10 TIIE MORNING OliEGONIAN. TnUESDAT. JULY . 2G, 1917. PORTLAND, OREGOK. Entered at Portland (Oregon). Postofflcs ss second-class mail matter. Eubscriptlon rates Invariably In sdvanesr (Br Hall.) Sunday Include), on year 8 22 T'Ay, Sunday Included, mix months ..... 4'25 uly. Sunday included, three months ... 2.23 Dally. Sunday Included, on month ..... .J Dally, without Sunday, one year .00 Dally, without Sunday, three months ... 1-75 Dally, without Sunday, on month ...... "Weekly, one year 1.51 Kunday, one year - 2. 51 fcunday and, weekly S.60 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sanday Included, one year Dally, Sunday Included, one month ..... -3 Dally, without Sunday, one year .... .0 Dally, without Sunday, three months ... 1-J Daily, without Sunday, one month ...... .60 Weekly, one year 2.80 Sunday, one year ........... .......... 2.50 Cunday and weekly 8.50 How to Remit Send postofflce money rfn er, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Oive poatofflce address In full, including county and state. Poatase RaM 12 to 18 pages. 1 cent: IS to 32 pases, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 3 cents; 78 to 82 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post, age double rates. EaMtern Business Office Verree A Conklln. Brunswick building. New York; Verree A Conklln, uteger building, Chicago; San Fran cisco representative, IU J. XUdwell, 74- Mar Vet street. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, JULY 20. 1917. TIIE WEAKNESS OF RUSSIA. It is impossible to exaggerate the gravity of Russia's breakdown in its effects on the cause of the allies. The revolution and Its immediate conse quences resemble the break-up of the Roman empire. Taken as a whole, the Russian empire was not a nation; it was a nation to which had been an nexed a number of conquered nations, held together by the autocracy. With the Czar the revolution destroyed the bond which held these conquered na tions to Russia. None of them feel any obligation to defend Russia prop er against the invaders and each claims its independence. Poles, Finns, Ukrainians, Georgians in the Cauca sus, Tartars and Turkomans in Central Asia, all are moved by this desire for independence. At the same time, the true Russians are so intoxicated with their newly won liberty that internal reform diverts their minds from de fense against the external enemy. They also find themselves engaged in a. war begun for conquest by the au tocracy, which is repugnant to their democratic sentiments. Here was the raw material for in ternal dissension and for destruction of military discipline, of which the Germans were not slow to make use. By pouring propagandists into the country and by hiring thousands of venal Russians, they incited dissen sion, aggravated division and hastened the process of disintegration. Nothing but a strong central government, un flinchingly supported by the loyal part of the intelligent classes and by the masses of the people, can stop this process. Kerensky is endeavoring to establish such a government by his rule of blood and iron. He may stop sedition by wholesale imprisonment and execution of those who spread it and of the German agents who incite it. He may check the movements for secession by giving to the con quered nations pledges of autonomy in a federal republic. At the same time- he must bring the mutinous, de serting and fugitive soldiers back to their duty, and must do his best with the troops which remain loyal to stop the German advance, or at least to make the retreat orderly and to save artillery and supplies. It is a her culean task for a man whose fiery spirit inhabits a weak body. If the Russian retreat should con tinue until the Germans and Austrian, penetrate into the heart of the coun try, the latter would add immensely to their stores of food and munitions. If they should occupy Petrograd, they would capture the great Putiloff Iron Works and many munition factories. The Russian Baltic fleot would be in danger and, if it should be captjired, the Baltic Sea would become prac tically a German lake. The flank of the Roumanian line would be turned, and the Roumanian army would be cut off from its base of supplies in Southern Russia. The mouths of the Danube would then fall into German hands, and that river would be used to send submarines and other light draft vessels into the Black Sea. to capture the Russian fleet and make that body of water also a German lake. A comparatively -short advance from Galata would bring the Germans to Odessa, the great grain port. The coal and iron districts which supply the Putiloff works are in Southern Russia, several hundred miles farther east. If Russia's resistance were to break down utterly, the Germans would have abundant food and war material at their command and they could obtain unlimited labor by en slaving the people as they have those of the countries they have already oc cupied. As regards supplies, they would be able to hold out indefinitely. But the Germans admit that they have not enough men to make so great an advance, for their eastern line is thinly held, they lack reserves to strengthen it, much less to lengthen it, and they dare not weaken their western line for that purpose. If they liad the troops, a further advance into Russia's vast spaces would be fraught with grave danger, for the Russians excel in strategic retreats, in which they carry off or destroy everything worth having, and a large unit might turn, cut off and surround