8 TIIE 2IORXING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 191?. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered t Portland Oresol). Postofflcs as second-class mall matter. Subscription ratea invariably In advance: (By Mall.) Daily. Sunday Included, one year 8.00 Dally. Sunday Included. six month! 4-25 Dally, Sunday Included, three months ... 2.25 IJally. Sunday Inc'uded, one. month 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year .00 Daily, without Sunday, three months . . . 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year 1.50 Sunday, one year 2.00 fcunday and weekly S-50 (By Carrier.) Dilly. Sunday Included, one year 22 Dally. Sunday Included, one month 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year ,.. S 00 Daily, without Sunday, three months ... Dally, without Sunday, one month -J" weekly, one year 2.50 Sunday, one year ............. 2.50 6unday and weekly 3-50 How to Remit Send postofflcs money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoftlce address in lull. Including county and state. Postage Rates 12 to IS pases, 1 cent: IS to 32 pages, 2 cents; 84 to 48 pases. 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. tastcrn Business Office Verree A Conklin. Brunswick building. New York: Verree & Conklin, Sieger building. Chicago: San Fran cisco representative. K. J. Bldwell. 742 Mar ket street. WRTI.AXD, SATURDAY, JTJI.T Zl, 1917. MUDDLING THE WAR, Muddle is the only word there will be no glory for anybody. But the Colonel can help him to win. Senator Knox is an unswerving' sup porter of all Mr. Wilson's war meas ures, though of ', the opposite party and from a state whose chief Indus try has been hit hard by the Presi dent's tariff policy, while obstruction has come chiefly from the Democrat ic ranks. Senator Johnson, of Cali fornia, is a man of high ability, dy namic force and unquestioned loyalty. Representative Julius Kahn put the draft bill through the House, when the man whose duty it was balked. . The Imperative need at present is that Congress cease obstruction and give the President all the power he needs. A feeling of inarticulate ex asperation prevails at the Senate's treatment of the food bill, and the President has only to open fire in order to start such a storm of indig nation as will whip the Senate- into line with him. Let the Gores, Reeds, Hoke Smiths and their like howl "Dictator!" till they 'are hoarse; the occasion requires dictatorial power. The same cry was raised against Lin coln, but the men who raised it are forgotten, while Lincoln's fame will never die. measures, at least. By demonstrating there were no other reason but It that personal contact Is responsible, is passing strange, when one ponders they emphasize the Importance of on it, that the story should have had early and strict quarantine. By show- I a throng of devout believers, among log that Infection must take place I people otherwise well ordered and through the mucous membrane, and possessing intelligence sufficient to that certain individuals are deficient carry on successfully the ordinary in protective elements of that mem- business and social affairs of life, brane, they point the way to prophy- umuucui .mi iiic.oui a v - i sin nRKnny rw t-jtv mvna caution. As a result of investigations I which adequately describes the manner of organizing the American Nation for the war. Blundering preparation for the draft and the last-minute change In the method of drawing numbers of selected men are simply the latest examples of muddle. We have an Administration which was organized for peace, which has set its face not only against war but against prepar edness for war, and which is com- Dosed mainly of men selected for party service, for sectional reasons and to a limited degree for their abil ity to perform tasks of peace. As subordinates they have bureau chiefs and permanent officials who are slaves to precedent and regulations. The great body of business men who patriotically rushed to the aid of the Government find the way barred by a barrier of red tape as Impassable as a barbed-wire entanglement. There has been muddle from the Btart. Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo bungled the liberty loan, and Its success was due to the patriotic efforts of the banks, the bond houses and the people. Secretary Daniels has wasted his limited ability on driving hard bar- grains with men who supply the Navy. He was primarily responsible for the fake story of the submarine attack on the transport fleet. Secretary Baker got Into a wrangle witn secretary or me interior jiano about the price of coal, he delayed contracts for Army cantonments until the end of June and he is responsible for the draft muddle. The newspapers Imposed on them selves a voluntary censorship, but their patriotism was chilled and Con gress was antagonized by an attempt to gag them. Shipbuilding at full speed Is still delayed by the Interminable quarrel between General Goethals and the Shipping Board, though the president of the New York Chamber of Com merce warns us that, "if the present rate of sinkings is maintained with out the full force of our Industrial efforts, there can be only one con clusion, and that is that we shall lose the war." A factious clique of Senators, moved by concern for selfish Interests, by Jealousy of the President's power or even by a secret desire to limit our military effectiveness obstructs the food-control bill and pulls its teeth. The people