10 THE MORNING OREGOXIAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1917. POEIIAXD, OKECO'. Entered at Portland (Orenos) Fostorflee aa seoond-claas man matter. Subscription rate in variably la advance : (By Mall.) Xaily, Sunday Included, one year .......$8.00 X'atly, Bunday Included, six month ..... 4.25 Xally, Sunday included, three months. . . 2.25 Jjaily, Sunday Includ d. one month . . . . .75 XHiUy, without Sunday, one year ........ 6.00 Pally, without Sunday, six month . ..... 8.25 Ially, without Eunday, three months ... 1.75 XJally. without Sunday, one month. ...... .60 Weekly, one year ...................... 1.00 Sunday, one year , . , 2.50 bund ay and weekly S.50 (By Carrier.) . pally, Sunday Snoluded. one year ......$9.00 pally, Sunday Included, one montb ..... .75 Pally, without Sunday, one year T.80 pally, without Sunday, three month . . . 1.05 Paily. without Sunday, one month ...... .65 How to Remit. Send postofflee money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, ooln or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffloe address In full. Including oounty and state. Postage Rates 12 to IS pares. 1 cent: 18 to 82 pages, 2 cents; 84 to 48 pag-ee, 8 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents: 62 to 76 pases, 5 ents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents. Eorelsn post age. double rates. Kantrrn Business Office Verree & Conk 11 n, Brunswick building New York; Verree A Conklln. Stager building. Chicago; Ban Kranolsoo representative, R. J. Bidwell. 742 Jkfarket street. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches , oredlted to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND, THURSDAY, DEO. 13, 1917. PENALTY OF UN PREPAREDNESS. General Crozier summed up what is the matter with the American war preparations when he said to the Senate military committee: It Is apparent that the original programme for 1.000.000 men did not contemplate our participation In the war. The difficulties which now confront the Government are the outgrowth of its refusal from the outbreak of the war to contemplate our participation in it. President Wilson refused to contemplate that possibility until the beginning of 1916, and Congress re- fused to entertain the thought even then. Hence its plan to spread over five years the expansion of our Army to a million men. We now have a million and a half men enrolled, but have not enough rifles, artillery, clothes or blankets for them. We borrow field guns from our hard pressed allies for the army In France, and have a miserable sprinkling wherewith to train men at home. Gen eral Crozier says of artillery: We will be fairly well caught up on the most important things by next Summer. No man can foresee what may hap pen "by next Summer." The Germans have a greater force concentrated on V. ........ .... .a Y. ; . a i wit? ncoicni aim Ak4Liio.il aruiius man they had in 1914. The allies prob ably have superior material, but not man power. The most gruelling fight ing of the war may be expected be fore next- Summer, but the American Army, which is counted on to turn the scale, will be short of the most essential implement during that period. The consequence threatens to be pro longation of the deadlock for another year at best. No man can foresee what it may be at the worst. The most effective weapon In the hands of the Germans has been the lack of foresight on the part of their enemies, and Congress has been the most conspicuous example of that de ficiency. When men who looked ahead warned Congress to prepare, they were jeered at as jingoes, mili tarists and tools of the munition man ufacturers. The same men who then jeered are running Congress and the fighting departments. How can we expect the same men to prepare ef fectively who could not see the com ing storm? There are little men in big jobs, and a multiplicity of boards jostling each other with minimum practical results. The whole Governmental machine needs overhauling in order that it may be fitted for the job of making war. The American people are willing to sacrifice their sons to the cause of democracy, but they are not willing to sacrifice a solitary man to official bungling. This emergency demands that authority be centralized in the hands of big men, and that every in terest, class or sectional, be subordi nated to the supreme interest of the Nation and of the democracies which fight with us and for us. UNNECESSARY OCCUPATIONS. The movement to eliminate unneces sary occupations for the period of the war Is pregnant with possibilities. Not the least of these is the widespread discussion that is bound to result. The luxuries of yesterday become the ne cessities of today. It is a serious prob lem to segregate the things we must have from those with which we could do without. Our system of living has been adjusted to the newer order. It is much easier to --generalize about "non-essentials' than it is to specify them. There are many men now living who can remember when we had no telephones. This branch of service now absorbs the labor of thousands of men. When we had no telephones we did not miss them; now business would practically come to a standstill if they were abolished. The practice of typewriting our cor respondence, now universal, has grown up within a generation. An army of amanuenses, as well as of makers of typewriters, is now employed in an industry of which our recent fore fathers ' knew nothing. But even though we once got along without them, we could not dispense with their services now. Millions of people now ride to and from their work where half a century