THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, AUGUST 24, 1919. rvriBListrr bi hiit u prrrerK Published by The Oreronraa Publishing Co.. 1U Sixth eltreet. loruand, Oregon. C A- MORPKN. E. B. PIPER. Idansrer. Bditor. The Orson la n ta a mnnW of the Ajwh elated Prena. Ttie Associated Press is ex rlualvely entitled to the use for publica tion of air ni dispatches credit;! to it or rot otherwise credited tn this paper and al-o the local news published herein. All rTTT.ita of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Sabacrlptlasi Raise Invariably tm Advance: (By MaiL) Ta!ry. Bandar Included, one year ...... .$V0O Iaily. f 'jndar Included, six months .... 4.-5 J u y, Sunday included, three months ... 2.39 Tai!y. Sunder Included, one month ..... ." iJailv, wtrhont Sunday, one year ........ 6.00 r-sily, without Sunday, six months ..... 3-5 Tlly. without Sunday, on month ...... -AO VI eekly. one year .. . .......... l.OO funday. one year 2 AO fcuaday and weekly s.30 By Carrier.) Taily. Sunday included, one year .. . ... .19.00 Jity. Sunday included, one month ..... -79 I'ewly. Sunday Included, three months ... 2 2S rily. without Sunday, one year 7-0 Ieily. without Sunday, three months ... 1.05 Ijatiy. without Sunday, on month ' .65 How to Remit Send postofflco money or der, express or personal check on your local rnn. Stamps, coin or currency aro at own er's risk. litve pnetoffice address in full. In cluding county and state. Fo-tmxe Kate 12 to 1 pares. 1 cent: 18 to 32 paces, ;i cents; 54 to 4- pas-?. 3 cents: an to tp pages. 4 cents: t'Z to 74 pages. 5 cents: 7 to K2 paces, cents. Foreign post age, aoubie rales. aaeterw Bnsineee Office Verreo St Conk- Itn. siruuewlck bunding. New lork; Verree A C onklln. .Steger building. Chicago: Verre sc t'onkitn. Free PTess building, letrolt. Mich. ran rrancisco representative. K j. tfldvrcll. Indians. He had the prophetic instinct forgotten the place, and anyhow he keeping; dictated by business policy. of PIOXRER THRIFT. The thrift and industry of the early Oregon pioneers would go a lone way in times like these toward solving- the Men cost of living- problem. It Is sig nificant of a good man v thlns-a that I the mlxsinnftrv forerunner nf tha larger immigration movements were the first, as the Rev. Jason Lee once pointed out, to bring- plows into the western country. The plow was. and still Is. pre-eminently the symbol of production. "Probably," said Lee in his address before the mission board ln1844, defending his policy tn Ore gon, "three thousand more bushels of wheat were raised last year than if the setUers had not had the advantages afforded by the missionaries. Lee himself mentioned with pardonable pride that he had cradled his share of wheat in the field. The measure of a man's merit was the amount of work he could do. There wereexceptions. but they were not in good standing 1 that community. The speculator, too. was in disfavor. One of the most interesting chapters of our early history is that In which tha Rev. Mr. Lee defends his brethren and himself against a charge "speculation, but shows on how pit! fully small a scale any possible specu lacions might have been conducted. It certainly was not speculation in the sense of profiteering in which the word has come lately to be employed. "There might be a shadow of truth in that, said Lee, reciting the charge marie by the Rev. Mr. Hines. "When they first went out they bought horses to-rids and cows to milk. Some sold ff.the young cattle: others let tbemJ increase; Brother Parrish made a lit tie money that way, perhaps $100, on year. He and others kept hogs as your preachers do tn this country, and thus got his pork a little cheaper. He and others would go out and look for a cow that had calved for a quarter of a qay. I did not think It right to spend as much time as some did on their own business, and I told them so.1 The drat Impression one obtains now from reading the story of the earlier days of the white settlement of the Onegon- country is this impression of serf-denying, incessant toil. Lee was charged before the board with mis directing his enterprise into unauthor ized channels and exceeding the au thortty vested in him. and he had been aceused by a colleague of having made souse personal profit from very minor trrwtisactlons. It seems worth men tinting that he defended himself with gr4t warmth against the latter accti s-itlon. He called the chairman to wit- lieHi (as the chairman did witness) th.tt when he first offered to go to Ore- god. and it was proposed to give him a larger salary, he had said: "God for bid that the time should ever come when a minister of the Methodist Episcopal church would take into ac toiint the prospect of pecuniary ad- atatage above what preachers have at ho Sue. as an Inducement to go Into missionary fields." He had refused to accept more than the rate of pay re ceived at home. He had an humble confession to make. Once he had been teased by a Dr. Richmond to buy the tatter's rifle for 30. He had done so and when he got home with it a man had offered him $50 for it. He had accepted the offer quickly. Twenty doll irs must have looked large to missionary then. He was sorry that he had speculated In this way. not be- rairse he believed he had done any thing radically wrong, but because of the. une that was made of the rifle. "The Oregon committee." said Lee, must remember that I told them that the. question to be asked the applicant should be: Doea your wife want to goT" The issue then under discus sloa was the personnel of the early missionary expeditions. There had been discontent In the ranks. A nega tive answer to the question, said Lee, ought to