e , 0 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, , PORTLAND. SUNDAY. MORNING,. JUNE ,18. 1916. Y THE JOURNAL AH IHDEPENDBWT WBWBPAPSB. c, a. jackso pubiiow I'Dbllaned ereryS day. afternoon and morning teteept Sunday afternoon), at Tb Journal Building;, Uroadwaj and Yamblll eta... Port, laud. Or. 1 Ka tared at the poatofflce at Portland, Or.. Cor tranemUatisn turougb tlx mails a eeond elaae natter. . TKLBPHONEB Main 7173: Horn: A-OOM. All departaenta reached ty tbeao anmtan. Tell la operator what department yon want. IUB1C1QM ADVKRTI81.Vi BEPREHENTATIVB Benlamlo Kentnor Co.. Bronawlck Bid., lis .fifth Are- New l'otk, 121 Feople'e Bldg., Cbleggo. Subscription terme br mall or to any d dra lo the t'ulted state or Meilro: DAILY (MORNING OB AFTB BN'OON) On year $3.00 I On montb $ .CO Uli'NDAY. Om yetr 12 50 I One month f .23 DAILY. - (W0EMN1 OR AET1CBN00N) AND SUNDAY One year 7 .V I One month .SB rum: he baa a right to aak for humanity Itaelf. WOODBOW WILSON. Million (or defend, but not a rent tor tribute. CHARLES C. PINCKNEY. Tie Sabbath la (Jod'a special present to the working man and one of Its chief object la to prolong bit life, and preaerre efficient hie working tone. Blalkl. A BISHOP AXI THE HOME B' ,ISHOP HUGHES' remarks about the 'home in a recent sermon were pointed and some of them were true. The i . home, or more properly Bpeak j v lng, the family, is the basis of f society and every good lnstitu i tlon that society cherishes. So !Jt is the plain duty of all of us to do what we can to confirm the j "stability of the home. ; Bishop Hughe3 directed his ar- . rows mainly against apartment dwellers. In his opinion, as we i ' gather from the report of his sermon, he thinks that the influ- , . ence of apartment life is against I children, connubial love and every- thing else that helps ta fortify the j, family. No doubt he has studied .'.the subject profoundly and speaks j . from adequate knowledge. We j may say. however, that it is idle i to think of persuading people to 1 go back to the old type of iso I lated residence. The apartment is a great deal wore convenient than 5 the separate house in the matter J ' of light, heat, water and cleanli ' ' ness and it has many other ad- vantages. We will mention one or two of them. For less money than it takes to keep up a house in a re mote suburb far from lectures,, Ood churches and the center of life a family can hire an apart ment in the heart of the city with- in easy distance of all that is worth while. This saves carfare, time and strength. Many people who live in the suburbs are de prived of much that they would : enjoy because it la Buch a hard ship to ride home on crowded and uncomfortable cars late at night. Bishop: Hughes could do more , for the suburban home by reform ing the Btreet cars than by preach- ' ing against apartments. Scolding never has accomplished a great 'deal for the home or any other ..valuable institution. A little ecb- r somic justice would be found to go somewhat farther. The Ameri can home is falling into decay be- y- cause breadwinners do not earn enough money to keep it going. The minimum annual expense of an - average family Is not less than ' $800 a year. The majority of wOrkingmen earn lees than $600. - Here lies the secret of the de , cadent home. Much of what we often call vice is really poverty. Frank Hitchcock says he wants to see Hughes elected because he believes it will mean "the restora tion of national prestige and hon or." If Mr. Hitchcock lived across the water and intimated that the flag under which he lived had neither national prestige nor honor his fellow countrymen would not . acclaim him as a hero or a leader of men. And he said it just after flag day. THE METEORITE ONCE upon a. time there lived a great and good prince on the south slope of a moun tain beside a clear and placid .lake. On the eastern side of his palace was an orange grove. On the western side was a park where -many deer disported themselves.. ,In - the middje of the park was a band stand where the prince's musicians played on moonlight -nights for the pleasure of the peasants and their children who : -were freely admitted to the park as long as they did not pick the flowers or worry the deer. , The prince lived happily with his wife and beautiful daughter for many years until on an un lucky day a meteorite fell from the sky and lighted on the piano In his best parlor. The piano was crushed to splinters and the me- teor fell on down through the floor -; into the cellar where it XinaUy came to rest close to a mighty hogshead of beef. This was sin gularly disagreeable to the prince because he liked that -particular Soeer better than any other. It had been given to him by a witch of his acquaintance who had cast a spell upon it such that it it were drawn from any other place Ua the same way. This is a rough renins, like Shakespeare or Na than the faucet ia the side next; outline of the nebular hypothesis poleon, elves us a glimpse of our to the meteorite it would turn whoever drank it into an ass. And the meteorite prevented 4nybody from reaching that faucet. So the good prince was in de spair until his vizier sent for a &as engine with a crane to lift the meteorite out of the cellar. The vizier wanted to hitch the crane to the top of the meteorite , and haul it straight., up and out but the prince said no. There must be a rope hitched under it and one at the right and another at the left with an engine to pull on each. The vizier grumbled but he sent for three more engines and fastened them to the meteor ite as the prince ordered, digging a well for the one underneath. 