THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORT LAND, I SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 15, 1919. 8 . AM IXDEPENDEST NrWSPAPER ' J. 8. JACKSON,..'.-. . . . Pnbliher IMbUahed erery Uy, afteraoon and moniins (except Sunday afternoon), at Tha Joanw Building-, . Broadway Awl Yamhill street. Portland. rcgon. Entered at the Postoffice at Portland. Oregon, fnv trammixsiott through tha mails, aa second class matter. TKI.KPHONK8 Mala 7173: Horn. A-8051. " All drtment reached by thaea number. Tell the operator what department, yon want. fonhlUN ADVERTISING RBPBE8ENTATIVB H'tiiamin U Kentnur- Co.. Brum. wick itullding. 228 Fifth avenue. New TCork; 800 Mullen " Building, Chicago. fcubecripUnn term by mail, or to any addreas in tha t'nited Mtatef or Mieo: DAILY (MOUSING OU AFTERNOON) Cna year 85. OO f One month .80 HVNliAT lliw year 12.50 1 One month $ -25 DAILY ' IMOHXINO OE AFTERNOON) AND 8CNDAY Ona year 87.50 ( fine -month . ,. . . . 8 .65 lit (lie Vat the minute we nee I Thai unambiguous footstejw of the Ood 1 -Who give, it luster to an insect's wing ' And wneels hi throne upon the rolling j : wo'lds. C'owper. I hi-: WHIRLWIND? F TUB' peace treaty u rejecLu, what will take its place?" asks the Oregonian in arguing that tlft; American senate, should ratify. Nobody knows what might "take its place." Chaos might "take lis place" all over Europe. mere is ciiaos m iiu'mu, riicj" m Austria, chaos in Germany, chaos in Jlhe Balkans and near chaos in France, Italy and England. .. Workers in France. Italy ami Eng land are restive and dissatisfied. For 58 months' they have been living and wnrkinir ahnnrmallv. It has been T8 months of privation, struggle and agony. Hostilities ceased,- and they looked1 'for a happy return to the set tled life of peacf. But the peace treaty is not signed. Nothing is settled. Foch is actually getting . :s armies in readiness to re new the conflict if the Germans 1 refuse to sign. The Germans in turn are encouraged not to sign by the activities of American senators. The prospect before these workers of a return to the hideous and horrible conditions of war after nearly five years of agony, fills them with dis trust and dread. There never was a situation on the earth in which a spark could i more quickly and easily light a con - flagratioo. An alluring propaganda ' be prevented by a united and militant of illusion is spread broadcast. Class i public sentiment made plain to the war is preached and widely accepted. j members of house and senate at The confiscation of property and its j Washington. division among those who have no .J Mr. Warburg's interview is ex property is openly proposed and ; tended, and the reader can peruse it eagerly approved among millions. The French revolution came, had ! its day, and passed into history. Its l fiery path ought lb be a warning. Ioveirnnt.i form rtn iL-1 v- Tho cn.L denness of their development is often which prevails throughout the gov an unexplained marvel. jernment service, congress included, . Nobody 1 imagined 10 years ago, or j so far as the provision of funds and five years -ago., or even three years j their expenditure are concerned, he " ago, that national prohibition would! sums the situation up by saying: be scheduled in America for January, VKki. rvonoay ever areamea rive years ago or' three years ago that every slate west of thy Mississippi except one, would be a presidential suffrage stale. . . With propaganda constantly fan ning the smoldering fires of illusion, no' living man can safely predict that . .nn..i;,in e ...... .. t:i.- the French- revolution may not sweep through Europe and beat against the - shores of North America within a month or a year. Starving men' do not stop to reason. Distracted and agonized millions do : not consult precedent or abide, by -Written rules. Mad ami illiterate multitudes who have gone through 08 months of fiery furnace in the expectation that it was to bring them ! to a place of rest and better living only to find that they are -obstructed on all sides by American senators 'and other junkers, may suddenly lose patience and yield to the siren voice of hallucination, "'If ethe peace treaty be rejected, A hat will take, 'its place?" - Who knows? That treaty, in its IftnAM. n.nn. I . . . V J , I trriKuc Lin t-iiniiL. iiiiiiin din. itrnnimn to the working millions of all nations. , H is a pledge in which every mem ; , ber nation covenants to strive for, - better living for its working people It is a hope and a promise to those who have been so long in agony. It - is a pacifying pledge to encourage the . Paris conference is laboriously and patiently, working out for them and ror. ail mankind. "t dhe peace treaty , be , rejected, what will take its place?" Possibly (he whirlwind. Possibly a social cataclysm beside which the French revolution would be a noth-4 ing - Possibly, a class war in which the illiterate masses of Europe . would wipe out all traces of present civi lization and, .set the world ; back a thousand years. ! "Portland ; has fallen far - behind hi the race for business. "Shipmas- , erft . have not chosen to go up . the Hliallow river approach to Portland." These, are choice expressions from a discussion of the Portland, rate-caso by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer In an article on this page. Perusal of it will show Portlanders how Puget Sound is fighting to ; keep freight rates to Portland adjusted to cost of haul over high mountains rather than on a legitimate cost through the Columbia gateway. . Twenty-seven well behaved girls in uniforms, of blue and white won ad miration and were a striking feature in