THE OREGON DAILY: JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1915. THE JOURNAL ' AM INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. S. JACKSON ; A.. Publisher. published every eieolsi (except Snnday) and erery. nnnaay morning at xne jonrnii tog, Broadway and Yamhill sta.. Portland, Or. coetoifflce at Portland, or., ior : tranamUsioo - tbroajCb the mall aa second tun matter. ' s j PHONES Mala T178: Home. A-SOSl. . All r . ODartments reached by neee number, xeu t in oiwrtiof arnae aepartmeni yon want. :fcUKlQM AUVKKTlINO BEPKE4SKNTATI VB I Benjamin Kent nor Co., Brunswick Bid., s 225 Fifth A"e., New. York 1218 People ; uaa umg Chicago, - - ? Subscription term by mail t any d- -er,s ui u liOJtad states or jaeiico; DAILY. Due year...... $5. 00 1 One . month .1 .BO ........ CSDAI. . :One rear...... $2.00 t One month. 25 ! . DAILY AND SUNDAY. 'One year. .....S7.r0 I One month t .6.1 i. . . . . . . S3 -a God always gives us strength to bear the f troubles of ieach day; but : H never calculated on nur oiling; the trouble past. and those tot come, on top of those of today. Elbert Hub bard, .-r- -83 Bill. TAFT'S ADVICE i ' a MERICAN citlxenshlp and V American ! Ideals rise to noble exemplification in these words ; by former President Taft in la speech at the Union League at .'Philadelphia. Tuesday night: ! We must bear! In mind that If we 'hav war It la the people who muit ' pay with lives land, money the cost ;of it. t The president ; Is anxious to find a ;way out of the present difficulty ; without war. The task Of the president Is a : heavy one, for Ihe Is actlnsr for the whole country. I The president iis acting like Wash ington. Lincoln and McKlnley to a void war. 1 Before party, i before ourselves, we are for our. country. That is what 'he is workman .for. Shall we not , stand by him in it? -The president will not surrender our country's rights. i He does . well, when quick action us oi no cntictu importance, 10 aimy 'excitement and i to await the regular and studied action of the people's : representatives, j In 'the heat lof even just indigna tion Is not the best time to act, when action involves such momen tous consequences and untold loss of life. 1 ! No message) that goes into the k White House j where a troubleC man la struggling with unheard of 'world . comnlieatlona will be more comforting to i Woodrow Wilson. No tidings from, his country will do more to reason re and to help guide Woodrow Wilson in his stupendous iwhlle protecting American honor 'and American life In a war-mad-'dened world. . These are not the slings and ar rows of a brutal criticism, but the 'cheering words of an approving confidence. "jThey are net the rash .utterances ofj irresponsible bragga docio but thejwise counsel and pat riotic effort,1 at guidance by a friend of the nation. It is not a partisan attempt "to make person al . capital out of the passions of ?iis : fellow man," but an exalted expression of the "touch and ideal TDf America."! Mr. Taft counsels the president to be In no jhaste to decide what to do. There could be no sounder advice. This is no a normal time. Too never was such a disjointed and disarranged world before. The warring nations are at bay. They ire frenzied land desperate. They are fighting! for existence. Each la cornered, and In the strained and awful exigencies, is. on the border line df madness. Like men, ia. nation with its back io a nui, aup wnii u wait or steel !n front, to jkhe right and to the left, cannot jbe counted on to-be completely , rational. It is an un heard of situation, and one to call for Americans exercise of reason ttnd patience and every possible degree of . forbearance. It would be eriminarj f r us, with nations so unstrung,! to play the part of the bully and- braggart. ' - For the time, we are the great trustee of civilization, and by a course of firmness, calm dignity ana impartial kindness we should prove ourselves worthy to play the great part assigned us by fate and the vicissitudes of a weltering world. 1 Not In bis public career has William Howard Taft been so big and broad. iNot since the days of MadlsOn and Jackson has - there been so excellent an example of what an ftY-nrecf riant oon k - r vm.. as a counsellor to his country. SELF IXDICTED HE National Association of ; Hosiery and Underwear Manu M A... . S a. J . .. . . . facturerjs met in Philadelphia : last weK. mere was a rep resentative attendance of -New Eng land high tariff advocates. At the second day's session speakers painted a dismal picture. Everywhere I were blackness and ruin. It was said the new tariff had Increased Imnnrto or a j .. w . fcM , t ix uo creased exports' until "our factories have, been: on part time and our men on bread lines." The hosiery and underwear trade had been ruined. i I - ? . But, as ; pointed out by the New York Post. it. the first day's ses-l sioa optimism prevailed.' ' Dudley 1 Bartlett of the Philadelphia com mercial museum, who had just re turned from! Europe, stated that Americans ''could successfully com-i poio wiia.asusfl iirms in iungiand if they would adopt better? selling equipment, supply - better deliv eries and acquire a more thorough knowledge of English needs."' Philip Hough, of New York, urged Germain salesmanship meth- ods and a clearing house tor ex-force a readjustment of the dlslo porters, saying that Germany never i catecj conditions that have existed again could undersell America, and$ since the auto, with Its peril to life, that American seamless hosiery ' la I entered Into 1 the daily . affairs of