8 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, ,1919. AW INDEPENDENT NEWSPaPEB t C . S." JACKSON, : . . Publisher Published every day, afternoon and morning texeept Sunday afternoon),: at The Journal Bnildlng. - Broadway and. Yamhill , street, Portland. Oregon. Catered at the Poetof fica -at Portland, Oregon, for transmission, through-the mail a second class natter. . TKLEPHONE8 Main 71 78; Horn: A-6051. ; All departments reached by these number. Tell the operator Jrbtt department yon want. FORKION ADVEBTISINO BEPBE8ENTATITZ , Btnjuila . Kent nor Cow Brunswick Building. - 22B Fifth arenas. New York; BOO Mailers "Odto Chicago. - Subscription term by mall, or to any addreaa in tba United fctatoe or Mexico:' DAILY ! (MOUSING OB AFTEBNOOW) One year. ... .lo.oO Ona month..... t .80 , SUNDAT 'Ka year... ..12,60 I Ona month. . . . , .25 I AILT (MOBNtNO Ott AFTERNOON) AND , . SCNDAT Ona roar. ....87.SO One-jaonth S .65 i There lai in sanest houn, ; a eonacious neia. ' a thought that rises, ! independent, liftad out from all elss, calm, like tha star, entiling, atamal. This is tha thought of identity youra for too, whoever you ara, as mine for an Walt Whitman. THE POOR RICH BOY wwyEALTH was a tragedy With 'the W hundred million 9-year-old Vin cent Walsh McLeanj, run down and killed recently j by an au tomobile. j lie was a victim ifcf the folly of swollen riches. Wealth stunted his childhood and killed him at 9. Through fear that he would -be jk Knapped, . four armed men con stantly guarded his person- One sat beside his bed throughout the night. All his, life he was a virtual pris oner. His playgrounds jwere sur . rounded by stone walls ' and steel pickets with locked gates.. His' play mates were hired, and were selected with extreme care. Ona jvas a little colored boy who served as his chum for six years. .He was the pampered idol of for tune. -His tova at; Christmas vvhpn hft vsas 4, Icost $40,000. They included a j working model of the Gatun locks in the Panama canal and a miniature steam yacht. AH that two enprmous fortunes could supply to pamper him was provided in lavish prodigality, v. Most of . the year he lived on a hundred acre tract at Washington. IV C If he went to Florida or else where for an outing, hisj corps ' of guards and nurses accompanied hfm. lie was never alone. I He., was . not permitted to mingle wilii children like other boys. At birth, he was sent a gold and rose wood aradle by King Leopold of Uelgiurn, partner in a rich Colorado gold mine of Thomas D. Walsh, grandfather 'of the child, j The boy had five nurses in five lif tllf finfct mancinno in -AmVi.? he had a private car, especially built of steel and elaborately j furnished,, which carried him to California, to Palm Beach r wherever he wished ' to go. He had half dozen- automo biles, one of which was of special t.teel construction. He - had doctors and nurser and private j detectives ana ail else mat care could suggest or wealth buy to make' his life safe: So far as anybody knoWs, he was never on the street alonej until" the day that he mysteriously dodged out ttie steel gate at "Friendship" to be run -down by the passing autOj in which were- three women anc n which 4was a West Virginia license tag. ! His pampered life undoubtedly caused his death. ;If a newsboy of an .ordinary street urchlnj he could better have taken care of himself as the auto approached. I . It wn traveling at moderate speeq. Unused to such things unaware ofl the com mon, means of protecting himself, he became 'confused, and the inevitable happened. v The thing that makes boys strong, is contact with" other boysi. That is the virtue of the American public school. . The school is a nursery of manliness, self protection ahd growth In self reliance. The contests and conflicts and conquests there., are agencies for making men strong. Upon no crown prince of Germany was eveF lavished the gifts! and care showered upon this poor j rich boy: No throne ever showered its heir with such extravagant bestowals. Nothing could have been more out of place in America. ; ' Nor could there be a moW foolish use. of money. To lavish it so prodi gally on a child until it killed him when there are so many ways in which "it could have been used to the benefit of so many. Is accentuated folly. Fractions of these two great fortunes spent in building light "and airy homes on sites where now there are dark and gloomy tenements, these new homes brought - by easy terms within the reach of poor people would be a worthy 'use of swollen wealth. Or . expenditures of parts of " these r fortunes in a' better wage to the-workers whp helped pile them up, would : have been that economic justice which is the. true rule in human affairs. ; ' Nor- should there be in America a status . in which there could be in one hand riches so prodigious that -v rv,j:?:L-;"-J :rv;-'-: ' v.- ,-; a - family tmo thered its own child to 'death in aa ostentatious and heathen ish, idolatry of its gold. The true thought'in America should be 01 theJ country and alt its people, the lift ing up of the submerged, the quick ening of the publio conscience, the cleansing of the etvic life, the per fecting and finishing of our institu tions and general .inculcation Of .the belief that "I am my brother's keeper." Spent in propaganda in such ah enterprise, a mere part of the Walsh McLean " millions would j have given the family a happy inner conscious ness and might have saved the life of its hundred million dollar boy. After all, the child of poverty who sells papers on the street ; and shouts out his gladness in the woods and picks flowers by the brookside and goes whither he wills, is the real child of. fortune. The farmers ask passage next Tuesday of the market road bill. They are entitled to it. They .have been. urging market roads for years. . In the light of all this big road .program, who- would deny them their market roads? TEN YEARS AGO THE leaps and bounds of-invention are exampled in an interview given by Orville Wright 10 years ago. "How high can you got" he was asked. He answered: - As hignWas I want to, but there will never be Sriy need to go higher than 1000 feet. At that height no known gun could reach you. . . Answering the query as to how high he had gone, he said "300 feet," and to the inquiry, "How fast have ly-ou gone?" he replied: Forty miles an hmir" Tn trip, mwrv "Hnw faat could a machine be made to go?" he answered : There is no limit that I know of, but no man unprotected, could go faster than 100 miles an hour and stick to his machine. The rush of air is too great. Trre most interesting thing in the interview .in the light of the recent achievement of the- NG-4 was Mr. Wright's reply to the question, "Do you think anybody will ever fly across the ocean in an airplane?" His answer was : Hard to tell. " Depends on whether anybody wants to. In closing the interview Mr. Wright, who, with hjis late brother Wilbur, was the firjst to fly, said that' airplanes woukj be used for "military operations aind sports." ' The powers of gifted men cannot be measured. Such men can not - measure themselves How then can other geniuses they realize what may do? New York's plan to beat the pro hibition law by eating so-called so lidified alcohol in, a small, muddy green patty, conveyed to the mouth with a fork, readsi interestingly on paper. The claijn is that no court would hold a solid food to be a "liquor," when the federal prohibi tion amendment forbids use ronly of "intoxicating liquors." Bufr in the ultimate decision the justices are likely to enunciate that a -cocktail solid as substitute for cocktail fluid, is more joke than genuine. WALT WHITMAN T HE good pray poet whose cen tenary was observed yesterday was an extreme type of individu alism. Not only in dress but in thought and wor he broke away from convention. Like Carlyle , and Emerson his style and diction did not follow set form. By some it is claimed that Whitman was the first to introduce democracy fj and Amer icanism into the literature of the United States. 'Whitman, himself, made no such claim. . He described Bryant as "pulsing the first interior throbs of a mighty world." He owned himself indebted t6 Whittier, Longfellow, Emerson and Bryant. One of the chief char acteristics of Whitman was to glorify the ' commonplace. . He dressed like a farmer or . a workman with homespun trousers tucked into . cowhide boots, whose tops reached nearly to his knees, a pea Jacket seldom buttoned, a flannel s-hirt open at the throat, a red hand kerchief knotted at his neck and a broad brimmed Quaker hat in token of his ancestry. Whitman expressed a healthy con tempt for those who would make men moral 'by law. "Laws," he said, "have very little, to do wjth morals. Where the popular virtue is low no legislature can make it higher by statute. -Where it is high no statutes are needed. By too great a dependence' on law the moral fibre of the ' individual and society is weakened." He wrote: We generally expect a great deal too much of law. After all the government does not exercise anything like the influence for good or for evil over us tha't we are- apt to -imagine. We have grown in the' way of resting on it to do anything which ought to be -done by the individual and of making it answer for such , things that society alone Is In truth the responsible author of. No one can be readier than we to unite in a true measure to prevent crime, or to reform it where once it has been allowed to get headway, hut we hunt immorality to its recesses in the indi vidual heart and grapple it there, but not by law. , ROUTING THROUGH PORTLAND HEN transcontinental railroads bogm to announce that careful investigation of the freight.hand- lmg facilities of the Port of Portland has induced them to route all ,-pf their ' transpacific cargoes through this; port in preference to any other on the Pacific coast, it begins to look as though all I of the efforts made for the upbuilding of . the harbor have not been made in vain. : Therefore, the announcement made by Harry; Adams, traffic director of the Missouri Pacific, that his lines have decided to use Portland aa the Pacific coast terminus of , their Ori ental freight business is good news. It may be that thai Missouri Pacific does not handle as ! much freight to the Orient, or from there, 1 as Bome other lines, but even so, the investi gations of its traffic department show that rail lines interested more in the upbuilding of business and the hand ling of it and less in the upbuilding of property in which they, are In terested, turn to Portland as' the most available harbor. lt clearly shows the way the wind is blowing with ever increasing 'strength. And Harry Adams, by long experience in Pacific coast traffic business, knows what he . is talking about, and what he is doing. . Two automobile collisions,, a man knocked down by an auto while he was trying to board a street car, another injured by a machine while he was standing at Third and Pine, were among the accidents" on Me morial day. The. attention of the police department and the :clty gov ernment is called to the fact that ac cidents are rapidly multiplying. Are reckless and drunken drivers to be allowed to run tha pity?, MEMORIAL DAY T HEY marched together on "Nfe- morial day. Civil war veterans, Spanish war veterans, world war veterans and Boy Scouts, or vet erans of the war the future holds, all paying homage to the mingled dust of "those i immortal dead who live again In minds made better by their presence" and "who with their mild persistence