; AM IKDKPKttDEWT NEWsPAPKfe. ,C . JACK BON publisher 's-obllabad every day. afternoon, and moruinT .. i tescept Snnday afternoon), at Tb J on real v Bslldlng, Broadway and xambm ate., rorv ftottrred at tb postof flee at Portland. Or., tor , trenemlseton ttaougU tba malls aa eacoBS . class matter. . lELEPHONBct Mala T173; Horn. A-o61. All departments reached by taese nnmbara. Tall the operator what department yon wast. ;jTOftKiaN ADVERTISING BtPKtSK.NTATI VK - Benjamin Kentaor Co., Brunswick Bldg.. 22 fifth Ave.. New York. 1218 Paopla'a ' Qn Bldg., Chicago. Snbecrlptlon terms by mall or to any addreea is lb United states or Mexico: " , ' .DAILY (MORNINO OR AFTERNOO! Out gear ........ fs. 00 One moots .60 SUNDAY. One rear $2.50 One month -23 DAItY iMOBNING OR AFTERNOON) AND - SUNDAY. On rir IT.Mt I una month t OS f: America aaki nothing for ntrself hat what aba hue a right to uk for Dunn airy lteelf. V'i WOOD ROW WILSON. Inillobt for daferme. bnt not cent tor :i tribute. CHARLE8 C. PINCKNEV. To that In men which t secular sn1 animal. Sunday saya "Rent"; to that which la Intellectual, moral and aortal, "Grow." H. W. Beecber. . ALL IS ONE c HERRY stems are munitions of war under modern condi tions. The allies, who are buying them at The Daljes, ';' will manufacture prusalc or hydro t cyanic acid from them and this j product they will utilize to make ; Vj poisonous gaB for trench fighting. :"? Prusslc acid, which is one of the 1 f most deadly -poisons, is contained In both the stems and pits of the f cherry. It Is found also in the ''prune and plum and in all trees J, and fruits of that family, which Is large one. ' ' This poison must give the trees which distil It some advantage in V the struggle for existence or it -would not be found in them and ; their fruits. The economy, of na- ture Is such that healthy living . ' creatures do not, as a rule, produce parts or substances for which they ; have no use. The prussic acid iu ithe cherry stem and seed is no , doubt a preservative. It may also .. be a defense against predaceous inflects, like the thorns on the rose. ."Mr. Jackson of The Journal is '. quoted In the New York American .'as saying that the thorns of the : rose bush are pointed downward to yj made It difficult for worms to as 'i cend to the flower. But there is J more to it than this. The thorns ; ; are so arranged on the stem that the ascending. wym could not read ' lly pass them even if they were ' ! not pointed at all. They form a i protective hedge to defend the . f flower, which is nature's final aim and hVr srfalfKt trlnmnri sr far na rose bushes are concerned. : ! Nature's protective arrangements jare found everywhere and they as ' ! sume many forms. In the cherry, ' at we have mentioned, there is a poUon, harmless to the tree and T fruit, but probably fatal to insects ", jthat might injure them. Wheat lt provided with a tough, mtneral- bearirfg skin which keeps out air 'Jand moisture and no doubt wards ; Off Insect attacks. This skin is tto well adapted to its purpose that ?,lf it is not punctured or otherwise i j destroyed, it preserves the germ of :tne wheat for thousands of years. .Vtiatar Varnctla falran fmm murv. I'mles in Egyptian tombs have prouted upon planting and pro y.duced grain, though certainly not ,;leBg than two thousand years old. Popular belief places a layer of poisonous matter between the thin iouter skin of the potato and the atarchy interior, but this Is proba--bly a superstition originating in - Ithe laziness of cooks who like to cut off thick peelings. But the ; bean has an outer coat which acts V.as a mild poison to the human fstomach and so has the peanut. .Everything that nature produces , jhas some kind of protective co ver ging, or contains some protective . ;'poison, which gives it a better Xcbance to survive and perpetuate j jits kind. ; Nature has many devices to ward j Joff and destroy injurious insects ; 7 t,and almost as many to attract ! ' 'helpful ones. Darwin's book on I ; (the "Fertilization of t he Orchids" ;Bhows how dependent many of ' .'these beautiful flowers are upon . ttnsect visitors. Without the help , ;0f insects some of them could not 'J She fertlllted at all and their Bn- : -; ;xies would perish. Most fruits are t benefited by cross fertilization. An fapple or walnut tree la apt to pro Iduce a more desirable fruit if the j fertilizing pollen comes from an - ' other tree. f Cross-fertilization is largely car :: Tied '-on by insects which visit the .'"blossoms for honey. Incidentally "they dust themselves with pollen which they bear away in their flight to. other flowers. A . There are insects whose young Jean only he reared inside the grow, tint seeds of certain plants. The . insect pierces the seed capsule and 'lays' her eggs inside the ovules. ..then, iu order to insure growth . 'of the seeds and a supply of nour- ishment for her young, she deliber ately .'takes. 'pollen from the an ithers and spreads it on the stigma lft the flower. The insect world is 'full of similar adaptations.