Rgo they were content to walk. But the vast Increase in local transporta tion facilities of all kinds has woven Itself into our social system. Cities have been built up around rapid tran eit. Any substantial inroads upon the system would require the making over of the whole country. People not only demand, but re ceive, service nowadays of which their mothers and fathers did not even dream. But the fact that It was pos sible in a former period to live com fortably without It does not argue that it is now non-essential. Every industry must be Judged by its pres ent relation to every other Industry, and by the changes that have taken place in our methods of doing busi ness. But there are still a long list of occupations as to the inutility of which there will be quite general agreement. The countries which have felt the full force of the war are coming to real ize this fully. We shall, no doubt, come to it by and by. The extra sen-ant, the supernumerary small dealer, the hat-check boy in the hotel and a host of others are failing to justify themselves, and they are either groing into the fighting line or into necessary industries. Here in America we have a fine opportunity to forestall drastic legis- Iatlon by asking: ourselves as Indi viduals -whether the work In which we are engaged Is "necessary" or not. It Is partly a matter of personal con science. We do not believe that a man need necessarily be a poor juror because he himself is the defendant. There is such a thing- as Impartial in trospection. There are men who will admit to themselves that the work they are doing, however much it may be Justified in normal times. Is not fitted to the National emergency. They do not need to enter the Army to show their patriotism. They can dem onstrate this by engaging in work that is required, directly or indirectly, to keep the industrial and social machine in working order while we are winning the War. FROM A WARMXY CLAD SOLDIER. The Oregonlan has received from a highly esteemed citizen a soldier's let ter written at Camp Mills, on No vember 18, which is offered as evi dence that the troops have abundant clothing and are well fortified against zero weather. Says the soldier: We have our Winter equipment now a new overcoat, two new wool uniforms, two pairs new shoes, five nalra inod un ihraa suits wool underwear, a new slicker and two pairs new gloves, one leather, one yarn. Besides, the Red Cross has given us each a good warm blanket, a muffler and a pair of socks. There are man v mean ilea srnin about the Middle West about our having to pay ior mat wnicn the Ked Cross gives us, but we don't, i don't know what we would do without the Red Cross and the Y, M. C. A., and I hope the folks at home will keep on supporting them liberally. This is cheering news, which The Oregonlan publishes gratefully. It. has only an indirect bearing, however, on complaints about conditions at Camp Mills, which have to do with site, weather, cold, furnishings, mud, and so on. A soldier with two new uniforms, five pairs of socks, and so on, furnished by the Government, and with an extra blanket, donated by the Red Cross, should doubtless be able to worry through a hard Winter in gusty tents on an exposed coast. What's the extra uniform for but to-wear inr bed, if the blankets are thin and the weather four below? . Yet the closing paragraph of our young friend s letter interests us more than any other, and we hope some thoughtful citizen will mark it with a blue pencil and send it on to Secretary Baker and Secretary Daniels. "I don't know," he says, "what we would do without the Red Cross and the Y. M. C A." Neither do we know. TRIFLING WITH HISTORY. A zealous correspondent had a state ment In a news dispatch from Salem, the other day, that a resident there who was born In 1849, and had just died, was "said to have been the oldest white child born in Oregon." It may be just as well to warn all concerned, or likely ever to be con cerned, that any claim that any worthy pioneer citizen saw the light of day In the Pacific Northwest before the well established and duly authenticated oldest white child recognized by His torian Himes will speedily have the props knocked from under him. Oregon was beginning to emertre from the wilderness in 1849. It had in 1850, according to the United States census, a population of 13,000, who were nearly all white people: and there was in that primitive community the normal practice and habit of mar riage and giving in marriage, with the customary results. Mr. Himes prints a list of some twenty-four white children born be tween 1837 and 1844, giving the primacy to Alice Clarissa Whitman. March 14, 1837, at Wai-il-at-pu, near the present site of Walla Walla (then in Oregon territory). The disconcert ing statement is added that scores of others were born before 1849, the date of the Salem claim of the "oldest white child." The oldest white child In the Pacific Northwest, if alive, would now be eighty years of age. It is time the oldest white children grew up. THE PENALTY IS DEATH. Thirteen soldiers of the United States Infantry were executed by hanging on Tuesday for the murder of citizens of Houston. Prompt imposition of the full penalty of the law is another re minder to all men that the country is at war. In time of peace their trials quite probably would have been long drawn out, there would have been one appeal after another to the courts, and appeals for executive clemency after that. Some of them might have obtained confmutation of their sen tences, with hope of parole as the years dragged on. The fate of the victims