urge man's search to vaster issues." It was not the march of a par ticular generation or a 'particular class. Old age, manhood, Youth, of all conditions, of all professions, of j community. Manpower, from an in all casts of thought, of all who ac- dustrial and commercial standpoint quire title to a larger and fuller j alone, is something well worth con life by virtue of service and talent, i serving to the fullest possible extent The world belongs to no particular j From the vantage ground of humanity class. The constant struggle of a particular class to dominate it, has been the source of 1war and out of this struggle have come our Me morial days. It is a struggle that is not ended. Each day freedom must be anew. won And ye, that wage the war of wdrdslnity; a vote for humanity. With mystic fame and subtle power, J ' Go. chatter to the idle birds. Or teach the lesson of the hour. The world is in ferment. There ; is a striving for a "new and better condition of things. The walls of t the structure of civilization have i, ow...nn. J'"r nigh cost of living, labors discon- . , , . . I tent, grievances real and imaginary j against the general order as a whole, j the contention for a larger share of the fruits of industry, constitute a magazine which may be exploded if the lesson of Americanism and the true significance of American ideals is not learned. The world wftl never be as it was before the recent world war. But it can be made mor6 habitable and at tractive if patriotic men cooperate; of there Is common sense, mutual trust, . respect for all classes and a following after the standard of lib erty, justice and human sympathy. . W7here social and economic insti tutions, however deep and old their roots, stand in the way of the achievement of social justice and in the road to opportunity, welfare and contentment they must be changed. Those who ,have prospered under the old order must meet the conditions of a' newer day. Liberty is not license". For its benificent working it requires self re straint, a clear and sane recognition of the reality of what is practical and attainable and a. realization that there are laws of nature and of eco nomics which are immutable and be yond human power to change. If we; march together, Civil war veterans, Spanish war veterans, world war veterans and Boy Scouts, the nation will, not be torn from its ancient moorings whatever may be tide in the rest of the world. Put ting down foes within and enemies without united action will protect and preserve: ! ' That mystical token of stripe and star. Which we through the years haveafol- lowed far And borne upon many a field of dread Its streaming splendor of white and red ; But now from the height of the ' struggling years It bursts like the dawn on a night of tears And we gather beneath it, with radi ant brQws " , Seattle is sounding a bugle call to arms. -"Seattle must take as great an interest iri the Portland rate case as Portland does," is the slogan of Seat tle newspapers... Thus . that city is fighting hard to maintain the policy of forcing Portland and the Inland Empire to submit te rates ; made for the special benefit of Puget Sound That ciiy is determined, if possible, to force Portland and the interior to pay such rate as would be necessary if a train had to f cross a chain of mountains m order to reach this city.' REBUILDING MAIMED. MEN T HERE also are the crippled indus trial workers who . should be re constructed. , I ' Oregon has abou t i 23,000 of them added to its long f list i every year. , We ; have determined to re construct our maimed soldiers and sailors. ' We should at the same time rebuild our maimed-workmen.- It is proposed in the amendment authoriz ing, the construction of the recon struction hospital - at ;. Portland,' and its . complement clause in the bonding bill providing funds..: It would under take the rebuilding both of maimed workers and such maimed fighters as the federal 'government may fail to provide for. Statistics show that the' industrial accident, commission ; handles ' each year upwards of 25,000 cases where workmen engaged in the hazardous industries of the state have been 'in jured and disabled in varying degrees. This is, of course, but a part of the actual total, statistics not being avail able for those not reported to' the commission. Of- the 'total reported approximately ; 15 per cent represents cases of permanent Injury, while, the remainder covers the scale between, from trifling accidents to those trenching close upon total disability. For the; care of these cases the state is now spending from. 125,000 to $50,000 'each month, which sum alone, diverted . -to the state institution, would practically, if not entirely, maintain it. But the repair and salvage of in dustrial wreckage' would not represent the full scope Of the hospital. The children of . the poor do not, as a usual thing, Have the advantages of expert. care and specialized hospital treatment. Slight, deformities, easy of correction if taken In early" youth, are permitted, because of lack of means, to grow" into aggravated eases. Boys and girls grow up into shrunken and -mishapen .beings, involuntary drones in the community life, to live through years of sorrow, suffering and- regret. Such a hospital as is contemplated could save much of this wreckage. Such achievement would be worth "more than the money cost, humanly and from the standpoint of economics. The United States government Is spending vast sums to reclaim those injured In the war and bring them back, so far as possible, to useful and self-supporting placed in the the salvage of misfortunate broken 1 units of our civic life is equally to be desired and commended. A vote for the building of the re construction hospital would be a vote for the