- Fabre recounts scores of-them in his in comparable books. We can only speak of the wasp, which stings spiders to provide its young with food. The spider is always stung in a certain spot so that it is paralyzed, not killed. Thus the flesh keeps sweet while the young wasps are devouring it week after week. These innumerable adaptations in nature look like the work of reason. Paley, who knew compar atively few of them, nevertheless found them so convincing that he likened nature to a watcH and ar gued that such wonderful harmony necessarily Implied a watchmaker, or Creator. But modern science rejects his conclusion. The inter relations found in nature have been produced by' the slow adaptation of one creature to another by me chanical selection and survival. They have not been worked out by forethought but by a weeding process. Whatever would not work Into the scheme in one way or another perished. Whatever could find or make a place for Itself survived. There is no systematic reason in nature, nothing but blind adapta tion. Reason is largely a human attribute and we probably err when we try to transplant it wholesale into the. infrahuman world. It is to be remembered, however, that "modern science rejects the old distinction between mind and wnatter. it is accepted by tne r t(A thlnlrAra t riii rlair 14 lr- A luiiuci iiiiunci o ui uui uaj t tine Forel, that every ultimate particle has a psychic as well as a ma terial aspect. Forel says unmis takably that in the human body, for example, nerve matter, brain action and consciousness are only different aspects of the same thing. The whole universe is linked to gether by a common psychic na ture and no doubt by a common purpose. The incongruity of so?ne people's names is apparent in the case of Senator James of Kentucky, who weighs 300 pounds and has heavy thoughts. What induced them to name him "Ollle'? DAVID DU BOSE GAILLIARD I N THE Spanish war Colonel David Du Bose Gailliard was regimental commander of the Third United States Volunteer Engineers. On December 5, 1913, he died and his regiment at a meeting in St. Louis in May, 1914, voted to publish a volume in hl3 memory. We have that volume before us, a modest book, solemn ly decorated with the Gailliard arms, wherein the reader may learn in soldiers' language of the deeds of their comrade. To them he was endeared by many qualities that marked the man and the hero. To us he is forever famous as one of the builders of the Panama canal. Perhaps Colonel Gailliard was the greatest of the builders, for it was he who cut through the hill at Culebra and solved the seem ingly hopeless riddle of the slides. Before he accepted service at Pan ama Colonel Gailliard had done great work on the lakes near Du luth, had helped survey the Alas kan boundary and run the western boundary line between the United States and Mexico. In the Spanish war his work, says a comrade, "was of the highest possible or der." While engaged in river and harbor service he wrote a book on wave motion which "is now the standard technical work on that intricate subject." r But his greatest achievement waB at the Culebra cut, which in his memory has been renamed the Gailliard cut. The organization which he built up to do that mighty piece of engineering was, says his West Point Clacs Bulletin, "the most perfect ever seen where bo much machinery and so many men were Involved." When the great task at Culebra was done St had to be done all over again, for the weight of the super Incumbent mountain forced earth up like a liquid from the bottom of the canal. The new excavation was a heart breaking task. "It is no wonder," says the Class Bui letin, "that the lamented Colonel Gailliard lost his health and his life" in fighting what seemed to be an invincible foe. But he fought gallantly on and finally won the victory. For the time the slides were stayed but the man who had conquered them lay on his dying bed in a United State hospital worn out in his country's Bervice. ' Colonel Gailliard exemplified all that is most beautiful in a soldier's career. Simple, manly and brave he gave his mind and body for his country. He did not look for any reward except the consciousness of duty well done and he found his richest recompense in the excel lence of his work. The republic conferred frugal honors upon him while he was alive and when he was dead a little band of comrades met to. mourn for him. The people whom he served so well heard but little of him and few knew of his genius. But now that he is in his soldier's grave his work lives after him a per petual monument and the grati tude of the United States will see to it that his fame grows brighter with the centuries. Let us bow to Colonel Gailllard's memory and tell of his deeds as an example to America's boys. x No other conclusion than that the Deutschland is a merchantman could have been reached. German trade is like love, it will always find a way. Driven from the sur face of the ocean it dives beneath the waves and if it runs into a No district should be too remote net It will take wings and fly , and no child so poor as to be be through the air. -. jyond the pale of rudimentary ln : , 1 ' struction. Books should be made Cities, like individuals, have 'so inexpensive as to be within their dreams. The dream of Port- reach of every household, land Is the full use of an open j These are days of preparedness, river. ' I and what preparedness is more RESTORING EUROPE nR. ALFRED H. FRIED is an Austrian publicist who has a MM plan for the restoration of ; Europe" when the war is over. He received the Nobel peace prize in 1911 and has, therefore, a standing In the world which en sures respect for his opinions. Dr. Fried thinks that the immediate occasion of modern wars is the machinations of diplomats. He knows, of course, that the causes lie deeper but in his view if the diplomats were compelled to cease their nefarious intrigues the causes could be handled peaceably. The diplomats, conniving and plotting in darkness, bring on war before the people concerned have any chance to express their wishes for