THE ; OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 17, 1915. TLJCT - trt IDM A I I Pi EZ. r J SJ J r"V IN A-NL- iff IKBEPEXDEHT KEWRPAPgB C t, JACKSON .....Publisher fubllabed every eTenlog 'except Sanaa?) an4 very Sunday morning at To Journal Boll Inf. BroaaTray and TamfalU ata., Portland. Or. fcaterea at tb poetoff'ea at fortlaod. Or., tot traaaaiissloo tfcroagb Ci mail a seeon rlaM Batter. - : 1 Ll.EFHIINEM V.ln 1 7 It-. Ron A-AOS1. All departments reached by tbese numbtfra. Tail Ita eperater what aepau-tmeat tm want. UKUON ADVERTISING EEPBEBKTATlVB - Btajatnla V Kentnof Co.. Brunswick idldf., fiftb .. Near Xork. 1318 People' Urn cims.. caii-age. Subscription terms by mall or to any ad diet i la tba Doited States or Meaicei DAILI CM year....... S5.00 Ota moats., 9 gCSDAI . On year 82 JSC : On meats. ......I -S9 DAILY AKD SUNDAY One year....-,.. ST. BO I One month. '...... .OS a- A deserved and discriminat ing compliment 1 often one of the strongest encourage ment and ; incentives to the diffident and- self-distrustful. Tryon Edwards. S- THE COURTHOUSE SCANDAL w HAT is the "stand In" which Mose Bloch had at the county court bouse? What influence did he exert on certain public employes that gave him the power to ex , tort a part of their wage from other public employes? VVas there a compact of secrecy, -silence, and division,: or did ..the officials who favored the wage shaver do so ' for mere affection for Bloch? ' - J The petty extortions practiced upon wage workers in the cOunty employ, as detailed in yesterday's Journal, constitute a public scan dal. The wage of h& breadwinners is low . enough ' without being trimmed by a thrifty go-between. The fact that a loan shark busi ness could be conducted with free desk room under the very shadows of. courts of justice and within the portals of the public building dedi- cated to Just administration, is a ' scathing indictment of things as they have been and it calls for a searching . Investigation. -J Multnomah county should be a Just paymaster. Her every obliga tion to those who render her serv ice should be promptly met at 100 cents on the dollar. What is the status, what the infamy, when so rich a local gov eminent permits her little debts to tber humble servitors to be laid ' Under toll for usury and usurers. How, why, and by whom was Bloch given his. privileges? Iet the public know the truth, and let the shameful practice be termin ated for all time. How could Bloch operate with out confederates? 'IT NEVER PAYS STRANGE patient was dying the other day In the tuber culosis ward of the County hospital at Chicago. He had known as "Joseph Wagner. been But, with death near, he said he was Ignatius J. Chileski, lawyer and private banker, who In 1911 fled from Chicago with clients and depositors clamoring for more than 1100,000 of their money he had lost in gambling. Impending death revealed a sad story, Chileski, until he dropped out ,of sight, was the kind of man other men trusted. He was known to have worked and saved and sac rificed to become a lawyer. He prospered, gained friends among working men and handled, their money for - them. But he 4 made other friends politicians who in . duced " him to gamble with other people's : money. He lost and be came a fugitive. ' x-. On his 'dying bed Chileski said that when the crash came he fled to soutn America, went from there to Africa and later visited Asia to -escape detectives. ; He tried to earn money to repay : his creditors, and Tailor Than 'anmathtnir mll him ' back to Chicago. He went In disguise. . Only when death was Imminent did he call for his wife and children, who had long since given him up for dead. "Tell my old friends that I paid ; for ray folly with my life," . he whispered. "Gambling did it all - Mtr-did not pay." It never pays. LOOKING TOWARD 1916- SENATOR PENROSE of Penn sylvania predicts that Repub licans and Progressives will unite for "an old-fashioned Republican year In '1916." In a statement jssued last week he said: It IS very evident that the Pro gressives, so-called, are coming back to the Republican party. The last election In - Pennsylvania and else- ' where demonstrated that - they would continue to come back In Increasing numbers. The mistakes and misun derstandings of the past will be for gotten sad the party will again be harmonious and reunited. But; ; the Philadelphia Ledger, leading Republican newspaper of Pennsylvania, does not see an as sured Republican triumph in 1916. It declares that men like Penrose and BarneB of New York stand in the way. The Ledger says: :When the history of the 1912 split comes to be written dispassionately, it will be seen that the Progressive movement was not distinctively the formation . of a new: party.vbut a re vulsion from the leadership of such tnea as Penrose, Barnes, Aldrich, l.or- lmer and. Cannon, v . . . . The Ledger adds that as Pen rose and men of his type are - the 'real obstacles to fusion, they should " Unhappily tor Lincoln . Repub licanism, the reactionary leaders project themselves upon an tin willing rank and file, and by; hook I and crook maintain control. These leaders In all their acta are false to : the great achievements and ple&did traditions of Lincoln Re publicanism, and, as the Ledger says,; the Progressives, know it and , that knowledge -makes them un willing to return to an organisation led by the Penroses. A GAMBLER'S PRICE ,a-:-vfJ !.. : ".' FORMER millionaire banker of Vancouver,. B. C, was yesterday found wandering the streets of Los Angeles A In a condition of bewilderment. . His bank at one time 'owned more thanf $3,000,000 worth of waterfront property. It was- also a heavy speculator in British Co lumbia ; timber.