a body of Germans. An advance for a great distance would strengthen Kerensky uy raiiymg tne people around hihi and unifying them, though Germany's game is to divide them. It would use material which is needed in the west, where the allies are on the offensive and are continually reinforced with American troops and material. Hence the present disasters may have no decisive results adverse to the allied cause, and may, on the contrary, have the desired tonic effect on the Rus sians. Nevertheless the Russian retreat and confusion make all the more es sential a vigorous offensive in France anr Belgium. It imposes on the American people the duty of speeding up their movements to build ships, to provide an air fleet, to hurry food and troops across the ocean and to or ganize new armies for steady rein forcement of the western line. We cannot afford to fritter away time and energy on quarrels about ships and food bills. Our civil population must be kept constantly at work in pro ducing all requisites for the allied armies, and means should be found to stop and prevent strikes. We have a tremendous work ahead in supply ing Russia and rebuilding the Russian railroads as well as providing for our own forces and the western allies. The whole Nation should put ItsclX behind the President, and he should call to his aid the highest ability that can be found. BILLIONS. The astute Senator Smoot took his pencil in hand the other day and made a little calculation on war ex penses. He was Btartled to find that America's war bill for the current fis cal year will be the staggering aggre gate of 114,226,000,000. Now the mathematical gentleman from Utah rises to correct his esti mates. He finds he had omitted a few trifling items, such as $500,000, 000 for the Shipping Board, $2,000, 000,000 for the allies and $150,000, 000 deficit in the executive depart ments. The Senator now says that his revised estimates bring the unheard-of total to $17,000,000,000. Let us see: Congress recently au thorized an initial war expenditure of $7,000,000,000 $5,000,000,000 in bonds and $2,000,000,000 in certifi cates. Now Secretary McAdoo says he must have $5,000,000,000 more. The amount to be raised by direct tax is about $1,800,000,000. The total thus in sight is $13,800,000,000. We are still shy a few billions of the $17. 000,000,000 of Senator Smoot. Doubt less he knows of some items of which the public has not been apprized. The public is not yet able to grasp the tremendous significance of either $13,800,000,000 or $17,000,000,000. The difference between these huge sums is" not material. The public knows where these bil lions are, to come from out of its pocket. It is becoming important to know who is to spend them, and how. BrSY POLITICAL BRIGADIERS. Forty thousand young Americans the flower of the Nation have had nearly three months of intensive train ing to be officers in the new army which is to go against the seasoned veterans of a powerful enemy. Twenty-five hundred families of the Pacific Coast have voluntarily offered to their Nation the services, and if need be the lives, of their patriotic sons, and they a part of the 40,000 are in training at the San Francisco officers' camp. Twenty-five hundred sons of Ore gon the rising hope and chief reli ance of the future state were yes terday mustered into the Federal Army and are soon to take their places in the dangerous trenches of France. Three hundred and fifty thousand other valiant young soldiers are now being transferred from the National Guard to the Grand Army of the Union and are to see arrtt know what war means. A great new army of 500,000, or more, valiant and true citizens have been called to the colors through the selective process. Altogether, a million, and more, fine and brave sons, brothers, fathers, have rallied to the flag and are to undertake the most heroic task yet performed by America. They must go through dtlnger, and fire, and blood shed, and suffering, and many of them are not to return. ' Now we hear ot a great rush of the politicians to be Captains. Majors and Colonels for this patriotic host. If they have their way, the sons of America are to be sacrificed to the vainglory and inexperience of self seeking job-hunters. The fathers, mothers, sisters, broth ers of America will have something to say about political Generals and Captains. They will not have their sons and brothers led to war by gilded pets of some Congressman not if they can help it. They can help it by getting into immediate touch with their Congressmen and letting them know what they think about it. PROPRIETY IX TOMBSTONES. Ever since the ancient Egyptians designed the pyramid as a fitting monument to the dead, the propriety of various forms and embellishments and the general question of "good taste" in tombstones has engaged the attention of artists and architects. It is newly brought to notice by an arti cle in Granite, Marble and Bronze, in which a plea is made that desire for novelty for its own sake be tempered with stricter sense of the eternal fit ness of things. The writer, linger Klliott, devotes himself particularly to the headstone, which greatly outnum bers all other forms of memorials, but he finds the subject quite large enough to deserve serious considera tion. Despite universal desire that everything associated with the event of death shall be conducive to the highest thoughts, really satisfactory examples of what a headstone ought to be are rarely met with. To the true artist, the