the floral parade Friday. They were the cornet band representing a fruit canning establishment at Sheri dan. The girls, their uniforms and their music were, a charming setting amid the flowers of the decorated automobiles. , GOVERNOR LISTER A' T ONLY 49, a period of great use fulness would still have been before Governor Lister of Wash ington, had not an untimely death removed him from earthly en deavor. He was the desirable type of public servant. To him, public office was accepted as an obligation to return real service. He used his high posi tion as a vantage point from which to defend the public interest and guard the people against the en croach ments of the selfish pests who swarm around state capitols and seek undue advantage over the mass. His easy reelection in a state of pronouncedly opposite political faith was his people's acknowledgment of the high character of his service. It was in a mid-term in office and in the high tide of his usefulness that Governor Lister passed. Life is full of irony. Here they start to have an irrigation celebra tion up in Lane county and the rain comes along and jipps the show. But, when yon stop to think about it, how could you have irrigation with out water? .. THE PEOPLE'S MONEY P ALL M. WARBURG, world-recog nized as a financial expert, makes some pertinent and compelling observations elsewhere in this paper upon the necessity for the establishment of a national budget system. : Mr. Warburg looks at the subject through the eyes of a business man, who believes in efficiency, economy and financial sanity in the conduct and operation of any business, whether that of private or public interest. He believes the time is here when congress, impelled by popular demand, should provide a budget system, but he fears that the old and selfish influences which have kept the unscientific and wasteful present day system in effect will succeed in emasculating any con templated reform until it will "make a noise like a budget" I and function no further. This, he points out, can 'for himself, but one or two of his i observations are so sound that they j merit more than general comment. ! ' After outlining the absolute lack of Ifommon. ordinary business method The situation is a disgrace to the intelligence and acumen of the American people. Similar practices would ruin any private enterprise. Going on to discuss the part con gress has played in the perpetuation of these conditions the gerrymander ing and log rolling, the exaltation of petty and private interest above the public interest, he says: Ho determined, at times, has been this objectionable practice that It is difficult to find a fitting expression for It with out using a very ugly word. I do not doubt that for the men in ..congress. standing for high standards of govern ment the budget system would prove a most welcome protection. Men of Mr. Warburg's type recog- ! nize all-too clearly that reform must icome in the manner of raising gov ernmental funds, and spending them, or else there can be no surcease from high tax burdens, inflated costs and continued economic and social dis turbance and unrest. The American people are. not stingy people. They do not begrudge neces sary governmental expenditures. They hue been careless, probably because the costs of government have been so 'ndireclly laid upon them that they have grumbled at the load without definite realization of its cause. They have stood by without con certed complaint while district has jockeyed district, section has striven against section, governmental depart ment against department, and bureau against bureau. It has resulted in outlandish waste and extravagance. Now the burdens have grown so heavy, and so direct, that the people are complaining. They want business efficiency. .There is a general demand for a budget system and it should come. When the telephone girls go out on ttie nation wide keymen's strike they will certainly; take the o out of hello. THE NEXT ROSE FESTIVAL P ORTLAND'S 1919 Rose Festival has passed into pleasant history. It furnished record breaking crowds gathered . from far and near to participate its three! days of clean and wholesome entertainment which they will take back to their' homes witli thm pleasing memories and ) , v : lasting reasons for: their return a year from now. ? ' The festival management is to be congratulated - upon the success which crowned the untiring efforts of each Individual who gave so gener ously of his time and effort They labored ' " under 1 undoubted disad vantages this season which former managements were not compelled to struggle against. The weather god was unkind for one thing, but ; in spite of the tears he shed the throngs of merrymakers continued to smile- And H was difficult to turn so soon from Liberty loan drives and other activities of war time to1 the promotion and execution of a pro gram of pleasure only. The temper of the public has been so long tuned up to the stern work of war that it takes time forN it again to learn to play. The financial demands of the war left the management face to face with a difficult financing prob lem which called for long days of unselfish toil. The Rose Festival is a Portland institution. It has done much for Portland has brought it many en during friendships from every nook of the nation. It ought to be made bigger and 'better as the years go on. It ought to be lifted on the shoulders of a united community spirit with everybody under the load and on the job all the time. x There seems to be this difference between being the victim of an auto mobile or an airplane accident: the former wrecks 'em and the latter kills 'em. THE