PAGE FOUR THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1914 lit ill Arizona Republican's Editorial Page ill The Arizona Republican Published by ARIZONA PUBLISHING COMPANT. The Only Paper In Arizona Published Every Day In the Tear. Only Morning Paper in Phoenix. Dwight B. Heard President and Manager Charles A. Stauffer Business Manager Garth W. Cate Assistant Business Manager J. W. Spear Editor Ira H. S. Huggett : City Editor Exclusive Morning Associated Press Dispatches. Office, Corner Second and Adams Streets. sintered at the Postofflce at Phoenix, Arizona, aa Mall Matter of the Second Class. Address all communications to THE ARIZONA REPUB LICAN. Phoenix. Arizona, TELEPHONES: Business Office 421 City Editor 433 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Daily, one month, in advance . f .75 Dally, three months, in advance 2.00 Daily, six months, in advance 4.00 Dally, one year, in advance g.00 Sundays only, by mali .. ... 2.50 THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1914 We Germans fear God, but noth ing else in the world. Bismarck. Convicts on Public Work Governor Hunt is being attacked by his political opponents and is being praised by his political friends for having decided to withdraw convicts from the roads and other public work to make room for men out of employment. The enemies of the gov wnor see in his decision a very apparent political trick. His friends regard it as a philanthropic mani festation. We are inclined to believe that the gov ernor should be the subject of neither censure nor praise. The governor Is too astute a politician to be lieve that on the very eve of the primaries a de cision, that ought to have been reached long before, could do him a great deal of good. There are many men in Arizona who have not been sent to the peni tentiary who are out of work and who need it more than the convicts do. For that matter, ever since the governor set the convicts at work, more than three years ago, there have been many men who needed employment. We have been informed by laboring men that last winter there were 400 free and unconvicted citizens in Phoenix alone who were without work or the means of living. It is right now that preference should be given by the state to such citizens, and it was right then and has been right ever since convicts were set at the work that unemployed citizens should have had. The employment of the convicts was only a fad in the beginning, an unprofitable if not an expensive one. It was, perhaps, not the expectation of the gov ernor that the employment of the convicts would be of any advantage to the taxpayers. It was a part of the governor's uplift plan. He believed that it would be better for the convicts to work on the roads and bridges than to remain in idleness in the prison. Whether or not this uplifting effect has been accomplished, we cannot say, but.it has been amply demonstrated that as a financial expedient it has not ' been profitable. The governor, therefore, de serves neither praise nor censure for abandoning it. He would, however, be deserving of severe censure by both the taxpayers and the laboring men of' the state if, after the primaries or the general election, tie should put the convicts in the place of free labor ers again. Fatally Mixed Military Plane - It is not necessary that one should be a military expert to see one reason at least why the allies were defeated by the Germans in the first great battle. It is a reason at the same time why the allies could not "have hoped to avoid defeat. In the "explana tory" dispatches of the French on Monday, It was stated that the attack upon the German front was made after having taken precautions against a Mishap. French Ambassador Jusseraud on Tuesday said: "In view of possible failure, we chose a cer tain line of defense and on that line We stand. It was the offensive which failed, -but we knew it might fail and provided our line of occupation." The French military commander, after having laid such plans, should have known not only that they might fail, but that they certainly would fail. No army can fight when it enters into the fight with a thought of retreating. An individual cannot fight effectively " when he is looking back over his shoulder for a way to make his escape. General Grant was the ablest commander In of fensive operations this country has ever produced. His battle plans were arranged frequently with seeming recklessness and want of preparation ' for contingencies. Members of his staff remonstrated with him on the eve of Pittsburg Landing. In case of defeat, they told him, transports for recrosslng the Tennessee were inadequate. Grant replied: "We do not Intend to recross the river. But if .'we are fcrced to cross it, there will be enough transports for all that will be left of us." Grant was surprised by. General A. S. Johnston and was forced back to the river, but he did not cross. A crushing; defeat was administered to the confederates at Shiloh. We can easily believe that another commander who would have taken the precaution to provide sufficient transports and who would have been sur- -lirised by so able a general as Johnston and driven to the rlejpr, would have "made use of his transports and Shiloh would