THE aniTGOn DAILY JOURNAL, FORTXATTD, . TITCmSDAY, JUNE 17. 1815. pi ir I nk i A i That element secured control of I rlt- JwLJlXlNrL.sP"tIc in lsof- and ia strongly r. S. J ACKOMi..i... i-.PBlHW Published rvrr evening (exc-ept 8nndr n . -ery nanaay TBwirnin at 'Abe Journal ".uiiv log. Brwdway am) YsBihll! r., Yvrtu. tr. Entered at the fjnetaffloe at I'ertlaad. Or., for . tranmciiinn Uiroasb ttae tnli m second IfXItPHONFS Ml 7I7S; Heme. 4-6031. AH , departments rearbed by tliciw naatf. Tetl tti- opratnr what t-prtBj-ut yu want. FOREIGN- A D VXBT IS 1 N O REPBESBNTATIVE Bwijaaifn & - Keatuor Co.. BruturvH-K Bid Klffb Aw., Mew Yofkt 121A People's B11g., Chtmgo.' - Hotxtrripflon 'term fey nail or t aj ad dreas ia tb L'nitea state or Mexico; - - DAILY - ' - On ttt, '. , . ...$5.0o one moatk . .. . . M Oo yea. ......$2.50 ) Om Booth....... $ -25 - : , UULV AND SUNDAY One Mr.......T.69 Ow month... . ...9 .63 Cliooe alwsyu the way that emi beat. ' however . rough it may be end custom will soon render it easy and agreeable. Pythagoras. . STE.VDYTIIE BOAT T1IK news dispatches say, Mr. Bryan Is- preparing another ! statement.1 .' , " "it's no time to rock the boat; was " Mr. Bryan's telling epigram when the news came of the sinking of the Lusltanla. Korj la it a time now to "rock the boat." . , .,.. , - It fa a time of air times for the country to- stand by. the president. If everybody stands by the presi dent now his great task of com posing the complications with Ger many will be made easier. Every- j body standing by the president will convince the great imperial Ger man ?. government - that this is a country not . of divided opinion but of united opinion, and by that token' the task of avoiding further complications and - harmonizing those that' have appeared will be simplified. 1 .. Unhappily, Mr. Bryan cannot consistently take issye further with ' President Wilson's latest note. It . will add to yhls own embarrassment '" to ao so. maeea, . Mr. Bryan s resignation on the contention - that the latest note is too aersressive ! placed him in a position of incon sistency. - Th originarpaote was equally it ', not more aggr&aive than the last, j and Mr. Bryan Bigned it. That act1 : made the original note Mr. Bryan's i note. It made the contentions- of that note, Mr. Bryan's eonten-j tions. ' ' The original note informed Ger-i many that her proclamation of the dangers of the ; war zone could not be admitted by us "to operate as : in any degree an abbreviation of i the rights of American shipmas ters or of American citizens bound on lawful errands as passengers on merchant ships of belligerent na tionality," and that we "must bold,1 the - imperial German government to a strict accountability - for any ; infringement of those rights Inten ; tional or incidental." .The original note also referred to the advertised warning put out by the German embassy at Wash ington as ''of ''surprising irregular ity," V; but it declared that "no warning that an unlawful or in humane act will be committed can possibly be accepted as an excuse or palliation or as an abatement of - responsibility." These contentions with Mr. Bry an's name signed to them in the J . original note became Mr. Bryan's contentions, and his acceptance of ' lucui a uai iu ma tuuoiuieui re pudiation of thefn now.; i , Mr. Bryan ia a splendid citizen.) He is a statesman with exalted ' ideals, a" figure of conspicuous ! achievement, a great commoner ! : whose influence upon ; the affairs j of,, his time has been ; world "wide! and exalting. j . But his resignation ;was , a mis-1 roenta, no discussions can change, it or make it other han an nn-i happy incident in a very great career. - j 1 THE GREEK ELECTIONS t TbiiitiiiAOr iuiuer premier oi i 1 Greece, and his adherents, ; w ' were uatieu oy lWO-iniru8 of the- . voters at Sunday's elections. , Dispatches from Athens say the result Indicates that) Greece will soon be at war on the; side of the allies.! j v The people have spoken, but l : the situation In Greece is peculiar, ? and there may be question whether ; Venlzelos without the; threat of a ' revolution, will be placed at the i neaa oi a war " ministry. King Constantino Is ? incapacitated to take 'active charge .-. of affairs of state, and there are persistent ru mors .that he is suffering from a wound inflicted by, his queenr sis ter of the kaiser, because of hi determination to abide by the peo- 5 pie s mandate.-- Before the elections , there were well-authenticated reports that co ercion would be used to. keep Venl selos out . of power. He had been warned to keep out .of Athens, and there is said to be a military junta organized to keep him away until : parliament meets in July. The army's general ; staff is co operating with' the existing gov ernment p prevent - the return of Venlzelos, and : there may be an attempt jto obtain ' a recount of the ballots and a reversal of the majority. ' , . , Reports of the elections are mea gre. .Venlzelos secured . the people's Eupport,, but it remains" to be seen whether the military element will concede defeat without further at tempt to prevent Greece becoming an ; active enemy of" theiTentons. pro-uerman. Ventrelos' partisans. though outnumbering; their political ene mies, may be unable to struggle against : the superior organization of the "general, staff. " , . t SETTING AKIDE -THK LAW OVER the" opinion r of . the at torney genefal and over the to of the secretary of stats. Governor WIttycombe and Treasurer Kay, of the highway commission, have . deposed State Engineer John H, Lewis as high way engineer and placed E. I. Can tine, chief dcjjuty under Mr. lewis, in ; charge of .highway work. : Why is th attorney - general? Are" the governor and