THE? JOURNAL AN INDEPKNUKNT NKWSPaVPEB C. S. JACKhOM .iPubUrtef fublUbed tier Atj, afterooos ami Bornlni (Meept Uunclny afterunos), at Tb Journal Bolldhif. Broadway and YamalU at.. Port- land. or. 1 atotaraJ at tba pmtofflva at Portia ad. Or fut trajwmlaalna through tu aiaila aa aaasod rlan natter. XgLEI'llOSKH Main 71731 Hcaaa, A -6061 Ail dapartmcLU raaetied by tbeaa nsmbera. TaU tba oparitor won uepiriowni jrawini. OUK1U.N A0VEUTI3I NO BKl'BJCBKNTATI VE Venlanila A Kaotoor Co., Braoawtck Bldg., 4 Fifth At.. New Xorkj li Blriu.. Cblraito. Subscription terms- bj mall ot t aujr ad draaa tu tba Unltad States or Maxloe: DAILY CMOKN1KO OH AFT...AXPON) Osa tar S6.00 I 'Jue month -BO 8UNDAX On jut... 2.W Oam month 3 DAILY (UOEMNO OR AFTERNOON) AND SUNDAY Ooa rear ST.BO I Out month i America asks nothing for her self bat what she has , right tu ask for humanity itself, l.; U'OODROW WILSON. S8 The proper means of in creasing the love we bear to our country, is to reside Home time in a foreign one. Shen- tone. ss OKKGOX VICTORIES N COMPETITION with the world, 'I Oregon made a clean sweep lu I the international egg-laying con . test at the Panama exposition. It Is. a triumph for which tho state of Oregon is indebted to the Oregon Agricultural college. Though there were 55 entries from ill parts of the world, the college pens took first, second and third prizeB. The fourth prize went to British Columbia pen, and the prize, for the greatest number of egg3 by a single hen in a year'r contest was taken by a Lebanon bird. The Oregon college has as head of its poultry department, one of the most famous poultry experts In the world. It is doubtful if tny living man has as profound a knowledge of the habits,, require ments and possibilities and breed ing of poultry. The trophies he has won for Oregon at the ex position and in the former recordr. made in egg laying contests, are tirnrtf of Mr Ilrviloi'o mmlr In ' ."Wfc Vb ..... V.JUUUM . D 1 ' theTotiUry field. The victories at the exposition are reflected in the evolution work ing out In the poultry induBtry In the state, under the leadership of the college. The bulletins, the de monstration trains and the dfs- ,'tribntlon of eggs from birds of pronounced egg-laying strain have changed the whole aspect of the - poultry Industry In this state. i Where formerly we were heavy Importers of poultry products, we are now producing abundantly for Our own use and are on the thres hold of becoming exporters. The Increase in poultry production ir. he past three years has been phe bomenal. ?. In the single item of tho greater wealth derived from poultry pro duced, the Oregon Agricultural college has given back to the state more than the state has given for ; maintenance of the Institution. THE RENASCENT CZECHS uuucuuaus iu lilt" LUI1CU States, who are numerous and more intelligent than some of our immigrants, are making themselves heard in regard to the coming reorganization of Eu- vijh. n la iiarijr vnvJUfcU lllcU I lie ? map will be altered good deal In -consequence of the war and the Bohemians are making the Initial moves to recover their ancient lib- trties. They have organized a "na i tional alliance" for the United "States and Canada with a platform . which demands "an independent Bo hemian Slovak (State." For many years Bohemia has been swallowed up in the Empire of; the Hapsburgs, though its peo ple never felt much, love for that fTasping house. They took an ac tive part in the great revolutions of. 1848, which shook the thrones : Of Europe for a few months, but in fthe end their rising was suppressed and tyranny became worse than ever. Jt was not until 1859 that the Bohemians secured some fee- hie constitutional rights und even then they were far from satisfied. " they believed themselves oppressed h? the Magyar and German ele tnenta in the Empire and have loused for a mora adequate nation M. expression. Ia recent years there has been . revival of Bohemian literaturt . and the native language has been . ardently cultivated by patriotic ; Ozechi. Their history is full of Inspiration. . In John IIuss Bo hemia produced' a leader of civil ization. His country was a pio neer in that forward -movement which goes Cby the- name' of the ' Refdrraatiorl and among her sons Wer Some of Jthe most capable mil itary conVmandersa Of , theif; ; tim.o, The Counter-Reformation - and -: tb terrfble Thir'ty Years., War crushed out tb nascent civilization of 'Bo hemia, but the germs survived and EQWhey.-artmanirestln ,tl?mba5tened with flat anjd not roso" selves la new hopes and lofty as- plrations. America feels a nat- ural sympathy with the spirit of tire projected more than a quarter tem was 1036. freedom wherever it comes to light, of aas inch from, the surface of i Deaths from external causea 'the tire the owner of the vehicle ; numbered 649, of which 116 were WHEN WOMEN RULE should be fined. 