destined to supplant goods manu factured : . by foreign countries. If Mr. Bartlett and Mr. Hough knew , what . they . were talking about and ! they were Invited to ; seth case, the man who drives his speak as experts the d'smal pic-: machine recklessly and with fatal ture painted at the second session ' results is headed for the peniten ts an indictment of the manufac-i tiary. f : : i , turera themselves. Tne Trdlct should be .an Im ; According 'to their own speak- j nressive argument for "safety era. thesa manufacturers nroDOse' to ask the American people to tax themselves to - make up for incom petency in directing manufacture and sale. A 3fO BACKWARD STEP 0 THER than a few politicians and job hunters, nobody wants Democratic politics of Republican , politics or ' Pro gressive politics or any other kind of politics in Portland city gov ernment, : The further cities get away from conducting business affairs by po litical methods the better they wlll 'fareL A political hack and business do not mix Veil. It is because they do not mix that the politician; wants a job in the pub lic business private business doesn't want him. Running city government on pol itics has i cost American cities mil lions upon millions of dollars. Under j politically administered government, ; men are kept in po sitions, not because the city needs the men, but because the men have rendered political service and think they ought to have public Jobs. i After a survey of city affairs in Chicago some time ago. It was officially i reported that there were 110 employes on the city payroll who were not needed.' They were drawing salaries, not to help gov ernment ibut to help politics. The proposal by the Republican county central committee to in troduce politics again Into Portland city government is against good public policy. When the city went under commission government, It left politics behind, and the people like it better. There Is no traffic in jobs at the Portland city hall. No efficient employe is kicked out to make room for an incompetent political hack. Few people even know to what party the five administrative heads belong. With no political game to play, the officials and employes have their full time for the public service. It is clean, wholesome govern ment, a government that Portland should never abandon. A LOVER OP NATURE. N EW light is thrown upon the character of the late John Muir, the naturalist of the Sierras, in. i the publica tion of his ; letters to a friend, a woman who helped him much in his struggling years. This woman was a botanist like, himself, and many of the letters are devoted to the discussion of plants and flow ers. Throughout the series of let ters is revealed the remarkable sensitive nature of the man who could endure only with a great effort the society of those who de lighted In the accumulation of money and its expenditure in dis play and personal gratification. Muir had no patience with most of the teachings of the schools and with the pedantry of schol ars. Ministers of the gospel Beemed narrow and unspirltual to him. His sole remedy for worldly taint was to get cloBe to nature. In one of his letters he said: "Churches and the schools lisp limp lngly, painfully, of man's capabilities, possibilities and fussy developing- nos trums, of duties, but If the human flock together with their Rev's and double L-D shepherds would go wild themselves they would discover with out Euclid that the solid contents of a human soul Is the whole world." in anotner paragraph is ex pressed the thoughts of a man who can spend weeks in the wilderness alone, living in close touch with the treed,: the rocks and the flow ers: "I was alone -and during the whole excursion was in a kind ef calm. incurable eestacy. Z am honelesalv ana rorever a mountaineer. How glor ious my studies seem and how aim- pie. I found out a noble truth con cerning tne , Merced moraines that escaped me hitherto. Civilisation and fever and all the morbidness that has hooted at me has not dimmed mv glacial eyes and : I care to live only iu Iowa, ai nature s loveliness." The study of the glaciers was a passion with Muir and it would be difficult to find in all history a more unworldly man. GUILTY A JURY in Judge Gatens eourt has found Fred Skogseth guilty; of manslaughter. The auto truck . Skogseth was driving ran over and killed Russell Ward, aged 11. The de fense sought to show that Skog seth had his machine under con trol, and that the boy skated In front of the machine. ; makinar the. accident unavoidable. But the Jury found the driver guilty.. . Two other cases of similar details are; pending in the Bam court, one of the defendants being the driver of the racing car which Killed two men on Tillamook street during, the Rose City Park auto faces. : ; . -,!; ; - v This verdict should have a sober ing effect on irresponsible and reckless drivers. 