satisfy the committee that su-h a person ought not to be se lected. "Actually several families were dragged several thousand miles, some of whom would have returned on the err steamer that took them to the ship. Lee added: It Is a bard lot to so so far from hems. flea from cars and anxiety, but to endurs neb a veyar with a companion all tbe time locking back to loot and reproaching- one for . haetns drawn her from that homo Is sees than almost anyons can endure. The bearing of this sage observa tion on the situation In Oregon mis sionary circles is Illustrated In many ways. A heavy burden fell upon the women; their rewards, unless they happily were content with only spir itual emolument, were hardly ever commensurate with their labor and sacrifice. "My wife," said Lee to the missionary board, "well earned her own living. In addition to her domes tic .labors for the mission, which were heavy, she made clothing for the In dian children In the school. All the proceeds of her work for others. went Into tha mission fund. This, he added, was the case with both his wives. In eleven years he had re ceived $1300: he had lived most of the) time without table expenses. The superintendent of a mission was ex pected to give more than . others to various causes. He had sold, he said, the clothing of both his deceased wives to meet demands upon him. In travel- ins, he had not spent more than $3 In all at hotels. He had frequently lived on crackers and cheese, so earnest was he. in his desire to save for the cause in which he labored. Lee had. probably, a larger vision than the board that sent him to the Oregon country- He was right, as we now view it. In placing emphasis upon the Influence of the missions upon the whit settlers, rather than upon the which foresaw tha west as a white man's country: he took pride In the fact that certain regions had been made tolerably safe not against hos tile redskins, but against a certain class of whites. It was a view that was to be shared by others. About the same time, in 1841, Dr. Marcus Whitman was writing to his parents a letter in which he said: 1 have no doubt our greatest work is to aid the white settlement of this country and help to found Its religious - institutions. Providence has its full share in these evonta. A'though the Indians have made and are mak;ng rapid advance, in religious knowledge and civlllsaUon. yet it cannot bo hoped that time will be allowed to mature either the work of ChrUtlanliatlon or civilization bo- fore the white settlers will demand the soil and seek the removal of both the Indians and the -mission. What Americans desire of this kind tbey always effect, and It la equally futile to oppose or desire it other wise. . . . Indeed. I am fully convinced that when a people refuse or neglect to fill toe -designs of providence, they ought not to complain at the rmmultm; and so it Is squally useless for Christiana Jo be anxious on their account. The Indians have In no case obeyed the command to multiply and re plenish the earth, and they cannot stand in the way of the others in doing so. ... No oxcluslveoeas can bo asked for any por tion of the human family. The exerclso of his rights Is all that can bo desired. In order for this to attain Its proper extent In regard to the Indiana, It is necessary that they seek to preserve their rights by peaeable means only. Any vlolstlon or this rule wm be visited with only evil results to them selves. Well, time has shown that this was indeed meant to be a white man's country. The pioneers saw that the law of use must be made to apply: that no race so wasteful of its re sources as the Indians could hope to retain moral title to the soil. But the ptoneers at the same time set the ex ample of use in Its highest practical sense. They were neither wasteful' nor improvident: ' they subscribed to the gospel of work and of production and thrift. Thus they justified the taking of the country from the Indians. Can it be said that all their successors are equally justifying themselves? doesn't care. There are plenty of Tbe real question is the aggregate other buyers who will be as heedless percentage of profit on the aggregate as you have been. I capital invested in all the affiliated I now the thoughtless citizen, per-1 companies. mitting a succession of such ex-1 A denial that control of half of an periences to -embitter him, will be In-I industry carries practical control of clined to inveigh against retail mer- the whole is contradicted by experi chants in general. Which, of course, ence with other big combinations, is rank injustice to the much larger The Standard Oil company controlled class who realize that honesty is the ! oil and the Steel corporation controlled best policy, even if it is not also good I steel with slightly larger percentage of morals. . It probably is capable or I control. The bulk of capital and the proof that merchandising in general j degree of business'abllity that are con Is on a higher plane now than it ever I centrated in the hands of five closely has been. "The occasional exception I controlled packing companies gives by no means vitiates the rule. . I those companies a power to dictate to A certain responsibility rests upon their smaller competitors which it is the buyer. We need a little more of only human to exercise. The fact that the disposition to insist upon getting! that power exists argues that it is precisely what we have paid ior, ana used.