10 THE OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, XOVE3II5ER 17, 1917. PORTLAND, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice as second-class mail matter. Subscription rates invariably in advance: (By Mall.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year $8.00 liaily, Sunday Included, six months 4-" 3aily. Sunday Included, three months... 2.5 l'aily, Sunday included, one month -"" 1 aiiy. without Sunday, one year........ 6.00 2aiiy, without Sunday, six months a.'JS J al!y. without Sunday, three months.... l.'t-'i 3 ai:y. without Sunday, one month....... .Ro "Weekly, one year 1.00 Sunday, one year -T0 bunday and weekly ........ 3.50 I By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year .......50.00 Daily. Sunday included, one month. ..... .75 Daily, without Suntiay, one year 7.80 3 aily, without Sunday, three months.... 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month....... .65 How to Kemit Send postoffice money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. iive postoffice address in lull. Including county and state. Potaite Kates 32 to 16 pases. 1 cent: IS o 3 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 4S pases, 3 cents; fco to eu pases, 4 cents: 6 to 76 pages. 5 cents: 78 to s:: pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age double rates. KsNtera Business Office Veree & Conklin Jlrunswiclc building. New York; Veree & t.onklin, Steger building, Chicago; San Fran cisco representative, K. J. Bidwell, 742 Mar ket -street. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis patches credited to It or not otherwise cred ited in this paper and also the local news published herein. AH rights of republication of special dis patches therein are also reserved. PORTLAND, SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1917. WAIT A LITTLE. "The submarine menace as a de cisive factor in the war has failed," eo the optimistic Secretary Paniels in forms a gratified, if dubious, Xation. Uut "This is no time to pat ourselves on the back," declares the practical minded chairman of the shipping board, Mr. Hurley. And "The good return of tonnage sink In by enemy submarines last week, and, indeed, the comparatively favor able result of the last two months, ought not to be taken as indicating that the submarine menace is a thing of the past, or is defeated," is the warning griven by Sir Eric Geddes, First Lord of the British Admiralty. One large Uritish vessel only was sunk by the U-boats last week, -with two French and several American chips. It is an encouraging record, after the maximum of forty large liritish ships in one week, last April, B.nd thirty-eight the following week. The submarine peril has been partly met by the British and American patrol; partly, but not wholly. Until It is entirely overcome, if it ever is, there must be unceasing vigilance, de termined warfare, extensive prepara tion. The enemy wants nothing bet ter than the thought to gain posses sion of the American mind that the war is over, or will soon end. The low submarine toll last week may be due to withdrawal of many submarines to refit them for the Win ter. OrHhey may have been massed at some "one spot expecting a great British naval drive say in the Baltic, or toward Kiel. Or they may have deliberately laid off for a few days or weeks, in order to catch the enemy napping. The Germans cannot be defeated by promises, or hopes, or prayers, or ex pectations. They will be defeated when they are defeated. WORK OF THE BOYS. Analysis of the efforts made last Summer to employ boys on farms as a direct aid in food production, espe cially in those localities where the movement was definitely organized, indicates that they were generally suc cessful, from the point of view of both the farmer and the boy." The old notion, which persisted because peo ple have the habit of thinking in grooves, that a city boy is not worth his salt in the country, was disposed of. The city boys made good. The conclusion is important because of the bearing it will have upon food pro duction plans for next year. Impor tance of keeping youths in school re gardless of the war is realized, but it is seen that with foresight and organi sation such an adjustment can be made that there will be a maximum of help to farmers with a minimum of interference with educational plans. Massachusetts is one of the states in which the organization of boys reached a high state of perfection through volunteer work and without iiiect state subsidy or appropriation. Under the direction of the Committee of Public Safety, a sub-committee on mobilization of schoolboys was formed and its success is indicated by deter mination to carry the movement for ward next year on a larger scale than ever should emergency conditions de mand. Although the yield from home gardens and vacant city lots was large in the aggregate, it is still recognized that the main dependence of the coun try must "be on the farms, and that unless labor is furnished appeals to their owners to "speed up production" will be weakened. High prices of seed and fertilizers have bred a spirit of caution which more than ever takes account of the possibilities of culti vation and harvest before making plantings on an extensive scale. The Massachusetts experiment, as reviewed by W. I. Hamilton, agent of the State Board of Education, has re vealed that it pays to send city boys to the country, as well as to encourage country boys to remain at home. One of the hardest tasks was to convince skeptical farmers that this was true An easier task was to imbue the