- ; Economic condi tions and war led to enormous financial losses and the former millionaire ; has been reduced to want For a time recently, he held a job as night watchman. Such Is speculation. When you embark in i speculation, your suc cess depends upon how many peo- f le there are for you to prey Upon, f there are enough people willing to be your prey, if they have suf ficient means to pay you tribute, and if general economic condi tions remain favorable, you win. But if there are too many speculators; for the jijumber of those to be preyedp6n, you are almost certain SoIose. That is the law of speculation. "'" The British Columbia banker millionaire so found it. He gam bled heavily.' He played the limit. -Luck was bad and the intended victims were too few. ,v He lost. notpnly his millions, but his mind. And so, every day human wrecks pile up on the ocean beach of life MODERN DICK TURPINS T HEFT also has its evolution. Twenty modern Dick Turpins holding up a fast freight train in the heart of New York state and r carrying off $5 0,000 worth of costly silks is an exploit to make the original Professor Tur- pin sigh for another career on earth in which to have a turn at the old game w!th modern appli ances in hand. The audacious program of the New York bandits is amasing when one reflects on how there t was to be disposal of so much bulky booty, and where the spot in which it was to be hidden from the au thorit'es. The o-.?rage and dash of the; train engineer alone seems likely to have spelled an exploit that, if successfully accomplished. would have been in many respects, the most remarkable robbery in Criminal annals. The bee , has its sting and the flower its hidden poisons. The automobile on a smooth highway of a summer evening, or through the lanes between the meadows when the bloom is on the clover, is a new force for human happi ness. But it -is likewise a joy . forever to the honorable Turpins who shoot up baaks of seize young girls on the street and speed away to a rendesvous. It is one Of the penalties of civilization, one of the stings of, advancement, one of the poisons of progress. "STIRRING UP TROUBLE T HE Japanese embassy at Wash ington denies tnat a naval base, has been established' at Turtle Bay, Lower California. It Is declared that the Japanese government never had any inten tion of locating a naval base ! or occupying any territory on the west coast of Mexico. There never should have been any occasion for such a denial. Dispatches ; from Los Angeles tell ing of the gathering, of foreign warships, of a large camp ashore and of mines laid In the harbor are the occasion for the Japanese disclaimer. But these dispatches caused no uneasiness In Washing ton, for it was conceded that un usual activities were necessary to save the stranded cruiser Asama. A few Japanese flshormen fre quenting the waters of Turtle Bay are the only evidence of the pur ported "seisure" of American ter ritory. The facts make the man ufactured scare ridiculous. But thero Is a serious side to it. If constant misrepresentation of Japan continues in this country the time may come whek relations between the two governments will become strained. - Circulation of false ' reports and rumors without foundation in fact is almost as dangerous as handling dynamite. There should be a stop put to the activities of such propaganda, j It Is no time to stir up trouble, I for the stirring might bo easy. i THE FIRST WEDGE HE steamship Noordam, "with the white flag of peace flying, sailed from New York Tues day. Among the passengers were nearly 50 American women on their way toThe Hague to at tend jthe International congress of women, April 28 to 30. Their mission is peace, but they do not expect to do the impossible. Here is Miss Jane Addam's final mes sage of the eve of sailing: We do not expect to stop the war. but we will be the. first international body to talk about stopping It. We hope to drive the first wedge. ; I know many men think we women are trying to do something that belongs to the province of international law. Such is not our mission. W do not presume to represent governments, We do 'not even officially call this peace conference. It Is a congress of women, summoned In response to the fervent appeals of our sisters of many nations... ? ' There has been criticism of this woman's undertaking.- Butt was it Just? It la the task of women to make good the humanity that has been destroyed : and is : being de stroyed.' It is up to the women to furnish new nations, v Why ; should they not have the right to protest against slaughter? soldiering Is a risky business, but so .IS' mother hood. .' ; ji. Miss Ad dams says women do not expert to stop this war; but they should be able to do something toward making another war-impossible. If women of all nations, at The Hague are able to impress upon the world some great truths their congress will be a great suc cess. The first great truth neces sary for statesmen,, militarists and people generally to recognize Is the wickedness of permitting interna tional conditions to develop so that war. may come by a sort of spontaneous combustion. If that wedge Is started; the rest ' should be . comparatively easy. : WHAT ; GUARANTEE PROMINENT American sur geon predicts that when the war Is over, the need for virile men will be so great that the decimated nations will offer great Inducements