6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 11. 1914. PORTLAND, ORIGOX. Entered at Portland. Oregon, Postofftce aa eecond-class matter. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance: ?BT MAIL.) riiy, Sunday included, one year ...... .$8.00 Da lly. Runaay Included, six months 4.-5 raily, Sunday included, three months ... taily, Sunday Included, oca month ...... -75 Pally, without Sunday, one year M0 Ijaily, without Sunday, six months ..... 8.25 lal!y, without Sunday, three niontba ... 1.73 Dotty, without Sunday, one month ..... .so Weekly, one year 1.60 tunday, one year ........... 2. SO Sunday and weekly, one year S.&0 (BI CARRIER) Dally, Funday included, one year 89.00 Dally, Sunday included, one month 75 How to Remit Send postofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's' risk. Give poatoffice address in full. Including county and state. Postage Rate 12 to 18 pages. 1 cent; IS to 22 pages, 2 cants; 84 to 48 pases. 3 cents; CO to 80 pages. 4 cents; C2 to 78 pafc-ea. ft cents; 78 to i2 page. 0 cents. Foreign post. ' age. double rates. - Eaetern Business Offices Verree Conk lln. New York. Hnmawlck building. Chi cago, Steger building. ban FrnnrNrn Office R. J. Bldwell Co., T42 Market street. POItmyD, SCXDAY. JAN. It, 1914. EDISOX AS A' MTXOR ' PHOPHKT, Mr. Edison is treating himself this Winter to a vacation in Florida. The occasion is notable because vacations are rare with the great inventor. He eats little, sleeps less and seldom stops to play. His playfellows on the Flor ida trip are John Burroughs and Henry Ford, both excellent outdoor men, who will catch enough fish to feed the party even if Mr. Edison lets all his bites get away, as he doubtless will. Just before setting out he gave an interview to a representative of the Independent in which he discussed most of the topics that interest the world just now. Naturally he began with the subject nearest to his own heart, that of inventions. The most important one of the year 1913 he be lieved was the method of manufac- ' turlng .ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen. This is a great boon to the world because it solves the problem of cheap plant food. Ammonia Is organic nitrogen, without which vege tation cannot thrive. The natural sources of this essential to civilization will be exhausted In a few years and an artificial supply has long been sought. Methods of synthetizing or ganic, nitrogen products from the chemical elements have been known for some years, but they have been almost prohibitively expensive. The new invention promises to render the process cheap and rapid, so that the world may feel reasonably certain of a continued food supply. Among the factors which have con tributed to make nitrogenous fertiliz ers cheap is the use of water power. For many purposes this is the least costly source of energy now known. The cataract generates electricity, which in turn serves to combine the chemical elements and produce the fertilizing ammonia. Were some less expensive source of energy at our command, the process might be still further cheapened. Many have imag- ined that such a source of energy will be found in the atoms. It is well known that when the radium atoms break up they set free enormous quan tities of energy. Perhaps some way will be discovered to capture this val uable product and set it to work. Mr. Edison thinks some such thing may possibly be accomplished, but he is not too sanguine. "No one can pre dict," he says. "There are enormous possibilities." Others, more ardently hopeful, expect to see the energy of radium utilized before a great while. They also believe that other atoms can be broken up and made to yield limitless stores of working power. While we are waiting for this grand victory over nature, Mr. Edison thinks something may be gained by utilizing the heat of the sun in desert regions. Many have tried to do this, but the failures have been many and the suc cesses few. The difficulty is to concentrate enough of the sun's heat rays to pro duce an efficiently high temperature. Engines of "from twenty to thirty horsepower" are now :;t work in Ari zona and Africa, deriving all their power directly from the sun. This is not much, perhaps, but it is a begin ning, and nobody can tell what it may lead to. Another source of energy lies in the deep and thin veins of coal which it does not pay to mine. Mr. Edison, thinks they can be fired as they lie in the ground. The gas formed by the combustion can be caused to generate electricity at the mouth of the mine, and thus the en ergy of the coal can . be utilized at great distances. Setting the world on lire to keep our machinery running appears like a fearful expedient, but it may become necessary when more accessible fuel grows scarce. Some speculative geniuses have suggested tapping the internal heat of the earth to furnish power, but Mr. Edison sees little promise in the project at pres ent. It may be made to pay some time, when our coal is all gone, but at present we can obtain power more profitably from other sources. We can virtually Increase ' the world's supply of energy, Mr. Edison suggests, by stopping waste. It is a matter of common knowledge that by far the greater part of the energy of the coal consumed in our furnaces Is lost. Probably as much as 90 per 'ent of it, on the whole, goes to waste. If this deplorable leak could be stopped the world's coal supply would be multiplied in practice eight or nine limes over. The longest step ever taken in this direction was the inven tion of the internal combustion en gine, which, when at the acme of its efficiency, utilizes pretty nearly