TIIE MOKXIXG OREGOXIAJf, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER JM, 1018. rORTUND, OREGON. K;ilerr-d at Portland (Oregon) Fostofflce as snnl--ta.-,.s mail matter, bubscriplion ruto -Invariably in advance: By Mail.) !!!;-, Sunday Included, one year ',-!J2 3 :tilyf Sunday inrlu'led. six months f'o- J '.tilv, Sunday im-liuled, three months.... '-'z' Jnily. Sunflay inclj'leil, me month j; i ly. v it hout Stimliiy. one year ........ S OM J ly. v. it hout SuiiOhv, six months 1 m i i v. ivit hout Sunday, uiie month....... -So U.-...LI.- ...,,.. LOO Sinifl n v. fin1 V"nr ...... ........ ........ 2. -0 I bu.iUuy autl Weekly 3.30 ( By Carrier.) ral:y. Sunday Included, one year -.f9.n0 1 'a i ly, Suiu'.hv included, one month J ;tity, Sunday included, ttiree months.... J taily, ithout Sunday, one year 1'n- llaily. ithout Sunday, three months l.!. Jjiiily, uithoul Sunday, one month - -Go How to Kemit Send postotfiee money or der, expmn .r personal . heck on your local hank. 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We shall miss the spirit of the most significant Christmas day that the world has known in many years if we rc-frard it as only a time for exchanging (rifts, and singing carols and stuffing ourselves -with turkey at 50 cents a pound. There has not been a Christ inas within the life of the-present gen eration which has called for more serious contemplation of the deeper lessons of the day, or for exercise of a more catholic spirit of forbearance and charity and benevolence. Christmas today finds America en Joying not only material prosperity but relaxation from the trials and griefs of war; it finds us, moreover, practically whole and bearing fewer of the scars of the conflict than any other great nation in the world. Yet the essence of the Christmas spirit Is unselfishness, and if we give rein to the. pleasures of the table and of the festal tree without making room in our minds and hearts for the less for tunate peoples bf the world, we shall be foregoing the most permanently satisfying sensation of all. Christmas was made for no one man, nor one family, nor one nation. It ought to be a universal day of peace for all the world. This means neither that there should be sudden giving way to emotional excesses nor that we should mistake miscellaneous "forgiveness" for justice and rehabilitation of ideals which are worthy to endure. There will be some confusion, perhaps, as to our duty toward our enemies on this day on which we are enjoined to bold nothing but good will toward men. We are still right in insisting, on Christmas as on every other day, that, for the ultimate spiritual good of the sinning one there shall be substantial evidence that he has seen the error of his ways, that it shall be made clear that he lias repented, and that he knows that restitution so far as may be is a car dinal requisite of absolution for his crimes. This we may do in full knowledge that forgiveness need not be maudlin, and that the victim of the evil-doer is entitled to at least as much of our sympathy as the criminal him self. v We shall require, if we are 'to do our full duty in the months immedi ately to come, a greater extension of the Christmas spirit than ever before. It will not be sufficient if we limit it to the day or the week. There never were so many peoples looking to us for spiritual and material guidance, or so insistently demanding for their own uplifting the reinforcement of our own example. Precept alone sadly falls short of the needs of the occasion. If the Christmas lesson has been learned by us, we shall have peace and, good will at home first of all. The opportunity is presented for every in dividual to exert a mighty force in a modest and unassuming manner. More momentous than we may suppose in ' their influence upon the world are the thoughts which govern our acts in little ways. The will to have peace lias its roots in many unconsidered places. The litigious, the quarrelsome and the uncompromising in their eyery-day affairs have no business to be talking about the great things they Would do to bring peace to the world. We greatly need the Christmas spirit now both because of the miseries of others and because of our own prosperity. The fact that good for tune does not always soften those upon whom it is bestowed should put us on our guard. It is by no virtue of our own, but rather by the beneficence of a Providence whose ways are still inscrutable to us, that we . have been spared for a mission that will be unfolded and expanded in proportion to our fitness to assume the responsibility. It is pre-eminently bl time for self-examination and for due humility, albeit for confidence and determination to prepare ourselves for the great task. The star of the East lias not been dimmed by the gold stars in our service flags. Some of us have been ennobled by our sacrifices, and those who have been spared the deeper and more personal, poignant griefs must not fail also to grasp the mean