boys with the spirit of doing their best, but they were, upon the whole, im pressed with the patriotic nature of their work and with the fact that enlistment for farm service was as necessary as any other service they could perform. A high degree of co operation with school authorities was found advisable. Direct communica tion with individual farmers when ever possible, and arrangements by which the youthful laborers entered into the home life of their employers were found to give good results. This Im-s been manifested by the large num br of agreements made to renew the arrangement next year. It promises more enduring benefits than the method of working boys in groups and boarding them in camps near, the scene of their employment. Marked benefits have been received by boys who took their work seri ously. Last Summer's experience left them in splendid physical condition, and it also gave them real insight into the economic problems confronting the country. They now realize as they could have been made to realize in no other way the relation between production and distribution and the needs of the people. .The objection that these benefits are rather vague and general, when set against the school course, is met by the proposal that farm employment shall be made to supplement schooling and not to displace it. It is not desired that the trend to the farm shall be so general or so permanent as to interfere with education. With all Winter in which to discuss details and to appraise mistakes that were made in the haste and confusion of 1917, it is now generally believed that the boy help movement can be so organized for 1918 as to become a large factor in food production. Ad justment of school courses in some instances, while difficult, would not seem to be impossible. And it seems quite probable that farmers will need all the help they can get. The call for foodstuffs will be quite as loud as ever, and the present outlook is for a smaller supply of adult workers for farm purposes than ever before in our history. THE CASE OF BABY PACL. There is apparently nothing in the medicinal treatment of Baby Paul Hodzima that is wholly revolutionary or susceptible to sound criticism. Mor phine is used, to relieve pain that can not be relieved by any other means. Morphine in such cases as Baby Paul's weakens resistance and shortens that which would still be a short span of life. Probably in this country today a thousand or more adults are ob taining surcease from physical misery from physicians who know that that welcome relief will hasten the in evitable end. Baby Paul has come into public notice because of the abstract opin ions of Dr. Haiselden. This physician believes that anesthesia, where death, rather than relief from pain, is the primary object sought, is sometimes justified. He is frankly opposed to the set sensibilities of the multitude. Whereas the average physician would administer morphine when necessary to relieve the pain ofa fatal malady and would preserve silence as to its in fluence upon the hour of the soul's departure, Dr. Haiselden bluntly tells the whole story. Yet it may be safely assumed that he would not act upon the full ex treme of hfs own opinion. . The law does not recognize the authority of a physician deliberately to end a life. A physician, like others, cherishes his liberty above his opinions in matters of that kind. None of us will probably ever see the law changed. It is not con ceivable that set limitations could be devised within which deliberate tak ing of inoffensive life would be per missible. It is a pronounced human characteristic to preserve life, and it is a characteristic that defies cold reasoning as to what is best for the individual and society. We cannot .bring ourselves to put innocent life, no matter how empty or deformed, into the keeping of scientific logicians. It is no less true now than when it was written that while there is life there is hope. Surgery and medicine have not reached their limit of de velopment. The incurable disease or malformation of today may be curable tomorrow. But, conceivably, wrack ing, continuous pain may offset a faint flicker of hope. It is then that an anesthetic is a ministration rather to be condoned than condemned. Who is there that is sane who would deny Baby Paul two weeks of ease because without it he might have six weeks of suffering? THE BOLSIIKVIKI. "Bolsheviki" Is a Russian word meaning "th majority." Its employ ment as the name of a political party dates only from 1903, when the Rus sian Social Democratic party split in two and the majority, led by Nicholas Lenine, now recognized as a pro-German plotter, accepted the designation. The word reveals nothing as to the present strength of the party or the principles for which it stands. Whether or not the party is a "majority," the word is still indissolubly associated with it. The immediate peril to Russia from 1 ? , 1 u . -; i-1 itAe, tn i, f. v, ' ' 'J h .'u..un nvi lies 41ft ma i ua ' Lenine and his followers have changed their views remarkably since the war began. Still clinging to their mean ingless name, they have become, in fact, according to A. J. Sack, director of the Russian Information Bureau in the United States, pure exponents of anarchistic ideology. The Bol sheviki are anarchists in their feeling about life and in their political prac tices. Sufferings inflicted upon the masses by the old regime have caused a reaction which has made the ground fertile for anarchy, which appeals to the uneducated masses. Hatred of monarchy has found expression in hatred of every form