or against it. They also, poison the minds of the public by artfulty devised rumors which set one na tion against another. Dr. Fried's remedy for all this miserable busi ness is to abolish secret diplomacy. He would make all diplomatic transactions between nations pub lic, doing away with secret treaties, underground correspondence, the iniquitous spy system and all the rest of the infernal network. In his opinion all the operations of every government -should be car ried on in the full glare of pub licity. It is not denied that this might cause some inconvenience to the high officials, but no matter about that if at the same time it oblit erated the excuseB for war. With the diplomatists and their black trade out of the way. Dr. Fried reads his title clear to a European alliance which should Include every country, big and little. His pro- fessed model ia the Pan-American ! union for which-some of our states-1 men are laboring. But In reality I he dreams of a close federation almost like that of the United States. There is no reason in the na ture of things why the European nations should not unite in a fed eral republic under a modern con stitution. Before the union could be consummated they would have ! to jettison their kings and other I rubbish of that sort but this should not grfeve them. W hen we recall what kings have done to make their peoples miserable it is diffl- that $5000 would set the move cult to see any reason why they I ment on foot in Portland-. Surely should be treasured. "jour school directors could spare The common objection to a European union is based on racial hatreds. There is a superstition that these hatreds are too deeply W'hy not spend some of it on edu- seated to be eradicated. But to cation? see how utterly shallow this ob- jection is we need only look at the ! To tne Republican elephant, the United States. We have here all : Democratic donkey and the Pro the races which hate one another J gressive moose, is to be added the so bitterly in Europe and they are Prohibition camel. living side by side in peace, com peting quietly with one another in business, joining each others' i churches, learning a common lan-1 guage and marrying their sons and j daughters back and forth. Racial hatreds are nothing but one of the wicked tools with which diplomats practice their deceitful arts. Give people a fair chance in the world n v iii-iav7 t r 1 1 r a Tnoir rriio iivou and race hatreds vanish. The world is waiting for some punster to call Jt "somme" battle. ST? TE-MADE BOOKS T HE propaganda for the state manufacture of text books is gaining ground. Reports from the states v t. . , . . . vance the welfae of a community. show that the prices obtaining are 0ranized for uch alma a is about half what the big schoolbook "ldltl fL p1h LI , , ,. i proposed in the Portland meeting, combine charges. Sometimes the IV , u ' i , i 7v vithe tendency Is to obliterate the price is less than half while thi unworthy influences book provided Is as good In every, 80metlme8 prevairy The out. t n v Tha ziAmhlna nr truer -nrnistn ' r at present controls the textbook trade would, therefore, lose a large sum of money if all the states were ; to manufacture their own. Hence the influence of the combine is exerted powerfully and continu ally against state-made text books. It invents all sorts of bugaboos to . . ingmen iu peupie nuui ub Vll At. ,! T u Ti . e 0"CI:' abroad all sorts of fictitious argu - mems. cut we rem wsumeni against state-made text books is t.aai iuej wuiu wu.. .utu u fulu politician comes out strongly a&ainst the state manufacture of text books, it is wise to inquire a little about the strings which may connect him with the big trust. .The Washington state grange has adopted a vigorous resolution fa voring state-made text books for tbe public schools. People in gen-, eral who have looked into the proj ect disinterestedly favor it. Of course, every claim in favor of state-made books is based on the ! hopes to see enacted into law lome assumption that efficiency, honesty j day. From the nature of ,the, meas and Intelligence shall govern In the urea we may all Join in hoping book making. Except on such lines, failure would result. California has experimented in the activity until a well defined, course of procedure has been mapped out. The plan has brought results there, over which there is no room for debate. The public schools ought not to be a source of profit to the mer- lcenary spirit. They ought to be above and beyond commercializa tion. They are a public activity of the utmost moment to the re public. The diffusion of the rudiments of education should be universal. I Important than that afforded by the public schools? The principal interest in oar na tional conventions of all kinds seems to be the selection of a meeting place for next year. LOST TIME IN SCHOOL Q TJITE likely Dr. Berle draws a long bow when he sayB that there are from three to five years of lost time in the education of ordinary children. It is pretty well established that two years are lost for most of our children. We know this to be true, for they are at least two years behind European children of the same age in their studies. But it is hardly likely that five entire years are lost in idleness and tra- ditlon worship Dr. Berle, who is lecturing in the university summer school at Eugene, is an educator of stand ing whose opinion should be care fully weighed. He thinks that one reason for the time our pupils lose is to be found in the inexcusa ble custom of keeping bright chil dren back