'suicides. T ' . v.i ! After two centuries had passed! In respect to age there were al- . cmcSO papers are Jubl- ,t oegan to reall2ed that tn moBt many deaths fr0m gen lant over the deed of a frail fungible poliCy was to adapt the eral diseases between the ages ot woman who. in her timorous roads to the them ; twenty.flve and xuty between "c"um ttucumyiiBneu a which the sheriff and all his men ! could not do, or said they could not. Fact does not always jibe with fancy in sheriff's offices and ) sometimes the minions of the law nay they can't do what they really don't want. t$ do, a habit in which they resemble bad little boys. The woman in question had filed Oregon Electric train- claimed a damage suit against a certain Tuesday its fourth victim in three man upon whom it was necessary years. to serve some papers. The sheriff's . The third victim was kiMed near men couldn't uerve the papers bo- the same spot three weeks ago. cause they were unable to find a. passing Southern Pacific train the defendant. He lived iu a big fn eacn instance seems to 'have house in-a wealthy quarter of Chi-, bewildered the victims as the Ore cago and his goings and comings gon Kiectric train which was to were frequent but still, tq. the law and its officers, he was. invisible Probably he had eaten fern seed. The woman finally grew tired of the law's delay and took, matters into her own hand. Armed with a! goodly pile of brickbats , she marched, up to her oppressor's' porch and fired them through the j plate glass of his front door. Nat- j urally he had her arrested, just as she had planned, and he also had j to appear In court to testify against her. ; In this capacity it was impos- a Bible for the sheriff's officers not half holiday for public employes to see him and the woman's pa-1 while private employes work longer pers were finally Berved. To us ' hours without a half holiday and this reads' like a highly edifying for smaller compensation. "This is story, though we do not seem to The Journal's reply to the letter on know exactly what it teaches, un- this page, which defends the prac loss it be that when women come , tice in federal government depart to rule the affairs of the world ments in Portland In which 278 a good many evasions and decep- employes are employed to do tho tions will be driven away and we work of 243 in order that the 278 shall face life more honestly. Worn- may have a seven-hour day and a en appear to Bcorn base indirec-, Saturday half holiday. tion more bitterly trian men do.; ROADS WD LOADS A PERPLEXING problem in many counties Is the regula tion of the weight of loa-Js on improved highways. The problem in not a new one. It con fronted the people of Great Britain In the bejrirming of the seventeenth century when vehicular traffic be gan to develop. The genesis of our road laws is found in the English laws, and in confirmation of the old saying that the world moves In circles we find that the present day method of dealing with the problem Is fol lowing along the same lines adopted by the English whoe policy was to adapt the traffic to the roads instead of constructing roads to sustain the ever increasing-traffic. The policy of restrict ing the weight of loads and reg ulating the breadth of wheels be came pronounced during the reign of James I. Confirming one of his father's orders Charles I issued a proclama tion commanding "that no carrier or other person whatsoever shall travel with any waine, cart or car riage with more than two whee's nor with above the weight of twen ty hundred: 'nor shall draw any waine, cart or other carriage with above five horses at once." From the accession of William and Mary every few years saw fresh acts of parliament changing or adding to previous regulations as to weight of loads, number of horses, the order in which thev should be harnassed, the brearHh of tires, the position of the wheels, the kind of nails to be used for fastening the tires and so on. To enforce the regulations severe penalties were imposed. Any per son was authorized to seize ana keep possession of "such number of horses as might be attached to n. carter's wapon in excess of six, or to a cart for hire in excess of three." The various provisions respect tho number of, horses or oxen per cart or wagon failed to keep the loads down to a weight suited to the deficiencies of the road and George 11 authorized turnpike trus tees not only to erect weighing machines but to impose an addi tional toll of twenty shillings per hundred weight on any wagon, which, together with Us contents had a total weight exceeding sixty hundred weight. In addition to regulating weight, parliament devoted much atten tion to the construction of vehicles, particularly the breadth of wheel rims. One act established nine inches as the minimum width of a tire. Wagons jwith nine inch wheels were allowed free passage on all turnpikes. To make up for the loss of toll, collectors were per- m Uln.l in t i . . ., I. ...... .-. . uiiLLcu iu i in uuac neuviui rates oil wheels of lesser width. Another curious provision was tbe arge of half toll on wagons whose rear wheels tracked with the front ones. The broad wheel policy was not satisfactory and it evoked much criticism from others besides farm ers. One critic said: Of all the barbarous and abominable ma- chines that have been contrived by ignorance and maintained by Vulrar prejudice. none hsvp . . .. . equalled the broad wheeled car- rfagea that are now in use. In- In- ,they stead ot rolling the roads flnq them, into mud and dust " .Not alone cart wheela. but. cart! tfheel naUs; engaged tho attention ( pttllament. One act provided deaths therefrom. Under the clas among other things that "the I Blficatlon of general diseases there 6treaks" or' tires of wheels were toLwere 1679 deaths. This includes headed nails. Another act dl- rected that when the nails of the . We