10 THE MORNING OREGOXIAN, SATURDAY, JUXE 30, 1917. rOKTLAXD, OBEGOX. Entered at Portland, (Oregon) Postoftlce as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance: (By Mall) Daily. Sunday included, one year ?V Laily, Sunday included, six month! ... 4-25 Ijaiiy, Sunday included, three month. . -j-j Liaily, Sunday included, one month ... .75 laily, without Sunday, one year B-0 iJaily, without Sunday, three month! L7o Laily. without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year - 1-'1 Sunday, one year ............... Sunday and weekly .......- .,o ( Hv fTnrrler.l Daily. Sunday Included, one year . iJaily, Sunday Included, one month 9.00 .75 How to Remit Send poetoffice money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postotflce address In iuii. Including county and state. I'OBtage Kates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent: 18 to as pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages. 3 cents. 60 to 0U pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, o cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. Eastern Bimlnrae OfflM Veres at Conklin. Brunswick building. New York; Verree at Conklin, Steger building, Chicago; San Fran cisco representative. R. J. BldwelU 742 Mar ket street. POBTLASD, SATURDAY, jrNE 80, 1917. THE MATTER WITH CONGRESS. Many bidden weaknesses of organ izations and of men are thrown into strong relief by the searching: light of war. This is nowhere more evident than in the groaning and creaking of the ponderous machinery of Congress, in the slowness with which it operates when speed is most needed, in the utter incompetence, provincialism and lack of broad vision which mark some of the leaders, and in the absurd de votion to shibboleths which have been customary in peace but which are as utterly out of date in war as would be the campaign slogans of the mid nineteenth century in a twentieth century political contest. Before our Government can become approximately efficient for war, it will be necessary to scrap old machinery, old customs, old ideas and old lead ers, and to adopt new ones hammered out in the fierce forge of war. That has happened in every other warring country, and it is inevitable here. The process of centralization which has been going on ever since the Civil War must be accelerated in order that the Government may become an efficient fighting machine. The Executive power must be greatly strengthened and the legislative power proportion ately weakened to meet the emer gency. It is doubtful whether these two departments of government will ever resume their former relative po sition when peace returns. The radical defect in Congress is that it is organized to satisfy the po litical needs and the personal greed and vanity of its individual members without regard to the quality of serv ice which they can render to the Na tion, though that should be the su preme test. Because those members who have served longest know the ropes, know one another and have formed alliances, they are steadily pushed to the front without regard to character and ability by the pernicious seniority rule. Committees are or ganized on the principle that "them as has gits." This explains the presence at the head of vitally important committees of such men as Senators Stone and Gore and Representatives Kitchin, 1 Adamson, Dent and Small men who are out of sympathy with the purposes of the Administration and the Nation. Only good fortune has brought to the head of the vitally important commit tees on military and naval affairs and interstate commerce Senators Cham berlain, Tillman and Newlands, who heartily strive to give the President all the means of prosecuting the war. Accident has given the President the aid of Representatives Flood, Fitzger ald, Padgett, Alexander and Lever in the House. Men of the type which seniority pushes forward concern themselves more with getting something for their constituents, with triumphantly lug ging home pieces of pork, with speeches which cater to class preju dice or to special interests and with generally clogging the legislative ma chinery through words than with get ting things done to defeat the Kaiser. They act as though we had all eter nity in which to do the work, though the world's democracies are bleeding away while striving to cut the tenta cles which Germany has fastened on the invaded countries. They have able seconds In Senator Reed, who is alarmed for the food speculators of Kansas City and who inveighs against temporary dictatorial power for the President, apparently preferring to risk the permanent dic tatorship of the Kaiser; and in Sen ator Hoke Smith, who is more con cerned for prompt shipment of Geor gia peaches and melons than in prompt feeding of the allied nations or prompt munitioning of the Army; and in Senator Gore, who predicted famine as the result of a bill which guarantees the farmer a fair profit and which strikes only at the accre tions which the middleman may make to the price of food; and in Repre sentative Small, who fills a pork bar rel with wasteful river and harbor appropriations on the false plea of war emergency. Others, startled by the sudden demand for unusual Exec utive powers, are unable to get out of their old ruts of