in their studies to wait for the stupid. When this Is done tb.e stupid, as Dr. Berle justly says, "set the pace for the class" and the interest of the bright pupils perishes. They fall into that deadly languor which is so apparent at about the seventh or eight grade and nothing more can be done with them intellectually until something arouses them from their stupor A good deal was said at the Benson hotel the other night in favor of "boy scooting" as a moral and intellectual tonic for boys President , Suzallo of Seattle was quoted to the effect that scouting gives boys a complete and most valuable education. If this is bo, why do we see nothing of it in thej public schools? Of course we do not refer to the military feat ures of the scout movement, if it has any. We speak only of its educational features. If scouting does, as we are told, revise and recreate the whole phys- ical and moral nature of the boy, why not try it in the schools? Why leave it to the patronage of Stand ard Oil magnates and the like? It was said at the scout dinner that sum. Men who give thousands of dollars for a tip in a land pur chase must have money to burn. THIS WEEK T HROUGH the Realty Board, Portland villi be host for three days, beginning tomor row, to a lnreo number of j vIgiting real estate" men. The vl8ltors come from near and ! dlgtant points in Oregon, Washing, j t0Q and Iriaho. The purpose is I to advance business and ethical i standards in handling real estate. An elaborate program for enter tainment of the delegates has been prepared. To give the national touch to the occasion, the secretary of the Na tional Association of Real Estate Exchanges is here. Few men are in position to do 60 much as real estate men to ad- terest of city and Btate as a whole Is taken into consideration. The national organization has for years set itself as high a stand ard of ethics as any of the profes sional organizations. It gives every realty dealer an ideal toward TpVtlfH Via will avAfitiiollv txrrtrtr if TT AAA V" VUt.1 IJ W . 11. A A ha . ,T vAfnra v,, It is a most welcome and most 1 reaBBurIng fact tnat 8aie8men's or- rimin arrhcI Atl on n of nrfvpr. ti8,ng men and other repre8entatIve . actlvltle8 are working toward high- er ideals and loftier standards. A common quotation among Pro gressives is "you can lead a horse to tbe river but you can't make him drink." BETTER 5LARKETS T HE Washington state grange has published a list of 26 progressive measures for which it stands and which it that the day will soon be here There is no space to mention all of them but we are going to speak of one. The state grange goes on record Unequivocally for "state and fed eral marketing." The reader will notice that it does not indorse state and federal "investigation" of markets but actual marketing. The Washington grange sees its way to demand the erection of state and federal market houses with adequate railroad connections, a full working force to take charge of receiving, storing, packing and shipping crops. We gather from the report that it would include in this system all the crops of the state. The federal government has al ready done something in the way of aiding the farmers to find mar kets. Consular investigations and reports have been useful, but tbey are perhaps of more immediate as sistance to the middlemen than to the producers who are not in a situation to seek foreign, markets as a rule. The federal government has also done something to pro mote marketing by' parcel post. But observers who have watched the effort, seem, to feel that it never will be of great consequence until the government builds .market houses where producer and con sumer can meet for that bargaining which is indispensable in retail trade. Letters From the People ICommanlcatlona aent to The Journal foe publication In tbla department abonld be writ tea on only one aide ot tba paper. uUd iwl exceed fcOO worda In length, and maat be ac companied by the .name and addreaa of the aender. If the writer doea not dealra to have the same publlahed be ahould ao atate. "Dlacnaaion la tbe createat of all refonrera. It rationalise, everything It toorbea. It robe nrlcdplea of aU falae aauctltj and throwa them back on their reaaonableneaa. If ther bare ao reaaonableneaa. It rutbleaaly cruahea them out f existence sad aeta up ita own oooclualona In their atead." Weodrow Wllaon. Statement as to Auto Accident. Portland. Or.. July 15. To the Ed itor of The Journal. The statement In your paper of July 14, page 2, column 4, states that the accident on the Oregon City-Park Place road was caused by the auto plunging- down an embankment of 70 feet. Having gone to the scene of the accident. I will state that the machine, after having passed over th decline from the Southern Pacific tracks, had reached the slight curve about 100 feet from the track and there ran off the hard surface of the road into the soft sand which extends about 18 Inches beyond the pavement. The attempt to regain the hard surface caused the rear wheels to begin working out through the sand to the edge of ,the bank, which extends about seven feet down to a barbed wire fence. In turn ing over, the machine caught against the fence tearing away the upper wires, against which Mrs. Myers, my sister, was caught, and as the ma chine was bottom up on the bank any attempt to raise the machine only caused It to slide farther down onto Mrs. Myers. The Band which extends beyond the hard surface is soft, and it Is possible it had become worked up over the pavement, making: it Impossible for Mrs. Orpin, who