3 TITE MORNING OREGONIAN. fUESDAT. FEBRUARY 13, 1917. y PORTLAND. OBEGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Fostofflce a second-cla9S mail matter. Eubscriptlon rates Invariably In advance: (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year ...$8 00 Daily Sunday Included, alx months 4.26 Daily. Sunday Included, three months... 2.25 Daily. Sunday included, one month. .... .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 0.00 Daily, without Sunday, three months... 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month. X. .60 Weekly, one year. ............. 1.60 Sunday, one year. .................... 2.50 Sunday and Weekly 8.50 (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, one year. ...... 9.00 Dally, Sunday included, one month..... .75 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express order or personal . check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency arc at sender's risk. Give postoffic address in full, including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent; IS to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 rents; 50 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 6 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage double rates. Lantern Business Office Verree St Conk lin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree - Conklin, Steger building, Chicago; San Francisco representative, R. J. Bidwell, 742 Market street. FOBTLAND, TUESDAY, 1B. IS 1917. let on the subject and has-enlisted the aid off several patriotic organizations. Even at this crowded session Congrress should find time to provide for its purchase and preservation. By thus honoring one of its great men the Na tion would honor itself. CONSTRUCTIVE ROAD PLAS. The proposal to issue state bonds for $7,900,000 to build roads sounds formidable; but it is nevertheless clear and comprehensive In its essentials and altogether promising" of a satis factory solution of the perplexing and costly road problem. Let It be recalled. In any consider ation of roads and their cost, that the sums expended In Oregon in any given year mount to a gigantic total. It is hardly credible, but It is true, that the average outlay in state, county and district for the past ten years has reached the staggering (estimated) maximum of $5,000,000 -aer annum, or $50,000,000 for the decennium. By comparison, then, the sum of $7,900, 000 to be expended by the state, not at once, nor in any stated time, is not beyond bounds. With the limitations of the Government assignment for post roads to five years, and of forest reserve roads to five years, the major portion of the authorized sum of $7, 900,000 would be spent In the period of five years. It has been understood that the state is for some unknown reason committed to a financial policy which permits the issuance of state bonds for no purpose; but it is not true. The people last November, by a large vote, authorized the issuance of $18,000,000 rural credit bonds, and the Legisla ture is actively at work devising the machinery to make the $18,000,000 plan effective and advantageous to the legitimate borrower.. So $7,900,000, divided, say, into units for each of five years, is not a stupendous sum. Nor is it likely to prove a burden on the taxpayer. A feature of . the $7,900,000 project which commends it strongly to the citizen is the simple and easy finance by which the annual interest is to be paid and the bonds to be completely retired by amortization over a twenty-five-year period. It is astonishing to note, but it is demonstrably true, that the whole issue may be cared for by the quarter-mill state tax (as. at pres ent) and by the proposed automobile tax. ' The plan is that the amount raised from motor cars is to be appropriated to hard surfacing of roads, now ready or to be made ready by the counties for paving. It is the era of hard surface roads. It is imperative that main-traveled thoroughfares be built to stand the heaviest traffic. The mo tor car is the greatest contributor to road deterioration. No road, unless it be paved, will long withstand the se vere attrition of speedy and weighty automobiles. The road must be built to withstand the friction of heavy traffic, or the annual cost of upkeep must continue to be enormous. It is fair that the automobile, which makes road paving necessary, should bear the expense, or the large portion of it. That is just what the new plan ar ranges. It is impossible to deny its equity; and we do not think that the automobile owner, who will certainly make a large saving in gasoline and in wear and tear on his car and tires by better roads, will offer any ob Jeotion. It is to be noted that .the measure provides for. the construction of post roads and forest reserve roads, meet ing the Government appropriation, throughout the state; and provision is made by which the more remote sec tions will be reached and aided. It in hard to see how any section, or any Interest, can offer, serious and valid criticism. The city, and particularly Portland, is to get nothing at all, ex cept the very great and undeniable indirect benefit. The country is to get It all. ' The bond plan, constructive ..nd equitable as it is. and giving a great and needed impetus to road construc tion in Oregon, deserves the immediate and attentive consideration of the Legislature. In its fundamentals The Oregonian thinks the consideration should be favorable. THE SAME BRYAN. Mr. Bryan's newest illustration of the supreme