TITE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER lO, 1916. POBILAXD, OBEGOX. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice as fcecond-ilass mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably in advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday included, one year $8.00 Xuilv, Sunday Included, six months jL',- Jaily, Sunday included, three months.. Xaily, Sundav- included, one month..... JJaily, without Sunday, one year 6.-5 iJaily, without Sunday, six months a..t Daily, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 Dully, without Sunday, ono month .BO "Weekly, one year - J-0 Sunday, one year ?"Jn Sunday aud. "Weekly S.oO (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, one year. . . . . 9.00 Dally, Sunday included, one month 75 How to Kemit Send postoffice money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk, (live postoffice address In full, including courity and state. I'ota;r Kates 12 to 18 pages, 1 cent: IS to 32 paK-s. 2 cents; 31 to 48 pages, 3 cents; fK to (iO pattes. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, f cents; 7S to S2 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business office Verree & Conk lin, Brunswick tuildtng. New York; Verree & Cor.klin, Steger building, Chicago. San ancisco representative, K. J. Bid well, 742 Market street. JVRTLA.VD, SUNDAY. SEPT. 10, 1916. I DUTY FIRST? OR SAFETY FIRST? The recent address of Theodore Ttoosevelt at Lewiston, Me. (printed elsewhere today), strikes the highest note of patriotism, duty and service yet sounded in the Presidential cam paign. It is a powerful stimulus to the latent Americanism of the people, and a needed warning to them that in duty done, and not in duty avoided or Ignored, lie peace, security and self respect. It is no mere partisan harangue at the mistakes of President Wilson; it is a demonstration that the fatal defect in his Administration is his failure to assume the role of re sponsible, stimulating and courageous leadership in times of National stress and peril. It has been the Wilson method from beginning to end to find the easiest way through, and to take it. A policy of facile and obvious opportunism has been the real index of the Adminis tration's deeds; and there have been no deeds at all when it has been pos sible to substitute words. The unpre paredness of the Nation has not been merely military and industrial; it has been moral and spiritual. There have been promises without performance, and threats without consequences. There has been an ostentatious pre tense that the Nation has been kept out of war, but it has been definitely plunged into war. Whatever has hap pened, or has bade fair to happen, the Administration has sought to "play safe." It has thought only of today, never of the morrow. It has done nothing which all its abundant re sources of evasion, vacillation and delay permitted it to evade and has sought always by the arts of elocution and letters to allay the justifiable ap prehensions of the country or to quell the natural and spontaneous instinct and desire of the people to give their sound Nationalism sturdy and ef fective expression. Colonel Roosevelt exposed the source bf all Mr. Wilson's series of blunders .when he said: Th policy of the United States must be shaped with a view to two conditions only; First, with a view to the honor and Interest of the United States, and, second, with a view to th interest of the world s a whole. At the outset of his dealings with Mexico Mr. Wilson departed from this first principle, and he has never re turned to it. Had he from the begin ning placed the honor and interests of the TJnited States first, he would liave prevented or punished crimes against American citizens in Mexico without interfering in the internal troubles of that country. During the Madero revolution against Diaz and during the Orozco and Felix Diaz rev olutions against Madero, President Taft did not meddle and American life was reasonably safe at the hands of both parties, while the American Na tion was respected. Had Mr. Wilson continued the same policy, the same results might reasonably have1 been expected. But he interfered not merely by withholding recognition from Huer ta but by dictating that the latter should not be a candidate for election as President, also by alternately rais ing and reimposing the arms embargo to aid one party or another to the subsequent revolutions. By "so doing he violated Mexican rights, for which he professes such scrupulous respect, he aroused the anger and incurred the contempt of Mexicans, and the slaughter of hundreds of Americans was the -result, yet he refused to take effective measures for remedying the harm he had done. His policy has done incalculable injury to the United States, to Mexico and to the interests of the world at large simply because It defied those first principles of which Colonel Roosevelt spoke. The Democratic slogan that "Wil son kept us out of war" was shown by the Colonel to be shallow bun combe. He rightly regards war as an affair of deeds, not of words. While Mr. Wilson's words regarding Mexico have been peace, "a greater number of Americans have been killed by Mexicans during these years than were killed by the Spaniards during our en tire war with Spain" and "peace still irontinues to rage as furiously as ever In Mexico." Our army went Into Mex ico to catch Villa, dead cr alive, but it has not caught Villa, it has aban doned pursuit of him, and the killed and wounded "during this futile ex pedition" Included to June 1 116 JTnited States soldiers and ninety-five American civilians. ' Since