THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7,' 1810. 7: A ' . Y'-J - m WW U'Jfl's--:MV:ff;WaWW-.-' ... v ., - ; ,47 K- 5 ' v.-, i , v - ; v:. e . ,: . r ,. 5. ... '. . . . Krtr M K I , ft. rt a'' ,',!'. i , f 4vi.-' J. " . rr ".. - .-n. .-. , .yi, . f ' - . j-A'i.v-- . .-V ' S i ' 1 ; .. v ' I -. ;. ' V -"i -x:-kv.v.j..T ,',','yVl. V;''-.v II K ' 1 : !-. Mp($ : ;.: ji'nl&W i!Wf.Nfl ArM f by Two Hundred Mile Hike FromMf . .Wl--, tiff W ' ,;,v:':v. t 'r'' - :- ' ' ' ' ''JV Strenuous Practice Afforded Troops Two Hundred Mile Hike From; Vancouver Barracks to American Lake. A WORLD MADE RICH IN; A ; CENTURY--Con- ,; tinued From tkc First Page Ocction 1885 there were 68,062: by 1890 th Now the yearly expenses of our irov number hsfl teached J0,74.' ernraent tre greater than the amount - Hungary started with 2621 pupil de- which Bismarck depended upon to break posltors ln lS76 and by 1890 had 37,- trance's power. ,. " : : y rjugeTie e aes. " rucKs u American laxe is loom in in a.uir n Vf(oit iiiitc-o, uui . viuvi umi wi mat inn 0 ALL annearance. the state of miles, a somewhat circuitous route was fA ? XM.'-' iSZiA.- -i-- iSTr mult In .the satn manner. Every- ' I . Washington is In the hands of an choaon, , j . v ' : iff TmAj --:ff ' ?:" ATuiMf r where the' result has been the same; vt I Invadinn army. Along it rough- For the first few days out consider-1 i-dTr ' r ? ' -""'t - ; . v r; ' " '?f " - -.Vjjh' the more convenient aavlns; Is made the in dust,- march img lines or men, hi ly -read between .woodland and Che, ;.. gg-:: vv -,.-v .y.'. si''fAp W, .f-rr.. - n it.iv-nd ffinrfini -foi-' wamnle ' ra.;w , .- clad lrt the service uniform of the Unit- halts sometimes delayed the wagon .1 . , ' . , .. . , . . " Jmll'JJM B..I e M,ttt . wmprehand howunlversal was ed States army, each man carrying the train" several hours. : So thick was the day is 40 minutes; then follows a i tht Ume, however, moat ef the men lvn with apacea jot School Sving$ System. the habit of savtng In France. Later regulation field equlppage. Preceding dust on the roads from Chehalls to the minute halt. For the rest of the day were recruita. A distance of i0.5 miles dhes,ve "tamps.. These cards can m America the school savings syg:-ay nava ihown tno power of the habit, the infantry column la the -wagon train, jcamp -at Scatter Creek that the men each marchlhg period i of 60 minutes' as oovered Julv II from Centralla to uht 'or Pnnt . n "hen they tem which has not been as In European . f ? '? -' ?C w , 8a-i5 AU the experiences of real military ' Although the order of marc pre. Wherr the next camping site la reached m,Bu1te of u4hto-,ln: "' 'quarteiwthat urnount U entered to the !nff t"'18! W,M 'ounea J H.Thlry, financial community.' -Every daughter service, -without the fighting, is the lot scribed decrees that the wagon train the companies pi toh depositor account. v In ,1188. As usual ha was not the or- must hav i her dot.r Every -aon must of these officers and men from Van- shall precede the artillery and Infantry with the kitchen tents at the end (if terymen remarked, "Ttola la the 'hiking, r jngland, by the by. was right in the iglnator or the idea,, but the man who nave his little hoardto add to-soma COUVer barracks While on the 2D0 mile column. It hn henn Mecionn vhfti. ..v. " ...a .t,i. ant' InfntitPir T u " ,-. . . ., I. k. n.t.l ..l... ,mf mudo It wnrlr nut In nra.o.tlmt v i: Other daughter S ClOt. ' " practice' march to the maneuver eamn ever the roads have been hliiv. ta have t aim. . u.. Th. u..t itftT . nnaai vina In 187 It was that Joh P. Tnwnseml ' he last, succeaarui movement was, at American lake, Washington. March- the wagon