thought and ex press honest alarm for the Constitu tion. The "little knot of wilful men" which filibustered against arming ships is, in fact, still at work, ob structing effective prosecution of the war which it failed to prevent. It is somewhat changed in composition, but it is still busy. Congress cannot become an effective instrument of war until these men are pushed into the rear, to give place to other and new men. The worst obstruction, as usual, is in the Senate, but that body in cludes many able men of both parties who exert themselves to the utmost to back up the President. Senators Cummins and Kenyon have atoned for their membership in the wilful dozen by rallying to the 'Administration. Among the old members they have been joined by such men as Lodge, Nelson and Knox on the Republican side and Newlands and Williams on tho Democratic side. Strength has been added to the Administration by such new Senators as Husting of Wis consin, Kellogg of Minnesota and Johnson of California. There is good material in both parties for a win-the-war party, if means can be found to put it in control of the organization. Congress has been in session for nearly three months, and has lagged behind the Executive departments in every provision for the war. When reproached for its dilatoriness, its members close their eyes to the great amount of work which is yet to be done and boast of what they have already done. Its achievements do not bear comparison with those of the war legislatures of other nations. It has worked much faster than in peace, but not fast enough for war. It can not work fast enough under the pres ent rules, particularly in - the Senate, or under the present leaders. Another burst of public indigna tion like that which drove the Senate to adopt closure may be necessary to drive Congress to radical reform of its rules and to relegation to the rear of its incompetent and obstructive leaders. By this means only can Con gress be made an effective instrument for winning the greatest war in which this Nation has ever engaged. SOLDIERS' INSURANCE. The billions of money poured into actual warfare by the United States and other countries but especially the United States by no means tells the story of the tremendous cost of war. There are, for example, pen sions for the heroes who saved the country and their dependent relatives. The United States has paid out in pensions for its several wars the great sum of $5,000,000,000. For the Civil War alone, the total to June 30, 1916, was $1,765,076,020.92. The number of pensioners Is now more than 700, 000. It would appear that republics are not ungrateful. Now the suggestion is made that the lives of all soldiers be insured, and a lump sum perhaps $4000 be paid to survivors for any death. It is an attractive idea. It may relieve the Nation of the undoubted evils of the pension system. But it should be carefully safe guarded. A lump sum of $4000 paid to a soldier's family would in many cases be a mistake, for too obvious reasons. There should be strict con ditions ao to its payment, its care and its expenditure, and it should have a definite relation to any possible sub sequent pension. Then it may be both wise and patriotic to have sol diers' insurance, but not till them. A WISE BEGINNING. The first year's allotment of road funds by the State Highway Commis sion has been fairly and more or less widely distributed, yet the allotments have been made in such amounts that something better than haphazard, piecemeal construction is in prospect. The policy of the Commission, it seems, is to recognize two Important characteristics in Oregon road needs. One is the better improvement of main, heavily traveled thoroughfares; the -other is assistance in overcoming good-road obstacles within certain counties that have offered too great a load for the counties to bear alone. In many portions of the state are hills and other physical features which make road construction costly. Through roads may be fairly good ex cept for these intervening places. But the usefulness of such parts of the roads as may be good is destroyed in large part by the dangers or practical impassabllity of spaces that are be yond the means of the county alone to improve. There is where the post road funds are being wisely applied. In allotting the paving funds, the Commission has recognized the im portance of the Pacific Highway and the east and west Columbia River Highway. Allotments there have been made in useful amounts. There is not to be a mile here and a mile there of pavement, but stretches of mate rial length are to be constructed. A favorable impression is given by the interest displayed by several coun ties. They exhibit a willingness, even an anxiety, to co-operate. They in effect bid for paving funds by offer ing to prepare the roads for the hard surface. Oregon has at last begun a system atic road programme. We shall see some of the benefits the first year, but the full merit and wisdom of the new policy will be plainer as time passes and the big links in the chain are connected. F CKOWIXO FIELD PEAS. The current report of the recent experiments made by the Sherman County branch experiment station of the Oregon Agricultural College points out anew the value