will nH tn .tk. leed to sol problem jn a similar way. A FOURTH VICTI3I N A STRETCH of track run ning parallel with a Southern Pacific main line Just east of the city limits of Albany, an 0 bft their doom came speeding on. It would seem that a way could ! p be devised by which to minimize the peril of this fatal spot, and a decent regard for the value of human life would suggest 'that a plan of the kind be applied. FEDERAL PAYROLLS T HROUGHOUT its existence. The Journal has advocated shorter hours for all workers. But it has never advocated seven-hour day and a Saturday Wno paya these 278 employes?! The money comes from the toil of hands. All wealth is created" by wprk. The more money govern- meuu, uusurua lur its yuryur.c iUO more somebody must work to pro- vide that money, the longer hours j that somebody must remain at hi" , msiY, iuc UJV'C "c u,usl . go without in his home, the fewer shoes he must buy for his children, the less leisure and the less com fort he can have. And that somebody is the aver- age worker, that undefended work- , er on long hours and short rations i that The Journal is speaking for . ... v. kii n When it insists that public payrolls should not be an asylum Of leisure, a rendezvous of ease, ln short, a private snap instead of a public trust. PROPHET STEINMETZ R. CHARLES P. STEINMETZ Is an electrical engineer, per haps the most eminent in the D world He is employed by a big electrical corporation which pays him a princely salary and fin -la 111 t i cn VQlnahlo that AVPn , . , i his radical opinions are tolerated. This is probably more or less dif ficult for the corporation to doi since Dr. Steinmetz is a pronounced I-..1.H.1 i -u l.. rociafisi wuo ueueves aim upeniy t toaches all those half-baked doc trines about human brotherhood, the abolishment of poverty and uni versal happiness. Dr. Steinmetz writes mathemat ical works on electricity so erudite unij iitii i a. uuecu )icujic iu i tne Lnited states can read tnem. We dare say before he dies he will write a book so learnedly dif- ficult that nobody can read it and and depref,slng debrls of the bacUyard will then go down to his grave!, . , tv,. happy. This wonderful man has given an interview to Collier's Weekly In j which he permits himself to specu late regarding the future of elec-1 trlcity. In his opinion hardly any- I thing has yet been done in tbe' way of applying It to human uBes 1 We are just at the dawn of the ' real electrical age. People now on earth will live to see this subtle and potent agency doing most of ; the work of the world and doing it economically, swiftly and with-1 out dirt. Electricity is a cleans- j Ing and beautifying element, as well as one of limitless utility. This genius which i3 soon, accord ing to Dr. Steinmetz, to. take charge of so large a portion of our hay nlness and comfort is best eener- atpd hv water nower. Wherever water flowa or falls, there elec tricity may be caused to pour forth for human weal, or for tbe weal of a small cli'que of monopo lists. The choice rests with the people. Electricity is destined to control our future and it depends for its abundance and cheapness on the waterpowers. It follows pret- c,ear, that th whQ ' - the waterpowers country. will own the A HEALTHY STATE S OME interesting vital statistics are given in the annual re port of the state board of health for the year endln December 31, 1914, just issued by the state printing department. The total number of deaths dur- ing the year was 6446, or which 9i5K. females and 1 fiQ1 mains -w " - The number Of births reported waa 11,624. 5944 males and 5ti0t 11,624, 5944 males and ,5680" fe - males. The total number of mar - rtages reported was 5170. Cancer, Still Shows an increase over former years. There1 were 480 deaths front tuberculosis wMclrtQ taled 637. The number who died i from diseases of tho circulatory sys- tifv or nv.fU I case the number was j the second 536. j The total mortality rate of th state for 1914 was ten for every thousand of population a low rate indicating Oregon is a healthy state. WHAT VENICE MEANS TO THE WORLD Harrev M Watta in Philadelphia Ledcer. KNTTCK Is for everyone. It is not Va hidden meaning. a form of beauty that is only understood I when explained by specialists, but freelv and frankly today, as it has een for centuries, it exists as one j of those realized dreams of fantasy that human beings are only capabla of in their great moments at soma critical period of the world's history, when thej put in permanent form those creations of the mind that, otherwise, trailing the nimbus of glory, might never be, or like "the baseless fabric of hie vision, the un substantial pageant" of the poet, "the cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces, the solemn temples," dissolve nd fade "and leave not a rack be hind." One, indeed, has but to look around and see on every side the pho tographic record of some of its fam ous buildings, its canals and its al leys, its campaniles. Its palaces and piazzas, its landscapes and seascapes, without which no American house hold seems to be complete, to get a faint idea what it would mean if all that these things are but the faint shadow of were blotted out and of Venice it should be written as of Tpres "Erat" "It was!" And that this will be its fate should the counsels of f rightfulness prevaU n0 one can ,joubti for the frail character of the