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The man-beast Horner tag pleaded fruilty to the murder of a woman, his companion, and her two children and will speedily be on his way to the penitentiary at Walla Walla, to serve a life term. He will join others who have thus escaped their just deserts on the gallows for foul and deliberate murders or so many of the well-fed crew of blood-thirsty malefactors as remain within prison walls. Among t'hem is a fellow from over Kent way who killed his entire family, includ ing several children his own flesh and blood for a miserable sum of money, a few hundred dollars, which lie thought he would get out of Insur ance on their lives. There is, of course, no life impris onment for murderers, or anybody, in America. Kansas is a state of fairly good repute, yet it is tender about ex ecuting its slayers of women and chil dren. In the past thirty-one years, according- to reliable statistics, 339 murderers have been sentenced to life Imprisonment in that state. Of this total only 96 remain In the hands of the authorities. Forty-two died, one escaped, two were freed by the courts, and ninety-four were pardoned. Thus It Is seen that only one in eight forty-two out of a gTand total of 339) has carried out to the full the penalty of his crime. Seven out of i eight had influential friends or per sistent relatives, who doubtless start ed the movement for their release as soon aa the prison doors closed on them. A guess may be made that the aver age time served by the convicted mur derer is not over five or six years. The unconvicted murderers do not, of course, serve at alL They are the great majority, for It is a shameful fact that the average trial for murder ends In an acquittal or a mistrial. Horner is sorry, but sorrow restores no lives, undoes no deeds. There is in his printed confession a note of self justification for the woman had de manded that he marry her, for rea sons obviously good, but he had re fused because she was "too old," and it was impossible. She was not too old to contribute to his pleasure, only too old for him to do for her as an honest man should and would. If the state were to put such a fellow in a cage and label him "mur derer of women and children" and "enemy of his kind" and exhibit him to all who might want to see, it would be terrible punishment. But it does nothing of the kind. It incarcerates him with other felons, and hides him away, and feeds him regularly and scientifically, and lets him work a ; little, and provides amusements and recreations for him, and gives him time and a fair opportunity to set afoot plans to get out. In seven cases put of eight he succeeds. THE ENDC8TRIAL VALUE OF KNGLISU. Further stimulus to the teaching of English to foreign workers in the I'nlted States will be found in definite statements by employers of aliens that knowledge of the language of the country adds greatly to efficiency, and lessens costs of manufacture of goods. Instruction in English In large indus trial plants, therefore, has been taken from the classification of philanthropy and is being treated as a "straight business proposition." The. hard head, no less than the soft heart. In the words of a member of the National Americanizing Committee, can be em ployed to advantage In solving the problem of unifying our people. Secretary Lane's amazing presenta tion of the statistics of Illiteracy in the United States before a recent confer ence In Washington also has proved thought-provoking. He said that there are five and a half million persons of working age in the United States who can neither read nor write English, and that of this number a million and a half are native born. There are now being drafted into the National Army some hundreds of thousands of men who cannot under stand orders given them to read, and a considerable proportion of them do not understand spoken commands. Unless this latter condition were cor rected, military success would be Im periled by the presence of numbers of soldiers who did not understand commands and- signals. It Is being overcome, under the pressure of ob vious necessity, 'by schools established in the training camps. The conten tion of. the leaders in the Americani zation movement is that we will not have attained our maximum of effi ciency until the same principle is adopted in industry, and every worker has both an opportunity and incentive for mastering the language of his Adopted land. Kvidence accumulates, asthe sub 3ect is Investigated, that ignorance of English is responsible for a vast amount of waste, and also for great loss of life in hazardous occupations. The number maimed or killed from this cause alone is beyond computa tion. Language instruction in certain manufacturing plants in large Indus- trial centers heTs been found ' to re duce the percentage of accidents of all kinds remarkably. Considerations of humanity, as well as of economy and efficiency, dictate an intensive ef fort to bring about the 100 per cent Americanization of the language of the' people who live in the United States This would seem to be self-evident. That there axe guU some localities in which Americanization still needs to be emphasized is shown by the state ment of an official of the Federal Bureau of Education, that in Fort Wayne, Ind., last year. J14.S72 was spent for teaching German, as against only