train eome . last, in order duties the artillerymen hava to aroom .ncount.red f nm Wondland ta Centraiia bank hill was Introduced In the house called the attention of the tAmerlcan before stated, atarted by George Von in by day , and pitching camp , by the that the troops be hot; delayed. Be and water their animals. - ; ' where ; the road win'da uo down and of commons by a Mr. Whltebread. The Social Science association to the merit u'eyer' 4 ... roafislde at night, in strict military cause the artillery, travels faster than At t :S ft n. m. cornea .ta.t and aukn 7,.rt. JSS? 1?PA ... intIi -vnr -..''bf the Dlan. About the same time T.. They, above moat others, have fore-. style Is the order hat I being observed the men net riding, It precedes the In- mount, after which' guards are stationed wads are compsrat vely leve thrcughout the entire hike. ; , fantry; raising great clouds of dust about the camp. : The strenuous day, ' tS-spite the tnUouswss of the dally It was Julv II-when bI rnmnanlx thf Vi infantrvmon D1mM ..a. -v.. ... ' 4 iiBpui in iirenuouBRMi oi in ouir ( --.------- . ... ..-....... n..e..orc. hu ai i wtiwn, wucn ps i bouiiu- urosfram tha -men are In ' arood . ami-It a of h. Firat infan J? , Sf ih Be.oond Field-artillery, paths along either side of the road, : are permitted to ride with the wagon suoeeedlna dav that furnish siwh a Colonel McOunnegle:Commanding.T left Reveille sounds at 4:30 a, m.. and as train, while the men Of the eookf .d. Wked contrast to the monotony of .. - "-"'i - u. uiu wm uiou iti uw uu wbik wun in wagons dui nave no barraoka Hf t , i - where the officers and men are to take their . breakfast the work of striking equipment to carry. uw"-.' ,...,.. This year the infantry is marching the ' epochal " results 1 of a- postal savings bill. . Were the French savings inrRniTT i Tnnrnnin v - . . . the month tt August The First bat- Ing up the tamp site commences. ; At -faster than two years ago. when the W nam " Jn a - ATi A a tallon. and Battery B traveled by Train, 8:80 everything is In readiness for the same rout was traveled. The mimh , AXUSC , JT Cltil9 I'laUC In order to reach Tacoma in time to resumption of the march and the troops from Lexington to Little Tails, a dla-, take part In the military tournament, start on. the infantry, for the most part, tance of 18 mltes, was made in tft but -will make the practice march de- traveling at the rate of four miles an hours, which means four hours and 40 creed by the war department on the re- hour and the artillery traveling a bit minutes of actual marching. This is turn trip. - faster. ' ' . , an hour and 40 minutes faster than the The distance from . Vancouver i bar The first marching period of each time tnade on tha previous march. At Into Beao! CLain ,:r;,r"r.rr...V' -X;V1" 8. Merrill of Seloit. as a result of his ein aim vut,vui o-k i ilia tituuoii j aaiaa visk vq e- . . ' ereSlianTreVaUonoT establishment of pne great national in- ' .,Hffl..i r.. never even dreamed of. As it is now. sutunon m me nature or, a Dana, ior, z. ..v .J-'""". iv:. 7..." Amarina. mii MnAUah lomaka an uuu xv. . rnu, utn upenmvnueni vi - - - - - the Carlisle Indian Industrial school -.-ther nation rich. : - After that came Mr. Thiry, who Is a All this, and more than the most san native of France,-and who came to thls;uln has ever dreamed of,- may come country for his health. Aa before atat- w pa" if the; American people .will d It wss in 1885 that he began his advantage of their opportunities, work In the schools of Long Island City. AU ,ot lt bM coma from one modest, His most able second, in the earlier Practical preacner. use and tha advantage of the laboring classes alone."