1 It means that juries are reaching out - to en- men. . The killings cannot c on. A sentiment will arise to end them. Under the finding In the- Skog m DISSATISFIED WITH PEACH. I N the teeth of these things, we earn as a nation measureless scorn and contempt. If we follow the lead of those who exalt peace above rlarhteouanees. if we heed ; the voice of those feeble folk who bleat , to high heaven that there is peace when .there " is no peace, i For many months our government has preserved between right and wrong neutrality which would have excited the emulous admiratI6n of Pontius Pilate, the arch typical neutral of all time. Theodore Roosevelt. i Colonel i Roosevelt evidently chafes because we, too, are not in the war. There is no mistaking bis language. "Our feeble folk who bleat:xto high heaven that there is peace when there Is no peace' are words in which Mr. Roosevelt deliberate ly announces that he is for war. Comparing President Wilson with Pontius Pilate as a "neutral" is a stinging insult to the president and to those who believe with the president in his policy of peace and neutrality. There Is no mistaking the situ ation we would be In were Theo dore Roosevelt president. This ccuntry would be resounding to the tramp of marching men. There would be Caesarisrn In the Whits House and the mothers of the United States: would be bidding good bye to their sons to follow a Caesar Into war with Germany. American boys would be pouring into the bloody trenches and this nation would be Impoverishing it Belf to raise colossal loans for the war chests. The awful convulsion that holds Europe "in a staunchless welter would seise upon the West ern Hemisphere and grip.: the whole world in Its horrible embrace. Amid his superman Ideals, Theo dore Roosevelt Is not satisfied with the ways of an honorable peace. He loves the smoke and explosions, the trappings and noise, the fuss and fury, the turbulence and strife of the battlefield, and he cannot forget them even when half the world is a saturated shambles of human blood. It is almost as if a protecting Providence had Interfered in the affairs of men when Woodrow Wilson and net Theodore Roose velt was chosen president of the United States in 1912. WHAT OF FRANCE? F RENCH vital statistics fof the first six months of 1914 have been published. In that half year the deaths exceeded the births by 17,000. In eight of the last twenty-five years France has required more coffins than, cradles. Repopulation -. of the nation is one of the most serious problems confronting France. It is declared that if the present low birth rate continues, one of two things must happen. Either a gradual deponu lation of France will take place, or there must be a steadily lncreas ing influx of foreigners to make good the losses among natives. The war has. accentuated the prob lem and national societies are at tempting to find a solution. ,j It is pointed out that if It had not been for the presence of Ital ian and other foreign elements with a high birth rate, France's show ing would have been worse. If Europe is to remain an armed camp, each nation anxious to over pewer Its neighbor, what about France? Rear Admiral . Peary announces for the Aero Club of America that a "permanent transcontinental aerial highway has been mapped," to follow the Lincoln highway as closely as possible. But for the present a lot of us will insist that enough . people will travel by auto and wagon to make Improved terra flrma highways highly desirable. Justice Hughes, of the United States supreme court, has definite ly declined to be a candidate for the presidency, i As governor of New York he had some Illuminat ing experiences with politicians now looking to him to save them. He hears no call to'jduty. President WJlson should be helped, not carped at. Even parti san politicians and their organs ought to recognize the fact that he Is carrying the greatest burden of responsibility that has . rested on an American since Lincoln.; Huerta says he has chosen New York for hia home. The millions with which he quitted Mexico should afford him excellent cre dentials In' Wall street, where no questions are asked as to how he got them. . ; j Thomas A. Edison is expected to visit Portland In tfuly. How fitting that the superman of the electrical world and the superclty of the i west should linger for 'a time In each other's company! Principal Kiggins reports that worms i are devouring, the- wood work of the Ladd school. 1 : Is it possible they are ; book " worms? " CAN WARTIMES BE "GOOD" TIMES? "O. r-n ta Philadelphia Ledger. HE prophecy was made in the 1 early weeks of the present strife that Its magnitude and Its mighty destructlveness would speedily bring the fighting nations, or at least some of them, to the end of their economic ropes and that they would be forced, accordingly, to an early peace, : ThW" far the course of events has not given the strongest support to ; this ek pectatlon. The several governments have never found jit easier to raise money. In ' Germany cooperative credit bad been developed before the war to such an point that it consti tuted one of the chief distinctions of German .efficiency, and it has since been utilized with startling suc cess by v a government whose second war loan reached a total of $2,22i 000,000, the world's record. jf It is .quite as remarkable a faet that the quantity of money lying Idle In the market enabled Great Britain to negotiate huge loans In London with out disturbing rates. Of conditions tn England a well-known financial writ er says: "The shipbuilding, industry was never so prosperous, there Is relatively little unemployment In Lon don, the woolen mills are working double time, the iron works are busy, and the demand for coal exceeds the output - of the . mines." The same writer adds, and his belief seems to be well based on Information which has recently become public, through several reliable sources, that "even In Germany" business conditions In gen eral are good. Aa for the neutral countries, the United States has begun a new era ef prosperity such as It has never known before, and in considering the late hesitation and calamity howling we have to consider also ttfe characteris tics of domestic politics. Argentina is worse off. 