was driving the car to tell Just where the hard surface extended. The steering apparatus was found to be In good condition when the car was taken out. Accidents of this character are pos sible on graded roads where the earth beyond the pavement is allowed to get on the pavement, and covers its edge. CLAUDE H. MILLER. The Plutocrats and Mexico. Portland, Or.. July 10. To the Editor of The Journal I have been pleased and edified by reading in the columns of your paper from day to day your diagnosis of the causes of the Mexican disease, and am myself convinced that if we are drawn into war it will be brought about largely by the exploiters of Mexican resources and that they will be the chief beneficiaries as a re sult of the war. I have sought to em body my views in verse, as follows, for which I beg space: Praise God from whom oil blessings flow. For our troops are marcbinf to Mexico. For this Ie prayed; ti.d From the plain Of the Dakotaa and from Maine. Come gallant noata and from IlliDola, From ererywhere In U. 8. A., tbe rallow boy Who Talnlr thinks he goes to fight For Uncle Sam and ret things right; But to myself I aay with glee The foolish chap miU fight for me. Patriotism. Ah Ha Ha! Lore of country: "Rah Rah! 'Rah! Whoop it np, brsTe boyo. while yon go Through the sun-burned waHea of Mexico. Your fathers aul mothers accl alaters at home Ar Droiid of you. boys, for I clearly aee They regard joh aa Ueroea In war for your own country. And that for this ranse you forsook aweet- bearta and wires. And pledged all your future. een yonr Uvea. But the guffaw's In my throat, aa I ctoka with glee: You pof-r llttie boobs, you'U be bleeding for .me. Tttutee of God I am, and1 I will surely rule Auother big alice of bis loTelr footatool. With that gentle force which 1 apply la my Eldorado. 'Mong the Rockies !n ye loyal atate Oolorado. In free U. 8. A. with the aid of tba aoldler boy And aatute buslnesa man and preacher decoy, I choose my own subject ana alare; There la no one to dispute me, no one so bra re; For when the men of Uncle Sam decline to lUe I pon the sumptuous fare which I to them glTe, I summon men from China, from Greece and from Rome, Some of whom, I am told, lire on rats when at home 'Crora tbe sea. These are my alarer. and again I must eblllnte wlth-a about of pore glee; Chlneae. Greeks and Romana are laing for me. To my friends tn peace and war who. In ser ried ranks Aa soldiers enforced my will, I glre oleagl- noua thanks For what tbey have so derotedly done not only for me But alao for mwy dearest pale. Schwab and J. P., And Others who reign along other lines In beef, in leather. In tugar and mines. In powder and guns, before tbey are abot. In railroads and banks where money la got. In power electric, gas, heat and Ught For us, the goTernment lnrtalble and clear oat of sight. For what the soldiers did for tbeee, my thanks no aurceaae Shall know, if only in rich Mexico Tfceee aoldler bore will make war, not peace. Till aucb time as will please my benevolent will And until I proclaim and ejaculate: "Peace be i till." My feellnga are now beyond my control as I alng with glee These soldiers will thirst, go hungry and dla tor. me. Thla talk is not for publication, and by wiy of explanation. That It may not leak cut. I cautiously aay: That we are friends connnblatlng at 26 Broadway, In my cosy little den. where the fa tea of men Are decided to their best Interest, now and tben. In secret conclave, each other to congratulate In the large expansion of our atate. Soon to be Just ao when we gobble Mexico. Much to our great weal but to others' woe. Now to do exact Justice to our pais first. Let ua give martial pralae to Otla and Ilea rat. Who In their papera with redhot flowing lingo Set the mind of the greaser aflame galnat the gringo And who with rage atlr np old Carrar.ra And make fools In IT. 6. A. bear the Japanese "Banaal!" Aad In their imagination, tbe Germans In Mexico about: "Btrafe the American and from your land kick him oat." And Otis and Hearst yell from the hilltops To busy men In mart aad abops All O'er thla amlling peaceful land: "To your armories, khaki and brass band! To arms, young men. bear your eoatatry'a call: Fill tm your knapsack with powder and ball. Aad the spirit of Mara from Hearst's Ameri can. Examiner end Journal Breathing forth threats 'gainst tba Mexican, deep and Infernal. Join with Otis Los Angeles Times In out-bellowing the bulls on their Mexican ranches, in proas and la rhymes. Tben with, a wink which they wink at ma (Tbey whaVper in calm aweat tones to me): "We're got them going t war -for as and you, J. D." Sewton McOoy. THE LEAVEN OF MAN'S LIFE By James Russell Lowell BUT stay! no age was e'er degenerate, Unless men held it at too cheap a rate. For in our likeness still we shape our fate. Ah, there is something here Unfathomed by the cynic's sneer Something that gives our feeble light A high immunity from the Night, Something that leaps life's narrow bars To claim its birthright with the host of heaven; A seed of sunshine that can leaven Our earthly dullness with the beams of stars, And glorifyvjur clay With light from fountains elder than the Day; A conscience more divine than we, A gladness fed with secret tears, A vexing, forward-reaching sense Of some more noble permanence; A light across the sea. Which haunts the soul and will not let it be. Still beckoning from the heights of undegenerate years. JOURNAL 76 Marion Lake Louis A. ("Tarn") McArthur gives today the second of the three Journeys which he recommends as the "best In Oregon." He says: "Marlon lake Is in the heart of the Cascade range, about midway between Mount Jefferson and Three-Fingered Jack. It is at an elevation of approx imately 4500 feet, and Is one of the most attractive of Oregon's mountain lakes. It was named by a road locat ing party from 6alem. headed by John Mlnto. who were working on an easy pass into central Oregon in 1874. The rugged peaks now known as Three-Fingered Jack were christened Mount Marlon, and the lake received its name because it gathered most of the drain age from the north slopes of the moun tain. The mountain was named for Marion county. 