'When they were alLjset going the meteorite did not move, for one rope was pulling it down, one to the right, another to the left and a fourth upward. "We shall never get the meteor ite out of the cellar in this way," wailed the vizier. But the good prince smiled and replied, "Per haps we never shall but you must confess that we have applied a beautiful system of checks and balances." Today is the day when the city officially goes into the "swimmin' hole" business. Youngsters will swim under official direction, in official pools officially sanitated. Some difference between the new and the old when we used to fol low the frogs across the pond to learn the leg stroke. PORTLAND WILL? CELEBRATE T HE EAGLE la coming back to his own, so the Fourth of July committee says. We are going to have a real old fashioned celebration with march ing columns, flying flags, brass bands and patriotic music, fun and i noise, pink lemonade, red fire and firecrackers. We are going back to the good old days when the email boy had some rights; when the toy cannon, the giant cracker and the "Chinee bum" woke the startled day and soothed the ex hausted night to belated dreams. It is a temporary goodbye to the community picnic and the Chatauqua salute. Both young and old America are in a heroic mood. . They want to smell the powder and to hear the bray of brass. They want to watch the boys march by with swinging stride and bayonets fixed as they did in the days of old. They want to whoop 'er up and see the bird of freedom stretch her disused wings and soar aloft above the ruck and din. It has beeo a long time since Portland heard cannon challenge cannon with mock defiance across the valleys, or saw sweating mil itiamen advancing from bush to bush to attack a friendly foe. It will be an inspiring sight and as we watch it we will look back across the years to learn anew the Btory of our country and our flag. We will see through the panorama of play and realize the stern realities which couched its birth. We will know more vivid ly, perhaps, how, and why, the starry banner floats above us, and with a freshened mind yield it, if rossible, still greater reverence and love. But the picture will have an other side. It will take us across the sea to where uncounted mil lions have died, and more will die, to hold aloft the battle flags of their native lands. It will visualize to the imagination, faint ly, the awfulness and the horror of war. It will paint the canvas with boitow and suffering, with death and .desolation, shattered lives and disrupted firesides. ' It will teach us to pray that those who shape the destinies of this great country that we love' will be given 'the strength, the cour age and wisdom to guide us safely through the years, away from the welter of war. The real feelings of the stand patters in welcoming the Pro gressives back into the fold are thus expressed by the Los An geles Times: "Boys, isn't it fun to see them tumbling over one another and busting their galluses in their frantic efforts to get in where the band Is? Well, well, well, it is about time for us old standpatters to have a little un diluted amusement." EVOLUTION OP THE EARTH P ROFESSOR CHAMBERLAIN of the Chicago university has given a new and ingenious account of the origin of the earth. He applies the evolution theory a little differently from his prede cessors. He does not believe that LaPlace's nebular hypothesis, of which so much has been written, quite meets the exigencies of the case: LaPlace, following the Phil osopher Kant, taught that the uni verse had been formed by the con densation of a vast , nebuja. The force of gravity acting between the particles drew them together. Their clashes generated heat until the mass became molten. The final re sultant of all the varied motions of the particles was nearly circu lar, or perhaps spiral as we see It in the great nebulas now con densing. The central maBs of the nebula became the sun. By its rapid whirling enough centrifugal force was generated to throw off the planets one by one. Finally some of .the, planets threw off moons nuicu rruieoour (jaamDeriaui uas i tuner potency vut wo bvuiiuw somewhat modified.. In his opinion , falls to see the meaning of the the planets were rery small' bodies ' revelation and meekly resigns when the sun first threw them off . himself to mental impotence, into space, but they have since, Helen Keller's education has un "grown." j fettered her mind. It has opened Their . food has been meteoric new modes of expression for her bodies such as we may see any powers. It