'Argentina Is taming a wilderness, as America had to do, and is. still exceedingly dependent on for eign capital. History contains some Interesting suggestions concerning the relation of war and business. It was predicted that the Napoleonic wars would leave Europe bankrupt, but Europe, while paying off Its debts, grew rich so fast that In Macauley'a words, "the growth could almost be discerned by the eye. After the Franco-Prussian war, the world believed that France would 'be overwhelmed by the Immense indem nity Imposed upon the nation, but the country so easily paid off and so rap idly advanced In prosperity that only the strategy of Emperor William I, who on this occasion accomplished Bismarck's severest defeat, prevented the Iron Chancellor from sending his armies forth again to crush com pletely the fortunes of France. -Our Civil war and the Spanish-American war were each followed In this' coun try by an almost miraculous business expansion. y It is dangerously easy to rest' argu ments on historical . chronology, and one of those critics of the theory that war is economically wasteful has gone so far as to assert that the cost of wsr is negligible because war has oc curred In spite of the cost. He falls to weigh the causes of war. He forgets the difference between offensive and defensive war. He Ignores his favor ite authority history, our Civil war, for Instance, was not materialistic, but it certainly was costly. In the case of the present conflict what does It signify that there la lit tle unemployment in London? There are so many Jobs in the army that It would be strange if the Jobs left at home went begging. What does it Sittrilfv that the fthinvfLrria. trta snnlen mills, the Iron works and the coaii mines are busy? The market' for their products is only answering the de mand of a carnival of destruction. To create' prosperity should Philadelphia pray for an earthquake, or a fire? Either would result in great Industrial activity, but either would be' decidedly a mixed blessing! What does It sig nify that the governments of Europe are finding It easy to negotiate loans? For one thing, It Signifies that while the gun and ammunition manufactur ers contributed heavily they who are as far from the firing line aa they are from the poverty line the tradesmen and clerks and laborers and skilled artisans gave of their scant substance and then marched out to do the na tlob's fighting and dying. 1 signifies that financial patriotism may be a very different . thing from financial prosperity. The promulgators of the theory that war helps business, who assert that the fallacy of economic waste 'Is re futed by all modern history," Inform us that the expenses of war are not much greater than the total expendi ture made through myriad agencies in time of peac for Impermanent and unproductive things and that the forced economies of war time balance the ledger. : "In an economic sense, is the purchase and maintenance of an expensive automobile any less waste ful than the purchase- and mainte nance of an artillery gun carriage, provided' the , cannon Is not used to destroy life or property? Is a mili tary uniform a less productive In vestment than a dress suit? Is the movement of troops en xnasse more wasteful of wealth than the annual heglra of the working millions of this country for their summer holiday?" . e ., . Can you beat It, this narrow delimi tation "in an eeonomio sense?" Pre sumably the uses of industrial pro ducts are not - to be reckoned. We make a distinction between life and the use of life why not make a lm llar distinction waen "we come to corn- pare . the cost of war activities and the cost of peace activities?' Presum ably, however, a war is Justified by the economies' it necessitates! A FEW SMILES A Strong man. doing two shows a day,-was a recent passenger on a train from Kansas City to Omaha ard had occasion - to go Into the day coach. There he was . accosted by a tail main with aid whiskers, who said: : "Excuse me. but ain't you the strong man?" "Some say I am," was the jroodnatured response.' . ' Tou can lift three tons in harness?" That's my record." 1 "You can hold 200 pound at arm's length?" "Yes." - ,M "And put up 00 pounds with one hand?" , " ';' "And 600 with two?" M "I can.-- V i ; "In that case, will you kindly under take to raise this car window for me?" "I think that woman ought to -have the ballot." "Do they really want it?" "They must want It. Borne of them are working so ar dently for suffrage that they are paying absolutely no ! atten tion to dress.' i George Bernard Shaw was invited by a friend one night to hear a string quartet from Italy. Expecting a treat, he accepted the in vitation. Through out the program h. sat with a stony look on his face. The friend, to draw a little praise from him, said: "Mr. Shaw, those men have been playing together for 12 years," "Twelv years? said the other, in an incredulous voice. "Surely, wo'vj Deen here longer than thaty" Letters From the People (Communications aent to The Journal for publication in this department should be writ ten on only one aide of the paper, should not "cctu ow woraa in length and must be ac companied by the came and addreaa ot the aender. If the writer doea not desire to have me name puousoea, he should constate.) DiaeuMlon ts the rrertest ef all reformer It ratlonaliiea everything it touches. It rob principle of aU false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have ne reBBuuaoieness. 11 ruu:essir erusnes them out ui existence ana seta up Its own conclusion in weir eieaa.