'The best way to reach Marlon lake is by means of the Southern Pacific to Detroit, and by pack train to the lake itself. The pack train trip will con sume about a day or maybe a' little longer. The first part of the way is along the North Santiam river over the grade of the old Oregon Pacific line that was to have been pushed across the Cascade range. But little is left east of Detroit but the grade and a few rotting ties. This grade extends 10 or 12 miles, to the mouth of Whitewater creek, a tributary of the North Santiam from the slopes of Mount Jefferson to the east. The Whitewater carries an unusual amount of glacial silt, so much so that fish do not live in it. "At the mouth of the Whitewater, there is a sharp bend in the North, Santiam. and from there on the course of the traveler is over a reasonably good trail in a southeasterly direction. Soon Independence prairie is passed, at which point Marion creek comes In THE PROMISED LAND rrom the Philadelphia North Amerlcan. July . And It shall be on the day when ye ahall pr over Jordan unto the land which tho Lord thy (iod giveth thee, that tbou vhalt et thee ut- great atonea, and platater tbem with pluU ttr: And thou shalt write upon them all the virde of thla law. when thou art peaaed over, that thou mayeet go In unto tbe land which the Lord tby God glveth thee, a land that floweth with milk and honey; aa the Lord God of tby fatbera ath promleed thee. And thwe tlialt thou bnlld an altar onto tbe Iord thy (iod. an altar of atonea. And thou ahalt write upon the atones all the work of this law very plainly. Deuteronomy, xivll:2 3-5-8. In early days of the current week there met in this city a notable gathering- of men and women. It repre sented the ineffable tradition of an ancient faith and the undying spirit of an indomitible race. It included persons from the common walks of life, humble artisans. Industrious traders, hard-fisted farmers. It coin prised men and women whose genius is acknowledged across the earth, scholars, economists, authors, Jurists leaders and makers of thought. Elo quent speeches stirred the audiences, and were reported in the daily press for the edification of an unnumbere.l public. Careful and precise thought was put into papers for the elucida tion of the Zionist movement, that all men might know its exact meaning. But after one has read all these re ports, after one has eard the inspir ing eloquence that called the Jewish mind and heart back to the Holy Land, or.e turns to the twenty-seventh chapter of Deuteronomy to find the soul of the movement expressed in a hundred worst. Minds among the keenest of our age with painstaking diction have defined the Zionist move ment. But the best definition Is 3703 years old, and Its history is nearly 1000 years older than that. It began when Abraham went forth from Ur of the ChaJdees to go into the land of Canaan. And the dream of the Prom ised Land went with him. He became the founder of the most illustrious line in all human history. And that line carried with it the tradition of the Promised Land through countless generations. It went with the sons of Abraham to Egypt. It abided with them In prosperity and poverty. Riches and power did not efface It Slavery only made it the stronger. The armies of Rameses melted before it. It conjured the Red Sea to divide its waters, and the children of Israel, dryshod, carried the dream with them back to their native Asia. For 40 years they wandered. And It came to pass that they pos sessed the land. A pastoral people In time was transmuted Into a conquer ing empire. The glories of the tem ple dazzled all Asia. The dream seemed a realization. But Babylon and Assyria in turn scattered the chil dren of Israel. They trickled back to their ancient home, but again the relentless Roman nd again the Sar acen and the .Turk stripped them of their patrimony and sent them naked into the world. 'The history of the Jews Is not merely the history of a people's ex ile. It is the exile of a civilization. There has never been a time since the Babylonian captivity when the Jews, if they could, would have gone back to Palestine in the mass They have been citizens of th world, the uni versal dwellers. But there has never been a time when the Jewish heart has not yearned for the Promises. Land. The hope has not been to transplant to that favored spot the Jews of all nations. It has been to regain pos session of soil made sacred by the most hallowed traditions, and to pre serve It forever as a center of Jewish civilization. The hope has been ths there Jewish thought, Jewish learn ing, Jewish culture would be free to preserve and develop the Imperishable principle whtch It had carried through o many vicissitudes for more than 4000 years. And that is the Identical meaning of the Zionist movement of today. No one proposes to transplant to a little tract In Syria a Jewish world popula tion of nearly 15,000,000. No one suggests that the Jews