to. male American immigrants. He suggests that these governments may even send ships to convey them abroad, all expenses paid. Maybe it is only a wild guess. Yet, practically all the able bodied men in the warring countries are under arms, and the toll of the trenches is heavy. In that toll, there Is more than, the mere killed. There are wounds that leave the heart beating but destroy all fu ture . efficiency In the man. There are exposures In the trenches that doom the body of youth to a career of near invalidism. The trenches and the long night of terrorism mean a living death for millions born and unborn, a living death of gnarled limbs, knotted muscles, wasting frames and stunted minds. They mean a continent of cripples, an age of weaklings, v If the young men of America are to be offered inducements to help repOpulate decimated Europe, will the rulers who make war give them guarantee that they are not wanted, to become, like bullocks for the butcher's block, human atoms in the bloody regiments and trenches of future wars? THE LIBERTY BELL P H1LADELPHIA will Bend the famous Liberty Bell to the San Francisco ' exposition. There was opposition to the plan, the contention being that the bell should not be put to the haz ard of; a long railroad, journey. It was urged that the crack in the metal had been growing and that jars incident to travel might prove disastrous. The ! bell is the property of Philadelphia, but in a larger sense it belongs to the American people. They do not wish harm to come to it. but : such a relic of revolution ary times will serve a larger pur pose by taking chances on a first trip to the Pacific coast than by remaining forever east Of the Mis sissippi. - V' An attempt will be made to bring the bell to Portland on .he way to or from lan Francisco. It is to be hoped the effort will be suc cessful, for Portland's school chil dren should have the opportunity to see this prized relic of the days when the colonists declared, and set out to maintain, the rights of man. The notes that the old bell rang" out changed the whole course of human history. Its voice was the voice of the Immortal Declaration, thundered forth at a time that tried men's souls. Times change and men die. Na tions drift away from their ancient moorings, and; institutions are sometimes scarred and. marred by time and human weaknesses.- It Is a wise judgment that per mits the Liberty Bell to go forth on its -journey, for the sight of it rebaptizes the beholder in the old faith and stirs the mind into a re newed devotion to the old but everlasting principles ; announced when freedom was flung forth to a waiting mankind. STILL UNPAVED N' EXT Thursday will fee the second f anniversary 'i of the opening of the Broadway bridge to traffic. The structure cost $1,586,921.90, and for more than two years the Interest f on the bonds has been running- For nearly : two 'years, the great Viaduct has stood In beautiful outline across the river, and ; has, - throughout that long period; been of but minor use to other ,than "; street car: traffic, be cause of the 10 blocks of unpaved street at its eastern approach. . The unpaved thoroughfare is at all times in worse condition than many of the roads in Multhomah county. It is so rough, and In winter so muddy and In summer so dusty that most vehicles that can avoid It, use: other -bridges. The Broadway bridge Is dally .deteriorating. ; The " process goes rapidly on. Is the structure -. to pass Into final decay withput ever having risen to its full usefulness because of the nnpaved stretch of street? ..In what other city has-there been a like example of shear waste? In his testimony yesterday be fore the federal commission on Industrial Relations; J. Ogden Ar mour waa asked, "Do you believe a.-proper standard of living can be maintained . by a weekly wage of $12.50 ?" He replied that It "is a broad and difficult question." It Is not a difficult question for the head of a family .who must maintain a household on. $2.08 per day. He knows that it cannot be done in a city under the present cost of living and maintain a proper standard of living. If Mr. Armour has real doubts, he could soon settle it by trying the plan himself. - THE JOURNAL NATIONAL EDITORIAL CONSIDER THE CAT Ur AGNES HEPPLIKK A.uthor and Eaaaylat. THE Audubon Societies have pub lished in their official organ, "Bird-Lore,- a plea for the "un prejudiced consideration" of cats. They ask for what they call a "broad-minded view" of the cat ques tion; and, as might be imagined, their conception of broad-mindedness con sists In suppressing the cat 'for the good of the bird. "Public welfare" is associated In their eyes exclusively with the protection of birds. ' The ancient and honorable order of cats has no place In the Audubon scheme of creation. We are asked to sur render the friend of our fireside and the companion of bur solitude," be cause, forsooth, he has remained through the centuries what "broad- minded" nature made him. Not that "Bird-Lore" admits for a moment' nature's ruthless impartiality, According to this authority, the cat's place "in nature" -tis to act as check upon small t-odents. although "by habit" it preys upon birds. Why such incomparable dexterity in climb ing, in leaping to a great height, and in balancing itself in precarious po sitlons, should have been lavished upon an animal designed to check rodents, does not clearly appear. Do the Audubon Societies believe that nature shares their preoccupation with, birds? Do they think she oares more for a tanager than for