proprieties are everything, and it is probably true that the average layman has a better sense of innate right than he is aware. The man or woman who only knows that a certain form of vase is restful to the eye, but does not know pre cisely why, or who is offended by cer tain color combinations and pleased by others, but does not analyze the sen sation, will be interested in what Mr. Klliott has to say. The writer holds, for example, that every consideration must center around the facts that the head stone is made to bear an inscription, that, an inscription is a formal thing, and that consequently the stone must partake of this formality. So he would exclude the rough-hewn stone, and the one with polished face and rough sides, and the stone tree-trunk, and the polished' roll set upon a plinth. Hearts and armless hands and other products of the stone carver he con demns without benefit of clergy. The whole history of ornament in architecture is bound up in Mr. Elliott's warning against the seeking after novelty effects for cemeteries. The new may be beautiful, but more (jiuuawj ic is not. xne laci mat the seeker for it did not have beauty uppermost in his consciousness counts against realization of the desirable. A beautiful woman would not be more beautiful if she had two noses and three eyes, although she would be novel enough. Her beauty would come from the perfection of familiar features, not from their multiplica tion, however ingenious it might be. Our forefathers of long ago were con tent to progress slowly. An altera tion in a generation in the inherited design was rather the exception than the rule, and we still find it difficult, if not impossible, to improve upon the lines prescribed by the Greeks. So we are advised to cling rather closely to the old forms. Chaste lettering, due relation of width to height, pre cise placing of simple ornamentation are necessary factors in creating the exalted spiritual restfulness that should confirm us in our belief that there is peace beyond the grave. Tourists who have visited Buffalo, JT. T.t and have taken the sightseeing trips prescribed for them will not have forgotten a .noteworthy example of sepulchral architecture, which we think Mr. Elliott would not approve. It marks the grave of a young man who ended his life after an unfortu nate love affair, and depicts in stone his deathbed scene. It is novel, but not inspiring, and so violates the high canons ot memorial construction. On the other hand, a simple headstone, not an inch too wide or too tall, with no- offending marks of overdecoration and no adventitious and superfluous ornament, might produce precisely the effect desired. Books have been written about the curious epitaphs in the graveyards of the world. It will not have escaped observation that those which obviously strove for the effect of newness were the least satisfactory from every sober viewpoint. It would seem to be Mr. Elliott's purpose to show that as to the material and design of the head stone itself, the same fact holds true. A STORY. A great many years ago "a young man who was engaged in the arduous work of teaming ran across, on the sage-brush desert lfcar Umatilla, a stranger who was trying with a horse to find his way to Pendleton and had lost his way. The young teamster took the wanderer in, found water and food for man and beast, split his blanket with him for the night, and in the morning sent him on his way rejoicing toward Pendleton. A few months afterward, the young man was in La Grande, and, being of devout mind and spirit, he attended church. There in the pulpit, in the sacerdotal garb of a bishop, was his friend of the desert. He. made him self known to the - bishop and was joyfully received. Later, the good bishop, finding that the young man was saving his hard-earned money to get an education, offered to assist him through an Episcopal college. He was an Episcopal bishop. The family of the young fellow was consulted, and, being of another faith, the father and mother thought it their religious duty to decline. The son returned to his team and the sagebrush, at $1 per day, until he had saved enough to carry out his life's ambition. The teamster-student, by perseverance and worth, became an honored and loved professor in an important educational institution of Oregon. Somehow we think of that little Incident when we note the objection to the consolidation between Forest Grove and Albany colleges. One is Presbyterian, the other Congregation al. They are therefore to go forever their separate ways. BOOT OUT TIIE I. W. W. Though direct evidence is. in the nature of the case, unobtainable, the prevalence of I. W. W. disorders gives good ground for the suspicion that the forest fires which have broken out in the Northwest are, in some cases at least, due to that organization. Burning of forests is in line with I. V. W. doctrine, and is the same kind of lawlessness to which its members in cline. The dry season naturally causes some fires, but it is also good cover for incendiarism in the forests. When all the fir lumber which can be cut is needed to build ships and Army camps and when there is a great de mand for spruce lumber for aircraft, these fires- are more serious than usual. The danger is too great for further paltering with the I. W. W. It has given abundant proof of its defiance of law and of having become the tool of the enemy. Its existence should be declared unlawful, and membership should be held sufficient cause for arrest