not have been fought and won. Napoleon, who aiomst invariably attacked, and usually with numerically Inferior forces, seems never to have made any arrangement for the contingency of defeat. His genius was employed in devising means of going forward and not backward; in preparing to reap the fruits of victory rather than In plans to extricate himself from the wreckage, of defeat.' The reckless military leader may produce dis aster. The over-cautious leader is certain to pro duce futility,' and .futility in the end is disaster. . A Graham county citizen died of grief or by suicide ' the other day. He had been brooding over the loss of $2500 in a poker game at Bowie three weeks before. Arizona has no gambling. We mean It has an anti-gambling law. ' The Price of Wool, Etc. We are not defending Schedule K of the Payne Aldrich law which even President Taft admitted was indefensible. But we believe that the Copper Era is finding fault with it on improper grounds when it shows with some jubilation that wool is two cents higher under the present tariff law than it was under the iniquitous Schedule K of the old law. To pro claim that the higher price of wool is traceable to reduced duties is subversive of the democratic con tention that the old tariff law had much, if not all, to do with the high cost of living. Events beyond the operation of tariff laws are fixing or have fixed the prices of wool and many other commodities. The Balkan war, for instance, made it unnecessary for the present to legislate regarding the price of wool, which would be about the same in this country now under a prohibitive tariff law as it would be under free trade. Likewise, by reason of the general European war, many of the schedules of our present tariff law will be dead letters for many months to come. As Paris next winter will probably not be at tractive to the tourists who have flocked there in the past, the Tucson chamber of commerce is ad vertising the desirability of that town as a center of pleasure. Tucson may lack some of the attrac tions of Paris, but it has something to offer in the way of climate that Paris never had, even when there were not so many Germans about as contem plate enjoying the hospitality of that gay capital next winter. The Prince of Monaco wants to engage in the war, not as a nation, but as an individual. If he could be turned loose against the German army with his roulette wheel and other devices, the kaiser would have to stop hostilities for lack of funds. We suppose the Austrian declaration of war against Japan was made only for the purpose of keep ing the record straight. A SUMMONS TO AMERICAN ENERGY Vj. . (Chicgao Evening Post.) War is cutting off from our manufacturers a thousand and one important ingredients made abroad. . The fact should be an immediate summons to AmeTican ingenuity. We should turn our immense reserve of capital, energy and organization to producing these things for ourselves. We should not close our factories mournfully -and say that we cannot continue busi ness. . - ' We have met just this crisis in the past and built up great industries simply because we had to do sq for our own preservation. The civil war suddenly cut off the New Or leans grain market from the' northwest. At onee the route of shipment shifted. Chicago, during all four years of the war, handled 20.000,000 bushels of grain annually on its way between East and West. Europe had to have our grain during that era because of her crop failures. And, despite the drain of war, we gave it to her and developed mightily our own strength in so doing. This city was established as the world's grain market, as it, is today. For Illinois the president of the State Agricul tural Society in 1864 thus summed up the industrial result of the war period: "Observe that this state and this people of Illinois are making more rapid progress in popula tion than in any former period; then realize, if you can, that, all this is occurring and has occured in the midst of a war the most stupendous ever pros ecuted among men." Before the war Chicago's stockyards had been getting their immense supplies of salt from Vir ginia fields or from importations at New Orleans. War cut off this supply. At once neglected salt wells along the Saginaw river in Michigan were de veloped until they were producing 500,000 barrels a year. Our packers used this near-home supply. And, incidentally, along the twenty-three miles of the Saginaw river the thriving towns of Saginaw and Bay City were created. This was a case when need stimulated us Into appreciation and use of overlooked opportunities at our own door. It is a fact, indeed, that our whole packing su premacy was- established by the war. St. Louis, Cincinnati and ' Louisville, our rivals in this indus try, were simply eliminated by the closing of the South. And Chicago not only for her own sake but for the sake of the country rose to meet the demanas thus laid upon her to furnish meat to the nation. War made us take advantage of unappreciated inventions. The West did not use harvesting ma chinery before 1860. The scythe and "cradle" were the implements of the harvest. War took the young farmers from the fields, and the. West filled their places by buying thous ands of