- nooarovr WUson. Impartiality Appreciated. Goble, Or., May 10. To the Editor of The Journal We feel much grate ful toward you for showing no par tiality in your news, and especially so on the war news. ' As we, the peo pie of the i United States, are proud of. our advanced civilized country, we should also be the same when it comes to prolonging war by the eagerness of trade. I faithfully believe that if the United States had closed all gates to export and called all her cruisers and other forms of this nature to not leave the three mile boundary posses sions of this country during this war, this inhuman war, would be at an end today. -But as It is, it will make a number of Americans wealthy now. while paralyzing business in the Unit ed States at the present, ana the shock will be felt here for some time to come. It seems much like' a feast for capitalists and a famine for the common people now, and tor some time to come. BERT BUDENBAUM. Let Wilson's Way Prevail. Portland, May 12. To the Editor of The Journal -If the American people will respond to the deep not, struck by President Wilson In his Philadel phia speech, of "humanity first," It is 'possible that much good may come from the tragedy of the Lusitanla. The warring nations Germany with her back to the wall, and the allies seeking to- force her to her knees are unable to see beyond the horizon, but if the United States, arona man, will stand on the high ground Taken by the president. Instead of descending to avenge personal injuries, Ihey will es tablish an epoch making precedent. Also, even now it Is possible that by so uniting and fearlessly standing they may be big enough to appear on that trouble filled horizon of Bister nations. Belgium's rulers missed a rare op portunity which would have shone as a great light around the world when they elected to fight. MABEL W. PLOWMAN. Rose Planting. Portland, May 10.-Td the Editor of The Journal The Country Gentleman says, "Set out roses in May to bloom in June."' If that advice is sound, then we can always make sure of plenty for' the festival, and people can plant right along, even to May. But I think it is better to plant earlier, as soon as the season warrants and the ground is warm enough for best results. They are wonderful this year, with little or no aphis to contend with. - My hollyhocks have always been eaten up by a green caterpillar, but this season I sprayed with nicotine solution and the hollyhocks are doing well. ; OSBORNE YATES. A'- Question As to License Ecola, Or., May 6. To the Editor of The Journal Please answer the' fol lowing in your paper: Is , there., law in Oregon which compels anybody sell ing milk from his own cows to pay a license of 818 per year, regardless of how many cows he owns? M. K. There Is no such st&to enactment. If such a license confronts the Inquirer it must be one established under some )clt ordinance, and If so ne can doubt- en-i.,. Jitui exacts this license fee. j In Personal Appreciation. 'Portland, May 10. To the Editor of The Journal Will you kindly allow a little space for the acknowledgement of a kind of work which seldom re ceives the public attention and com mendation which it deserves? : I refer to the faithfulness and devotion of Miss J. A. Kenny of the Visiting Nurse association, who recently attended Mrs. Sarah E. Long; wife of Timothy Long, at her home at Fourteenth and Savicr streets, during her last Illness. To her, for her devoted and efficient care Jot Mrs.- Long, the members of the family feel most - grateful, and tp neighbors and friends as well.- . A FRIEND OF THE FAMILY. He Was Not. Portland, May 10. To the Editor of The - Journal Kindly answer in your columns If Count Zeppelin, the' Invent or the Zeppelin war balloon, was not killed some years ago. C F, J. MS PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE - Some good people enjoy telling bad new. . . ., i Gallons of trouble may eomi out of a pint flask. , i. . To err Is human; to forgive may be a brand of diplomacy. " .t ? ' . iMany of us feel that the only excus able faults are- the ones we have. -. : Before declining an offer of mar riage a girl should be sure of It, - - '" Occasionally lyou meet a woman so homely that she la willing to admit it, : : -. ... e , ., !.:. . I - Man's Inhumanity to man has put thousands ef lawyers on Easy street. There is a much, better market for good mules than there is for bad men. Marriage Is usually a failure when the female in the case Is in a hurry to wed. . . e J- A man without ambition is like a pan or dough without any yeast j to raise it. i Sometimes it seems that everything a fellow cares to do is sure to ruin his health. e v . t A woman feels as if spring Isn't spring if she can't have some changes made in the bouse. ' : .'I ' How poverty stricken most of our friends are when we happen to need 16 for a few days! i - e e If a man could read his own biog raphy it would probably surprise him more than any one else, , , NATIONAL By : Oakes. . x Another name has been added to the peck or more of Republican presiden tial possibilities. It is that of Wil liam Alden Smith, senator .from Mich igan. -1 Senator Smith, of course." enters the lists as the favorite son of Michigan, a state in which he was born some years ago and in which he has long practiced law and served In legislative capacities. i . As chairman of the senate Investi gating committee of the Titanio dis aster he brought upon himself un dying' fame because he thought that the water-tight- compartments of that ill-fated