treasurer governed by s law or by their wishes? ' ) The law governing their' act says; - - - Tae offldft known ' a th 6tat Highway Engineer defined by Sec tion 3 of Chapter 833 of the nession laws of 1911 is. hereby abolished, and the powers, dutia and work now per formed by the state hisrhway en gineer PHALL i BE VESTED IN JD PLACED UNDER : THE C1IAKOE AND DIRECTION OP THE STATE ENGINEER, and w eraver , In any law now In force In the Mate of Ore gon the name "Stat Highway En gineer" appears.' it nhall ; be . consid ered that the name "State Engineer" is substituted in lieu thereof. - , This is the language of the. leg islature, and the attorney general, the legal, adviser of state officials, holds in an" official opinion that It is the; law.; In view of the re fusal of the governor and state treasurer to be guided by that lan guage, why Is a legislature? The : duties of the engineer in charge 'of highway matters, as de scribed in the original act are . to advise, and assist county courts in matters pertaining to road build ing, to compile statistics as to the highways in this state, to have charge , of all maps, record, etc., to keep accurate account of alii moneys expended, and to -prepare each month for the board detail accounts of and vouchers covering such expenditures ; which shall be submitted to the secretary of state for approval and payment. Can the secretary of state draw warrants for ; the payment of ex penditures incurred by the deputy engineer when the law directly says the state engineer shall ex ercise "the powers, duties and work of the i state highway engi neer?" , . .Can the governor and state treasurer set aside an official cre ated by law and substitute1 another and charge that other with the duties of the deposed official? If so, where did the; governor and state treasurer get their new powers and what other powers are they likely to usurp?- ; Is it because the deputy en gineer is appointive by the gover nor and supposedly in consequence subject to control or removal by him, that' a solemn enactment by the legislature, as Interpreted by the attorney general is thus arbi trarily set aside?. Is it because State Engineer Lewis holds an elective office and is answerable only to . the people, that he has been deposed? A MAN'S CONSCIENCE NEW YORK newspapers are making a fight for Robert E. Hick3. "a man with a conscience." He is in prison, and they . want him pardoned or paroled. Twelve years ago Hicks was sen tenced to serve 10 months' impris onment and to pay a fine of $1000 for using the mails for illegal pur poses. He fled the country, re turning a few years later penni less, and was about . to take up his old ways again when a visit to a Christian mission worked a change of heart. Since then he has devoted, his time to saving other d erelicts and has become a useful citizen. But, according to the New York Times, Hicks has a conscience, and this, conscience at last drove him to disclose his identity and surren der ' himself to the authorities. Leaving his ;wife and three : chil dren behind Hicks has 1 gone to prison, the judge before: whom he was arraigned; having no alterna tive but to send him there. - The argument In behalf of Hicks is that a man with a conscience so strong that it makes him give up family, home, position every thing, in fact for a principle, should not be in prison. ' They are needed out in the open where men with ' active consciences are none too numerous. r ' V Should the ; New York aews papers win their - fight for Hicks? Few men would have done what he did! Is not his voluntary surrender proof that further punishment can do nothing for him or for society? AN UNEXPECTED BOUQUET SPEAKING unofficially a short time before hit resignation as secretary of V state, . Mr. Bryan- suggested a plan fOr financing i. South America. He called' attention to the fact that countries to . the south of us were handicapped ' by Inability to bor row: money except at - extravagant rates of interest. The United States, he said, might establish an interchange of credit. This i could be done by taking ; from a South American nation its . obligation bearing four per cent interest and giving to such a country - three per cent United States bonds. : .Our ' gov ernment, instead of making the one per- cent, could devote it to amortizing the South " American bonds, ' which v would be - accom plished In 47 years by - Investing the einking fund at three per cent. , The Natioil City bank of New York in its June circular letter, bestows high . praise ; upon- the former secretary of state, saying: Making allowance for all the "dif ficulties w that will be - Immediately thought of In the consummation of auch a daring scheme it ; still de serves to be pronounced not only a daring but a really brilliant concep tion.. It la" dating because It goas beyond the conventional In govern ment . finance, but It Is brilliant be cause It appeals to the imagination as offering something that, while at tended with ! difficulties. . is not im possible of realization, and If carried through successfully ' would . be ; an historic .act of - statesmanship. ' - This is an unexpected bouquet from a strange source. There was a time when the mere mentidn of Mr. "Bryan's name- in connection with '- finance ; would ;nake iWall street -rage. Interests represented by the National City bank had been throwing -brickbats., at ', him since 1896. Now he is: credited with haying proposed "an historic act of statesmanship." f t v SELLING SCHOOL SITPLIES PECAUSE of an alleged dif ference In paper,: the Oregon I J City school board ' paid a member ; of that body 639 for supplies which a : competing bidder offered for $489.73. The experts in a Portland paper com pany claim the rejected paper was of . the same quality - as , that in a list of supplies for which the board paid an additional $149.27. J : -The particular specifications employed . by the' school board were effective in preventing : ac ceptance of the. outsider's bid ahd securing acceptance of the- board member's bid. The particular specifications were also effective in adding $149.27 to the cost of school supplies at Oregon . City, and the paper pair chased may have been no better than that ""rejected. Strikingly significant is the fact that the whole value of the paper in the competitive bid was . only $105.25, while the increased cost of the supplies "caused by the al leged difference in the quality of the paper is, $149.27. T f -" U There may have been no method in the board's action. But it ' was unwise. - J . ; .'