has set her free. This clear night shooting across the ; is all that education can do for sky. A great many millions of these meteors fall upon the earth every year and in the course of ages their weight must be consid erable. SInee they have been ac cumulating for countless millions of years It is easy to" believe that they have actually built up the earth as Professor Chamberlain teaches. In the same way the other planets have been formed. The process is strictly evolutionary and not essentially different from the nebular hypothesis. Only the details are modified. LaPlace taught that all the ma terial of the solar system was con tained in the original nebula and condensed Into the central sun. Professor Chamberlain believes that much of it has been collected from space since the planets were separated from the sun. Accord ing to the nebular hypothesis the earth must have had a very high temperature for many ages. Only when it had cooled down was life possible. Professor Chamberlain believes that the earth never has been a great deal hotter than it is now. If this is true then the sun must have been a cold body when it parted with the primitive earth. Since that time it has been grad ually growing larger by attracting meteors and its heat has accumu lated from the energy of their fall to its surface. So there is no reason to believe that the sun is cooling. It may even be growing hotter and will continue to do so until the radiation from its sur face outbalances the heat received from falling meteors. This theory of Professor Cham berlain's postpones for an indefi nite time the realization of Byron's famous dream in which "the bright sun was extinguished and the icy in the moonless air." According'' hU "J188' ' to Professor Chamberlains view there is nothing to hinder the uni verse from being born and reborn millions of times over in endless cycles of existence. Tho planets break up into meteors and the meteors reunite to form new plan ets. Nothing is lost but something mow Ka trainari Tho nrnnnrtfl nf the mind may possibly survive wreck of worlds. Intending settlers are already beginning to make inquiry as to procedure for getting a home on the agricultural portion of the Oregon grant lands. The way is opened for making Oregon a great er state. Does the railroad pro pose to Btop it' by litigation? HELEN KELLER. E VERY little while we read something new and wonder ful about Helen Keller. The world was astonished and de lighted when she broke the shell that enclosed her mind and showed that she was an intelligent being. Then came the marvel of her edu cation. She mastered the ordinary school studies as well as normal children ever do. She not only committed them to memory but she developed extraordinary pow ers of thought. As Bhe learned what was going on in the world she became a radical. Modern so ciety with its cruelty and injustice has no sterner critic than Helen Keller, who neither Bees nor Hears but feels intensely. When she learned to speak ar ticulately everybody was aston ished. We have all heard her from the platform and forgetting the miracle of her speaking at all we have been moved by the power and beauty of her thought. How is It possible that a woman, with scarcely any of the senses that give us our hold upon life and nature, should feel so profoundly and reason so well? Now Helen Keller has worked I another miracle. She has learned to sing. Was there ever another such a victory of mind over matter? And It is all a question of educa tion. She ha3 had good teaching. That explains the mystery. Edu cation and nothing else has trans formed her from a mindless lump of clay into a bright and happy woman capable of thinking great thoughts and expressing them for the instruction of the world. If education has done so much for Helen Koller with all her hand icaps what might It not do for the normal child whose senses are acute and faculties active? Helped on by her teachers she has caught up with the normal children of her generation and passed them by. Could she have done it if they had been taught as well as she was? Why are they not as well taught? If a burdened, -fettered, blinded mind like hers can go so far, should not the free, unfettered mind go a great deal farther? And yet it does not. The powers of the human mind are like, the world's electrical energy which lay hidden for thou sands of years. Hardly anything was known about It, nobody dreamed what It could do until a line of scientific men brought its powers to light and harnessed them to machinery. The mind's ..powers slumber as electricity did. They have been slumbering century after century. Now and then some wonderful anybody. For -most people it does a good deal less. It does not un fetter them. It binds' on new fet-j ters, It does not ojen new modes i of expression. , It closes .the old ones. It does not set them free. It enslaves them to servile tradi tions and dead superstitions. "If we took education serious ly," says a writer in the June At lantic, "if we thought It as im portant to keep alive the minds of children as to win victory in