would haye been forgotten by the sentimentalists who would have" espoused their cause. But the essence of the military or ganization is discipline, and discipline depends upon the absolute certainty of rewards and punishments. The penalty of the crime of which these soldiers were shown to be guilty is death, and they paid it within four months of the event because mili tary' law is swift and sure, and seeks only to establish the facts, and sweeps technicalities aside, and dispenses with thefol de rol of endless reviews of inconsequential Issues, and paroles and such devices as make a farce of justice. The men were hanged in no spirit of vengeance. This spirit prevailed no more in war than it would in peace and under the operation of the civil law. The executions were carried out because their effect will be salutary, as experience has shown; and because they will discourage if they do not absolutely prevent a repetition of the affair at Houston. Vindication of the law will forestall other crimes. The law-abiding have nothing to fear from it; others undoubtedly will be re strained by fear of the consequences of their acts. It is predicted by some students of social psychology that war will make us sterner in our dealings with the problems of crime. We know now that we must have order in our own ranks if we are to do effective work against the common enemy. The Rus sians have shown us the folly of sickly sentimentality under fire. Weak ening of resistance on the eastern front in Europe dates from the aboli tion of punishment for insubordina tion. We shall make no such mis take. If we continue at war a year or so it is quite safe to predict that we shall extend the penalties of mili tary Jaw. and the methods of their execution, to such offenders, for ex ample, as those who drive spikes into spruce logs and commit other forms of sabotage which lessen the capacity of our people at home to give ' full support to the armies in the field. Total deaths in the Army since the United States declared war have been 1848, of which 937 were from natural causes. 362 were accidental, eleven were killed in action and eighteen lost at sea, while the causes of thirty have not been ascertained. Thlrty-flve have been wounded and eleven captured or reported missing. This statement of the War Department disposes of wild rumors, the source o? which is not difficult to surmise. 1 PROTECTION. Mayor Baker has begun the organi zation of a War Emergency Council, which is to consolidate under one head all war emergency work. It is, evi dently, not designed to supplant the local branch of the National Council of Defense in its work of co-ordination, but it Is evidently to be a sort of clearing-house for all local civic movements promoted on behalf of the war. Something of the kind is needed. There are calls of every sort from many sources upon the citizen to give in money or in effort; and usually he deems it unpatriotic to decline. Bt clearly there is danger of duplication, and it must be avoided. Duplication Is not the only fault. There Is a worse. It is waste waste and diversion, of the public's money into the hands of promoters, or too generous payments to performers, or too heavy an overhead charge for projects launched in the name of war benevolences. We make no charges. We believe that the larger enterprises such as the recent Allied Bazaar were faith fully and carefully conducted by pa triotic and public-spirited men and women, and that the proceeds will go where the people want them to go. But it is true that in a recent Army and Navy Bazaar, in New York, the gross financial returns were about $70,000, of which $700 went to the nominal beneficiary and $69,000 to the real beneficiaries the promoters. Nothing of the kind has occurred In Oregon, and 'nothing like it should occur. The personnel of the com mittees having these projects in hand is usually a complete guaranty of honesty and efficiency. But something else is needed. It is the "O. K." of a duly organized public body, designed chiefly to protect the public against casual and Incidental schemes. Mayor Baker appears to have found the way. WAY OPENED TO FOREIGN COMMERCE, At last the Senate has passed the Webb bill permitting combinations for export trade, and there is early pros pect that it will become law. Ameri can exporters and importers will now be able to compete with Germany with her own weapons. It has been shown by the Federal Trade Commission and by ex-Ambassador Gerard that every American firm which buys in Ger many, sells to Germany or competes with Germany in foreign markets has to deal not with an individual firm. but with a huge trust embracing an entire industry of the whole German empire and backed with all the power of the German government. He is like a Lilliputian who goes forth to combat with the giant of Brobdingnag. We can only combat the German in commerce, as in war, with his own weapons. As the sixteen-inch howit zer forced the French and British to build guns of equal size, as they were forced to meet poison gas with other gas and to overcome machine guns with more machine guns, so must they meet trade combinations with other combinations of equal strength In no other way can they hope to win, and the United States must do likewise. Congress is not acting too soon. The American people will need all the financial resources they can possibly develop to win this war, and much wealth can be derived from the foreign markets from which Germany is excluded and which allied command of the sea keeps open to us. Within a year we shall begin to have ships for use in this