the whole of the energy of its fuel. Hence It would be a great economy to con vert coal into gas and then generate all our working power in gas engines. Very likely this will be done sooner or later. But fuel, as Mr. Edison re minds us, is not the only commodity which the world recklessly wastes. Inventive genius 1s another and per haps far more valuable kind. Many writers have told us lately that in ventors seldom get the just reward of their toil. Mr. Edison takes much the same view of the matter. "Every new thing is resisted," he says. "It takes years for the inventor to get people to listen to him and years more before It can be introduced and when it is introduced our beautiful laws and court procedure are used by predatory commercialism to ruin the inventor." If this is true we can hardly expect our mechanical geniuses tr devote themselves very ardently to the service of society. Mr. Edison believes conditions would be improved if "methods of court procedure were changed and the courts realized that men who make inventions cannot by the very nature of things be business men fa miliar with its merciless code. They should take this into consideration and protect him." This sounds rea sonable. Inventors and other eccen tric geniuses have not enjoyed much consideration heretofore either from the courts or any other established in stitution, at least until they became rich and famous. All future social progress depends more or less directly upon such men as Edison and his fel low laborers. If we are wise in our generation we shall cherish them more tenderly than pearls and dia monds, but the chances are that we shall continue to let many of them perish in misery Just as we always have. HIGH LIVING. Some friend sends to The Oregonian a newspaper clipping, purporting to be an advertisement of an Ohio gro cer, and actually being a printed and fruitful sermon on the high cost of living. Says the putative grocer: Some of you people give me a pain about the high cost of living. You don't know any more about It than my kid, 9 months old. I have the most up-to-date poultry farm In the country. I have the beat-laying strain of liens In the country. 1 employ the best men that money van hire. It costs me nearly Z a dozen to produce fresh eggs at the present time. I charge you about one-fourth of the amount, yet you say I am robbing you. I m selling you strictly fancy Florida oranges at 15 and 10 cents a aozen. The poor farmer that raised them, after paying for the picking and packing, gets about 10 cents a box. The railroad company gets the balance. Tou rush over to the opera-house, pay $2 for a seat, to see some chickens and old hens show their legs and shapes. That is all right. You rush down to the millinery store, pay about 'i!0 for.a hat the flr8t cost of whloh Is about $3; that's all right; you get a awell hat. You pay ISO for a chiffon dress, noth ing to it. I can put it In my overcoat pocket, but Ifa the style It's all right. But when It comes to something to eat you have a fit. Take my advice take care of your stomach. One profound economist has a theory that the high cost of living is due to the increased gold production. Another searches the world over for a suitaDle abstraction, tind winds up with the sapient conclusion that it is the middleman. A third casts a contemplative and troubled eye on the race between the nations for greater navies and more efficient armies, and concludes that the waste of human energy and worldly capital in preparation for war is the real cause. Along comes then a modern school statistician, and he thinks it is due to shorter hours of labor with In creased wages, and diminished ef ficiency. Another is sure that the un equal distribution of wealth, due to a faulty and discriminative economic system. Is the root of the trouble. So it goes, with all kinds of phrase-making definitions of world-wide causes and scientific judgments on perfectly obvious facts. The Ohio grocer knows why it is and what has done it. The high cost of living is in the main due to the high cost of high living by individuals and by states and nation. THEY KNOW NO BETTER. ' The theory that women fall into im morality in consequence of the low wages paid in stores and officer re ceived another blow from the "psy- cnoiogicai laDoratory" report of Dr. Anna M.' Dwyer, physician of the Morals Court in Chicago. . She states as follows the occupations given by 759 women of the underworld: General housework on WaitrKR.. ...... Laundresues .... 1' ""'" Xa Clerks or cashiers 3 Seamstresses or dressmakers ". 6 Stenographers 4 Manicure " Scrub women a vtn.i . .. vvibiiuut occupation 10d The small proportion of clerks, cashiers and stenoerrarjhers rlisnnaea nr the theory that the wages paid in those occupations are the chief cause Of Women's downfall. Th mnat f.o. quent cause is indicated by the state ment mat two-thirds of the women examined were mentally defective. In other words, they lacked the- moral sense or the moral strength to remain chaste, or they lacked understanding to realize the consmiienp.. rr h.in. unchaste. The remedy for the great majority or cases or prostitution is not. mereiore. a- minimum wnc- Vif on industrial home, where women may, be protected against their weakness until their mental powers and moral sense have been develoned tr th nntnt where they can resist temptation, and where they may be instructed in the means of earning an honest living. r-rosututes in general should be treated neither as criminals nor as vic tims of the present economic system, but as mental defecti gone wrong because they lacked sense tu Keep in me rignt path. Some