war, we should conduct education quite differently." Indeed we should. Helen Keller's teachers bave taken her education serious ly. Unhampered by precedents, theories and creeds thev havA conn directly to the end they wished for and the results are a world's won der. Any child taken at random would become a greater wonder if he could be as well taught. There is an old poem that tells of the lightsome happiness of youth, how it dances and sings and trips merrily through the years. But by and by life shuts down upon the bright being. He sings no more. He forgets how to dance. "Good bye for aye to Money Musk, and the heavy march be gins." Why should life be a heavy march? Why should not mankind dance and sing down to the very edge of the grave? Why should life grow sour and somber for most of us long before nature de mands the last debt? The reason is evident. We do not learn to use the powers of our minds. If we were half as well educated as Helen Keller life would open so many new and wonderful doors to us that we should never think of gloom. Gen uine intelligence has never been persistently applied to the affairs of the world. We have stumbled fighting, wasting, plundering When we learn to give all our children as good an education as Helen Keller has had each hu man being will know how to get out of the world his fair share of happiness. Life will not then be a "heavy march" for the majority of us but a gay frolic so full of K- dena will hardly be felt at all. The forty per cent of grant land proceeds set aside for reclamation shbuld be spent on Oregon rec lamation. Oregon has contribu ted enough for reclamation in other states. MISSOURI'S POVERTY T HE Missouri state university is soon to close its doors for want of money to pay its cur rent expenses. It has been running for several months on bor rowed funds but, of course, that ex pedient must come to an end be fore long. Next fall, unless some great piece of good fortune Inter venes, the university will not re sume its classes. It has been a pretty good uni versity. No fault as far as we know has been found with its courses of instruction or its dis cipline. The law school is partic ularly commended. But for some reason the state of Missouri can not provide the money to keep it in operation. What can the rea son be? Have the resources of that wealthy 6tate been squan dered by "political crazes"? No, they have not. The Missouriana have not been subject to political crazes. On the contrary, they have been more than commonly "safe and sane." The astonishing fact Is that Missouri is poor because of its im pregnable virtues. Its finances have been continuously managed in the I good old ways of the fathers, j Graft, thriftlessness, waste, lack of i System, all those dear old American blessings have ha4 free swing in i Missouri for these many years. The surprising consequence is that the state is bankrupt, or near ly so, and must shut up its uni versity. No political crazes and no reforms for good old Missouri, thank you. It prefers to go safely and sanely over the hill, to the poor house. The Missourians may have to let their children go un educated but they won't adopt any crazy fads and they won't listen to any half-baked agitators. Some half-baked fads are now held out to the state in its ex tremity The voice of the tempter is ever heard when man is hard up. Some wijd agitators make the incendiary proposal that Missouri should adopt the budget system and thuB get its finances into the shape that a good man of business prefers. Hitherto nobody has ever known or ever could know where Missouri's money came from or how it was spent. A budget would easily answer all such questions. But will Missouri be weak enough to adopt any such unpatriotic and un-American expedient? Another fad proposed by sedi tious agitators Is that Missouri should revise Its laws so as to make Justice in the courts "cheap er, swifter, and surer." It is fool ishly Imagined that this wild scheme would make the state more prosperous. The same crazy chi mera has been proposed elsewhere. We have heard something of it in Oregon, but we are glad to say that this state has thus far es- caped that blight, though It suf fers under plenty more. Other frenzied fanatics propose that Missouri should reform her tax laws so as to make the wealthy pay their fair share of the state's expenses. This would -fill the treasury but It would grieve the souls of so many excellent citizens that there is no danger of its adoption. In Missouri as in other states it Is a good, constitutional principle that the taxes must be paid by those who work, not by those who live upon others', work. This principle sometimes causes inconvenience in practice. It may even compel a state to shut up its university. But what matters a little trouble when one's conscience is at ease? To make the rich pay taxes is, as everybody knows, not only unconstitutional but also frightfully Immoral. We rejoice to announce that Missouri is not likely to rush into any such un natural scheme. Some folks refer to it as the whiskers ticket. Referring to its iciness, one paragrapher calls it the zero ticket and predicts a cold summer. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND (Coffee, tea and anlcea are araln the tonic. Intereatlnc facta concerning preparation pro cesses ana supply aonrcea are preaented in o 168 of The Journal's '"Nothing the Matter With Portland" series. A sound diaaertatlon on 'the good buslneaa of home buying of home prod ucta la appended; also, mention of a new but energetic coiiee, tea ana spice pusineai.j H' ERE is a coffee .story, and it relates to the D wight Edwards company, Front and Couch streets, manufacturers of "Dependa ble" brands of coffees, spices, ex tracts and baking powder, and packer of teas. The concern, grinds more than 2,- 000,000 pounds of coffee annually. It manufactures thousands of gal lons of flavoring extracts. It grinds and cans nearly 100,000 pounds of spices. Its baking powder output will run up to 120,000 a year. The corporation was founded 12 years ago by Dwight Edwards, with a .force or three to five in the fac tory and two traveling salesmen. That "crowd" is increased to 25 in the factory and 14 travelers, cover Ing the states of Oregon,' Washing ton, Montana, Idaho, Utah, Alaska and parts of ' California. Mr. Edwards died on April 7. 1915, since which time his son, Dwight Ed wards Jr.. has had charge of the business as manager, and he has with him Frank "tV. Howell, who is in charge of the sales department. To day their business Is expanding be yond all (heir expectations, and so far as they are concerned dullness of trade is a1 forgotten dream. ' DIRECT IMPORTERS. The coffee handled by this house comes direct, from Brazil, Central America, Arabia arid the East Indies, in 2000, 3000 and 4000 sack lota. Each sack will weigh from 100 to 150 pounds, and Is worth about $15, so it will be seen that Portland coffee dealers must be possessed of plenty of the "long green" in order to get on in their business. All this coffee Is roasted and packed In the company's own plant In this city, and it would be mighty convenient for some of us fellows if we had an Income as great aa this concern's outlay for gas consumed. One must actually see the flame, and the coffee falling through It like a Kansas -hail etorm, in order to get an Idea of the amount that's burned Just to think of it Is enough to make Father Pabst,' of the gas company. enjoy life to the full. The raw materials from which the spices ; are elaborated come direct from the countries of ' production and are manufactured by the latest Improved machinery. In all 'its de partments the company's appliances are absolutely the latest produc tions money will buy, and the goods It sells are not surpassed for quality. WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH ii BUYERS? These articles have so persistently advocated the consumption of home made products that a repetition may be wearisome. But It wouldn't be If the reader ad in the last six or eight month become acquainted with things as ttie writer has. He has seen the best things sold, and they were made in Portland. He has inquired prices and found them as low as any. He has sought for a reason why oonsumers failed in their loyalty to their own 'manufacturers, and has discovered none other than careless ness on the part of the buyer and tniiff.i.nA, n th na.rt nf th Heller He has seen advertisements for bids for supplies published at the instance of V1 state, and they have specified foreign teas. "It Is because these teas are more lavishly advertised," Mr. Edwards de clares, "and pot for the reason that they are better than our teas, or that of any other Portland manufac turer. And this is the key- which so mysteriously unlocks the state's treasury. If'fhelr roods were super ior to ours, or those of any other manufacturer, I'd say go to it But they are- not. . "And this; is what the Portlafrd manufacturer' if up against, not only in this, v but ; all other lines. "Some day, maybe, these customs will change.". Clossett & Co. Clossett AvCo- Alfred A. Clossett, manager, also conducts a wholesale coffee roasting, tea packing and spice making plant at 128 Twelfth street, north. ' This young concern Is full of life, always on the-square, and Is building up an attractive business. Mr. Clossett and an assistant are their own salesmen. THE BROOK By Alfred I come from hiunts of coot and hern, I make a sudden sally, And sparkle out among; the fern, To bicker down a valley. By thirty hills I hurry down. Or slip between the ridges By twenty thorps, a little town, And half a hundred bridges. I chatter over stony ways, In little sharps and trebles, I bubble into eddying; bays, I babble on the pebbles. With many a curve my banks I fret By many a field and fallow, And many a fairy foreland set With willow-weed and mallow. I chatter, chatter, as I flow. To Join the brimming river, For men may come and men may go. But I go on forever. I steal by lawns and grassy plots, I slide by hazel covers; I move the sweet forget-me-nots That grow for happy lovers. I slip, 1 slide, I gloom, I glance, Among my skimming swallows; 1 make the