the theretofore rather despised reapers. As a result our crop production went up instead of down. War stimulated Invention. The armies had to have shoes. The could not be made rapidly enough In . the little shoemaldng shops, L. R. -Blake invented the machine which sewed the up pers to the soles, and raised shoe production one hundredfold per day. - The same Influence worked in other lines of endeavor. . ; -. "More patents," says Emerson D. Fite In his work on civil war industrial conditions, "were is sued in the height of the war in the North alone than ever before in the whole Union. - "The period of prolonged war, with Its ardent national -pride, scarcity of labor, abnormally active production and the creation of new industries, stimulated effectiveness to the highest pitch. In ventors had never before found such high in centives." . " " Today the fact that some eastern factories of highly manufactured products are putting their men on half time shows that we are feeling the loss of our imports. Tet we are not now subject to the actual -drain of war as we were in the '60s. We have an im mensely more powerful commercial machinery to direct toward the weak spots thus . suddenly de veloped In our manufacturing structure. We should at once proceed to develop the yet undeveloped resources of this continent; we should foster invention; we should pick up the. little home industries which, have faded because their products could be obtained more cheaply or more conven iently abroad; we should direct every effort to stand upon our own manufacturing foundation. - This done, we shall find ourselves at the war's end with a tremendous national gain wherewith to offset our share in the world's payment for this Scene of the Great Gathering of Shriners y ' mi. , ft - v- ,sa : ; . uc 1';- 'jSf&i-v- . y K Sleep Party Loyalty S R WAIT MiRAN I I ruuxrLrLrunjnjAAfrtfVvvvv-.-'V-i-i-i--i-i- - -- -- -- ----- T n-n ... mr.u. tlrtd Hilt QtlH find K1frh U'flilp yet awake, -There's no use living any more, life's such a grievous fake. It's nothing but a round of toil and tears and things like those; my heart is sorer than a boil, I have so many woes.' While grumbling thus f start to snore until the bedsprings rock and then, for seven hours or more, I sleep around a block. Ah, far and wide my snores are flung, till wakeful neighbors yell; I learned to sleep when I was young, my tutors taught me well. For seven hours, or maybe nine, I sleep with ardent zeal; then, in this withered heart of mine, new energy I feel. I murmur, as I don my rags, "How foolish is despair! I don't indorse those dismal wags who say that life's a snare. I'm glad that I have work to do, and, wish I had some more; I'll gayly toil the long, day through, enjoying every chore. I feel as fresh and free from aches as Adam ere his fall; bring on your wildcats and your snakes, and I shall whip them all!" Oh, sleep! It is the only dope that's never known to fall, that brings new courage, faith and hope, when man is tired and stale. BEACON FIRES OF HOPE (Chicago Evening Post) On the edges of war come victories of peace which are admirable enough to make the great tragedy grow dimmer for a moment. England is in peril. For the first time in all the story, of centuries past Ireland rises and throws her united aid to the country that has misunder stood and oppressed her. In the house of com mons John Redmond offers to the Sassenach the Nationalist volunteers, and guarantees that every redcoat may be withdrawn from his island. Sir Edward Carson makes the same offer in behalf of Protestant Ulster. Think what this means. Irish troops have fought against England from Fontenoy down to the Boer war. Look, too, to Italy. The stan.chness with which King Victor Emanuel has held his country neu tral is a fine tribute to the real solidity of the Italian nation. The people will not go to war in behalf of Austria, and the king feels himself bound to follow their desire in this crisis. Democracy and peace win a victory. Norway and Sweden have shaken hands under the pressure of events. They have formally agreed not to war ovith one another, no matter how they may be forced to turn in the course of events. They ought to make this bond for all time. Broth erhood' prevails. Holland is making itself a hospital and supply station for all the countries around. Portugal is displaying her readiness to come to help in all ways short of war the British Empire, to which she owes so historic a debt. Gratitude appears on the checkerboard of politics. And it does not do nowadays to count the small nations as unimportant factors in the struggle. Belgium has shown what a small nation can do.' Canada's gift to England of 1,000,01)0 sacks of flour is another heartening happening. It shows pity and brotherhood. The great gift for the Red Cross from Ger mans and Austrians in the United JJtates is an other sign of the stirring of those higher qualities which seem so inconsistent with war. It Is a black lookout over the world today. But upon the peaks, here and there, we may see the flaTe of the white light of that human civilization which last : week seemed trampled out in complete darkness. SHARP The successful farmer has to be sharp as a raHser. Lippincott's. , immense destruction. And the world will be glad -to take the service which we can offer her. '-' Let our business men look back to the way in which their fathers met the manufacturing crisis . in the war of the rebellion. What man has done man can do. , Bv GEORGE FITCH Author of "At Good Old Siwash" -- -- -- -''"---" - - -i-i-i-.