are willing enough, but are actually held In check by the men who should be, but are Incom petent to be, their leaders. It was hoped when the British and French commissions came to the United States that our Government would profit by the experience of the allies to avoid their mistakes. It is repeating their experience of the first year of war and, unless it mends Its ways, it will commit blunders as dis astrous as theirs. Britain started with a partisan government composed of peace statesmen, who gave up re luctantly the organization and meth ods of peace. They then tried to win with a coalition government under the same head and composed largely of the men who had already failed Not until last December did Britain organize a non-partisan government for war purposes, composed of men who had proved their ability to con duct a war. The most revolutionary step taken In forming the Lloyd George Cabinet was the scrapping of a lot of political statesmen and the substitution of such business-states. men as Lord Rhondda and Sir Joseph P. Maclay. President Wilson has been elected for four years and could not be dis placed if the people wished, as was Premier Asquith, but he can do the other things which Britain has done. and he must do them, if. we are to win. He should begin by shaking out the second and third-rate men who are rattling around in high places and by supplanting them with men of the first rank. He los one of his strong men when he let Lindley M. Garrison resign, and should call him back, James W. Gerard has proved that he Is made of sterling stuff by defying Prussianlsm in its citadel through two and a half years. Henry Morgenthau made good as Minister to Turkey and could be put In harness. Men of equal quality can be found in Con, gress. But in seeking able lieutenants, the President has no right to limit him self to members of his own party. He Reeds the aid of the ablest men of all parties and it is his duty to use them, The people look to him to win the war with the best tools he can find regardless of their political brand For the duration of the war the peo ple have forgotten party, and they expect the President to do likewise, If Mr. Wilson succeeds, he Is apt to find himself at the head of a party very differently composed from that which has twice elected him. At the risk of shocking some sensitive souls, we might paraphrase the words of " General von Falkenhayn by saying: t. 1,111 LUC isc&i 1-IV. -3 ( 1 , 1 1A Uil. vvcw. The President's ff.rst excursion from the Democratic ranks for men to aid him the selection of Elihu Root for the special mission to Russia brought good results. Why not go farther along the same line? His inability to use Colonel Roosevelt's great powers -- in thA A rmv snnilld nnt rniiRp tlinsp :ttnmpr tn 11a fnllnw. ThA rrJonAl Is ready to serve in any capacity. Tne - President has no right to consider whether this would promote Colonel V Roosevelt's political ambition, and. - politically, there is no need. If we win, all others will be second to Mr. ' Wilson in public acclaim. If we lose, THE LAST WORD. "The Russian failure to hold the Germans in Last Galicla," says the official statement from Petrograd, "was due to extremist detachments holding meetings and discussing the advisability of obeying orders, which some regiments had refused to obey, We used to hear of the Wisconsin idea, and the Oregon system; and now the fate of civilization Is jeopardized by the Russian delusion of democracy and Its duties and powers. Your Russian soldier "will fight if he pleases or will run when he is ready; and the higher command can go hang. The old-fashioned rule that it is a soldier's duty to obey has gone to the discard in Russia. It is not the soldier's duty to do anything' but consult his own sweet will. The bar vest will be no soldiers, no army and no free Russia. A referendum on the battlefield! It is the last and final word In Rus sian TJ'Renism. . J c . v. i l . t Vxn11AAj4 Vi o , I "UC - u" itlM are going the right way about I TZ-u v v I . Z. T i PU"ing an end to tons feuds in Ore- "Ja" ""V V , k00- Tho frequency of murders of co-operation on the part of the public ChInese by thelr feliow.countrymen and the impunity of the murders have FREE delivery. I been a disgrace to the state, particu- One hundred or more merchants of I larly to Portland, where most of these the Nation met at Washington the crimes have been committed. Ad- other dav and aexeed to eliminate un- ""eaiy it is aiincuit to onng tne " 1 nV.. 1 I 1 i J . 1 i 1 , necessary delivery of purchases. It J . . , .. . , , are of foreign race, speak a foreign ia not wnony clear uo mci.- , which is known to few enced eye, and may not be to others', Americans and herd together as a just what deliveries are unnecessary, clan In a few houses. But a com It will be agreed, however, that a munlty which allows its laws to be large proportion are. Any delivery defied earns contempt, and no dlffl- which might be avoided by carrying culty should daunt police and prose- ome a purchase is duplication of cutors. service and therefore involves need-I As with other criminal conspiracies, less cost. the only way to deal with the tongs An elaborate system of free dellv-1 ia to catch the heads of the organ- ery of goods, has grown up through- ization, who Instigate the crimes and out the Nation and it will not be easy hire the murderers, and to punish them. to modify it greatly. It may not be it is useless to punish none but the