a tad pole, or for a chaffinch than for a centipede? It is n6t nature's bust ness to rid us Of rats. She has pro vided munificently for the propaga tion of the species, and there her interest ends. Our annoyance, our distaste, even our possible peril, do not concern her. "These vylanOus false cattes . Were made fOr myse and rattes. And not for byrdes smalle," is a poetic and sentimental view of the situation. Nature has never yielded it her assent. It is true, as "Bird Lore" reproach fully points Out to Us. that we have "disturbed the balance of nature" by domesticating the cat, and that It is under the aegis Of our protection that" he pursues his predatory career. We have also disturbed the balance of nature by domesticating the dog, and his uncritical attitude, together- with our Amazing: eucoess in alienating him from his kind, gives us a pleasant sense of proprietorship. He is an un cleanly and often a dangerous beast; but we value him because he is our very . own, because he Is what we have inade him. rather than what nature intended him to be. If a dog bites a child in the city street, a dozen kind hearted ladies write at once to the papers, assuring us that hydrophobia is an imaginery disease. It never occurs to them that parents may not want their child to be bitten by. even a sane dog. If a cat eats a robin on the lawn, a dosen equally kind hearted ladies call heaven to wit ness that the deed is one of violence, and that any householder who har bors the criminal must be held ac cessory to the crime. a ""For the benefit of these offenders, "Bird Lore" prints a searching exam ination of conscience, a list of ques tions which, if truthfully answered, will carry conviction to the soul. Some of these questions are of an intimate and personal character, as, "Am. I perfectly sure that my cat Is a good mouser?" Others appeal to the Intelligence, as. "Am I sure that rats- and mice about barns and houses cannot be more effectively destroyed by some other means than by cats?" "And many take a high moral stand, as, "Does my cat tres pass On the grounds of other people, and interfere With their plans for saving and attracting birds?" ""Does my cat wander free at night, disturb ing my neighbors ,by fighting with other cats, or, by making harassing noises?" "Do I know how many stray cats are about . my neighborhood?" "Am I taking a broad -minded view Of the cat question r The last query but one would puzzle an accountant. "In the dark all cats are gray;' and my, Tiiend's Tom taking his evening constitutional on my back fence Is not distinguished from a freebooter enjoying th same unconceded privilege. " : a a " The truth Is that this kindly solici tude for our welfare on the part of the Audubon societies Is but a cloak to veil their only real concern the safety of birds. It is . natural and right that they should be so Con cerned. ' c . . It is natural, ." though : not right, that they should seek the destruction Of the cat as one step toward the as sured protection of th bird. But when they talk about broad minded ne and the fright kind of cltisen shlp," when they clalm nature as their ally and conscientiousness as their dower, then cat lovers, who are every whit as ardent as bird lovers, rouse themselves for combat., ' "Am I perfectly sure that my cat is a good mouser?" X am iot, and I should deem it an impertinence to ask him. I am not sure that my other friends are 1 good lawyers or doctors or coal dealers. It is enough ,for me that they are friends. . If my eat grants me his suave companionship on terms of honorable equality, If he drowses and blinks by my side, and purrs responsively when I speak to him, our bond is sealed. A cat by the firs is worth more thaa two birds in the bush. : -copyright WIS. A FEW SMILES ' "No," said th roan who was shot In head by his friend While they were out shooting, lost greater part of an ear and was scratched con siderably, "I don't mind the wounds so much, but it breaks my heart to have my head mistaken by my most intimate friend for a rabbit." I "xes," said the amateur tenor, "I once received a high compliment from a. great musician. X was singing on board of an ocean liner, but without accompaniment, : for accompanists . can never keep time With me, you know."- "What did the mu sician say?" "He said and these were the very words "When X saw you begin to sing witnout accompaniment I was aur prised; when I heard you I was amazed; but when you sat down I was de lighted!' " , - i Prospective Employer (perusing ref erencesj Have you any knowledge of 3 the siuc and satin de partment? I Applicant Spent my life among 'em, sir. j Prospective Em ployerAnd sheets and blankets? Applicant forcibly) Born '.em, sir. among - Ar organ being some time ago in troduced into a parish church in the north of Scotland, some of the mem bers took offense and left. One of those soon afterward met another member and inquired: &oo's the organ get tin' onr Oh. fine," was th answer, "Jlst Wawin away the chaff an keepln' th corn." Letters From the People : CotemODiett1ona aeot to Th Journal for pobllratlon ia tola Oapartmeat aboold be writ ten on only ona aide of tbe paper, ahould not exceed 3O0 woraa in leogto ud muat d ac ooipaaniad br tha name and addreaa of the lender. If the writer does not desire to have the same published- Be ahould a state.) "Diacuaaton It the greatest of alt reformers, tt rat!onallxea eTefytnlef it touches. It robs principles or au raise sanctity ana rorowa toem back on their reasonableness. It they hare no reaaonableneaa. It