of America, for instance, shall give up their treas ured citizenship her and become units JOURNEYS from the southeast. The trail forks, and those who desire may travel up the west branch toward the Big Meadows, the headwaters of the North Santiam. The name of Independence prairie Is another legacy of the Marlon county road locators, who camped there on the Fourth of July. "The trail up Marion creek gradu ally becomes steeper, passing many beautiful rivulets coming in frm the Bteep slopes on the east. Some of these streams are very cold, notably Puzzle creek. Gatch falls, on Marion creek, are very beautiful, and naarer the lake is another high fall. Marion lake is a fine, large body of water, shallow on the northwestern edge, with good camping places. The trail leads around the lake and over the summit Into contral Oregon. "Pack outfits may be obtained at De troit. Husky persons can walk in to the lake, carrying their own packs, but this is not recommended. It is far pleasanter to have a patient pack an imal do the rough work. The trail is easy for walking, all the way. and some parts of it afford fine views. P rom the ridge north of Marion lake a fine sight of Mount Jefferson la to be had. "The train gets into Detroit about noon, and those who so desire may start for Marion lake In the afternoon, making the second day's traveling a little easier. There are plenty of ex cellent camping placea on the way. Good maps of this district do not exist, but the map of the Santiam national forest is fair, and the maps Issued in the geological survey's "Water Supply Paper 349' are very nseful. The lat ter publication may be secured at the geological survey office in the Couch building." of a new nation. Zionism Is not movement to restore the Jews to Palestine, it Is rather a militant hope and a vivid faith that Palestine may be restored to the Jews. The existing Zionist organization Is but an expression of the new drift which began in the middle of the last century. In 1800 the Jewish popula tion of Palestine was given as 3000. All during the early decades of that century there was a drift of Jews back to their old home. In 1880 there began what is termed the new settle ment. Since that time 75,000 Jews have gone back to Palestine from all parts of the globe. The Jewish pop ulation of the Holy Land now num bers 150,000. The earlier immigrant were herded In the cities and became dwellers in new ghettos. B"t gradual ly the call of the land was heeded. The agricultural reclamation of Pales tine was begun. Soil long thought to be worn out was made productive. A ciesert was made to bloom. What the Jewish farmer is doing for Palestine is illustrated in a single export. Twenty years ago the Jewish colonies first set out orange trees. The yearly export of Palestine is now 1,500.000 boxes of oranges, of which more than a third are produced by the new colo nists. How suggestive is this of the ancient tradition "flowing with milk and honey"! But Palestine's contribution to the world has been something more Im portant than any material product that the llttie tract could bear. Pal estine's great gift to mankind has been thought. Jewish thought, Jewish civilization, Jewish culture. And the central principle of that culture has been the soul of all western civiliza tion for 2000 years. Scholars recog ntge that to re-establish this culture in Palestine amid the babel of tongues brought by Jews from many lands, It is necessary to revive the an cient Hebrew language. The Idea took definite form with Ben Jehudah, a rich Paris Jew, who SO years ago announced that he would not marry any woman who could not speak the ancient Hebrew fluently. He found such a one imbued with his own high ideals of tbe mission of Judaism. With her he inaugurated In Palestine the revival of the ancient tongue of his people. Today Hebrew is the common language of the most poly glot community in the world. Two daily Palestine newspapers are pub lished in it. The Hebrew library in Jerusalem has 18,000 volumes. Hebrew Is taught in the schools from the kindergartens up. The rehAb'illtatlon of a Jewish Pal estine is well on Its way. It Is net to be a rush of immigrants to found new homes on material prosperity. It Is to be the establishing of a center of Jewish culture, recognized as such an 1 protected by the nations of the worlJ. Tbe ancient raith and philosophy are to have a home in the land where they were !rat planted 3700 years ago. There its pure flame of Idealism may burn unmolested. From that center it will radiate Inspiration to every Jew throughout the world to keep to the high tradition of the sons of Israe!. It will fulfill the dictum of the great Law Olver: "That thou mayest go Into the land that the Lord .thy God glveth thea a land that floweth with milk and honey; as the Lord Ood of thy fathers hath promised thee. And there shalt thou build an altar And thou shalt writ upon the stones all the words of this I law very plainly." A Trial of Faith. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. A" pastor In western Pennsylvania, who until recently was a believer in the literal answer to prayer, now is, with some trepidation, taking stock In his faith. Not long ago a visiting fel low clergyman prayed fervently In his pulpit to this effect: "May the brother who ministers to this flock be filled full of fresh veal and new zlgor." The startled pastor says that he doesn't object to fresh veal In modera tion, but does object tos having one of these new breakfast foods forced upon him. TKQnce Ger FtF-.V" T.AMPMANl NOW when th year Is at her highest noon end leaves are at their deepest green the rambler comes and publishes her beauty. J Arid pome there are who love the earlier roses host, -the roses that mme in Junetlme. and make their magic in our dooryards. and line our roalwn.v(, wiyi their loveliness. bending upon their oicms as though In sadness. that they so' soon must perish. that they should bloom and be no more. almost before they have become acquainted with the sun. or with the winds thai 1 ve them. the winds of June thnt strew their petals on the lawn's new green. J But as for me 1 love the ram blers. perhaps hereuse this Is their time. ! and with their wonder I forget 'their last-month sisters. 1 J And 1 know a fence a carelecs country fence thnt is like a snow drift. with white ramhlem overgrown. J And there Is n lattice in ,the town where the red ones clamber. J And someone 1 don't know who a writer in the New York Mall last summer wrote about the crimson rambler. saying, that In her blossoms is the best blood of the summer.- JAnd he praised her hanlihood. telling how she never falls when the sun Is high and hot to re peat her pledge of life renewed for ever. aj And the rllmhlng white roee and the red are so beautiful there Is no word to tell It. JBut there Is another rambler that I love heat of all. JAnd she Is pink as nothlnr elae may be. JAnd she flut ters along t he hedge like a scarf flung by n dancer. a silken scarf stolen from the streaklngs of the dawn. JAnd her name Is Irrothy Perkins. JAnd some there are who see the roses going and nre snd. aeelne; therein the way of all that lives. the end of nil hemity. the death of nil thnt hopes and aspires and looks up In gladness to the light. JAnd since ever men chose words- to make mirslr wltli their sound and beauty with their meaning it has been so. JAnd poets have mourned her transience. ''and have made sweet songs to tell their sorrow when she goes. J And so perhaps I should be ssd when roses fade. J And the earlier roses almost per suade me. JBut I never quite give In. and when the ramblers come they prevail against It. JAnd I think they shout to me to be of good cheer. that nothing is ever lot. that no hhiomlng however unre garded Is In vain. JAnd we're living In a rented house Just now. and we can't do as we like with it. hut we expect to have a home of our own some time and J LISTEN When we d" I'm go ing to plant Dorothy Perkins all around the place. Women. By J House In Capper' Weekly. A man has his' choice. He can either devote his time, to allaying his .vlfe'a suspicions or to the conduct of his bus iness. But there never 1s sufficient time in which to do both. Leila Conr.tance Feat herlngliarr. say when she buys a gown fche hns her selection on the theory that a brass band makes more noiec than a vio'et. A man has his choice. He can retain his self respect, or he can he what Is known as a "good mixer." Tears provide a woman with an ade quate defense. But a man neds a lot of wltnesf.es and the bent legal talent available. They ray Eddie Featherlngham, who bought his wife a year ago with a trip abroad, an automobile, two hired girls and unlimited credit st the stores, is already delinquent In some of his pay ments. Every man Is on trial before a Jury composed cf the women of his neigh borhood. -. Before hec marriage to him a woman is Interested In what a man sayr. After marriage she Is interested In what he 1 docs. A man greatly enjoys the -liberty which his wife's absence from home gives him for a couple of weeks t-efore she goes away. When a woman asks a man of whst he is thinking, she wants him to aay he Is thinking of her. Digital Disasters. Dud Beardaley la nursing a sore finger, tne glrla at the telephone office have furnlahed him wllh a ciiahlon to alt on ami are doing everything for his comfort. H liver Lake Leader. as Jamea Brandon, bockamo foreman at tha leland Ranch, bad the mlafnrtiine to have the first Joint of hl right thumb torn off )at Hatnrday by g'ttlng If canaht in a rope while retching a calf. Mr Rrandnn la one of the old time cow men of tht auction. In fact baa followed riding all lila life and la an tinerl enced man throwing a rope, hut be got caught, Burns Tlmea Hrald W. L. Lowe. loniiea1er of the Sliver country, had two ff hi tni cut off lo a motorcycle accident Vrttiei1ay afternoon. We did not learn the nri!i-ulri hut ba seemed to have tlpfd over with tli machine and got his font caught In aurti a manner that the big too and the one adjoining wre cut. He was brought ln that night t.y W. P.. Johnson and pr. standard took care of Hie wouuda, finding It necaarv to remove the two toea entirely, Iturna Tlmea-Heral'l. An accident that threatened very serious resnlta occurred Monday at Thomas to Mre. Km ma Ollkey, whn a cow she il leading ran and dragged l,r aevrat rods. The rope. In xuiif manner caught around Mrs. Gllker's J w rlet and she was thrown to the ground, after I which the rone got aronnd her neck. Tha cow ran for aotne dlatance until atopned by the bruab. and in holding the rone away from hr neck to aava her life her finger ws burned so naaiy mat u nan to d amputaiea. Albany Democrat. Evidence, rrom rveryborfy'e. r . "Not guilty, eir," replied the prison er. "Where did you find the prisoner, constable?" asked the magistrate. "In Trafalgar Square, sir," w.ig tha reply. "And what made you think he was Intoxicated V "Well, air, he was throwlnr his walk ing stick into the basin of one or the fountains and trying to entice one of them stone lion to go and fetch It out again.- , ,. . .