commerce with the na tions to the south of us, which have shown their friendship for us by mak ing Germany an outcast among na tions. We now have the opportunity to go in and possess the land, but when those markets are thrown open to our present enemies after the war we shall not be able to retain our hold unless we are as well organized for commerce as they are and will be. This war has taught us that foreign commerce is a nation's chief source of prosperity in peace and of financial strength In war. From that source has come our great accession of wealth during the first two and a half years of war, also the strength with which Great Britain fought and pro vided funds for her allies. Fromrthat source came the wealth of Rome, Carthage, Tyre, Venice, the Hanse towns and Holland. Our work of internal development has been a work of preparation for- the great part we are to play In the world's commerce. The Webb bill and the expansion of our merchant marine are the necessary equipment for that part. THE PROBLEM OF THE FARM. The food problem is traced by the Outlook to the farm problem, and thence to all the ramifications of that problem. The question is how to stop the drift of population from the farm and how to turn it back from the city to the farm. The answer to that ques tion is to make farm life both more profitable and more attractive socially. Involved in that answer is everything from farm efficiency through the whole gamut of present-day problems rates ef wages, rates of interest, use of machinery, including automo biles; whether farms should be big or little, good roads, country schools, churches and amusements, co-operative buying and selling. If we should succeed in solving all Of these prob lems, we should have gone a long way to solution of those affecting the city as well as the country, and we should be within sight of the social mil lennium. The discussion in the Outlook started with an article by Theodore H. Price suggesting that patriotic capitalists should industrialize farming by going into the business on a large scale' and applying to it the methods which have made their own business successful. He would have tracts of land near the cities farmed by these methods and would have labor to operate them go to and from the cities' by automobile. His article drew forth a flood of let ters discussing the subject from every viewpoint, of which the Outlook pub lishes typical selections. Perusal of these letters inspires the thought that there is no one cure for the shortcomings of the farming in dustry, for there are as many different kinds of farms as there are of fac tories. Mr. Price's plan may fit a bonanza wheat farm or cattle farm stretching over thousands of acres, but it will not fit a farm where close attention to detail is essential to suc cess. The owner or manager of the big farm is a big business man, fully competent to do his own buying and selling, and with a volume of business which secures for him the closest prices. The small farmer cannot de velop tht) same business ability and la so tied down to the 'manual work of production that he cannot give proper attention to buying and selling, pack ing and shipping to the best advan tage. Those parts of his work form a separate field which can be handled best by special men hired In co-operation with neighbors. '" In fact, co-operation seems to be the best way out. By it the farmer now secures through the rural credit asso ciation farm loans at low interest and on easy terms. Those associations may become the machinery by which he disposes of his other troubles. They may buy seed, fertilizer, imple ments, lumber and other materials in bulk or may buy machines for cem mon use of all the members, when each one needs them for only a short time In each season. They may lump their crops for sale, may build their own warehouses and elevators, and may pack and preserve fruit and "vege tables as do the Puyallup and Sumner growers. By this means they may eliminate one after another of the string of middlemen until they finally open stores in the cities for sale direct to the consumer. In this manner they may secure for themselves a large proportion of -that 60 per cent of the consumer's price which now goes to the middlemen Instead of themselves. By. increasing the farmer's profit this plan would put him In the way to dispose of his other troubles. He could pay higher wages and build cot tages with small gardens for his labor ers, thus being able to compete with city employers In the labor market. Having means to buy an automobile, he would be inclined to vote taxes for good roads and good schools and to build churches.. He could then take his wife to theaters and dances in town, while he and his neighbors would arrange entertainments in the country" school. Fruitgrowers and market gardeners, who usually farm small tracts, could live in community centers, from which they would motor out to their farms daily. Almost all of the objections to Arm life grow from isolation, except that that one drawback arises from bad roads. When farmers get together to help one another over their troubles, they will have taken the long step to overcome all of them. Individual ex amples of success for large farmers in overcoming objections to farm life point the way for small farmers to make rural life attractive and profit able. The expedient of making hens work overtime by installing electric lights in the laying-houses has been tried again. Farm and Fireside records an instance of a seventeen-year-old boy who ."made big profits" by adding three hours to the working day of