of field peas in breaking up the one-crop system of farming, under which the soil is not only depleted but is lost to use dur ing the fallow years. The report says that field peas have been shown ta be the most profitable of all the legumi nous crops to grow in rotation with grain, to increase and maintain the fertility of the soil, that the equip ment of the ordinary dry farm is usually sufficient for the production and harvesting of peas and that the soil-suspension method of inoculating the seed a simple process can be employed successfully. The conclusions of the experiment ers are based on a four-year rotation series, in which peas were substituted for one Summer fallow, and in which it is shown that the crop of peas was a clear gain for that year. The aver age yield of Spring wheat after crop ping to peas was slightly greater than that after Summer fallow, and it is safe to assume that the soil was left in better . condition for future crops. Data as to moisture conserva tion are also available, and show that the percentage of moisture in the ground after a crop of peas is higher than after either wheat or corn, but is less than after Summer fallow. The crop following the peas, nevertheless, would appear to gain in other respects what it loses in moisture, for the net results are encouraging to the contin ued growing of peas. . Significance of the experiments lies in the bearing they are likely to have on the utilization of the dry-farming area for the production of meat ani mals, the Sherman County work hav ing been devoted to the dry-farming aspect. Pasturing with hogs or sheep, it is concluded, is probably the most economical way of utilizing the pea crop. But another important factor is the freedom of choice permitted to the grower. Field peas are regarded as more profitable than grain for "hogging-off," because they can be followed either with peas or grain, and profitable results obtained in either instance without the interven tion of an idle year. Thus the suc ceeding crop can be adapted to the growers' situation with reference to livestock on hand, and to his judg ment as to future markets. At the same time, peas also make excellent silage, especially when mixed with grain orf the dry -farm. Pea hay grown at the experiment station has yielded an average of from a ton and a half to two tons and a half to the acre. The field pea is not a soil robber. This is shown by the fact that increas ing yields are obtained after suc cessive years of continuous production. Its ultimate value, however, lies in the place it fills in the rotation that must be practiced If the states of the West are not to go through the ex- j perience of their older neighbors. whose average of grain production has been decreasing steadily, to the point in some instances where profit at normal prices is either exceedingly doubtful or entirely non-existent. WHY A FCEL SHORTAGE? When one looks out over the wooded hills of Oregon, one finds it difficult to conceive of a fuel shortage in Port land. Yet we are warned that such a thing is likely to come to pass. There is more or less persuasiveness in the excuses given for the cordwood scarcity. Men who formerly cut wood are tilling the soil, because thev see bigger profits in agriculture. Or the men who once worked as woodcutters are now engaged in more profitable employment. Yet sawmills dot the country. Many of them are located in small settle ments they themselves create. They produce much waste material. It is slabwood, but good fuel. What be comes of it? The mill towns are not big enough to consume a fraction of It. It would seem that there need be no real fuel shortage or even a scarcity "sufficient to cause abnormal prices for slabwood. Perhaps all that is needed is initiative and enterprise to meet the situation. If dealers do not move there is still the municipality. We are not forgetful that the city of Portland once went into the wood business with somewhat distressing results. Yet that disaster was exag gerated in the public mind through discovery of theft or graft. The wood pile was 1000 cords short of the amount paid for. It was not primarily a business ven ture. It was an emergency enterprise undertaken to care for a great num ber of unemployed men. They were paid more than current wages. It is also overlooked that the persons who ultimately paid the bill the citizens of Portland got wood for $1 or $1.50 a cord cheaper than formerly as a re sult of the city's competition. The sums they paid out in taxes to pro vide work for the unemployed they put back into their pockets in the saving on the Winter's fuel bill. The fuel situation is commended to the " attention of the City Council. Food control is now popular. Why not fuel control? With fuel going to waste and other fuel merely await ing the coming of the axman, a fuel shortage in Portland would be an eco nomic crime. THE U-BOAT'S INFLUENCE IN WAR. As the toll of ships taken by the submarines rises and falls from week to week, the nations arrayed against Germany are subject to the alterna tions of overconfidence and despair that they will overcome '.he one men ace to sea traffic. We cm best gauge the U-boat's possibility of reducing the allies to impotence by comparison of their