S 108 for instruction In English and citizenship to immigrants. Phila delphia expended $70,000 for German courses and $14,000 for English and citizenship. These are typical cases. The point, however, does not lie in the expenditure for Instruction In Ger man, but in neglect of the essential education of the immigrant. It is a good time, now that German language courses are being discontinued In many cities, to suggest that the funds for merly employed be diverted to Eng lish courses, and particularly for the extension of the education of adult aliens. The "melting pot" simile will not be applicable to the United States so long as there are more than five mil lion persons in the country who de pend upon a foreign tongue for a means of communication. A SUGGESTION AS TO TOTING. Only about one-third of the citizens entitled to vote appeared at the re cent primary. We hear various rea sons assigned, but none is quite satis factory, except that through Indiffer ence to candidates and issues they stayed away from the polls. We have popular government con trolled by a minority. The majority stays at home, reserving the right, of course, to complain if it Is not suited. By the time next election day rolls around, it has forgotten Its grievances, and is deaf to all appeals to discharge a plain duty of citizenship unless there is a supreme issue, and then the polling booths are crowded. How may the public be beguiled to the polls, so as to vote when it does not care to vote? Judge Lowell, of Pendleton, suggests compulsory vot ing. It presents many- difficulties, one of which is that your coerced voter has no free Judgment. -- His vote, therefore, isn't worth having. The Oregonlan has another plan. Let us submit it for wbat it is worth. Let the elector who s'.ays away from the polls, twice In succession, without a reasonable excuse, forfeit his elec tive franchise. A BOON TO STAMP COLLECTORS. The recently inaugurated airplane postal service already has opened a new vista of possibilities for the stamp collector. Naturally, the new issue of 24-cent stamps possesses especial in terest, and, also naturally, they fore see the time when air service stamps will become so common as to possess no particular value. So the efforts of collectors have been concentrated upon the stamp bearing a postmark show ing that it was used on the initial trip. The aim In life of your true col lector Is to obtain something which no one else possesses, and. If possible. of something which no one else can possibly possess. Intrinsic value has nothing to do with the collecting mania. There may be millions of oblong bits of paper, printed in red and blue, each entitling Its owner to send a letter by airplane post, but they will he worth at most 24 cents. One of them, however, which had seen its best days and had served the only useful purpose for which It was intended, has brought a dollar, and is held by a speculator who doubtless dreams of the day when it will be worth a small fortune. As a work of art, the new stamp, hastily devised. is of little worth. There is some his toric interest, however, in the fact that It is the first stamp since the Pan-American issue of 1901 in which two colors have been used. Twenty-four-cent stamps went out of use in 1870. The Postoffice De partment issued a few of this denomi nation in 1860, and in 1869 adopted a design in two colors green and lilac -and by a mistake of the printer some of these were issued with in verted centers. These misprints have become exceedingly rare, one copy which had not been cancelled bring ing $2850 and a cancelled stamp be ing sold for $405 at an auction about a year ago. In the former instance, enhancement of some 11,000 per cent in value from the collector's view point was due to a mechanical imper fection. It used to be urged that collecting postage stamps was a highly instruc tive pastime, because it stimulated in terest in geography and history, and in some vague way "broadened tire out look" of the collector. It will hardly be contended that the geography les son taught by the 2 4-cent misprint of 1869 was worth $2849.76 to anyone. We must look elsewhere for an expla nation of the collecting habit. A LIMIT TO WAR SUBSTITUTES. Those who are inclined to waste essential commodities, in the belief that substitutes will be found for them when they are gone, will do well to ponder, over the latest failure of Ger man "efficiency" to function in this respect. For something more than a year past the world has been regaled with stories of the success of the Ger mans in producing paper textiles, from which it was said clothing of hlgn quality was being made. But the most complete possible confession of failure has just been made by the German government, in its comman deering of all the extra suits of cloth ing in the empire, for the use, not of soldiers, but of workmen engaged in producing war material. The high command has undertaken to produce in this manner some three million suits of used clothing. Every man who possesses more than one suit is to be compelled to give his surplus to the government at once. Only smoklng jackets and evening suits are to be exempt from seizure. Paper clothing may be definitely written down as a failure. The Ger man textile workers' union recently addressed a petition to the Imperial Chancellor calling attention to the bombastic promises