that date the number has been increased by the fight at Carrizal and by other encoun ters. "During this murderous 'peace' in less than three months more Amer ican blood was shed than In all the operations combined during the Span ish war, save only the actual battle of Santiago itself." Colonel Roosevelt most tellingly observed: "Moreover, when the war with Spain was through. It was through," but murderous peace still rages in Mexico. Colonel Roosevelt struck home when he described the Wilson policies as "an opiate to the spirit of idealism," which has "meant the relaxation of our moral fiber." He exposed the impudence of those followers of Mr. Wilson who call themselves Lincoln Republicans by reminding his hearers that Lincoln put duty first, while Wilson puts safety first "the immediate safety of the moment by shrinking from duty." By the first step in his Mexican policy, Mr. Wilson entered upon that path which has led the Nation from one downward step of humiliation to an other. It is a favorite retort of the Presi dent's defenders to say that the critics of his policies are for war, for the only alternative of peace is war. Who ran justify war and all its horrors? they ask; and who can go with the Hugheses and the Roosevelts and oth ers who think with them in plunging the Isatlon into blood conflict? It is not at all a question of war or peace, but of duty and life and self-respect and honor and preparedness all first principles of human conduct and of National conduct. War is not to be avoided by the Nation which merely courts peace, any more than the consequences of law lessness are to be escaped by the citi zen who observes the law and who contents himself with no effort to re strain and discipline others, or require them to obey the law. The man who runs from unsought dangers or unpro voked perils does not often find solace for himself, or approval of his friends, in boasting of his agility in fleeing from, them; no more should a nation turn its back on the wretchedness, misery and helplessness of a neighbor, who is not able to keep his house in order, after that nation has with lofty phrases asserted its high duty to hu manity and with meddling conduct has affirmatively declared its right to take a hand in its internal affairs. War has not been the alternative of the peace achieved by duty neglected, or scorned, or. undone. Not at all. A straightforward course is the only path any nation may take in confidence or respect; and it is the surest way to keep others at a distance and to avoid war. BIQ FAMILIES. The Tacoma Ledger has discovered a family of sixteen comfortably living In a happy home in that city, and thinks the fact of first news impor tance, for it is appropriately presented on the first page of that paper, with detailed text and many pictures. The name of the family, which has thus sought to live up to the Roosevelt ideal, is Nilsen, and it is Norwegian in origin and partly in birth. The father is engaged in Alaska fisheries, and somehow finds ways and means to feed sixteen mouths and clothe six teen bodies. The newest arrival came on August 12, 1916, and led to a re porter's visit. Says the chronicler: Smashing to smithereens the modern ideas that health, happiness and prosperity are confined in these days to small families. the Nilsen family is an example of all the good old-fashioned virtues. Qf the sixteen children born to Mr. and Mrs. Nilsen in their twenty-five years of married life, fourteen are living, and all are as fine, robust, good looking and intelligent speci mens of humanity as any proud father or mother could possibly desire. The mother is 42 and was married when she was 16. Evidently she has had a busy life, for the position of mother in a large family is no sinecure. The Tacoma discovery leads natural ly to the not unfamiliar Inquiry as to what has become of the large families of former days? There are, or were, numerous households among the Ore gon pioneers numbering eight or nine and sometimes more children; but now they have gone out of fashion. There are those who think that the biggest families are the happiest families, de spite the sacrifices and economies which necessarily become the lot of parents and children. Certain it is that the virtues of self-denial and the necessities of mutual help which boys and girls must in such cases practice are a gain and not a loss. You rarely hear much about spoiled children in households where there is no room for them. Perhaps Tacoma has the record in large families. If not, we should like to know where the prize for the most numerous household belongs? VOX H1XDENBURO IX COXTROI Appointment of General von Hin- denburg to succeed General von Falk enhayn as Chief of the German Gen eral Staff is ascribed to failure of the prolonged effort to capture Verdun, which Von Falkenhayn planned, and to his failure, to provide against acces sion of Roumania to the ranks of the allies. Selection of Von Htndenburg Is due not only to his decisive victory of Tannenberg at a critical point in the war, but probably also to a desire to hearten the German people by ele vation of their popular idol to suprerrle control. Von Hindenburg is the third man to whom has been entrusted direction of German strategy. Von Moltke under took to carry out the long-cherished plan of a quick decision against Prance before Russia was ready. That plan was foiled at the Marne and its failure was made absolute by the un breakable resistance of the allies at the Yser and by the Russian successes in Galicia. It was only prevented from ending in disaster by the Russian dis aster at Tannenberg. To