can do it if he I has the time and money. Civilisa- tlon Is doing wonders In Africa ln spite or the war., .-it would he crime to blight everything by hand- pn.8 the country back to the bar- barian -Huns. 1 A state's rights, as Mr. Justice Holmes points out, end at its own borders. It has no right to force upon other states goods tfhJch they I do not want Congress recognized I this when It passed the anti-booxe law sustaining state prohibition. Ths - IsiPoreme court decision against th I st sT - w I cTRld labor law pretends to sustain I state ' rights. In reality It confers upon the states a right which they never - had before. Judge Holmes bases his dissenting opinion uDon jthls;ftt twiu; notbemany years before his2jninority -; becomes Interest that you look at the ne'.v I has made of you. . There were the I There were the things Dleasinir to I edifying. U uM'(!rfflinv a mi lit offAiut tn bad housing and unfit tenements, a I tuberculosis, a low average In Berlin j an ucvaun uo saiu. iu ucrmaai uiu 1 . . a . . . . ineir unn.ini m nnnn inr tnm nv i democracies like America and Great 4 chance by proper education and fit v: w meaires. sewers, water buddiv ana I every gin is as sare in ner work own hnnrn life. ' tar.rt at tns aiiv nAt v Have Anari i on which he hieM hi riMvtirtiftT. building of houses now for taking w uuuiuw ui w.urters, many wiwi would not be temporary but per- 30,000 or 40,000, most of them will thinking kind, br the broad-minded uuu UViUQ SU l Wf IUIU5 UVUSlUg 1L1111 I was the query. every iamuy snouid he housed in the majority. Not even the supremo court can permamently resist right and common sense. MOTOR TRUCKS T HE national food administration has a great deal to say about the capabilities of the motor truck. Properly , used it mia-h help distribute the country's food! Supply bringing it in from the Pro- ducer to .the City consumer. .... I The time of distribution would also be shortened an thet fnort fmm iso country would resnh the tvi country wouia reach tne Oity table J uva ana crisp, wnn motor truck TW&W . J . . A . I traffic nrooerlv rinvelnneri h farmer wnuM ntntoli- h hi. it. rarmer would naturally have his list 01 city customers to whom he would ship a supply of green vegetables, I berries, milk and poultry daily. ny is it not carried out In practice 7 perhaps the inertia of human nature Is one obstacle. It takes a long time and much preach ing to get men to change their old K.kit. . . . . ... 1 ,,au" I1U ul' nw ones. AiarK i warn sermonizes on mat topio at great length in his YenVpn t win.- Arthur's Court. Have you read that book lately? If you have not go to the library and draw It out. Take it home and Study It You Will rise from an hour's commission has tabulated returns nroirtSSlver VTX V0 K bSreuTo? flrTadald progressive. You will not wish to under the food administration's regula be burdened any longer with your I tions from September, 1917, to March. big peddler's pack of dead ideas. a t . . . . . I T"'" umurancB me Progress of the motor truck is bad roads. Our roads are Improving, but only as the ! snail travels. .And -often a stretch whj,ch has . been . made, passable is allowed to. relapse for lack of re pairs. A road must be kept in repair, like an automobile, or it soon goes to "destruction. Motor traffic tears up the best roaa surrace surprisingly fast, if you stand and watch the progress of one of -the heavy cars yo.u will " ouuwer oi ain ana Stones n its wake. It tears them out nt th TL fUngt i;?m 8COrnfuI11' into tne rear. rsothing ahort of asphalt Or solid' concrete Will live under such traffic. It would pay us to push our road Duuaing as last as the war will permit. In fact, road building is a fundamentally defensive measure. How could we move armies against an Invader over our highways as mey stand? Alamosa, Colorado, celebrated the glorious Fourth by burning all the German books In the community, un tne natai morn a little extrava- gance Is not only oermissihle hi.i ITeai Iaci M 10 XBO,r muty to con even nralsewOrtnv W,V7n7.M form 10 ntft-'y "tterentrcondItlona even praisewortny. Still, considering of the present war. We knovJ that the me present price or paper, would It not have been better to have sent th hftnV-o in th nni miuo tne cooks to tno pulp mill? STATE RIGHTS D id anyooay ever near of tho state rights doctrine being sum moned to support anything good or progressive? Many years ago It was the great bulwark of Slavery. Later on It was .. Invoked a - IV . - o . to Dream: aown tne inoome tax. Today It destroys ; tho child labor law. . , ... or a long time our big corpora- tlons u.M In nnf!it hetwoon ii,iin:iA-v... ., , ... and . nation tO, keep UP a "twilight law which they vmst obey. This "Is a, ' nation. - It h . not a mere assemblage of Jarring states. When slate and nation conflict tho people", have decided which must rive way. -The supreme court would have been mare- nruderft . had it listened to the people's voice upon the child labor law- PROFITEERING ON WEST COAST By Carl Smith. Washington Staff Correspondent of The Journal ,???J of the federal trade commission, which j uwunuau many meniDera ox wnnwmkmm mm inoii am as r.a w mtim - v. cJiobn Th h, iTrZr aut. M ..tl 1 distanced by the shekel ratherera of the E. Western lumbermen escape the eptos pulertiroflu oteaster refiners m the oil industry have been found to be much ahead of the califor- nlans, and in other Industries where the Xfo? thenostpsit arewy dowTtti ladder from the 100 and loo per cent earnings found to exist m steel, copper, sulphur, packing, leather goods and like mdostries. o ln?ftriM ff th" pclfi0.Nh- lrfthe tooTcanntr? fS miners and condensed milk makers. In deaUna with lumber the renort says : nef exceed proms m. the lumber industry on the west coast, although it Is understood that ?f"fir f irpln sPfuc .ln iynul the MmmUoUM'. cate unusually and unnecessarily larre 5uu rh companies, producing z,6i5,ooo,000 feet of lumber m wit. made an average profit on indicated br the fact that th avra profit m m was only 6.1 per cent In 47 per cent of the footae of the ?0flJ!rtA of. profits was from a small loss to over 121 Pr cent on 4116 net investment. The SaJ? 1-2. "5 J1 feil 117 are the more noticeable for the rea son that the profits shown do not Include any payments of federal Income and ex cess profits taxes, but are the sums act ually available for additions to surplus the companies concerning their dividends and income taxes supports the preceding statements." 000 The flour millers are given a hard bump, and the jolt is applied impartially, witnout reference to any particular see tlon of the country. One thing not stated in the report, but known tn the "trade and In official circles, is that the federal grain corporation Is in the process of re covering prof ite which the millers made In excess of the 25 cents per barrel max lmura they were supposed to be making. bo tne miners win not "get away with it' to the extent indicated in the federal trade commission report, which Bays of them: "The flour, millers have had unusual profits for Considerably more than a iiiunauu.uegiea ana veriuea by the commission shows for the four years ending, June 30. 1816. a profit of cents on each barrel of flour and 12 per cent on the capital investment. ThAao - " ngures came from accounts covering nearly o,ooo,ooo barrels' output annually. This is Bomewhat less than 40 per cent of th. annuM output of the wholo country but a very much larger part of the flour BoU ,n th 3ar commercial market In other words, these figures apply to mills that In large part supply the de mand for flour ln Interstate commerce and for export The years covered (1913 14-,16-H) should probably be accepted as fairly representative tn spite of the fact that the war demand ln 1915 and 1llt woul(t4?ad ?.n" xpct 115 em to oiiuw n aonwrnuuiy nign proilt. in tne vear ending Juna SO. 1917 mills made an average of 52 cents on each barrel of flour sold, and nearly 38 V-' ,:;.,r;r, .Ti.iL" an average of the profit of one rnlll for ,x mftnth of the year shows as high as . . H1!: lnch",ve- Jn f85 of regulation va xxu.m 131 Ls,i i ci ma, jl a mum, uie iv- erage profit per barrel on the flour was about 45 cents, or over three times the norma""Trofit per barrel referred to above. The retarn on Investment was apparently between 25 and 30 per cent However, with prices maintained at the same level, cost would probably have In creased and profit would have been soma wnat reduced in April. May and Juno. lsis. because of the smaller output In those months. The average net profit or jobbers reporting to the commission was about 15 cents per barrel for 19is and 1114. but increased to nearly SO cents ,n th nm hlllf 6f 1917- T1 profits yLT. ices. It is clear that If the profit above uch pay was reasonably high In 1913 and succeeded In reducing the profit of these eoncerne, but for the year 1917 It was still over twice as high as tn the earlier years. Germany's Vaunted Training Is Training for Defeat From the San Franclsoo Chronicle. The really gratifying feature of the encomiums passed upon the ' American troops at the front by prominent French ,nd Brttl8h soldiers and newspapers is ZliaX? valor there was never a moment's I aoUDt but only actual experience could German idea as So the essentials of a oW,r w ng. in the German calculation the Individual counted for rothi. m.m of ,. -wr V- taught to move 'like machines In Im plicit obedience to instructions which could never be varied by a hair's breadth no- matter .