netted sunbeam dance Against my sandy shallows. I murmur under moon and stars, In brambly wildernesses; I linger by my shingly bars; 1 loiter round my cresses. And out again I curve and flow To Join the brimming river, For men may come and men may go, But I go on forever. JOURNAL 48--Oneonta Gorge COLUMBIA RJVKE HIGHWAY NO. 13. Just beyond Multnomah falls are a series of fine Columbia river highway features that very conclusively war rant continuance of the conventional half day trip over the highway. me rirst or the series Is Oneonta gorge. Like a knlfecleft In the moun tain wall it Is. narrow and deep and the aides lean toward each other. From Oneonta gorge issues a strong stream and at the mouth of the arorEa is room i&r picnicking. If you have rubber boots or are not afraid of getting your feet wet, wade up the bed of the stream a few hundred feet to falls all th more romantic for their narrow home with the sky as the high ceiling. oneonta falls might have been reached by a hanging trail safely above the water, but the owner of the property so far has refused to let those who would meet the cost perform the service. People who would appreciate the witchery of this place could not harm the solid rock walls or take the beauty of the scene away merely by looking at it, so that his attitude of" mind is not understood. A few feet beyond Oneonta gorge the highway passes under the bluff through a tunnel. The rock above the tunnel Is several hundred feet high. It is weathered by the centu ries. At its top, sheer above the rail roai, stands a lone fir. How did It find earth for foothold; whence does Its nourishment and moisture come? Emerging from the tunnel, there bursts upon the eye one of the most wonderful views of earth. It Is as though you had suddenly come into THE AMERICAN IMPULSE Charlton Andrews In New York Times. The distinction between the modern Herman Ideal and the Ideal of the. Anglo-Saxon Is essentially the distinct tlon between classicism and romanti cism. Classicism stands for the state. romanticisim for the Individual, first and last. Therefore I believe it fair to assert that, roughly speaking, Ger man Ideals, once eo thoroughly ro manticised, are today essentially clas sic atnd that the American Ideal Is es sentially romantic. On the one hand. there is a fundamental social and po litical cred of discipline and self sac rifice; on the other, an insistence on freedom of thought, feeling and action. The true American, since Patrick Henry, and before, has never hesitated and will never hesitate before choosing between liberty and Its his toric alternative. This remark of course raises the Instant question as to what liberty really is, as well as the obvious fact that excess in the classic German attitude means slavery, and in the romantic American attitude means anarchy. This is not to say that the average American bothers his head greatly over distinctions among national Ideals. The majority of citliens are obviously con scious only of conditions. The man In the street, the shop, the factory, the ditch, of course, does little abstract thinking the concrete Is so much eas ier! What he is keenly aware of Is the pleasure he finds In a democratic and non-milltarlstlo country as contrasted with conditions in a paternal and mili taristic nation. The average citixen knows he likes to be free to speak his mind on any subject, without danger as to lesemajeste. He knows he would rather work for higher wages and spend his money as he pleases, choose his own occupation, have a chance to raise himself to any station In short, exercise with a minimum of restraint any and all powers and faculties he may possess. If he realises that his opportunities for complete self-expression are purchased at the expense of a considerable degree of national ef ficiency, he contemplates the fact with regret but with equanimity. If he un derstands that, after all. It is geo graphical and political necessity, cou pled with natural human egoism, that has forced the efficiency ideal on mod ern Germany, he thanks Ms stars that thus far, at least no such determin ing conditions prevail on his side of the Atlantic. Few besides the leaders see far In the abstract; but the citizen who deals altogether with things In the concrete is at no special disad vantage on that account. Sticking to facts, indeed, he runs little of the theorists' risk of flying off Into fan tasy. Of these two national attitudes the romantic and the classic, the Ameri can and the German which Is the better? Which is right? ByMhsir fruits shall ye know them. Germany shows us cities beautiful, poverty "abolished,"' education ad vanced. Industry wedded to science and along with these desiderata the present war with all Its attendant cir cumstances. Contemplating thene lat ter, the American promptly decides for tlv "Anglo-Saxon," the romantic ideal. He 4ias no quarrel with efficiency ex cept when it Is so Inordinately stressed that it trespasses on ths domain of Tennyson JOURNEYS to St. Peter's Dome the country of the giants and their, castles and cathedrals were before you. These