ruthleselr emahea them out of eslatence and ceta up lta own conclusions in Uiair stead. " WOodroW Wilson. Mr. PhUlen's Statements Criticised, Portland, April 16. To the Editor of The Journal In an article on Lux emburg in yesterday's Journal, Philip Phillen writes that lh his hone ooun try "any man has a right to protest If anything does not suit him.", In justice to your readers, some protest ought to be made against 'statements made by Mr. Pbillen. He states "that he was born and reared in Luxemburg," and then goes on to add that "it Is the smallest coun try In Europe, is about 60 miles In area, has a population of 650,000 and Is a great farming country, and yet puts out 40 per. cent of the world's production of steeL" Any sixth grade schoolboy In Port land In five minutes could disprove these statements. This country is less prepared than Belgium was to withstand an attack by Germany, and If we were placed in Belgium a position, would we follow th example of Belgium, or that of Luxemburg? He would be a rash Lux emburger who suggested that we would He down and let any other coun- try-jtaltt over us. Belgium did, and is doing, what any nation of men would do. Her good name cannot be bought With money, and by her conduct she has won the admiration of all moral people. We all know that Luxemburg was power less to prevent the use of her terri tory by either France or Germany, but if she had had the moral fiber of her neighbor on the west she would not have held out" her hand for the price thftt was Offered for the une Of her roads. A SUBSCRIBER. Questions Mr. Murphy. Portland, April 15. To the Editor Of The Journal X should like to ask' J. Hennessey Murphy a question with reference to his letter in The Journal yesterday in regard to the Chicago election. X should like-for Mr. Murphy to explain just who or what Professor Cahill means when he speaks of big otry? The Oregonian gets off the same word in. I think, last Monday's issue, and the News a few days earlier, and wo are beginning to wonder just who or What is meant by th constant recurrence of that word of late, with due respect to Mr. Murphy. R. K. BRATTON. The Chicago Election. . Orenco, Or., April 14. To the Edi tor of Th Journal Th city of Chi cago recently - held an election and a Republican waa elected mayor by a big majority. Th Oregonian claims It was a rebuke to the-Wilson administration, and attempts to prove its case by wasting columns of editorial space. If the Chicago election is a rebuke to Wil son, what shall we say of tbe senator ial election In Oregon last fall? - Mr. Booth repeatedly stated in his public addresses that the only way to secure a full dinner pail and restore prosper ity was to elect him to the united States senate. . The Oregon : voter voiced their ; confidence- in President Wilson ny defeating Mr. Booth by 25.- 000. Mr. Wilson will be reelected, for ail the pettifogging Of the Oregonian and th rest of the standpatters. DEMOCRAT. :: Children's Bights as Heirs. : Ashland. Or., April 1Z. To the Edi tor of The Journal Pleas answer the following: Do th children get half of the property la teas of the mother's death, and. if so. how should the chil- PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE ' A flow of words Is no proof of wis dom. .... - a '.. Why shorten our days by lengthen ing our nights? a If you want to know anything about club life; hit the policeman. , . .. v . A good many spirit manifestations come after visits to th bar. . If a lazy man has nowhere elae to go, he ought to go to work. - Pat men ar good natured . because good natured men are usually fat. . a . The lantern-jawed man isn't neces- sarily a brilliant conversationalist. ...... a a r A full dress Suit enables a 1800 clerk to pass himself of f for a $1200 waiter. a ;-, a Talk less and think more. This Is easy advice to give, but uneasy to take. . ....... - a a j--'.,: , A cpntented, willing laborer is worth 60 per cent more than a dissatisfied compulsory worker. After it became apparent that cloth ing was the proper thing. It vgas Eva who said: "I told you so." a . a ... l Sometimes the humor of a man Is so dry that he has to buy the drinks in order to get other .. men to llatan to it. - '.'How sliail X dress ' tomorrow?" is th all Important question that fills the mind of a woman the first time she goes to bed in a sleeping car. And no wonder! When corfipany' Is present and the children modestly state that they pre fer wings and backs, the company knows that mother ha had a little side talk with her rising generation. WILLIAM Fj-om th Salt Lake Telegram. The newspaper profession of America lost one of ita most abl members In the death of William Rockhill Nelson yesterday In Kansas City. Mr. Nelson was editor and owner of the Kansas City Star. He and a part ner started that paper as a little, four page afternoon edition In 1880, but soon his partner retired, owing to ill health. Mr. Nelson, through his abil ity, tireless energy and conscientious attention to detail, gradually and stead ily built-up the Star until it Is ranked today as one of the nation's greatest newspapers." ; While Mr. Nelson was vigorous In his attacks on what to him seemed evils, he was primarily ' a construc tionist and Kansas City owes to him a great deal of credit for Its develop ment, - -J He was a great believer In the beau tifying of a lty and any on who ever knew the old Kansas City realizes how much beautifying it needed. Mr. Nel son was one of the prime movers in the campaign to build boulevards there, and today no city