his hens in the manner specified. The question of conservation of fuel re quired to produce the lights is not taken into account, but it can well be ignored. In view of the impcobability that many poultrymen will be so sit uated that they will be able to utilize a sufficient amount of light to simu late daylight at a price that will make the plan attractive. Creating artificial daytime for hens has long been the dream of experimenters, some of whom have reported adversely upon it. If it succeeds commercially, this will be due to the longer period given the fowls for exercise, rather than for the actual laying of 'eggs themselves. Our sister republic of Colombia is beginning to experience the penalty of being dependent chiefly upon one in dustry, and now National as well as private credit is at low ebb because of the closing of the markets of Eu rope to coffee, upon the export of which the country depended in large measure for its prosperity. Cutting off of this revenue has diminished buying power, so that her former cus tomers also are suffering the conse quences. It is seen by far-sighted statesmen that the present situation can be turned to account as a lesson for the future, and development of other resources is being strongly urged. Every effort will be made to push construction of a great railway into the western part of the republic, not withstanding the high price of mate rials and the difficulty of obtaining them at any cost. In seizing fuel and sending it to points where it is needed. Governor Cox, of Ohio, is bigger than the fuel administrator, and that is the action "needed when suffering begins. The man who cuts red tape Is the right fellow in emergency. Under the embargo the big sticks from Oregon will not be a feature of trains traveling eastward. Timbers that square more than a foot and re quire two cars, however, have called attention to the resources of this'state. The suffragette pickets need remind ing that their British sisters won votes by patriotic aid to their country, not by picketing or other cantankerous acts. They give the best possible proof of unfitness to vote. Meatless days will do for troops in cantonments, but those at the front must have the best of meats. To whip the Hun, feed the Americans on dry salt and smoke-cured bacon. What matter if our bread Is dark brown? It does not leave that dark brown taste of which we heard so much in Oregon's unregenerate days. What's the matter with sleeping three In a bed at Camp Mills? The boys must learn to spoon, as their progenitors did in the Civil War. Katherine Stinson, Texan aviatrix. shows what women can do. Enlist them. They do not crowd men in the air. What is needed on the auto is a better device to illuminate the num ber, so a fellow can see what kills him. The officer who discovers whisky in half-gallon tins in a trunk must pos sess remarkable power of deduction. Mr. Hoover will not object to goose for the Christmas dinner, though the date falls on meatless day. T. R. has no connection with T. N. T., though both sets of initials have an explosive sound. Russia's idea of an honorable peace is a slap on each Jaw, and then the toe of the boot. The Nobel neace nriza e-oes tn thn Red Cross, and a better award could not be made. Comfort is worth something, and discomfort at the cost of a cent la an aggravation. Snow is falling in Italy, and good- by, Hani Stars and Starmakers. By Lees Cass Baer. HW. H. mailed me the following from a Hermlston paper, or rath er, I should say, the Hermlston paper. It doesn't belong in this column, un less you go on the theory that It's about automobiles, and actors always have automobiles. Usually the auto mobile is resting at the actor's Summer place in the Catskills or the servants at the Long- Island home are using It, but most of the time It exist purely In the mind of , the actor. So, alnce actors and autos are thus closely re lated, there's an excuse for the Her mlston clipping-. Its other excuse la that if funny: "For sale One used Ford touring car, a bargain. One new runabout. Neither will last long. Sapper Bros." Tom Kane, who has been in the pub licity end of the theatrical game for a dozen or more years but who has stayed In the East until this season, la In Portland ahead of "Turn to the Right." which comes to the Helllg next week. The Chicago company In thla homey play, sat" to be an adroit mix ture of the fly-crook and the home- and-mother drama, will tarry in our midst en route to Seattle for Christ mas week. Mabel Bert, as the old fashioned mother, will renew acquaint ances here. Anna Held'a eyea are tear-filled these days, and It la only at the theater that the famoua orbs sparkle and mis behave. It la for her beloved France that the little Parlsienne la sad. Bhe spent last Summer singing- to the sol diers In France and going about the hospitals telling stories and cheering her wounded young countrymen. "It waa terrible," ahe said, "and too pitiful to talk about. We went from one hospital to another and always were men. in pain, pain for France. In the grand American Hospital in Paris, in the smaller hospitals back from the trenches, we found the same spirit be hind the same aufferlng. Everybody waa willing to give all for Franee. It was wonderful. "Aa aoon aa the war la over France will be herself again; Paris, now dark, will be bright; the boulevards, which are now black, will again be cheerful. France, you know, has a proverb which Americans might call, "When anything Is done It Is done.' And so It will be. Now the people are fighting, but fight ing with a grand hope, a grand pa tience. They