merits of a turn-your-other-cheek pacifism is stated thusly: It Is no surrender of a right to postpone enforcement of it. For Instance, if I am on the sidewalk and see a drunken chauffeur running his car toward me I know he has no right to come up on the sidewalk, but I would prefer to step aside and settle with him when he is sober Instead of standing on my rights and leaving my widow to settle with htm. Any American citizen worthy the name, other than Bryan, would not step aside but would take summary measures to apprehend a drunken chauffeur running amuck, in order to save the lives of inhocent women and children, and men as well, jeopardized by his lawless recklessness. Bryan would wait until the mischief was done and then reason with the mad man. The New York Sun revives recol lection of a speech made ry Bryan in Omaha, June 14, 1898, where he ap peared to have other ideas. He then said: Universal peace cannot come until Justice Is enthroned throughout the world. Jehovah deals with nations as he deals with . men, and for both decrees that the wages of sin is death. Until the right .has triumphed tn every land and love reigns in every heart government must, as a last resort, appeal to force. As long as the oppressor la deaf to the voice of reason, so long must the citizen accustom his shoulder to the musket and his hand to the saber. Having differing notions at differ ent times, he's yet the same Bryan. SAVE THE FISHERIES. The Legislature has importunities from many sources for appropriations, and a rreat part of them are worthy. Yet unner the .barrier of the 6 per cent limitation it is impossible to meet all demands and even some de mands which otherwise would and should receive favorable consideration. On that account. The Oregonian has refrained from urging the Legislature to make specific appropriations. Yet it feels justified in departing from its practice to call attention to the great importance of several fisheries bills. Some of them are: House bill 234. by Mann Relating to im provements at Bonneville hatchery. House bill 208. by Bellland Relating to Improvements at Clatskanle hatchery. Mouse bill- llta. by Lane County delegation For Oregon City fishway, and Upper Wil lamette and McKenzle hatcheries. House bill 212, by P.owe For hatcheries n District Two and their operation. fcenale bill 135. by Handley For work, of juasier isn warden. What can be done to promote the fishing industry in Oregon ought to be done. The maintenance of hatcheries is indispensable, for without them there will soon be no fishing. To neglect the hatchery, then, will be ruinous. onstrated that with this percentage added the total cost is less than that jf ships built at Government yards. Private enterprise has proved the abil ity of the country to provide merchant ships, and these ships will remain un der the American flag if Congress will make it possible to operate them at the same cost as under foreign flags. Prix-ate enterprise will supply all munitions of war at a fixed per centage over cost. It gives us far more efficient telegraph and telephone service under Government regulation than any nation has - nder govern ment ownership. Mr. Daniels' policy has served only one useful purpose as a demonstration of Governmental incapacity to do these things prompt ly, efficiently and economically. TEACHERS IX ' LOCK-STEPT Not only is efficiency of the schools menaced by the Senate bill to amend the tenure law but the welfare of the teachers is adversely involved. The law in its practical operation would prevent transfers or dismissals. The history of hearings- under the present .system reveals that they vir tually turn into a trial of the superin tendent or one of the members of the School Board under direction of a skillful lawyer. A self-respecting su perintendent cannot be expected to make himself the frequent target of th pique-inspired criticisms that in variably assail a successful man in that position. Erection of a new authority over dismissals and transfers of teachers means that there will be no dismissals or transfers. Lower efficiency would consequently follow. With low effi ciency there is slender prospect of better pay for teachers. The best teachers would be kept in lock-step with poor teachers. There would be fewer promotions because there would be fewer vacancies. The tendency of such a law is to lower the teaching standard and to compress all teachers into the gauge of the least fit. The OregoAian speaks out of a high regard for the teacher's profession. It cannot believe that, if there is a demand by teachers for this law, It has been well considered. Surely devotion to the cause of edu cation and pride in efficient service have greater weight with teachers as a class than license to an individual here and there to kick up a public disturbance over the Judgment of the Superintendent or School Board. CCRATITE POWER OF WORK. The therapeutic value of work is well illustrated by a series of experi ments made in the past two years In the Connecticut Hospital for the In sane, and by the practical application of similar principles in other institu tions for the care of those afflicted with mental disorders in more or less serious form. Recent development of the work idea in Connecticut has in creased the proportion of patients who are usefully employed from 38 to 48 per cent, without compulsion. The beneficial effects upon the patients, while not capable of being stated in figures, is believed to have been even