buildings in Venice ,g such that a steady rain of bombs would do more damase tnan ln the rlti nn terr- flrma whit there la not, even in Rome itself, such a con- centration of architectural beauty or of historic Interest as in found i-i ! ! these few square miles of the city of!1' 4a fallacy to believe that more the lagoons. Perhaps the Austrian disciples of General Bissing will es- plain that they only aim at buildings j U8ed for offensive operations and that they have a higher regard for the j beauties of Venice than do the Ital- ians themselves, who, by going to war, have put ln Jeopardy the safety of Venice and all the great northern art centers for which Italy is custo- j dian for the world at large. Perhaps, I but what of it? When the bomb fell on the roof of the Church of tho ! Scalzi and destroyed the superb bra vura frescoes of Tiepolo on the ceil ing, the perpetrators put themselves outside the Dale of civilised peoples. ! It is true the Church of the Scalzi adjoins the railroad station, and, p . . , re- sumably, the aviators were trying to hit' this important military depot1; but in Venice no risks of any kind can" f i " iJC taken unless the enemy have -r , - tnrtwn ail decencies 10 ine TVina. iai- I .rAlrnwrlfl nnlA and church irlance I , , , i , iu inuiLii, vr, 4l v siauiu, that not even the trifling modern changes of today can affect. For the ! poetry is there, although, as one ap-j proaches the famous city from the mainland in the shimmer of a sum- I a ...n one', heart oinL-o ao tha I . ' . , . . , ' rallroaa yards, gas plants, electric . ... .. ... ,,tne naUonai qu,stion 0f elavery in and you are assured that what seems j the south, we shall have trouble. But to be a very literal duplication c-t the worst aspect of Atlantic City from the meadows is Venice itself. But you quickly find your old dream you qulckly your old dream comes true when. after passinar I through the dingy railroad station i you step out on its raaittt quay and at once are confronted by the real Venice that is "the Venice of the sweet maiden's fancy," gondolas and ' all, and where, as ts true of no other I place on this restless orb, every stone, I every brick counts. Indeed, it ws ! not by mere caprice that Ruskin en i titled his description of Its archl , tectural glories "The Stones of Ven I Ice" since,' literally, the unnumbered beauties of its facades demand this i minute and detailed study, and to ntss some one square foot Inlaid i marble Is to be ravished of a treas ' ure which, when seen, remains for ever a fragrant memory. . . But the stones of Venice are not without their humors, and .the first thing you see from the railroad sts- tion, across the Grand Canal, is the curious church of St. Simeon, with a very large dome that reaches so far down on the squat walls of the church that when Napoleon came to Venice and looked at it he made the famous mot. "I have often seen churches without domes, but hera is a dome without a church." And then as your gondolier turns to tin- b-ft you se the overelaborate facade of the Church of the Scalsl (barefoot friarsl. and your trip into the fairyland of I "calle and canale'1 is begun. And j you are perfectly at home, of course. ; for have you not been feeding your funrv nn vim nf Venice all vour lifo , and here is everything Just as 4t cught to be? Moreover, if you feel 1 cught ! you ar c Wl ) iiv.ii nit Aiiiniiniiuh, d-alnrii i o nllel rush, can any home touch be surer I than to note that garden wall and, here and there, a high facade Is cov - ereu with our own laminar Virginia creeper, often, even In summer, show ing In Its foliage a premonitory touch of hectic colors m If .anxious, la , 4i foreign lands t spread a hint of the exotic glories of the American au- tumn! ' Th modernization of Venice in deed is all at the back, and once you are inside not even the little motor- boats, the vaporettU or the larger j . , ... . I steamboat, the vapore, that act as trolley cars for the citizens, spoil the In the first effect you have seen so often pictured Se'l, now Yeady for 'the gu 534 and in , in prose and poetry; and as evening , bernatorlal music. J falls, even with the lltUe low-pow- ' . ered Incandescent lights illuminatinj the canals instead of the old lan- terns, the Venice of old comes out , in oyerpowerlng manner and under the August moon, with the gondolas crowding around the music boats an chored, at the entrance of the Grand Canal, with the graceful silvery domes of the Santa Maria Delia Sa lute to the right and at your left the plazetta, . the Ducal Palace and the campanile of St. Mark's and the Blow of its famous piazza as well, wlt a11 tlle old Palac ront. now mostly hotels, at the entrance of tb 111 wuuuty not know Tintoretto from Titlar, Falma Vecchio frorn Paolo Veronese, think that Venice is more than any painter or poet has described It. Letters From the People (CommunicatkiDa aetrt to Tha Journal 1m publication ln tnia department abould be writ ten on only one aide etbe paper, should not exceed 300 worda in Tengtli and mint be ac companied by tbe name and addrraa of tbe sender. If the writer does not desire to bae tba name published, be should to state.) "Dlaeosslon Is the greatest of all reformer. It ratU.ua Uk-s eTerjtbing it touches. It roba principles of all false sanctity aud throws them back on tbelr reasonableness. If tber be no reasonableness. It