of restraint, and in extremes which endanger all law and order. Efficient and enduring national organization under anarchy being manifestly impossible, pro-Ger man propagandists have fostered the Bolsheviki, and this course, from the German point of view, has been Justi fied by weakened resistance to the country's real foreign enemy. Bolshevism, as it now exists, is the product of Czarism and the conse quent unenlightenment of the people No more forcible commentary upon this condition has been made than that of a writer who says that "the monarchistic system, in its practically unlimited form, was dead in Russia some time ago, and in dying has poi soned all the atmosphere around It. The Bolsheviki have grown rapidly since Lenine's reappearance in Russia after the revolution. They now control the Petrograd and Moscow councils of workingmen's and soldiers' dele gates, and the councils in a consider able number of provincial cities. With hunger and cold threatening almost every Russian home the coming Win ter, conditions seem favorable to their continued growth unless some strong power rises to restore order. Iff is a perilous paradox that much of the dis tress is caused by the very disorgani zation of society which the Bolsheviki are doiilg- their utmost to intensify. Restoration of systematic iransporta tion and organization of production and distribution would relieve hunger and restore the economic balance. The blind followers of Lenine have not yet learned this, and it is no part of the purpose of the German element in their country to disillusion them. Discovery that there is at least one public school in Minnesota in which German is the only language taught, and English is ignored in giving in struction even in the "common branches," will serve to emphasize the need of complete Americanization of all the grade schools of the country, and to revive interest in the question whether any foreign language should be taught until the schools have first proved that they can teach .English well. Hoboken, N. J., with a large German population, meanwhile has abolished the teaching of German al together, even as an elective course, and has overcome reluctance to the dismissal of old employes who have been teaching German by assigning them to a specially created "Ameri canization department." -The Hobo ken schools will gain in two ways, the new department offering one fertile field, while concentration on English is expected to result in turning out graduates who will have better com mand of that language In every-day business correspondence. BRAZIL AS OIK ALLY. Brazil's national celebration of No vember 15 reminds us that it is only twenty-eight years since that country overthrew the last monarchy on thi. hemisphere and established a: repub lic. The enthusiasm for democracy which found expression in that event still lives and goes far to explain Brazil's, declaration of war on Ger many. The sentiments of the Brazil ian people as to the United States has been shown by cordial and lavish hos pitality to American warships, and prove that their hearts were already enlisted in the cause which they will serve with their arms. ' The aid of Brazil in the war will prove valuable, both from an economic and a military standpoint. The last possibility that supplies of coffee, rub ber, tobacco, hides and meat from that country will reach Germany through neutral countries is removed. Germany is deprived for the time be ing of money and credit from large investments and settlements In Brazil. The allies obtain the service of enemy ships which were interned in Brazil ian port's, also of the republic's mer chant marine. The latter is consider able, for the tonnage of home steam ers entering the ports of Brazil ex ceeds ten millions a year. The navy can relieve the United States of much work in patroling the South Atlantic Ocean, and may add destroyers to the flotilla operating in Europe. Though the peace strength of the army is only 23,500 with 20,000 gendarmes, mili tary service is compulsory for men between 21 and 4 5, and a large force is being organized. Probably when the campaign of 1919 opens, a Brazilian army will be ready for service in Europe, if, in the meantime, the United States has done its part in providing ships to transport it. The knowledge that such rein forcements will be available should prove a powerful incentive to the United States and the allies not to be sparing" in their efforts to overpower Germany through fear that men will be lacking to finish the job. The United States in particular wel comes Brazil as an ally because the adhesion of the .great southern re public to the embattled ranks of de mocracy forecasts the drawing closer of the bonds of friendship among all American republics. It helps to make Pan-America a reality. THE NATIONAL MISTER ROLL. The classification and questionnaire adopted by the War Department show the purpose to make a complete in ventory of the men registered under the selective service law, in order to determine the order in which they shall be called upon to serve in the Army. The men are to be arranged in the order of their highest useful ness, those least useful at home being taken first and the classes gradually working down to those who for divers reasons are not likely ever to be called upon to fight. In the first class are placed those whose removal will cause the smallest gap in the domestic, social or Indus trial organization, and they are sub divided according to the readiness with which they can be spared. Every person will consider it eminently proper that