- ..;. r-,.-:;- - o-- . Of course, this was considerably In advance of its time, ft wasnot. until 1858 " that another measure, introduced by WlllJban gykes. secured , the favof of Oladutone, then chancellor. Of the ex- IN THE ML . part n ):- HOUSEBUILDING A By Our Country Cousin. CHES had found us a place nucn King new and strange devices for his many men weuld have called that good comfort when he should go out to camp fortune. on the property, as he was determined It i part ojf John's creed that a man t do, but he would have none , of them, must be ready to do whatever comes to He took the simplest kind of camp out- hand. Ha was certainly living, up to It fit and camped under the trees our In those first weeka of his longed for trees and slept upon the ground. our Independence. ground and hewed trees. . i , i; : . - As part purchase price of "our land His letters during the succeeding he slashed, brush, made rails and trim weeks were most interesting. 1 It waa so med an orchard for the man from whom good to know that he had made a start, we were purchasing the place. He built that, the die was cast and- that retrac- wire fence for one neighbor, sorted sed tlon was impassible. We both had that potatoes - for- another, and alt of his happy sense 'of reposing upon the Inev- spare time, besides much that he eeuld Itable that eomes witn having made nn lit -'snare from eleeD. he . occunled in ns-we. thought' we wanted it ""portant aecisibn. .we were steadied clearing the spot where the house waa wasn't at all the kind of a place M Imbued with purpose. : - f to stand, s " -''i(r. , j. he wished us. to want and John It was still cold in those early spring It bad been part of my dream to was to go oirt and look at It as day", and living In the open under the have a-log house. A log house seems to .ioort as his. month at the Office was' B'8; trees ;must have been somewhat typify the solldarlty-ef ownership. It over. bleak and cheerless, but John made tho has in air of honest slmplicitiy, of an I confess. 1 was not of much use in bcst of It'.-in the letters .reporting his unassuming desire to bet known solely helping to decide what kind of pUoa -progrean. t for what one Is, that appeals to the we should-select for I regarded within" Th firet one. after stating the terms mind and the heart. It was the kind the range of possibilities everything arranged, and telling of the first pay- I wanted, and I was quite depressed to from a. three-acre chicken ranch to a ment made on our "stick ranch" as he find that it was impracticable. John homestead, and found something ad- called it, told of his pitching camp and pointed out that he could not, Single mirable In each one offered, so eager Winning' life on our own property, handed, lay the logs in place; that it was" 1 to begin our farming operations 'Today I pitiched my camp," go one ran. would require a team of horses to haul , so in actual cnoice leu upon Johns na picaca out me spot lor the nouse .them to the building site after they When the last day had been put in ut first I surveyed around a little, to was in the way of a luxury emancipation half an. hou oauae he dldn' to breakfast looking owned a township at least He saw the still car he was accustomed to cat oh sUd no other ' v.: n ' ' ' li i: li '''! ' a i Vi'l I I ' " 1 f 1; twXJjfl''VW:V:t'-', chequer, and was finally passed on Msy . ye4ri ot his work, was Sarah Iouisa B'or n, time? the Germans bad 17, 1861, rihAfhnlzoe .Of ; NorrKtnwn . P. ... Kht- UKin hold Of th SSVlngg '.. Idea. " AS wa f ully as enthusiastic as Mr. Thlry, early -aa 178 a philanthropic instltn and fora time actually eclipsed him "on. Besorgungsaustolt