OREGON ILIAD T HE pageant of Willamette univer- j sity as produced at Salem, under ; the direction of Ella Crowder j Miller, is in the main the his-1 tory of the earliest missionaries to j the Pacific Northwest. Staged in connection with the last commence ment exercises of the third quarter century in the history of that uni- j versity, it is remarkable that many of the descendants of the Arst colo nists, missionaries and Indian con verts of Oregon could participate as performers. Alanson Beers, member of the first gubernatorial committee of, the provisional government, was represented by his granddaughter, Miss Lois Evans. Josephine Holman Albert of Salem is granddaughter of Almira Phelps,, a missionary ; teacher who came on the ship Lau- j sanne in 1840, and Joseph Holman, who arrived the same year overland from Illinois. Rev. J. L. Parrish, another well I known missionary of the Lausanne, was represented by his daughter, Mrs. Frederick Stewart. Some of the Indian performers trace their lineage to the red men j and women who received from the lips of Rev. Jason Lee their first inti-! mation of the white man's Book I of Heaven. ! Also several pieces of furniture used in the pageant are more than ' a century old; and the roses that) brighten one of the principal scenes j in the pageant were the perpetuated i growth of roses brought to Oregon by Mrs. Alanson Beers in i837. .Many of the leading citizens of Salem, the entire student body of the university, and 50 Chemawa Indian school students assisted in the cast, and the patronage was such that the alumni association later requested the trustees of the University to repeat the pageant at regular intervals in order that the dramatic events that brought Christianity to Oregon, that established Willamette university, the first institution of higher learning on the Pacific coast, that essentially founded the city of Salem, and that wielded a mighty Influence in locat ing the capital of Oregon in that city, j might be perpetuated. The request comes timely, inasmuch as only here ,and there in history has there been a pilgrimage more far-reaching in its results than the one which first brought the lamp of learning to what is now the city of Salem. The story of sacrifices made. hardships suffered and privations en dured by those missionaries in their devotion to the uplift of a people living in heathendom indicates in part, the purchase price of civiliza tion in Oregon. Therefore, the pa geant depicting the origin and early progress of Willamette university in cidentally emphasizes one of the most important features recounted in the great Iliad of Oregon. The pageant is nota local to Wil lamette university, or to Salem. It belongs to the nation and to civiliza tion. It depicts in human figures and action the evolutionary process from barbarism to civilized condi tions, from ignorance to enlighten ment, from the wilderness to the electric lights, wireless and birdmen. This spectacle of history, repro duced at other times will be sought and seen by all within Oregon's bor ders and beyond. There will be pil grimages to witness its production, as there are to Oberammergau. It is afield In which Willamette university is distinctive, notable and unchallenged. WHAT AN ARGUMENT! "T HE Portland contention of ad justing rates to distance and cost, of service is impossible," says the Seattle Post-Intelli gencer, in an article on this page. That is to'say, four locomotives and four engine and train crews should beJ used to haul -the same trainload of wheat 306 miles over mountains to Seattle, when one locomotive, one engine crew and one train crew will haul the same trainload! 218 miles downhill from Pendleton to Portland. Any other arrangement than that costly system with. Eastern Oregon and f Eastern j Oregon farmers i made to ; pay for the costlier service In higher rates : is "impossible" In-the Seattle view. Why not arue that white is black or that the moon is made of green cheese? . The floraL parade was more beauti- It was a spectacle worth ournev to see. Doubt less, under competitive ornamentation and the year of practice, we have become morej adept and artistic in decorating the; cars. Besides, what is, more beautiful than the flowers I APPLY THE GOLDEN RULE THE. labor! question should be solved byJ applying the formula of the Golden Rule, says Otto H. Kahnj First of all, labor should have a. living wage. Then a living wage should be set aside for capital. The) remainder should be divided between labor and capital on a basis of, fairness and equity. Such an apportionment Is the ideal one, but in practice it is difficult, for the reason that there are many kinds of labQr and many kinds of capital. There is skilled labor and unskilled labor and casual labor. There is the; skilled and unskilled employer. Tliiere is the small em ployer, the lafge individual employer and the corporation employer. Often the laborer tnd the capitalist are merged in the same individual. While it is impossible to draw a clear line of j division, certain guide posts are pointed out by Mr. Kahn which would! lead to a better in dustrial condition. Labor is neither a machine nor a commodity. It is a. partner of: capital, and as such entitled to a voice in determining working conditions. Every opportu nity should be given the workman to inform hinjiself as to the conduct of the business, and Mr. Kahn goes so far as to, advocate that where practicable, the workers should be represented on the board of manage ment. This' would give them a better idea of the employer's problems and lead tp a better mutual understanding. To provide proper homes for work ers is an