- . that goods shall be Just what they are The report of the federal trade represented to be. The sum involved commission has only confirmed gen may be- small, but there is- a prin- era! public knowledge as to the decree ciple behind it. One way to compel to which the Backers have extended square dealing is to stop trading with control over the food supply, not only those who shortsightedly believe the of this but of other countries. The present nickel is worth more than the alarm prevailing in this country is ex- ruiure aoiiar. it is particularly un- pressed in EuroDe also. The rjeonle are fair to honest merchants to brand not now concerned with the manner In them all with the same iron. It is not which nor with the reasons why this a sign of parslmoniousness to protest I control came about. It is a condition. against being cheated. The better not a theory, which confronts them. class of merchants welcome inspec- That control carries with it power to tion; the other kind are unfair com- extort profits and to oppress. Not to petitors and deserve no consideration. use this power bespeaks an almost superhuman degree of unselfishness. HOW SHOES WKNT TP. -wiiii which the public refuses to credit the Mayflower does not increase as it might reasonably be expected to do. In the days of their early hardships the excellent New England stock of which we are so fond of boasting held its own fairly well against interloping strains. In a time of greater ease of living it does not continue to main tain itself. It has even been esti mated that at the present rate of de cline the Mayflower descendants will be practically extinct in 150 years. This suggests that there may be a practical lesson as well as an occasion for philosophical reflection in the coming celebration. We owe so much to the pilgrims that it would seem to be a practical duty to save the race from the extermination which nowj appears'to threaten them. MO UPSET LIKELY. Only a languid interest may be con fessed in the herculean effort of ex Senator Bailey to organize a new po litical party of old-time democrats in Texas. There Is room enough in Texas, to be sure, for several parties; but long-time habit and the bugaboo of negro domination have been ade quate to hold a vast majority loosely together in the democratic organization. Tet Senator Bailey has without doubt struck the keynote of a consid erable sentiment In the south when he starts out to make war on the uplift and the new era generally. His plat form Is one of opposition and is thus defined by the New York Evening Post: Opposition to constitutional amendment without direct popular vote; opposition to unconstitutional legislation enacted under the pretext that it answers constitutional purposes: to the undermining of stato rights; to woman suffrage; to the tendency to regu late everything: to tho extravagance of gov ernment; to government operation of rail ways; to monopoly and Socialism alike: to the curbing of free speech; to class legis lation; to tho league of nations. A rather complete programme of negation and it should suit the spirit of the reactionary south. But the south lacks courage and the new party will probably not lead to any surprising political upsets. Texas and the south know Bailey and they know the democratic party. They will take no chances in being led astray by the one or In abandoning the other. New parties do not thrive. The old demo cratic party has first and last served tbe sectional south faithfully. Mr. Bailey says he does not want to hold office again. It is unanimous. The story of hides, leather and 1110 Packers, though they may have shoes, as told by the federal trade ' moaerauon. . . I Whether the packers have done right comm.ss.ou, is an examp.e or. me man- wr(Jn& ,n acquiring or elerclsYng net ui euii.il uisucr jintra suu vuu tnis control, the people in general ob- have been pyramided during the war. ject to being dependent for several es- Hldes rose, packer hides much more sential articles of food on any small than country hides, a fact which is group of men. ascribed to control by the packers. The occasion calls for an impartial Cost of producing leather doubled, inquiry into the facts, aimed to elim- and S5 per cent of the increase was inate a danger to the public safety. aue to increased cost oi maes, DUt tne That requires no criminal prosecu percentage of profit, increased enor- tions, no raids on safe deposit vaults, mously, the number of companies no sleuthing by Heney, but it re earning 20 per cent trebling between quires that all the cards be laid on the 1914 and 1917. table, by the packers as by all others. For the shoe manufacturer cost of The public is tired of grandstand at leather increased over 60 jper cent, tempts to "put the beef barons in other materials in the same propor- jail" which never get anywhere. It tion. labor and general expenses in a does not want to confiscate their prop less ratio, but "selling prices Increased erty. It does want to break the con- I at a somewhat greater rate than costs" centrated control, which extends all Meet of their quest. Geber writes OCT DEBT TO SCIENCE. There is a style of mind that is im pervious to the influence of facts. It delights, having taken a position in opposition to progress, in assembling trifling exceptions and constructing them Into rules. Science, says one of these, is a fraud. And he supports his contention with an array of incidents like these: After a learned scientist had estimated the age of a petrified shingle found in the Eads Jetties to be 3000 rears, a nail found in It made In Pittsburg- 20 years be fore. A California professor announced the age of a stalactite to be 4000 years; an old farmer replied that he remembered when there were none at all there. A Michiean wise man examined an Indian mound and stated its aye tb be S5t) years; a farmer re plied that he had built It himself. In 1814, a