-what unforeseen circum stances might arise.. : They were to move In masses and therefore there would al ways be someone at hand to do their I tbinking for them. ; such . tactics are u yItw1.,tv.th! I them well supported by heavy artillery. I a..a a o . . . lo t - . a 1 0n ln is ne.mecnuucu system or cll T,pen,wwJ.t?1 e I vlnk-ftf , in .Avur-mMhaiiiftr mahA la 1 that It makes machines and not fighting I men.; The weakness of the German sy I tern was seen a the battle of the Marne, when, deaoite fhe fact that th-ro wo. zona," where ' thero a was no little or no heavy artillery to support the front line of the German Infantry, the kaiser's, soldiers ought to hare put up a better fight when the French in fantry also rot ahead ox their artillery. The Oermans fled because they were not hand-to-hand fighters. It, was not merely that then- Instruction covered an ad vance and not a retreat, but that they would never engage the enemy unless! they were In numbers vastly superior. I The same w" nJ" t?!aefj'y I were- brave when their artulery and ma-1 chine gun. were pounding men short od. rifles and ammunition, but the momentl wo AWlWSllSaaasj eoTeauv "umu we.;vuwv .ve the Teutons Ced to safety. It is. there- fore, good to know that In the German sense the Americans are "unprepared." They are, however, most adequately I prepared in mai muer sense wmcu takes individual Initiative end courage I into aooount. The French 'and British I systems of training, at least thoee cor-1 ering the men who were brought under I arms since the war and taken from peaceful pursuits, have takon Initiative I into account, but with the Americans. that resourcefulness has been with them all their lives. They know how to shoot and live In the open. They can think as well as act for themselves. They are not machines. Letters From the People r rv nnnwilnia Mat to Too loaraal for dob- I BokaoB ia tato deportment ohooid writtoe oa eev eeo no 01 too popor, uwu ooi exoooa I worii In lonstlt ana man do nssoa oy in writer. wbom Bill oddnoi ia full bum! aecjoauoar too ooBtruranoa. . The AnU-Admlnlslratlonlsts Portland, July I. To the Kditor of The journal. Tne extremity in wnicn anu- admmlstrationlats find themselves placed by the growing success of Amor- tea', war effort would be humorous If lt were not dangerous. It is not so long since Republicans of the Intensely partisan sort saw a source of danger and delay in what they chose to term j the "secretiveness" of our war heads. I They railed at the censorship rules and brought about a modification. They were so sure the people should be told more about the troop movement to I France that they brought about a popu- lar demand for light At first, by hints sed generalities, and later by quoting as tlon el English only commercial Eng actual figures, the authorities satisfied lish par example, 'I beg to ackno wi the people's natural desire and right to edge,' "Contents are noted.' Tours of late know a little more about the things for date.' Tour valued order,' "We draw on which they were ao willing to spend their money and their blood. il could have been suspected from the first that the Insistence on nublleirr bv c viia.- w..M ..i but It took something like the Lodge outburrt of a few wks ago to prove t. immadiatoiv ofter onnnunr. ment of the activates of German U-boats off our AUantlc seaboard, the Massa- chusetta senator Inadvertently made a oonieewen wiuco invum ool out ramus at rest on the question of its motive, even if. after reflection, lt leaves us disturbed about another and more threatening element In the struggle more threatening because It may well be the opening of a battle which we must fight at home. If I were to attemDt to fix the re- eponalbllity for the submarines being here." said the senator. I would oav that it. was due to the loose bragging and boasting about the number of trooM we are sending to France." v. - ..n b!I with