building of unfortunate children and maimed men into useful and productive units of the commu- THEIR CENTENNIAL HE month of May, just expired, was notable as the centennial of IT thp birth nf a numhpr nf h me oirtn or numner or the , world's great; literary lights, i ur.lt HrkU , . Eliot, George Sand and Julia Ward HWg 1U j ' . , A Peculiar distinction- nr t.wn of these, George Eliot and George Sand, isithat they are both generally known b their pen names rather1 than by their almost forgotten real names, Mary Ann Evans, who became Mrs. j J. W. Cross, and Aurore Dupin, after ward Madame Dudeyant. Both women led unconventional livjes. The lesser dereliction of George Eljot loomed larger for the reason thiit she was an English, woman and was surrounded by more strict stand ards than was her contemporary who lived in the more tolerant atmosphere of j France. . George Eliot is notable for her portrayal of provincial life. Lovers of j the little comedies of life will never grow tired or the conversations of Madames.Glegg, Deane, Pullet ,and Tulliver and their husbands. "Pullet keeps all my physic bottles did you know, Bessy? He won't have one sojd. He says it's nothing but right folks should see them when I'm gone. Thjey fill two of the lopg storeroom shelves a'ready but," she added, be ginning to cfy, "it's well if they ever fill three. I may go before I've made up. he dozen of these last sizes? The piljl boxes are in the closet in 'my rojm, youll remember that, sister, but there is nothing to show for the boluses if it isn't the bills." i 1 The law's made to take care o' raskills," was Mr. Tuflliver's dying opinion. "There's no slipping up hill again and no standing still when you've begun to slip aVwn," thought Adam Bede. "It's but1 little good you'll do a-watering the last year's crdp," is a homely bit of " wisdom expressed by Mrs. Poyser. Another is, "If you could make a pudding with thinking o' the batter it ud be easy getting , dinner." Then there is Bartle "Masset, an extreme misogymist. "I tell" you," he saiji, "there isn't a thing under the sun that needs to be done at all but what a man can do better than a woman, unless it is bearing children, ani that they do-In a poor make shu"t way.' It had better ha' been leffc to the men, it had better ha' befn left to the men-" he chief claim of George Sand on posterity is her mastery of . style. In jher stories of rustic life she shows hei originality and through them she livfs. To Thackeray her diction re called 'the sound of village bells fall ing sweetly and ! .softly on the ear and "it sent a shiver through John Stuart Mill like a symphony ot Haydn or I Mozart.; No man has more skill fully laid ; bare the heart of a girl thsfn she in the 'Histoire de Ma Vie." lioth women passed through phases of j faith.1 While positivism did not cool the Innate religious fervor of Geprge Eliot, with' George Sand re ligion was a passing experience, no deeper than her republicanism or moire lasting than her socialism. RUSH, TO GIVfi WOMEN BALLOT Br Carl 8mith, Tfashington .Staff Correspondent of The Journal. Washing-ton, May 29. The hurried pas sage of the- woman suffrage amend ment In tie house la the first act in the drama leading to the 1920 campaign. The woman vota is growing so, fast through tha action of state legislatures in passing presidential suffrage bills that th Republican leaders resolved to make a quick march in that direction. Two and two always did make four.' The.; suffrage question cuts through political lines, however, and at the fin ish the neyr Republican "progressive" speaker did not vote. In. the last con gress' he voted against it. Two other Republican leaders, Moore of Pennsyl vania and Greene of Massachusetts, stuck to their guns and, voted "No." Liongworth, of Ohio, insurgent leader, executed a hasty somersault and voted for it, for the. first time. v The Democratic leaders also were di vided, Champ Clark speaking for it and Claud Kltchin against it. Kitchin took occasion to point out that the Republi cans will hardly be able to claim party credit for putting it through, since the Republicans, for 14 years In control of the presidency and of congress, did not even permit the question to come to a vote. It remained for the last Demo cratic congress to create a suffrage com mittee and bring the question to a vote in the house, he said, and in that con gress the resolution was passed in the same form in which it has again been approved. . The resolution now goes to the senate,- where the efforts of Republican leaders to claim credit from a party standpoint is embarrassed by the oppo sition ,-of Penrose, Lodge, "Wadsworth and; Borah, but whe're the amendment is apparently assured of votes enough to win, . In the last senate suffrage lacked one vote. The responsibility for Its de feat rests most heavily upon the sen ators from suffrage states who stood against It despite the verdlot of their states, and this means Borah and Wads worth. Suffrage will owe its coming victory In the senate to the gains it has made in the conservative sections of the Sodth and East alike, and the two parties will contribute almost equally to It. Harris of Georgia and Dial of South Carolina bring two Democratic votes from states where suffrage seemed to have no chance a few years ago. A hew Demo cratic senator from Massachusetts, David I. Walsh, brings an affirmative vote. In place, of Weeks, Republican, who voted against.it, and Walter E. Eage of New, Jersey adds a new vote on the Re publican side. Letters From the People r Communication nnt to " Th Journal for publication in thb department should be written on only one side of the. paper, should not exceed 300 words in lencth, and must be siened by tha wn, waose man aaarees in tun must accom pany tha contribution.! The Park Budget Portland, May 3l! To the Editor of me Journal Mr. Cheney, the city plan ning expert, in the Oregonian states that Portland in 1918 appropriated $28,000 for "ay.suna service, wnile Oakland, CaL, a much emaUer town appropriated $85.