Von Falkenhayn's strategy is due the great series of German successes which marked the year 1915. He planned the drive through Galicia and then through Poland and Courland which swept the Russians to Riga, the Dvina and the line from the Pripet marsh to the Roumanian border. He planned the Balkan campaign which won Bulgaria to the Teuton cause, kept Roumania and Greece in hesita tion for almost another year, left the allies a mere foothold in the peninsula at Saloniki, connected the central em pires with Turkey and prevented or at least postponed the elimination of that country as a belligerent. That campaign contributed materially to the abandonment of the allies' Dardanelles campaign and thus 'prevented the opening of the straits and the close linking of the western powers with Russia. Von Falkenhayn's plans failed of complete success, for they aimed to destroy or capture the Russian ar mies and to put Russia out of exist ence as a military factor. . They also failed to clear the Balkan peninsula of ttie enemy, for that was impossible without control of the sea, which would have prevented the allies from holding Saloniki, from rescuing and refitting the remnants of the Serbian and Montenegrin armies and from massing a new army for the new Bal kan campaign which has now begun. He succeeded, however, so far as suc cess was possible. He made a mas terly bid for that success which might have been attained through the ex haustion of France and Russia before the new British army was ready. The attack on Verdun was probably his last attempt to accomplish this end, at least in part, and to revive the German people's hopes, which seem to have dropped . after the victories of 1915 proved to have only prolonged the war instead of bringing peace. It was a final effort to put France out of the war before the full British force entered the field. When that failed after prodigious sacrifice, when Rus sia began smashing, Austria, when the French and British, began hammering the Somme line to pieces and when finally Roumania joined the allies, the brand of failure was put upon him, but only because Germany and Its allies lacked the means to achieve suc cess. Though Von Hindenburg holds the highest place in German esteem, it was not he but Von Mackensen who won the most brilliant victories. Von Hindenburg"s victory at the Mazurian lakes prevented the German retreat in the west from being continued to the Meuse or even farther eastward and It enabled the Kaiser to make his des perate effort to cross the Yser and to reach Calais, and then to hold that line after hjs repulse. But he failed in repeated efforts to reach Warsaw and came to a deadlock north and west -of that city -a deadlock which was broken, by Von Mackensen's suc cesses. The latter executed the plans of Von Falkenhayn so brilliantly that he crowded the Russians out of Galicia and Poland to the line which they held until their offensive began last June. It was he who swept through Serbia in October and November of last year. He is reputed now to be executing a daring counter-offensive by invading Roumania on the east a movement designed apparently to divert Rou manian troops from Transylvania and Russian troops from Galicia and Volhynia. Upon Von Hindenburg devolves the unpleasant duty of deciding whether to shorten the Teuton lines by with drawal and In what quarter to with draw. It is rumored that he has ad vocated retirement in the east behind the Niemen and Vistula rivers to a line much stronger than that now held. This would mean abandonment of much conquered territory in Courland, Lithuania, Poland, Galicia and Buko wina. The western line might be withdrawn to the Meuse or the Ger man frontier, which would release sev eral corps for the east, but that would mean surrender of the . French, and perhaps also the Belgian, coal and Iron districts, and probably serious losses In a relentless pursuit like that from the Marne. The southeastern line might be drawn in to the Danube, but that would involve early collapse of Turkey, opening of the Dardanelles to Russia, probably desertion by Bul garia and fading of all hope of domf nation in the Near Kast. It would permit the allies to complete the ring around the central empires. Were the Teuton powers thus to withdraw to their own frontiers, it would be a renunciation of that mili tary map of Europe on which yon Bethmann Hollweg insisted that peace terms be based. It would be a con fession that victory on those terms was impossible, but it might prove that vic tory for the allies on the terms which they have outlined is also impossible. A defensive war on those lines might be prolonged to the point where the allies would despair of penetrating be yond the Carpathians and the Alps or beyond the German frontier on east or west. Reduced to exhaustion, they might be only too glad to leave the heart of Teuton territory in Europe practically intact and to compensate themselves by partitioning Turkey and the German colonies among them. Such a settlement would leave Ger many and Austria-Hungary in a posi tion to recuperate and to seek new alliances as the preliminary to a new effort at expansion. STANDARDIZING SHIPS. Why not the "standardized" steam ship? The subject was broached in the United States a few years ago, but before definite progress" has been made on this side of the Atlantic the announcement comes that one of the large German trans-Atlantic lines al ready has launched the scheme, prep aratory to putting it into effect after the war. Briefly, it is to cover the ocean, figuratively speaking, with tramp steamers of convenient size for average