.;.:.. It was especially unwise in vew of the fact that the members of the body seem to be doing a large business in j selling supplies to themselves . as officers of ; the Ore gon City school district. It is a practice: that: in state matters Is forbidden by law and that In school matters ought to be forbid den by law. - It should be forbidden because it leads to just such ugly condi tions as that reflected in-.a pur chase of .supplies , at a cost more than 30 per cent, higher than prac tically the same supplies were of fered the board by a bidder who was not a" member of the school board, ; '- , . A favorite method of controlling bids is by the s requirements of the specifications. As shown in last Saturday's Journal, specifications can be so prepared as to make open competition impossible, and it Is a process that has been used in bridge building, in Oregon with deadly consequences in co'st, to the taxpayersi ''- f l:y" There ia nothing revolutionary in the theory advanced by Dr. Sargent of Harvard that women are as fit for military service as men. It is a well-established fact that wopaen have more: - physical endurance than ; men, even though they ttb not -have so much - muscle. Woman 's fightin g capacity has been attested on many . an en sanguined field. It the European war continues much longer it is not wholly improbable that some mod ern Penthesilea will lead 'her army of Amazons to the relief of some beleaguered city. - i ; ' Premier Asquith- estimates- that the war expenditures of Great Brit ain lor the next three months will be $15,000,'000 per day: As ' in the Napoleonic wars England" "Is rendering extensive ? financial ; as sistance to her. allies.' The ques tion is how. -long can she stand the heavy drain of the present. The federal government, in spite of 'protestations- of neutrality, has begun . an investigation of noodles. The noodle, ! experts point' out, is merely Teiitonized r spaghetti ? or macaroni or; considering its rib bonlike shape, a tape vermicelli. Why, then, pick on the noodle in times like these? : , ' ! , Congressman Frear, of Wiscon sin, said .Portland's wealth of flow ers and its marvelous setting -give its guests a thrill of delight. He has looked upon many things 'that please the" eye. but say Portland is the most beautiful city he ever saw. He was a discriminating guest. .1 . There is something - worse than bullets and asphyxiating gases.: A recent German war statement said? "Farther sohth t our pursuit, has reached Nowicakalusztomaszowce," Are the Germans trying to choke Massachusetts has a new "law providing that whenever the price proposed to be; paid - for . land needed for any municipal ' purpose is more than 25 per -cent higher than its average - assessed valua tion - during ; thev previous : three years, the land shall not be taken by purchase,; but shall be acquired by right of - eminent domain. - It is a statute aimed at evils against which - The Journal has protested here in Oregon. ' It affirms the principle that there should - be a fixed 'relation between. Assessed valuation - : and purchase price. Massachusetts thinks a 25 per cent increase over the assessed , value for three years is enough. ? Huerta told the "census takers in New York that he is a soldier and a civil engineer. - He may be Kj soldier and an engineer, but this country's experience with ' him casts doubt upon the qualifying adjectives. , . A "New Jersey jury, returning a verdict in a damage case, held that one. boy is worth two girls. Not so. If left to a vote of the boys. .' Colonel Roosevelt has announced his stand - with ;- the - president. Doesn't that make it practically unanimous? WILSON'S ADVISER IN INTERNATIONAL LAW From the Philadelphia Ledger. . ROBERT LANSING, the counselor of the department of - state, who has become acting secretary of state by the resignation of Mr. Bryan, the successor of Mr, Bryan as rank ing member of the Cabinet, is one Of the " ablest authorities in this country on the conduct of 7 diplo matic affairs and; on; questions of International law,, ) - , Mr. Lansing has been counselor of the ' state department since- April ; 1, 1914. At ; that time he; ' succeeded John Bassett Mtore, another Ameri can expert on international law. Mr. Lansing' has served in that Capacity ever since the United States landed troops In Vera Cruz throughout the Mexican situation, and during all of the European war to date. ' Especially -siace War In' Eu rope imposed on the United States government new, serious - and most intricate problems has Mr. Lansing been , i, towerr of Btrength ' la the state department, He has been the main, source- for advice on all ques tions of International law; and neu trality, All quegtions relating to American neutrality and they have been numerous- have been ; referred first to Mr. Lansing for his advice arid judgment : as td the correct course to be , pursued. - Mr. t Lansing is a son-in-law of John W. Foster, who ;l. was ! a -former secretary . of state. - He was well known In . Washington even before he became counselor of the state department, by : reason of his service in aA0pecia: capacity, for the state department. Hfe Is a native of Watertown, N.