single men without de pendent relatives" should compose di vision A of the first class, for they will leave no burden. Next will be taken the married man "who has habitually failed to support his fam ily," and after him the "married man dependent on wife for support." These are three types of men who have not begun to perform or have shirked their social duty, either by failure to found a family or by neglect to support it. They have done the least of all for the Nation In peace. therefore they fill only a small niche and most appropriately are- to be taken first, but only provided there is no reason connected with their occu pation for placing them in a later class. Jn that event a claim for de ferred classification would be made. Thus a man may have no wife or dependent relative, but he may be a necessary artificer or workman in U. S. armory or arsenal." That fact would transfer him to division H of class 3. far down . the scale. Any registrant who fails to submit the questionnaire is placed in class 1 re gardless of all other considerations, unless some valid claim for deferred classification should be made on the ground of his usefulness at home. This is the penalty of negligence. Married men whose families are supported by their income independent of their labor, otherwise the idle rich. come next after men dependent on their wives, then unskilled farm labor ers, next unskilled industrial laborers, to be followed by men for whom no deferred classification is claimed and those who are not included under any other heading. The next and probably several suc ceeding drafts will be made from this class. As it is estimated to cohfprise two million men, and as it is likely to be swelled by the majority of the 600,000 young men who will have reached the age of 21 between the passage of the draft law and the sec ond draft, the other classes may not be drawn upon unless the war should be very prolonged. More than a mil lion and a half men are already under arms, and the numbers mentioned would increase this total to more than fouF millions. Raising of armies, and provision of ships to carry and supply them would have to be speeded up in order to- exhaust class 1 before the end of 1919, by which time another 600,000 young men would have come of age. If it should be necessary to draw upon class 2, two divisions could be exhausted before any necessary skilled labor would be taken. These are mar ried men whose -wives or children, or both, are not mainly dependent upon their labor for support, "for the rea son that there are other reasonably certain sources of :i d en n;i tf suooortf" I excluding the wife's earnings; and I married men without children whose wives could support themselves by skill "in""some special class of work." After these divisions come "the neces sary skilled farm laborer" and the "necessary skilled industrial laborer," but in each the enterprise on which they are employed must also be neces sary. Not until class 3 was reached would inroads begin upon men who have ab solute dependents, upon public .offi cers or upon necessary men skilled in other ways than those mentioned. Then men with dependent children other than their own, dependent pa rents, brothers or sisters would have to serve long before those whose wives and children would be left without support, for the latter form division A of class 4, and ahead of them come county or municipal officers, firemen, policemen, custom-house clerks, pos- tal employes, workmen in arsenals, armories or other Federal service and assistant managers of agricultural or industrial enterprises. In class 4, after heads of dependent families, are placed mariners and sole managers of agricultural or industrial enterprises. Class 5 seems to have been reserved for T.hose whom it is impossible, unnecessary or unwise to draft in any case. In the A division are executive, legislative and judicial oflicers. Federal or state, then minis ters of religion and students for the ministry, persons already in the mili tary or naval service. The impos sibles are alien enemies and other aliens who claim exemption, persons physically, mentally and morally unfit, and, last of all, pilots, for they may be needed to steer the last transport to sea. The questionnaire requires all the information needed to place each man in his proper class and division, find naturally looks more formidable than it really is. The questions are plain and straightforward, and the great majority of them should present no difficulty to men of ordinary intelli gence who are willing to answer truthfully, though some will require reference to records as to such things as naturalization and former employ ment. Much work will be imposed on the local and district boards which must classify the men, and no doubt much time will be consumed But when the work is done, it will be done once for all. This preparation for future drafts is, in fact, so thorough as to be elo quent testimony in itself of the Na tional determination to see the war through to the only finish which we are willing to consider possible. The Amer ican people are ready to go down the line from division A of class 1 until they come to the totally unfit in order to provide men who will carry on the war, but long before they reach that point they will, when necessary, swell the total subject to draft by extending the age. The grand muster roll of the Nation is to be made up. Apples of Wenatchee and other dis tricts tributary to the Columbia River are rotting because there are not enough cars to carry them to market. Adequate transportation is as