was founded by in the number of banks established, for. tn henevolcnt cltigens of Hamburg. In 1868j Belgium 'was the first contl-- hy M8, out of 280 schools with banks,."" Hwas madeover into a. savings . a . w' . na - u U Aht I ahtfS tail w jAaf.tn ginaraan IT jXf va Than TJlrfl ' wHrA Ba n INCW YOrif 1 fil oviiiiUciLiaii vvMifmu vt ' The Plan Develops, - . ' , ' Canada followed; England's example In nentat country to do so, in 1870, followed Italy, in 1876; the Netherlainds-. . In llSiiianee 184 welenl-8$8iJAuB- n Pennsylvania, probably the first In Europe. Or late years tha scnool savings i savings ;Vr;r- bank, as we know It. was not or oer many an uuv kiwi m rrany u cuies Lastly nav aved all told, 15,500,000. of which , n0. 84,600,000 have been withdrawn, leav British colonies' and . Japan, a nmAai lma.((ai i S AS 'i .Jul af aial tA tortai, , B.v....r:. w.,. -.. I, AAA AAA slbllltles than any of, the othere. be- "' "-"'". '""X'i caube her aggregate wealth of 1126,000, V! crodlt cf we,U on 200''000 000.000 is something that none of the TUf 'Um . ... other, nations can remotely : approach. ; Pt"nirop,r muf 1 " - And greater, perhaps, than any other WfJLy'" 'tWhtt,I advantages has been the work of the JVSf" 5 t"1,6" T-?.0, lnJL savings movement as an educator. , Its tthtn tT1. SS!--!.1?-,,!:-!!!" iaSS'-P-"-- Prt Of the operation, of predecessors, he made the savings bank. not a philanthropic institution, nut a business 'affair. ;..,..-'.;. -.-c.vf ;f That le why tha savings bank is this year celebrating Its centenary, It la. because it has been altogether divorced from the philanthropic idea, and is on a sound business baste, that it dates, from the time of Duncan, instead of the earlier Hamburg affair. - ' To all -'-'intents and purposes tne world savings batiks and snapped her fingers . at the royalists. A nation whose finances are shared by tha bulk of her -- Inhabitants need have no ffiaf that ov ernment will be overturned. v A v V work with .the justifiable pride of a man who is nearlng the century mark and feels.be lias not lived In vain.',.. it seems a pity that the Bcotch bank ers of dear old Parson Duncan's time Furthermore, none Is so quick to see rnnM tint riAV hiort trtM thft.f in in. the merits of a system as those who tury less than one-third of the school benefit by it So that the government children of the then new republlo Would that promotes saving societies finds .treasure up 88,600.000. Yet, anyone that its work continually becomes eas. who could have been so bold as to pre ier. . Though in all eases the merits , diet this would have been considered a are perhaps not so outstanding as in lunatio of the first water.' ; the s ease of the slaves of the Romans, - -.- wnu, iuuui xns secona century or tne expenditures increase. j lNB of the most unique souvenirs of Christian era, were .allowed to deposit that the 1 savings nank has taken to build up Its present power. - And W takes but an ordinary prophet to predict that th next hundred years ' will see changes equally far-reaching. 13u what will b tne result when polit ical liberty shall be paralleled by finan cial liberty, such as the savings bank n.ay ' bring about, is something that might cause the boldest prophet to keep his mouth shut and await the logic of 'vents. '-.,":. -, .,?.-.- v Hereditary Pensions. ! ; Seevral perpetual pensions have to be iBiuiii rrafc. wflm Kiiuwca ia nRnoHii; - . .. . - . . .... ... 1 cwviai wiucium wnniviia aiow the 1910 Rose Festival is a string their Surplus earnlnis until thev acou. .