ship were places of refuge. Senator Smith : gained his v first leg islative experience as a page In the Michigan house of representatives and he has bean at it fiver since, as a state legislator member of congress and lastly as senator. e e If congress should follow the sug gestion of Howard Elliott, president of the New York, New Haven, &, Hartford railroad, and establish a federal de partment of transportation with a new cabinet officer at Its head, the presi dent's official family would be increased to 11. George Washington's cabinet consisted of but five department heads. Increasing needs of government have brought the number up to 10, however. The first addition to the original five was a secretary of the navy, under John Adams, and the most recent a secretary of labor, under Woodrow Wilson. t i ' " . i . I Senator Culberson of Texas will probably be a candidate to succeed himself In 1916,1 although It was be lieved for a time that he would retire from public life : because of ill health. Under the influence of. this belief quite a few Texans made it known that they were not averse to holding down a seat for the Lone Star state. Among them was ex-Senator Joseph W. Bailey, who Is now practicing law in Washing ton and who has again stepped before the public eye as counsel for the Rlggs National bank In Its suit against: the government. Other willing ones i are ex-Governor O. B. Colquitt, who tried to play horse with the administration on the Mexican: issue; Representative Robert L. Henry, of Waco; George W. Riddle, of Dallas; Dr. S. P. Brooks, president of Baylor university: at Waco; ex-Governor Thomas M. Camp bell, and the present governor, James E. Ferguson. 1 1 ' - Close observers of Governor Whit man of New York assert that he has IN TIME OF BUSINESS By John M. Osklson. "Finally," says a recent circular put out by the biggest bank in the coun try, "these periods ' ; of depression would be much less disastrous If each individual member of the community understood the Importance of having reserve resources of his own." : It is a logical' contention for a bank to B iake. A bank must always have reserve in sight sufficient to Insure at the worst times. Why shouldn't the individual? The circular adds: "After all is said that may be said of the obligations that rest upon : so ciety as a whole to provide for the Individual, it remains to be said that ther is an obligation upon the In dividual to avoid being: a charge upon the community. : i "A man may be willing to work and unable to find work in times of in dustrial depression without being quit of all . responsibility for becoming a pubiio charge. . . , ' "It -Is true that the Industrial or ganlzatlon is far from perfect; It' Is, in fact, a rather hit and miss affair. INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY Cleveland, Ohio, May 8. The Iron Trade Review today says: i "The confidence of business men in approaching -prosperity has been shown by the purchase of from 76,000 to 100,000 tons of pig iron by New York capitalists who are in no &ay connected with the iron and steel . trade and are buy ing entirely to hold the Iron with the expectation of a substantial advance. ' Both northern and southern foundry and steel mak ing grades are Involved. Advances by Virginia and Alabama furnaces in prices of pig iron have caused & snore cheerful feeling 1 in the southern states. Buying at Chi cago in April was far ahead of that In March. There is fair ac tivity in pig Iron in the . central west. - "Export demand for machine tools has again assumed tremen dous proportions. While exaggera tions and denials as to orders for war' materials make It difficult to state definitely what business Is bona fide, orders actually placed or soon to be entered are unques tionably of great . volume. ' The building of numerous additions to plants engaged in the manufac ture of war materials is a visible' evidence of the large amount of business taken during the ; past I lew weeKs.- OREGON SIDELIGHTS - Eugene's cleanup week yielded 105 wagonloads of rubbish for the city dump. - . e e The Umatilla county Yair board has set aside 60O of the fair funds for premiums to be given for, the school exhibits. !. I.-'-. Baker has discarded the "snake" for ftreet flushing purposes and has in ts place an auto f lusher that has three or four times the efficiency of the old method. . Dallas Observer: E. M. Smith has completed the task of indexing the deeds filed in Polk county from 184K to 107 to the number of 30.211. The cost to the county was about $1500, and those who are in position to know say it is well worth the money. i ; ;' :' There will be a circus In Salem on good roads day, and the Salem Jour nal considers it "a safe bet that there will be a let of people . on the roads that day who will not be wielding the shovel or pickaxe.' ; "Not a few Bandon people are well supplied with bacon," says the Co quille Sentinel, "they having picked up sides of it on the beach after the Randolph disaster, i The boat carried 18,000 pounds of it. all-of which was lost. The most of it floatd in with the tide for miles down the coast." e e Ilermiston Herald's welcome to new comers: "Since January l'the section about Hermiston has averaged one new family a week. Few, even; residents of this immediate .Vicinity, fully real ize the number of new people that are coming. , They are locating j in the country, Jjnot the city. They are the class- we need; every family e. valu able addition." i . POLITICS . been badly bitten by the presidential bug. His friends, it