neces sary to food production and economy as is the work of the farmer and housewife. We are now paying dearly for the pinch which prevented rail roads from buying cars between 1913 and 1916, and for the neglect to de velop water transportation. Steamers and barges could have carried fruit from the Middle Columbia to Portland where it could have been transferred to sea-going vessels for transportation to the Atlantic Coast. Many cars would thus be released to carry fruit that is not accessible by water. The people who gather at a boxing exhibition differ .somewhat from the usual crowd in .theater or hall In that about every other person smokes his favorite brand of cigar, cigarette or pipe tobacco. In a short time the place is hazy. Attention must be given to ventilation, as smoking cannot and with that crowd should not be prohibited. The late Edward C. Brigham, pio neer Jeweler, was a conservative citi zen and business man of good stock. who began his manhood in the service of his country in the Rebellion. He fulfilled the scriptural injunction, met his obligations and leaves to his de scendants the memory of a good man Can one do more? The main thing now needed for bum per crops next season is the right kind of weather at the right time. We have the soil, the seed, the machines, the science and the men and women. If the weather will only behave, the only other things we need worry about are the ships to carry the stuff across the ocean. Women workers for the Red Cross have coined a new word. When they see a woman knitting wool of any other color than gray, which Is the Red Cross color, they infer that she is working for herself or her family, and they call her a "pig-knitter." A farm of 100 acres of fine land in Polk has just sold for $18,800. Many land-poor men in other counties could sell If they ler ?l at such a reasonable figure, but they want two or three times that price. The Pope has appealed to the cen tral governments to order proper re spect for women and children in the captured parts of .Italy, but Hun pre cedent is against anything of the sort. Everybody who had a war garden last Summer should have one look at the potatoes grown in the Deschutes country, in the Land Show, and regis ter a vow for next Summer. For once, at least, Gifford Pinchot may be right, in leaving the food ad ministration organization because he could not run it his Way. Anyway, he was right in resigning. Strikers at the Trail smelter against enforced military service do not know the Canadian government and what it will do, but they are going to have a great time learning. From Tacoma comes the news that Mount Rainier is quaking, but there must be some error in transmission If it were Mount Tacoma the report would be credible. The young man in the trenches who does not get a Christmas box will hope until the distribution ends, and then wonder if the world forgets him. At tend to it today. After standardized bread will come standardized appetites, regulated in proportion to a person's height and girth. Militant suffragists in Washington who scorn fines and go to jail should get sentences long enough to cure them. There is civil war in the ranks o John Barleycorn. Grapegrowers in California want to eliminate whisky. Meat prices have advanced 87.3 per cent in the past two years.and the bones weigh as much as ever. The barred Eone for alien enemies may have embraced the borders o this country. The Italians know the Hun horror of water and turn loose the floods. The Auditorium should with children today. be filled It's ' a today. good-fellow tair you wear What Y. M. G. A. Is Doing for Your Soldier. Br CsrUtoshet Morloy. If every thinking person could hear the speech of the Y. M. C. A. secretaries as they come back from France to tell what they have seen, there would be no question of how the association is to raise the 135,000,000 it needs to carry on its work until next July. Rich men would be selling their limousines and rich women their furs, all of us hoard ing and sacrificing in every way we know to help this gallant human crusade. Crusade is the only word; every phase of the work is illuminated ith the light of the cross. The Y. M. C. A. goes with your boy from the time he leaves home right through the whole gamut of warfare. In those dark, lonely minutes before he goes over the top, his last contact with this world, with this life he loves so well, is a cup of tea given him In the front line by the Y. M. C. A. Do you want your boy to have that up of tea? And as the wounded men hobble back o the dressing station and men are walking back from No Man's Land with wounds that would kill most of us outright in less heroic times the Y. M. C. A. is ready with tea. cakes of hocolate and other comforts. Every man, before his wounds are dressed, gets hot soup, biscuits whatever the M. O. A. has. One Y. M. C. A. tent ehind the British lines has cared for 3,600 wounded men in one day: 40,000 In a month. Just in so far as you and I fail to upport this work, in so far are we eglecting to help our own flesh and blood in their sorest need. A Colonel in the British medical corps, looking out Into a courtyard where 2000 ounded Tommies were waiting stoical ly to have their wounds treated, cried What under heaven would we do here without the Y. M. C. A.?" In the dress ing' station haggard doctors were treat ing wounds as fast as men slice pie in Chllds" restaurant. And In a tent be- ide that courtyard the Y. M. C. A. ecretaries were brewing tea, passing out chocolates, soup, etc.. as fast as they could work. There is no road in the world