urgent duty of the em ployer, adds Mr. Kahn, and if he is unable to do! so, the duty devolves upon the state. The worker must also be relieved of the dread of sick ness, unemployment and old age. He should receive a wage which will not only provide for his reasonable daily needs but will enable him to lay aside something for the future and to have his due share of the recreations of life. In return for these benefits the workman should not forget that they obligate him (to honest effort in he field of- production. High wages dan only; be maintained if high produc tion is maintained. "-The restriction of production;, says Mr. Kahn, is a sinister "and harmful fallacy, most of all in its effect on labor. Under production is a cause of poverty. Furthermore, lessened production makes for high costs. Mr. Kahn is a banker. He Is used to the click of gold and the rattle of the machine that adds up the daily profits. He ! knows the steel bolts that make money vaults secure and his ingoings ;and outcomings are- in wealthy and fashionable New Yorfi. Mr. Kahn jvas born and educated in Germany, j He came to America in 1897, has since been a member of the great banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. jln the war he was an American cttijsen of great loyalty and a war workejr of much power. His appeals to th people of his own race in America to . stand by the United States government were among the conspicuous acts of the time. ' He is not the only man of his type who speaks (for a new order in the industries ot America. Charles M. Schwab has done the same thing and in much the same language. A great deal of thought among important in dustrial figures is running in the same direction. On their part, the workers, by a just policy toward employers and by disassociatiori from the wild illusions of reddest Riissia can greatly forward that promises more for them than workers ever had since the world began OLD HIGH COST OLD man (High Cost of Living has grown I wire as tall since th e dark days at the close of the Civil Wijir. Even then he was imposing enough, and our. fathers, as our mothers, tell us of the inroads he made upon the family wallet some 57 yeai's or so ago. In those days they kicked and complained, as we do in! these, but had he laid as heavy a Hand upon them then as he has uponj us now they undoubt edly would jhave shrieked with fi nancial agonjy. Back in "62 so a delving statistician tells us, molasses sold for 62 cents the gallon. - ow it is $1.26, or there about. Then the thrifty housewife pungled up 25 cents a peck for the lowly spud, now she pays just double the i;um. A two poind roll of butter was half a dollar in those darkj days, now it is fl.liO; two pounds of coffee then cost 4(0 cents, while we are now paying 8G cents and above. Two dozen eggs vere 45 cents ; now one dozen costsj more than two then. Three pounqs of beef cost 70 cents? w;hile now hobodybut the million- aire can see out having Old High a ruminative cow with & spasm. Cost was a kind and gentle, frien before the world war made him grow - so talk ; . PORTLAND SEEN FROM SEATTLE Hostile Critic Draws Comparisons in Discussing Rate Case From the Seattle Poelntelliencer Portland j. . has fallen far be hind in the race for business. Seattle has made the most of Its splendid deep water harbor find broad and easy ap proach from the ocean by expending many millions of ' dollars for conven iences. - docks, ! mechanical contrivances for facilitating! the handling of freight, and its success! has aroused the antago nism of the "Willamette , river port. Shipmasters have not chosen to go up the shallow river approach to Portland with tugboats j and pilots, when they could pass . through the broad tidal reaches of the straits and -tie up at a Seattle dock without the aid of pilot or tug ; and I they have appreciated, too, the conveniences of modern docks and freight handling furnished by the enterprise and cash of Seattle. Seattle has thus gathered here the greatest overseas commerce on the Pa cific coast, second in importance only to New York ;ln th nation. Portland has induced the government to dredge the Columbia land the bar at its en trance, and now claims to have thirty or thirty-five feet of water in its ap proaches, but it has not, until very re cent years, busied itself in the Invest ment ot ' cash for- modern docks and conveniences to attract commerce. It has chosen to stand back and let more enterprising' ports acquire the overseas business, and how has bethought itself of the expedient of asking the inter state commerce commission to grant a rate advantage to Portland so that it may go after ?the commerce that other ports have so laboriously built up. The Portland contention of adjusting rates precisely! to distance and cost of service is impossible. Were this grant ed, every port on the Pacific would have a' different terminal rate, and the whole existing iBtructure of business and of commerce would be thrown into con fusion. The interstate commerce com mission has already suggested this in former rulings. Ships seek the most convenient, approachable and economi cal port, and shippers route freight to the ships at these ports because the ships are there and because their com modities may be handled with facility and with saving of time. Otherwise they do not care what the name of the port is, nor precisely how many miles away it is, or by what route their com modules reach! the sea. But. even were Portland's argument tenable, electric equipment of trans continental rail lines reaching Seattle is turning the mountain grades to actual profit by generating electricity in the down grades fpr