must not wear bright clothes Joffre says not to. They must not rejoice Polncaire saya not to. They must keep Paris dark and in mourning the government says so; but later, ah, we will all go back." Madame Held opens tonight at the Heilig in "Follow Me," a sprightly musical comedy. a William Favereham recently an nounced a plan to present a Shake spearean festival next Spring. It now appears that hla ambition la chiefly concentrated upon a production of "Hamlet." It Is hla desire to incorpo rate new ldeaa In the acting and stag ing of the play, at the same time reviving certain features of the Fechter production. Aa Mr. Faversham'a production of "Othello" and "Julius Caesar" 'some yeara ago achieved wide popularity mainly because of the humannesa of hla characterizations of Iago and Mark Antony, It la reasonable to expect that hla appearance aa Hamlet will be an occasion for a popular Interest in the tragedy of the melancholy Dane. Sarah Bernhardt closed her road tour in Montreal last week, and unless ehe comes to us In a vaudeville engagement she will not visit this oout this sea eon. Negotiations for veudevllle are being made by Madame Bernhardt'a agents. When last playing In vaude ville on the Orpheum Circuit Bernhardt received $S00 a performance, or $7000 weekly In a city of 14 performances. It la eald her proposed vaudeville tour will be at around $5000 weekly, with about 10 weeks given her at this figure. If no return engagements are played. Harry Lauder's poplarlty in Montreal, Canada, received a bump last week, when the Scotch comic, at a dinner ten dered him by the Rotary Club, la al leged to have uttered some remarks anent the breeding of French-Canadians. Lauder's remarks were pub lished in the Montreal papers and im mediately a loud protest rang out throughout the Dominion. Mayor Martin wrote a letter to Lau der demanding an apology, but could not locate the lecturing comlo and waa forced to serve the order by publica tion. From Quebeo came a challenge from Corporal Emile Larochelle, a con valescing war veteran, who dared Lau der to Join a unit with him, promising to re-enter the trenches if he would. Gabriel Ysaye Is In New York pre paring to debut in vaudeville. He Is a violinist, and claimed to be the equal of his famous Belgian father on the instrument, minus age and experience. The younger Ysaye was In the trenches, where he was severely wounded and received his discharge. Elizabeth Mayne at the Orpheum in Boston last week was forced to with draw one of her members from her act because Boston Ian 3 thought it eacre llgious. The song wasentitled If They Have a Jazz Band In Heaven. Send Me Down Below," being the lament of a man who is driven to distraction be cause he la forced to have muslo with his meals whether he wants it or not. , Charles King, of the vaudeville team of (Elizabeth) Brlce and King, has been appointed chief yeoman In the Navy and ordered to report to the Navy De partment at Washington for special duty. He was recommended by Lieu tenant M. S. Bentham, U. S. N. Brlce and King are now in "Miss 1917," at the Century, New York City. King is also a partner of Andrew Brannlgan In the merclfant tailoring firm of Brannl gan & King. That concern is dissolv ing through Brannlpan also enlisting in the Navy, made a yeoman and as signed to the Brooklyn Navy-yard. Mr. Brannlgan married Hazel Cox, elst'er of Ray Cox. Elizabeth Brlce has engaged for "Words and Music." Hartley McVey (brother of Mrs. Sid ney Drew) has received his commission as Lieutenant in the Aviation Corps. Frank Wilbur, professionally known as Juggling Wilbur, Is with Company L S30th Regiment, Camp Sierraan, O. . . Frank Phillips, formerly ot the Dan iel Frohman forces, is at Camp Upton, L. I. Edna Pendleton, a Seattle girl, placed with Arthur Hammersteln by Jack Hughes and Leslie Morosco, has joined "You're in Love" on tour. YOUNG MEN Rl'.V WHEAT FARM Rules) Quoted by Which Their Draft Classification Will Be Determined. PORTLAND, Dec 13. (To the Ed itor.) My brother and I are both of the graft age and are single. We are both engaged as farmers, namely,, renting father's 1280-acre wheat ranch in Eastern Oregon and working It on a partnership basis. We were practical ly reared on this place until the Sum mer of 1912, when father rented the place out for a term of, five years In order to give ua boys a chance to fur ther our education. This we did. hut as soon as the lease was up last Sum mer we were well Satisfied to go back on and take charge of the place again. The place requires at all times two men and part of the time three and four men to work It and father la no longer able to do anything there. (1) Could we both claim deferred classification to class IV or would we be more apt to come under class III? (S) In what class, under the new classification, would we be most suit ably placed? Would the fact that we had not particularly worked the place for five years, although we now are aa firmly established there aa ever, go aaglnst us In claiming deferred classi fication? A SUBSCRIBER, (1) Tou should both claim classifica tion in olaaa in aa necessary associate managers of a necessary agricultural enterprise. (2) In classifying you the board will first determine whether the farm la a necessary agricultural enterprise. We assume that any well-conduoted, going wheat ranch of 1IS0 acres will be con sidered a necessary agricultural enter prise. It will then determine whether you are necessary. The word "neees aary." aa applied to the relation of a registrant to an agricultural enterprise within the meaning- of any rule govern ing deferred