ao lonely as that trod by the men moving p to the front line before an attack. n full kit, with their "tin hats." gas masks, bombs, rifles and bayonets, they trudge silently on. No road was ever o lonely since the path to Gethsemane nd Calvary. Men speak In whispers. if at all. In watching thousands of English and Canadians move up to the front rencn during the recent push near Ypres, a Y.' M. C. A. secretary reports that the only cheerful word he heard poken was when an association lorry passed up the road with supplies. "Good old Y. M. C. A.!" cried a Tommy and there rose a feeble cheer. At the great French port which Is our naval base the Association is op- rating a splendid big restaurant. where our sailors can get plenty of good home food at minimum prices. Mrs. Vincent Astor Is working there; one of the first sailors she waited on was a man who had been a table stew- rd on her own yacht last year. There Is a big 1. M. C. A. hostel in the same port where, the sailors can get beds. wholesome recreation and the touch of home Influence that keeps a man from going wrong. The Y. M. C. A. secre taries even go out with the men on the destroyers on active duty, to help In ny way they can. Among the land forces the work is necessarily more complex. Our troops are quartered In a large number of very small villages. In each of these villages the Association has already set up its quarters In a tent, a stable, lean-to wherever it can. Music, writing paper, boxing bouts, hot drinks. chewing gum, baseball outfits, books with every weapon the secretaries try to safeguard the idle hours. We dare not blink the great perils our men face over there. These are worse enemies than the Germans. The men are paid liberally; they have plenty of spending money; wine and other temptations are at hand. In one village of 300 Inhabi tant where our men are quartered there are 24 wine shops. Most of this problem must be left to the Imagina tion; let It be said plainly that the problem is imperative. The "Battle of Paris" has Incapacitated many a man long before he got into the trenches. American leaders over there are call ing on the Association to spend every energy it has in combating the vice problem. In this matter we are fight ing for the lives of our own future gen erations. Every dollar, every book every film, every baseball we can send over is a weight on the credit side. The Association alms to provide in terest and amusement for every minute off duty. It changes money for the men. supplies reading matter, moving pictures, concerts, food, beds, games. religious services for men of all creeds. Protestant, Catholic, Jew, white or In dian or negro, it knows no distinctions. It Is trying to make trance aafe for our own democracy. Thousands offc our men go to France by way of England. In London is the great Eagle Hut (the Y. M. C. A. buildings are known abroat as "huts") which is headquarters for all our men in England. Wherever your boy em barks or debarks, the Association is waiting for him. In the French ports and In Paris it is running big hotels for the men in Uncle Sam's uniform. A big Y. M. C. A. hostel for American of ficers la to be erected In St. James Kauara in London. One of the two Y M. C. A. hostels In Paris is run by lira. Theodore Roosevelt Junior. The As soclatlon expeats also to open hostels In the French Alps where Americans on leave can be cared for. So far-reaching and wonderful is the work, that the five American censors in one camp say that three-fourths of the letter materials that pass through their hands describe the bene fits offered by the Y, M. C. A. Don't get the idea that the T. M. C. A. work is merely behlnd-the-iine work. In tiny little dugouts and shack right ud under the constant rain o shells the secretaries: are working night and day to supply the needs the men. Imagine a little hut or hovel the roof punctured by a hug shell hole, perhaps patched and hit and patched again, a greasy mud floor cov ered here and there by a plank run way, a lucky horseshoe hanging over the door, a fire of klndllnjs biasing in a tin bucket or Improvised hearth. few rude benches and a makeshift counter. Here the "walking wound ed hobble In on their way back from the charge, cr the men stop i cold and famished from the long dark Winter hours on watch. At that plac and time a tin of hot cocoa la worth more to your boy than a marble llbrar on Main ntreet at home. And the only way you can ensure his getting tha cocoa, that friendly service, that soul and-body-warmlng contact with life and human love is by contributing to the Y. M. C A. ReesTerr of Property. FOSSIL. Or., Nov. 16. (To the Edl tor.) Where can I find out about th laws of Canada relating to the helrshl of property transferred to others through fraud of 60 years' standing With whom could I confer to regal possession of land? ANXIOUS READER. s Employ a lawyer of the locality in which the property is situated. NINETEEN NATION'S ARB ALLIED War Declared by Tkrm on Germany or Germany Allies. CAMAS. Wash.. Nov. 15. (To the Ed itor.) Please print a list of the 21 countries now allied against Germany and the date upon which they entered the war. Please name also the coun tries which have severed relations with Germany but have not actually declared war. B. II. CONKLE. In Indicating the IS countries which are at war with Germany and her al lies the Official Bulletin of October 9 also showed the natlAis which have broken diplomatic relations with the German government and the dates when declarations of war were made by the different nations Involved In the world struggle. We reprint the sum mary herewith: At war with Germany or her allies Serbia. Russia, France. Great Brtialn. Mon tenegro. Japan. Delirium. Italy. San Marino. Portugal. Koumania. t;reere, Cuba. Han- ma. hum, Liberia. China and Vnlteil States. Ulplumatio relations broken with Jtr- many Brazil. Bolivia. Haiti. Honduras and Nicaragua. leclaralions of war made Austria vs. Belgium. August 28. 