ruthlessly crushes them out of exlstenra and ets up ita own conclusions In their staad.'' Woodrow Wilsoa. Federal Payrolls. Portland, Or., Nov. 23. To the Edi tor of The Journal Apropos of your editorial last evening regarding the working, hours of 278 federal em- ployes, it impresses me as being most untimely. In the face of the present and ever-growing unemploy ment, it would appear to anyone who has made even a superficial study of social conditions that what we want is not agitation for an in crease ln hours, but quite the re verse. Efficiency, or the ability to perform a given task with the high est degree of perfection or skill, does not mean that that task should be performed for a greater number of hours. The fact is that where the hlE-hest efficiency is reoulred it has been found that the hours must bi of wQrk whefe inef ficlency preval,8 tlat longer hours are resorted to in order to make up for rack of skill. wuift is aicumpumieu wneil me floors are long. And such agitation as evi- danced ln your editorial of last eve- nlng, in my opinion, has a tendency t0, Creat? a wrong impression in the minds of both employer and emplove. is H not the tendency in all class-s of work to shorten the hours and Increase the efficiency? I have known: stated that they have become com- pletely exhausted after four hour-' work on a given task under the ef- ficlency system. Therefore for thft i preservation of the race we may net: advocate Inefficiency, but we should advocate short hoTTrs. HARRIET T. CHERVIN. The Seven Hour Day. Oswego, Or.. Nov. 23. To the Edi tor of The Journal I hope you will be so liberal as to permit me to voice The October reports puDiisned last my opinion through your paper con-' week show continued Improvement, cerning your editorial under the cap- Great Northern's earnings are up $1, tion "Wasteful Payrolls." in which 0t2,000. Bu in view of the grain yo i deplore the fact that the federal movement, that was to be expected, government employe works only seven The most noticeable feature ln the hours a day, while "other folks, the whole railway situation is the sharp fa 7 rwr s A Tfrt nn rf Vi a mAn wn n A tha ami h arn i-ia f a T . ? v-. v,. KVa s..va Va. " VJ VV'lllUIUIl IUII Ul imve tu wuin. vigm una ien. Accordinff to your &tatitiotr ther arc ,2i8 edral employes. By compellinar ; thern to woru ejght hours a day only 243 would be needed. Correct. But what yarould become of the 35 who would lose their Jobs? Are the ranks of the unemployed not large enough, that we should increase them? Tlu problem of unemployment has al- I ""U' UBCUine a national question: I witness the work of the industrial relations com miss Jon diirfnn th no at i - - - - r -" K"" ! mands speedy solution. When it shall have become as keen as was " win not oe a second eivll war; It 1 b Woody revolution. Although "faorTde ! iaorea rew wno could work less ; than ten hours a day. I do not h- , tnan ten hours a day. I do not be- Erutee. the federar employes their sev en. won iuck to tnem. I sincerely nope tney win not only maintain their present status but strive for a still shorter day. For only by short ening our working hours we workers do away with unemployment, eliminate mutual competition on the labor mar- Ket, consequently Increase our wages and come within easy reach of. what , .s..i...7 "cuiiRj io us me ' nursuit of happiness." J. LL'DOW. T j.. at. . a ioi.-rs ri. rfuuns t-OnOuttora. Portland, Or.. Nov. 23. To the Ed!- ! mills, for instance, actually are be tor of the Journal. I would like to I coming buyers of steel. The Pltts- i express my appreciation of lha mousniruiness or the conductors of the St. Johns car line. Thev are es pecially considerate of women with children, and of old people, and strang ers. One might say, "well, that is what they are paid for," but I do not look at it that way. I think- th. or- 1 real gentlemen. This is from an appreciative .patron. T1lREU - ' r- j i ..... oujs oumiay laws All .Man-Made. eaiem, ur, rxov. Z4.--To the Editor i or tne Journal. One of the most hack I neyed and Indefensible nx.thr.Ho i forcing the views Of an individual or an organization is to insist that hiu views come from God. The value of this method is that if you Insist stren ously enough many people will believe It. and so be suppressed. But. while often effective, this attempt to over ride opposition by claiming divine sanc tion is merely a confession of weak ness. The field secretary of the Sabbath association uses such an argument to uphold Sunday laws. With supreme assurance that his view is unassailable, be asserts that "moral law" meaning-the decalogue and hence the law 1 7 " ' Tk ' ' ti h k I v. ... . ., . ror sanoatn observance, came from w i m nme itocn ucn a dictum ; was generally accepted, but the time Tof ',nd acceptance of church author- ity has gone by. Besearrh shows that : made ordinances nat even originating among the Jews. Thus it has the same ! ",vu"! 