modified at all, under the conditions assassins who take a life for (20, for of competition In most cities, unless their masters can and will hire more the National Council of Defense takes I at the same price. As with the Molly hand or a business dictator Is I Maguires In Pennsylvania, the Night, created. I riders in Tennessee and other like There is of course no such animal I organizations, conviction of the prin as free delivery. It Is paid for by the I cipals will soon break up the whole customer. Every package of pins or combination, at least so far as this yard of cloth or pound of potatoes state is concerned. If other states costs the buyer more because of the should not adopt the same means to common delusion of free delivery. rid themselves of the tongs, the latter The vlciousness of the system does are likely to give Oregon a wide berth not end with the practice by any one after their local chiefs are put in the establishment of sending articles to I penitentiary. one's home. A lot of wagons, or motorcycles, or automobiles perform An Ingenious solution of the prob the same service, cover the same lent of repopulation of France after routes and pile up a heavy toll against the war has been offered by a writer a buying community. Take milk de- in the Paris Medical. He begins with livery. Is there any economic justi- the postulate that each adult French fication for a great fleet of milk carts, man owes the state three living chll ROMANCE Or A POOR TOUNO ASTOIU For long years the sympathetic and romantic public has bewailed the fate of young Henry As tor, who In 18 69 married for love, and not for money, and was promptly cut off by his father, William B. Astor, with "only enough Income for his maintenance" so the story runs. The object of Young Astor's unselfish affection was his father's gardener's daughter, and they were married, and have lived In retirement and comparative poverty at West Copake wherever thaj for half a century. Now It develops that the young scion of a great name who was willing to marry beneath him has for years been enjoying the income on 125 par. eels of property In New York. Per haps it was not true that the dls. obedient son was disinherited; or per haps property valued at only a few millions say ten or twenty Is the Astor Idea of poverty. It Is to be hoped that the brave and devoted Astor has been amply rewarded for his deed. He lives, for getting the world and by the world forgot, struggling along as best he can with a scanty ten millions or so, and with his wife, the poor garden er's daughter. He Is 8 5, and she is of suitable age, and they are child- ess. Fortunate, perhaps, since there Is so little of this world's wealth to leave behind. The world, which has a proper In terest in other pepple's affairs, would doubtless like to .know just how many Astor families there are, and how much Is the aggregate fortune. It is a century and more since John Jacob Astor laid the foundations of the fam ily wealth, and It has grown to colossal proportions and has borne at the same time the burden of many sons and daughters. Just now there is much talk about conscription o wealth to carry on the war. There ought to be very little difficulty in determining where to begin. ABSOLVING THE FLY. The fly Is responsible for evil enough as It is, and so it will not be regretted that he has been absolved from blame for the spread of lnfan tile paralysis, by so eminent authority as. Dr. Hideyo Noguchi, the Japanese bacteriologist, who has made other important contributions to medical science. The value of his latest dis covery lies in the fact that it narrows the field of investigation, by the proc ess of exclusion. Unfortunately, It does not point the way to a cure. Dr., Noguchi was associated, in the making of an elaborate series of experiments, with Dr. Rokasaburo Kudo. Both are members of the re search staff of the Rockefeller Insti tute for Medical Research. Thei joint report Is fascinating reading, for the reason, among others, that it throws so much light upon the scien tific paraphernalia -that is available In the modern laboratory. A great number of live monkeys, obtained especially for the ournose. were m ployed, and flies and mosquitos were not only obtained from various parts of the country, but were bred in cages and watched through several genera tions. Biting and non-biting flies and mosquitos were observed under every possible condition. ine Japanese scientists are now prepared to accept as "plausible" the hypothesis of Drs. Amoss and Taylor that the incidence of infection may be due to the absence of a protective principle which exists in the mucou membranes of normal Individual While this protection remains intact. it is regarded as certain that the virus of the disease will be destroyed be fore It becomes established In the In dividual. The protective substance Is more generally and abundantly pres ent in adults than In young children. and this accounts for the fact that so few adults become infected. Ab sence is a highly abnormal condition; hence In a large family of children it Is quite probable that only one or two will be stricken. This apparently erratic course of epidemics has been the basis of much speculation in the past. Every step, even those which lead to negative conclusions, is important. Much has been accomplished In other investigations by the process of elimi nation. It is relatively only a few years since a long train of diseases was classified under