- T.. and a graduate of Amherst college In 188. He is Si years old, in the. prime of his activity, Is quiet. modest and thoughtful, regarded as a man of poise and balance, , hard worker and an official of fine judgment and ability. : : . . " . . ".. ' : , Three years after his graduation Mr. Lansing . was admitted ; to the bar in 1889. He became a member of the law flfm of Lansing & Lan sing In r that i year, : a" partnership which - continued until 1907.- In 1992-3. Mr. Lansing became counsel of: the .United SUtes in the Bering sea arbitrations, and Tin 1898-7 he became counsel for the United States Bering .sea claims . commission. Again in 1903 he became solicitor for the ; United States government before the Alaskan boundary tribu nal. ' Iij ' 1909 . the United States gov ernment once more sought :, his serv ices and be was employed as coun sel in the North Atlantic coast fisb-eri-w during the arbitration of "that issue between England and the United States at The Hague. Mr. Lansingj Is a trustee ef the Roswell P. FloWer memorial library, at Watertown, N. T4 wnere Tie main tains his home, is a - member of the American Society of : International Law. of the National: Geographic so ciety; of the Holland Society of New Tork, of the! Psl Upsilon fraternity, and of the American Political Science association. He belongs to the Met ropolitan, Chevy Chase and Black River Valley clubs. : . "U Speaking before the alumni of his alma mater Amherst college on February: 24,' last, Counselor Lan sing sounded a note .f of -warning re garding -America's relations to the war. He saw: .-vr-i."- - ' Yon- may think that I have Adopt ed a too serious vein for an oc casion of this sort,, but men of Am herst, these are critical days for our country -how ; critical only those who are In intimate touch 'with affairs can fully: realise..; It is a time for serious thought, a time- for anxiety. "It Is my duty as many of you know,' to deal with - the questions of international - law and - usage, which are arising every day in . our rela tions -.-with other countries, -v These questions are of absorbing - Interest and ' many, of - them are extremely complex, because this" . war. 'in its magnitude, and methods Is different from all- the wars which - have gone before. One can look .in vain for precedents in many - esses. . ."This - great conflict ." bas Intro dueed . the 'eubmarine, . the - aerpplane, the wireless telegraph, and new forms :- of explosives. - It has, ' made mechanical . motive power . an : abso lute necessity in military operations. The 'old ' strategy of surprise : has given place ; to mobility. The pe troleum products, .essential to rapid motion . In the air, on land and be neath the sea, -are as necessary to -a modern army and navy as arms and uamanltion, New devices of com munication - and. transportation are used now for the 'first time ia war, and new modes of' attack are; "em ployed. , - - . "The result Is that , neutral na tions have had to meet a series of problems -which nave never - been solyed. . The ' liability of ; error, the danger : of unintentional partiality. and the ' constant:; complaint . Of one or another of the belligerents make the path of' neutrality rough and un certain. When . the war began early last August the 1 department of state, amply equipped for Its work in time of .pe&ce, was , forced. . to reorganise immediately to meet tne new condi tions and the enormous Increase of its business. All at once the de partment of state found itself the diplomatic j clearing house ot the world : as well as tlie banker " trans portation agent and medium of com munication for Americans : abroad." A FEWSMILES "Sorry not to htv beard your lec ture last night,? said the loquacious bore. : know 1 mined treat; everybody says . it was splendid.", -"I wonder bow they found out," said Mr. Frock coat; "the lecture you know, was postponed." "Some days ago," relates the ' wife of a well known attorney, "I accom panied my husband on a business trip to Cleveland. As we ate our luncheon I chanced to overhear several traveling men jesting : with the colored waiter. "JOeorge, travel ing men always, say Oeorge to a colored waiter), 'this bill of fare has an item, chicken giblets with biscuit, but we want to know whether-there is more than one bis cuit.' ' . r . - "George examined the menu s card, scratched his poll and finally ; an swered: - - 'No, suh yo' don't git only One. Da wo'd 'biscuit' is . singular gender. So yo all don't get but one." Letters From " the People (Communications sent to The Journal . for pabUcation in this department sboolA be writ tec on only eoe side jf .he paper, sbuuld not exceed S00 words la ;mgtti and moat be ac companied by the name aad address of tbe sender. If the writer does not desire to hare the aaoae' published, he should so state.) "Discussion is the rreatest of all reformer. It tctioaallaes everything it touch. It robs back on their reasonablenesa. It they hve no reaaonableneas. it rutnlewtir crashes them oat of existence and sets p its on conclusions ia their ctead." Woodruw Wllaoa. Disburses of Banking System. Lents, June 14. To the Editor of Tbe Journal According to a report in The Journal of May 26, "the nation al bank system (of the United States) while working fairly well in ordinary times, has Invariably been found want ing in stringent times, entailing enor mous and unnecessary losses and ex penses to the public generally." Tbe .banking business, being the one that controls the working capital of the people, has it Within its power to Causa these stringent times, at pleas-' ure. And at no time have the banker hesitated to use that power when It seemed to their best interest to do so. It "is stated. In the article that at the recent banquet of the Portland chapter of the American Bankers, Governor kains. of the San Francisco reserve bank, "touched on the panics of 1873. 