- 000. This statement is very misleading Nnaamucn as it seems to cover our entire playground expenditures ' for that year. Our park budget in 1918 was $319,621. For ISIS It is, $307,000. In 1917 the park budget Vas $154,986.' This increase of almost 100 per cent in 1918 was largely caused by the passing of a message call ing for a yearly levy of four tenths of a mill, to be used in the purchase of new. parks and playgrounds. This levy raises about- $120,000 additional, besides, the regular park budget. Most of this $120, 000 of 1918 has been spent on the Mar quam gulch playground, and It will re quire, the 1919 extra levy to finish up the jod. Mr. Cheney suggests that the play grounds should be connected with the. senools. .This- has been in vogue in many of our large cities, and It works well. Fnirther, Instead of building weed less community houses, many cities make use of the schools for all com-f munuy worn, ims idea is yearly gain ing ground. Practically all of Port land's schools have playgrounds con nected with them,, and many have play sheds a good thing for rainy days. Why not use these for the 12 months instead of the 10 months In the year? Most all of our school houses and our libraries have fine large auditoriums, where communities can congregate. , Why not make use of these? If this is done, I'm sure the $120,000 yearly, now voted, will take care of the growing necessities if it isn't all sunk fhto a gulch. G. E. D. Indorses St. Paul's- View of Women Portland, May 30. To' the Editor of The Journal I rejoice to hear the sanc tity of - Christian marriage publicly up held by the Rev. Mr. Fhrgott. Would that this generation were always influ enced by such high Ideals. People do not read their. Bibles zealously enough ; hence the spread of ba$er principles. Marital ties are regarded too frivolously. What changes have come over the world since Jehovah ordained in Gene iss. "Thy desire shall be to thy husband and he shall rule over thee." There could be no broken homes if this In junction were always observed. Aban donment of the holiest standards causes all the matrimonial wrecks we see about us. Is it not time to return to the old stabilities, the old authorities and sub ordinations? There Is no other way to prevent dW civilization from going on the rocks. The first authority ' that holds society together originates In the home. We seem to have forgotten that. We have traveled far from the rule laid down by St. Paul, "Wives, submit your selves to your own husbands" (Colos sians 3 : 18). Did we but abide by that rule there would be no -family' disrup tion. We seem to have forgotten that St Paul, that spiritual ' giant, also said : "As the Church is subject, unto Christ,, so let wives be to their own husbands in everything" (Ephesians 5 :24). This is the cornerstone of Christian marriage loving submission, the only-securtty tor lifelong union. It will prove at last to be also the cornerstone of political and civic authority, in short, of all orderly government- There can be no order without subordination. This great and fundamental truth is further emphasized by St. Paul thus: "If they will learn anything, let them ask their husbands at home." (1 Cor. 14: 35.). All these principles are pillars that have kept society an erect structure throughout Christian history. . In the day they are abandoned God will not fall to punish the world. The Christian home, that preeiojis safeguard of civili zation, will disapear and with It all the sacred things that spring from it. LOUIS COE. A Question as to Affiliations f Portland, May 31. To the Editor of lyThe Journal Has The Journal any all the leading lights In the Irish" anti peace league noise are all old Republican party leaders and there Is not a Demo crat in the whole bunch? Does Ireland belong to the Republican party? ' ,lrJ. HENNESSEY MURPHY. i ' THIS By Witter If only you'were here Walt Whitman, j To tell the largeness of this man I i For only you could forget In space his enemies- ' rou-who sawXincoln sttnl up before tbe faces of a city, Alone like this man, j . - j ' Alone. even when friended, (j Alone with destiny; . , You who jaw him facing Manhattan, Manhattan hating- him, Never a cheer That silence. Thai anger. That misunderstandingi .What would you say now . Of this American, This liberator, : This man of destiny?- Choired by the voices of slaves who And of freemen who would renounce their slaves, Called to be a witness of Joy before the peoples of the earth I Would you not say that lilacs have bloomed again, And that out of their death their odor Is the odor of life, ' And that a star which hid risen at evening grew pate toward a morning of sun? Ana tnat trie neauty of thei sinews ot Summoned now i , By this man ' To a new stature, 7 ic; Shall become the beauty of the sinews of the world. . f -. -From Poetry, a Magazine of Verse. OBSERVATIONS 'OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Meeting a number of acquaintaneea at Sea- aide, Mr. Lock ley glean, from them atorlea of many aorta. But chiefly ha recounts that of an American who before tha war waa in Kua- aia and so remained until constrained by the tutbulence of the times to depart, and who . is now a T. M. C. A. worker anoof Russian troops now prisoners of war in Franc. New sidelights on certain phases, of tha Europ sit uation stint through this narration. If you want to hear an interesting story, tackle the first person you meet. Here at Seaside, during the past .few days, I have met scores of interesting