use on the up grades. So, from1 any standpoint, Portland's contention Is not practical, not fair, nor desirable in the public interest. And tne interstate commerce commission will undoubtedly so decide. Letters From the People t Communications sent to The Journal for tublication in this department should be written on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 300 word in length, and must be signed by the riter, whose mail address in full must accom pany the contribution. J Citations From V. C. T. U. History Portland, une 10. To the Editor of The Journal A writer in. the current Everybodys on the great Crusade that was the origin of the W. C. T. U., says: "Those 70 women marched out that day to make America 'dry", and-they have won at Jast." Do not think this over states thie case, for although many or ganizations and the church have later joined the crusade against the liquor traffic, alU have built upon the founda tions laid by the W. C. T. U. in its educational work. The W. C. T. U. con ceived the idea and in spite of tremen dous opposition from the immensely wealthy "liquor oligarchy," secured a scientific temperance instruction law in every state and territory of the Union. All now admit that has been the great est factor in producing the recent pro hibition victories. In view of this fact, the writer of the above mentioned article made a grave mistake when he gave the AntirSaloon league sole credit for the "political" part of the movement against the traffic, and limited the work of the W. C. T. U. to the "moral" phase. The W. C. T. U. was in politics years before the Anti-Saloon league was organized. The first petitioning to congress against the traffic was done by this body. Sev eral of the first states to win prohibi tion did so through the initiative and assistance and insistence of the W. C. T. TJ., against the opposition of the Anti-Saloon league, whose slogan at that time was local option. When the W. C. T. TJ. first went into politics it encountered the active opposi tion of the churches as well, who closed their pulpits to the women because the church was supposed to keep entirely divorced from "politics." Curiously enough, in the light of this author's view of the situation, is the fact that while the W. C. T. IT., repeatedly, at all of its conventions, pledged its support "to that party, by whatever name called," which should make prohibition an issue, the Anti-Saloon league strenu ously denied any connection with the hated "politics," and waged Its war solely against the local saloon. Later, when public sentiment, through long years of education, had become Irresist ible, it was forced into line in favor of statewide prohibition. History some times makes strange blunders. ELLA BEECHER-GITTIXGS. Second Wife's Property Rights Forest Grove, June 6. To the Editor of The Journal If a man and wife, have property and it is in the wife's name, and if the wife dies does the man get one third of 'the real estate or does he just get a life lease on It, and after his death does it go to the children? And If the man getsmarned again, if he is en titled to-one! third of the estate, does the second wife get anything after the man dies? I want to know the Oregon law. Please ! answer in The Sunday Journal. SUBSCRIBER. The widower of ercry deceased perron shall be entitled to the use, dnring his natural life, of ona half of all the lands owned by the de ceased. At hia death the land descends to toe children of" his deceased wife. The second wife can not inherit any of the landed estate belong ing to the first wife. The widower does not receire Uie fee simple title to any of the lands of the deceased wife. 1 Questions Portland's Civic Pride Portland, June 9. To the Editor of The Journal i-At the election last Tues day some 7000 Portland voters recorded themselves in! favor of erecting an in dustrial reconstruction hospital ;at Salem in pla4 of Portland. It is per fectly clear hfcw that number of voters might vote againat taxing themselves for such an institution by voting against the reconstruction , bond bill, but how they could vote in favor of the Indus trial commission's building a $400,000 hospital out of its own funds in Salem in place of-Portland is difficult to ex plain, especially wljen there is no more reason for placing such an institution at Salem than at West Scio. Can one con ceive of 7000: Seattle citizens voting to erect such a building at Tacoma? W. F. A. Of the: Old Pioneer Stock From tha Kansas City Star. Sometimes we hear it said that this race of - ours is accomplishing a rapid and ' easy journey ' downhill. -One THE FLOWER By Oliver Wendell Holmes WHAT flower is this that freets the morn, Its hues from Heaven so freshly born? With burning star and flaming; band, It kindles all the sunset land: Oh tell us what its name may be Is this the Flower of Liberty? It is the banner of the free, The starry Flower of Liberty! In savage Nature's far abode Its tender seed our fathers sowed; The storm-wind rocked its swelling bud. Its opening leaves were streaked with blood. . Till lo! earth's tyrants shook to see The full-blown Flower of Liberty! Behold its streaming rays unite, One mingling Jlood of braided light The red that fires the Southern rose, With spotless white from Northern snows. And. spangled o'er its azure, see The sister Stars of Libertyl The blades of,heroes fence it round; Wherever it springs is holy ground; From tower and dome its glories spread; It waves where lonely sentries tread; It. makes the land as ocean free. And plants an empire on the seal Thy sacred leaves, fair Freedom's flower. Shall ever float on. dome and tower. To all