greater. It is not strange when one consid ers how men of sound mind de teriorate under enforced idleness that it should be concluded that employ ment is a palliative. If not a cure, for many forms of. so-called insanity not complicated by Incapacitating physi cal degeneration. The public at large has been accustomed to regard the hospital for the Insane as a purely custodial institution, which it is not. Its still more important function is to restore mental health and where possible to fit the patients for useful economic lives. Employment, first for the hands and then, by natural devel opment, for the mind, is found to take first rank among the agencies em ployed. Occupational education de velops mental power; it also has an Indirect effect by takjng the patient "out of himself," by creating a new interest to take the place of the ex aggerated ego that aggravates insan ity. Those who are suitably employed thrive encouragingly, and there are many Instances in which the process of awakening new interest has re sulted in restoring mental health. . An instance officially reported in the institution to which reference is made illustrates the point. No com pulsion to induce the patients to work is exercised, but there are various methods of coaxing them. Seasonable entertainments are given for those who" are engaged in some form of work, and on one occasion a bazaar was held. One of the women patients who had persistently refused to do anything but sit In her cell, surprised the authorities by prerenting herself for admission, offering as her ticket of admission a piece of fancywork that she had done secretly. She had caught something of the spirit, but there was a curious mental twist that had prevented her from surrendering openly until the last moment. It is of scientific value to know that her malady has shown signs of continual improvement ever since. It is a somewhat common fancy of the unthinking that heaven is a place where no one has anything to do. As a matter of fact, a place where any appreciable number of individuals are doomed to unemployment soon de velops into a condition quite the re verse of heaven. This has been shown by the penal experience of ages, and the world is getting away from it as fast as it is able to do so. Without work, preferably of the kind in which the worker can take a lively interest, any man soon decays. Old-time ship masters believed in the adage that Satan finds mischief for idle hands to do and strained every effort to keep their sailors employed on long voy ages, but they grasped only half the truth when they set them at doing and undoing the same things over and over again. Futility has no part in the scheme. But work in which prog ress is being made is not only a rem edy for mental disturbance but a val uable preventive of mental, moral and physical decay. other peoples, even of the same re ligious faith as themselves. v Dr. Herrick points out that -eventually a solemn duty will fall upon Americans in. this connection. He would not stay the trend away from physical government by Turkey ever others, but he pleads for sympathy for those Turks who are striving at the same time to raise their own peo ple. He says that, contrary to popular belief, there are many of these, nd he cites instances. They are at the parting of the ways. Their govern ment and their religion both have failed them. He beileves the time will soon be ripe for extending them a practical helping hand. This will not take the form of food ships and industrial investments, but of sym pathy and understanding. Through this, it Is predicted, wHl come In the next century an even greater regener ation of the Turk than there has been destruction of his .temporal, power in the last 100 years. It indicates that a large share of the work of the mis sionaries in the near future will be concentrated in the dwelling places of the Turk, under whatever rule the map makers after the present war may leave him. Gleams Through the Mist By Dram Collins. DESERVING OF GREATER REAOWJI Popular Knowledge of Ore Ron's Great Senator and Soldier Lac-klns. EUGENE, Or., Fe"b. 10. (To the A VALEXTIXE. Editor.) Mr. Beck's letter and your Babykln. Babykin. with big, bright editorial of this date embolden me to . i aua sometmng to toe senator naivi Elfish and Impish and soft and pink; th- r-ivti wr mv .Mention was Hither and listen, who art so. wise, called to the ereat speech made by While I tell you the thoughts that I Senator Baker. August 1. 1861. The think, think, think. There Is a wind that whistled through the street. A tiny wind, a tricky wind, and mirthfully it blew. Touselling the petals of the daisies atl bold denunciation of those Southern my feet; Senators that still retained their seats A gusty soul of Joyousness a soul in cur Congress, his zeal for the Union like you. . fact that Baker was a friend of Presi dent Lincoln and was chosen to Intro duce him at the time of the first in augural, that upon the day of the speech he was dressed in uniform. booted and spurred as he came from the field of military operations, his In Other Days The success of a subterfuge in the introduction of a new and Important food supply is shown by Secretary Redfield's report that packers of the newly renamed grayfish are already unable to meet more than one-tenth of the demand for the product, and that the Department of Commerce is being flooded with requests for de tailed information, coming from points from Maine to Oregon. Experiments have