requirements, in a systematic effort to capture the sea-carrying trade of the world or that part of the world that does not make trade embargoes against them. Experience has proved that a vessel of from 3000 to 4000 tons' cargo ca pacity is the most practical size. In asmuch as in high-speed craft the last few knots are obtained at dispropor tionate cost for fuel, no effort will be made to break speed records. Twelve to fifteen sea miles an hour is a good working speed, economical as to fuel and labor cost. Since there are many harbors in remote parts of the earth that are not standardized and since also drydock facilities, are more or less subject to similar drawbacks, it is pro posed to build vessels of moderate draft and of modest length but of good beam, to give great freight capacity with the smallest expenditure. The scheme contemplates more than this, however. Having decided on a type of steamer that experience has proved to be of greatest all-around serviceability, it is proposed to stan dardize the propelling power, just as would be done by an automobile con cern that ordered its engines by whole sale. This will enable the owners to provide additional parts at various ports of call for use in any emergency. It is regarded as possible to carry the idea of standardization to the last de gree of minuteness. Even the bolts and rods, it is said, can be made with the view to their widest employment. By a carefully thought-out method of construction, it will be possible to re duce the number of specially made parts 'almost to the irreducible mini mum. The ultimate aim of the build ers is to produce a ship pattern that will enable the practical reconstruc tion of one vessej out of the integral constituents of another. Loading ap paratus would be made according to the same rule. The United States just now occupies a prominent place in shipbuilding. We are now building ships at the rate of one a day. To be exact, there were at the date of the last report 368 ships under contract, to be completed within a year. The number is likely to grow as we enlarge our yard facilities, since the demand is outrunning the supply and we have not yet made up for war wastage alone. But except that we sometimes build what are commonly called "sister ships," we have done little toward "standardization." Even sister ships do not attain the practical mark. Though it robs the sea of some of its romance, there Is nothing inherent ly difficult in the scheme from a me chanical point of view. We already have standard parts in steel-building construction: patterns have been adopted for types of railway cars; ag ricultural Implement makers have the system down to a fine point, and many automobiles owe the success of their "service" features to the same policy. It is quite distinctly a move in the di rection of better vessels for the money, and it promises to deliver the goods when the great contest for mastery of the world's commerce begins again. Experimental use of Chinese labor in France and Russia, in order to set free more of the men of those coun tries for the armies, promises to give Europe a taste of the problem which confronted the Pacific Coast some years ago, when peace shall have been declared and the white men return to their homes and begin seeking their old jobs. There will be a difference, however,, in the respect that while our Chinese immigration came chiefly from the southern provinces, the Chi nese now going to Europe are from the north, are of a robust type and are believed to be capable of a high degree of training In the mechanical arts. They are to be employed, in mu nition factories, in fields and on the docks. The contract system is em ployed and the new workers are to re ceive wages unheard of in their own country, half of their pay being re tained by the contracting company for their families at home. Preliminary arrangements contemplate dispensing with the services of Chinese as soon as the war is over. WAR AXD HUMAX PROGRESS. Efforts to draw conclusions from history as to whether war has helped or hindered the progress of the human race are shown by James Bryce, ex British Ambassador to the United States, to be made difficult by the fact that mankind has lived in a state of practically permanent warfare. Writing In the Atlantic, Lord Bryce notes that the Egyptian and Assyrian monarchs were always fighting and that the author of the Book of Kings speaks of the Spring as the time when Kings go forth to war, "much as we should speak of Autumn as the time when men go forth to shoot deer." War, he quotes Plato as saying, is the natural relation of states to one an other, and he observes that the fact has been hardly less true since Plato's day. Except in rare instances, a state of peace has been uncommon, either among civilized states or ' barbarous tribes. The case of Greece proves that war and progress are compatible. The case of Rome, he says, is still more often dwelt upon. In the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, in cessant wars between the cities of Italy did not prevent the growth of a brilliant literature and an even more brilliant art. Lord Bryce does not be lieve, however, that there is anything in Italian history to show a causal connection between intellectual activ ity and the practice of war. He is loth to concede anything to the god of war, and is inclined to insist that the nations would have made even more progress if not interrupted by de structive conflicts, but he freely pre sents facts that, to say the least, con trovert those pessimists who assert that as a result of warfare the bel ligerents