among them are criminals or have been driv. en to Unchastitv throueh rliro nnoor),. but they are exceptions and. should be treated as sucn. some, too, are nat urally licentious and would be liberated than they would return to ineir rormer life. The best that can be done with 'them is to heal them when sick and to prevent them from spreading those deadly diseases which are common among them. A HISTORIC PARALLEL. That is happening in the PhiliDDine which always happens when one lead er of a political party promises or en courages hope of more than other leaders promise. The most extreme promises are Interpreted as binding the party. Qualifying phrases are overlooked and Immediate fulfilment of a promise is expected, which In the very nature of things must take a con siderable time to carry out. Delegate Quezon, having been cred ited with procuring the appointment of Governor Harrison, had apparently been seized with megalomania and Imagines that he had only to demand transfer of the Government to the educated minority and it would be granted. Careful reading of President Wilson's address to Congress shows that ho has no such intention, though the action which he has permitted Mr. Harrison to take shows that the Presi dent intends to expedite greatly the substitution of Filipino for American rule. But imperialist hotheads Jike Representative Jones have encouraged the hope that Mr. Wilson's hand could be forced, and Mr. Quezon's threats of revolt seem to have the same pur pose. The situation closely parallels that which existed In the Transvaal when Mr. Gladstone acceded to power in 1880. The Boer oligarchy was on the verge of destruction by the Basutos, who made war in revenge for slave raids, and appealed to the British Commissioner to annex and save it He complied, the British subdued the Basutos and the Boers then demanded independence. Gladstone assumed their sham republic to be a reality and in the campaign of 1880 con demned annexation and said their de mands should be granted. He became Premier and -the Boers" demanded ful filment of his promise. When he de layed, they rebelled. Thereupon he granted them independence under a shadowy suzerainty. From his course resulted all the bloodshed and devas- tatlon of the Boer war of 1899 to 1901. If in response to Mr. Quezon's threats Mr. Wilson should grant im mediate independence, we may expect even worse conditions than existed in the Transvaal from 1881 to 1899. Un- like the Boers, the Filipinos are not a nation; they are- a collection of tribes ranging from savagery to civili zation. These tribes have internecine quarrels and have not even the bond of a common language. The more civ ilized Tagalogs and Visayans- are like ly to provoke war by taking slaves from the mountain savages. Ifwe were to grant control of the Government to the cultured Filipinos, of whom Mr. Quezon is a leader, we might reasonably expect civil war, which would be followed by appeals from the losing party for interven tion. If we then Intervened, the work of reconstruction would need to begin all over again and would be fought with difficulties growing out of our display of vacillation. If we refused to Intervene, the islands would prob ably sink to the condition of the most debased Central American republic and only our threat of war would re strain some other power from seizing them. Thus the men who have made the loudest professions of friendship for the Filipinos would do them the worst injury. MORE ETHICS. The Oregonian submits the follow ing 'letter from a Portland engineer as a contribution to the current dis cussion of the interstate bridge and its consulting engineer. It will be noted that the writer takes for his text the interesting subject of "Ethics": As a consulting engineer of this city, in nowise connected with bridge engineering and yet familiar with the ethics of our profession, I can no longer resist making a few remarks, as a citizen, regarding the j contract Just signed with Waddell & Har- ""Biw" 1 iuu luetmig uii too inter state bridge. It the first place it Is decldely unethical for any engineer who poses as a "consulting" engineer, and therefore In a position to render Impartial advice to his clients, to own patents upon or be In anywise finan cially interested in any of the competing materials or equipment for any job upon which he may be serving in a consulting capacity. Thla should be evident to any one, since his recommendation of each of two type of draw spans. In this Instance. would profit him $15,000 more than the se lection of a non-patented type or a type con trolled by other parties. Can anyone be lieve that human nature is such as to per mit him In this case to render impartial Judgment? Engineering codes of ethlca al ways eliminate this condition. Engineers who practice In this manner do not stand upon professional grounds, but are strictly commercial engineers, who are not entitled to recognition In a consulting or (tuvisory capacity. During the recent controversy over the bridge, the public was edified by several lofty lectures on ethics from Mr. Harrington. It would seem that engineering ethics is a point of view, a state of mind, or a condition of pocket, dependent altogether on whether you get the contract. The bridge contract finally signed was determined as to compensation on the basis of a bid by another engineer, Mr. Modjeski. That gentleman, it seems, by his offer fixed the standard of engineering service to be rendered. So the bridge board rejected Modjeski and closed with Waddell & Harrington on the Modjeski figure. More ethics. WILSON'S THEORY IN PRACTICE. Woodrow Wilson is the first