made to relieve the textile shortage by furnishing paper substitutes and declaring that expectations had not been realized. At tho same time the war workers threat ened to strike unless substantial cloth ing was furnished them at prices within their means. The number of so-called substitutes offered was large; the difficulty was that the goods would not stand wear. Meanwhile the lack of progress made in the search by German chem ists for a workable substitute for rub ber is even more significant. The shortage in this regard is both indus trial and military. Electrical enter prise of every kind already is seriously crippled. Synthetics have been proved utter failures for the finer uses to which rubber is put. There is no longer rubber enough in Germany to permit its use in the manufacture of drainage tubes for the treatment of wounds. It is interesting at the same time to read the description by a Norwe gian correspondent of tiie exhibits made at the recent Spring fair at Leipzig, which were noteworthy for the impracticability of a large pro portion of the surrogates for staple articles offered. An artificial tea is one example. This has been com pounded from various leaves of plants growing within the . empire, from strawberry leaves to linden blossoms: these are treated chemically so that the taste has been cunningly imitated, but no quantity of the infusion will produce the genial feeling of stimu lation created by the genuine article. Imitation jams and marmalades are numerous. They are mostly prepared from garden vegetables instead of fruits, and employ a minimum of sugar. They are not meeting with much success. Substitute soaps also have their very definite limitations. It is npon the production of tex tiles and rubber goods, however, that the energies of German scientists have been concentrated. With respect to rubber, the problem has .the added interest of its probable effect upon the destiny of the empire after the war is over. Unless Germany wins and recovers her lost colonies, she will be excluded from the sources of rubber production of the world. It is said that a certain percentage of pure rubber has been found in the juice of the euphorbia, a plant capable of production in Germany and Austria, the gum resin of which was utilized by some of our forefathers as a medi cine. But the percentage is small at best, and we have learned .by this time to distrust the claims of the German chemists. It is seriously to be doubted that the artificial rubber Industry has yet approached near to a sound commercial basis. Drastic or ders issued by the government for the conservation of even the most minute quantities of genuine rubber indicate lack of faith on the part of the Ger mans themselves. There is an obvious lesson for Americans In the situation with which Germany already is confronted. This is that waste of any essential mate rial should cease at once. There can be no consideration of price, of being -able to "afford" to make reckless use of this or that. We need to prac tice economy from the beginning. We Cannot count on finding sub stitutes for everything. Every square inch of . cloth, and every ounce of rubber, and every pound of metal must, be put to its full use, and then saved to be reworked afterward. By-using caution now we may save much real grief in the months ahead of us. LEONARD WOOD. In his speech to Congress urging Immediate provision for war to the utmost. President Wilson said: The consideration that dominates every other now and makes everv ether seem trivial and negligible. Is the winning of the war. We are not only- In the midst of the war; we are at the very peak and crisis of 1C There is only one way to meet that duty. We must meet It without selfishness or fear of consequences. Politics Is adjourned. The elections will go to thoee who -think least of It; to those who go to the constituencies without ex planation or excuses, with a plain record of duty faithfully and disinterestedly per formed. On the day when the President spoke these words. Major - General Leonard Wood, senior officer In the regular Army, was detached from command of the eighty-ninth division. National Army, at Camp Funston, and will, therefore, not command it in France. Instead, he was assigned to the Western department with head quarters at San Francisco, and will remain at home to conduct further training of new troops. These orders have since been modified, and he is to remain at Camp Funston to direct training there. He is still denied a field command. How do these orders square with the President's exhortation to Con gress? That question requires con sideration of what manner of man General Wood is and of what he has done. He is the descendant of a Mayflower pilgrim and the son of a New Eng land country doctor who served as a soldier in the Civil War. Becoming an Army surgeon, he took to fighting in the Apache campaign, and helped so much in the capture of Geronimo that he was awarded the medal of honor by Congress. That distinction marked him for Colonel of the Rough Riders in the Spanish war. He over rode rules and cut red tape in cloth ing and arming his men, to the pleased astonishment of Secretary of War Alger, who described his conduct as "constructive insubordination." He fought so well in the battles near San tiago and took such good care of the health of his troops that he was ap