shown that the fish Is entirely free from uric acid, and the value of a little hocuspocus tn matters of this kind is indicated by the state ment that while the presence of this substance in small quantities in all meats, in other fishes and in all poul try has not the faintest significance from the standpoint of public health, the fact nevertheless has had a prac tical effect in reassuring many pros pective consumers who always hesi tate to try new things, however low priced and nutritious they may be. Investigations along the line of find ing uses for the by-products of the grayfish cannery also promise to have an important bearing upon the eco nomic future of the fish. A MEMORIAL TO JEFFERSON. No partisan motive should interfere with the purchase of Monticello by Congress as a National memorial to Thomas Jefferson. He stood second only to Washington among the found-; ers of the republic. He was the author of the Declaration of Independence, which has taken its place In history side by side with the Magna Charta of England and the Declaration of the Rights of Man of France. By the Louisiana purchase he made the lar gest single addition to the territory of the United Statss and he cleared the way for the extension of the republic to the Pacific Ocean. As the third President, he did much to solidify the structure which Washington had be gun. Mount Vernon has become the prop erty of the Nation as a memorial to the man who won victory for the Na tion in the field. The Hermitage has been saved by women who raised by public subscription the funds for its purchase, and it is now preserved as a memorial to Andrew Jackson, the victor of New Orleans. Arlington has been purchased and made a National cemetery for the soldier dead In mem ory of the chivalrous leader of the Confederacy. The Lincoln cabin in Kentucky has been handed over to the Nation by Its purchasers as a memorial to the martyr President who saved the Union, while the Lincoln home at Springfield, III., is owned by the state and is maintained by an as sociation of women. It Is fitting that equal honor be done to Jefferson, who was Washington's co-worker in diplomacy. Monticello was bought at auction by Commodore Uriah P. Levy, who be queathed it to the Nation, but the will was broken by his relatives and passed to Jefferson M. Levy, his nephew. The wife of Representative Martin W.-Llt tleton is now leading the movement for Its purchase, has written a paraph There should be no difficulty about nacting the bill placing all postmas ters under civil service rules, provided both parties play fair. The most valid criticism of the practice followed by former Presidents, of covering a host offices into the classified service. has been that it gave permanent tenure to partisan appointees. On this plea Postmaster-General Burleson subjected incumbents of fourth-class postoffices to examination In competition with ther candidates, but Impartiality de manded that. If they passed creditably, they should be retained. Instead, he picked one othe three highest and. If there was a Democrat among them, picked him, though the Incumbent was among the three. Though he had some ground for charging that former Presidents had used the civil service law to keep Republicans in, he used it to turn them out ami to put Demo crats in. The best thing done in a long time Is the order made to bar small boys from the boxing matches. Not that it is not a good idea to keep them in terested, for the boy who is "handy with his mitts" is the lad who gets along; but they are out of place at events for men. In a few years their time will come and they must be con tent until then. Exception might be made, however. In the case of a boy who accompanies his father. Sport ing blood Is "good stuff to develop in the family. DANIELS' POLICY FAILS. The strongest condemnation of Sec retary Daniels' policy of building naval vessels in Government yards, also of his general policy of haying war ma terial manufactured - by the Govern ment. Is his own record in that re spect. Congress authorized construc tion of many vessels for the Navy in the last four years, and the public was caused to nourish the fond delusion that many of these additions have actually been made. In fact, the only actual- additions to the Navy during that period have been four destroyers. Ships, even of the smallest type, which were authorized as long ago as 1912, are still under construction. Our na val preparedness is still on paper or on the ways. Mr. Daniels' policy has already failed. ' Congress has contributed to its failure by vetoing the efficiency system which "has succeeded at pri vate plants. The leisurely methods and official red tape of the naval bureaucrats do their part. Yet Mr. Daniels proposes to carry it farther by -equipping more yards for Govern ment construction, by having armor, projectiles and nitrates manufactured by the Government. He classes pri vate corporations which are engaged in munition manufacture as grafters. Whenever he encounters an obstacle to getting work done by private con tract on his terms, he exclaims, "Let Josephus do it!" - - . This, policy is not peculiar to him; it is common to the entire Adminis tration. When we need merchant ships. Secretary McAdoo wants the Government to build them. Postmaster-General Burleson wants the Government to operate telegraph and telephone lines, and gives a further illustration of the workings of bureau cracy by proposing to scrap' the pneu matic mail tubes in the