Is said, have no ticed it too, and are shaking' their heads with sorrow, for the reason that when Whitman begins to play politics, they declare, he spills the beans. The way for him to acquire a presidential standing and measure up to presiden tial strength, they j assert, Is for him to show presidential caliber and keep out of squabbles and "petty politics; in other words, to walk the straight and narrow path, serve his state to the best of his ability as governor, and I quit thinking of the presidency, and Whitman. i Illustrative of. his falling, a little incident is told of the recent formal opening of the New York state build ing at the Panama-Pacific exposition, Otttv unouch hut harmful , Norman B Mack, ex-chairman of thel Democratic -national, committee, ana ex-Governor Martin Glynn .of . New York were fellow passengers on the maiden trip of - the steamer Great Northern through the Panama canal. Mack, who hails from Buffalo, is chair man of the New York exposition com mission. According to the story toldT, in Al bany, he had hardly reached San Fran cisco before he wired Whitman stating that the time was propitious for for mally opening -the New York building, and suggesting Glynn as the man to officiate, as he was on the ground and could be persuaded to act. Mack, however, was unable to slip anything fiver- on 'Whitman, whd re plied that 'he thought of comiftg to the coast himself at a later date. If he had stopped there things woulds have been all right, declare Whitman's friends, but instead the governor raised a hullabaloo, calling the whole afair "a political trick of Mack's, and finally sent out Seth Low to conduct the ceremonies. .;''.:..' Gossips are busy, around Boise with stories of an approaching' rivalry be tween' Moses Alexander, governor of Idaho, and Senator William E, Borah. Borah, It Is bruited about, is beginning to fear Alexander as a political foe- man worthy of his steel, and interest ing developments are expected within the--next year or so. Borah's present term as senator does not expire until 1919 and a lot of things can happen in four years, especially with Alexander becoming increasingly popular with the people. In some quarters the fact that Borah has announced . that he 1 not3 an I active candidate for the presl dency is taken to mean that he is de termlned to hang on to what he now has rather than to take chances as a presidential possibility. DEPRESSION It was not made to order, the respon siblllty for it cannot be placed. This is so because of the liberty that be long to each Individual, and it can be made more harmonious only as each individual learns to play his part in voluntary and efficient co-opera tion with the others, and to bear his share of the, responsibility of finding uis place. Times of depression come as surely, if not as regularly, as do the seasons. They must be counted -upon by the workers, .Dy employers, and by lnves tors. When work is scarce, th worker ought to have reserves to draw upon. When business is dull, the manu facturer ought to have . reserves to drawn upon of capital to employ workers to make things (perhaps at a reduced cost), which will have mn.rlrt whn tlm, tmnrfiv. When the Investment market is dull. tne investor ought to have reserves to draw upon to acquire bargains, and to stimulate legitimate business which depends upon the sale of securities to raise capital. in dull times, there is a duty to spena. as wen as to retrench. ' "Old Man Opp.' FrdVn the New York Sun. ' "Borne men are so disrespectful to opportunity that they refuse to speak to, him on the street and others are so irreverent that they talk of him be- nma nis back as 'Old Man Opp,"J The best friend that you've got in all the world is Old Man Opp. He passes by your house each, day and always make a stop He Isn't blessed with time, of course; he hasn't long to stay. . But it Jrou're watchin' for him ho will helD you mow vour- he v. An' Old Man OppwlU help.y beat the Gloom God s line o dope; He'll boost y' up i the ladder with a fresh supply of hope. You'd better fix those shaky steps an' oil. your front-vard em An don't forget that Old Man Opp has Whn K J1'? ? spooky tapp'n on the frosted window pane Or there comes a low-toned rappin' throuerh the falHn" tht, Don't get frightened at it. . though you're shy of guns anTlad; Don't think it's some bold burglar who would steal your stove .and bed. I)on.J'. 1 vour face get scared nor think that bad men lurk outside. But beat It toward the sound you hear an' ope' the front door wide. ,w.?V;Put yesterday, . with his dentistry in view. But now it's likely Old Man Opp wno wants to talK with You! Some Mistake. From London Titbits. Coroner: W found nothing fnthe man's pockets, m'am, except three but tons, one handkerchief and a recelotawi bill. The Sobbing" Inquirer? A recelnted billi Then 'taint my husband. XS KABT.T DATS' By ! Xkler. Special gtafx Writes ef ' She Journal. - "In the spring of 1858 Colonel Step, toe arrived at Fort Vanoouver Ion his way to the Yakima country." aid Michael Klnnv Wall. -u.'.n- ... 