1H; Austria vs. Mon- e negro. Aukusi 9, lttl-4: Austria vs. Russia, uguat . luH: Austria vs. Serbia. July as. 14; Bulgaria vs. a-r!ila. October 1. (una vs. Austria. August 14. 1U17; China Germany, August 1. 117: Cuba vs. ermany, April 7. 1U17: France vs. Austria. August 11!. 1KU; Franca vs. Bulgaria. Oc tober IS. 191S: France vs. (Jermany. Auguit twi-t: Oarmany vs. France. August 3. l'.14; ermany vs. Portugal. March U. lulu; Ger many vs. Russia. August 1. 1U14: Great ritalo vs. Bulgaria. October Itt. lwl.-: reat Britain vs. Austria. August 1'J, l;M4; reat Britain vs. tiermany. August 5. 11U4: reat Britain vs. Turkey. November 5. 1SU4: reece pruvlstonul KOVerninvnl I v Mili aria. November is. IMltl: tireece (Drovlslon.il rnment) vs. Germany. November L's. Ureeca vs. Bulgaria. Ju!v 117: reece vs. Germany. July 1, lull; l;a!y vs. UStrla, AUL'Ult "1. lul.'i: llilv v Hulirirl.. ctober lull; Italy vs. Germany. Au- ust KS. lulrt; Japan vs. Germany. August Liberia vs. Germany. August 4. 117; Montenegro vs. Austria Aiipmr in "14; Panama, vi Germane Anril 7 hit' Koumania vs. Austria. Aucimr i7 turn" fcerbia vs. Turkey. December " 1M14- Austria. July 21. 1U17: Siam va. Ger many. July 21. 1917: Turkey vs. Allies. No- ember 23. 1!14: Turkev v Tti.umsi n l i..- -ut 29, cnued States vs. Germany. April J. 1U17. Since the summary was printed Bra il has declared war October 26, 1917. In4ereat on Taxra la In I form. FOREST G ROVE. Or.. Nov. 15. (Tn he Editor.) If a nronertv owner in Multnomah and Tillamook Counties does not pay any portion of his taxes netore .November & of any year, he Is required to pay 4 per cent additional. Washington County. If a nronertv owner does not pay any portion of his axes oetore .-November 5. he is reaulred to pay 7 per cent additional. why is not this rate uniform In all the counties of the state? Which should be paid. 4 per cent or 7 per cent? C. L. LARGE, M. D. Tax laws are uniform throughout the state. The correspondent has probably misunderstood a simplified method of computing Interest on unpaid taxes. The first half of taxes la due April 5; the second half October 5. - An interest charge of 1 per cent a month is made against unpaid taxes Thus, if a per son had paid no taxea on his property before November 6 he would be charged 1 per cent a month interest on the first halt for seven months and 1 per cent a month on the second half lor one month. The sum of the differ ent Interest charges on the two halves equivalent to 4 per cent on the whole. wn movemoer t a penalty or 5 Der ceni is auuea to the interest charge. All But FfW Demand Notea Redeemed PENDLETON. Or.. Nov. 13. (To the Editor.) 1 have read with amusement Dr. Agua" letter in The Oregonian. I remember that the Populist party used mat same argument about Uie tirst is sue of greenbacks. The so-called greenbacks were not greenbacks; they were demand notes, issued under a law passed under Buchanan's administra tion. The Government never suspend ed specie payments and always paid them on demand. That is why they al ways remained as good aa gold. If the doctor will look In the World Almanac of 1915, page S04, he ran see that there are over $a3.000 unredeemed. I suppose they have been burned, lost or destroyed or are held in curio of fice and may never be redeemed. In my opinion the exception clause on the greenback kept them from a greater depreciation, it being necessary for the Government to have some gold or our currency would have been aa worthless as Confederate money. I distinctly remember those old de mand notes. They were soon all re deemed and destroyed except the little remnant. a P. HUTCHINSON. 1810 West Webb street. Minimum Draft IIelBht. PORTLAND, Nov.- 18. (To the Bdl- itor.) A bets B that the required height for the draft is 61 Inches aiJ B bets A that It Is 3 inches. Which is right. A or B? A. Men whose height Is 61 Inches are accepted if they are of good physique. well developed and muscular. SPECIAL ARTICLES AND STORIES OF CURRENT EVENTS IN THE SUNDA Y OREGONIAN SENDING ARMY AND GUNS "OVER THERE" In this article, contributed by Rene Bache, the huge task, of transporting men and supplies across the Atlantic, in quantity sufficient to win the war, is thoroughly discussed. Through reading it one gains some con ception of the "chore" that Uncle Sam has, undertaken and is car rying through in amazing style. SKETCHES WITH THE NEW ARMY Drawn from life at the can tonments are these kindly sketches by W. E. Hill, who' presents a full page of them in the Sunday issue. There is the chap who thinks a "good front" will make him an officer forthwith, and the artless soul who hails his company commander, "Morning, Cap! How's every little thing?' "EMERGENCY RATIONS" Something about the tabloid foods, tiny but potent, that will sustain American soldiers when they are cut off from the commissary in a front-line trench, or are holding a shell hole until relief shall come. MY 24-HOUR HONEYMOON Here's a real romance about a day that was won from the war gods, while Lieutenant James O. Taylor, amid the bustle of preparation for a sailing to France, secured permission for 24 hours' leaver and was married by tele phone. UNCLE SAM'S WAR CRY Still