among Presidents to have deliberately ex pressed his opinion of the Presidency long before he could have had more than a vague hope of filling the office. That opinion was contained in the Blumenthal lectures at Columbia Uni versity, delivered in the Winter of 1907-8. It was a purely academic opinion, for he had not yet become an active politician. The New York Evening Post - publishes an article summarizing the views he expressed and comparing Mr. Wilson's practice with his theory. It. will be interest ing to carry the comparison further and to continue it as his policy and methods develop. Mr. Wilson, at the time of deliver ing his lectures, held the Presidency to be what the man holding the office "has the force and sagacity to make it." The President can become the leader of the Nation and the leader of his party. Mr. Wilsorr thought that only "by incapacity or lack of per sonal force can he escape being lead er of his party, because he Is at once the choice of the party and of the Nation." The Post says, giving the substance of what Mr. Wilson said: He ! the party nominee, and the only party nominee, for whom the whole Nation votes. . . . He can dominate his party by being spokesman for the real sentiment and purpose of the country . . . by giving the country at once the information and the statements of policy which will enable It to form Its Judgments alike of parties and of men. He "has It In his choice to be the political leader of the Nation. . . . His is the only National voice In af fairs. ... If he rightly Interpret the National thought and boldly Insist upon It, he is irresistible.-- for the instinct of the country "Is for unified action and it craves a single leader." The President he described as "the unifying power in a complex system," which includes not only the three de partments of Government, but the powers divided between Nation and states and the conflicting interests of sections of the country and groups of opinion. His success depends on the kind of relationship he can establish with public opinion and his highest task is to become " Its diviner and spokesman and to 'facilitate Its trans lation Into effective action, says the Post. Mr. Wilson even said: "A Presi dent whom the country trusts can not only lead it but form it to his own views." recognizing the Constitution as a "vehicle of life and its spirit always the spirit of the age." Mr. Wilson said the President was at liberty to "lead the houses of Con gress by persuasion," not "to domi nate them by authority." The personal force behind his messages is great, for "the whole country reads them and feels that the writer speaks with an authority and a responsibility which the people themselves have given him." As means of influencing Con gress he rejects bargaining as to ap pointments or measures, as well as ar bitrary acts. The President has realized his con ception of leadership by his overmas tering influence with Congress, and the result appears in the tariff and currency laws. He has successfully gauged and made himself the spokes man of public opinion and therefore Congress has been unable to resist him. As he has thus proved himself a capable leader of the Nation, the Democrats could not escape following him as leader of their party. The movements of great corporations and bankers to make their peace with the Government pro-! that they see in him public opinion unified in one person. Had he failed rightly to gauge public opinion, the Nation would have rejected him as its lead&r, and 'his party would soon have done likewise. So long as he reads the public mind aright, he will be irre sistible. - Mr. Wilson has put his theory in , . I practice in another particular the I making of appointments. He said in ) 1908 that the President was "the most heavily burdened officer in the world;' and he suggested as a means of relief "without shirking any real responsi bility" that "appointments should be made more and more upon the advice and choice of his executive col leagues." Almost his first act on as suming office was to refer all callers on matters of patronage to the heads of departments. His Cabinet officers have been required to shoulder re sponsibility, and Mr. Bryan, in par ticular, must bear the blame for re viving "the spoils system in the dip lomatic service, and Mr. Burleson for the same course in the postal service. Mr. Wilson has taken a hand in filling the higher diplomatic- posts, but in the main has kept himself free to deal with the larger problems. His suc cess so far in doing so vindicates the wisdom of this policy. The President has taken direct con trol of the Mexican affair In harmony with the opinion he expressed six years ago that "the initiative in for eign affairs which the President pos sesses without any restriction what ever is virtually the power to control them absolutely." He has correctly read public opinion as opposed to armed intervention and as desiring to see genuine democracy prevail in Latin America, but he has run great risk of being deserted by the people when he intervenes so actively but so Ineffecutally that he leaves no alter native to National humiliation except armed intervention. Does he hope in this affair not only to lead the coun try but to "form it to his own view"? If so and if he should suceed, his glory will be the greater; if he fail, the sham will all be his, for It will be of his own making. WORKERS AND IDLERS. The reference by The Oregonian to "professional idlers" and "chronic ne'er-do-wells" was not intended to "answer to the thousands of unfortu nate men honestly striving in the al most hopeless task of finding honor able