skeleton, believed by them to have com from so-called primitive man, proved to. bt that of a Cossack soldier. A New Yorh City scientist, after exhibiting a skeleton found by himself 150 feet below the sur face, was discomfited to learn that his friend, a practical joker, had placed It there. Another of these joyfully proclair.ed to the world the finding in Colorado cf the re mains of the true "missing link." His en thusiasm was short-lived, however, for a few weeks later a cowboy advertised, offer ing a reward for the return of his pet mon key, whose grave had been robbed. Meanwhile men of science toil un ceasingly on, sometimes blindly, but always in one direction. Doubts re solve themselves into certainties; cer tain ties become doubts again; yet something is gained. The ancient al chemists, seeking the philosopher's stone, pave the way to substantial di coveries in no wise related to the ob as a golden age of science, and when we contemplate the possibilities of the twentieth we are prepared to believe every prophet. There are men now living who have seen the telegraph come into being, the first Atlantic cable laid, the first traction engine doing the work of the horse and the ox, the first mower, and reaper, and combined harvester; the first photo graph, the first incandescent lamp, the first gas light, anesthesia, artificial limbs, antiseptic surgery; aniline dyes and all the chemistry, physical and therapeutical, that has flowed from them; the first petroleum, which has given us gasoline, and the first high speed steel, which has put a new face on tool-making; the first typewriter and perfecting printing press, the first skating rink. Wireless telegraphy is a memory of comparative youth. And wonders do not cease. Yet we fall into error if we think ours the only century of wisdom, or the only one in which scientists labored that we might enjoy. The failures of the past, no less than the successes of the present, have been part of the eternal scheme. A few names stand out. The unknown workers, too, deserve their monument. Theirs were substantial, though im ponderable, contributions to the result. and out of 25( companies more than the way from the live steer to the one-third earned 25 per cent more in butcher shop and from the United 1917, while only aoout one-slxtn States to Argentina and EuroDe. for earned this much in 1914. the sufficient reason that such nower While the retailers paid much more is not healthy for the consumer or for tor snoes in isis man isi. tney those who nossess it. added much more profit in the later rnur on flvncra nf tl fin rtmr n.ip a a eralr,r 11 In 1411 thnnp-h Tho rolo. n.'l"U. UI xn-T. BJtiruitllB, me cuwing ceieoration oi tne ter TT6 TOvf-Jf BAND. The Hood River Glacier gives great prominence to announcement of the organization of a band of thirty pieces by the Knights of Pythias. New In struments and new uniforms will be secured, and the members say ac cording to the Glacier "that the new musical body will assist the promotion of all local civic and patriotic move ments." Despise not the town band, but support it, appreciate It and listen to it. As the character of a community may be judged by its newspapers or its churches, so its spirit may be tested by the quality of its brass band. Is the band slouchy in looks, lacking in liveliness, ragged in discipline and a stranger to tunefulness? " Look for sloth in civic works, broken sidewalks. dirty streets, unkempt lawns, unweed ed gardens, quarreling neighbors. un pain ted churches and backward schools. Has the band bright uni forms, competent leadership, eager ness to practice, willingness to play, interest in public affairs, and a place n every public programme? Look for a town that is pushing forward. respects itself, keeps clean, wants place in the sun, and will get it. The brass band Is not alone the bul wark and ornament of progress, pride and culture in the smaller centers, but is the indispensable agent of go ahead-ativeness, the sign and expres sion of community harmony and social progress in the larger places. A city without a brass band is a dreary waste of stagnation, indifference, inharmony and ignorance. Life Is not worth liv ing there. It Is not lived. It is endured. Let every town In America have its brass band. Let every citizen interest himself In its welfare. Let the band be diligent in its pursuit of knowledge of the right kind of music and the way to play it; and let the town sea some how that it has ample funds to keep going. Every day then in such a town will be a gain. OLD-FA8HIOXED BARTER AND SALS. We are too busy to resort to the old-fashioned practices that were com mon when barter and sale were part of our every day Uvea. Who does not remember the housewife who went to market with her basket on her arm. and carefully inspected every vegetable or bit of fruit that she put into it? People got what they went after in those times, or they knew the reason why. Later they got Into the habit f ordering over the telephone, with sometimes) the privilege of return ing goods that were unsatisfactory. But the general effect of buying with out looking has been to atrophy the sense of bargaining. Now with a multiplicity of mer chants, it seems Inevitable that there should be some who are content to reap the dime or the quarter of the passing stranger, not caring much whether he buys a second time or not. These are the ones who display tempt ing pyramids of sound, bright-colored fruit, but fill the paper bag from the concealed pile of less favored pro duce. Tou Indicate your desire to buy from a stack of luscious pears marked 30 cents a dozen, and when you get home you find that you have a bag of