the general head ing, "Cancer," and scientists have been able to reduce the death rate greatly by segregating the false from the true. The latter remained incur able, but the former responded to better-guided treatment. In the case of poliomyelitis, physicians seem to be approaching a basis for preventive At last the state and city author- loaded down with cans and bottles. running all over a city, each in com petition with the other putting its product on the back porch of the user? If milk Is worth 6 cents a quart at the cow. It mounts to 10 cents and more in the bottle, and a dren, and proposes, first, that those who do not pay the debt In nature's manner shall be compelled to pay It in cash; second, that no child shall be permitted to Inherit more than a third of Its parents' estate; and, third, that the parents of more than three great part of the extra 5 cents is for children shall receive from the gov-delivery-. It might easily be less if ernment an indemnity equal to the there were a common system, serving ascertained cost of rearing and edu- all dealers, preventing duplication, eating the number in excess of three. cutting out waste, and operating on The childless household and the cell schedule. It Is the same with ice I bate , would be left to choose freely and other commodities. I between the methods of payment Yet if the milk or ice dealers com- Those who shun the responsibilities bine and sell through a single agency, of parenthood would simply pay, and there Is at once a loud outcry against that would be all there would bo the "trust." If they strive to serve about It. But the penalty, coupled the public Independently, they appeal I with the Indemnity for larger families. to the same customers, cover iden- I the writer believes, would bo effective, tlcal territory and pile up the cost. which somebody must pay. In the end it Is the public. It is the day of waste elimination. Far-seeing' measures to conserve and add to the number of dairy cat tie in the country are regarded as We are urged to prevent waste In the highly essential to the future welfare kitchen, in the market. In the store, of the country In view of the paradox In the field everywhere. It is the I that although meat Is becoming more right idea. The head of the house and more scarce and higher in price, might begin by paying cash for what many persons persist In eating too he buys, and taking it home In his much of It. Milk and Its products are basket. If everybody were to pur- I an excellent substitute for part of the sue this commonsense and dignified meat ration. The American Museum way of supplying his household, the of Natural History has Issued a bulle results are certain to develop in lower I tin In which it says that only one prices and more satisfactory pur-1 sixth of the food value of the grain chases. SCPERSTITIOX SURVIVES. Jane Addams is always interesting, whether one agrees with her con elusions or not, and her most re cent contribution out of her experi ence in sociological work is certain to start a controversy among psy chologists. She writes In "The Long Road of Woman's Memory" of the devil child" of Hull House, and the account makes It seem almost as If we were living again In medieval times. h or the devil child never existed, of course we do not have devil children In the nineteenth cen tury but people went in throngs to see it, and would hardly be denied The imp, or elf, or whatever popular fancy had made It, was exceedingly real to thousands. There were times when the clamor to be admitted to its presence was positively menacing. This myth persisted, despite all de nials. The story obtained wide cir culation even before it was noticed by the newspapers. Letters were re ceived asking for special admission rates for large parties and an excur sion from a distant city was proposed. By what underground system of tel egraphy, or telepathy, or whatever It was, the tale traveled, no one knows. But the amazing feature of it all was its revelation of the credulity of so many people In what we refer to as our enlightened age. The various versions of the origin of the "devil child consumed by cattle is returned to us when we eat the meat, while milk is far more economical in every way. It Is estimated that every family should purchase at least a third x' a quart of milk per person per day. To make this possible In the Nation as a whole, the herds will need to be greatly Increased European War Primer (T ESS than 60 miles northeast of JLi Toulon, where American aviators re receiving Instruction from French fliers experienced In the problems of the present war. Is the charming little sea-bathing and Winter resort of St. Raphael. Here the French have an aviation camp of their own, where they are drilling the men who. n conjunction with British and Azner- can airmen, must. In the opinion of many military experts, win the war," says a war geography bulletin issued from the Washington headquarters of the National Geographic Society. St. Raphael is one of the numerous attractive watering places strung like beads upon the railway which skirts the Mediterranean shore from -Marseilles to Genoa, Twenty miles to the northeast Is Cannes, and 20 miles still further on Is Nice. The town, which has a population of E00O, has no archi tectural features of interest save an old church which was once fortified to resist the inroads of pirates who frequented the coast In -olden days. Two events of great historic interest have written