must necessarily recede in the scale of civilization. For example,- Lord Bryce, though himself an Englishman, discusses the progress of Prussia in a spirit of emi nent fairness, and says that ever since she became the nucleus of a united nation her production, her wealth and her commerce have rapidly increased, while, at the same time, scientific re search has been prosecuted with the greatest vigor and on a scale unpre cedentedly large. "These things," he remarks, "were no doubt achieved during a peace of forty-three years, but it was what one may call a bel ligerent peace, full of thoughts of war and preparations for war." He adds: "There is no denying that the national spirit has been carried to a high point of pride, energy and self-confidence, which have stimulated effort in all di rections and secured extraordinary ef ficiency in civil as well as military ad ministration." This he regards as a clear instance in whicrr a state has grown by war and a people has been energized by war. Painstaking as the author is, he as sorts his cases into groups, and pre sents also those which seem to show that absence of war has been attended by absence of progress. As has been noted, these instances are rare, because so few countries have enjoyed, or had the chance of suffering from, periods of long peace." One historical instance is supplied, however, by the Spanish dominions in America for two and a half centuries, before they won their independence from the mother coun try. This vast country, from Califor nia to Patagonia, "lay lapped in peace" unbroken except for an occasional raid by sea rovers or by minor skirmishes with native Indian tribes. And these colonies certainly did stagnate, with out either material or intellectual ad vance. Lord Bryce is Inclined to look for other causes than peace, however, for this result, and he thinks that government that was at the same time autocratic and incapable, coupled with Isolation from the revivifying influ ence of Europe, might easily explain everything. China, another case often cited, he does not admit as wholly in line. He declares that on the one hand China early in her life reached a civilization remarkable for its moral and intellectual as well as material perfection. The example of China. however, as Lord Bryce himself views it, does not altogether harmonize with its classification as illustrating lack of progress in periods of long peace, for he declares that there has always been a good deal of fighting more than Is commonly supposed on the out skirts of the empire, and in the Tao Ping Insurrection forty years ago sev eral millions of men are said to have been killed. Yet the fact that prog ress has been slow in recent times he is inclined to attribute to national iso lation, with no nation near her from which she had anything to learn. On the side of war that has not been accompanied by progress. Lord Bryce makes reference to the Thirty Years' War in Europe, which "inflicted in juries on Germany from which she was two centuries recovering," and the history of the South and Central American republics, including the ter rible war of thirty years ago, in which Peru was overcome by Chile. Social and economic conditions, he says, no doubt were against progress there, but it is to be remembered also that war apparently did not better those con ditions.' Quite frankly puzzled to arrive at a conclusion from the contradictory facts of history, he nevertheless regards one outstanding statement as proved. It is this: AH that can be safely said to be proved by history is that a race that cannot fight or will not fight when a proper occasion arises, as, for instance, when it has to vindicate its independence, is ltkelv to go down, and be subjected or absorbed. Tet the fact that a state Is subjected or ab sorbed does not prove its inferiority. There is no poetical Justice in history. Scant satisfaction, though, to the disappearing nation, it would appear! Consciousness that its inferiority . has not been proved seems hardly suffi cient recompense for extermination. Against the disadvantages of war, against the conditions created by,war which are unfavorable to progress in the higher forms of literary and scien tific work. Lord Bryce is willing to place "that stimulus which a great war Is held to give to the life of a whole people." He offers the argu ment, for what it may be worth, that "when it rouses them to the maximum of effort, and gives them the strongest consciousness of national unity, it may invigorate them for intellectual crea tion." It would be rash, he adds, to deny this possibility, but he does not believe that a causal relation has been traced between war and the produc tion of great work in art and letters. These often have- coincided, but so. also, has each often appeared with out the other. The final conclusion reached is that "isolation retards progress, while inter course quickens it." -The great crea tive epochs are declared to be those in which one people of natural vigor re ceived an intellectual impulse from the ideas of another. Lord Bryce would reject the theory of Trietschke. He discredits an assumption which he regards as "noxious as well as base less." He would seek future progress of mankind, not through the strifes and hatreds of nations, but rather by their friendly co-operation in the heal ing and enlightening works of peace. HOIAX FACTOR IX ACCIDEXTS. JJespite all the efforts of employers and inventors of safeguards for ma chinery and organizers of systems for the protection of workers, one factor remains obdurate. It is what, is called the "human factor" and it defies