1884. ,1890, 1892 and 1907." But it does not state that Governor Kains mentioned the fact that in each in stance, with tbe exception of 1907, (when the president of the United States illegally came to the rescue of big illegal business) the banks brought on the stringency because they feared that ': the people were awakening to their methods and. that their power might be curtailed. As it is at the present, so it always bas been. They harp about the "elas ticity" of money, but said elasticity, as well as the money; must be strictly under their control, so that the peo ple, to whom the money rightfully be longs, cannot get the use of it which means a panic, atfd Incidentally a les son to the voter who looks no farther than immediate business, or a job, which amounts to the same thing. . - In the present case they began to throw out a scare about "tight money" as soon as they saw, that President Wilson was a man determined to stand firm for the principles that.he believes to be right. And as a proof of their duplicity, meetings were held all over the' country antagonistic to the sup port of a regional bank. However, when they saw .that the better class of newspapers, and the thinking 'pub lic, were with the president, and after the original bill had been modified to suit them, or nearly so, they seeming ly acquiesced and agreed - to make use of the regional bank In case of neces sity. . ,:uy; - :i ,. . . : . , ,: On the face of it It would seem that the necessity had arisen. Money Is harder to get today than ever, be- r ore not because not because' the -rank and f ile ! of the people are afraid to embark In legal enterprises, but because "the banks will not let out what they ,now have; regardless of the security of fered. So to them there Is no need of calling on the - reserve panks. It doesn't require a Philadelphia lawyer's IIP ihwvi - J power of discernment to see that their . otir public school system. Special scheme Is to discredit the adminlstra- privilege fought the government post tion in the eyes Of the voters. -age stamp. And again-special plvi Either the people as a whole seem lege fought the parcel post. Special to be what the - bankers take themJ privilege will fight to the last ditch for, a class of unthinking muts, or else j toi retain the position of broker of the we have arrived as nearly as poslble people's money, this,, being the: one at a perfect banking system; and must ! great thing that - creates the special continue to periodically have "finan cuu stringencies,'- v "tight money." "bard times', and the rest , of their concomitant evils - colossal - fortunes and -arrogance- on the one band, and abject poverty and degradation on the other. . .. . . The constitution of ' the ' United States gives the federal government. only.; the right to coin money. If the! federal government is empowered to i coin money, what Is to binder the fed-i eral government from going a .step farther and disbursing the money di- ( rect to.the people T Let us allow (hypothetlcally) that it -would require 1 the same number of men to do the i work,, the same number of buiidinsal the same , amount of furniture, etc., j that is used today, one per can t -added to the price that the banks pay the! government now woui3 derray all ex penses. A large percentage, however, the useless part that draws the big dividends, with many of the buildings and much ' of the costly equipment, would - be. eliminated. The - banks Dav the government an - average of -about ' two per - cent. Add : one per cent to f this for the work that -the present ! bankers hire -done, another one perj cent as a sinking fund, and still the-, borrower -could get the money ; direct from the government at four per cent. . neing aoout one-half or the average Interest paid today., and on exactly the same security. The same system that gives us the right to take our . pennies and buy postage stamps should also PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE . Bunions are nobby things in shoes. . It's' a poor elevator that won't work both ways. - T A babe in arms is worth two armed with ? toy pistols. - Many an illiterate man is able to make his dollar mark. . ' Hope may .bud - when it Ms cloudy", but it blooms only in sunshine, i -y.;:: V';r:" .::.;'-i--":s.'-.: i-.-fi&-fei. Some men are so forgetful that they even fail to remember the poor. - ...-V :.-;: When a i man becomes a chronic loafer he begin to prey upon . his neighbors.- ' - i - Every time you avoid doing wrong you r increase your inclination to do right..:,"1 , Words resemble sunbeams the more they fire - condensed the deeper they burn.. ,-. ., .. .-. - . .,. ' Some' men are never too busy to ar guft a point that they know nothing abOUt.' v.