are the splre-llke monoliths called "Cathedral Rocks," and some times Winema Pinnacles. Most commanding of all is St. Peter's dome, which stands 2000 feft or more above the highway and al most perfectly rounded above the shoulder which Joins it to the cliff. No one has ever climbed St. Peter's dome. Many are ambitious to do so and have tried to. But the perpendicu lar circumference forbids and will con tinue to until a trail is either tunneled at a 15 per cent slant to a shelf whence it is evident the summit may be reached, or by cutting into the rock and placing an iron railing for protec tion at the edge. Why should the trail be built? Because one of the greatest view points of the highway will thereby ba attained. Because one of the most sensational routes In the country will lead to it. St. Peter's Dome projects its great height to an altitude where It com mands the marvelous panorama of the gorge of the Columbia. It Is Isolated from the heights at Its back and there is nothing to Intercept the view. 1 havs climbed to the summit of equal elevation Just to the rear of St. Peter's Dome and even from this point to look down the almost sheer drop of 2300 feet to the highway and the river makes one dizzy. A committee has been organized to direct the work of securing the funds and building the trail to St. Peter's Dome. his traditional personal liberty and of his Immemorial and indispensable con victions as to what is fundamentally right and wrong. He realises that non-paternal inefficiency Is very cost ly poverty, graft, crime. Eastland disasters, Georgia lynchlngs, etc., all perhaps directly traceable to an unbe lief in the "superlndlvidual soul." But all things considered, he prefers to grope on in his own blind way to ward the greatest possible measure of Individual freedom compatible with ! national existence. We are. In fact. ! satisfied to be a romantlo peopte. Nevertheless, in spite of what has been said here, I am not an apostle Of the romantic ideal Of ths State. At Dest, romanticism is a one-sided doc- trine, verging always Just as classi cism does on extremism. The state theory and the individual theory may lead equally to disaster. Beyond ques- tlon there is a far preferable middle: ground. The classic poet, aiming at the perfection of regularity, arrived at , deadening monotony. The romantics, I soarlntr after libertv often rdim. soaring arter uoeriy, orten plunged headlong through license into ruin, both romantic and classic In turn. rrealdent wilaon d the word unadulterated realized this when he saw all culture , In reference AmerlcapHm. Not to he i.ot- In meditation. Unhappily for Germany, ne Ju1"e "'" "?l undiluted. -v. v... , v - , . 'MTber mean practically the same thing. Adult- she has for the moment forsaken her",ri(,;d ,.,iei.iiy n'a M, harder aubauuee greatest propnet. we need all of us to take for our motto, from the portico of the ancient Greek temple; "Nothing tso much." It is hard, for example, to decide nowadays which la the more dangerous ths Jingo or the pacifist As a physical melting pot America is amalgamating the races of the earth into a citizenry that promises much for the world. As an intellec tual and ethical melting pot, wherein Anglo-Saxon and with those of all other nations, to be refined as well as fused, may not our country achieve an ultimate compromise be tween the doctrines of ths ons and of the many, a golden mean of theory and practice that will make for uni versal salvation? I for one eagerly believe that. Instead ofan experiment station for the rest ofrhe world, the United States will bs the country wherein ths results of ths experiments of all ths other nations shall be har moniously combined, to ths avoidance of extremism and to ths ultimate progress of human Ideals. A Braw Race. From ths London Chronicle. Pride in the national drees of his v?Un.tl? V"5 love f Profession were blended in a charming. If somewhat Incongruous, fashion in the answer of a Scotch farm laborer who called at a recruiting depot last week. "New,'1 said ths sergeant, after ths necessary preliminaries had been gone througtt, "what regiment would you like to Joint" "Never mind that." was ths hearty response. "Just gl's me a kilt an' a boras and let me awa' fo tbs front," Are They? From Tld-Blts. Waiter Yes, sir. omelets has gone up on account of tha warl Diner Great Scott I Ars tbs throw ing eggs at each other sowT - TKe Once BV wyyy i .&mpman SATURDAY MORNING I Went out to William MacMaster's ; house near Waverley golf links to se "Veda, the Vamplr" the i society' movie in the making. JAnd Van Anderson was sitting o the porch trying to look like the husband of another man's wife. 5fAnd the wife was Mrs. Donald Green who had Riven her baby an early bath eo an to get there on time. IT And Harrie t Cummins was their daughter. JAnd Harriet wanted to ! go and find Aunt Veda. but her papa wouldn't lrt her. And he went around tie house and threw pebbles against Aunt Veda's . window. and his wlCo and daughter looked on and laughed. only that was another scenn. ami they weren't in it. so liny .didn't remember that they wcru Van'n faintly. 