culls. Tou may, of course, return your purchase and make a row about it, but chances are that you won't get anywhere. Ton resolve to buy no more from that dealer, but yon have tive cost of doing business did not change. centenary of the landing of the May- The conclusion of the commission I flower pilgrims on Plymouth Rock Is that "slaughterers took more than has already begun to take on an in tbey should for hides, tanners charged I ternationai character. England ap more than they should for leather, I pears to be more deeply interested in and shoe manufacturers likewise the coming event than is the United charged too much for hides," while States. Certain preparations have retailers "made unprecedented been made in this country to corn profits." memorate the landing, which was The Increased price Is thus piled up made in Plymouth Harbor on De- in layers, like geological strata. More cember 21, 1620, but those made in for hides with higher profit on top I England to celebrate the sailing of laid on by the packer; he passes them the same pilgrims on September 6 of on to the tanner, who manufactures the same year are in a much more at higher cost and adds another higher I advanced stage. Lord Bryce, who Is profit: he passes the leather on to the deputy president of the commemora- shoe manufacturer, who assumes this tion committee, has already been able load and adds double the normal cost to announce that tbe event will be for other material, increased labor I attended by impressive pageantry, but cost and double the usual profit. The most important of all by sincere ef- shoes are well loaded when they reach I fort to reproduce with historical' the retailer, and he almost doubles fidelity the scenes of the embarka- his profit. tion, even to the costuming of the In this process cost and profit grow members of the ship s company and like a snowball, almost like an ava- the construction of a replica of the lanche. Each man adds more than Mayflower itself. the usual profit on not only the last) It took the Mayflower sixty-three man's cost but on the last man's in- I days to make the voyage across the creased profit. When the shoes finally I Atlantic in what has been conceded to reach- the consumer, his feet are so have been an uncommonly stormy loaded that he can scarcely lift them, season. Steamships now make the A cut in the price of hides would be trip in six days as a matter of course, felt all along the line, and a reduc-I and an airplane has crossed the same tion of profits to the 1914 rate would ocean in sixteen hours. Yet no ocean go far to bring shoes back to the 1914 crossing in all the Intervening time price. The price would come down in nas oeen iraugnt with greater con- the same way as it went up. As with I sequences. The voyage of the pilgrims shoes, so it would be with other was significant of two things of the things. I desire of the people for greater meas ure or iiDerty or conscience, and of tnair rllainollno flnn t n rfn.-ll am "fr THX POVTER OF THE PACKERS. in an tT. nX.. The meat packers are given an op- L.u.,u, tn., . tt, ,.,., portunity to set their case before the Ieft mUa to be desired on tnat public through publication of a com-L Tr w htc,i e , municauon irom tneir puoiicny on- f,m nih h. nii.im on, reau in another column because they tnat tney prefer the perils of uoiu. umi. e ' " , , lan unknown land which they might tnem an iujubuco. cui uicit I rail f heir- own tn rh. rnmfnrl nf Hw. aoes not meet, me argument, wuicn wb ln& under a 8transe though tolerant iii!.qo uKdiubi pi t.vul:tu uuuliu. wi I government- food supply oi tne nation oy a smau English interest in the coming cele- group oi men. bration may soring from several At tne outset, we ora not icrepi io TTnrinnhicHiv ii,. iih. charges or tne teaerai trace comm.s- of rh. .Mrrimi was an event of nrima sion as "conclusive evidence." We moment to England itself; its con- expressed some aouot oi ine.r cor- sequenCes cannot have been less in rectness by saying: "If the array of I rr,eir ,, ,,- ,v,i, facts presented by the federal trade I pilgrims left behind them than they commission. . . . be correct. That wr1 ... th nw rmint-v whirh thw doubt was raised by employment of nelped to construct, in the social and F. J. Heney as counsel, by the spirit poiiticai sense out ot a wilderness, in which he conducted the Inquiry and wo may well suppose tnat the by the tone of the report. Mr. Heney English, too, are moved by a spirit is not a calm investigator who seeks of latitude at this time for the con- the Whole truth, . like Charles E. trihlltinns which tho Hnscenrlnnte nf Hughes; he is a prosecutor, who is ,he Mayflower vovagers and their out after a verdict of guilty. This is eary exemplars have made to the re ground for attaching some weight to cent current of history. In any event, the packers vehement denials. But tie English celebration proposes not this report, following numerous in- niv reconstruct thn srnnu t quiries and trials, has a cumulative Plymouth, England, in ,H20. but also effect on the public mind which can- I to hasten work on the restoration of not be ignored. the ancestral home of George Wash- The OregOnian'S Comment On the I inon. at Slllerev Marinr In tha nnn pacxers- pronis was lounaea on uu. of combining with the pilgrim com passage in a statement or jouis a. Swift published on July 11: memoratlon the dedication of this historic place. Later a delegation of Jfa ens disputes that oat ot tne twtal re- British and American representatives will go to Leyden, Holland, where the Pilgrims first sought refuge after the persecutions of 1S08. It is one of the saving graces of English people that they do not