employment." This In reply to a complaint from Mr. Isaac Swett, printed today. It is a strange per version of The Oregonian's remarks to assume that they were designed to be a sweeping classification of the unem ployed as loafers and trlflers. The Oregonian has distinctly and repeatedly approved all practicable ef fort to aid the worthy workless, but it has insisted upon a proper dis crimination between the ' deserving and the undeserving. It was not able, for example, to support the quixotic scheme of Governor West to have the Emergency Board -make an appropriation of $50,000 to create work on the public roads. It is not sympathetic with the demand that employment be given by the city, on specified terms (specified by the job- hunters). The hungry man takes work when and where he can get it. But the unemployed are with us, and The Oregonian is In .accord with Mr. Swett's suggestion that the prob lem be studied carefully and that a solution be found and that every reas onable concession be made, and doubt be resolved, for the man in want of work. It must be understood that the condition is not local but world-wide Every American city has had on Its hands large numbers of idle men, Portland among the rest. If they want work, and will work, they should get it. Set it may fairly be asked how long the state or the city must con tinue to care for the unemployed, merely because they cannot easily find private employment. There is a limit to the public resources and the public responsibility. GIVE NEW LAWS A FAIR CHANCE. Men of all parties now unite in call ing upon the people to give the new tariff and currency laws a fair chance and in predicting good results from President Wilson's constructive pro gramme. One of the most distin guished of these is John Wanamaker, who was Postmaster-General under President' Harrison and who is noted as an independent Republican. In speaking at the dinner of the Union League at Philadelphia he attributed Republican defeat to the fact that "that party was deaf, dumb and blind to the widespread evidence of a deter mination to enforce changes in the tariff corresponding to the improved machinery and greater skill of Ameri can workmen." He said Mr. Wilson took office pledged to tariff revision and monetary reform and, he contin ued: In less than one year both these great undertakings have been accomplished. All honor to the nersistent President and the Democratic statesmen who have made their word good. He pronounced it too early to pass judgment with certainty on either of these laws, but he did not think tariff changes had affected business seri ously. He found the crux of existing business conditions in the monetary legislation and denied it was the proper function of any government to do a banking business, expressing a preference of a central bank man aged by bankers and merchants, as in other countries, but he said: Now that the bill Is a law, there Is nothing to be gained by pulling it to pieces. The bill, as passed. Is a vast improvement upon the original bill. I believe it work able, but not by amateurs. Mr. Wanamaker said a stupendous responsibility rests upon the President in selecting the members of the Fed eral Reserve Board, saying they should be men "commanding the con fidence of not only our own country men, but of banking and business men abroad," for their tremendous power will enable them . "to hold in their hands the weal or woe of the American people" and therefore the Board "must be kept absolutely free from the slightest taint of politics of any kind, good or bad." He called upon good citizens and publishers of newspapers "to abstain from criticism and partisanship in discussing a bill enacted in good faith after long study by many capable men' He predicted restored confidence as a result of as surances as to the President's atti tude towards corporations and he con cluded: The man who sees nothing but dis aster ahead is not a true American. I have no fear of any serious unsettleraent of business or any long disturbance of pros perity. . We have lots of room in this coun try for courage, energy, and enterprise, but there is no room or reason for a panic. What the President wants and what the country wants are strong men, unselfish and broad vlsioned, who are able to help him and his Cabinet to lead the way. The motto for the New Year is, "Don't be blue." These words of a representative," successful business man in regard to the work of a President to whom he is politically opposed are worth tak ing as a guide by every man. We must give the men at the head of affairs credit for good work done and must take it as a pledge that their future work will also be good. The confi dence thus reposed should inspire confidence to go forward with our Industries and enterprises. If each will do his part in this way, we sljall hasten prosperity. IN WllOSK INTERESTT It is asserted in a letter from a Bend contributor published today that the new tax law was not formed for the people's benefit, but must have been " drawn in the Interest of the bankers and note-shavers. We cannot quite agree with the statement. The higher the penalties for delay in tax payments the more likelihood is there that the taxpayer will borrow money from the banker or note-shaver before the day arrives in which penalties begin to run. As compared with the old law the new act actually lowers the penalties Imposed for fhe first five months after the day taxes become due and payable. If the taxpayer whose re ceipt calls for $150 paid nothing until the expiration of five months from the first Monday in April, the penalties and interest amounted to $22.60 