can boast of greater progress in this line than can the city on the Kaw. He, himself, had trees planted along the first boule vard. He mads of his home and his neighborhood a district rivaling the countrysides Of England In homelike comfort and beauty.' . v . a a ' Not only Kansas City but the entire middle west will miss and mourn tua tor Nelson. His services were valuable for that great empire that fledges the Mississippi and the Missouri. He fought for big ideas and high princi ples, not only for cities, but for states and sections. And a mighty influence he wielded. - Always independent, but never -neu tral In politics, Editor weison was Tear less in his attacks and powerful in his support Of what he considered right and just. ' . The- best proof that the people had confidence in him is the great record and success of his newspaper. There was a day when corporation-owned and big-business-controlled organs could prosper when journals following the narrow groove of a political machine could hold the faith of the people, but that day long ago passed. Editor Nelson's paper prospered because. the masses believed in its sincerity even when they disagreed with it. There were times when the candi date for office who was most bitterly opposed by the Star received th larg est majority at the polls, while at the earn time the Star's circulation ma jority continu6d-to grow, which, shows that you need not agree with th peo ple all the time so long as you are honest with them and retain their con fidence. While political Organs and news papers that carried the curse of cor poration stamps on them were losing thousands and thousands of dollars YOUR INCOME AND EXPENDITURES By John M Osklson. Says the originator of a new sys tem of personal accounting whicit is simple and intended to appeal to ev erybody: "Success depends more on system in conducting your affairs than on any thing else." . ' ' . ' Kin evstem is Interesting; it-Is lawa pn the segregation of income and Out go into units. It Is ft monthly record, kept on ruled strips, one side for the details of your personal accounuin and the other for keeping your bank account. - . "Saving" and "Miscellaneous' are two standard headings: and there are eight other headings to b filled in as vou wish. At the extreme end ii. a ."Petty Account blank. in starting mis, you. m.iw among th headings the total of your hnnfc accounts If you hav $100 in th bank, assign, for example, 10 as your balance for savings, 38 . to miscellan eous, $16 for rent. S8 for clothing, $15 for food, $5 for fuel, $5 for the dona tion or charity fund, and so on. j On either side Of the "balance col-, dhen go about making claim to their portion? SUBSCRIBER. tThe Inquirer should consult th county judge in his county. This offi cial has Jurisdiction over matter of inheritance and will giv all necessary Information, with instructions as to proper procedure. '- The Champtonship. From th Portland Advocate. We are not glad, neither ar we sad about Jack Johnson losing his title of heavyweight champion prize fighter of th world, trut w do feel that a hug Impedlfent to our racial ad vancement has been removed try his defeat. We don't deny th fact that w felt a sense of race prid When Jack won th championship in the fis tic arena but the notorious pace that he set and th race friction, and bitter criticism that hi many acts of out lawry brought to his race, made many of them wish that he had nev-r been born, therefore, if any tears are to be shed over Mr. Johnson's defeat, let Mr. Johnson and his associates, both white and black, shed them, ror the well thinking, respectable element of the race will not. Should th whit race see superior greatness and glory In th fact that Jess Wlllard has re- OREGON SIDELIGHTS "Salem." the Journal alleges, 'is the only city of importance in- Oregon not actively engaged ! in campaigning for a bigger commercial club membership." e -a ! The ferry on the Willamette near Canby haa received its final appropria tion and will soon be in operation. It Is almost entirely! a product of private effort and capital; . , All's right with' Hermiston's part of. th world, according to the Herald,' which bays: "New people avr securing land here and doing Improvement work. The outlook for good crops waa never better, Ther is work fori svery man and team. Altogether the prospect Is for an excellent year." J . - f A' , Springfield correspondence Eugene Register: Mel Bartlett had on display this week th black wolf hid h had mounted for Stacey Russell, county clerk. This was) the wolf that had been playing havoc with young stock year Marcola and was finally trapped. It was Indeed a monster and was made into a beautiful rug by Mr, Bartlett. r v.fv - Complaining that not a slngl non resident property i owner contributed a cent to iSstaoada's clean-up day ex penses, although the majority of them were solicited, th Jrroress urges that an ordinance be (.passed Immediately which will make lit possible to charge non-residents for labor expended on upkeep of tbeir- property, Pendleton East Oregonian; Ad Nye and Colonel John Bentley are bound for San Francisco to attend the Panama-Pacific,, carrying with them all the zeal of two youngsters. Both are Mis sourlans of th cam locality, both are Democrats, both pioneers of this coun ty, both 73 years old, both ex-sheriff of Umatilla and; have several othwr characteristics in common which make them congenial traveling companion.. R. NELSON very year, the Kansas City Star, un der Editor Nelson's guidance, was an nually