destructiveness with that of the French privateers during the Napo leonic war and of the American prl vateero during the war of 1812. In those wars the French ravaged every sea, even to the most remote, and one of them took 160 prizes. In the two and a half years of the war of 1812 American privateers took 1590 British vessels, one-third of them in the last six months of 1814, or at the rate of 88 a month. During the sev enteen weeks of the unrestricted sub marine campaign ending with June 17, British losses totalled 350 large and 141 small vessels, or 491 in all. This is at the rate of twenty-nine a week, or 1508 a year. Though ships now average much larger, they are now so much more numerous that probably the present ratio of losses to the total number of British ships is not much greater than it was in the last years of Napoleon's wars, which coincided with the war of 1812. Great Britain "stuck it out" then, though her allies had few war ships to aid her. Nearly all of the allies have considerable navies, and by close co-operation they should be able to "stick it out" now. An impression prevails that Britain was self-supporting as regards food in Napoleon's time, but it is erroneous. Though the population was then only one-third of what it now is and prob ably a much larger area was producing wheat, an average of 4,800,000 bushels a year was imported during the Na poleonic war and the stock was so de ficient that in 1810 the price rose to $3.60 a bushel and in 1813 to $5.33. When we consider that the scale of Incomes, both for the workingman and the well-to-do, was much lower then than now, those prices were relatively much higher then than they would be now. Wheat at Chicago now ranges from $2.14 for July to $1.87 for September, and addition of freight to Liverpool would make the price at that port much lower than prices which pre vailed in 1810. Price is a fair guide to the sufficiency of supply, and it indicates that the allies are having better success in carrying wheat past the submarines to British ports than the British alone had in carrying it past Frenoh and American privateers a century ago. It would be as great folly to assume that the submarine is beaten because in some week its toll runs low as it would be to throw up our hands in despair because in some other week it has made a great killing. It is a new weapon, and must be met with dif ferent means of offense and defense from those used against privateers. It cannot be totally exterminated, but by grimly applying all their energy and ingenuity to the task and by keeping everlastingly at it the allies should be able to limit their losses by its oper ation to a certain maximum which will be well within their power to suf fer without risk of defeat. It requires a certain addition to shipments of food and munitions as a margin for losses. It adds materially to the cost of the war and it buoys up German hopes to continue fighting beyond the time when they would otherwise confess de feat. But if the allies keep after It, the U-boat cannot win the war for Germany. It may even aid -them by keeping them keyed up to constant vigilance and combativeness. Acuteness of the shortage of fine paper is emphasized by the warning given by the Postoflice Department that citizens employing the mails should not use two postage stamps where one will do the work. This ad monition is made particularly for the benefit of patrons of the parcel post, who, if they are careful, will not use ten 1-cent stamps instead of one 10 cent stamp, and so on. The fact that it is more convenient to stick one stamp on a package than a dozen or so is only an incident of the situation, the conservation of paper being chiefly the object sought. The postoSice is sues stamps of such odd denominations as 7, 9, 11 and 12 cents, a fact that many have overlooked. A few years ago it would not have seemed neces sary to call attention to so seemingly trivial a detail as the saving of the paper in a stamp, but we are rapidly coming to economies in many departments. The "abandoned farms" of New England are responding nobly to the call for food in the National crisis, as was shown at the graduating exercises recently of a country school In Green wich Village in that state. On do nated land, the pupils of this school have planted five acres to oats, ten acres to hay, and more than ten acres to corn, potatoes, peas, beans and other vegetables. There are also 550 hens, 1800 little chickens, nine cows, eight pigs and other livestock. When it ia considered that the work on this really substantial farm is being done by the boys and girls, having only the supervision of their teachers, it will be seen that much that is worth while is being accomplished. The benefit extends beyond the season and the actual amount of food produced. It will be enduring and in the years to come will be reflected in the addition al number of men and women who have formed an attachment for the soil and a new idea of the dignity of agriculture. The bureau of chemistry of the De partment of Agriculture is making a series of tests of preservatives for cloth, with especial reference to their value in conserving the canvas used by farmers in protecting their ma chinery against the weather. The