great cities and use thousands of automobiles in moving the mails, thus providing fat contracts for automobile manufactur ers and many jobs' for "deserving Democrats." Secretary Lane proposes to hold the West under perpetual landlordism and make more jobs by leasing the public land. ' It is time to call a halt on this wholesale .extension of bureaucratic socialism. Private enterprise is ready to build warshjps at a fair percentage over actual cost, and It has been dem- DECLINE OF TURKISH POWER. Striking figures showing the rapid decline of the power of Islam as a physical governmental force, compiled by Dr. George I Herrick, who has labored more than half a century as a missionary In the Turkish empire are given In a recent article in the Review of Reviews. It Is not a cen tury since Turkey, in addition to its great possessions in Asia, controlled the territory now held by all the Bat kan states, including both Greece and rtoumania, ana neia dominion over Egypt and almost all of Northern Africa, and over the islands of the Aegean Sea and the Eastern Mediter ranean. Turkey was then a formid able' power In Europe, and on the sea was far from negligible. But her navy was shattered at the battle of Navarino In 18 27 by the united fleets of England, France and Russia, the same nations now taking the lead in an effort to complete the destruction of Turkish power on land. There aro men still living who witnessed the sev ering of Greece from Turkey in 1832 of Roumania in 1861, Serbia in 1867 Montenegro in 1878. Egypt in 1835 Bulgaria in 1879, Bosnia in 1908 Tripoli In 1912 and Albania, Mace donia and the island, in 1913. Now the same powers that once crushed the Turkish power on the water have set themselves to the task of pushing the empire over the line into Asia. No such momentous events ever have occurred to one nation in a single century. But the question now is whether, if the entente allies are victorious, the process will stop with the exclusion of the Turkish government from Eu rope. Russia is reported to be mak lng some progress in Asia Minor and the British are holding territory in the region of the Tigris territory that will not be abandoned in the event of anything resembling complete vie tory. .. There are 90,000,000 Moslems under British rule in India and 80 000,000 more -subjects of Russia, France. Holland and other non-Isla mic powers. There are not more than 27,000,000 Moslem subjects of Moslem rulers, and these are In Turkey, Per sla and Afghanistan. In he main the Moslems have proved loyal to their later rulers at least, efforts to in duce them to rise agaii.st these have failed. It would seem that this has been due in large measure to th greater material advancement possible under non-Moslem rule, to superior forms of justice administered and to the greater capacity for government manifested by the Christian nations The facts Justify the assertion of Lord Bryce recently that the Turks have shown utter Incapacity for ruling over cause, and his tragic death so soon afterwards at Ball's Bluff, all this . i . i , . . i. . . i .. rr.1 i . i . si ! .H irreauy impressed my juuuiiui I flrnmat Ytut rtnf or tn most aervice- A wrinkly beam, a twlnkly beam of aDie the North that occurred in Con- dancing gold on blue, 1 cress during that wonderful period, in That flashed upon the willows where fact, much reading since has not great . v - vu. i 1 iy ensnared toat eariy impreasiuo. iaao nunc JCCfcWGO L. . . , I - . T . , . , , . . . I oiuld M. Qiliu t w VJ p, - A boui Ql llgnt ana iibuiouhiccoi. v..-,, .nrnrlserl that so little was popu- a soul like you. Urlv known here of Baker. Perhaps if ia r f mihltf declamation There was a baby faun that skipped Btm obtained, our young people might ?$ou.rf- upon which the Board of among the reeds. know more of him. With a view oi i jreeieraay. is increas Piping on a tiny flute, and merrily trying to keep green tne memory oi it blew, Twenty-five Tears Afo. From The Oregonian of Feb. 13. 1S92. Chicago. Feb. 12. The Marquette Club celebrated the birthday of Abra ham Lincoln with a banquet at the Auditorium Hotel tonight, at which: covers were laid for over 600 persons. Guthrie, O. T., Feb. 12. Boomers to the number of 20.000 are making ar rangements to move to the Cherokee strip March 22, unless Congress takes action toward opening it before then French's Park Theater will reopen next Tuesday evening with that inter esting play. "Captain Swift." Arthur Forrest is the star, and he is supported by a strong company. Everybody who has read the poetry or novels of Sir Walter Scott has seen the throstle or mavis frequently men tioned in them. A number of these birds were among those imported here from Germany. Last year' they made nests and reared young tn the large trees at Ninth and Main streets. New Yorki Feb. 12. The typhus Till all the world about it danced, as light as thistle seeds, . A soul of heedless happiness a soul like you. And once there was a kitty-cat with I oft, soft fur That purred and burrowed at my riAclr as hahv Vlttena do; I held her gently In my arm, and liked With highest "Tthen'renwneS? this brave and patriotic Oregonian. I nrrntn the following lines. ODC6 OQ & time: EDWARD DICKINSON BAKER. O Oregon, dost thou forget No longer vaunt his name Nor treasure up hie tame N'nr stir ai Ions ago. When first the word came alow But sent hot blood to cneeic And made the full heart speak? ing hour by hour. No man can tell its extent at this writing. to hear her purr. A cutey, cuddly, kltteny thing, soft like you. And all the things In all the world that seem so soft and bright. In counsel wise, in eixon iree. AnA L-ha in eloausnt as he? But with his country's flat; assailed , His pleasure In debate had failed. Forth from the senate men no urw. Brave, eager, . in our Federal blue. -m,v 17 " ... iu 1 or roos alert ana irienas so siow. the kitty that I knew. It seems to me, the while I make this little song tonight. Are round me to remind me. O, so prettily, of you. Of doubt and treachery everywhere. Our good great Lincoln near despair! I only name one fatal day When treason dared its boldest play, For untrained seal Its worn had done Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonian of Feb. 13. 