the name of St. Raphael arge in Napoleonic annals. It was here that the future Emperor landed on his return from his Egyptian cam paign In 1799, and it was from here, just 15 years later, after causing every throne in Europe to totter and after redrawing the map of the whole con tinent to suit his Imperial will, that he embarked for his brief period of exile on the Island of Elba. Two miles northwest of St. Raphael is the smaller town of Frejus, now more than a mile from the sea. Its har bor filled with silt from the River Ar gens. More than 1900 years ago Frejus, under the name of Forum Julii, was an important seaport, founded by Julius Caesar and much favored by Augustus. It was to this port that the latter sent the ships captured at the Battle of Actium in 31, B. C, when Mark Antony deserted his fleet to fol low Cleopatra in ignominious flight. Several impressive ruins are still ex tant to attest the one-time importance of Forum Julii. There is. for example, the crumbling shell or tne Arenas, an amphitheater which is said to have accommodated from 9000 to 12,000 spec tators. And there are the remains of the great aqueduct, its arches towering 60 feet, which brought water to the town from the River Siagnole, 25 miles distant. But Forum Julii has more lmperlsh able monuments than the amphitheater and the aqueduct the achievements of two of its native sons, Agrlcola and Gallus. It was largely due to the statesmanlike qualities of Agrlcola that Britain was finally brought under complete subjection to Rome, for dur ing his seven years-as Governor of tne island he persuaded the natives to adopt both the customs and the civili zation of their conquerors- Tacitus, the historian, has left a highly eulogis tic appraisal of statesmanship and mil itary powers of Agrlcola, who was his father-in-law. Posterity is forced to rely entirely upon his contemporaries for an estimate of the genius of Cor nelius Gallus, none of whose poems has survived. We have the testimony of Ovid, however, that he was first among the elegiac poets of Rome, and Virgil was also a great admirer of this "For um Julil-lte." Among the modern sons of little Frejus who have won fame are Sleyes, the French abbe and statesman of the revolutionary period, and Desaugiers, the gifted song writer who after bare ly escaping from the blacks during the revolution In Santo Domingo came to the United States shortly after the colonies had gained their Independence, and earned his living here by giving piano lessons. Olll SOLDIERS AD O. . C LANDS Special Provision as to Establishing Residence Ia Suggnted. PORTLAND, July 20. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregon-California Railroad Grant lands recently reverting to the Government will soon be open for set tlement. The writer recently made In quiry of the Department of the Interior concerning the opening of these lands and particularly as to the opportuni ties the soldier boys would have for making entry when they are finally opened for settlement. The reply from the department contained the following Information: "The classification pro vided by the act (of June 9, 1916) has not been completed and no date has been set for the restoration of any of said lands to entry. When restorations are made sufficient notice will be given so as to enable all parties Interested to file applications If they desire to do so. rxo special consideration has been shown In said act of June 9, 1916, to soldiers In the matter of making entry of said land. Persons serving as sol diers in the United States Army may be permitted to make entry of said lands. They must, however, establish resi dence upon the land so entered within six months after the date of entry, as shown on page 11 of the Inclosed cir cular No. 541 entitled "Suggestions to Homesteaders, etc' No provision Is made In said act whereby credit may be allowed for service In the Army or Navy of the United States. It will be observed that no soeclal consideration Has been shown to sol dlers or sailors evidently because we did not. at the time of the passage of that act, appreciate what a vast Army the country would have In a few short months after its passage. "Persons serving as soldiers In the United States Army may be permitted to make entry of said lands." That is fine, but "they must, however, establish residence upon tne tana so entered within six months after the date of entry." It thus ap pears that our boys, the ones to whom every possible advantage and favor should be offered, are among the few who are excluded and from whom all opportunity is cut off, for It Is only too plain that the soldier cannot "establish residence upon the land" until dis charged from service. It ought to be clear and plain enough to everyone that this matter should Twenty-Five, Tears Aco. From The Oreironlan of July 21. 