and for putting men to work under conditions where they can do no mischief and cannot escape with out imminent risk of wounds or death. The country needs their labor- and that of the men whom they incite to strike without-cause, as well as the property which they destroy. It can get all of these by treating the organ ization as a public enemy. IRELAND'S CHEAT OPl'OlnTXITT. If the Irish convention which met Wednesday should agree on a plan of self-government within the British empire and if the British Parliament should ratify it, those Irishmen who may continue in enmity to England will have no claim on the sympathy of Americans. By submitting the question of home rule to a convention of Irishmen, Premier Lloyd George has put the question up to Ireland and has proved the sincerity of dec larations made by himself and other Britons that the obstacles to the real ization of Irish hopes consisted not in the opposition of the English, Scotch and Welsh but in the divisions among the Irish. If home rule should not result from this convention, the fault will not rest with England but with Ireland. Opposition of the Unionist clement in Ulster to coming under the rule of a Parliament at Dublin is not an in superable difficulty in the way of agreement, for it can be disarmed by resort to the federal principle. The beauty of that principle is that it is applicable to small as well as large units, and can meet just such a case as that of Northeast Ulster. That part of Ireland could be made one of sev eral divisions of the island, each of which would have a large measure of self-government under a government directing the affairs of all Ireland. Each province could have reserved to it certain rights, similar to those which are reserved by our states, with which the general government would be for bidden to interfere. Northeast Ulster could thus be secured from religious oppression or discrimination, which it fears, and could be ruled by its Scotch Irish majority. The most serious danger is not that the convention will disagree but that the Sinn Fein party will wreck the whole scheme by continuing its de mand for independence. That party has proved so irreconcilable that it re fused to participate in the convention and it met the olive branch offered by the government, in the release of rebel prisoners, with riots and display of the republican flag. It is not content with home rule, as have the states of the Union, but wishes to secede from the Union after the example of the Confederate states. The Ameri can people are in hearty sympathy with the demand for home rule, but they have no sympathy with secession. Ireland has been under the same gov ernment as England for more than seven centuries, the two countries have many traditions and interests in common and, with relation to other countries, their highest interest would be served by a common political head, a common system of national defense and diplomacy, with separate legisla tures and local governments. By de manding more the Siaa Fein stands to' lose American sympathy for any further Nationalist agitation. One of Ireland's misfortunes is that it no sooner comes within reach of the object of Its desire than it grasps after more and by so doing loses all. It constantly loses the bird in the hand by reaching after the bird in the bush. Of late years there have been evidences of more sober sense among Irish leaders, but during the last year the impracticable graspers after the impossible seem again to have been gaining the ascendant. The term "well-known clubman" is probably less distinctive in Havana than in any other city in the world. The city has a population of 350,000 and 125,000 men belong to one club or another, according to the Bulletin of the Pan-American Union, these fig ures accounting for nearly every man in the city, from millionaire sugar planter to hodcarrier. One club has a membership of 45,000. There is no reason why a Havanan should ever go home because he has no other place to go. The Cuban club has the social and recreational features com mon in other countries, and some other advantages, in' the way of mu tual benefit and aid departments. There are free night schools for mem bers, for example; kindergartens for the members small children, and free hospitals and sanatoria. - Some admit women to membership. What will most surprise most Americans is the fact that all these thingu are done with dues averaging $1.50 a. month. Boston is taking advantage of the spirit that inspires women to take up nursing as a profession in wartime by pointing out the necessity for special "industrial nursing" and providing educational courses to that end. The position of the specially trained nurse in the large - manufacturing plant is becoming one of increasing impor tance, and is being enlarged to include vocational studies, so that men may be safeguarded not only as to their health but also as to the chaj-acter of employment for which they are best fitted, physically and mentally. The new nurse is also a sanitary scientist, as well as a first aid in every emer gency, and has succeeded in many instances, so it is said. In proving that she is indispensable to a large estab lishment under modern working con ditions. William Ellery Leonard's transla tion of Lucretius' "In the Nature of Things" is criticised by the London Times because he uses such American isms as "right there." Such expres sions are considered not good literary English and as being slangy, but why should