piling up fortune upon fortune. It is on of the nation's biggest money makers among newspapers, No political organ will ever make the money the Star has made;! no corpora tion or gang ' controlled journal will ever succeed as it -has succeeded. It is the day of Independent news papers and Editor Nelson was present at tne dawning of the day. - e His career Is another proof, also, that a man who jfeels discouraged be cause has failed in his chosen line, may hope for ultimate success In an other line of endeavor., j Mr. Nelson was nearly 40 years old berore he entered the newspaper pro fession. And yet he won recognition as a leader In it4 j Many men give-up and -consider themselves failures, if they cannot make a big showing by the time they reach, the age ofj 40. , ( . Mr. Nelson was first a contractor. He became interested I In politics through an ideal of reform. And he discovered that the most affective way to bring about reforms and justice for the people is through the agency of an honest and! fearless newsrmoer. He met with business reverses and then decided definitely to give up con tractlng and enter the newspaper pub lishing business. When his Utile paper ' at Kansas City began to make profits, Mr. Nel son put the profits into improvements and kept the Star growing in power ana userumess. 'j- ' J- . There was ahother' newspaper. In Kansas City that had already achieved fame and success before the Star was thought of It was called the Times. It had a nation wide reputation. But politician . got hold of it and made It the organ of a rang, and then It took on its death pallor. It was like any other newspaper that degenerates into political orpan. Its strength waned. It grew-weaker and weaker. - .1 There was but one hope- transfusion. And so It was transfused with the Kansas City Star. And from that day on th Times Was delivered as the morning edition of th Star. Nelson was the surgeon! who delivered it from its death agony. j The people inj the middle west are not unlike the people elsewhere in this nation.- They 4re Quick to "see the motives back of newspapers. . They are quick to Judge jbetween the true and th untrue. And bnce they have 'Jsed. there ia no hope for the one that car ries the corporation or political ma chine brand. Itjis doomed forever. - None but the jstneere and Independ ent newspapers can succeed in then times when thei people jliav learned to think and Judge for themselves. - ' ( f r umn in each division are spaces to enter, the checks drawn j and charged against each account ana aepoHits credited to each account; ' on the side of the sheet ruled to show " your account with the bank, spaces are provided for: the date of each check and of - each deposit; the number and amount or in cnecK, to whom it was made, for what, and whether or not jit has been recorded on the other side- The balance in the bank is shown each entry. There Is space below iff which to write fur ther details concerning the use made or the money drawn out oy ciiecK. "The financial gam of living, played, artgbt, says this system's sponsor, "is a niost fascinating prob lem." i , He is sure that (f you Will keep this record with' conscience! useless ex travagance will (disappear out of your life; you will better realize the earn ing power of savings and the buying oower of your income. ' I'm' for thlsr System? On thing against - it Is that it seems rather complicated just at first, i Who Will be next to offer a simple pian? The Ragtime Muse Style's tbe Thing. Tell me. don't they make! you son!!, Stately girls with lots of style. Oirls with figures slim and straight. Throwing glances out for bait. Shedding graces! by the mil. Making conquest while you wait? " - - .- - I - Giggling girls won't do for ms. Roly-poly though they be; Rosy girls with pouting lips, Oirls with shoulders, girls with hip. Biyie s me tning, you may n': Style abhors girl who skips! Take away the girl with curves. She should have a cas of nerves; So ahe'U wriggl through her belt. Make her bony, make her svelte. Make her solemn, well that serves; Take her flesh, hut leave her pelt! When she's slim enough, desist; Her lost flesh will not be missed If she wears a stately air, . Bob her skirts and bob her hair. Shows her ankle like her wrlst; . . Then th girl-has style so ther! turned: the championship to it, with all it brutality and debauchery that us ually characterizes th life of a prize fighter, accept it with our best wishes. "tH gABXY UATM" By ml tackley. gpaolal Staf Writs, a Tbe Journal. For 38 years Miss Kat C. McBeth haa worked among th Nes Perce In dians in Idaho. Recently X vial ted her at Spalding. Idaho, to learn something Of her work. ; "My sister, Susan I McBeth, came her six years before I did." said Mis Kat McBeth. "My sister Was several years older than I am. Sh waa born on th banks of the Doon, In Scotland. When sh was yet a baby my parents cam to America, "I was born in Wellsvllle, Ohio, not long after they cam from Scotland. My sister taught In Fairfield univer sity, in Iowa, prior to th Civil war. In 185$ sh went to Ooodwater station, in th Indian territory, as a missionary to th Choctaw Indians. At the break. Ing out of the war the schools were suspended and sister went, to-' Jeffer son barracks to work among the wounded.. soldiers. I bellev she waa th first woman to be commissioned for this work by the Christian com- ' mission. "When the war was over ah be cam city missionary in th church at St. Louis of. which Dr. James Brooks was paator, "During Grant's administration th