1S09. A private letter from Prnrnp Agasslz, the famous scientist, to a tnena in ban Francisco states he will probably come West early next Spring for the purpose of visiting the Yo semlte Valley and other natural curi osities of the Pacific Coast. The town of Lewlston. In Idaho T.r- rltory. has been lncornorated aa n f-tr A Mayor, four Councilmen. a Recorder, a. i reasurer ana a Marshal are to be elected in March. Several flags were at tonmmf terday in this city in honor of the an niversary of the birth of Abraham Lin coln. We notice that several persons on Front street, toward the upper end of So elfish. Impish Babykln. who listens unto this. Let's make a little bargain 'twlxt your little heart and mine. And witness it and seal.lt with a aticky baby kiss. That each of us to each of us will be a Valentine. e e Sir," said the Courteous Office Boy, dashing breathlessly into the -sanctum have the bards begun to twitter yet In the Spring saengerfest?" "No yet." I said, "but soon." "The geese are flying North," said the C. O. B., bitterly, and, it seemed to me Irrelevantly. 'But before they begin to twitter, I life outwelgha the cause of right. would twit you further about the sea son myself, if I have your permission.' 'You have," I said, "but you must understand before you sing a note that Sweeps ever to a greater tide: T 1 nnf woEtili. vou as a Bard." An1 that vast flood the river meets, "Barred, so to speak," retorted C. O. B., and before I could take fur- Or thundering tears at Tillamook, ther measure, for self-protection, he darlnd hVh end.U,r. tuned up nis Aaara s tippie tiuvi ucbuu And to tne dauntless liberty a continuation of his campaign of Of the wide, unconquered sea. frightfulness which he had launched Sunday. Spring; Pome ton tinned. went outdoors last night, and tried In vain to get once more inside; I beat the door With roar on roar. But could not bore Inside once more. What made the door to do this thing? Correct you are! It was And" shattered ranks proclaimed Bull Run. town, are setting shade trees along the Our senate rang with traitorous boast borders of the sidewalks. Mor UT tnose wno praised wio truot ; . ( . , . " tu oe paid to this item or Of those who on And urged acceptance or demands That made our sections separate lands. Aghast men heard and held their breath. It seemed the Nation faced Its death. ornamentation city. in every part of the The fatalities attending the flro in the second-class hotel at Minneapolis show the danger that is always pres ent in that kind of hostelry; but all cannot pay a high price and many must take the chance. One thing can be done, however, and that Is to pro vide enough fire escapes to save guests. Germany tells of the "kills" made by submarines, but John Bull only smiles and says nothing about the number of U-boats he has killed or captured. What's the old boy's game? Has he caught any of them or does he enjoy keeping Germany worrying and guessing? I If the United States can impress the world with the idea that we have new devices for destroying all the new weapons that can be used against us, they may be afraid to fight us. In that class would fall Admiral Fiske's airplane torpedo. Those optimistic Hood River fel lows are counting on this year's apple crop. Hood River is one place where one can count the chickens before they are hatched and tally even. A .man at San Jose says he has a device that will locate the presence of gold. That's nothing. In Portland a man can stand on any business cor ner and point to hoards of it. Then, suddely. aa soldier clad He stood, our man, our Galahad. No glittering armor dazed the sight. But flamed he with Indignant right. "What here, from very Senate seat. Men glory over our defeat? And here propose a craven peace . That agony of war my cease? Why, in the Senate of great Rome, When liberty had there her home. Who there had made such words his own. Had from Tarplean rock been thrown." And so he spoke and traintora feared. He spoke and patriot hearts were cheered. Then turned he where death's arrows speed. Like Warren and like Wlnkelreld. To prove that in earth's endless fight O, Oregon, dost thou forget? Thy mountains, that so well he knew. Still thrust themselves to cloudless blue; Thy river, uncontrolled and wide. See advertisement of Rmltv. TrtoV. Market. He has just received the first smelt of the season. SEWARD D. ALLEN. QUERIES IS INTERNATIONAL LAW "TOBACCO IS A FILTHY WEED" Grown Men Onsrhe tn TihM Y - -1. of Hoys. Says Writer. PROSSER. Wash.. Feb. 10 (T tr, Editor.) In The Oregonian Saturday vie Hammer says he cannot undorstoml the reason for so much Dreludica against the cigarette. If Mr. Hammer will get the text book on physiology and hygiene used in our public schools and