not an American render Latin into his own kind of English, and what is slang but the latest device for forcibly expressing an idea? A search would probably prove that many ex pressions which were condemned as slang in the eighteenth, or even the mid-nineteenth, century are accepted as good English today. Languages grow with the needs of the time, but literary pedants do not. They are the Mrs. Grundys of literature. The time is approaching when 'the "boys" rejected at San Fqancisco "will be coming home. That thcy did, not get commissions is not to their dis credit. They did their best in the endeavor, and. once more in civil life, they can be depended upon to do the same. A university woman lecturing here on foods emphasizes the need of long cooking for the legumes. Old-timers who cooked the beans all night in a dutch oven while on the big trek knew this, but their descendants, using modern ranges, need to bo instructed. The lack of rain has passed the stage of humor. Rain is needed, but the skies remain clear and the farmer is blue. There is a deficiency of twelve inches, and nobody would ob ject to a quarter of it in one day just now. A cherry tree at Salem produced 1500 pounds of fruit that sold for $90. The woman who can figure a fortune In one hen and a sitting of eggs must turn her talents toward the cherry tree. If there is a burglar running around with 500 pounds of dynamite stolen from a camp in Eastern Multnomah, he must be approached with caution. Too sudden arrest will Bend him off. Again have resolutions been Intro duced in Congress "butting in" on home rule for Ireland. President Wilson will not take them seriously, nor will Great Britain. As the Government cannot supply arms at present. Captain Deich might train his B Company in the use of fists for emergency work. If there is not one, there should be a law requiring cattle on a public road to carry lights. The result of bump ing a cow is disastrous. The American dollar is below par in Switzerland, but it buys a dollar's worth at home, the best place to spend it- Villa is killing just enough govern ment troops to get into print while the big thing is on in Europe. Portland streets were safe to pedes trians yesterday. All the butcher boys were at the picnic. There was lack of enthusiasm at the opening of the home rule convention yesterday but wait. It was a happy idea to put a spy suspect under anesthetic at Miami to hear him babble. The Third Oregon loses its Identity, but Oregon will keep trace of its actions. Not enjoying the benefits of the ref erendum, conscription will go in Can ada. The housewife is canning what she can and making pies of the surplus. For one day in the year the grocery boy did not ask: "Anything else?" The biggest picture of desolation Is found in a neglected hopfield. Where are the Summer apples and attendant cholera morbus? The home guards must drill with wooden guns. Seventy cents for ice or bust the trust! . The Serb Army Today. It Fights on KxaertlMK- TIe. but Intent That Country's Bill Shall Be Paid. The condition of the' Serbian army, after nearly three years of the bitter est experience undergone by any of the entente allied forces, is described by Herbert Corey, the war correspond ent, in a graphic communication to the National Geographic Society, a part of which is Issued as the following war geography bulletin from the so ciety's Washington headquarters: "The Serbs are the poor relations of the allies. They are armed with the old St. Etlenne rifle which the French discarded. The artillery in support has been cast from other fronts. Their surgeons are borrowed surgeons, for the most part. They are uniformed and fed by the French, and Great Britain loans them money. They never have enough cars, even for staff use. Sometimes they have not enough food. But they always have enough ammunition and they find enough fighting for themselves. "The Serbian army began the great retreat of 1915 250.000 strong. Not more than 150,000 reached asylum on the inland of Corfu after the Winter's fight through the snow-filled passes of Albania and Montenegro. In the confusion of those days someone had forgotten. There was not sufficient fobd or clothing or medicines or nurs ing waiting them. Men who had struggled through the Winter died on the open beaches of the island of Vido- "Dyin men dug their own graves and then dug the graves of the men already dead. Not more than half were fit to serve again when the Fall cam paign of 1916 began. "It was a sad army bitter army but not a despairing army that I ac companied last Winter. Many of these men were 'chcechas.' in the Serb phrase. When a man reaches the age of 40 he becomes "uncle" to his neigh bors. Some of these men were in the fourth line before the war. "Serbia to the Serb peasant means the little white cottage, the plum or chard, the 10 acres of ground. Few of them had been 50 miles away from home when war began five years ago in the Balkans. Fewer have seen their homes since. They have received no news from their wives and families, for the Austro-Bulgarian censorship had been extremely severe. They have seen their comrades die. Most of them three men out of five in some units have been wounded at some time dur ing the war. "There were no songs upon the march except during those vivid days when the Bulgarians were being forced out of Monastir. There was no light hearted talk about the campflres. There was no music except that now and then one heard the weird and com plaining tones of