spare themselves in their studies of the lessons of the past. From that side of the Atlantic, the lesson of the sailing of the Mayflower and the reasons for it may loom less heroically, but they will be none the less valuable as moral precepts. Two statues to .Abraham Lincoln will .be unveiled in England during the same period. The controversy over the relative merits of the St. Gaudens and the Barnard statues having been happily resolved by the erection of both of them, one at Westminster and the other at Manchester: both will be unveiled if possible. These observ ances, frankly designed as compli ments to us, will, we think, be not without value to our British friends themselves. Every historical happen ing flowing from the events which led the first pilgrims to emigrate from Britain has been fraught with deep significance not only to the British people but to the whole world. On this side of the water the cen tenary observances will take on a more open tone of thanksgiving. The dominant note of course will be that of gladness because we are here, and of gratitude to the pilgrim fathers (and mothers) for making possible our present enviable lot. Yet it has been called to attention recently that there is danger that the original pil grim stock will be submerged. The roll of the Society pt Descendants of eeiota of the packers derived from th nmdurt of animals, about 85 per cent Is paid out for the live animals themselves, about 13 per cent is paid out tor wages, transpor tation and other such expenses, about 2 per cent on this turnover is earnea oy tn packer as net profit. Having pointed out that 2 per cent profit on turnover implies a much higher profit per year on capital. The Oregonian is now informed that the food administration reports profits on controlled products" from November 1, 1917. to November 1, 1918, were only 5.6 per cent. ' But that was only on "controlled products"; how about uncontrolled products? What ' were they and what profits were earned on them? We have not the whole story. Again we are told that "the aver age profit on every dollar of sales has been about 2 cents." That Is not a straightforward statement. It does not tell the profit per cent per annum on capital invested: that may easily be 20 or 25 per cent profit on a 2 per cent profit on turnover. Then we are told that the profit on meat is only a fraction of a cent per pound, but meat is only one of many products of the animal. It may even be only a by-product of other com modities. Still we have not the whole story. It is stated that refrigerator cars "have often been operated at a loss and have never been an attractive invest ment." That depends on how profits are figured. When a dozen companies in connected industries are controlled by the same group of men. the show ing of a profit for one and a loss for another is a mere matter of book-, book on chemistry so unintelligible that Dr. Johnson says our word "gib berish" was derived from Jhe name of tne autnor, Dut out oi it nis succes sors are able to distill a fact or two, and Roger Bacon and Albertus Mag nus carry on the work, Paracelsus adds to the store of knowledge. Salt, sulphur and mercury are identified men who at first resolved the universe into four elements add more, one at time. Fire, first regarded as an "Im ponderable," is harnessed for the use of man; earth, air, water, are resolved and dissolved, taken apart and put to tether again in flask and crucible Early chemists call every gas "air, but later ones discover oxygen, nitro gen, ozone, argon, helium, neon, kryp ton and xeon, all in our atmosphere. It is impossible to appraise at full value the efforts of each research worker. Scientific knowledge is cum ulative. It grows in the form of an inverted pyramid. Nitrogen, one of the component parts of air, was discovered less than a century and a half ago. Rutherford called it an element. Only recently have the chemists begun to suspect otherwise. But meanwhile, a great department of science has been built around the single discovery the earth has been made more fruitful by studies in fertilization. Without Ruth erford's discovery the work of Llebig would have been impossible. The father of agricultural chemistry owes a debt to Rutherford, as Rutherford is Indebted to all the chemists before him, even to the first searcher (now lost in antiquity), for the formula that should transmute every base metal into precious gold. Chemistry, as we now know it, was in its infancy when Llebig began his labors less than century ago. Every grammar school boy knows that discovery of the pent-up power of steam revolutionized social conditions throughout the world. But not every one who tells us that Watt invented the steam engine, and Stephenson the locomotive, knows that steam was ap plied as a motive power by Hero of Alexandria, perhaps in the first cen tury of our era; or that there were steam power contrivances of a sort in Spain in the sixteenth century and in Italy and England in the seventeenth. These were the avant couriers of the age of steam." There were quack scientists and inventors then, as there are now. Many failed, the few suc ceeded, and the world moved on. Without Salomon de Caus and Gio vanni Branca, there might have been no Thomas Sovery, who first obtained a patent for the application of steam. But for Humphrey Potter, a mere boy. Watt's discoveries might have been in definitely delayed, and but for Watt we probably should not have heard of Stephenson; but the latter also owed much to Blockett and Hedley. The RocRet," which won in the first loco motive competition the world ever knew, just ninety years ago this year, was the product of the research