1892. New York. Madison Square Garden was packed tonight by people Intent n witnessing the ceremonies attendant pon the notification of Cleveland and Swvenaon of their nominations. B. Campbell, freight agent of the Union Pacific, who accompanied Pres ident S. H. H. Clark and family to San Francisco, returned here with the party yesterday. James Lotan. the new Collector of Customs for this port, took charge c his office yesterday and was warmly greeted by clerks in the office, all of whom are personal friends of his. Dublin. There was a bloody riot In New Tipperary today In consequence of the excitement over the elections. Sev eral Parnellitea attached a party of anti-Parnellltes in the street and a hot encounter with clubs and fists followed. Moscow, Idaho. Fire broke out this morning In A Baystrop s restaurant. hree doors south of the postoffice, and the blaze soon spread to adjoining buildings. Many occupants escaped with their lives only. The conflagra tion was extensive and damage- was heavy. nave early, if not the immediate, atten tion of Congress and the Department of the Interior. Thousands upon thousands of the best men our country has pro duced have offered to sacrifice and are sacrificing their all. They have left comfortable homes, friends and loved ones, they have abandoned (without hone of rprnv.rv lnrotiv. ....... i , ment, estaDiisned business and profes monai practice all the prospects of the future are left as nothing. Yet. what of their return? Surely something should be offered, not to mmnms.r. mem. ior sacrnices such as theirs can not do Dougnt. but rather to erinhlo them again to take their position among us in civil life as honored, re spectacle, self-supporting citizens sines are already making pro vision ror tne cominir of th dnv when It will be found expedient to demobilize the huge armies now In the field. Can we afford to do less than thpv? w have at our disposal these thousands oi acres or public lands, they have cos us comparatively little, the general puouc win get tne benefit of their de velopment. they will afford the neces sary opportunity for large numbers o our soldiers to make good again in civil life, and such a disposition of them will not in any way place a burden on those remaining at home and receiving th benefits, both direct and indirect, of tne sacrnices oi tne, soldier. Again I Insist, something should be Famous names In American history will be perpetuated In this great war. A descendant of Ethen Allen has joined the marines in Montana and If, In the name of the great Jehovah and the Continental Congress, he does not capture a fort it will be because there are no German forts afloat. Speed Is an essential in considering the case of a man and woman in the State Penitentiary, who may be guilt less If the confession of Convict Rig- gin be true. If they are Innocent, they should not be held an hour longer than needed to show their Innocence. The Michaelis Idea of honorable peace Is to stop hostilities and leave the situation as at the start, which is something the allies cannot accept. Their idea of honorable peace is to put Frussianism out of business. If Seattle should acquire the rest of the streetcar lines as a sequel to the strike, it would have a fine op portunlty to lose still more money va . Mr than it is losing on the present mu- the Dark Ages. One was that before nlclPal "aea- the child was born the father, who was an atheist, had torn a sacred pic ture from the wall, with the exclama tion, "I'd as soon see the devil In the house as that picture." Another version was that the father, expect ing an addition to an already large family of girls, declared that he wquld If the railroads do as well In July as they did In June, they will have the car shortage abolished about the time when movement of the crops starts a new shortage. That young woman- at Los Angeles rather have the devil come than an- PeE ner weaatng aate one weeK other girl. It was quite impossible to ahead, so she can get back to pick convince some visitors that there was lno peacacs, m " v.u ui . not actually In Hull House a baby wife for tnriit. born with cloven feet, horns and a tail and that horrified its nurses with The method or selection in use to I . , .1 .J m- -B a flow of profane language on the ua' lul "10 "" day it was born, Miss Addams does not dismiss the Incident lightly or find an easy solu tion in the cry of "ignorance." She attempts to discover a foundation The fact that most of the credulous ones were women, she seems to be lieve, is helpful In reaching a con clusion. There must be some reason for this blind confidence in the ex lstence of such a child, she would argue, although It will be held by many that- it Is cated as the description of it would indicate. It will be the squarest lot tery ever held. In reappointing so many Oregon postmasters, Wilson slaps the war- horses for not doing better in No vember, with all the jobs In sight for new men. A good remedy for hot-weather Ills is to postpone a meal until time for not necessary that the next.' Looked at rightly, this is there should be what we commonly not missing one something undesir- call a "reason" for every superstition. I able. Experience is needed to navigate a canoe ln the Willamette, but the man without it does not know it until The Army needs straw and It will be better not to burn so many stacks after threshing. She sees a "sex memory" of wrongs suffered by women in past ages, and subconscious reaction toward a feel ing that there must be some sort of retribution for the "sorry scheme of he capsizes. things." v xnis is ritting an argument to a preconception withv a vengeance. It would almost seem as if Miss Addams had developed her own subconscious "sex memory" rather intensely, but of course she does not justify credulity, but only attempts to explain it. To follow her In her' reasoning, one would need to accept as proved a good many I Fellows drawn and not required to tenets on which scientists and meta- go can double the glory by enlisting. physicians still fail to agree. The old conflict between heredity and en- I Sixty days seems to be