educational work of th Indian reser vations was assigned to different re ligious denominations. Th Method--iats were given charge of th Yakima reservation, the Presbyterians were as signed the Nes Perce reservation, and so on. Although she received her par from th government, she was em ployed by the board of foreign mis sion of th Preabytereian church. "Rev, Oeorge Ainaley had worked with her among the Choctaws, ami when h was assigned to th work among the Nes Perces he suggested to Dr. Lowrle, the secretary of the Pres byterian board of foreign missions, that my sister would be peculiarly fit ted for work among th Indians. She cam to Iapwal agency In the falloof 1878. "Mr. Spalding at this. time was sta tioned at Kamiah. He died next year and Is buried here at Spalding, where he started his work tn 1838. His' wife died In the Willamette valley, but rc-n cently she was brought her' and re burled by the side of, her husband. "After teaching for a year at Lap wal, my sister went to Kamiah to do the work that nad ben started by Mr. Spalding the training of .Nes Per a young men to be ministers. In 1877, when the Chief Joseph war started, 45 of the Kamiah Indians came with her as a body guard to Lapwal. After thV Joseph war Was over she returned to Kamiah and there sh died and wa buried. She died May 26, 1893. "During the 20 years my -slater worked among the Nez Perces she fnade a dictionary of 10,000 words of he Nes Perce tongue. Sh had asked that the manuscript of this Nes Perce dictionary should be sent to the Smith sonian Institution. I sent the box con taining the manuscript, upon which my sister had spent years of work, by ex press. It mad the first part of its jonrney by boat, going on the Annie Faxon, Fifty miles below Lewlston the boat was blown up and, many of the passengers were killed. The boat was blown up at Wade"s bur at about 7:30 O'clock On the morning of AugUHt 14, 1893. Captain Harry Haughman was badly hurt and. eight people were killed. "Mr. King, the clerk In the store at Fort Lapwai, 'had bought a ranch' on the Snake river some distance below Wade's bar. lie satv a red box float ing down th river and juat an It en tered the rapids he threw the nooue of his saddle rope over it and drew it auhore. He opened it, recognized my sister's handwriting and took the wi-t manuscript home, and ha and hla wilt; dried the wet sheets and so it fitmlly reached the Smithsonian Institution. "I came here in 1879 to help Sinter Sue. with tlx work. You will find much ' rnlhinforniAtlon about the Ni- Perces. Their very name is a ml notner, for they never pierced thele noses. They are a branch of the fclm haptlan family and their name fr themselves Is 'Nim-s-poo,' meaning i umI, Th, f .ii r ItiHana who went to St. fjouls to get the 'Book of Life' were N Perce Indians. Their names were 'Tlp-yu-lah-iia-Jr.h-nln,' r 8peklng Eaglo'; 'Ka-ou-pu,1 or 'Man-of-the-Mornlng'; 'Ill-youts-tohan, or 'Rabbit-Skin-Lngglns,' a nephew of Speaking Eagle, and 'Ta-wis-sis-sim-nlm, or 'Llttie-Ilorns-Llke-an-Old-iluf-falo.' "I have talked with Indians who re membered their leaving for the lontf trip In 1831. When tliey reached HI. Louis they were taken to the America it Fur company's offl' and one of-the trappers waa brought In totalk with them. When axked who they were, lie xald: 'They are the Nes Perces of tlifl lower Columbia.' In history you rea l they were the Flathead branch of the Ne Perces. There is no. such a thlnn. as the Flatheads and the Nm Perce ar distinct tribes. The mlatake Of the French trapper in mistaking them for the Indians of the lower Columbia who occasionally pierce their noses . IVja been perpetuated, and ever since they have been improperly called 'Nez Perces. - "The I Nez Perces are very religious. Their religion is to them a matter of deeds, not words alone. .We are hold ing religious meetings her now . ami the Indians will be her froth all over th reservation. There are six churches on the reservation, all the pastors be ing full blooded Nes Perces. They are all here, and if you wish to attend the services tonight you may hear sev eral of them speak. -They not only preach here, but go out on missionary tours to. other tribe," That night I attended church. Never In a church whose worshipers were white people hav I seen such perfect order and decorum and such unflag ging Interest and attention as I did there.' On the platform were" Jarm-n Hayes. Peter Lindney, Moses Monteltn, Robert Parsons, 101 las Pond. William Wheeler and Mark Arthur, the Indian ministers. Rv. James Hayes presided and Rev. Peter Llndsey preached the sermon, which was in the Indian tongue. After a short service a prayer meeting was held, at which a score or more spoke briefly. More Impressive almost than th evident devotion and . consecration of th spoken service wa the singing. All took part and they put their soula Into the singing. , One cannot study the Nez Perce In dians without respecting them. Broken faith and violated treaties on the prt of the government caused the Nez Perce w a. r and It is a chapter in oar national history of which w have lit tle cause to be proud. L'nbleachabl. From the Washington Star. "If some of thes financiers keep i telling on on another they'll all end with the character that Cal Clay gave the deacon." Th speaker was GIfford Plnchot. I la resumed: "Cal Clay was a witness in behalf of th deacon, who was up for chicken Stealing. ""-Calhoun, my man, the lawyer said. what do you know of the deacon's character? : j "'lilt am unreachable, sah Cal re- i plied." . , j