of all the physical scientists of recorded time, as it was the forerunner of every means of rapid locomotion that has contributed to the making of a new world. We owe the automobile no less to the spirit of research and invention generated in the beginning of the age of steam than to the definite deter mination of a French abbe who suc ceeded, in 1678, in driving a cylinder by means of the explosion of gun powder, or to construction in 1791 by John Barber, the Englishman, of a machine driven by a mixture of hy drocarbon gas and air, or to the Frenchman Lenoir who operated the first practical gas engine in 1860. Science moves rapidly once it gets under way. Without our Barbers and Lenoirs It is unlikely that we should now have automobiles; certainly avia tion would be impossible. We may ap prehend the speed with which science progresses from the theoretical to the practical if we will bear in mind that it is only thirty-five years since the first high speed gas engine was in vented, only thirty-three since the water-jacketed engine of Carl Benz came into being, and less than a quar ter of a century since it required three weeks to make a test run by automo bile from Cleveland to Buffalo. And it was only sixteen years ago that the first successful, though brief, flight was made in a heavier-than-air ma chine, and thirteen years since long distance flight was demonstrated to be possible. The airplane which a few days ago overtook the steamship Adriatic in mid-Atlantic and success fully deposited a mailbag aboard, and the NC-4 and the R-34, which have reduced travel time across tbe ocean to almost nothing, had their inception in the brains of scientists who died long ago, and to many who have been for centuries forgotten. We think of the nineteenth century! One of those fellows who are always thinking of things to do but never doing them suggests that scientists de vote their attention to developing a cross between a goat and a snake, and so develop an animal that will shed good goatskins every year. But the goatskins situation is not a joke. Tanned and in good condition, they are now said to cost manufacturers about $1 a square foot, and as ?. square foot weighs about four-fifths of an ounce, and there is a good deal of waste in the leather that finally goes into the shoe, the part actually used eventually costs about $1.50 an ounce, or about 40 per cent more than its weight in silver, which Is now quoted at 11.12 an ounce. But we should not expect the demand for kid shoes to abate if leather became worth Its weight in gold. We "must have the best," and insisting on the best, we must pay for it From which text a whole sermon might be written, if it were worth while, on the cause of the high cost of living. Dreams. By Grace K. Hall. "Family Rides in Airplane," says one headline, and "300,000 See Pair I Wed in Airplane" another tells us. Big folks and little ones insist on hav ing all the thrills that are coming to them. Meanwhile it all helps to bring nearer the day when the airplane will come into common commercial use, as on one occasion recently In California, when an aviator flew from San Fran Cisco to Stockton with a package ot serum needed in an emergency by physician, and still more recently in Oregon, the aviator in the latter in stance carrying repair parts for threshing machine, that the good work of harvesting a crop of food might not be unduly delayed. In year the airplane will thrill us- no more than a bicycle did in 1890, or an automobile ride ten years ago. and the only question asked when we hear that Neighbor Jones has bought a new flying machine will be: "Is it this year's model, or did he get a used boat?" If science, says Lord Farrer, would invent a drink without alcohol which made one feel as cheerful as a glass of good champagne, it would earn the thanks of the universe. And if the soft drink purveyors now working on the job don't succeed in doing so, will not be for the want of trying or for lack of numbers enaged in the quest. The "Mexican war comet" of 1846, so called because its appearance was coincident with our, early unpleasant ness in the south, is said to be due to reappear, and if Brother Carranza is superstitious he will read what hap pened to Mexico then and govern him self accordingly. Germany has a long job ahead of her to pay up, even with the old-fash ioned workday. The time for her to have agitated for "shorter hours" was before she began figuring that she would make the other fellows work while she loafed. It will be well for those who are predicting calamity to the soldiers who married abroad to bear in mind that home marriages are not 100 per cent happy, as revealed by the alarm ing increase in the divorce statistics. The habit of caution is worth culti vating. There is a tragedy in every automobile fatality, whether or not it was "unavoidable." It is only just to those who drive carefully that pedes trians also should do their part. The neighborly times we used to have when everybody went to the postoffice for his mail will come back again if the government will arrange to hold frequent sales of prime bacon and good corned beef. Why this ado about some one or other swimming across the Rhine? People used to swim across the Wil lamette, which is about the same width, on Christmas and women have done it, too. The church bell, as the Rev. Mr. Switzer of Hoqulam reminds us, is an unnecessary antique, and it is more than that; it is a positive nuisance to folks who like to sleep late on Sunday mornings. The literary world will be glad that Thomas Nelson Page has resigned his ambassadorship. There is plenty of ambassadorial material; authors of the Thomas