the popular vironment as major influences on the 1 1. W. W. sentence. destiny of the individual, for example. crops out again. We shall not at tempt to act as umpire in the match. Of course, the non-existence of the devil child Is settled Miss Addams' word on that, score is final, even if The Boy Scouts of Astoria are thor. oughbreds. They will pick the cranberries. Figures may be dry reading,' but not just now. Is a forest fire part of the German scheme? In Other Days. fi t reraov this disability of our ten poetry and short stoi fofjf "d..l0 Irlr.Lth;mat least!read them before audien II EXP WITH HARVEST IS URGED Writer Thinks Teacher Ia Worth More In Field Than Schoolroom. GERVAIS, Or.. July 17. (To the Ed itor.) There are three prime elements in the successful prosecution of the war. The soldiers at. the front, in spired by the high Ideals of the prin ciples for which they fight, will bear Old Glory triumphantly over the ram- Darts of Prussian militarism, if sup ported by a patrlotlo co-operation of the bther elements of a successful war fare. The financial strength of an army Is all Important, for many a gallant army has been swept from the Dattleneld not for want of brains or bravery, but be cause the proper munitions of warfare were not in their possession. 'I he bravest hearts and strongest arms can not long endure the battlefront with freezing limbs and empty stomachs. Oregon has done herself proud by sending her noble sons to the ranks, until our ratio stands highest in our great republic. She has and is ready to give financial strength to prosecute the war in full proportion to her sister states, as shown by her work in buying bonds and Red Cross contributions. Next comes the food supply, the third and last great factor in the trio for cer tain victory. The farmers and even the cities have faithfully responded to the call of our Government to raise all the food that Intensive farming can produce. There yet remains the successful harvesting of those large crops In proper time. In earlier days, when but little more than grain was grown, we counted on the harvesting of many acres to the hand, while now the or chards, vine crops, beans, beets, onions and potatoes require a little army to handle the area formerly harvested by a dozen men. Our peason Is a month later than nor mal. The August crops will this year be harvested in September, if harvest ed at all. The valley farmers have always re lied upon the cities and towns to aid them In this work, the major part being finished before the September school began. Owing to the. late season and war conditions It Is up to the cities and towns if those much-needed crops are harvested. . In my opinion a true patri otic teacher is worth more In the har vest field In September than In the schoolroom. It will be better for the children to lay aside the text-book and learn the true principles of patriotism by helping win the war, helping to gather the food to feed battling bro thers and comrades In foreign lands. Better to lay -aside for a month the copy book and write Herbert C. Hoover that they are helping harvest the large crops, that his requests are heeded and vast stores of food are at his command. . Write to that brother who will be In the ranks beyond the seas that we will send him and his comrades choice food from Oregon, to make that good right arm strong to strike for the no ble principles for whioh they fight. Write him that the chosen one from the family circle shall not fight alone when willing hands can gather food that lifts their strength to victory. I have full confidence In the patriot ism of the people of Oregon. I have spent the better part of my life with the boys and girls of our state! I have tried to teach them to be true to their God, their country and themselves, and I expect to hear their clarion voices ring out over hill and dale to war cry of victory. Down with the slacker! Help win the war! WILLIAM C. EG AN equal opportunity with civilians to provide for the future. The require ment that they "must establish a resi dence upon the land within six months after the date of entry" is obviously unfair and should be removed. Con gress has the power to remove It. Why should Congress not act? JAMES A. OANOE. THE MOTHER'S "HIT." I sit alone In my room tonight And my heart is very sad. For over the sea my laddie has gone. The only laddie I had. I'll try to be brave and have courage vvnile my laddie Is over the sea. To help him succeed, why, I must be brave While he fights for Old Glory and me. He lives In my heart, alt ho" far away. My laddie so brave and tall. The poplars sigh and seem to say - "What If your laddie should fall?" Well, what if my laddie should never return? If killed In this awful war I'll try to live closer to God each day And forget that my heart is sore For there's many less strong than I, methlnks. Who will need my love and cheer; Let the poplars sigh. I'll "right about face And do my wee "bit" while here J. B. C. CAUSE OF" BULL RUN STAMPEDE Mr. Cllne Sayn Defeat Was Good Thins; for Union In Lone Rnn. PORTLAND. July 20. (To the Ed itor.) The defeat and stampede of the Union forces at the first battle of Bull Run, July, 1861. is commonly attrib uted to the raw levies on the Union side, that discipline and drill of the Northern troops would have averted the disaster that overtook them. This In a measure Is true, but the fact Is the Confederate force greatly outnumbered the Union side, as shown by the official reports of Generals Fry and Jordan, Adjutants-General of the ' Union and Confederate armies, which are as follows: Union. 