--'.., , - . Another disagreeable thing about the Weather people are always wanting to' talk about it. When a -young man marries.' his mother always feels sorry for him and his sisters feel sorry for bis wire. . -V . . ....... . . ' . v A . nonentity is a man who "has to tell people who the girl was that he married before they are able to recol. lect him. Probably there is nothing quite so pure as the motive of a man who lends mony to' another when he Is morally certain he will "never get it back. - NATIONAL - f- .." By Oakes. Under the law President Wilson has 30 days in which to fill tbe vacancy In his cabinet occasioned by the resig nation of Mr. Bryan as secretary of state. Although as yet be has given no sign as to his probable choice , the logical assumption is that he will re tain Robert .Lansing, now acting ad interim as his premier. : ' . - :v t Other names have been mentioned in connection with the appointment, but for knowledge of International law and international conventions Mr. Lan sing excels all of them in qualif lca- tiOnS. ;-: ' ; , ' .I;-- ,:- :i-:-v - . ' He has represented ' - the United States in more international arbitra tions than any other living American." He has appeared before international tribunals more frequently than any other living lawyer. v But instead of going outside for a secretary of state it is suggested that Mr. Wilson advance one of the mem- bers of his present cabinet, and Secre- taries Lane, Garrison, Houston "and McAdoo are mentioned In this connec tion. --.':';.,:'--:. . In case of demand for a bipartisan cabinet attention is drawn ' to Elihu Boot and Philander. C. ' Knox, both of Whom served as head of the state de partment under Republican adminis trations. ' ., , ;"'-. Tbe qualifications of John ' Bassett Moore, .late counsellor of tbe depart ment, are unquestioned, but inasmuch as he withdrew because of inability to 'get -along with Secretary Bryan, such an appointment . would undoubt edly be considered a personal Insult by friends of the latter. Richard Olney name bas been men tioned but his advanced age and the fact that he turned down an ambassa- i dorship only recently. remove him i from serious consideration. A. Mitchell ; Palmer is another foe. wbom a cabinet place bas been sought. It Is said, for some time, and it Is possible In event of the promotion of one already In the cabinet Mr. Palmer would get the position made vacant by the advancement. -; ?:- If it should happen that President Wilson should look to the diplomatic corps for a secretary. Ambassador Page TEACHING THRIFT . By John's. Oskinson. . The. enlightened director-of a New Tork orphanage was explaining the system under which . the colony of orphaned . children in; bis' charge is managed. Touching on bis plan for inculcating thrift, be n said. , in substance,- , ' - . : We keep our children in cottages; a family of about -.20, -of. all ages. In each cottage under the direct care of a mother.' .That cottage is made in a most real sense' their home and we- have cottage,, mothers' who ; have more than a perfunctory interest in their 'children.'.. ? - - ; 'When the boy or girl reaches the age of 14 he or she Is put to doing some work during the hours spared from study which Is paid for. The work they do is such that the manage ment would have to pay for, anyway, and the children are paid at the pre vailing rates for such work. They must turn out-work which is up to the standard. "For the boys It may be janitor service; for the girls . dressmaking or cooking. riva the rteht to take our collateral and secure with - it the use of money. The stamping of one is as much a government function as the other, and should be used as well for: the benefit of : the whole people. " - Special privilege, entrenched behind the law of master and servant. lougot privileged elass. But it seems that INDEX OF ADVANCING ' TIDE OF PROSPERITY From the New York Evening Post. Since May 31 '. the .orders for material being turned out by the United States ; Steel 'Corporation have Increased "rapidly; the esti-. .mate was ventured this after noon that in the 11 elapsed days of June 100.000 tons have been t added to the. May 31 total of. ; 4.264,000 tons of unfilled orders. This probably - is an exaggera- ! tion. ' rt is calculated that out put of. the " corporation plants j is -now 38,000 tons a r day, or four-fifths of full srcapaclty. . Lately - incoming Orders -were be- J ; tween - 37,000 - ;and . 40.000 tons; : this week "Orders have come in so f fast that according to Pittsburg reports, the heads of various plants of : the v corporation ; have , been in conference nightly until ,: t o'clock to go over the orders that were coming-in. ; The full ; productive capacity of the Steel - Corporation "plants' is 45,060 -tons daily, and orders coming In are said - to have been equal-, to fully that rate. OREGON SIDELIGHTS ThaMedferd, Sun states that the local clutpter of . the Can't Do it club had figured on a rest this summer, but development j and progress-mad, citi sens threaten to agitate a beet sugar factory. , ' ! - , -'powder 'river "valley roads, says the Baker Democrat, "are a delight to travel over by auto, and improvements are still going on. The good roads policy of he county court is com mended by all." The emblem of the ; Albany Pheasants- will be: a pheasant cock embroi dered in silk and fastened to the left sleeve -of the coats. The club will make - its first appearance away- from home at Salem during the celebration of July 2 and 3. , . The Clatsop county court wants to remove the r Scotch broom along the Clatsop Plains road. Protesting, : the Astoria. Budget asks: "Why this de struction ofT a plant that lends so much charm to th peoplo - who drive along that way? The Scotch broom is an asset to the community." v ".pr''..;vi- .r -.-;."V-''': Happy "homecoming chronicled In the Drewaey lion per Sun: "Hoy ' I Beede. eldest son of the editor of this glorious sheet, returned home Tues day from his first term at th O. A. C. at Corvallls. He says the smell of the sagebrush is very sweet to his nostrils, and the old home still holds its charm tot him." t .:. r.- :-ys ' 0' ' .'