8"u a 'ws of Ger- I many. The real truth about Jewish Sab- bath laws seems to be that they were promulgated by the priesthood of a local religion, in order to more firmly i rivet Its doctrines upon (bt People, so PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE No. Portland's Woodrow Wilson league is not an aggregation of rowers. ....... Now that we hve given thanks, let a ret bUBy on that Christmas chopping. II.. a 4' a. t t. 1 Christmas, but he may have to be satisfied with a year or two from 'hristmas France and England are said to be contemplating some "surprises" In the Balkans. It's always wise to prepare people for too great a surprise. The small boy who turned several mice loose -in a Portland fmovle, thea ter thought out a good Scenario but ; failed to get the hosiery filmed. It is not probable that the Baker eountv rancher who killed hba three little children and himself because of business reserses has bettered his prospects. When Oregon's Panama-Pacific ex hibit is brought to Portland It will be possible for Oregon-first people to see Oregon's best without going to San Francisco. a Th nation's nostal savinss deposits rinereased more than ten per rent dur ing October showing tnat people oiner thaa munition makers are accumulat ing money. Judge Cunning, of Baker, having an nounced that after December la "drunks" w-ill be given jail sentences expiring New Year's day, there may be some cunning off as well as on the bench at Baker. THE ECONOMIC William C. Ward ln Commerce and Finance. November 17. The financial situation ln the United States Is being fortified each day by the establishment of symmetry among its part. The steel Industry stands on so normal a basis that it was able to withdraw certain export quotations last vmIi. Other manufacturing en- ' temrises. too. have ceased to regard their prosperity as dependent upon the war needs of Europe. War-order wind falls are being used to cancel bondea debts, instead of being distributed un thriftily in extra dividends. Bank clearings continue to ne reponeu uue to record figures, ana every new in crease in surplus Is properly balanced by an Increase in loans. Money is neither being hoarded nor wasted. Even the stock market has thrown off the war spell. Bonds are being bought i -r rAnfd flr-iirA Ana everv Rt steadily rising prices, despite neavy sales from abroad and the widespread i belief that such securities are due to 1 deDreciate. The only one-sided ele- ment in the entire commercial struc ture is the foreign trade, and the one menace which that one-sidedness has been held to contain is removed for the time being by arrangements which have strengthened the foreign ex changes. Agricultural and railroad i prosperity have enabled the trad re- views to report glowingly. i Between the m0Tnt f from the northwest and tn contin- ' ued congestion of traffic at Atlantic i seaboard points, railroad facilities are taxed to the utmost. Baltimore & ; traffic in Its history. Idle equipment ! Is at its lowest since .November 15, j 1913. Since September 1, 80,812 new freight cars have been contracted ror, and the railroads are nov Inquiring for 50.000 more. But it Is not only ln the matter of equipment that the car riers find their facilities inadequate. Around Chicago railroad labor is bo scarce that $2.25 a day is being offered for work which commanded only J1..5 one month ago. K 1 1 1 1 5 H 1 1 1 U i I t l"C PUUVUt,!" K. reported earnings up J441.4B8 Southern. $443,177; Mobile & Ohio, $129,825. The gain for all the lines reporting to Dun's was 7.7 per cent over September earnings. These changes, it must oe remem bered, occurred before, the acute con pestion of traffic ln the east devel oped, and before the grain movement had attained anything- like maximum proportions. November earnings when published, undoubtedly will sur- - nn..tkinn Havo iAn vavr1 I I, jt.Tn Oil iiiuiK vc " v The withdrawal of quotations -for abroad speaks rear delivery oruers 1 ioqUently of the sold-up condition of the steel mills. It was well known that tlie Gteel Corporation had ac ceptea all the orders Its big plants can "J? that rehabilitation of its old and worn m. -. i ,..-rB in nn ffnrt : miiu was In nrorress in an effort ; to increase its output capacity. Also I u was known that contracts had ben ' signed at the rate of 1.000,000 tons a : W4?ek during October. But no one was ' quite prepared for the unfilled tonnage rpnort of 6.165.452 an Increase of su: 834 tons durinr- the month, which nrobablv is a conservative measure of , the excess of demand over capacity, Throughout thj entire Industry v, ,.t thl snrnf rnnrlit on are ! heard. They point Tward a Btate of """" " -- ----- is now hampering the railroads. Meel burr Steel company has purchased 40,- 000 tons of Bessemer billets within the last 10 days for making wre pro ducts, releasing its own open-hearth capacity for the manufacture of pe cial steels for forging and other pur poses. This seeming paradox is really nothing more nor less than a reflec- I tmU the prIests and rulers might re- 'tain their rank and power. The pur- nna or present suuuuj " " - ..pntiaiiv different. Rest is not the. r.si nhtPi-t nf these laws. Because or a senseless insistence upon a dictated vu cnri n -practical indifference to cti. f ft the real cause or uie woes ui Human ity the churches are losing ineir power of drawing people to their services- and these Sunday laws are oe sired' In the vain hope that cutting people off from other Sunday recrea- INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY Chicago That business on railroads Is gaining rapidly is reflected in the American Rail way association's report of surplus cars on November 1 f among lines in the United btates, t a decrease of 5U.060 cars com .--.I Htii tha iJctober 1 report. 