preparatory tasks that she had "VflT?"Iiy.r... I the partisans deemed it not only proper. but essential, that the people of America should be told of It first and the people of Germany immediately aft erward. But so soon as America's troop movement had assumed proportions which set up a direct military menace to Germany, and knowledge of which could do nothing but good In America and nothing but harm tn Germany, It was "loose bragging and boasting" to tell anybody about It. There is one kind of publicity that la music to the ears of such Americans as Lodge. It Is the sort which advert! a our mistakes and shortcomings. At a 1 "i'v" .aI!mn.y ,Wt her ,fonrth It hM gonVprowling off into the appar and hardest war winter her morale was inu"eTnpty spaces of the color seals kept up. not by the Russian wheat, fcn4 comi triomphanUy back with a which proved an Illusion, but by the whole theaf of discovert Beyond red lamentations of Ue Roosevelts. the sob- wave lt hM tomA others which cannot bings of the Ood-sakers those who bc ,een but whlch excits . oensaUon of were too busy sensing calamity In warmth. These are the Infra-red or America to help In bringing calamity to hat waves. Beyond the violet lt hae Germany, and by the snipers who were found others which can be "seen" only too much concerned with success ln by a photographic plate, and these are future political campaigns In America called ultra-violet rays. While both of to center their thoughts on success ln thse types are most useful for their France. own purpose, they are dangerous to the Pleased by anyone who could render eye when present tn too large amounts, this sweet music, those who would The danger of the heat raye is evident danoe to it led Chamberlain Into a end easily felt by coming too near to a momentary aberration, during which he tire or a red-hot piece of metal. These seized their fiddle and commenced to In the ultra-violet group are of extreme play. During the trying days of a importance, for lt ie from among them hungry winter he afforded the mental that we have gained two of the great gratification which a short meal could Inventions of our times the photo not supply to minions of Germans by graphic camera and the X-ray, while saying that America was honeycombed on the borderland between them and with graft and incompetency and that the war machine had all but ceased to function. It is unfortunate that our Oregon senator should furnish the text, but the Republicans need It without questioning the politics of Its author. So long as our war machine could be ad- vertlsed to our people as having broken down under the administration. It mat- tered little to what good purpose our enemies turned the gross misstatement, It was anti-Wilson stuff from the Inside : lt had a punch here In America : the fact that It might help them to beat the ad- ministration nunaea them to tho fact at least equally important to some of us that Germany might use It to help beat all of us. Hence the cry for publicity. But so soon as me maenme was re - ?,edC!I, " "OW.lOWh! ca" have been, so soon as the fact that It never had ceased to function seemed Impossible longer to conceal or misrep resent then It was time to can for the brakes, the soft pedal, the muffler, the mute and the censor. When Lodge deplored this "loose hraggmg ana noasung snout the num- ber of troops we are sending to France" ne inzerentiaiiy, dux none tne less plain - ly. confessed that we had a great deal more to brag and boast about than he was willing honestly and openly to ad mit, and a great deal mora than he had expected when, previously, he and his party had demanded the limit Of pub licity. Critics of the administration are not displeased because the administration has "bragged and boasted" if it has but because the administration, despite their obstruction and back pull, has been able to produce anything to brag and boast about. It seems unthinkable, but the only reasonable conclusion to be flr frmjj Lodge's disclosure of antl- emlnlsatton jyologr u that Wil- son s critics rehlghly displeased be- cause he n,M fD''"hei much and would be Infinitely pleased had he ae- .tLit" v,. ...... . bn3ed antl -ad minis- wi'n Ad -3LWtU, .TmT. th? Jlr JTSl.rTT1". by ! i IT. 1. Z, tn k,I?" n hia. ??. w?SL.0l God help me, if 1 am wrong: God halo us all. If X am ght.. . , .aiiYAKU BHOUUKZR. PERSONAL MENTION Attending Commonwealth Conference At the Imperial are Thomas Adams of Ottawa, Canada; R. A. Booth, member COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE What will the harvest be? What are YOtf dolus: tn win tta war? Or are you? - that we approve of the Swedish move- . , . . - J06".1"" Jl1? 