- . Canyon City Kagle: The restless homesteader is now passing to and fro from Harney county. One day the old camp outfit, covered :wa.gOTv foot sore horses.; kids, doss and milch cow pass' through town. -and the next day I another ehip of the western prairie passes in the opposite direction. - They are all apparently hunting for a little preen spot that they call ' Home, Sweet Home." .,! - POLITICS would very likely be the choice. And some consider Colonel K. ,M, House, of Texas, President Wilson's personal adviser, . to . be a possibility.' - In manyJ quarters Mr. Lane is re garded as ineligible for the premier ship.: as he was born ;ln Canada and so could not succeed to the presidency, in the event of the death of the presi dent and the vice 'president.- McAdoo is" a business man and not a statesman and neither Garrison nor Houston isl well enough off to afford the place, which costs the incumbent many thousands each year in addition to bis stipend from the government. These' considerations entering into the appointment work back In a circle to Mr. Lansing. Everything is In his favor for the post. . ! :-.. j -v- ...'-!. Friends Of Colonel Louis j. WorVb tm, editor of the Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram, are booming him for the United States senate. Colonel Wortham is a well " known figure in Texas politics and is now a member of the Texas bouse of representatives. .., :-, v y L y t- :J;..,:-;tv;v :;:' . - Indiana editors have begun a cam paign to bring ' the 1918 Democratic national convention to Chicago. - ' The Massachusetts legislature ad journed several weeks ago after mak ing a -record for enacting a remarka bly small number of laws and putting some measure on tbe statute books that- put: the state's -reputation for staid conservatism to the blush. The three ' most radical measures passed were amendments to the constitution to be voted upon by the people pro viding for woman suffrage, taxing - of incomes, and granting power to the general court to take land for! the re lieving of congestion -of population In cities and- to provide homes for the people. -Among the minor enactments were many social welfare . statutes, and one; particularly that is attracting attention makes compulsory the sup port of destitute "parents by their children. - :. f u ' , . Senator Sutherland, of Utah, bas an nounced his candidacy to succeed him self. He has been in the senate since 1905. - . - IN AN ORPHANAGE nVhat each child earns is credited to him;-he can draw it and spend it. But wev make certain, restrictions. For Instance: ; "No child Is allowed to draw and spend all of his earnings. A certain proportion must be set aside for a Havings: fund, v- and another fraction must be reserved for ; giving to good causes.n For example, our children nave educated a boy who wanted to go- to a preparatory achool and to col' lege.. , ' i-:'.y - .:. ' - yy :: - . . "Since I have known the institution a number of boys and girls have gone out to enter college. ,, Some have grad uated; they Come back to us in their college vacations, using their old rooms and working for us. - - "We i insist that our Children learn the value of money what its getting costs, what the power of ; savings: is. and what. can -be done by wise giving. We have demonstrated that they learn easily, and apply- their knowledge." If only American parents - generally were competent- to teach practical thrift in the same convnonsense way 1 the 'next-step In the evolution of government of, for and by the people must he to entirely take over the func tion of banking. Nothing short of a complete obliteration of the present basking System, and the establishing, in Its stead of banks for the people's use, will bring about the result that 999 out Of every 1000 citizens want, and have i not got. : namely, economic independence. . f JOB LINSKY. S i Praemysl (ontrued. V' Salem. .Or July 1 6. To the Editor of The Journal There appeared i in Sunday's Journal - a .new version of how - to pronounce the ; word "Prse mysl," ; submitted - by J. F. Archibald. As I ,was born in Austria and have spent Considerable ' time in Galicia. I feel myself justified in correcting the version given by. Mr. Archibald. . It positively- Is not 'Premmel"; neither Is It Puh-chemisel."v It is . "P-rshe-mysl." iwith the accent; on the "rshe" There , Is" not : a "Puh" to It, buf by all means sa "P. The "r" in the "rshe" sho'uld be pronounced short an? hard, followed quickly by the "she." It : seems i to me that Mr. Archibald received the Information from a German-officer, who evidently did not know how to pronounce the name correctly.- j The difficulty lie in , pro nouncing the "rx," for which there is no equivalent in Kngtish. "Rx." to gether i with "ex," "dz," etc.; takes a separate place in the Polish alphabet besides the c, d and r. "Rs" and the rest- have each a - special sound ' and are never pronounced each letter sep arately.' Though there are two letters In "rx,'' "cs etc. one never hears two, but only oAe. - ' . . - ' . ONE WHO KNOWS". ' Cause for Thankfulness. From the Columbus, Ohio, Journal. -Thank heaven the movemerit for the equality; of the : sexes hasn't yet reached the point where the men folks are expected -o wear something that will reduce the hips from three to six inches.' , f , w 'tat.TSt ."LJ jf "T "t OREGON COUNTilY y 1 Ut ABLT PATS" By Fn4 ieekley. Special IUX1 Wrltat .'