'A I t VJ " . . - .. It i only a few months ago tha' the car surplus was more than 200.000. Complaints of car shorts z from all parts of the country are increasing. Northwestern roads have Issued orders to pre vent their cars from going east. AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS A band is being recruited at Ores cent. Klamath county, as an extension ot the school work, and to be under the control and direction of the teucher. As an incident of prospective rall- k..lMIw nKtivltiM in r-i)trul t t - K0n. the Burns Commercial club, h.-i ; been rertved and rorgamsauon is in -nd 0 one net heard ,! progress. m a Vle president do anytiiltiK Several more large two htory bri. k '" trouble, business buildings are to be erected at .-except the ilnrd vice pre Joseph in early spring. the Herald ot a rHuriau-.-says. and that the outlook for a lnely bnildinar boom next summer is excep- ' or an Iiimiii-mii.t ,m) tionally good. A dramatic club has been organized at Hood Rive and the. News says thnt while some of the younger ranchers are relaxing from the arduous dutlf of the ranch they will "grace tlie foot lights and furnish what promiHeH to be excellent entertainment for the ex pectant public." A trio from th Tutuilla mission on the reservation constituted an attrac tion at the Presbyterian church it Pendleton last Sunday evening. Tli'1 members of the trio were Allfii Pa taw a. Jim Baruhait und Rev. J. M. Cornelison. Parsons Motanii- was at Kn ... . . . . C .. 1 , n, t I... service conducted by Rtv. K. V. Wat - J rlngton. a The Benton County Courier claims Corvallis is heHdquarters for hmccvit y in Oregon. "There is a tiayiiiR." snsi the Courier, "that men grow old. only! in years In Corvallis. It Is also aid there are more men over S' years oi I j in this city than any place of liVi population ln the state. Rev. I. A. j Moses Is one of the notable ycpims men who Is Hearing the 90 milestone . vet hut few would judge him to li-i over 65." NEWS OF A WEEK tWn of the cooperation going on anions tbe mills ln an effort to use steel eco nomically and make what is admit tedly an inadequate supply go as far as possible. Forelgn trade continues to roll up the balance against Kurope. Iast week $64,286,000 worth of merchandise went abroad, and $30,273,000 wortli was imported. Both items were con siderably below the average of recent weeks. The unusually large quantity of foodstuffs going out of the country at present does not consist only of gTain and other staples. Export sales of meats and provisions by the Chi cago packers average over a million tounds a day, and a 10,000,000 pound week Is not rare. The average of such exports is between two and three times as large as normally, notwith standing that the Austro-Uerman trade, which used to equal from one- fourth to one-third the total, has i ceased altogether. Among bulk ship ments, oil, too, looms large. Since the closing of the Panama canal, most of this trade has been diverted through New York. Beginning with November 10 express trains carrying 750,000 gal lons of petrol for export, leave the California oil fields daily over the Santa Fe for Chicago and New York. Bank clearings in the prinripal Vllies totaled $4,641,820,759 ilightly below the turnover of last week, but nearly Oouble that of the corresponding week last year and about SO per cent greater than in 1913. . Member banks of the New York Clearing House association report sur plus reserves Up $4,744,870 to $193, M5.870. Loans and discounts ex panded $26,037,000 to $3,112,711,000; deposits Increased $42,596,000 to $3. J64,041.000, and circulation diminished $695,000. The money market ruled easy last week. Funds on call were nominally 2 per cent, ranging between that fig ure and Host loans were made at Time money was obtainable with freedom, but Stock market perform- I ances caused industrial collateral to ' be under close scrutiny. The rate was j 1 per cent with an additional '-4 to j 1V4 per cent where "all industrlnl" collateral wai offered. Mercantile i paper was In good demand but was confined rather narrowly to names i whose credit was unquestionable. Rates were: 24 & 4 for CO to 90 days, endorsed, and 3 84 for 4 to 6 months, Flngie names. a a The federal reserve banks gained $3,000,000 in total reserves and $2,700, C00 in gold reserves, while deposits in creased $13,300,000. A net gain of $2,100,000 in earning assets is shown over the preceding week's figures, increasing the ratio of these assets to paid in capital from 338 to 142 per tent. Holdings of com mercial pape. have increased $'657,000. The total amount of federal reserve rotes outstanding Is $179,800,000. against which arents hold $163,100,000 in sold, $16,700,000 In commercial paper and $1-0.000 in lawful money. The circulation of the banks Is given as $1o6,6(i0.u00, t lie net liability on ac count of which is $13,007,000. Additional British credits and the completion o7 the Italian loan so clar ified the atmosphere of the foreign exchange market that sterling and Hie moved within relatively narrow limits, exhibiting gratifying strength. AIho some, $10,000,000 ln American secur ities which arrived on board the Saint Louis Imparted an additional rigidity to Ivondon bills. Demand sterling ranged between 4 61H on Monday to 4.65 on Satur day. Francs, however, were weak, cheques sagging toward the Septem ber low- record of 6 to the dollar. Scandinavian