pointed Brigadier-General and Gover nor of Santiago province. In that capacity he made war on disease, especially yellow fever, filth and famine with such success that in December, 1899, he was made Gov- ernor of Cuba- He extended the same work throughout the island, author ized the experiments of Dr. Walter Reed which practically extinguished yellow fever, effected sweeping sani tary reforms which made Cuba one of the healthiest countries in the world, organized courts, schools, finance and railroads and conducted an election for a constitutional con vention. When the independent gov ernment was ready, he handed over affairs to it In May, 1902. He was sent to Europe, met the Kaiser and saw the German army mapeuvers. On nis return ne was maae jnajor-uea eral in the regular Army in spite of the opposition of the Army clique and its political friends. He became com mander of Mindanao in the Philip pines and Governor of the Moro prov ince, and conquered and pacified the savage Moros, then for two years com manded all troops in the Philippines, On his return in 1908 he was ap pointed commander of the Depart ment of the East and began the move ment for military preparedness in which he has since been a leader. He initiated and conducted the Army maneuvers in Massachusetts which proved that coast defenses are useless without the support of a mobile Army. On a mission to Argentina he met Gen eral von der Goltz and discussed with him the advantages of compulsory military training, and thereafter ad vocated that system on the Swiss and Australian plan. He was chief of staff for nearly four years ending in April. 1914, and aa such established student training camps. He then again be came commander of the Eastern de partment and started the citizens' training camp at Flattsburg, N. x. in 1915. The greatly increased number of men who attended the 1916 camp were addressed by ex-President Roose velt at General Wood's invitation, with the result that the Government for bade further speech making at camps. When the Hay Army law federalized the National Guard, General Wood exerted himself for its adequate equip ment, but be saw that the National Guard and voluntary training were mere makeshifts, and he conducted a ceaseless campaign for compulsory training. He urged it on Congress again in December, 1916. only a few I months before the United States en tered the war, and the Scientifc Amer ican has called him "the symbol of the preparedness movement" He is so well informed on military matters that he testified before the House and Senate committee without referring to subordinates or notes, while other high officers had frequent recourse to such aid. Since the United States entered the war General Wood has been trans ferred to the Southeastern command, which Is only a part of the Eastern command, thus taking a' step down. He was sent to France to report on the military situation, and on his re turn recommended to the Senate com mittee that an Army of four or five million men be organized. He told of the lack of artillery and aircraft in the American 'Army and of French disappointment at the small number of men sent. Then he was sent to Camp Funston. Though slightly wounded In France, he Is In good physical condition and is only in his fifty-eighth year. As to the motive for General Wood's campaign for preparedness, the Out looked quoted a rather cynical rookie at Plattsburg as saying: I've .been looking to see what General Wood la going to get out of thia prepared ness game he haa been working for so hard. He can't get any mors pay; he can't get any more rank. By thunder, I have almost come to the conclusion that he is doing it tor hie country. As to his ability as a soldier, Isaac F. Marcosson In Everybody's quoted a European officer as saying of Gen eral Wood: "You've got one great soldier over there." That is the opinion all the way up and down the line. When a man of such achievements, of such devoted service to his country and whose opinions have been proved sound by events, is relegated to a subordinate position at home Instead of being given active command at the front, there appears to be a serious contradiction betwoen Mr. Wilson's declaration that "politics is adjourned," his solemn summons to duty, and his treatment of this man. When we com pare what General Wood said should be done with what the Administra tion at this late day is doing, the General's-foresight appears to be as clear as the President's hindsight. When we recall the flurry about the Roosevelt speech at Plattsburg and the fury against the preparedness agitation which was displayed by men who now clamor for an unlimited Army, General Wood seems to have offended by being too close a friend of the ex-President and by having ex pressed opinions the correctness of which the Kaiser now compels the Administration to confess. Though, like a good soldier, he says nothing and obeys orders, his very presence Is a constant reiteration of the words: "I told you so." It irritates the men who, having scorned his advice, now follow it. The hillbilly of Arkansas naturally opposes the draft, as he also does what he considers the oppression of law and order, but always will re spond to the call of his sheriff it that official possesses and uses judg ment. Therein lies the cause of mis takes that lead to killings. The old union rules bob up to ob struct