5? a??1??7 t0 down to dl up V ft sj We're willing to vacate our place In te sun If by so doing we can bring bout aoaking rain. Someone suggest that Mr. MoAdooa uwuui migni do Deuer if ne bad some eort of work to keep his mind oooupied. i u necesaaxv tt lYim mnvl. mtmr sell War Savings Stamps and recruit marines to keep themselves out of the 01 non-eseenuai workers? "Evaneton Oirl Tells of Shelling of Parts." exclaims an esteemed Chicago rout Headline, very good, but what ia ahe able to tell of the shelling of peas? A aho iUm bow mt. in vi. merely means to us that we're going " ttra principles use tne dauber and "the brush as we did when dad was a young man. VP" fl.Caa.not ,ru"k Keep Warm.- Headline In an eeteemed contempo rary. Maybe not. but mnv tii. cold morninr In tho nlAon iin wtn a little "shot" stirred the sluggish blood ana vov uo glowing. JOURNAL MAN ABROAD By Fred bt oboaoo Mr. toeku onoooaton a itnuit ia VUtmUIm who. in u mox sniooi wy uaor- laablo. rooakoi tbo ladUfctooeo whio pnaiu o T Snfi to to prt ' Somewhere in France. When I visited the church of Notre Dame in Marseilles my guide, whom I encountered by chanoe on the spot Introduced himself as Stoly Delrmendjogtou. He volunteered to show me the sights. He said. "Do you speak French r I shook ray head. "Greek V I shook It again. "Spanish. Italian, Oer- menr X continued to shake my head. He sighed and said. "I do not speak conver you.' I shall spend all afternoon and evening with you to learn to acquire so American conversation. anau exenange. i give you myseir as guide and tell you much of the city. You aMxn!.wJ,"i ZFL?? .W? l?.hi JJIV. told hlm th arrangement was eminently satisfactory. w Mriunnii , wo tn tho oum rait of the church. The view was really inspiring. The Aloe were to be seen ln the distance, and bofore no lun. on league, stretched to the far horlson the bluest of blue seas. "Regard it before you. The island with the sea wall and the ancient castle. It Is the Chateau D'If. Tou have read 'Monte Chrlsto.' perhaps? Near lt you see Ftlone and the Islands of Pomeque and Ratonneau. In otherwise direction at Le Pharo is the oeeuurui paiace oi impress Bugenie.- He pointed out the famous Palais Long- cnamp. tne arch of triumph. Porte d' Alx, lM clt' paiace or justice, tne magniiicent catnearai, me cnurcn or est. Vincent de Paul, the fortress church and He points Jbelowurto where wirh a score of other prominent landmarks. in the church inclosure a big gun was trained at the harbor's mouth to help de fend the city from attack. o He told me that his people had founded the town long before the birth of Christ. HOW TO BE HEALTHY By Dr. Woods Hatcfclaooe. Former FortleBd Paydeioe BORDERLAND LIGHTS AND COIy- QRS NO. SJ Modern science Is con sumed with curiosity, but takes nothing for granted. Some day lt may take the 1 ...Tr." "IC .r,. ,,;V electricity come tne nerzian ana mar 001,1 rT ol wireiess. of the state highway commission. Eu gene; Frank J. Miller, member of the public service commission, Salem, and Professor F. O. Toung of the University of Oregon. These men are attending the Commonwealth conference being held at the Imperial under the direction of the state university and are giving addresses as part of the program of that meeting, which is being attended by municipal officers and city planning experta of the state. o- o o Denver Tourists In CUy Mrs. Claude Sachs and Mtss Dorothy 1 - xi-. w.i,.,. w,,M ui.. Frances Frum. all of Denver, are guests at the Multnomah. The party is touring the Northwest and Is spending the week In Portland. o o o Berkeley Party Here Mr. and Mrs. Charles C Rueger and I Miss E. L Rueger are Berkeley guests in Portland, hero on a trin throush the Northwest. They are guests for a few 1 47 at the Portland lime. Petrova at the Benson Mm a. Olga Petrova. who Is ln Port land this week In the Interest of wsr work. Is a guest at the Benson during her stay in the city. Mme. Petrova Is registered from NeW Tork City. Sao Mr. and Mrs. A. McFadden of Plum- mer. Idaho, are In the city this week, geueta at the Cornelius while here, Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Atkins of Oakland are among the Csilfornlans visiting Portland this week. They are at the New Perkins. Mr. and Mn. H. B. Mulls of Tllla- mook. Or, are