classification, will be taken by the board to Import (we quote from the regulationa): That the registrant Is actually and com pletely engaged In the enterprise In the ca pacity recited In any auon. rule and that he is competent and qualified in that capacity. That the removal of the registrant would result In direct, substantial, material loss and detriment to the adequate and effective operation of the enterprise to a degree pro portionate to the Importance of the capacity recltvd in the rule. That the available supply of persons com petent in the capacity recited in the rule is such that the registrant cannot be replaced in such capacity without direct, substantial, material loss and detriment to the adequate and effective operation of the enterprise In the degree proportionate to the importance of such capacity. The board will also consider gen erally: The length of ttme the registrant has been engaged in the capacity, and especially whether the circumstances of his engage ment are such as to convince the board that he Is not so engaged for the primary purpose of evading military duty service. The nature of the claimant's study, train ing and experience and the extent and value of his qualifications for the capacity in which he is engaged. The actual condition that -would result from his removal. Mem Working; 1st P prnre Camps. MclUNNVILEE, Or.. Deo. 11. (To the Editor.) Will my son, who la working with the Wheeler Lumber Company. on the Nehalem. Government contractors for furnishing spruce, and who haa slgnad an agreement with them to work during the period of the war, be ex empt from the selective draft by rea son of such employment? SUBSCRIBER. The "regulations that apply to classi fication of men in other Industries ap ply to men In the lumber industry, even though auch men may be getting' out spruoe. It la the privilege of your aon to apply for deferred classification on the ground that he la a necessary skilled laborer or necessary Ekilled .me chanical expert in a necessary Indus trial enterprise. If the claim Is al lowed, he will be placed in class II if the former, class 111 If the latter. If not allowed he haa the right of appeal to the President. If he la not successful In having bis claim allowed he may remain in hla present position by being Inducted Into the military servlceL This means that, though drafted and subject to call, he may be called Into aervice In the spruce production division of the Signal Corps and be assigned to duty In hla old po sition. He will, however, be an en listed man In the aervice of the United States, subject to all rules and regu lations laid down by the Government and subject alwaya to duty anywhere the Array may require him. It la the expectation that auch men will not be removed for many months to come, but that ia not a certainty. His employer doubtless has received a circular outlining the necessary pro cedure. Effect of Date of Marrlasr. PORTLAND, Dec. 12. (To the Edi tor.) (1) In what classification would a man come under who was married .May 2. 1917? Some claim a man married at such a date would be classified aa a slnglo man under the selective draft law. Is thla true? (2) Also, what class would a married man come under whose wife is solely dependent on him for support, she not being skilled In any special line where by she could support herself decently L. L. R. (1) It is not true. Date of marriage prior to May IS, 1917, has no bearing on a man's classification, and If con tracted since then does not necessarily alter his status. (2) A definite showing that the wife la mainly dependent on his labor for support ahould place him In class IV. When Wife Is t nnble to Work. ALBANY, Or, Dec. 11. (To the Edi tor.) 1 was married before war was declared. I am the only support of my wlfe. My wife was a typist, but has not worked for two years. On account of nervous . condition she Is unfit to support herself. What class would I be ln? A. C. E. Upon a definite showing that your wife is physically unable to perform the work In which she is skilled and that the is mainly dependent upon your labor for support you would be placed In class IV. Farmer With Dependent Family. BAKER. Or.. Nov. 10. (To the Edi tor.) I am 29 years old, have a wife and baby & years old. I am a farmer of about 400 acres, raise wheat, oats, bar ley, cattle, horses and hoes. Have no other income but what 1 make from this rented farm. I have farmed for three years and have it rented for three more. My wife has no business educa tion or any income. What classifiea tipn would I come under. FARM lilt. As the case is stated by you, you should be placed In class IV. .NatlTe-Dorn or German Parents. BLAINE, Or.. Dee. 10. (To the Edi tor.) Does a man born and raised in this country have to take out natural isation papers whose father and mother are Germans and never took out any papers? I have bought $500 worth of liberty bonds and alwaya considered myself and want to be a good Ameri can. HERMAN THU.V You are a full citizen. nri f..-..,, you say, a good one. You require no naturalization paper. In Other Days. Half a Century Aaro. From The Oregonlan December Is, 1S67. It la stated that Barney Williams, the actor, is worth $400. 