Nelson Page caliber are rare. Denmark already is beginning to find out that new acquisitions breed new responsibilities. A loan of 120, 000,000 crowns for the reorganization of Schleswig may be only a beginning. The government has libeled several thousand cases in storage in an east ern city because they are unfit for food. We did not suppose you could libel a bad egg. We weave of dreams the fabrio of our lives. For dreams we delve and do and labor long: Not for the Thirtg, but for his dream man strives. Makes his brave fight, doolies for right or wrong. His struggles, hopes, ambitions all he dares TJpon the field where battles dally rage. All that he pleads for In his unsaid prayers. All that he measures In his meager wage Are dreams. He may not look where you may look, Nor hear the call that urges other men, But his desires are like a singing brook That keeps the verdure green within the glen. And no man labors, if indeed he be a man, v Without a dream is urging on his plan; For none would race unless there be a prize To speed them towards the goal before their eyes. Some glimpse far lands that send in sistent call; Some sense a woman's lips 'galnBt theirs warm pressed: Some hold as trophy dearest far of all A baby's golden head upon their breast. Perhaps at first God dreamed, and dreaming wrought A theme divine, a dream without a flaw; A perfect, true conception glorious thought That's thrilled man through the ages, filled with awe All races, lifting them to higher plane Than mortal left unthrilled had sought to gain; And so shall we, the creatures that he fashioned. Create and build and plan, through dream impassioned; And at life's close hold up for his In spection Our little dreams each with Its imper fection; Nor be abashed at what he then shall see, For he has said not one shall perfect be. THE MUTE'S PROTEST. Not in bitterness, nor even dreaming That fate should will it otherwise. Nor in protest at an unjust seeming Of a mercy in disguise. Some who thoughtlessly condole me OiTer sympathy; its- piercing darts, Stinging deep with burning pity, Each silent glance or nod imparts. I may not hear the wild birds' trilling. Nor lift my voice In answ'ring song. Yet silent melody is thrilling Midst the woodland's towering throng. Seeing feeling keener knowing: Concentration brings to me. Music from the sunset's glowing Or the ever restless sea. Grant me only comprehension. And a chance to pierce the walls Where life's unfailing compensation Translates for me its unheard calls. Mind and heart must guide me onward. Through the soundless aisles that lay Stretching for me ever upward. I alone may find the way. G. E. PINTO. THE GYPSY TRAIL, The gypsy trail is a path of dreams; Ho, for the day we take it! Afar it winds over hills and streams; Oh, for the joys that make it! And the gypsy trail is the road from here; Lord, how it daily calls us! Where winds are sweet and skies are clear And only the good befalls us! Away it leads from the things that irk And that hateful thing called duty; Afar from trouble and strife and work It winds, to the haunts of beauty. Oh, we love the trail, for we're gypsies all. And ever till life is ended, We think it were wiser to heed the call From the Joyless road we've wended. MARY HESTER FORCE. EVENING GLOOM AND CHEER. MORNING Behold! the flaming morn Is here! Her rippling laughter fills the ear; To all, sweet eong and'joy she brings; Hope, born anew, in rapture sings! Oh, golden, glorious morning. Brief hour of laughter and song. Departing, leave a sunbeam. To cheer the night hours longl Dame Evening flaunts her garments drear, And robs the eoul of morning cheer; In somber robe gray Twilight creepe; Follows grim Night and lost Hope weeps. Oh. radiant, rose-tinted Morning, Would that my soul might tonight. Fly from the purpling shadows. Into thy soft, mellow light. MINA M. GATENS. LOVE IS LIKK'S THEME. Here is morn and noon and night The dew, the sun, the dark So few are the hours of light. So few our hours of might. Let us love before we embark. Let us love In the dew of the mora. Let us love when our noontime la here. And at eve when the twilight forlorm Is made bright by our loving reborn; Then shall be naught in our hearts that Is fear. the Let us love before we set sail On life's sea so clothed with night; Let us love lest life's fullness we fall. For our love is the theme of life's tale. And our toil but to set it aright! M. A TOTHERS. SPEAK IT PLAIN. A hobo at Salem has been caught milking- a cow. There's good in the fellow. Most hobos would call milk ing work and shun it as they would a bath. One feels like singing with the poet, "Blessings on you, barefoot boy," every time he reads about another prospective rise in the price of shoes. Striking actors give us a new defini tion of the phrase, "theater of war." The dahlia with the Roosevelt smile must be a daisy. If you have a word of courage, Speak it plain to those in need. Every soul has hours depressing. Every heart has need of blessing. With a tone or look caressing. To earth's sorrowing give heed. If you have some power to strengthen. Steady those about to fall; Those who see us, see to gauge us, Hope will ever be contagious. Let our lives make men courageous. Till they hold their fate in thralL What you sow comes back In harvest; Cheer some soul and cheer is yours. And it comes with multiplying. Far beyond your own supplying. All your pathway beautifying. With a beauty that endures. MRS. FRANK A. BRECK. . STAMPS AND GROCERIES SOLD HERE. Things are sadly awry, I think. When the postmaster says: "If you please. Do you want to invest in a one-cent stamp, Or merely a can of peas?" EVERETT. EARLS STANARDl r A