tn Portland for a short yUit. guests at the Oregon, Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Wade of White Salmon. Or, are at the Carlton whUe spending several days ln the city. will H. Fonts of Dayton. Wash., and small son. Will, are at the Imperial. Mr. Fonts la one of the prominent at- torneys of Columbia county, Mr. and Mrs. K. A- Steele of KaltopelL u.. .M k. -w. ...i. ., I the Washington, where they will snend the Washington, w here they will spend the remainder of the week. . A. C Hough.' prominent attorney Of SeatUe, Is la the city, on bnslnese this week, registered among the guests at the Mr. and Mrs, A. B. Abel f Spokane are spending a few days In. Portland. guests at the Benson while if the. city. NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Since war was declared 29 oarole con victs from the Oregon penitentiary have emistea in military service, it is o ma al ly stated. Grasshopper note In the lAkevtew Ex aminer: "A u touts who made the trip down the valley Sunday could not fall to notice the number of graeohopers la the vicinity of the Duke and Funk ranches. This pest has done considerable damage In this and adjoining valleys this summer." Reports reach Snerldan that two of her navy boys, one a gunner and the other a range finder, are responsible tor the sinking of two of the German sub marines off the Atlantic coast. The story is interesting and exciting, but more cannot be told until the war is over. says the Sheridan Sun. The organisation of a chapter of the American Red Star is being effected ln Pendleton. The society is the relief as sociation whose efforts are devoted to the restoration or animals. Mrs. A. J. McAllister has been officially authorised to take charge of the organisation at renaieton. t e est em No busier little town than Salem, and no busier iitue country tnan tnat sur round lnr the state's capital. The Jour nal says: "AU roads lead to Salem Just now. and all of them are lined with auto trucks and other vehicles loaded with berries and cherries on their way to town and piled high with orates on the way out to tne orcnaras ana perry patches again." Lockley "My people, the Greeks, were great col onisers." he said. We studied the topography of the country and of the Mediterranean shore for an hour and then went down by a sort of inclined elevator on the opposite side from which we had come up. We caught a car and went for miles along the famous Promenade de la Comlche, the sea wall drive that skirts the Medi terranean and takes one through a reg ular Arabian Nights district a country of figs and olives, honeysuckle and roses. gum trees and oedars. "My business Is to be the between man the man who introduces," my guide said. "A man wants to sell his cargo. find for hlm the buyer. A man wants to buy cork or wine or oranges or anything. I find for him the' man who has It for sale. Always I keep my eye wide for good occasions for my clients. Shall do well at this business in your city, Portland? Or shall I bettor start first In New Tork city? Lower class Greeks go to your country to do menial work, as the shoes to be blacked, or to work In the coffee house, but that I can not do. have too many education. I am the gen tleman class, the merchant, the man who works not with his hand a Tell me more about your seaport. Portland. We have here over SO miles of docks and we are the chief port of the Mediterranean. Do you use your waters greatly at your port? Do you have many lines of ships in the importation and exportation bust nessT" I told hlm we had very few. He shrugged his shoulders and said. "It Is the war. When, perhaps, the war shall some year be over, then you shall get back your Important shipping lines." m m m The more I see of the great use made of such liquid highways as the Thames, the Seine, the Rhone, the Garonne and other rivers over here, the more X am convinced that Portland can only find Its best development through the use of her Inland and coastal waterways. Why we can not have, as in the eld days, ships plying between Portland and South America and the Orient. I can not un derstand. The practical Influence of light and light rays of all sorts and colors upon living things Is, of course, enormous, particularly in the vegetable world, where the energy of the sunlight, turned Into heat and growth-force by the green chlorophyll of plant leaves and stems, literally builds tho herb and the shrub and the tree, which Is why plants "spin dle" In poor light