un der the old lawT Under the new law the penalty in such instances is $7.50. The former law, taking into account the 3 per cent rebate", enabled the tax payer to borrow his taxes on March 15 at 8 per cent for six months and save practically the entire penalty and interest charges imposed by the state on delinquency. For the $150 taxpayer this saving amounted to about $21 after deducting the interest on his note. The same taxpayer, if he bor rows today for five months at 8 per cent, saves $2.50 over what he would pay if he let his taxes run. These figures, however, have to do only with the inducements offered the taxpayer to borrow by the two laws, and reveal simply a present condition where it is almost as economical for one to make the state, rather than the private Institution, his banker. How the law affects the individual is another matter. If A, who pays $150 in taxes, bor rowed in time to get the 3 per cent rebate under the old law, the principal and interest of his note at six months at 8 per cent would have been $151.32. At present if he borrows for six months at 8 per cent his total of principal and interest on the same amount of taxes will be $156. From the standpoint of the man who can and would borrow his tax money the new law increases his burden of tax ation as result of abolishing the re bate, but paradoxically as It may seem, the inducement to borrow is less under the later statute. On the other hand the man who cannot or will not borrow will find a saving un der the new law if he' lets his taxes run for five months. In such case the saving is just 10 per cent on the total tax paid by him as compared with the former law. NEW LIGHT ON ANDREW JOHNSON. an the seventh and last volume of Is "History of the United States," James Schouler undertakes the diffi cult task of rehabilitating the repu tation of Andrew Johnson. It is made all the more difficult by the fact that Rhodes in his history returns an un favorable verdict upon the man who succeeded Lincoln in office. The latter historian frankly declares that "of all men In public life it is diffi cult to conceive of anyone so ill-fitted for the delicate work of reconstruc tion." He establishes a certain pre conception against Johnson by dwell ing upon his humble, birth and low breeding and ends by "stamping him as an egotist and braggart." Rhodes quotes copiously from the "balcony speeches," in which Johnson was at his worst and "more than insinuates that he was under the influence of liquor" during many of his extraor dinary deliverances. He condemns Johnson for beginning his Presidency by encouraging Sumner and the rad icals, while later on he lurched over to conservatism of the most uncom promising sort. Finally, in Schouler's opinion, Rhodes errs by blaming Johnson for his firmness under diffi culties, stigmatizing as "obstinacy" what he ought to praise as manly de termination. Whatever one may think of John son it seems Incongruous to cast his low birth and lack of fine breeding In the teeth of an American Presi dent. As Schouler points out in this connection we make a great merit in Lincoln of the very circumstances for which his successor is often blamed. Both Lincoln and Johnson came of Southern "poor white" stock. Lin coin had the good fortune to be taken to a free state In his early boyhood while Johnson was reared in Tennes see, where he came in contact with pro-slavery prejudices of the most obdurate kind. Lincoln entered pub lic life by way of the law, Johnson through a long course of administra tive experiences. He was successively Alderman, Mayor, Representative in Congress and twice Governor of his native state. He won National re nown as Military Governor of Tennes see, from which position he passed on to the Vice-Presidency. As far as ad ministrative experience is concerned he was far better prepared for the Presidency than Lincoln when he took office. His ill success must therefore be attributed to defects of character rather than of training. Had he shown himself adequate to the situa tion where fate placed him, the Amer ican people would esteem him all the more for his humble origin, just as they do Lincoln. But even as things turned out. It is an unworthy act on the part of historians like Rhodes to reproach him for the hard conditions of his youth. Johnson was no egotist and, as a rule, he was far from being a brag gart. It has been truly said that in private conversation he was a great deal more discreet than Lincoln, who said amazing things with startling complacency, now and then. In his speeches on great public occasions Johnson maintained a high dignity excellently befitting the Presidency. It was In his "balcony" speeches that he seemed to forget the restraints which prudence would have counseled and let himself go to wild extremes. His active and virulent enemies nat urally fixed upon these utterances as typical of the man, keeping his more Important speeches in the back ground. The stories of Johnson's ad diction to strong drink seem to have been grossly exaggerated. Schouler has profoundly studied the original documents bearing on the subject. He has had access to all the material In the Federal archives and also to the Diary of Gideon Welles, which throws so much light on the .difficult days following the close of Lincoln's life. From these sources Schouler concludes that there is very little ground for believing that Johnson was habitually a hard drinker. It is un deniable that he was intoxicated when he took the oath of office as Vice- President, but never again on ans' public occasion was he under the in fluence of liquor. His habits of life were, abstemious