rea son for the bureau's activity at this time is that the Government is ex pected to need for its own use every yard of cotton duck the mills of the country are able to turn out, and it is regarded as Improbable that private consumers will be able to obtain suf ficient supplies of certain grades at any price. The necessity of conserv ing farm implements of every kind is also indicated by the probability tha't the machine shops of the Nation will be fully employed in the pro duction of munitions of war. The destruction of farm machinery by exposure Is tremendous, and farm ers not only lose money by their care lessness but are confronted by the same danger that when it is gone it may not be replaceable. No one wishes to dictate to the German people the form of government under which they should choose to live. From Lloyd George's Glasgow speech. Thus, in another respect, the Brit ish Premier makes it clear that the aims of the United States and' its allies are the same not to punish the Ger man people, but to make the world better for them as well as for our selves to live in. An Assistant Secretary of Agricul ture says the barnyard waste in the United States amounts to $1,000,000, 000 yearly. He ought to be specific. Barn refuse on the farm goes into the manure pile, and the farmer who wastes that does not last. What does a bureaucrat know of these things, anyway? With a Dutch warship preparing to convoy the merchant vessels of that country through the war zone, and Norway offering aid to the American Red Cross, it looks as if the list of open enemies of the Prussian autoc racy was about to receive some more important acquisitions. The corporation that owns the mine at Butte in which 164 men lost their lives is arranging quick compensation to the amount of $600,000 for depend ents. It used to be said corporations had no souls; now they do not need them. It's just a matter of business. On of the big bogies years ago was the gold that included the French in demnity that the Kaiser held in stor age in a fortress in the middle of Ger many. It was the money that would finance the war of conquest when "the day" arrived. Chicago owes it to itself to remove the stigma of being the sixth German city in the world. It can best do so by getting rid of William Hale Thomp son, the Mayor who put the stigma upon it. Duluth police have released a wom an I. W. W. agitator on her plea that she wants to leave town, but this Is certainly not a neighborly way to treat the next town she will inflict herself upon. William H. Hohenzollern has not yet seen the American expeditionary forces. When he does he will reckon them worse than the Canadians, who "have went" some. The enemies of Russia are saying that the people are "drunk with de mocracy," which is better. In the long run, than being under the influence of vodka. American girls who contemplate marrying to obtain European titles will do well to wait until the per manency of those titles has been guar anteed. The man with a thriving back-yard garden Is not worrying about the de creasing purchasing power of money when measured by tho vegetable yard stick. An aristocrat bearing a German title is less esteemed in England than the humblest -London costermonger and thanks the King for de-Germanizing him. Every man who has shot a Denny pheasant can affoad to go a dollar on the benefit proposed for the widow of the man who brought the bird to Ore gon. Slabwood will burn green, but it rasps the cook. Get in your supply early, that every street may remind you of President Wilson. The latest dream of municipality makers is to set the maximum of city population at 300,000. They should tell it to Seattle. When Congressman McArthur can raise bull calves that sell for $320 each. Congress and politics seem like mere diversion. Director Campbell is all right. His programme of the flrst band concert tomorrow is full of patriotic airs. - The Pacific Northwest apple crop this year will be 23,500 carloads. Watch the allies do their bite. Of what benefit is a safety gate if a man drives under as it descends? It's a trifle cloudy, but there'll be sun on Sunday. Argument at Jim town. By James Barton Adams. There was sure a hot discussion in the Redlight t'other day. The arguments flew thick an' fast in an excitin' way. The question that invoked the language battle bein' why The Nation celebrated on the Fourth day o' July. Sport Tucker said it was the anniver sary when we Was first discovered by that dago from acrost the sea. An", glad that we was rescued from our previous unknown state. It ever since has been a day fur us to celebrate. Slim Snodgrass, who had studied law an' never got a case, Remarked in sneerln way that Sport had slid clear off his base. An dared him to perduce a bit o' proof to the effect His diagnosis o' the case was anyways correct. It was the day on which their boat was tied up to the dock An' pilgrim fathers stepped ashore an' camped at Plymouth Rock, An" that shows why the Jimtown Times keeps prlntin' on that day A Plymouth rooster crowin' in a glad e,xultant way. The way they quoted history an" Scrip ture an' the law Was fierce until a whisky travelln' man from Omaha 'Twas sellin' the proprietor a bill o" licker goods - Said that historic knowledge hadA't reached our neck o' woods. Such ignorance was painful, an' 'twas his opinion we Was needin' missionaries more than heathens 'cross the sea. Fur every little school kid on this civil ized o' earth Knowed 'twas the anniversary o" Yan kee Doodle's fc'rth. His grlnnln' insult stung us in a painful sort o' way An' every feller In the gang rlz fur a hostile play An' told, him he ut.