all efforts at prevention. This Is illus trated again by recent increases in New York in the number of industrial accidents of the kind commonly classed as preventable, coming at a time when there has just been an ex ceptional effort to enforce the factory laws and when employers and the pub lic generally have still fresh in mind the educational propaganda conducted by safety-first advocates all over the state. The chief statistician of the State Labor Commission explains that the increase is due to the rapid expansion of business, involving as a natural con sequence two other reasons. In the first instance there has been a demand for workmen which has necessitated the employment of large numbers of inexperienced hands. These have been among the chief recent sufferers, as the figures show. Another cause of accidents has been the desire of all concerned to increase output as much as possible. Piece scales have been increasingly adopted and the workers in many instances have thrown cau tion to the winds in their haste to add to their earnings. Both these facts reflect the human element in accidents as distinguished from the physical safeguards, the statistician is con vinced. Another significant feature of re cent industrial accidents is that a rela tively small proportion are due to ma chinery. Allowance also must be made in comparative figures for the fact that workmen's compensation laws In themselves insure much more complete returns. Whereas under the old sys tem of reports minor injuries were likely to be passed by without notice, now practically everything appears in the reports. We have gone almost as far as it is humanly possible in the way of me chanical prevention of injury to work men. There is no factory without its safeguards, and as a rule these are as complete as it is possible to make them. Automatic devices for checking the voluntary acts of the operator are in general use. The railroads only re cently have discovered that they can prevent the breakage of rails except in an insignificant proportion of cases. But there is much remaining to be done, and it is all in the direction of the education of the individual. Where caution is not an inborn trait, it seems to be difficult of acquirement. The hardest part of the task seems to be proving to be the education of the workman himself. A XATIOXAC DANCE. There is disappointment, no doubt widespread, general and illy, if at all concealed, now that the National As sociation of Dancing Masters has ad journed its convention and gone home without fulfilling its promise to give us a National dance. When the asso ciation first met, the future was full of promise. No obstacles seemed to be in the way; the need of National expression of our terpsichorean indi viduality was admitted; it was said that the dance was even then in the process of incubation and would sure ly be announced within a few days. But nothing was done. We are back to our old-fashioned waltzes and polkas, and our newer-fangled tango and our bunny hug, which are not. properly speaking, American dances at all, and we are still expressionless, so far as our light-footed aspirations are concerned. It Is a cruel world, espe cially for the young. Just what is desired in a National dance it would, perhaps, be difficult to define in .words. We are not prl marily a Nation given to excess of merriment. Our beginnings were rather of the solemn and determined sort. It i3 true that our forefathers were bent on achieving the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happi ness, but the manner of their going about it was rather lugubrious, on the whole. There was a time, perhaps, when a witches' dance would have been subtly expressive, but to adopt it now would be unfair to the present generation and an unnecessary and tactless reflection upon our well meaning if misguided progenitors. Somehow, the tired business man's glide does not fill the bill. The tired business man has been done to death and it is doubtful If he Is fLa tired as he Is reputed to be. Anyway, he i not fully representative of our Nation the tired one is not. We still have a good deal of vigor left, and if there is to be a dance to interpret the way we feel it must be something alto gether full of life, if not of fun. The natives 'of Madagascar have a dance from which we might learn something we who have pioneered In the wilderness and made our homes In the forests and on the hills. It is called the rice dance, but any other grain would do as well. It begins with a figure in which the dancers go through the motions of clearing the land. Swinging their arms rhythmically to the sound of torn toms and kettle drums, they show how they would wield the ax; then they pile the brush and fan the flames while the last vestige of the treetops burns. This is vigorous practice, but since it is in the form of dancing, no one tires of it. Presently and successively the merrymakers go through the sym bolical motions of plowing and har rowing and sowing the seed and cov ering it, and the National dance ends with an Invocation to the gods for a bountiful crop. Such is the expression of the life of a simple people. It Is, In a way, a parallel of the lives of a good many pioneer peoples. Its cul mination in the hope of a harvest is not unworthy; some sort of harvest is what most of us are hoping for. Complaint Is made that in their dan cing Americans fair to give Interpre tation to their spirituality: that there is lack of appreciation of beauty, such as the Japanese show in their cherry blossom dance; that Americans are at a disadvantage, in the opinion of one authority