read the chapter on tobacco and narcotics he will find amble reasons for tabooing the cigarette from civ ilization. But if he should still lack conviction let him read what David Starr Jordan, of Leland Stanford Uni versity, said to the toliacro users and especially to the cigr.rette smokers. On going home at the close of school last June they were requested to give up this harmful habit or not return to school, as education and the repu tation of a great university are of too serious concern to be endangered by so harmful and useless a habit. Henry Ford made a statement con demning cigarette smoking which the American Tobacco Company asked him either to prove or take back. Mr. Blockadrr May Sink Neutral Ship Un der Certain Conditions. CORNELIUS, Or., Feb. 11. (To thelrrd replied by publishing a 70-page Editor.) Under the heading "Why We THE SPRING. I Strove last night to sleep. In vain; My dreams were of unease and pain; Wires gouged my back. All blue and black. As on a rack Or tn a sack. Protest, E. M. Clark asks some rather pertinent questions, and it is in regard to your answers that I am writing this. You make the following statement: America Is not Interfering with Ger many s treatment of .England or with Britain's treatment tf Germany, but ls protesting Germany a treatment of America. The seas are the common property of al!.' If such Is the case, please answer the following: Why. in case the seas What made my mattress do this thing?! are the common property of all, does not America Insist upon sending cargo ships to Germany? Why Is it so neces- pamphlet, giving scientific, sanitary. economic and other kinds of proof, which ought to satisfy the tobucco company, and would If It were not for the huge profits it makes. It seems very unfortunate that the Indians taught the white man this use of the weed. No athletic manager will allow a member of his team to smoke. Our boys need worthy and wholesome ex amples. Why can't we "full-grown men voluntarily taDoo.inia naon ior the sake of the boys? GEORGE K. MOORHEAD. There's just one answer, sir THE SPRING. A friend of mine gave me, last night. A big. plump, trick cigar to light; I lit It, too. The tip burned through. And. pouf! Hurroo! The ashes flew. I sought to learn about this thing. And found the cause it was THE SPRING. TUB V. S. LIMITKD. sary to break the German blockade and The TT. S. Limited now rides a wet rail. not the English? Suppose two cargoes The grade-a uphtll and the roadbed's of wheat were started from New York, one for Hamburg and one for Liver pool, the one for Hamburg being taken into a British port and the cargo con fiscated, while the one for Liverpool was sunk, both acts being committed on the high seas. Which is the worst offense? Suppose there was loss of frail. The headlight's out. no tail lights be hind. The hoghead's bewildered con's going it blind. Past the station of Safety with a grind ing screnm. life on the ship designed for England. The semaphore-) set, but its red's un- ouppuMS turLucr mak u;3 uiaaier ut iuq I Seen light with smotn- (Note At this Juncture we muzzled other ship Insisted upon going to Ham- So through Destiny's night it . , . , , burg, do you doubt that that ship would erp-i r0ar the C. O B. to prevent him from over- be fired consequent loss of Move, the IJ. a Limited, exerting himself, but from the way he llre moves tne i. . burbled Inside the gag. we have hunch that he has some more of the same dope in his system.) BARDS' SPRING TWITTER. As announced last week, we have forevermore. In case Germany Is "Interfering with I In COaches luxurious, with blinds pulled down. Ride full-fare passengers on heads we frown; Unconscious of danger, where minions roam. We're aboard the Limited, to abide till we're home. dead- hell's American rights," why is It that If you were to write a letter to a friend In Norway for Instance, the English would be allowed to take this letter from oft the "high seas" and do as they please with If T a Vi 1 In t Tf Arl n cr with Atrier. thrown open these coiyuras to an potcs ,can rlfrhts or not? Isn't tampering who feel that they must write Spring with United States mall on the open pomes. , sea one of the much-discussed "overt The fuel tank's full and there's plenty R-u- thla iinselnsh net we. feel that we acts'? lou state mat ijermany is at- of sand. are offering the potes a means of get- temp.t'n? to make rules for the world. But we're looking above for a Guiding 7. ,' , , l . .. and that it is as unwarrantable as in- Hand: ting ii otx men tucoio, terfering with the internal affairs of time are in a position to hold the neutrals. Very good, but Is England mania within sufficient bounds to pre- interfering with the affairs of neu- vent it from becoming as frightful as it trals, us included, or not?' How about nrHinriv , their telling tne Hollanders to Whom VVwU . 