-l best evaporate, an' do it quick. Or he might be the victim when we turned a lynchin' trick. He said it was a joke, an' asked us all to take a s v.p Of inner consolation, but our flghtln' blood was up An' we made m pack his samples, an' the way his tender feet Hit the foot trail down the mountain was a pleasurable treat. Men Who Fall In Reserve Camps. PORTLAND, June 29. (To the Ed itor.) Please inform me what becomes of the men who have been or will be dismissed from the Presidio training camp for physical defects? Will they be accepted In any other branch of the Army? What will they do with the rest after the 650 officers have been chosen? Will any of them be nubject to the se lective draft? Are they not volunteers? O. R. T. Men dismissed from the Presidio Re serve Officers' Training Camp for physical defects presumably wl not be considered physically fit for enlistment In other military branches, unless their defects are temporary ones. At the same time the physical requirements for the Reserve Officers are probably more strict than the ordinary Army physical examination. if the men not chosen for officers are of the age to come within the draft (from 21 to 30 years, inclusive), they will be subject to draft just as If they had never attended the training camp. Those who are over the draft age, of course, cannot be drafted, but if they can pass the physical examinations there would be nothing to prevent them from volunteering into the regular Army, Navy, etc as private soldiers. Probably many of them will return home and resume -heir usual occupa tions. Scottish Ship Canal. Indianapolis News. While the British and French nations have come together in the matter of the necessity and practicability of a tunnel under the Channel from Dover to Calais, a project to be taken up after the war, another project scarcely less important is now being seriously con sidered. This is the Scottish ship ca nal to connect the east and west coasts of Scotland, the Clyde with the Firth of Forth. This would mean the recon struction of the present canal so that it could accommodate the largest ves sels. It is pointed out by the Edin burgh Scotsman that by means of the new canal the resources of the Clyde could be utilized by the British fleet in the North Sea entrance, instead of sending ships to the north around Scot land, and supplies could be sent direct from the west coast by the same route. Had It been In existence during the riresent war. it is claimed that the ad vantages to be derived from it would have been of untold Importance to tne North Sea fleet. The great Scottish shipbuilding yards and factories are on the Clyde. Such a canal. It Is advanced, would be of greater advantage to Brit ain than Is the Kiel canal to Germany, and while useful In war would be equally useful in time of peace for com mercial purposes. Very Slack the Same. Illustrated World. When Lincoln was still an Insignifi cant country lawyer he had occasion to travel to a small town to take charge of a case. It was a drive of some 14 miles from the railroad station to the town inn where he was to spend the night. Wet and chilled to the bone, he arrived at last, but, to his dismay, found only a small fire built in the grate, while standing about it, so as to exclude the heat from the traveler, were the other lawyers interested in the case. At length one of the group turned to Lincoln. "Pretty cold, eh?" he asked. "Yes," replied Lincoln, "as cold as It is hot in hades." "Ever been to hades, stranger?" asked another. "Yes," replied Lincoln solemnly. This raised a faint smile among the other lawyers. "What does it look like there?" they asked. "Very much like this," said Lincoln dryly: "All the lawyers nearest the fire." Violations of Red Cross, HILLSBORO. Or.. June 28. (To the Editor.) Would The Oregonian please state how many Red Cross hospital ships have been destroyed by the Ger man submarines, and also how many ReJ Cross hospitals on or near the battlefields have been bombarded by the Germans? CHRIS PETERSON. German submarines have sunk hos pital ships operated by the British government. They were not ships of the Red Cross Society. We know of no compilation of data on violation of the Red Cross on the battlefield. En tente reports make frequent charges against the Germans In that regard. Without Loss of Beaux. Life. Marie Willis (at the beach) Kit Is quite a clever social general. Jane Gillia Yes. She went through last season's campaign without the loss of a man. WHEY TREASON DESERVES DEATH No Analoary Between Sinn Fein Rebel lion and American Civil War. PORTLAND, June 29. (To the Ed itor.) From Patrick O Halloran s let ter on the Sinn Fein riots. I perceive he lacks a good deal In perspicacity. He is eager to Instruct me In Amertcan history. He points to the leniency of the Federal Administration in not pun