and, except In the regrettable "balcony" performances, he had a becoming sense of the dig nity of his office. In fairness Johnson ought to be ex cused for much of his apparent Inconsistency when he deserted Sum ner and the radicals, whom he had supported at the beginning of his Ad ministration. They were Lincoln's friends. As Lincoln's successor under the most unhappy conditions, he doubtless felt obliged to uphold as much as he could of the policy and spirit of the great martyr. Sumner and the. other radicals, much as they often differed from Lincoln in mat ters of detail, were his steadfast ad herents, so that Johnson naturally fell into their arms when he became President. But he was a greater statesman than any of them. He saw more clearly what ought to be done In the way of reconstruction and he had far more politic views upon the subject of negro suffrage. The trend of public opinion for the last twenty five years has been away from ex tremists like Sumner and toward pacifists of Johnson's school. His irenic policy was beyond all question the right policy. As soon as the se ceded states should have adopted the anti-slavery amendments and repudi ated their war debts, Johnson wished to leave them to solve their own domestic problems, while the radicals in Congress were determined to force a system of local relations upon them, which their souls abhorred. Johnson was overruled for the moment, but with every passing year his wisdom becomes more apparent and the fail ure of the opposing policy more mani fest. The Southern Stajtes won by dint of years of strife what Johnson would have given them Immediately, and the negroes have forfeited almost everywhere by their incapacity the right of suffrage which was prema turely bestowed upon them. We dare say the verdict of Impartial history will be mainly with Schouler rather than Rhodes a3 far as Johnson is concerned. The injunction case against the Widow Lyle raises the. painful question whether a bereaved woman has a le gal right to make her grief a public nuisance. This forlorn relict, having plenty of money, has embalmed her love for the departed in a chime of bells, which are rung every quarter of an hour, to the distress of the neigh borhood. Naturally an injunction is sought against her noisy woe. It does seem as if she might find some less boisterous way to grieve. The dear de parted left her $20,000,000, but is it necessary on that account for her to drive all her neighbors crazy? Men often remain bachelors because women are spendthrifts, says an edu cator. True enough. The poor fel low's fiancee drives him so hard that he can't get enough ahead to pay for a ceremony. A Los Angeles woman stepped from an aeroplane 850 feet In the air and landed safely by means of an aero life preserver. That's another big vic tory in the conquest of the air. Personality is to count 25 per cent hereafter in California Civil Service examination, personality to be de termined by oral questions. Gives the hot air artist a chance. By edict of-the Archbishop of Paris those who dance the tango must do penance. . Unwilling husbands who dance the tango feel that they have already done penance. Constitutionalists are carefully keeping liquor from Indian allies. But give poor Lo a few Jolts of firewater and he'll run the Federals into the sea before sundown. The oldest mail carrier has just re tired after having covered 360,000 miles and earned $35,000. How would you like to walk ten miles for a dol lar? A zoo monkey is 111 from having eaten a buttonhook. Some of his evolved relatives eat even more in digestible articles every day. Keen disappointment is felt among all lovers of gymnastics that Faderew ski didn't pause here long enough to wreck a couple of pianos. Admirals and Vice-Admirals for our Navy are urged as a crying need. Bet ter too few than too many of these gilt-laden dignitaries. An Illinois woman captured a burly burglar single handed. Up-to-date burglars keep away while there's a woman in the house. Let us trust that, refreshed by f-fine vacation. President Wilson will take a firmer hold on our foreign relations. Chehalls is planning an expensive water system which. will give the town pure water. No wiser investment can be made. The oldesf commercial traveler will retire after 58 years. Even the staunchest digestion cannot last for ever. Wall street bears are unable to af fect stock prices. The fangs have been drawn from poor old Wall street. Eventually, at moving time, we will need only put a couple of parcel post stamps on the household effects. As Commander-in-Chief of the mili tia why should the Governor submit to even technical arrest? Apples caused the downfall of Van couver thieves. Bananas more often bring this about. It is announced that Paris styles are to be even, bolder. They already are too bold. Hold your breath! Professor Taft and Dr. Eliot have had a difference of opinion. With a few erasures the directory may yet do for a ballot at the coming primaries. A St. Louis man wants a band to play at his funeral. Ragtime or dirges ? Promoter Lyman's desire to devote his life to philanthropy occurs a little late. Michigan may impose a tax on cop per. Anything to cop tne coppers. Iowa Progressives decline fusion. Must prefer defeat. About time for Dame Rumor to ac cept Huerta's resignation again. Gleams Through the Mist By Dean Collins. The Premier Pedeetrienne. (A Vancouver woman has found, by use of the pedometer, that she walks more than 17 miles dally at her housework.) They tell the tale of the crooked man Who hobbled a crooked mile: But I am impelled, as the story I scan. To smile a sardonlcal smile. And