shipbuilding in the edict of the British Boilermakers' Union against efforts to break riveting records. The Kaiser would show small respect for rules limiting output if he should win, and ships are built to beat him. The aim and effect of economic control over Finland by Germany will be to make the Finns look, act and talk like Germans, and. Incidentally, to buy only German goods. But Uncle Sam will upset that nice little ar rangement. Records show tTtat men gain in weight in the service, and it would seem that latitude be given in favor oZ the young chap bound to enlist but barred by deficiency of a few pounds. Somebody must be last, and It is just as well Illinois holds that posi tion in the Red Cross drive rather than a small commonwealth, that would grieve over such lack of honor. Every time a Hun bomb is dropped on an American hospital it goes into the record for settlement day, by which time we shall have sidestepped much sentimentality. That one distinctive American ar ticle, the sawed-off shotgun, will startle the Hun in the trench into abject surrender If he survives the first shot. Compliments of the season to Mr. Ed Wright, whose shipyard at Astoria has the official American record of celerity in laying a keel in five minutes. Instinctively one lifts his hat in salute to the Starrs and Stripes floating from that seventy-two-foot pole at the Seventh-day Adventlst campground. Anything that helps win the war is worthy of respect. Have we not long enough called the potato a spud and is it not about time to anlt7 Sinn Fein is referred to Ukraine for information as to the kind of inde pendence Ireland would have If Ger many should be the victor. That Austrian offensive is overdue and has been supplanted by an Italian offensive. Cannot Austria move with out German help? Von Tirplta says Germany must keep Belgium, but the first item in the peace convention will knock him stiff. I Tomorrow will be decorated graves of people who never receivea a iiower. Why not begin the better way today? Come to think of It, it was the bat tleship Oregon that started "Oregon first" in making records. Peace by understanding In the Ukraine has ended in a serious mis understanding Like the bricklayer who lays too many, the English riveter is getting a call down. The less talk of lower wheat sub stitutes the better. Make them do. In the matter of State Treasurer, Ole seems to be on the second "yump." Bread is anything the housewife cnooses lo call oreaa meae aaya. 'Save wheat by eating Oregon strawberries, A Line o Type or Two. Hew to Ike Line. L the tsdpe Fall Where They May. BT B. L. T. (Published by arrangement with Chicago Tribune.) Arnold Bennett, writing of England and Englishmen, doubts whether the vast majority of us are practicing as much self-denial as we might- If Old Arnold were to take another flying trip through the United States he would discover that Americans have not be gun to practice any sort of self-denial. After more than a year of war our withers are as yet unwrung. Mr. Burleson "has yet to learn of a patriotic reader, unless it be Mr. Roose velt, who approved the article In the Metropolitan Magazine, 'Is America Honestr by William Hard." From which one might almost suspect tbat Mr. Burleson circulates exclusively in administration society. Lowest Ferns ef After-Dinner Story. Sir This vital question was settled many years ago at a convention called for the purpose. .The lowest form is the one beginning. "Have you ever heard the story about the two Irish men, Pat and Mike?" C B. Rev Mr. Gllkey, of Hyde Park, de nounces the "My country, right or wrong" policy as international anarchy. Fortunately the men who have put on uniforms are with the late Mr. Decatur. heart and soul, as well as an over-' whelming majority of the citizens of the United States. Epitaph oa aa Amy of Memssries. (A. E. Rouaman's tribute to the British who made the retreat from Mona.) These, in the day when heaven was falling, -The hour when earth's foundations fled. Followed their mercenary calling And took their wages and are dead. Their shoulders held the sky suspended: They stood, and earth's foundations stay: What God abandoned, these delonded. And saved the sum of things for pay. Now that Mr. Creel has fit, bled and almost died for his chief, it is up to the President to refer to him aa "one of the ablest," etc Information for the Frantic. Sir The term "Jake" used by the boys writing from France Is purely a Montana cowpuncher expression. It is commonly used here by old residents and cowmen and means "It is well," or "It suits me." It was probably car ried to France by our "Powder Kiver" boys. C C. O. Sir To be "Jake" to a thing is to be wise" to It In the Middle West it was a farmer boy's witticism, when ques tioned whether he would do some par ticular thing, to say, "Leave It to your Uncle Jake!" and. if he did it. ."Well, you're Jake" was the recognition of his ability. "To be Jake" was exported to the Northwest territory in cans for use as local atmosphere by novelists who didn't know a Methodist ax from a splitter. "Bud" and "Sis" were the elder brother and sister of country families in Indiana. Kentucky and Tennessee, perhaps other states. "Buddie" is an endearing diminutive of "brother." and was in current Army use In the Spanish-American war by troops from those states. Common early Western and southwestern, as "Bud" Hamilton, "Bud" Fraser, etc (See Ople Read.) H.1LR Sir Now that the origin of "Jake- has or has not been settled, may I or may I not inquire who was Sam Brown, who has given his name to tho northwest-southeast section of the British officer's belt? M. K. M. Thrift. Horatio, thrift! Tis a virtue to be cultivated even unto death, re ports E. J. S. A west side mortician. who advertises inexpensive sepulture. had three hearses in a thrift stamp parade, with an ad for his buslnesa The effect fell short of exhilaration. Borrtoboola-Gm-au Ever since I first read "Bleak House,' Forty years ago, I have wondered whether Borrloboola-Kha is tho true name of a real place. Knowing that Dickens found at least Some of his Immortal names Traddles, Micawber, Peggotty, Uriah Heep. Dick-Swlveller, Captain Cuttle On signboards and subscription lists, I doubted his inventing Borrloboola-gha. And yet it seems too good to be true. In all these years I have never Looked the thing up. And I'm not going to look It up now. I prefer to pass to my reward Ignorant, so that In good faith I can ask C. IJ. himself. Borrioboola-gha is a wondrous sweet Collection of vocables. I'd like to be a native of Borrioboola-gha (What was It Mrs. Jellyby's society was making? "Red flannel nightcaps for the natives of Borrioboola-gha?") The life must be so different from The life of a Chicago "professor." Of course, there may be no such place. But, anyway. It's a lovely soft word Borrioboola-gha. It's mild, and yet It satisfies! I'm very grateful to Charley Dickens for Borrioboola-gha! F. M. B. This, by the Late Maeaalay, Might Be Written Today. "Such a display of wickedness, naked yet not ashamed, such cool, audacious. scientific atrocity, seemed rather to be long to a fiend than to the most de praved of men. Principles which the most hardened ruffian would scarcely hint to his most trusted accomplice, or avow, without the disguise of some palliating sophism, to his own mind, are professed without the slightest cir cumlocution and assumed as the funda mental axioms of all political science." Sea. What have the years left us? What will they bring? Life life's not bereft us: Still we can sing. See! blue skies above us. Green eo below; . Friends laugh with and love us; Bright the days flow. N Time, drop shades around us; Death, call us hame: Say not that you found us Sorry we came. LAURA BLACKBURN. Our attention is called, by T. R. D, n . t. -hAMtlno- .. . W I .. n n n I ta.i. v& v& oil i pcu lie 1 c appears to be no close season on cuffs. "You Must Have the Cask to Wed a Dallas Girl." Headline. An Array man, lately returned from Texas, reports that the Dallas girls are not peculiar in the respect referred to above: that they are a spoiled lot of darlings. Know all men by these presents that Louis Kaffel Is a real estate broker in Waterbury, Conn. Speaking of Gramsaar. Sir In St. Marx's Hospital. Roches ter, Minn., the barber, who says be went to school with the Mayos, dropped this on me: "Them dry goods Ttores seems to handle those kind of a thing pretty, well." .W. & J,. PICNIC HELPS AFTER SO YEARS Walaat Grows Is Arterasata Watch 'Will PnrUe Gsnatocavs. HOOD RIVER, Or, May 27. (To the Editor.) President Wilson's request of the Boy Scouts for a census of the wal nut timber of the country and your edi torial on the subject of the exhaustion of the walnut forests of the United States have Interested me much. The people of the Mississippi Valley have interested themselves more In for est destruction than in reforestation. In tho evolution of the farm from the forest some valuable varieties of wood have almost suffered extermination, walnut among the rest. During a res idence of SO years in Kansas I had opportunity to observe much along this line. ben that territory was first opened for settlement In 1854 all the water courses In the eastern half were skirted with good belts of hardwood timber, walnut predominating in many localities. It is not the case now. There la comparatively little left. It was used for cabins and fences of the pioneers and later for lumber for bet ter houses. The village of Lecompton. where the Infamous Lecompton con stitution was hatched, was built of native walnut lumber, and many of the houses, among them "Constitution Hall," after moro than 0 years' usage. are aa good aa ever. Also millions of feet of Kansas walnut was exported for furniture. In the Fall of 1885. when I came home from the Army, the family had a picnic In the woods, and the feature of the sport was the gathering of some 20 bushels of black walnuts. They were hauled homo and piled out in tho back yard to bo used as wanted. In the Spring those which had remained ex posed to the frosts had cracked open and were found to be sprouting. They were planted on a few acres or the farm which had proved too moist for general cultivation- in rows five feet apart, about as corn and potatoes are sometimes drilled. cor a few years they received the usual attention of enough cultivation to keep down the weeds and were then left to their fata In addition to the planting In the bot tom land, a portion of the nuts had been planted around the base of a prominent point of land that reached out Into the valley and formed a head land conspicuous for a long distance. Fifty years after tho planting I vis ited the old farm and wandered through the walnut sr