00. We publish today a call for a meet ing of the Union fUate Central Com mittee, to be held December 13 in this city. J. N. Dolph is chairman and the leaders deem it necessary for the state to get thoroughly organized) early In the fight. W. C. Painter has been elected rort master at Waiiula, Wash., vice lloaifr able Alvan Flanders, elected to Con gress. We received a call last evening from Mr. Gaston, the chief spirit in the Ore gon Central Railroad Company (West Sido of the river), lie is full of conii dence that the road by way of the Tualatin Plains will be built before any other in Oregon. We have been, shown a very hand some map of McMillan's Addition to the town of Oswego, prepare.! by C. W. Burrage. surveyor and engineer. Twenty-Five I rani Abo. From The Oregonlan Pecember 13, 1S0X New York. In connection with the failure of Toastmaster Kllery Anderson, at the Reform Club dinner on Saturday night, to call on Speaker Crisp, for a speech, it might be added that Ander son, Charles Falrchild and McFarland. of the Reform Club, knew In advance that Crisp expected to be called upon andi had a speech prepared. The speak ership fight promises to ba interesting. Bourke Cochran, of New York, saya that ouo mugwamps of New York are now trying to read 600.000 regular Demo crats, out of the party. Arizona and New Mexico are making a hard fight to be admitted to state hood. Mrs. T. L. Eliot will deliver her lec ture. "The Rights of Man." at the First Congregational Church Friday night. Preston C. Smith was elected presi dent of the Arlington Club last night. J. PVan.k Adams, who haa been, con nected with the Southern Pacific Com pany for the last three years, has re signed to enter business for himself. There la a growing anti-annexation, movement on the East Side and it ia said the Mount Tabor Villa resident may ask for a charter for themselves. Farmer -Whose Wife Has Small Income, PORTLAND. Dec 11. (To the Edi tor.) A young man owns and runs a good-sized apple orchard, having had some study at the Agricultural Col lege along this line: also keeps some stock. He is married, but has no chil dren. Hla wife haa a very email in come of her own. but la unable to sup port herself. There Is no member of the family who could possibly take his place If he la called. Kindly state under what class be would be put In. the draft. SUBSCRIBER. He can properly make claim for de ferred classification on two grounds: That he la the necessary aole directing head of a necessary agricultural enter prise evnd that he haa a wife mainly dependent upon his labor for support. But it Is Impossible for us to say whether either or both claims would be allowed. The board would deter mine not only whether the farm la necessary to the military and National Interest, but whether. If to, be la neces sary to its efficient operation. In de termining the dependency of the wife the board will consider her Independ ent Income and also the amount he would contribute from hla pay as a soldier and the family allowance the Government would make. But aa we read the regulations. If the board de nies the claim on agricultural grounds and finds that hla wife would be as sured adequate support In event of his removal he would not be placed higher than class II. The regulations, how ever, are somewhat Indefinite on this point. If it found that hla wife waa mainly dependent on his labor for sup port or that he was a necessary sola directing head of a necessary agricul tural enterprise It would place him In clasa IV. Registrant Away From Home. . ABERDEEN, Wash.. Doc 11. (To the Editor.) I am a registrant of Coos County, Oregon. In view of the fact that I have only seven days in which to return my questionnaire, of which six days are consumed In the transit of this mall and providing that the mail is delayed a day or so In transit, would that be sufficient cause for the Gov ernment to take me into the Army? Or can I get a questionnaire from the local board here and send it to the board where I recist ered. CARL 11. ERELIXG. The local board where you are reg istered is authorized to send out a questlonn;rIre in advance when a suf ficient reason Is shown therefor, but such action Is discretionary with it. Tou cannot get your questnnnare from another board. We suggest, unless the time limit is too short, that you write to your local boanl and ask that your questionnaire be forwarded at once. giving tho reasons for the request. If you know the number of registrants in your district and your order number you can figure on the dato your ques tionnaire will be mailed tinder the usual process. The board will mall 5 per cent of the questionnaires Decern.- her 15, 5 per cent the next day nnd so on, proceeding according to the order number of the registrants. If you figure you have not time enough, bet ter consult one of the lecal advisers In the town where you are located. Lawyers generally are giving free a'lvlce and aid to registrants. It would not be amiss to consult, one of them anyway as there are possible circum stances not mentioned in your letter which would make some particular course most advisable. Man DiARunnrnblT Ilwehaj-sed. BRIDAL VEIL. Or.. I .-. 11. (To the Editor.) Will a 1 ishonora bly dis charged solflier be drnfleil, that is a military offender? No doubt be will be classified, bt:J will he be accepted. Was dishonorably fl:scliaiKed October 2 0. 131B. R. V. There Is no special classification ex cept In the case of a person shown to have been convicted of any crime, which, under the law of the .lurid ietion of its commission, is treason, felony, or an lnfamo'is crime. Such persons go into class V. A registrant not classified as above, who Is In prison serving sentence or awaiting trial; o. In a reformatory or correctional institution, ir at large on ball under criminal institution is first classified and recorded as any other registrant, but pending discharge from confinement or final disposition of his case Is treated as standing at the bot tom of clasa XV.