scribble a fine Pedometrical line In praise of the housewife who made A record in walking. The which no use talking Puts hie record far and away In the shade. Myself I rated a walker stout. In days of my earlier youth. The time that in hallways and round about 1 escorted a fierce aching tooth. But far though my feet Went hurrying fleet. That distance is scant and forlorn Compared to the one The housewife has done While getting the boarders their breakfast each morn. Weston, I've heard, has a record strong. And Enils has walked a bit. Ana others have rambled both far and long To make a pedestrian hit; O'Leary's a stout pedal Wins many a medal A J?vr the country he blows. But, Danny O'Leary. lour record looks drearv Compared to the record the housekeeper shows. The suffragist hiker is known to fame For many a gallant walk; The papers publish her face and name; We fall for the line of her talk. But. suffragist hikers. You're shown up as pikers .Fo.r .wa have received the assurance That the medal for all Should certainly fall To the housewife for distance and speed and endurance. "Ungrateful son! Tou might have married an heiress! Then why did you take instead, this chorus girl, off the stage?" "Father, I cannot tell a lie," said the noble young man. "I did It to ele vate the drama." Passing It On. There Is a man In our town And he Is full of prunes; He has a rusty phonograph And never changes tunes. Cincinnati Enquirer. There is a man In our town. Who's even -worse than that; He's teaching tango dancing on The floor above our flat. Chicago Record-Herald. There is a man In our town A friend T do believe Who toots the sliphorn on our floor, from morn to dewy eve. New York Evening Sun. There Is a man in our town; A ruffian sure Is he He sleeps out loud and through his nose. Across the hall from me. Having read last week's series about the Prohibitionist who declined to drink the water because it had been "piped," W. E. M. suggests the following ad dition: I took him on the dry ship "Piffle"; Thought there he'd eat a bite But no for he began to sniffle And cried: "The ship is tight." All of which we! account us diabolic ally clever. Solemn Thought. My hand still dates "1913." With rage I choke about it. Because, each time, some Ivory Bean Gets off the annual Joke about it. The new asteroid, named by the as tronomers "Albert." may feel justified In hiding from their sight. SttU it might worse, for they could have named him Clarence or even Ethelbert. - ir Burns Lived In Portland. A man may dig aboot the pave, Ha"ng lantern up. and a" that; Pedestrians may rant and rave A street's a Btreet, for a that. For a' that, and a' that. The asphalt hunks and a' that. And Belgian blocks and busted rocks A street's a street for a' that. "Sir," said the courteous office boy in glee, "I can tell you a good story about the side of a skirt " "Cut it out!" I said sternly, "we must be in fashion." "At that," said the c. o. to., "we have, between us, doped out -a Jest." "Yes, my son," I replied, "and wc were as laborious as a vaudeville team In doing It." "And 'twas almost as ragged when done," trumped he. Approximate History. 38,217 B. C. Reginald Auktoe throws his grandfather into u. nest of wild bees. Medicinal value of bee stings In cases of rheumatism first noted. 25.140 B. C. Percy Gnatheel. from a tree-top, drops a rock on Hubert Beartooth and elopes with the widow, originating the saying: "None but the brave deserve the fair." 3483 B. C. Discontent arises over the. contracts on the Tower of Babel. First mass meeting of taxpayers held and work on structure halted. 1095 A. D. Godfrey de Bouillon and others arrange series of Cook's Tours through Palestine. 1436 A. D. Gutenberg, of Mentz. rashly invents printing from movable type, thereby making the compositor eternally responsible for all errors of the reporter and space writer. 1647 A. D. Peter Stuyvesant star In the first production of "The Burgo master" on Broadway. Cionrmet's Love Sonar. As is the mint sauce to the lamo. As is the fried egg to the ham. As is the 'possum to the yam, " Are) you to me! Like pork without the apple sauce. Like hot cross buns without the cross, Without you, love, a total loss My life would be! Like apple pie without the cheese, .tr- -i 1 . i - lamK wtiKniit tha Tt n i n Or lemon ice that will not freeze. wouio De my me. You are the syrup to my cakes. You are the mushrooms to my stenjes. And so I beg for botli our sake;, Oh, bo my wife! I love you with my heart and soul. More than young squab en casserole. More than French dressing in the bowl, Oh. do be mine! What? No? My future thus you spoil! My salad you deprive of oil! Farewell! But still the pot will boil! I go to dine! New York Globe. Beneficiaries of Tax Levy. BEND, Or., Jan. 8. (To the Editor. The new tax law is rotten, there Is no doubt of that, and was not made for the people, but for the bankers and note -shavers. With a strong public sentiment the Legislature might better the tax law. but, once convinced, how many bad laws would they, saddle on us? Washington has a fairly good tax law 3 per cent off before March 15 or one-half before June 1, last half before November 30, thus having the money coming in in three periods. There is no lump penalty for being a few minutes late, but la per cent per annum after delinquent. The Treas urer collects all taxes. H. II. DA VIES. Pbjalclan and Former Patient. Detroit Free Press. 'Well, well." said Dr. Bigblll, as h met a; former patient on the street. 'I m glad to see you again, Mr. Brown. How are you this morning?" "First, doctor." . said Mr. Brown cautiously. does It cost anything to tell you I"