their heavenly colors true; In blackening frost or crimson dew. And God love us as we love thee. Thrice holy Flower of Libertyl Then hail the banner of the free. The starry Flower of Liberty! OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley ( Eminently suitable for pondering in the leisure this day should give, is the theme which Mr. Lockley here elaborates. The hopes engendered amid war's deadly dangers are reasserted and the prediction boldly proclaimed that, despite the load. illations of all mannei of evil men, th world is henceforth to be managed by those who wish humanity well. During the past few days I have been struck anew with the change of atti tuu of business- men. It wasn't ao many years ago that the captains of industry regarded their tnen very much in the same light as they did their ma chinery. They wanted to secure the maximum of production at the lowest possible cost. The human element did not enter. When a man was no longer highly efficient he was thrown on- the junkpile. Just as machinery .deteriorated so employers wrote off the deterioration and depreciation in their men and re placed them without any thought of what would become of them or those dependent on them. This whole attitude has- changed. We are beginning to rea lize more fully the brotherhood of man. A few days ago I was talking to F. W. Kellogg, publisher of the Los Angeles Express. "In the old days." , said Mr. Kellogg, "many newspaper publishers had the idea that they were willing to lose money If they could make the other fellow lose money. There was a natural hostility between newspaper publishers. That day has gone by. When the pub lishers of the various papers meet each other socially they find they are good citizens and interested in serving hu manity. More and more, newspaper pub lishers aregetting together for mutual helpfulness. Altruistic work done by newspaper publishers and others during the war has had a most wholesome ef fect, and the whole attitude toward the public is tinged with a thought of service to others. Men of large means are putting their time and money into altruistic work. We are learning that the way to build up an efficient organi zation and the way to win the loyalty of every employe is to give the employe a feeling of responsibility and a Just share in the profits of his work. No longer Is It considered right : for a man to make large profits by taking ad vantage of the necessity of his employes. "If publishers can and' do believe in a League of Nations there is no reason why they should not believe in a League of Individuals, particularly when they are engaged in the same Industry. We all want helpful competition, but we do not want harmful and destructive cdm petition. More and more we are learn ing that cooperation and a kindly feel ing for our fellows Is the way toward peace and prosperity." Recently I attended a banquet at the Arlington club given to Colonel Weln stock. I could not but be struck, while listening to his address, with the golden cord that ran all through it of helpful ness to others. He had no thought that he was preaching a sermon : yet if he had taken the Golden Rule for his text he could not have preached a more ef fective one. He spoke of the results that have come to the producers In California through cooperation results that are amazing, almost unbelievable. He showed how' by cooperative marketing they are excluding inferior fruits and other prod ucts so that the consumer gets better value for his money and pays less for it, and the producer turns out a better says, look at our dances and lounge lizards. Another says. look at our luxury and ostentation, and adds some thing about the fall of Rome. (Rome always gets It that way when this sub ject Is up, the general Impression Jelng that Rome's fall was due to late hours and jazz.) . But let's take heart. Nations and races do not decay, because some young men are of the night blooming cereus variety and have no use for a bed ex cept to eat breakfast in. And anyway, a very encouraging percentage of them get over it, barring those who fall out of taxicabs, and become useful mem bers of the daylight colony. It is Im possible to look about at the subjection under which this planet has been brought by Its Inhabitants without re taining come confidence In our collect ive ability to get on with the job aa it grows and develops. Limiting our In spection for a moment to our own fur row this continent where our kind have been scratching around for a few brief centuries we cannot but recognize that we have made considerable changes in the landscape, some of them probably for the better. We have subdued the wilderness, built cities, overcome dis tance and killed off most of the original inhabitants. , The Tank's Forerunner From the Christian Science Monitor The Inventors of the "tanks," which first -came into action in 1918 on the Somme, had a forerunner, at least In conception. If not In execution, of whom they were probably wholly unaware, a forerunner who lived more than 400 years ago. In his letter Introducing himself to Ludovic Sforza, Duke of Milan, about the year 1482. Leonardo da Vinci, whose- Ingenuity as a military engineer was no less amazing, though less renowned; than hia artistic genius, stated that among tha weapons of war fare which he could construct were "armored -- wagons carrying artillery which shall break through the most 1 ' f ' OF, LIBERTY article at lower cost, and receives a higher price. It la almost like saying the door is shut and open at the same time. It has all been accomplished by the elimination of waste and by scien tific methods of distribution and