-,-.-ii-m.njT rmnru-Lruinnnj Party loyalty is the glue which binds the voter to the politician. It is the chief stock-in-trade of the latter. Without party loyalty he would be as helpless as a mason without mortar. Whenever a politician's voters drop off of him he ia a gone gosling and has to spend the rest of his life work ing. Therefore party loyalty means more to the politician than the ten commandments or the con- . stitution or Roberts' rules of order. He can get along without all of these, but without party loyalty he can't make the voters stick to him while he fixes conventions, ignores platforms and does hu- NICE WORK, CUD TOP. I KMO TJ fOH THE Gooo of iwe -P.iy morous things with the Deciara'tion of Independence. The politician uses party loyalty as a cement, but the voter uses it as a substitute for brains. If a voter has enough party loyalty he can get along without thinking at all. This is a great convenience for the voter hut it is an even greater blessing for the politician who is using his party for revenue only, and who would be sadly bothered if all the voters insisted on doing their own thinking before voting. Party loyalty holds the party together in ad versity and enables it to sweep gloriously to vic tory later on. Sometimes it sweeps to victory like a crusader's vessel and sometimes like a pirate ship, but the man who is afflicted with party loy alty doesn't care how it cruises, just so it gets there. .The man who has party loyalty in its paresis state believes that no man in his own party can be bad and that no man in another party can be very good, lie knows the difference between right and wrong, but believes 4hat whatever wrong his party does is right. He hates wickedness and graft, but uiAvxivxfvxn.ravTj-iri.nnAnri-i-i-i- -i-i-i- .ifiis mean. It's worth knowing about, and we have a book on the subject by Coburn of Kansas which we will gladly loan you. The Phoenix Idle Money Deposited in our Savings Depart ment will pay you 4 Interest THE VALLEY BANK If You Buy Real Estate and Want Abstract of Title WE built business, constantly and successfully giving com plete abstracts, with. a force of men experienced in detail. YOU can get just what you want from us.V If in doubt, consult with us. ' Phoenix Title and Trust Co. 18 North First Avenue. -innn.nririr.nnnnnqn.r? there is one greater sin than those not voting the straight ticket. If we had less party loyalty in this country we could have a great deal more national loyalty, and the smooth grafters who edged into control of a party could have that party to themselves. WHEN ALL YOUR CHILDREN ARE GONE In the September American Magazine a man who has been married twenty-five years writes "A Husband's . Story" in which he relates the exper iences he and his wife had in bringing up their children.. As is the habit - with fathers and moth ers they made all sort of plans for their children, most of which .. were never realized because the children, as is usual, took affairs intq their own hands and made and executed their own plans. On the futility of trying to arrange things for yoru children the author says in conclusion: "So all our planning for the children merely served to prove, that it is futile to strive to ar range the lives of others,' and that the function of the parent is chiefly advisory- Nor were we much disappointed at the failure of our plans. After all, what we sought was their happiness and welfare, and that they found them in ways other than those we devised makes little difference. "So ' my wife and I are left alone in the cage. With the flight of each fledgling I felt her com ing closer and closer to me. She 'bosses' me too much even now, and makes too much fuss over me when my feet are wet; but otherwise she is as perfect as she was when a bride." CASEY AT THE BAT De Wolf Hopper, whose name will ever be as sociated with "Casey at the Bat," is something of a batsman himself when it comes to a game of repartee. At a dinner party he had finished his speech, and as he sat down a lawyer arose, shoved his hands deep into his trousers pockets as was his habit and laughingly inquired. "Doesn't it strike this company as a little un usual that a professional comedian should be funny?" When the laughter that greeted this sally had subsided, De Wolf Hopper drawled out: 'Doesn't it strike this company as a little un usual that a lawyer should have his hands in his own pockets?" The Popular Magazine. SHE EXPLAINS "You have your father's eyes," declared grand ma, looking earnestly at the young girl. "And you have your mother's hair." "No, . this is sister's hair," faltered the girl. "And she said I could borrow it." Kansas City Journal. ta ww....---- --.-.-. Silos It has been determined by experiment that the feed ing of silage increases the milk flow from 10 to 30 per cent. . Think what even a 10 per cent, increase from all the cows of the Salt River Vallev would National Bank