people. The life stories of many of them are more Interesting than nine out of ten books that you can find in a book store. Last night Mrs. Dan Moore, Mrs. Pi . J. MavcAuley and myself spent an hour or so in front of the driftwood fire which blazed merrily In the huge fire place made of water-worn stones In the Hotel Moore. Both Mrs. Moore and Mrs. MacAuley were born In the Emerald Jsle ; both are passionately fond of the home of their childhood. I found I had visited many places In Ireland with which they are familiar. We talked of the beauty and fertility of Ireland, of its history, its traditions and its glorious past. Presently we began to talk of more intimate things childhood experiences,' the folklore stories told by the peasants of Ireland, the wit and philosophy of the Irish peasants. I i could write a book, and a most Interesting one, if I could repeat the folklbre stories, the ghost stories and the fairy stories ' of their childhood days that Mrs. Moore and Mrs. ' MacAuley told me as , we watched the driftwood logs blazing In the cavernous depths . of the fireplace and listened to the subdued undertone of, the surf as it swept up on the foam wet shore near by. Passing Locksley Hall, I dropped In for a chat. Mrs. J. C. Wakefield, the owner, said : "Like yourself, my son. Dr. W. t. Carlisle, went overseas as a Y. M. C. Ai secretary. Billy has been put in charge of the work among the Russian prisoners in -France. You remember the 30,000 Russian soldiers were sent ?t France - to strengthen the French line. They had riot been Ibng In France, when thy revolted' and it was a question whe ther they wouldn't Just as soon tight the French as the. Germans; so they were made prisoners. My son speaks Rus sian as well as he does English. He also speaks and reads French, Italian and German, so' he has no trouble get ting along in Europe. Billy will be 38 years old In October. When he was a little, chap he went to school 'to Miss Dimmick In the Park school In Port land. Later he attended the high school at Fourteenth and Morrison streets .and was a student under Professor Davis. ' "How little we know what Is waiting around the corner for us, or what fate has in store for us. Fifty years ago, when I was a little girl, at Amherst, in Cumberland county, Nova Scotia, one of my fellow townsmen was Pro fessor T. T. Davis. Now little I thought then that the ! day would come when Professor Davis and I would both be residents of Portland and he would be teaching my son. Professor Davis has been principal of Lincoln high school so long that the memory of man run neth not to the contrary. "When Billy graduated from the Port land high school he went to the Uni versity of Calif rnla. While he waa in college a Russian diplomat came to the United States to secure three young Americana to go to Russia as dentists for . the-. nobility. Billy was selected as one of the three. The Russian govern-. ment paid Billy's way to Russia and gavo him a salary of $200 a month for the first year, -until he could get es tablished. His patients ;were membersl of the Imperial family. One or two or the grand dukes and other members of thfe nobilitv became auite fond of Billy. He made lots of money. 'They paid -Po.wer Needed j From tha Astoria Budget One of the great needs which confront Astoria in her battle to build up a great industrial city here Is the power neces sary' to develop the electrical energy for operating the plants. "Every indication points to the fact that we have that' 1 - .1 ... 1 . I- .... ... I . ( M . n tu developed, and it lies In the great reser voirs of oil and natural gas, which are located In the various sections of the lower river' district. There Is not an other section in the "Northwest where the outward Indications for the presence of vast' quantities of ol and natural gas are so pronounced as in this section and still no organized steps are being taken to develop, them. To sink a well for oil would not be a very expensive matter and the good that would result to the community and the whole state as well, if one of the main reservoirs could be tapped would be enormous. It would furnish the cheap power that 'Would quickly put Oregon , in the efront rank as a manufacturing- and Industrial cen ter. - ! The Peace Terms, From tba Weston Leader The peace terms do not seem to suit anybody particularly which is pretty fair proof that they are Just about as equitable as could have been arranged in the present era of world selfishness. Calls It "Best of the Measures' From the Salem Capital Journal The Roosevelt highway is ona of the piargest development propositions ever submitted to the people of Oregon for adoption or rejection., it means a per manent road along' the coast from Ore gon's northern boundary to tha Califor nia line and In its course It will traverse all our coast counties, opening many valuable districts to settlement and de velopment. The effect of Its construc tion will .be to Increase the amount: of MAN Bynner would be freemen These. Mates, Aft D v IMPRESSIONS Lockley : generously. Billy stayed in Russia un til Russia -went to pieces." First one rarty was in, power; they would be overturned and some other party went In. Billy has seen peasants rush out and. take the shoes from people, who had been shot and who fell in the street Many 6f the peasants .were without shoes and had - gunnysacks wrapped around- their feet. The1 czar had . 