-w"" '".ino"B "K,?. Aom.ninB, provided for In the British excequer. of beads made from rose petals mulated enouirh to nurohasa freedom. V :?:r"v"nc5: . ""'i1" "I"P.1! " Earl Nelson has toeen drawing 8,000 by Mra, Paul F. Jones. Of Mar- , . Arnordln- ' a.. v tno onangainai nas corns aooui was ot- Bou,. a vaar for T4 vara because he v.. in.... -.'u . v , w....v.. ierea nv . senator Burton la a reoent - - - - - - where I shall begin clearing tomorrow, were cut, and that In fact a log house beds in the string theV were mads mlI? V.fl TX ftnd ,Po- speech, in the,upper house of the con- "8ap.pe"e. nZL t tZ hr0tr of the in ?t rst If urveyed around, little, to was In the way of a luxury to be at- rm. ix red roses taS fm & gres when he called attention to the t Schpmberg receives 720 pounds because of a debt owed him by the British gov ernment. The Duko of Schomberg was 1. !-!--'.-al .overnmenf am of Battle na m great aay x)i nis me irau id m creex wnere tamea sometime in the future, perhaps, on-t whlrh was nhotos-ranhed and used . . J. ',"""" """" ract tnat tne American government s Came around John rose vre shall get water, and cleared out a This was qullte a blow to m;. Living France, their first practical test, sxpendltures for the fiscal year ehding r earlier than' usual, be- tralL Then I settled my camp, cooked in a frame house Hike', other r..nni. "i A. ?1JL1 A XZ ..i.,It v ln ''Germany and their first statutory jufl go. 1909. were 81.002.000.000. or t have to. and Came down my SUDDer at the foot Of a bit? fir: and Roomed tm tima In mmnrlann tt'o,. i a i..J;j. regulation In England. He held that an amnnnt a.niml tn t, nntlra .tnaiiitl. V. . " . - - " " . .jtuvnua vivu. t,w aftgauii uu Trnm rose DrlulH a BnorX lime weiore tne .. . . , . - . i w . c. wl viid turi u,.t jiuhi fc,v. . . . -n nvor h It is in the forest There might be fmdlpg that. the house was to be made festival when she saw a string which' t,""!1"8? iASln f 'our-volume work 1786 to the beginning of the Mexican I"t2,rJ ther human being within 20 miles, entirely of rough lumber. . - had 'been brought f rom - Max o. the PWisd in 1610 He proposed an in, war in X846. i ,f ZVlJfmJl th.f ."..an the oundB that be "was; an. important day, that on beVda ot which were black, with i h g 1"'! B?6nfm the same speech he told an inter-. SfilkSvd;a by and shook a fist at It derisively. so shut Then John went off upon his 'voyage" long to civilisation of discovery end I 'waited ' eagerly for "The spot I have chosen for the honsa milt and-uninadM nn on Kntiiin. .tta. t"A .-'.. "5 Z .'.v.... and withdraw them asain. in nrt n ir,an : mtn4.fa.t t.m i vvm hlsjreport of our prospective faiw. v is hear the road, In a beautiful grove "In my capacity of archlltect" wrote of making such beads, and went to work wholB he, might require, with' interest" When he presented the budget In -1S22. When he came back he was enthuiiT. of vountr fir. h hh. or Kmr mf tv, -t ,mm i-.j .v. k.i . Y... . ." T. ' ' -.lir. ' ':v wv amnoniinar n th t,. u .. a, t n . - . . - t v , . - yiauim tmi uuubw, t wttn no insiruciion otner , man some 9 "u vmu uu -whoh uvyu.u.iB nm iuuc ivr-uivui lie. It WSS all that h had hooed for. coma down. I am aelent Intr ,thl nnt I. n i.a Vi a.u.m. .Uh .V. v.t 1.:2 " . .V " alannalt." .." TT' h..t K .hi.. .