a one-stringed fiddle which some patient soldier had made out of the material at hand. They kept to themselves or in little groups of twos and threes. At night scores of tiny fires would sparkle in the open land on either side of the Monastir road, where the paired comrades were cooking their evening meal. They marched badly, slowly, slouching, their old shoulder bowed under their packs, their grizzled faces deeply lined. Yet these men were the cutting edge of the weapon that bent back the Bul garian lines. "One division the Morava re mained in the n?Kressive for 95 days without rest. During that period they had but one trench the front trench. They had no second line, no reserve, no rest camp. "One regiment of the Cboumadla di vision lost 1000 out of 14U0 men in taking Vetternik Mountain, and then held that mountain under fire from the Rock of Bloc.d. which dominated the summit, for 2 days until relief came. Even then the men of the regi ment which had been so nearly wiped out did not go to rest. They stayed on Vetternik. "In the taking of Kaymnkchalan half of some of the organizations were killed outright. "The Serbs were enabled to do these things partly because of the experi ence gained In five years of almost continuous fishting. Another factor was the spirit of the men. They no lontrcr hoped for anything for them selves. They expected 1o die. Those who still remain expect to he killed in action. But they intend that the bill of Serbia shall be paid. Bankrupt YVlth Forrlsn Rstate. W11TTU SALMON. Wash., July 23. (To the Editor.) A few years apro there appeared in this Valley a man claiming to bo the brother of Rob ert Scott, the explorer. Ho borrowed money here and principally on the strength of his statement that hi.- family had a large estate in Scotland and that h had an estate in Scot land worth IS7.O00. He also had more tli nil $43,000 in money in banks in America. Can a man who has on estate In Scotland be ndjudged a bankrupt in Oregon? In other words, would not his wealth in England and Scotland he available to his creditors here? Kindly state how these estates could be made available to creditors in the White Salmon Valley. I have taken your paper for many years and take this means of gettinir correct Informa tion. A. G. STEIN WALT. The steps necessary to enforce a claim against an. estate in a foreign country are so complicated and depend so much upon facts as to the nature of the American claims and the title to the property under the English law that you would need to consult a com petent lawyer and lay all the details before him. Try This at Your Risk:. Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Herald. "My wife wants me to go shopping with her. I don't see how I'm going to pret out of it." "if she were to send you back to your office after less than an hour of shopping and told you she would never rake you on such an expedition asrain, you would consider yourself repaid for the trouble, wouldn't you?" "Certainly. But how am I going to do that?" "Let her catch you flirting with a fascinating girl clerk." Vrnlt en Overhansrlnsr I.lmhs. PORTLAND. July 25. iTo the Edi tor.) I have fruit trees, some of the limbs of which hang over my neigh bor's property. Does the fruit on those limbs belong to my neighbor or to me? I'UKTLAN'DEK. The fruit belongs to you, but you cannot enter your neighbor's property to get it without his consent. Neither can your neighbor lawfully take the fruit until it falls to the ground. Liberty Not I.eft-Hnnded. JOSEPH. Or., July 24. (To the Edi tor.) There is a dispute on at Joseph, Or., about the Statue of Liberty. Some say Liberty is left-handed. I contend she holds her torch in her right hand in tae harbor of New York. FRANKIE EARL MERRILL. Authentic photographs !n the Port land Public Library show Liberty hold ing the torch in her right hand. Yes. MULINO. Or.. July 23. (To the Edi tor.) Are Emma Goldman and Alexan der Berkman, the anarchists, Russian Jews? A SUBSCRIBER. EIGHT WAY TO STUDY HISTOI1Y "Books and Teachers Are bat Helps,'' bat Work Is Pupil's Own. KLICKITAT, Wash, July 24. (To the Editor.) I have been very much interested in your recenf editorials concerning Muzzey's -History of the United States," particularly as I am a Juno graduate of a Portland high school and consequently have studied "Muzzey." The editorials would nat urally lead people to conclude that present Portland students of United States history must have rather a weak foundation in this subject; per haps have failed utterly to glean any glory and nobility in our country's making. The thoughtful reader is like ly to consider it a serious charge that of having sent forth hundreds ot future citizens and prospective teach ers poorly equipped in such a vital subject. But let tne thoughtful one be ct iforted. There was at that time the type of individual, the so-called student, who remembered that "his books and teachers were but helps the work was his." and who therefore did not confine his historic scope to Muzzey. Such an individual found himself daily provided with an outline and splendid bibliography, which demanded from two to four hours' careful read ing and notebook wori. Once the student made a bad mis take by reading furthei than the les son, but he found that nothing really serious happened, so he tried it again, only to discover that he received an inspiration by so doing. He also took active part In th-a daily periods which were devoted to interesting discussions, supplemented by an occasional im promptu debate or special report. Oddly enough, his history teacher proved to be an interesting individual, who was ever willing and enthusiastic in giv ing aid or advice with regard to good historical reading. This student was odd. of course, but he was neither bespectacled nor a "sissy." On the contrary, I should say he was Just sufficiently live. Weeks, months passed. In due cou.