on dancing, even when com pared with the South Sea Islanders. Carolyn Coffin, who writes about dan cing in an appreciative vein, says that "one, two, three, kick" is as far as Americans ever have progressed to ward artistry. We are too gymnastic and not emotional enough. There is too much display of muscle and too little worship of beauty for the sake of beauty. Perhaps it is true. But that is not all-there is to the arraignment. We do not know that dancing in its highest sense is the elemental ex pression of art. that it came even be fore singing, that it was originally a religious ceremony. Ail these facts are, indeed, lost on us, as anyone will realize who has seen a country dance in full swing, with perspiration oozing even from the foreheads of the mu sicians. The trouble seems to be that we are a Nation that simply cannot learn to play; we are so accustomed to work that we make work even of our more joyous forms of so-called amusement. This is heretical, from the viewpoint of art. Yet. believing as most Americans do, that work is a form of consecration, what better ex pression could be found ? The priests of Egypt danced, and so did the ancient Hebrews. The Greeks called it the "art of expressive gesture," and developed it to the high est plane, perhaps, that it ever at tained. They made it a language. Gait, body movements, even immobil ity, says one enthusiastic writer, were governed by its laws. The Greeks are credited with having neglected busi ness to dance, in which, however, they have imitators in a more recent day. The Romans borrowed from the Greeks, but they perfected theatrical dancing, and when the dance lan guished in Rome for a time, the per secuted Christians revived it secretly as a religious rite, asserting the au thority of Scripture in justification. citing David, who danced before the Ark of the Covenant, the women who celebrated David's historical feat. and other incidents. There was. too, a dark age in dancing, and another revival with the age of chival ry, in which warriors danced in har ness, laying themselves open to the charge now made against Americans, of making work of their play. France gave the dance" a grotesque turn; the false nose was so much a feature of the dance In the day of Louis Philippe that the making of false noses was an important industry of the country. It was out of this era of pomp and court ceremony that the public dance of the present day grew. The folk dances of the people were put aside for dances in public halls because of the passion of the people to imitate the court. Their own rooms were too small, so public halls and public dances came Into vogue. There was a spirit of keeping up with the Joneses, then as there is now. It would be difficult by decree of an association of modern dancing mas ters to create in America a new spirit of dancing. For one thing, we have no "peasant classes," and all agree that in modern Europe it is the peas ants to whom the National dances are due. It is said that the peasant is able to convey the most subtle of messages of joy, of hope and of spiritual long ing but it may be that as much is due to his interpreters as to himself in this regard. Extravagant tales are told of the dancers of the almost fairy days of long ago. There is a legend of Dalmatia that will bear repeating. It is of a brigand who, on being cap tured, feigned death. Fire was built on his breast without causing him to wince. A serpent was laid on his body. and sundry Middle-Age tortures were resorted to, without avail. Then dan cers were called on to perform in the room where he lay. He could not re sist the spell, but smiled joyously and betrayed himself. However improba ble the tale, it has Its believers, and it is typical of many that illustrate the gap between a people imbued with art and a people such as we are, who never can hope to attain a National state of mind even approaching it. It looks as if the task of creating a Na tional dance for Americans would prove a thankless and probably a hopeless one. Yet purely as. a form common alike to the bashi-bazouk and to the child in the streets, it contin ues to be a vehicle of individual, when not of National, expression everywhere. Lo the poor Indian has become Lo the rich Indian on the Osage reser vation. Members of the Osage tribe are rated as worth $20,000 each, on the books of the Indian Office, and Secretary Lane, of the Department of the Interior, has recently approved leases running for five years by which the Osage Indians rent for five years their valuable oil lands. Thomas F. Logan, writing in Leslie's, estimates that this will increase the average per capita income from $600 to $1000 a year. There are about 2000 of these Indians and they are in sharp contrast to the redskin of our dime novel read ing days. Many of them are well edu cated, all have comfortable homes and it is saia mat tney even show signs of thrift, which never has been re garded as an attribute of the Indian in any state of civilization. The area of the land involved in the new leases is about 6 80.000 acres. An average yield of only twelve bushels of wheat to the acre, even with allowance for crop destruction clearly indicates the need of more careful study of agricultural methods. The Irreducible minimum will soon be reached, at the rate we are going, and the farmers of the Nation as a whole cannot continue to raise their crops at a loss. Philadelphians are said to have hailed as a discovery the making of denatured alcohol from rye. A good quality of spirits has long been made from this and other grains, and the denaturing process is quite apart