-ja. . i, u. . . - " - o ) w suvv. viirv vvuio niLii ixio iisLii. innsi or rtni nwn in xrti i us nap - nsr Tirsir "'-af , v swiu a , itius aiitziaiisi a i biiub ui itliii lima Hiuaiocm at c sitx-iu . and shot has oo away wun aimsnouses. ."Salute: these figures: tiiBQ.ooo.QOO), considerable number of - whether or not this educational worki gentlemen. You will never have oppor- grant of tic. it was an that h had hoped foe. come down. I am selecting . this spot is to have three rooms with the half ideas of her own to guide It wss well watered with springs and .at the foot of a hill because It will be story undivided above. In my capacity t riaT' proVedTuccVssf ul, !r"mV.huf &XlXHm K,aet fh'!.tered fr0rt heavy winds In win- of contractor I haye had the lumber since made a consldera VP:?? I"": ' . ' delivered and hava excavated a part roe neta beads. V lance of fir. white, red and yellow. wnicn tne luraoer was nauiea irom the polish, but lacking In rose perfume. She lJZ"" fax :"PO"nw savings vesting story or M. vaiieie, the irrench Vnrt ftnft Vmmrti from the English par liament, btit during the dififcultles of the Irfsh campaign he generously placed it at the disposal of William. The offer was accepted, and th Interest (hot yet entirely extlnguisneai was iixea at iour per cent r Lord Rodney receives 2,000, Impatient the of the hlllWlde where it Is to stand, and The beads, as made by Mrs. Jones, re was ths start of the savings idea, it is tunlty to contemplate them again- certain that France' was the first ,to . Reflect, then, what : a oliange;;must as- ne was to be at tha nf tho hiilUllla whra It ! in aitonrt on rr,- 1,,1 . -,o- (km t-- Mrtsiln that PraiiM-raa Toflo-t then i-lnl a nlianm,,.) f)"""B ""V"" r . . . ... . . wax. wen flt-Aln1 Br-.hla . v,,iMi.. - .k. k-...- t-u. . i . . . ..- . .. ... ..t r. -. . , --- . .:--- hi anr.iMk.tOF in 1 le ' ciui uu. vraiui y. . r " r":T.,-VM' "7 . ' .-. yei own- as carpenter j, Degan wont on tne roun- tain a del ahtful rose fraarance. are red- realize ruiiy its educational advantages have come about wnen, .hair, a century ,"" , ;....-.,- mmIm n in 1 11 rtitia ntn iHr wn v - waa a asrian m ix oma i aitiannt ar .aJ.. ...i aj...- .." . . . - . . . . . - , . . . . - HRirnor ti AiiveiuuvaMuv - school. ' : .- 'v:. ."' .:""" - f.; n''u; '"".1.: -y?Jj.- 1.1; . olshprown- in color and sllghyy -rough scnoojs ana this :roug the iater,,France .i.- a . , v.- "?"' : '"u""''q",iyi.JuaiirK.ajout.. oa .taa-tuf taoa.. ae-ft4wtr"trTwtteb Times tne r.r..z u...i-- . tha Ufa n - ... .t-uutaMt---sti asu.wita--wttniB wine or1 s 111 nnr flwuhmai'n.i-. rf u.nm. -. . -.. ,. . .v. i. tr. wwwr " cut a. ntnna atr.tit Jnhn rl ... a. ..., t.i-K 11':. - " X r,'" 7 I. J-;.. r . r 1 ""',' nu. t -'iiotw ui n Bir.ng reprwucea -xo . - .u.ou n, euucmignai system loruier luuIir, u, u ,,ui, Arante In battle. miiVh aa ttia firt that T Aa-T.nr-'' - " 4 p wn- xnes ie iuii were iaia ana then t are set off with tiny cut steel beads, fat the Vienna exposition in 1878, and So easily, in fact did tne Frenchmen - ' . , mum as te iuct mat tt was so oensejy lull v.- - .r. . . tv,a ..ma fnmi-ir u .-., t ... m. 2 v. .-..i. , v .L '. . . .. -, . i. . . ... 1 1111 7 - 7204 original , WU1- densely f ullv. timnret that ojie must indted haw out "A great nlere of good " fortune rery ttp pf ones fortune.," And John hsvn work at the sawmill for part pay nlng of Ouf home," Ins a liUiy UladMiiiiian Passion lor merit nn our lumber fni tha hm... , , , Lcwing trv-s. 1 lay awake .nights plan- I wondered in my wifely conceit how Vqcle Kxr Says: The chain is finished With a handsome thousands. - f. ' -t gave himself for not having scoured a From me ou iar' . , ' , r . amethyst cross and 1s probably, a sou- In Italy,, there were 11,933 children greater indemnity. Poor-old gentleman! ' "Ef a man is wutn aoin at au, nsa West Bunday, apart HI Our rirst Cow. venlx without a duplicata, J . depositors In the -gcboolg to -170 by Uohou&hl to cripple France for jeai a. bettcr-ba left undone.' , t were nailed in place, t This la tne begin- the Slae of those made from tho roses, children's accounts by the hundreds of small bonds that, Blsmarek nevor for- V