-se of time he was graduated, and. having met with slight reverses, decided to rell several books to the second-hand store. Among them was a history book. He felt that until he made a profound study of United States history his 300 page notebook would suffice, and be sides he had his historic "conscious ness" to fall back upon. Later he read a severe criticism of the history which he had sold. The student didn't doubt a word of it neither did his parents nor their friends only there was this difference. The student knew why he had sold his his tory but "they" didn't. E. a. ROBERTSON. LIMITATIONS OF" HUMAN MIND Writer Says It Is Useless to Try to Solve Certain Mysteries of Nature.. VANCOUVER. Wash., July 24. (To the Editor.) A sermon by Rev. Will iam R. Reece proves that he has taken a long step forward. He eliminates two sides of the eternal triangle, thus reducing it to a line or plane. This sim plifies matters greatly. It is given to mortal man to realize that one is one and that three are three, but the man has yet to be born who may conceive that one is three or that three are one. While the reverend gentllman has reduced a compound complexity to its lowest terms, there is yet a wide field of opportunity open to him. It is that of describing, comparing or demon strating this singular, unity in natural terms and language such as may be comprehensible to man. It is idle folly to attempt to draw man's sense outside nature. Man is a natural being and cannot rise above his nature. Therefore Kly yotir kite, if you please. Out of fiKlit let it so where It will on the breeze ; But cat not the one thread br which It Is bound, bo it never so high, to tills poor human ground. Through the ages man has wandered far afield and strayed outside the realms of nature In vain search of so lution of mysteries innate to nature, of him It may be said The huntsman has ridden too far in the r Iihkp, Aud cltrtc.-h and aerle and strange Is the place. Truly he has reached an unnatural realm and has there acquired an un natural sense which bodes no good to nature's children. And if "he heeds not the warning," Halt! Invade not the past, reckless child of today! And give not, oh, madman, the heart In thy oreant To a phantom, the soul of whose sense is pOKSt-Mfd By an uga not thine own. Truly may it then be said of him: And the gray morning sees, as it drearily moves O'er i land long deserted, a madman that rovf s Through a ruin, and seeks to recapture a (1 rnt m. Lost to life and Its uses, withdrawn from the scheme Of man's waking existence. AMOS. women Dmvi;ns not iv dem.vxi) Problem of Special Care on Battlefield and Behind Lines Is Too Complicated. VANCOUVER, Wash.. July 24. ITo the Editor.) Please tell me whether there are any women ambulance drivers in France now? Are there any special requirements for a girl to be one? Where would one living in Vancou ver jro to train for a nurse? How long do they train before they can go to France? What is age limit. I mean the youngest they will take for tralnins? Would a letter to General Pershing addressed Just France reaeh him? SUBSCRIBER. There Is no demand for women to drive ambulances for the reason that there would be a new problem of car ing for them on the battlefield. Nurses are needed for the hospitals, however, and we suggest that you write to Dr. K. A. J. Mackenzie, Corbett building. Portland, for full particulars. In ad dressing a letter 4o General Tcrshing, address it merely General Pershing, American Expeditionary Forces in France. Do not attempt to specify the town. Also put your return corner card on the letter. Kllinar on Timber Claim. FOSSIL. Or.. July, 22. (To the Edi tor.) Can a person buy a timber claim and commute or pre-empt a homestead without becoming naturalized? OLD SUBSCRIBER. -Anypne who is not a naturalized cit izen may take up a timber and stone claim by declaring his intention to be come a citizen, but must have full citi zenship papers to file on any other kind of claim. Some Verbal Agreements Binding; PORTLAND. July 25. (To the Edi tor.) Does a verbal agreement, where money is involved, made in the pres ence of witnesses hold good? OLD SUBSCRIBER. Some verbal agreements are binding; others are not. Your case must be stated more specifically. Exemption of Homesteads. PORTLAND, July 24. (To the Edi tor.) Can a homestead be attached for a store bill? SUBSCRIBER. If the debt does not exceed $1500 the homestead cannot be attached. Homesteads are exempt from any ex ecution up to this amount. .In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Aero. From Ths Oregoniaa of July 6. 