roves. The trees around the base of the headland had not at tained a remarkable growth and were only about 60 feet In height with trunks the size of large electric light poles, but those In the richer, wetter soil of tho bottom land were available for mill logs and had a diameter of two feet in many cases. They had pruned them selves by close contact with each other, the stronger had overcome the weak, so that the great trees stood about 10 or IS feet apart In tho rows, all In the Intervening spaces having disappeared. Now these trees that are so closely connected with the Civil War are to be used for gunstocks In this greater war. which, like the former, is being fought that "governments of the people, for tho people and by the people may not perish from the earth." ALBERT R. GREENE. EVER-WELCOME CCESTS. They come with soiled faces, with cratch and mar and dent. They come from many places, with divers motives sent; They come with fondest greetings from lands across the sea. And ever are they welcomed, and fondled lovingly. They're talked about In every place, but never with a sneer. And always there's reolcing when countless ones appear: They figure In the social game, and la the lowest dive. And atranga to say they have a way of keeping both alive! They speak a varied language, accord ing to the ear. To some they breathe of art alone, to some of homey cheer: They tell of dissipation, of lives that went all wrong Through listening to temptation In their thrilling evening song! They're waited for 'in anguish by many a starving soul; They're seldom left to langnish when they have reached a goal; They travel with the millionaire, by htm are never spurned. Although their sweet companionship he doubtless never earned! They may be soiled and battered, but beloved Is every one; The only criticism is for those that do not come! Oh, ever-loved and longed-for guest, pray be our daily caller. And do for us your level best, thou great and mighty-dollar! GRACE E. HALL. EOT East Forty-ninth street North. Registrants la Shipyards. ATHENA. Or.. May 17. (To the Edi torsWill a man in Class 1 In the draft get deferred classification if he accepts a position In the shipyards? (2) Who will notify exemption board If granted deferred classification? (J) Give names of leading shipyards la Portland. SUBSCRIBER. (1) Technically, ho is rot put In a deferred class, but retains the classifi cation originally made In his case While so employed, however, his lia bility to service is suspended. (2) He should notify his local board within five days of any change of status. Ho will also be certified to the local board as on the Emergency Fleet list by an official who prepares the shipyard list. (3) If you are looking for a Job your best plan is to apply to the TJ. 8. Em ployment Service, 247 Davis street. Portland. Increase la Widow's Feaaloa, BEAVERTOJJ, Or.. May 17 (To the Editor.) Please tell me why my pen sion Is not raised as well as other sol diers' widows. I am 8, and 112 a month doesn't keep me. I belong to the Red Cross and I do all I can to make me worthy of the button I wear. I have knit It pa'.ra of wristlets, furnished the goods and made lots of cup towels. I do love to do things for the Red Crosa M. A PRATT. "We think if you will write to W. C. Hawley, House of Representatives, Washington. D. C, he will be glad to investigate your right to an Increased pension and help yon get it if it Is com ing to you. He Is the Congressman from your distrlct. Pi-etee Eyes la Watentagr Eclipse. FORT WORDE.N, Wash., Way 27. (To the Editor.) As I have seen no word on the subject in the newspapers. I take the liberty of calling your atten tion to the very grave danger that at tends watching the sun with unprotect ed eves. And It is no less during an eclipse than at other times. Blindness haa been caused many peo ple In this manner, and I believe you will do w;ll to publish a warning. A piece of glass rather darkly smoked with burning camphor gum is the tra ditional means used, and It Is very efficient- SOLDIER. Mick llpiagssBi Mom tm Aluka, DALLAS, Or.. May 17. (To the Edi tor.) Aa the Government is In search of spaghnum moss, permit me to say that I have tramped for hours throutrh moss on the tundra adjoining Wrangell. Alaska, that I believe is Just what it Is looking fcr. It so, enough can be had within a radius of a Tew miles in that section to supply all the armies of Europe, A. V, R, SNYDER, In Other Day. JL Twenty-five Tear Age, ' From The Oregonlan. May to, ISM. New Tork. New Tork Central In augurates It-hour service between New tork and Chicago. Willis S. Dunlway leaves for Chlcae-o as delegate from Portland Typograph ical Union to attend National gathering of that organisation. E. L. (Jerry) Coldwell. writing from Denver, tells of meeting the following Portlanders in that cityj James Bangs. William M. Davy. Emil Wedthoff and "Salty" Boardman. . Portland Transportation Bureau goes before Board of Railroad Commission ers with its grievance against tho Union Pacific in the matter of dis tributive freight rates, which are se riously crippling Portland's jobbing trade. Alterations planned for' County Jail whereby ceUs will be provided for-segregation of witnesses and female pris oners. Half a Ceatnry Ago. t From The Oregoalaa. May 29. 