exchange, on the other hand, develoied pronounced strength, kroner cheques advancing sharply from 26.20 to 26.90. Amsterdam, too, continued jtioiig, with guilder checks selling at 4.. tions .will bring them perforce to church, and thus assist a waning re ligious belief to reassert Its influence. Sunday laws of all kinds are evident ly an attempt to fasten upon a com munity by punitive law, a. religious system; 'and whether the system be good, or medium, such an attempt is both arrogant and contemptible, and deserves to tail. W. I'ARGO. An Amphibious liattlefrrouiMl. From the Christian Herald. The northern part of Babylonia is generally dry during the greater part of the year. The lower part, near the junction of the rivers, is generally a great malarial swamp overgrown -with reeds, ln the springtime one may sail almost anywhere across the country from the Tigris to the Kuphrates, anj in the dry season great herds of cam eL, buffaloes, donkeys, sheep and goats grase over the same place. This explains why the war reports describe two battles between the British and the Turkp, one a, naval battle, the other a land battle, and both fought in precisely the same place. One was When the waters overflowed the val ley; the other when the land was dry. But even in the dryest of seasons there are great marshes in lower Meso potamia, and the British soldier who spends a season anions them , wilt probably burn and shiver the remain der of his life sway with malaria. . , Tne0nce0ven - BY -TKX.X LAMPMAN YKSTERDAY I told things for which ful but of course I them all. aj For instance I'm cause I was recently vlc president Of the a few of tha I was tlmnk couldn't tell thankful - l.o elertol tliirl Portland rrcss club. ' third gel ling :d.-nt but of course for doing it. ihcy a l his. pi 1 And a l hi; .1 i. .. press cluh- so ( n s president-- of I chii find out liaMi t mi) thinn in and Cum ,Sut Ih-i ImjkI i h thinks I'll make a K'"d one A nd the l insnti I t he t .i Konei i 1 third vice president rule is so harmless US H - IS t llH t l!C llH -tit nnl r nnu E h a '. - tllOlit "-- --to do a 1 1 V J i a ! 1 1 1 . j And I MineM t hat lio.l-, Stop Hie European vai and nuiUe all the kings third vice presidents. --and keep them that a iJAlid lat night when I w.ts third a h presldenting around - up at the Prvss club - I heard a stnry ahout lrorge Sitiituin who getsall the tonnage for the tlieat Northern. --and keeps the road going. - Hud keeps the stockholders frorn worrying. and e cry t li i uk. And he went t" San Frftnrtsro-- - on the steamer Great Northern - to koi; t tie fair. And there was a storm -all ths wuy down. - and George was afraid of getting sick. f And someone told liim of n sure; remedy or precaution or somothlng. J Anyway - If you did It you wouldn't. U And CoMijo said lie d try it. - and as h'ii us he got on fin boat he picked out a big rocking chair. and pulled his eout collar up - and his hut down--- and put liis chair crosswise of the ship. And every time one side cam up lie rocked forward. and when tho other side enrne up he ri kud back. 1 Ami thus preserved an equilib rium - or kept a horizontal or something -- all the way. And no "tic hhw him lesve the chair. And George kii s there's nothing like a rocking chair --when sailing '-sailing over the bounding main -hut LISTEN - - on the return George sat In an easy clmli Shasta Limited. trip on the "Homely women," says the Candid Or ouch of the Kansas City Tines, "hare no right to t sentimental, sad when they are, X hate 'am." RUDYARD KIPLING WRITES FOR THE SUNDAY JOURNAL Rudyard Kipling visited the British "Grand Fleet" not long ago, and his observations form the basis, tor a series oi articles on the British navy, the first of which will be published in The Sunday Journal November 28. WHY SOLDIERS DIE UNAFRAID The futurists or realists in art find in the rush and smash of armed action the most thrilling emotion in the world. An article in The Sunday Journal Magazine next Sunday is illustrated by a reproduction of their pictorial ideas in which one can sense the desperate abandon that sends men to death without a qualm. IF A BODY MEET A BODY Thi is another Jack Lait story that everyone will enjoy reading. Lait's facile pen is producing a line of matter that is fast gaining wide popularity among the. read ers of The Sunday Journal who discern in these stories a new note that is refreshing and a realism that bespeaks an unfailing power of observation. NEWS OF THE SCHOOLS The Sunday Journal school page is making more friends every week. It aims to chronicle what is going on ln Portland's public schools. Personal mention predominates and every effort Is made to report the every day events in this broad educational field. FEATURES FOR MATRON AND MAID Madame Qui Vive's dress sug gestions are accepted as authori tative by those who know what's what in dress. Her style notes Include a variety of subjects that interest every woman. Lillian Russell's Sunday chat on personal efficiency hits home. They are chock full of common sense and appeal to all. Dorothy Dolan's page for the housewife in The Sunday Journal magazine has suggestions a plenty to make the daily housekeeping routine the more pleasant. THE SUNDAY JOURNAL Complete in five news sections magazine and comic section.. Firs cents the copy everywhere.- , NEXT SUNDAY - j Tht Biggett Five Cents' Worth in Typ" ,