1S95. Oakesdale. Wash. What at noon was. a beautiful, thriving city, one of the most flourishing in the Palouse coun try, is at this hour, S P. 31.. a mass o smouldering ruins. The City Hall commission held a meeting yesterday afternoon In the parlors of Ladd & Tilton's bank and discussed bids for the construction of the new City Hall. "Washington. The possibilities of the passage of the New Mexico. Arizona and Utah admission bills is not good this session. St. Petersburg. Work is to be beirun at the western end of the great Siberian railway without delay. The first divi sion, covering a distance of 7S7 versts. will be ready for use. It is hoped, in the latter part of the coming Fall. The completion of the Worcester block adds one more grand structure to the numerous buildings lately con structed in Portland. The Falrview branch of the Citv 4i Suburban Company's electric railway. wnicn runs through w. S. Ladd'a farm to Rosenthal's place, a distance of four miles, will be put in operation today. Half m Century Akto. From The Oregonian of July 56. 1907. St. Petersburg. An imrierial ukase has been issued obliterating all polit ical governmental distinctions between Russia and Poland. The latter is ab sorbed as one of the provinces of the empire. Berlin. Bismarck's official organ de- nies that there is any probability of 4 war. 'When we have been ahnnf wharves and have seen from half a dozen to two or three dozen small boys piuying aDOuc tne water. In skiffs, floatinsr on nlankt lo chunks of wood, we have often won dered that there are. no trior o-ana Ae drowning reported. A report in some way became cur rent on the streets yesterday that W. R. Hill, familiarly known as "Buckskin Bill." had been shot and killed in a row at Salem on Wednesday. The ;report could not be confirmed and is prabably without foundation. The Oregon State Teachers' Institute" and Educational Association will hold Its annual session in Portland, com mencing on Tuesday. July 30. SOUTH AMD THE BURDENS OF WAR Prosperous Cotton Planters Ilrluctant to Have Their Product Taxed. " MOSIER, Or.. July 24. (To the Edi tor.) The charge is openly made that the Souh is not bearing her fair share of the burden of war. The motto of Southern statesmen seems to be: "We caro not who fights the battles of a cotintry so Ion or as we may raise Its cotton at an abnormally high price." Just now the Soulh seems to bo In the saddle, as it was in the early '3ns. when National legislation was directed almost wholly with a view of placating snd phrasing that section of the coun try. Cotton is selling at an abnor mally high prit-e. but it must not be taxed. The people were never before prosperous and never before have they shown a greater reluctance to bear ther sharo of Federal burdens in an emregency. The charge Is made by Senator Rrandegee, of Connecticut, that the draft quotas have been unfairly drawn, that they are greater in the North than in the South. Judged by the fisure presented, there seems to bo much truth in th4 contention. The Administration has receivei littlo whole-hearted support from the South or from states bordeiiii" on the South, and they havo afforded nearly all the opposition. Senator Stone, who but a few days ago said that an honorable peace at any time was possible, meaning a peace on German terms. Vnrdamun. Kitrhin, Hoke Smith and Reed, who are throw ing obstacles in the way of the food control bill; Gore, who doubt the rights of free people to the use of the seas so long as the Kaiser objects: all of them are Democrats and all of them are disturbing elements. Is it any wonder that in the matter of draft they seek to shift as much of the bur den of fishtinjr on the North as pos sible, just us in the niHtter of taxation they make other sections of tho coun try pay. They have the majority and they are using it to tiieir own advantage. SUBSCRIBER. UOXT LET JOH KI(i ECCAI'H Questions Before American People I n vite Answer Kmra !pirlt World. VANCOUVER. Wash.. July 23. (To the Editor.) While the spirit trappers of londou have a line on John Kins:, erstwhile Morgan, they should belay and holrl fast. He should not be allowed to slip his cable before we of the United Stated get a chance at him. His ready, curt and emphatic state ment that things in the North Sea were "wet" proves that ho knows a thing or two. Now the question uppermost in tho mind of each and every American to day is: Why is a United States Senator? Possibly the notorious freebooter might answer "wet." If such were his answer, it would cause a revolution In Amer ican sense, as the general conception today is that they are demonstrations of God's reckless carelessness ill han dling structural materials. J. HAROLD. Recruiting: of Foresters for France. FALLS CITV, Or.. July 24. (To the Editor.) Please send me particulars in regard to the foresters, as I am thlnkintr of Joining them. I would likej to know when they co to France. HATHAWAY BUELL. The Tenth Reserve Engineers' Rcgl- ment is now beeing recruited by the United States Forestry Service for duty behind tho lines in France. The en gineers will be in complete charge of the French forests, will preserve therm as much as possible and will supply all the trench timbers and railroad ties required by the allied armies. Recruits must pass the regular Array tests and in addition be experienced timbermen, teamsters, millwrights, blacksmiths or cooks, jr. L. llerritt, 40S Beck building, is In charge of the re- cruiting for this district. Child of Divorced Parrents. PORTLAND, July 25. (To the Edl- tor.) In the case of a girl of 14 years awarded to the mother at time of di vorce a year ago, can the girl choosa now and go to the father? SUBSCRIBER. The girl cannot go to her father without an order from a court of prop er Jurisdiction. After she becomes of age she may choose which parent she desires to remain with, but until that time she is under the control of her mother unless she obtains a formal or der from the court, . ; . , ... . t . j