84. paiaoes. The peasants were taxed to their utmost limit, to support the royal Class in luxury. ! "When things settle down once mora Billy will go back to Europe, for he can make more money there than in the united States. American dentists seem to have much greater skill than Eu ropean dentists ; consequently they are Very much in demand and get high prices ior tneir work. F- at ek a t "Billy married an English rirl. Miss Maybury. from Nottingham, Eng. lie met her in St. Petersburg -while she was Hunting her sister, whose husband, waa a member or the English embassy. ! . "The English people seem to know yery little about our country : . In fact. f ery few Europeans know- much about the united States. When- the ship on which (hey were passengers was " ap proaching San Francisco, Billy's wife heard the captain say he hoped they mould get through the Golden Gate be fore darkl She, asked one -of the of ficers if they closed the gates at night. Ho said, What gater She said. 'The Golden Gate. I heard your' captain' say he wanted to get through the Golden Gate, before dark.' She, was perfectly sincere about It, too. -I "We weire trying to get a convention of Elks to come down to Seaside. She was here visiting me. I said. 'We will have' lively times in Seaside If we get the Elks (here.' . She said, -Will their keepers b with them? I saw an elk in the zoo in England. They er fine looking animals. She asked me how many 'we expected' to be there. I said, 'We are hoping to get 300 or 400 Elks She said. 'My ! that will be a big band Of them.' She , was -quite disappointed to learn that instead of having fine antlers many of the Elks were bald headed, and that the elks she' had seen at the zoo In England were not the kind we were hoping would come to Sea side, i , ' I r"When Billy left Russia the party Ihen In control would let - him draw only enough money from the bank to pay his way ' to the United States. He Is hoping some day, when stable govern ment is reestablished in Russia, to be able to get his money that is on de posit there. He went to France a year ago last March. Since he has been there he has been given two decorations for his work. ; , ; "Here is, a letter from Billy, written from Paris. He says Jbe is hungry for some good American cookery, such as hot cakes and maple feyrup with real Amerlgan. coffee. Listen to twVpara graph, of his letter. He says: " "I have been all over France, as my work, opening new posts for my Rus sian boys, keeps me on the go. Last spring while working at the front I re ceived ' a decoration from the French government for keeping up the morale pf the . men in the trenches -and for caring for the wounded. The last decora tion awarded me Is for my work with the Russians. I have just returned from Nice and Monte Carlo, where . I opened a Foyer de Soldat. It Is quite possible I may be sent to Algiers. Africa, to in stall the work there for the French colonial troops. From there it is planned that I go on a tour of inspection pf our work In Siberia. May is a brick to stick it out as she does and to carry on and do her bit. When .you see Daisy Gadsby give her my regards. I was sorry to learn of Captain Uadsby's death.. Glad to hear that Astoria Is so prosperous." taxable property' In the state by ,mll lions within the next few years, sim lack of roads and transportation facll- iUea are now seriously checking the ad vancement of the coast region. This highway proposition should be given serious consideration because of Its Im portant bearing upon' the future growth of Oregon and also on account of the proposal of the government to match, dollar for dollar, the money appropriat ed by the state. It Is the best of all. the reconstruction measures submitted to the people at the election next month. 'Carry On By D. A- Walters Toe sons of Ood are hearkening to the Master's world-wkla calls; He calls for strong and patient hands to re- - build tha fallen walls,- . To replace tha homes and temple destroyed by cannon baUe- ' ' "Carry on; carry on." Swing round tha world, ye minute men, with messages alive,. ' That the church may everywhere possess the spirit of the drive. That la time to aava tha starving our ships may safa arrive - . . "Carry on ; carry m." Tbe church wakes from its life of ease; tha mul- ' titodes arfie; The star of Bethlehem agaia - lend luster te tha skies: Plate duties that w shunned once ara tha ones that now we prlre "Carry on; carry Well bad tlia heathen children and well teach ; them hew to pray : ' While training well their hearts and minds weH give them time to play. For fat this I era that has corns tbers dawns tha . children's day t -' , "Carry tm; carry on.'" -.'':. ' ' ''.., God of - oar homes, God of our flag, ws renew our pledge td This . With the freedom that's ours we would bare tha world sa fro And publish wide the Savior's call. "Coma ya . weary unto Me." . "Carry oa; carry a." Portland. May 2. . - , Ragbag: and Bobtail Stories from Everywhere A Tip. to Parade Spectators ' JLUCII ingenuity was shown by' one woman who felt that a big parade marching past was too Impersonal. She longed, :- says the Philadelphia Publio. Ledger, to establish the usual friendly f00!.1 ,ntaot" w,th th stalwart lads ..i11.-1 M they ,wunf -long the street withthe "get-there" fcadence that the War, v tau-ht lh,!rn- She achieved the result by a very simple ruse., From her high perch In the grandstand she blithely chirruped "John !' whenever there waa an interval of silence. . A great many startled Johns fell for It, lodked up and "Tilled invoftmtarlly. Then when a band or, nurses came along she changed the name and called "Mary !" Altogether, she had an extremely sociable afternoon. 1 - The Shoeblack I !hrfhten what I look uson and find the world Is good. ; . Ttcr sprinkler lays tha whirling dust, then tarns !ft into mud. ; TIm. mud sets on torn shiny shoes, than happl- Mesa in -mine: - His victim looks tot me. of course, thea pays ito set a shine. . real" I am an enUmlstt . I nn. thin V. it- fun i-. . .... IVf-en automobile splashes spoil the wort that 1 hare done Win fortitude I stand the shock because a- fellow then Will have tn hars to "pay another dims te hare ' 'em ' . ghlned again. .