- The taamL A few days ago I was sitting on . bench across the street from the post. office at Lebanon, waiting for the stage to Cascadla. A little, old, gray haired man with chin whiskers tamo along with a new ax over his shoulder. He looked at my black felt siouch hat, my black cotton cITirt, my gray suit, and said: "Are you much of a hand with an ax? 1 wanto find some W strong fellow about your size to sIukq some timber and work up some cord wood.' I moved over to make room on the bench and he eat down bexide tne an4 we looked at his ax together and dis cussed' the merits of second growiU hickory as compared with oak and eu as material for ax handles and of.tha iron wedge in place of the wooden cue to keep the bead from flying olf. When We had exhausted the sub ject of axes he .said. "My name ie Silas WiUiarns. Whiit mlht yours buT "I am the pastor of the church of the Primitive Baptists at Tailman," 1 continued. "1 have preached in that one church for the last 86 years. I have 'been living around this neigh borhood - ever since 18S2. I havn settled, down considerable since 1 was a young fellow soldiering in the sec ond regiment of Oregon mounted vol unteers back in 55-'56. In those days I saw the elephant and, to tell yon all the truth, 1 guess I chewed his tall some, but along after tbe war a spell I felt the call and started to exhort ing. C H. Matoon and I used to exhort together. He was a powerful preacher, full of fire and force. "I was born in Missouri on Septem ber 24, 1884. 1 started for Oregon in tbe spring of '62 when I was 18 years old. I didn't have anything in MU sourl and I had less when I got to OregonT I walked across the plains prodding a bull team. My shoes bad played out and my, feet were on the ground; my clothes had mostly quit me and my bolly and ray backbone were mighty near neighbors. I stopped whenever a farmer would give me a few days' work splitting rails. t settled in the forks of the Santl&m four or five miles from Hclo in the winter of '52. I married Sarah Short upwards of 60 years ago. "I'll tell you how I came to plk out the Primitive Baptists for my brand of religion. You see, -they don't take any stock in Infant damnation, like the old ' style Hue Presbyterian used to; they aren't so shouting a the old style Methodists. We believe in predestination, election, epectalr atonement, effectual calling and Im mersion, .all logical and reasonable doctrines. Now I'll tell you about the special atonement It's like thls-i-" Just atUhls instant- the stage swung UjlP the. edge of the walk and I had' to go wtthout learning more of the doctrines1 of the Primitive Baptists. The next day I was riding with an other pioneer of 1863 and tbe subject of early day preachers, doctors and lawyers came up. : "As a rule, moBt of tbe immigrants to Oregon were God-fearing and law abiding people," he said. "They didn't feel any pressing need of lawyers and they often settled matters lndlepute much more promptly,, with less ex pense and with more exact justice than tbe courts do today. I remem- oer one u.y m me summer ox ioo-, we were winding along through tho beat and the dust when from the top of tt rolllnpr hill nr auir a mfinrm fir more of wagons stopped a mile or so ahead.- Possibly there were 25 wagon; hptw..n nite. nt-ftn nnf th rrmm of wagons, that had stopped. We caw wagon . after wagon join the group. We - hurried forward. I will never forget how shocked I was when our wagon had stopped and I hnd pressed my way forward to where the "crowd was gathered to see a young fellow kicking and struggling In tbe air with a rope around his neclt The upper end of, tbe rope was fastened to two wagon tongues that had been raised and lashed together. We had gotteu there just in time to see him hanged. They had stopped to try him for mur der. The jury had sentenced him to be hanged at once. s0ne of the party he Was with said, in answer to our question: Two young fellows in our train were great friends. They fell in love with the same girl. For - a while - she wouldn't make her choice. Meanwhile the two former friends became ' bitter enemies. She finally picked out the one she wanted. The rejected lover picked a fight wlta his successful rival and got licked. The one who had won the girl made peace with his former comrade and" every thing seemed to be berene. A day or two after tbey had renewed their friendship they went out antelope hunt ing : together. Only one came back. He said his friend, the accepted "lover of tbe girl, had started for camp at hour before he did and probably had gotten lost or had been killed by the Indians. He didn't come in at all that night A couple of bis friends went back and struck his track. They followed it until another track joined it and within a few hundred yard they found his dead body with tw bullet holes: in his back. They fol lowed the footsteps that left Ut dead bodv until they joined the train. Tha t-ejected suitor was accused of tfi murder. He denied it. A, Jury was se lected He, was found guilty. Two .wagons were run together, their wheels blocked; their tongues raised, a rope fastened to the tongue and put around, the condemned man's neck. He wa told he could say a few words. 113 said. "I killed Tilm. Go ahead with the hanging. "Nowadays they would spend thou sands of dollars on a sanity commis sion and court costs besides weeks or time selecting: a Jury and then, nine chances to one, they would turn him loose on a technicality. .'Back there in '63 the girl was wooed and won. one lover was killed and burled and the other tried, condemned and hanged In the time- it would take to select a Jury nowadays."' '" "So Great Stan t. From the New York Globe. James See old man Bullion eating pie with a knife! - John That s nothing. Anybody ran with practice. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper consists of Four new section replete with Illustrated features. , Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's , pages of rare .merit. Pictorial news supplement.. Superb comic section: 5 Cents the Copy ."The Biggest 5-Cents'. Wcn'i in Type,"