in the iron districts of Minnesota is Frank G. Carpenter, special contributor to The Sunday Ore gonian. "Efficiency," he asserts, is the modern battle cry of America, and tells what the word means in ore transportation. WHO IS NUMBER ONE? "A Marine Miracle" i3 the fourth epi ' sode of this tense mystery serial by Anna Katharine Green, ap pearing in The Sunday Oregonian and at local motion-picture the aters. "Periscope two points to starboard, sir!" CHURCH AND SCHOOL A page devoted to each in the Sunday issue, with complete announcements and reports. The weekly sermon is a discussion of "Faith as a Form of Personal Power," by Rev. J. H. Boyd, of the First Presbyterian Church. ITS ALL THERE The Sunday issue is complete. Whether you are looking for the latest reliable news from the turmoil of Europe, or the score of the big football game, you will find it in The Sun day Oregonian. Departments suited to each member of the fam ily, well written and reliable. THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Just Five CenU. WHY CHINA PIIKASAXTS JUtE FEW Game Law Leaves Ileus Without Males , and Kgga Are Infertile. ST. PAUL, Or.. Nov. 15. To the Ed itor.) I have read Mr. Quimby's arti cle, which appeared a few days ago in The Oregonian. in which he advances a new theory as to why there are so few China pheasants. Among other things, he says: "Another serious reason for the scarcity of the China pheasant is that there has been to much inbreeding that they are not so prolific as in former yea rs." He also Ftated the stock Js inferior to what it formerly was. 1 live on the farm, where I frequently see this biad. 1 agree with him that few fine specimens are left, but that there is a decided scarcity. Personally. I do not think it is due to inbreeding, but due to the effect the law passed a. few years ago allowing only the male birds to be hunted had upon deterior ating and decimating this game bird. If only the runty stock would have fallen under the hunter's gun perhaps th law would have worked out nil right, but as the fine specimens as well as the unthrifty-looking birds survived it left not enouiih birds to allow na ture by the process of the survival of the fittest to eliminate tho inferior, stock. It has been my "experience many a time I must, however say not lately. though to see two stalely roosters 'fishting It out." By this method na ture crowded out the weaklings. By killing the "roosters" not only was nature Interfered with in trying to keep up the stock, but it also had the effect of leaving some hens with out mates. . I have run the plow into nests of 14 or 15 eirgs, not one being fertile. 1 have had nemubors tell me of the same experience. Surely something out to bo done if we acain wish to make China pheasant hunting a real sport- It appears to me that If the hunting of all upland game birds be prohibited until nature again has had a chance to build up this finely-plumed bird that that would be tho remedy. And let there be no joker in the next law, such as was suggested the"bther day in a news item of allowing only ijuail to be hunted, as this again would bo a fine excuse for the hunters to tramp the field and shoot anything that "popped up," virtually nullifying the law on the one bird that should be protected. Be sides, wero no hunting whatever of game birds allowed It would be easier for the game wardens to apprehend those that do unlawful shootinc S. A. HULl' En. V Hlntory of Standard Oil Klne. NAPAVI.N'E. Wash., Nov. 15. To tho Editor.) Please answer throutr.li your columns who were the presiding Su preme Judges when they decided tho Standard Oil Company fine waa uncon stitutional and date of decision. A SCBSCK1BER. If you mean the fine of 129.240,000 Imposed by a decision of Judpe Land is. It was never declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. The Judgment was reversed by a decision of Jude Peter L. Grosscup, of the United Slates Circuit Court of Appeals, July 22. 1908. and the whole case was remanded for re trial. An attempt was mado by the Government to obtain a review of tho evidence by the United States Supremo Court on writ of certiorari, but tho application was denied. In the second trial In tho original court the Uovern ment lost. Relief of War Prinonrrs. ASTORIA. Or.. Nov. 15. (To the EdU tor.) Can you tell me how to get in touch with any American prisoners that the Germans may have, that wo may send them common necessities of life to alleviate their hard lot? Also how to reach British or French pris oners? While the good people of tha American continent are anxiously try ing to Bee that their "Sammies" have a Christmas to be long remembered, how about the men who are prisoners? What will be done for them then, and In the long, dreary months to follow? M. A- OKKTU.N. Extensive relief work among pris oners in Germany Is performed through the agency of the Red Cross. Confer with your local chapter concerning any special contribution you may wish to make. .oration of Hoy In Navy. PORTLAND, Nov. 16. (To the Edi tor.) Is there any possible way of lo cating' a boy that has enlisted In tho United States Navy, in April? He was sent to litemerton Navy-yard and I would like to find out on what ship he is. VERY ANXIOUS. Try writing to the commandant at IT. S. Navy-yard. Bremerton. While tho name of his ship may be. given, its lo cation will not be revealed. Alms of the Bolsheviki. DALLAS. Or., Nov. 15. (To the Edi tor.) Briefly define the origin and aims of the Russian party known aa the Bolsheviki. 1. A. MacKENZlE. The question is discussed in another column on this paire