and refuse to grow In the dark. Though our own and other animal bodies cannot "eat" sunlight directly, but have to take -It at second hand bot tled up In the shape of starch, sugar, fat and other foods of vegetable origin, yet a certain amount of light must be absorbed directly and our human flow erets grow almost as badly In the ab sence of sunlight as the buttercups and daisies would. Light Is our best friend, the moot wel come and helpful guest we can admit Into our houses, not only the friend of health, lending glow and color to our cheeks; but the foe of disease, killing quickly the lower forms of moulds and fungi, the bacteria and disease germs. Next Monday Borderland Lights and Colors (No. I). Mr. and Mrs. r. C Morgan of Astoria are registered this week at the Weahtn. ton. while visiting In Portland. Walter Hunt and small eon f Los Angeles are among the guests registered at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. K. Bly ef Bverett. Wash., ere spending a few days In Portland, guests at the New Perkins. v C; ,L C"na t Astoria, a Ship builder of that port. Is In the dty on business. Mr. Callender Is at the Port land. Miv and Mrs. Madison Cooper of Was co. Or, are at the Imperial. Mr. Coop er Is with W. H. Harnett a Company, bankers of Wasco. - vwu swa lis. Mrs. R. E. PomeroT of Salem Is spending a few days visiting Portland. Mrs. Pomeroy is a guest at the Oregon. tra. i. r. Btockwell and Mrs. E. J Kobllta of Clatakanie are registered thle week at the Imperial. Ray Reeves, a cattleman of Jefferson. Or, Is In Portland, selling livestock. Mr. Reeves le staying at the Cornelias. Mrs. Berth Bethel of Phoenix. Aria, has arrived In Portland to visit In the city a few days. She Is staying at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. E. Phillips of Loe An geles are guests this week at th Wash ington. M. Sigmun of Dufur. Or., a cattleman of the eastern part of the state, is at the Cornelius. H. T. Holden of Zugene Is among the recent arrivals in the dty, registered at the Portland. B. C. Peevy of Bcto, Or, Is registered among the guests at the Oregon. F. N. JDrlnkhaU of Roaeburg Is aa ar rival at the Benson. T. J. Edwards of Missoula. Monti Is at the Multnomah. Mrs. C A. Owen of Lebanon. Or, la staying at the New Perkins while In tfae dty. Earl Kennedy of Roeeburg Is regis tered at the Cornelius. L. E. Herrod of Cleveland. Ohio. Is at the Portland. C B. Ludwlg of Greet Falls, Id ahe. Is at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. W. T., Pre astr of Seattle are at the Benson. : Hulda Anderson of Orofino, Idaho, to a guest at th Washington. Paula IL Schuls of Prinevtlle. Or, to at the Washington. Stanley Henry of Seaside Is at the Washington. - ' ; Ragtag and Bobtail Stories From Eveiwwbere The Wonders of the Automobile TWO curls were knitting fer the sol- r A dlaro. vhm aha a th.m . v a IK. ' Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph, turned t : the conversation to an auto ride she had , anlnvsd the mnlnv kariw. f 3 "Mr. Jones' ability In running an auto- ' mobile la simply -wonderful." she de- ' clared. "I never dreamed that It was - possible to go quite so far without ma- chinery." . "Go without . machinery IT was the . wondering rejoinder of the other. -"Do ' you mean to say that such a thing hap- - . penedT . "Tea," answered the first. "We must have gone at least IS miles before Mr. Jones discovered that the engine was aaaseevaaef To Our Boys Wnon eosto tho eoll U orn th floe. With koorts beth etevo oa4 troo. Too worrhod soy to flht for h. Tonr owi rod. whit tod Mae. Toe kft Sohtad an yos pnnoiia, an test wr eoor to yoa. Whe awry soorto ter wotoood toe so. Bet 4utr eaUod, thoj koow. 1 Aod em thoro. whoa la tao heat. Wbore 6aoth lo err nor. Tosll suae bofatad too door old flat WUaoat oa uioasbt oi foor. Yoar lire Moos' yos win rWalf g)T, for rirfit, demoeraer To riadteoto yoar oountry'i risst. Tea freedom of Uo too. Bat God hi with yee. eeo sod en. ,aas whoa too ear to doao. Oh. o ho bring yoe boaao osata. Wboa victory k wool Porusad. July 1. The Mystical Numerals The sexton was mtVlno a for the Sunday morning service, when he suddenly paused and glanced at th preacher with a look of consternation. "inooo hymns will have to be changed. person." he declared. "It will never do to post them on the board ln the order ; you have selected them." "Why not?" wonderlnrlv aokod thai preacher. "What Is the matter with them?" "Just look how they read." returned the sexton, placing the numbera on tea wall. "4-11-44." Life's Postmen Tm brtntint too drrone for ar hrtas. Urith only your Ulth lo rrpoy; Aad o MDilo to toke la too ci.inc Who h soodiBs s Ima too; f I'atooflas thoeo enlleo 01 tho bootate, ' TU1 I soroor your lan owmy. And lo aholl bo oil of tho Postoso, It youU order a dreoai todor. 