ishing the Southern leaders In the Civil War. The analogy cited by the writer proves his dullness. He fails to understand, what is obvious enough, that the Irish rebellion of 1916 bears no resemblance whatever to your trou ble in 1861-65. That was altogether a case of internal warfare, a struggle between two elements in your eco nomic, political and social life. The Irish rebellion of 1916. on the contrary, was an attack upon Britain from with in while the country was being most fiercely and ruthlessly attacked from without. In effect, the Sinn Felners made themselves allies of Germany. No sovereign power deals with spe cial leniency in the case of rebellion that, consciously or unconsciously, gives aid to a, foreign foe. Things, no doubt, would not have gone so badly with the Irish rebels of 1916 if Britain had not been at war. But under the circumstances the British government could not afford to trifle with misguid ed but dangerous visionaries, such as the Sinn Feiners were, when her very life was threatened by a savage and powerful external enemy. If Patrick O'Halloran is capable of understanding this point, doubtless he will realize how foolish his argument against me appears to a logical mind. If my critic wishes a true compari son between the Irish rebellion of 1916 and a possible situation In this country. I will suggest one. Let him Imagine the United States as having been at war two years; thousands of your splendid soldiers have been killed In battle; scores of merchant and naval ships sunk and their crews abandoned: unprotected cities subjected to aerial raids; noncombatant women and chil dren by the hundreds slaughtered by bombs dropped In the dead of night. At this Juncture a rebellion of negroes, let us say. breaks out, and its leaders set up claims of National sovereignty on the ground of racial difference. They capture several cities and perhaps a state. I need hardly say more to give an inkling of what would happen to the chief spirits of such a rebellious move ment, especially In what you call "down South." The Sinn Felners attacked British authority In Ireland when the whole of the British Empire was threatened. Does anyone In his senses suppose the British are so stupid as to allow Ire land to be converted Into an ally of Germany? Ireland has a position of immense strategic importance in the North Atlantic Ocean. Great Britain, as she values her position In the fam ily of nations, can never allow Ireland to be an independent nation, with her harbors as so many bases for hostile fleets. Not to put down the Irish re bellion was the same as surrendering to the Kaiser a step which we are not yet quite prepared- to take. Under such conditions to expect spe cial clemency for traitors borders on idiocy. If the Irish leaders were not prepared to face the extreme penalty of death, they should not have raised the flag , of rebellion. Patrick O'Halloran need have no fear that I have any wish to Interfere with the rights of free speech or a free press in this countdy. I trust I appre ciate sufficiently the hospitality that has been extended to me not to abuse it. May I suggest in turn that Brit ish statesmen be allowed to manage their itnernal affairs in their own way? It Is hardly likely that resolutions passed by the lower house at Washing ton as a stroke of politics or letters written by citizens of Irish extraction to leading newspapers will have any material effect on the domestic policies of Great Britain. ROBERT MUIR. Hashing Through School. ASTORIA Or.. June 8. (To the Ed itor.) Please tell me If It Is possible to get a high school education In two years' time; that is. are there any schools, public or private, where one could get a regular four years' course in two years and where are thev lo cated? AMBITIOUS. We know of no reputable school that professes to give a regular four years' course In two years. In almost any Institution, however, incessant ap plication to study. If one has the re quired stamina and mental ability, will enable one to shorten one's period of attendance. But to complete a four years' course In two years would be a big undertaking. That Contented Feeling of Being Well Informed Comes With THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN There is no waste space in The Sunday Oregonian. Its news service of all-the-world is prompt and authentic. Its special fea tures and departments are mines of information and pleasure. Its comics are clean and comical, as comics should be. It is first in the field. Your newsboy knows. WHAT IS OUR FIGHTING SONG TO BE Whenever Yankee troops have gone into conflict they have sung some tune of irrelevant lightness a very snap of the fingers in the face of death. The men of General Washington's commands sang "Yankee Doodle.' Into Cuba and the Philippines the troops of Spanish-American wartime parried "A Hot Time in the Old Town." Bead Joseph Jackson's speculative article on what may be the song of the light hearted lads in this conflict. KAUFMAN, THE UNQUENCHABLE There never yet was a prob lem to douse the trenchant enthusiasm and fighting spirit of Herbert Kaufman, whose Sunday page is a tonic for the weary in spirit. Soon or late, if you follow him, youH find your own prob lem, and its