1 ,, . I I I J .Hand; With his touch on the throttle and a full head of steam. Let war's rumors rumble, and its light nings gleam. If the Government should dig that canal Into Humboldt Bay to salve the Milwaukee, the waterway - might be maintained as a valuable permanent addition to the harbor. People who recollect that a 6hip was brought overland into deep-water down at the Columbia's mouth won der why the cruiser Milwaukee can not be saved. The road over Siskiyou Mountain will be negotiable in a month and every day in the week will be as good as Sunday for a few hours' Joyride. The raise of 1 cent an hour In car men's pay is not big, but it means a bit of money figured by the year. Local Socialists are opposed to war with Germany, The Socialist idea of fighting is with the vocal organ. No woman Is too old to experience pleasure on receipt of a valentine. Today is the time for mailing. Get your throat in condition to make a noise when the returning troops are on parade. That little girl who persists in run ning away needs , an old-fashioned spanking. Edison Is 70 and still at work. Yet a lot of fellows just above 45 are in a worry. Great Britain is spending nearly $30,000,000 a day and is not wasting a penny. A dead gunman is a Joy forever to the rival tong. who come to our Twitter are: 1. Make 'em short. 2. The shorter the better. Whereupon arises D. H. B., who sang In the late Saengerfest which we are not permitted to mention any more, and he wreaths daffodils In his hair and cuts him a willow whistle and opens the Spring Twitter as follows: Spring Song. Tra-la, tra-la. tra-la, tra-la, The birds act silly. And frisks the filly. . Tra-la, tra-la, tra-la, tra-la. I hear the notes Of the bleating goats; So I rise. I rise, and I lift my eyes To Sing of the Spring and to get the prize, , For It would be hard To find a bard Whom you would think fitter For this Spring Twitter. Tra-la, tra-la. tra-la. tra-la. The sap is running. And men go gunning. (Tra-la, tra-la. tra-la. tra-la.) Gunning for what? I can tell you not. But I toot my flute and I whoop and sing. Like a blooming birdie: " 'Tls Spring Tls Spring!" Where Spring potes are. Let me be the star. With the brightest glitter In this Spring Twitter. (Note D. H. B. has five other stanzas In his Dome, but, in accordance with the rules enunciated above, we have made.it short, and the other three stanzas are probably on their way to the pulp mill by now. Who's the next? February 17. PORTLAND, Feb. 11. (To the Edi tor.) In order to settle an argument. what date did Ash Wednesday fall on in the year 1S64? REGULAR PATRON. Is track blockaded? Shall we hit an open switch? Will some head-on collision pile our train in the ditch? While the seas are the common prop- Will some deluge of Fate wash our even what they shall get for them? L. LONG, erty of all, all have assented to certain regulations affecting treatment of neu trals, known as International law. Un der International law we would have no ground for protest if an American ship attempting to enter Hamburg refused to heave to upon demand of a British warshlr i nd was thereupon d upon or sunk. Instances have gone unques tioned In which American lives" have been endangered by fire of German submarines when the vessel was at tempting to escape a summons from the submarine to stop. ' The new Oerman policy gives no warning; it provides for no inquiry as to destination, character of cargo or nationality of ship. It Is sink on sight If you appear In certain waters of broad area. Crews and passengers may escape as best they may, if not killed by gunfire or the explosion of a torpedo. All of which Is contrary to interna tional law, to freedom Of the seas, and to humane obligations. We shall probably claim and receive Indemnity for violation; of property rights by any belligerent. Loss of prop erty may be compensated. Lives cannot. roadbed away. And a mass of tangled wreckage greet the light of day? Watchman, what of the night? Is It war or play? Good old Union, we're with you for aye. Come weal or come woe, we're true to the core. On the U. S. Limited, forevermore. OIAF OSWALD. Coat of Philippines. KELLOGG. Idaho. Feb. !. Editor.) How mnch did the States pay Spain for the Philippine Is lands? The encyclopedia says that the friars' lands were bought for $7,000,000. Was this money or more paid to the Spanish government? AUUL61 Mt,l..tit,. ' The United States paid Spain $20. 000.000 for the Philippines. The $7 000. 000 paid for friar lands was a separate transaction with the Dominican, Angus tlnian and Recoleto orders negotiated , with Pope Leo XIIL A TOUCHING TALE OK WOE. There are many sad faces In Port land today, there are many now mourn. ing who erstwhile were gay, there are many who into the future now peer, their erstwhile high spirits knocked plumb out o gear. The law making Oregon dry as a bone, without an oasis. a bibulous zone, has felt the imprint of the Governor's quill that left his illustrious name on the bill. He felt not a Jolt to his conscience as he at tached his proud name to the cruel decree, and not a regret was housed under his lid as he threw down the pen and exclaimed: "It is 6d!". He gave not a thought to the sufferers who were robbed of the product of still and of brew, who'd tramp through the city or loaf 'round the house bereft of the makin's to build up a souse: who'd hurl maledictions 'twould paint the air red at his unfeeling gubernatorial head, and swear by the witch that air- planed on a broom he'd officially dug his political tomb. But great as their (To thel,orture of soul now may be a greater United I awaits mem wnen sorrowiuuy . mcy drain tne last crop irom tne pacnage they got ere the cruel law hit them a poul-crushing swat; entomb the last gulp from the Juice of the grains till naught b-it the breath, of the bottle temains. and oft they may sniff at the fragrance of rye till the bottles, like Oregon, all are bone dry. Diplomatic! relations with Germany they in their dry throttle state and their "painful dismav will hold as a movement less srlously than severing relations with. Barleycorn, see? . JAMES BARTON ADAMS.