-.. . - -Philadelphia Evening: - Ledger. I Uncle Jeff Snow Says:-: These here, glner'l strikes the workln' men starts la some rumpuses, but If ever the, farmers in the United States starts in on a glner'l strike it'll be like a tor nado to boy whlstlln' .compared "to these here city strikes. . ; V The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benefit ot Joutfta! Readers GENERAL ,' - ; . 51 ve 7800-ton cargo vessels were launched at Hog Island In 48 minutes on .Memorial day. f Field Marshal von Hlndenburg expects soon to go to Switzerland, where he will take a long rest. , Twenty-one persons have been lynched, Tlv?. if thm burned to death. In the United States so far this year. England la threatened with a country wide police strike; Liverpool , men bu already voted In favor of stopping work. The new taxes proposed by the French government will cause living costs to soar far above anything yet experienced. Martial law prevails at Lima, Peru. " Since the outbreak began nearly 100' strikers- have been killed and 209 wounded. : ; , : . .' . Representative Me Arthur of Oregon .had the distinction of presiding over the house for an , hour during Memorial services Friday, j , , . The Jury In the case ofUohn S. Plngresl on trial at Salt Lake City on a charge of wrecking the Merchants bank, failed to agree and was discharged. Three American nurses, Florence Gra ham of New York, Ella Delton of To ronto and Alice Hagadorn of Patmer. N. Y.. were killed In an automobile accident at Chateau-Thierry, France, recently. One thousand Nleuport and 600 8 pad airplanes and 1000 HIpano-8utia and , 800 Gnome motors will be shipped to the United States under an agreement be-! tween the French government and this -country. :i NORTHWEST NOTES ' county-was, sold Friday to Nissan Bros. at 60 cents a pound. . The first victim of spotted fever in . Grant county this year was Lee Parrish ' of ' Beaver valley, who Dasaed awav Krl- dy.. - ,r ,-' , -. ' . u The Oregon Parkin comoanr at Van couver opened on Thursday for the fruit canning season which, will end in Sep tern be r. , - i "i Seven and- a half sacks of featUsxl whiskey were- seised; In a raid on the steamer TamalDals at Aberdeen 'Frldav morning. .- ' . , Resignations of four Washington grain- i. Inspection officials- are asked because J screenings were found In. barley after j shipment. t ' -'. The graduating class at Oregon A art -J cultural college on June 10 consists of more than 100 students, two thirds of whom are women. ; . President JCerr afmounces that Dr. T. V. PoliriK will remain at Oregon Aarricul- tural college as Y. M. C. A. secretary and general student advtsorl Portland parties were at Bend this week getting leases from land owners In' the region of Dog mountain. They will start ooring tor on at one. - , - The W-5. the fifth concrete shin built ' at Vancouver by the Great Northern Concrete Shipbuilding company was-. tauncnea oaturaay morning. ., Zeno Sari lost his left eve. Tf fl'Dol-- larhide broke his leg and Henry Lake was badly Injured When a water gauge burst at Cottage Grove Friday. . Mrs. Emily Wright of Palo, Iowa, and Mrs. William l-Aneley of Forest Urova V met for the first time in 61 years last weea. Tney were girlhood mends. News has been received at North Pow der that Frank H. Oorham, formerly of that place, has been murdered by Mex icans on nis estate pear cimmai, Mexico. Lee Lochackl. one of the five prisoners - who sawed their way" out of- the. county Jail at Everett on Slay 14, is hack In prison, having been arrested at Vancou ver, v . ...... - Mrs.'F. It. Olmstead. who recently re move! to Hood River from Portland, Is art aunt; of Lieutenant Commander Head, pilot, of the NC-4 In the transatlantic flight. , The senior 'class of the Chehalia hlch school will plant four trees in the school grounds in memory or the rour high ' school boys who gave their lives for their country. O. Olson, who" has Just rounded -out ntxty-second year in business in the wlitz river valley, tsftnouncea that he) has sold, his store at . Kelso and win retire June' I. Representative McArthur seriously ob jects to the proposal of the Astoria Chamber of Commerce to send a delegation- to Washington to work for the lower Columbia naval base slte4 , Sheriff Tl Taylor of Umatilla county and former Sheriff William Esch of Ma rlon county are the two most prominently spokon of in connection with a successor to Robert I Stevens as warden of tha Oregon penitentiary. 7 Edward Tiffany and P. M. W, Del to Were arrested at Yakima charged, with , stealing- S300 worth of tires, besldea stealing a truck to take the loot away. The tires. In addition to much other sto len goods, were found in a barn. May baa been the record month since the war both for the number of shipping board vessels clearing from the Colum bia and the number of placements on -the vessels- made by the Portland branch of the sea service bureau. - ... v " '' Gordon' ' and James Gage, sons of O. W. Gage of Marshfeld, served two year" In-the United States navy, and In that time were always members of the same crew and - were not separated during their entire term of service. Tis t)uty and Honor to-Talk About W. S. S. J Stories of achievement In the aommu- Ittion of War Savings rAUmpa, sent to The Journal and accepted for publication. wUl be awarded a Thrift Stamp. 1 Featuring War Savings Stamps, talking, about' them to clubs and in dividuals, is not solicitation, but ed ucation. The War Savings move ment is one of the greatest, per-u haps the greatest movement in all our American history. - W should not be apologetic: In its connection, but proud. ' Thrift ffumps and IBIS War Savings Stamps bow oa ; sale at .usual agencies.