4 , w . f it Mta, wav served under Colonel Steptoe in the fifties. "At the Cascades we went across to the Washington side and had a fight With the Indians. It was here that Second Lieutenant ! Philip H. Sheridan of the Fourth Infantry showed that he had the real Irish fighting blood. He was mentioned in the commanding officer's dispatches f!5aUntry and eo,"'S in action. "That fall Colonel Steptoe went with his command to Walla i Walla and built the army post buildings. During the summer of 1857 Colonel Steptoe'a command at Walla j Walla consisted of four companies of the First dragoons, he Third artillery, part of tUeptoe-s old command, and also part of the Fourth infantry and some in4e" K. th N,nth Infantry. --Ve,"nt ur counts ih the fail of 1857 down to Fort Vancouver to be wintered so our drill was afoot that, winter. Along about the first uf May Lieutenant Taylor brought the horses up from Vancouver. There had been some trouble in theScolvlUe country with the miners and Colonel Steptoe was ordered to go and inves tigate. The Indians were restless be cause surveying parties from both sides of the line had been in their country establishing the International boundary. When they heard that Cap tain Mullen was coming with a sur veying party they were still more rest less for they had been told the whites were comlus- in to mrv.v hi land and take U away from them. " w puuuu irora waiia walla on May 8, 1858. Colonel Steptoe. ex pecting no trouble, ordered us .not to take our sabres. There were three companies of the First dragoons. O. E and H and part of B company Ninth infantry mounted. There were ex actly 158 of us who rode northward that morning. The ammunition for our use had been put out near ! the magazine and the commissary stores were, put out ready to be packed from the storeroom. Tom Hun 11. whn im lives at Lewiston, was the pack mas ter. He packed the stores, supposing the ammunition had been put with the rest of the stores, and so we started out gaily with 40 rounds of ammuni tion to the man and we never knew any different, until the packs were opened when we were in the midst -of a battle and found we had no ammu nition. The cartridges were muzzle loading cartridges. You bit the brown paper in two, poured the powder In jour gun ana then rammed home the ball. My company. Comnanv I! imi Company E of the First dragoons. were armed with musketoons. They were really short muskets and would shoot up to about a hundred yards. If you hit a man at more than as far as you could throw a rock and hit him, you were lucky. ' "We crossed the Snaka. at n-.i won s crossing near what they now call Alpowa. We were going! to visit the Palouse Indians and then go up Colville way. Chief Timothy and Levi of the Nes Perces loaned us their canoes to cross the river. We traveled "north for nine days and on Saturday night camped on' Pine creak. Next day, Sunday, we headed for the Spokane river. Just before hoon wa were marching along when from the ravines between the rolling hills through which we were passing nearly a thousand warriors roue out closing in on both sides of us. They asked for a talk, so Colonel Steptoe stopped and they held a pow wow. They aoked why armed soldiers invaded their country. Colonel Steptoe said he had not come, to fight-the Indians but to try and settle the differences between the Indians and the whites. ' Moat of me inaians seemea eausnea, put some of the younger ones were apparently anxious for a fight. Colonel: Steptoe gave the command to advance. My horse was a new mount I had drawn and it was panic stricken at the sight and. smell of the naked and painted: Indians. : . C company started ' on but my horse planted its front feet and never an Inch would it budge; I spurred it, but.it simply trembled. Soon 1 was several hundred yards be hind the rest of the troops. 1 dis mounted and throwing my rein over my arm I started on afoot. Captain A. J. Smith, our captain, was on fur lough, so Brevet Captain Oliver I lax- ' ard Perry Taylor, our first lieuten ant, was In command of the company. He looked back and saw me and said 'Kinny, why are you hanging behind?' -1 said, 'I'm not, captain.- It's my horse.' He said, 'Make him come on.' Twas easy enough to say but 'twas harder to do. A big Indian rode Up to me and rode along beside me. I said to him in Jargon :'Wby are you naked and painted with your warpaint? Are you going to fight? lie said, 'Not today. Today Sunday. Make the Great Spirit sorry if his children fight on bis day.' We pushed on, the Indians riding along beside our command. Late in the afternoon Colonel Steptoe and the officers held another talk with the Indians. Colonel Steptoe told the Indians we were on a peaceful mission. They -pointed to the howitzers and asked If we talked peace with the big guns; if so, they would talk peace with their muskets and bows and ar rows. Colonel Steptoe refused to argue longer with the contrary creatures. "We slept In our arms that night at Rock Lake and kept the horses close - by. Colonel Steptoe told us next morning to avoid a fight if possible as we were heavily outnumbered and so far the Spokanes had been peaceful and friendly to the whites. lie gave orders to turn back toward Walla Walla. During the night a Nez Perce scout we had with us was sent with a message to Walla Walla asking im mediate reinforcements. By daylight on Monday morning we were In the saddle and on the way. First came Company H of the dragoons under Lieutenant Gregg, Company C of the dragoons, our company, came next, then Captain Winder with part cf company ; E, Ninth infantry, with the howitzers, then Tom Beall with-. the pack train and then Company E of the AS we started we saw the Indians get ting under way to overtake us." The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, ' consists of Four news sections replete with f Illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality.' ; Woman's pagei of rare merit. Pictorial news supplement. - Superb comic section. 5 Cents the Copy "The Biggest 5-Cents' Worth in Type.