896 officers, 17.676 enlisted men and 24 pieces of artillery. Confederate force. Generals and staff, 37; infantry, rank and file, 19,569; cavalry, 1468; artillerymen, 826, with 27 pieces of artillery. In other words, the Confederates had In round numbers 2500 men and three pieces of artillery more than General McDowell, the Union commander, and in this number of McDowell's force is included the Fourth Pennsylvania In fantry and Varlan's New York Battery, which, as any veteran engaged In that battle will remember, were held In the rear as reserves and not In the engage ment at all; so that General McDowell actually had little more than 16,000 men. against 22,000 Confederates, tne latter led by officers, every one of them educated at West Point and most of whom had seen service In. the Mexican War. Moreover, the defeat of the Union Army at the first battle of Bull Run was the best thing that could have hap pened. It aroused the North to the great task In hand and set the Admin istration to the adoption of measures necessary for the long and hard strug gle that was to follow. C. E. CLINE. HOW TO OBTAIN PUBLICATION One's Frlenila Are Not Always Unprej udiced Critics of Writing. PORTLAND. July 17. (To the Ed itor) For several years I have writ- ries. I have ces and have always won praise for them, but though many say they are worthy of publica tion. I cannot get any publisher to rec ognize them. Can you tell me how to present them for publication and how I can become recognized? What papers or magazines take volunteer writings? Would it be better to get them pub lished myself or to depend on their merit. I THANK YOU. Germs In Ills Money. Louisville Courier-Journal. "Does your husband subscribe to the theory that kissing transmits germs? "No, he thinks that germs are mostly transmitted by money, and Is very careful not to, hand me any." Flood of Tears Costa S-1S. Chaparal. ' Onyx My wife burst Into a flood of tears the other night. Bronx Did she cause any trouble? Onyx I should say so. Swept away $4 8 for a new hat In the first torrent. Many magazines accept the work of "volunteer" writers and most editors are keenly on the lookout for budding genius. If you cannot obtain recogni tion anywhere there Is probably some thing the matter with your work. One's friends frequently are not unprej udiced critics. Study the kind of ma terial published in various periodicals and try to compare your own with It as you would compare the work of two strange writers. There Is no conspiracy on foot to prevent publication of meri torious productions. i Share of Her Candy. Youth's Companion. Little Doris Is very polite. The other day she offered her aunt a share of her candy. "Will you have a sugared almond. Aunt Mary?" she asked sweetly, at the same time tendering the paper bag. "Thank you. I will." replied her aunt. And as she was particular what she ate, she selected a white one. "Auntie," said little Doris, "do you know the difference between the pink and the white almonds?" "No, dear," said auntie with a kindly smile. "Well, I'll tell you." erplalned Doris. "They were all pink once, and I sucked all the pink off the white ones. Didn't I do it nicely? BY EVERY TEST OF RELIABLE READABILITY IT IS- FOREMOST The Sunday Oregonian ALL THE WORLD IS A STORY The business of the modern news - paper is to "cover" that story with impartial completeness. By the test of its multitude of regular readers The Sunday Oretronian tells the story of world events, here, there and everywhere, clearly an comprehensively. That's why. THE GIRLS ON THE WAR POSTERS If your face is your fortune, and you are an American girl to the heart's core, how may you 6erve the flag in better fashion than by posing for posters that are to urge on recruiting, liberty bonds and Red Cross mercies? Many girls of the United States have done so, and Barbara Cray don tells about 'em in a Sunday feature. YOUR JOB'S TOO SMALL That's Kaufman philosophy. Whiners should read it more often, and the strong of heart obtain greater fortitude by a Sunday morning perusal of the Kaufman page, as it appears weekly in The Oregonian. It gives the ability to grin and grip. IN THE SALT CAVES OF AVERY ISLAND Poking around, here and there, it is Frank G. Carpenter's job to find where things come from, before they appear on the table. It's a war-time job, and ha does it well. This week he has located salt sufficient for the sea soning of a thousand Brobdingnagian soups. PLENTY OF POEMS There's never a drouth of poesy for the Old Poems page. The eternal wells of song bubble just as bountifully as they did a year and more ago, when the Sunday feature of ancient ballads and songs was originated. The piece you used to speak at school, before the thatch began to thin, i3 there. Look for it. VALUE OF PANAMA CANAL IN WAR By recent tests of the great Canal it has been demonstrated that an American fleet could be rushed from one coast to the other in time to meet any foreign expedition aimed at our 6hores. Charles W. Duke has a special story about it in The Sunday Oregonian. NOTHING FORGOTTEN The Sunday Oregonian is complete. Its news service, both local, National and foreign, affords the latest authentic information. Its special departments and features are designed for many tastes. Nothing has been forgotten. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Just Five Cents.