solution, on Kaufman's page. OUR CHIEF COTTON PORT Just as much as cotton is needed to clothe the children of men, so is it indispensable to the munition business of war. It plays a major role in the freed force of high explosives. Galveston, is our chief cotton port, and it is there that Frank G. Carpenter, special contributor to The Sunday Oregonian, analyzed the cotton industry and our exports to the allies. THAT BIG QUESTION OF FOOD Here is a feature page for the patriotic housewife. Its treatment of the question of kitchen economy will enable her to aid in the conservation of food, without giving rise to a single grumble from the family. They'll like it, in fact. The woman who banishes waste helps to win the war. FAVORITE POEMS PAGE Verses that have cheered for years, with their direct heart appeal, find new and wider distribution through the medium of the Old Poems Page, to which the treasured scrap books of all Oregon pay tribute. An especially fine selection ap pears in the Sunday issue. FROM FAR PLACES A page of pictures, each with its paragraph, taken in the distant parts of earth, wherever there was a "good story," by the camera reporters. Such is the Sunday feature of The Oregonian, which brings before its readers the 6cene as it was clearer than words can tell. SUCCESSFUL FURBISHING OF APARTMENTS This second article of the series on home furnishings- deals with the ideal fur nishing of apartments, and describes inexpensive effects that are permanent and pleasing. WITH THE CHURCHES Announcements for the services in all Portland churches are to be found in the Sunday issue's special church page. "Food saving" will be the timely text of many patriotic sermons tomorrow. The weekly sermon is by Harold H. Griffis, minister of the First Christian Church. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Just Five Cents. In Other Days. Tvrenty-Flve Years Ago. From The Oregonlan of June 30. ISO 2. The citizens of Mount Tabor Villa met Tuesday evening and organised a. volunteer fire department- The steamer Wilmington has built up a heavys business between this city kaI Puget Sound and British Columbia ports, and the arrival of the steamer Hatien Republic to supplement her is none 4oo soon. Wallace McCamant will deliver an address at the Young Men's Hall, at First and Salmon streets, next Sunday on "The Young Man for Citizenship." The Union Pacific tug Wallowa wan successfully launched at the Willamette Shipyards at 4 o'clock yesterday after noon. The tug has undergone extensive repairs, including the installation ot a new shaft. Portland won from Seattle by a score of 5 to 3 yesterday. Our town Is now at the head of the Paciflo Northwest League. The standings are: Portland, .595; Tacoma, .600; Spokane, .466; Seat tle. .422. VALIANTS IN OLIVE GRAY. Our boys are valiant, brave! Boldly they dare the wave Meeting the need! Clad all in olive gray. Valiants, our valiants, they Go forth to join the fray. Men must be freed! Valiants Intrepid cry, "We with red blood will buy Democracy!" To the far future time. For the most distant clime. This gift shall be Men shall be free. Valiants! declare the name. Valiants! Shout loud the fame! Never again the same This world shall be! They dressed in olive gray. Challenge tho world to say: "Men shall be free!" Tyranny, thou shalt not last! King craft! Thy time Is past! Fair pay shall be! Freedom, this is thy dayl Thus in their olive gray, Springing to arms they sayt "Men shall be free!" Heart nurtured passion flowers! Our "bit" these valiants ours! (Cease weeping, cease!) These to this cause we give. That In all lands may live. Democracy I Justice ani peace. HARRIET HICKOX HELLER. Now Hope for Lawns. PORTLAND. June 29. (To the Edi tor.) The Willamette Is too high; water Is being pumped out of base ments at great expense to the owners of the cellars, and this flood la being augmented dally by millions of gal lons . of water that are running to waste from the city water works. Yet. notwithstanding this, our autocratic and foolish management of the city water system Insists that owners of lawns should use water only every other day. If there was a shortage of water. If the people were suffering therefrom Instead of having an overabundance, there would be an excuse for such a foolish order. Let us hope that now Daly is being retired to private life, the new official who handles the water question will at once revoke this absurd rule and not put it into effect again until either the Willamette is running dry or until there is a shortage of the supply from Bull Run. WATER USER. Hoover Born In Iowa. OLYMPIA. Wash., June 28. (To the Editor.) Kindly tell me whether or not Herbert Hoover is a Belgian Socialist. Mrs. Kate O'Hare. Socialist lecturer, in a lecture here last night said that Hoover was a Belgian Social ist. Is she correct? SUBSCRIBER. Herbert C. Hoover Is an American engineer, born in West Branch, la. He has operated in Australia, China and Europe. For a number of years prior to the war his home was in London, but he maintained offices also in New York and San Francisco. No. PORTLAND. June 29. (To the Edi tor.) Would It be an offense to our President or a liability to copy the President's photograph and offer it for ,aie- SUBSCRIBER.