1 5And wlille lliis (scandal; wan be ing filmed the other albrs were talking. f - J "When my dear" RaW I.loyd Smith to Harbara Hart lei t "do I Klve you poikson and throw you off the Cliff?" ' J "Tomorrow no Tuesday" said Barbara T"And first" said Uoyd"I'ro go ing to give you measles germs. "and they won't hurt you be cause you've hnd measles'. ": "and then I'm going id give you scarlet fever germs "and they'll make yoii sick all right. "but I'll get. tired waiting for you to die so I can many Veda. "and I'll throw you off the cliff." 5J "Yes" Kald Rarbara- consult Ing the scenario "won't that !e nice?" 1 51 And then l.loyd had to K and , embrace Veda for a moonlight scenn. ! only before V. A. Van Scoy the movie mun could lake the pic ture Harbara had to shirw l.loyd how to hold the vamplio lady. And they walked toward the cam era until Kleanor Sanford ljrge -the director clapped her hands. and ald "That'll tl." and they broke a Way. JAnd l.loyd said "tiolly -.he's greasy." and wiped his bands on the grass. JAnd Veda suid "( Ice I wish I had u cigarette what's next?'1 J And It was a Kert-niiding scene with Veda leaning out of a window. and 1-loyd who has nome othr. name in the film where he piny he's Harbara Hurt let l's husband also played a ukelelc. JAnd Veda lesned do n and" h dropped the ukp . and reached up -and grabbed Veda and got eonio grease paint on his nose. JAnd Mrs. I.arTe got some talruin powder and repaired the damage to Veda's face. JAnd" another scene- -was -wh-ere Lloyd carried Veda--whti Welshs more than he does up somn tone steps. JAnd while he was doing it Bar- ' bara Kartlett kept tellfnff. Tlllrn "Look passional look r" alonate." JAnd he couldn't. JAnd 1 didn't wre l'ord Tarpley who wrote the scenario any place. JAnd there's a good dal of mys tery about who's playing Veda. J It's a secret and : J LISTEN It's a deep dark secret the kind tnat everybody, knows. so I won't spoil it iy telling. Th Coy Colonel. Fr"m Newlrjf KnttTprie News dippatch from Ouster Hay "'No, no picture. t am out of rolitlcs." Colonel ltoonevelt de clared to a newspaper photog rapher who asked him to to's lor a picture." What a :plty; what pity. The newspaper hjive had so -much to say about Colofirl Kcohp velt that thev have ' aroused all over the land a seneial ciesiie on the Part of the public to see what he looks like. The Boom in Canning, IT. Z. iuiiiif iir.. Hlnnt, K l.l Adx?f ' (inning prolm? Writ I (una an. Mrx Henlett uvrr,l a huaM lu MeijrlnT. wbere abe mill live ditrtng ifee aummer. Life's Infinite -Variety. WIIMnru RrU. of tbe Imperial. ti that ticu lie ln-ard a iiljflit l. laat Mood it nliM he knew that rummer bail om. Ha luaints that la a aure alin. Its alan aaya that rcaht bwk and whlpuoorwlll do not hT i-?"" '"' lay their rti' m grirei. e tn-rg Kuterprta. J. I.. Wood haa been haTlric a wfenl let of "fun" with leea In the flMmne.r of bla lioura. Ther crowded In.: wart klllad - hy fiuike a half hiiNhel of dealt. taa hloektnff the rblmnej taken out. and ;wbo tba fir ""n'l s oot more waiter) bn the oatatda d,Dh;d;'u'uu,,, woul1 9m : ln--Woolbar . ' ' . It ,y ; ; . . ,f u r'PT'd t Mirlon.Ladr wit r. ,, married at Kaletn, trot ;lf tru he haa kept it rery quiet Irom Tuei Sun. HbarlUao Run. diluted for liijulda Albany Democrat. Three would he tougha l.lew Into town ona day this week and proceeded to paint tba tcwa rd. After numerotii rtld On ieral poaeeful Htlaena they entered Bart'Mhea'a pnolball and proceeded to wrei k the Jelot at lby called K. Uart tried 'to tell tbem to ha good but adflee waa wealed ; and In eonne urence three ahota were Suffleletit 1tjentl for them to tnoTe promptly. 'ITtey hot through the door ot the piviltiall , n If the old Nlek waa In the rear. Bart aaya they sprung tba door frame at leaat eight tn'hea and the ona with the red aweeter and jeroert teamater from Harney eounty were found In tha rata barrel berk of Hart'a plr. All tba rot aeem to be running yet. JunCura Times. One's Los Another's Gain. IT WAS during the afternoon of Flag day, when the Jitney competition with the street cars on Alberta street was meeting with unexpected suecM during the dull houra that a. driver with a Ford of the. vlrftage of 1909 wav hailed by a very large woman with two very large boys, 'Tti woman weighed over S00 pound; It required the eptire rear seat to ;accomrrdate her, and tha boys eat ,t her lap Inrlvtn mt th lnrnv .nf Thtr mfiA Wa,hlnrlon streets, trie roud mother ,,. w ,,.. .,,-1 started to lose herself and fam'ly in ths crowd. It was explained to her that It took at least m cents' worth of gasoline to haul that family to town, but tbs matron declared that the city ordinances said when children sat on ths 1P of other pastengsrs, no fare could bs collected- I In vain ths weather stained Jitney Jehu lmplorsd and threatened the buxQm lady. 8h ' swept away from him; In majestla wrath and was lost tp view, the two. boys in tow. : "I hops she walks Rorfie. I am out 1 10 cents and maybe my springs ars -broks," mourned thi victim. -gasoline -tank looks Jrtty hollow. " i! . t :. '