market ing. In place of cut-throat competition and veiled hostility the producers of California are enjoying prosperity and have for each other a feeling of friendli-' ness and comradeship. Take the raisin industry as an example of what has been accomplished. An association was formed and all inferior raisins were ex cluded from the market. The higher grades of raisins, better prepared, bet ter packed and more efficiently mark eted, created an increased demand for raisins. Extensive advertising was done and channels of distribution were found. The association published recipes for raisin bread and raisin pie, and within a year or two thousands of -tons of raisins were being bought by bakers and restaurant keepers and the public was demanding more and more raisins. To day there are few industries more pros perous than the raisin industry of Cali fornia. The same thing was done for the dairy industry, for peach growers, for the strawberry growers, and for al falfa men. Today, in place of worry ing as to how he will meet the mort gage, the farmer is considering to what college or university he shall send his children and what make of automobile he had better buy. . For centuries we have been talking about the brotherhood of man and the era of good feeling. No matter" ' how much the world seems to seethe with unrest the era of th brotherhood of man' is at hand. Much of our trouble in the past has been caused by misunder standing and by judging harshly the motives of others. When we come to know others better we see that they, like ourselves, want to do the right thing. Some years ago I ran across a poem entitled, "Not Understood." I don't know who the author Is, but I have tried to make it a part of my life. It Is worth cutting out and saving. Here it Is : Not understood, we more along asunder. Our paths grow wider as tha seasons creep Along the years; we marvel and we wonder Why life is life, and then we faU asleep. Not understood. Not understood, we gather falte impressions And hug them closely aa the years go by. Till rirtues often seem to us transgressions ; And thus men rise and faU and lire and die. Not understood. Not understood. Poor souls with stunted vision Oft measure giants by their narrow gauge. The poisoned shafts of falsehood and derision Are often launched 'gainst those who mould the age. Not understood. Not understood, the secret springs of action Which lie beneath the surface and tha show Are disregarded. With dissatisfaction We judge our neighbors, and they often go. Not understood. Not understood. How trifles often change us. The thoughtless sentence or the fancied slight Destroy long years of friendship and .estrange ns And on our souls there falls a freezing bligbt; Not understood. " Not understood, how many breasts are aching For lack of sympathy T Ah, day by day How many cheerless, lonely hearts are breaking. How many noble s)rits pass away Not understood 7 , - O fled, that men would see a little clearer. Or Judge less hanrly what they cannot see; O flod, that men wAi'd draw a little nearer To one another: thy'd be nearer Thee, And understood. serried ranks of the enemy, and so open a safe passage for the Infantry." Ap parently Ludovic possessed neither the imagination' nor the enterprise to avail himself of the offer, and the "armored wagons" were to wait more than four centuries tor their inauguration. Milk Problem the Same in All Lilies From the Chicago 1'aily News. It has been demonstrated that the cost of milk consumers could be mate rially reduced by replacing the pres ent clumsy, costly, overlapping, -sys-temless system of milk delivery with one in which the routes would not con tinually cross and recross, whenever they did not parallel one . another. The remedy for the enormous expense of milk delivery is perfectly plain. The trouble ia that nobody is really trying to keep down the expense. The con sumer haa no friends except just before elections. , Have They Sacrificed in Vain? By Tirzah Lamond Watching o'er tha field of batfle, " Deafened by its steady din, Watching as oar comrades falter. Watching as our lines grow thin, Jusl on thought is ewer with us t Just one goal w -hope to gain: That our lives wa give unsparing Are not sacrificed in Tain. "Peace on earth!" wa hear tha chorus, Kisa above tha battle's roar. And our hearts are filled with gladness. That the day will soon be o'er. When the flower of the nations To defend the right as slain. Then the blood wa shed so freely Will not be sacrificed in Tain. - Now tha war is e'er and rumors. Vague, persistent, fill the air. That . the victory, woo so dearly. Will bring nothing but despair. Do thry dare betray our comrades, . Dara they face tha world again, : If our boys who lie In Flanders Sacrificed their lires In TaiilT -Wolf Creek. Oregon, May 2S . Ragtag and Bobtail Stories from Everywhere The Airplane Doctor's Practice TEBRASKA'S "airplane doctor" waa called to treat a Kansas patient last week, says Capper's Weekly. W. D. Si dey. an oil driller, had hia skull crushed in an accident t,hat left a fragment of the bona, embedded in the brain. The nearest doctor was at Beaver City, Neb.. 80 miles away. He made the trip by airplane In 60 minutes,, and performed an operation that will save the man's life. So far as known. Sldey is the firSt Kansas man to be attended by a physician who make long trips In an airplane. The Seventeen-Vear . Insect Tha locust la coming a And soon will be tuimmlnc A meal off tha p-eea in tha park From early each a. m.. This pest commits mayhem On herbage, until it is dark. It's not so surpriiina- He'a busy dcTisina " New menus from morn until nlfiht; Perhaps if