48 Kort meostt Btroeir' Ww' Not Like the Graphophona A farmer went to town and purchased a music stool, says Tit Bits. " In a few days he brought lt back and demanded the money paid, as the stool was no good at all. The storekeeper examined It and said It was In perfect order, end that It should not be thrown on his hands. "Well." said the farmer. "I took It home careful, and I gave tt a turn, and every one of the children gave It a turn, and never a tune could one and all of us screw out of It. It la no mora a music stool than the four legged wash ing stool the missus puts her tub on." Spring Wishes Thle le the tiau whoa poets etes. Of eloMat any oorthty thins, 1 e awaiory f ftdee oa fancy wise ' To woke tbo dormant mam. . Thoro la hnt ana thai,. I.I f mtm Colastbtoa eoeao la bottle lino wWoh 'mod trae beorui aoth km esteuM, ! aotaeorlas sad prof see. IrUk Kearte wots over true. nib4o, "Asra." fair teed, to yoa. Tblr loyalty tooy aw roaotr To roe. their eeeond Baothrr Lot oum talk loot oa they ortll. Erio e ooao will lava m, m . They-n tlcht aadia. tkotr blood thoyTl asUL othor. Their aaUto Und they woat U eoo rr?f.cWnl oejf toreror froo. ' ?e a"" they took te iboa. ColuaHaa, autoUoBS eeooa. JVhja ware oabloaoaod luhet, Irtah valor o woa t form. . onf 'o oe brae ae ortr yV. Aad aor kdasd joat oa . 4t WUnaau Anaaa. L Uncle Jeff bnow Says: . fu,hr. my gran'darter, has been Iossin them young folks from Portland pickln' berries. I reckon from what ab tells us that they most likely et more berriee n they picked, the first three) days ; but If we gtt half of the logans la the dryer w can afford to give the kids t'other half. Some of 'em le that lgnor ant that they think pertaters grows on trees, and that a -cajf drinks milk 'cause It don't know how to suck ; but they wise up amastn' fast and are mighty enter, talnin' company. Olden Oregon Phenomenal Returns From Apple Rais ing In the Early Days. The first outside market for Oregon apples was found In California during the gold mining period. In 1151 a few boxes, securely bound with strap Iron' for protection against thieves, were) ehlpped to San Francisco, and sold for 12 a pound. In 1SS L00 bushels were ehlpped. They returned a net profit of from I1.S0 to $2 per pound. In 1S&S 000 bushels were ehlpped, and returned 20 to $10 a bushel. Young trees were now In full bearing and the export of IS was 20,000 boxes. One box Of Eso pus B pit ton bergs paid the shipper a net profit or $10. and three bosee of Wlne saps were sold In Portland at 1102. From this time to 1180 the fell and winto shtpmenta, bi-monthly to Sse Francisco per steamer, were from 2000 to tooo boxes. The business decreased from 1SS0 until 1ST0. Only a few boxes of the) late winter varieties were sent. Orchards were neglected and pests appeared, oom Ing with the importation of California fruit. Twenty years or more passed' before the Oregon fruit Industry revtved. Journal Journeys Notable View From Mount Wanna, Southward From Bonneville. . There le a good trail to Mount Wanna, the mountain Just south of Bonneville. Starting from Bonneville, ge east over the Columbia River highway half a mile, turn to the right and follow the old military road a quarter ef a mile up the hill to the point where the Tanner Butte) trail begtes. Ouldopests indicate i the route. This trail has been buUt by the) United States forest service oa an asy grade. It works up the fee of Mount Wanna and to th south abovs Tanner creek. It leads along Wildest canyon and cresses th creek well tx Water la plentiful along the rout. . Th beet view point oa th trail Is four and a hall miles from Bonneville, at an elevation f 200 feet.. It ie a wonderful pane- ram of river and mountain. To'th est are th Columbia liver. XCagl Creole canyon, Benson flats. Cascade . locks, Stevenson. Wind and Shell Rook mouno tains. To ths north are Table mount tain. Mount .Hamilton and Trout take, a sapphire ln emerald setting. Topping all are Adam. Rainier and Hood. . For . farther Informatldn regarding routes, rates, time schedule and other details, call on or address Travel Bo reau. Journal Burtnets Offtee." Infor mation tree. . - U