1S8S. J. Gaston, president of the Orecon Central Railroad Company (West Side), in report to stockholders lists com pany's assets at 1587.000. At annual meeting Oregon Central Railroad Company. James W. Neamith. J. C Ainsworth, T. B. Cornelius, WU1 lam T. Newby and J. Gaston are elected directors for the ensuing year. Another ordinance Introduced In City Council provides for employment of city prisoners upon the streets and public grounds. Longshoremen's Protective Union ar ranges for elaborate torchlight proces sion, with band and transparencies. A B. Richardson, auctioneer, sells at public auction a number of frame build ings at First and Stark streets. SCSTAISED BT UXCOIS PRECEPT Cosnrt-Martial for Disloyalty Legal or Emancipator Waf, Wrong. McMIKXVILLE. May 27. (To tho Ed itor.) A recent article in The Oregon lan. entitled "Court-Martlal a Leaser Evil." will bo universally approved by your Q. A R. readers, who have very vivid recollection of the conditions which prompted President Lincoln to permit, if he did not order, military measures to suppress disloyal agita tion during the Civil War. In his first message to Congress at the extra session called for July 6. 1S61. Mr. Lincoln explained the condi tions under which he bad acted In cre atlng an army of nearly 200,006 men and a greatly enlarged navy and la proclaiming a blockade of Southern ports, etc In that message he an nounceed an important principle of constitutional Interpretation which has never been better stated. He said: "When an end is lawful and obligatory, the Indispensable means to it are also lawful and obligatory." On that principle ho stood, and no court haa ever presumed to hold ad versely to It- Under that construction of authority, he acted to tho end. "To provide for the common defense" was one of the declared purpoaee of the Constitution, and certainly tho sup pression of treason In time of war fall within that provision. If that end caa be attained only by military law, Mr. Lincoln's interpretation clears away all reasonable objection aa to the legality of court-martial proceedings to attain It. v Mr. Lincoln made In that message tho following remark as to the character of the army he had thn organised: There are many single regiments whoso members, one and another, possess full, practical knowledge of all the arts, sciences, professions, and whatever else, whether useful or elegant. Is known In the world: and there Is scarcely one from which could not be selected a President, a Cabinet, a Congress and perhaps a court, abundantly competent to administer the Government it self. The same could be ald of the pres ent National Army, and there is not a single regiment from which a gen eral court-martial of 11 members could not be constituted, that would be as capable of rendering Just and impartial decisions as any of the civil courta Indeed, such court-martial could be composed wholly of trained and ex perienced lawyers and judges men of highest personal honor. The present efforts of the Govern ment remind older persons of similar proceedings during the earlier years of the Civil War. Civil police would arrest persons charged with disloyalty, and scouting parties of soldiers would capture men, often carrying arms, and bring them into camp. The punishment was seldom more severe than the op tion of taking the oath of allleglanco to the United States, which treason ably Inclined persons would readily do Just as they are doing now. In ons of the camps a newly arrived recruit found a big yellow rattlesnake coiled under the edge or his blanket, and asked In his sudden fright what he should do. "Swear him and let him go," was the answer of a veteran com rade, and we" are pursuing a similar policy no, or offering them free board and comfortable lodKlng. or letting them out on bail traitors still. A. L. Pat More Reverence la Antaeus. PORTLAND. May 28 (To the Ed!- tor.) Today, tomorrow and for cen turies "The Star-Spangled Banner" will bo sung. Almost all my life I have been listening to an Incongruity In the last verse, towit: Then conquer we must, for ear Cause It is Just, And let this be ear motto: "In Uod Is our trust." Too many people, choruses and gath er in jrs render that motto In jig time. It should be sung with tho reverence it insDlres, slowly and with profound re spect for the sentiment and all It means. Begin today. W. J. C. FREE IJfrORMATIOTT FOR ALL, BEADRHS OP THE HKGOMAM. Each reader of The Oregonlan Is offered the FREE and unlim ited use of the largest Informa tion Bureau In the world. This Service Bureau Is located In the National Capital, where It la in immediate touch with all ths ftreat resources of the United States Government. It can answer practically aay question you want to ask, butt it cannot give advice, nor make exhaustive research. The war has forced so many changes in the daily life of tho American people that the serv ices of this FREE Information Bureau will be invaluable to all who use It Keep In tooch with your Gov ernment during these trying times. It can help you in a thou sand ways if your wants are only made known. The Oregonlan pays for this splendid service In order that every one of its readers may take free advantage of it. You are welcome to use it as often as you like. Write your recjuest briefly, sign your name and address plainly, enclose a S-cent stamp for return postage, and address THE PORTLAND OREOONTAJf INFORMATION BUREAU. Frederic J. Haskln. Director, Washington. P. C