you'd fasted At long and had lasted Tou would, too, bar a food appetite. . Chicago Nawa, . Uncle Jerr Snow Says: Uncle Ham's a-ehowin' off some old war tanks to the folks at home, and they bring in lota of folka to town to aee 'em cavort around. But Uncle's a-goln to nave some lch and Indignant old tanxi to ship to Europe Jist as soon a prohi bition gits to workln', and I've a idee that them there French. Spaniards and Eyetallana will consider 'em quite a sight, too. The -News in Paragraphs' World Happenings Briefed for Benefit - of Journal Headers '' GENERAL . The magnificent edifice, the Yildia Kiosk, at Constantinople, Inhabited by the aultan, was destroyed by fire Fri day. The Methodist joint centenary cam paign has- nearly reached ita goal. Uii Saturday 1106.000,000 of the 1118,000,000 quota had been raised. Ramon de Valera, president of the "Irish republic," has been missing from Dublin for 14 days, and it la believed he is in the Lnlted States. At San Franciaco Friday 35D0 round of rifle and pistol ammunition destined for Mexican revolutionaries were seined aboard the steamer Kortigan III, Information haa reached peace con ference circles that the Italian officer serving with the Czecho-tslovak army have been replaced by Frenchmen. Dr. William T. Ellis, correspondent of the New York Herald and the only American newspaper man in the Near East, is being held a prisoner in Cairo, and Mrs. Allls of Rant a Barbara were killed in an automobile ciccident at . Crescent City. Cal., Friday. Mrs. AIUm Is a sister of Miss Pearl Bengham,of Medford, Or. t W. H. B. Schmeid. aged 83. for more than 60 yeara a prominent jeweler of Napa, Cal., shot and killed Ma aged wife Friday and then, sent a bullet through hia own heart. - Increasing business, which it la hoped may offset the railroad deficit sufficient ly to make an advance in rates unneces sary, ia reported by the railroad ad ministration in statistics for traffic last week. Charles F. Wyant of Minneapolis, president of the Mortgage Security com pany and of 14 affiliated state banks, has been- convicted of accepting de posits in a bank which he knew was not solvent. J NORTHWEST NOTES Hod"carrlers and mortar mixers ara on a strike at Yakima, demanding S3 and 6 a day. The various schools In Clarke county graduated 105 students from the eighth grade this year. r A chapter of the American legion haa been fdrmed by the returned soldiers of Klamath county. Diplomas were presented Friday night to 100 members of the graduating class of the Balem high school. George Uber, aged GO. eacaped Friday from the Insane hospital at Kalem. Asylum: authorities ay the man la harm less. . " E. A. Stuart of Seattle sent five anl mals to the annual Holsteln sale at Philadelphia which sold at auction for S 18,500. Four hundred caaea of salmon fresh, from the new Alaska pack reached Se attle Saturday on the steamer Llbby Maine. ' . Influenza Is reaching worrying pro portions at HOod River. Scores of resi dents of the county have fallen victims to the epidemic. ' The deaconess hospital of the Meth odlst Episcopal church at Spokane ha let a contract for a new addition to cost $87,000. The uteamera Senator and Victoria, first of the fleet to leave this season for Nome, Alaska, are Icebound in th Bering aea. W. G. Chandler, an architect, haa been, delegated to advertise for bids for conw struct Ion of the Marsh field armory which will cot $40,000. Lawrence Grosa. Vanled in various Northwest cities for hia I. W. W. or ganization work, was arrested In Che halia Friday by Sheriff Berry. The flrat concrete ship to be finished, by the Great Northern Concrete Ship building company at Vancouver will ba given a trial trip the first of next week. The Oak Knoll orchard near MM fords consisting of 420 acres of fruit and train land, has been Hold to Wllllarrs Hpr.ry, a Honolulu capitalist, for 115,- ooo. While playing "Boy Scout" 6-year-old John Uptegraph was ahot through th stomarh and lung at Everett, Wash., by another boy who did not know th gun waa loaded. The Roach Timber company, holder of 55.000 acres of timber In Dourim conty, will noon begin the construction? of 20 miles of railroad and two larg sawmills in Sutherlin valley. Leonard Creawell ' under arrest ' at Aberdeen on a charge of nhooMnc T'ostolUK George during a quarrel fol lowing a poker game admits (lie ahoot Ing, but claims he shot in aelf-defense. With wages from 5 to" 70 ixr cent higher than before the war. the labor4 situation In Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho ia in excellent condtion. with the supply about equal to the de mand. The body of Carl Whlllock, 13-year-old won of Mr. and Mrs. C I Whlllocla of MMford. waa found In the Rogn rivr near Goldray Thursday half a mil below, where he waa drowned Decora tion day. . -War Sa-vinjrs Plan Offers Grand Opportunity f Stories of achievement in the a renm" la . tion of War Savings stamps, sent to The Journal and accepted for publication, wiU be awarded a Thrift Bump. 1 , ' The war savings plan offers the safest, most convenient and moat profitable method of accumulating savings that haa ever been presented to any people. War Savlnga Stamps represent, without qualification, the finest Investment ever offered by any government to Its people. The government ia tapping new aprlnga of resources when it goea to all the people with a financial obli gation so designed that everyone, even the children, can become an owner of a 15 War Savings Stamp, which is virtually a United Statea government little baby bond backM up by the entire resourcea of the United States. Thrift Stamps and lflt War Rstitigs Stamps now on sale at usual agencies.