from the making of the alcohol Itself. Phil adelphia has simply been asleep again. It is only the domestic goose that is the symbol of stupidity. His wild brother seems to know more than man has been able to learn about the pass ing of the seasons, and the flight of geese southward Is ono of the most reliable indications that Summer is gone. Even with the farm-loan banks, the farmer will still need to work for his living. There are doubtless some who are counting too much on borrowing to make them rich. They should re member that there will be a day of reckoning, just the same. John Burroughs, who has camped out a good deal of his life and is now in his '8 0s, admits that he has got to the point where a bed seems pretty good to sleep in. Another evidence that the race is getting soft. The Episcopal church may as well eliminate the word "obey" from its marriage service. The women elimi nated obedience long ago. Life has its compensations. As the vacation season nears its close, we are relieved of the necessity of deciding on a place to go. Both the entente allies and the cen tral powers are doing their best to make work for the bureau of geo graphic names. A few days ahead of time, perhaps, but Autumn is not so bad, after all. Gleam;. Through the Mist Br Dean Collin. THE LEV1TATIOX MVSTEHY or SOXGS OP THE RISING OP BREAD. Ode to the Cost of Living. Hail to thee, blithe spirit; Bird thou never wert. But to heaven or near it Thou dost make a spurt. So doggone high, to see thee makes my poor eyes hurt. Higher still and higher From the earth thou springestj All that I require Which the grocer bringest. In its cost doth soar and upward ever wingest. We look both up and after And pine for what Is not; And the grocer's laughteV With our pain is fraught, For as thou acroplanest, O how shalt thou be caught? Better than all measures Of delightful sojind: Better than, all treasures That in books are found; It were to see thee coming again in sight of ground. In the days whenn Shelley Did to skylarks write. It is safe to tell, he Had not seen thy flight Out-skylarking the best records of the skylark's might. Otherwise the gladness That his brain could knotv Had been turned to sadness And from his lips would flow A yelp of bitter protest like I'm yelp ing now. Hail to thee, blithe spirit. Bird thou never wert. But to heaven, or near It, I will bet my shirt The cost of living will arise in this premeditated spurt. CHORUS (GRAXDIOSO.) Oh-ho say, can you see-e-e. By the dawn's early light. What so loudly we wailed At the twilight's last beaming. Up so high in the air. Darned near out of our sight. While our income for help Was distressfully screaming? Oh, our coffee and cake, 4 And our rolls and our steak, . Have become so expensive It makes our heart ache. (FORTISSIMO.) 'Tis the high cost of living. It lo-hong ma-hakes uh-hus ra-a-a-avj In this la-hand of the f ree-he-e-e-e. And the ho-home of the brave! (During the singing the audience will stand up on stepladders if possible to be nearer the subject of its song, which will be seen volplaning above the proscenium arch.) Hobtalled Ballade of the Bakers' Bono, As up went flour, down, down the bakers sat To plan a plan to meet the cost that rose. To figure out just where they might be at And some sort of a remedy propose; And what they've done, too well the whole world knows. They've cut the sizes of their bread once more. And the consumer mumbles, mid his woes, "Where are the buns and biscuits built of yore?" The B-cent loaf the bakers tell it, "Scat!" The 10-cent loaf in smaller sizes grows; The cookies shall be thinner and more flat. As higher still the soaring flour price goes; The staff of life, as comes the sca son's close. Becomes too short to lean on any more. And the consumer cometh to depose; "Where are the buns and biscuits built of yore?" L'ENVOI. Baker, for us in sooth an ill wind blows. And so forgive consumers if they j roar. While for still smaller loaves your oven glows Where are the buns and biscuits) built of yore? Interlude. (UEDUCKD TO 5-CEN'T SIZE.) The baker cried "I knead the dough To pay the miller men who rob: I need the dousrh so much you know, I'll have to loaC loss on the job." To get more dough- I'll use less dough, Alas it is the only way, I'll use le"ss dough and so, and so Loaf less and le.--s from day to day." "Sir." said the Courteous Office Boy, and munched a buttered roll, "the bread each day, doth fade away, unto my bitter dole." "Aye. aye!" I sighed in accents grim, and snatched the buttered roll from him. "The loaves each day they trim In weight." went on the Courteous Office Boy. "until I fear that soon or late they will exhaust avoirdupois." "Oh, oh!" 1 cried and then; "O-o-o! O-o-o! (iood C. O. B., what will we do, when they no more can peddle round, bread in the old 16-ounce pound?" "Ha-ha!" replied the C. O. Boy. "They'll have to use the weight of Troy " "And thus." in chorus then we said, "we'll ask the baker for our bread " Brrnd Line Song. rat-a-cake, pat-a-cake. Baker Man! Sell me a roll as quick as you can: Weigh it by ounces and carats of Troy For me and the Courteous Office Boy. Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake. Baker Man! Two grains of brown bread I'll have if I can. Also, a couple of ounces of pies. And a loaf of French bread of a ten carat size. (Changing the record slightly.) Hot cross buns, hot cross buns. Fourteen carat, eighteen carat Hot cross buns Trot, trot to market To buy a loaf of bread; Trot, trot back again Let's buy a farm instead. To market, to market To buy a plum bun Home again, home it cost Ten cents for one. i