ing of a Christmas in which joy and sadness are inextricably mingled but out of the reverent contemplation of which the realization of our fondest hopes may come. PHOTOGRAPHY A3 AX AVOCATION. There is a good deal to be said In favor of photography as a pastime, and some of the pleasures of it are emphasized by the exhibit of the Port land Camera Club. Amateur photog raphy ranks among the arts, the sciences and the sports. In the last named field it is both an outdoor and an indoor amusement. If it is ap proached in the properly reverent spirit, it possesses almost endless pos sibilities, requiring technical skill, ar tistic Instinct and originality. It is fit for all seasons an all times. Seeming difficulties only add zest to the game for the enthusiast. Outdoor photography is not, as many have supposed, restricted to pleasant days. The business of the photog rapher is to record -things as they are, and sometimes, although it may seem a paradox, to avoid too great "pho tographic fidelity." It is because the camera, obeying certain physical laws, so frequently records details which are inconsequential, which the eye it self does not take in and which only confuse the mental impression we re ceive, that the photographer finds op portunity to exercise the repression that is the basis of true art. If the beginner does not understand this at first, it is soon revealed to him. Be cause there is no limjt to the excel- lencewhich may be attained, it is an avocation which lures on and on. So large a proportion of picture- taking, however, is done out of doors that it is fairly entitled to be classed as a sport, in addition to its other claims upon the interest of healthy human beings. If is a normal adjunct of the hike, and a fair substitute for hunting and fishing. It may be prac ticed alone in the great silences, or in the companionship of the crowd. Snowcapped mountains and sunny glades, peaceful valleys and storms at sea. wild animals and pastoral flocks and a thousand other subjects are al ways at hand. Amateur photography resembles literature in the respect that it 33 the method of treatment rather than the topic which makes the prod uct great. It is, as has been suggested, a uni versal avocation. It is particularly to be commended to those who require an interest in life outside the daily grind. Like golf and gentleman-farming, it contains the germ of a length ened and a happy life. Also like these pursuits of middle life, it is adaptable to the leisure and the purse of the devotee. A good deal of fun may be derived from it with very simple equipment,- or, on the other hand, it may be taken up on a highly elaborate scale. NOT MERKI.Y EIGHTS, BIT DUTIES. The best sign that the Czecho-Slovak peoplo will establish a well-governed republic, free from any of the disor ders and excesses which marred the revolutions in France and Russia, is to be found in the proclamation with which the National Committee took charge of the government of Bohemia j at Prague on October 28. In that praciatuatiuu it says lu imuiiic. The whole world watches your first steps Into the new life your entrance into the promised land. Let your shield remain un spotted, as la the shield of your national army, the Czecho-Blovak legions, Do not forget national discipline, but remember al ways that you are citizens of a, new state and that you have not merely rights but also duties. At the opening of the ftreat undertaking your national committee, from now on your government, lays the charge upon you that your conduct and your behavior be worthy of thia great moment. Our liberators. Masaryk and Wilson, must not be disap pointed in their belief that they won liberty for a people that knows how to rule itself. These great days must not be marred by a single ugly act. not one of you shall commit any deed that would throw a shadow on the pure name of your nation. All of you must unconditionally be regardful of what is sacred to another. Personal liberty and private property must not be touched. How well the people lived up to this exhortation is proved by the -statement in the account of the revolution pub lished by the Czecho-Slovak Review of Chicago that "during the entire course of the sudden revolution there were no riots and not a single life was lost." It is hot safe to lay too much stress on this last act in forecasting the fu ture of Bohemia, for the French and Russian revolutions begen with little bloodshed and with general expres sions of good will. But the French Declaration of the Rights of Man dealt entirely with the rights which liberty confers and said nothing of the duties which it imposes. The Czech leaders tell the people that "you have not merely rights, but also duties," and that they "must be regardful of what is sacred to another." Those admo nitions raise hope that Bohemia will come through the transition as a self restrained democracy after the Ameri can pattern. NEWS PIRACY DEFINED, The International News Service is Hearst; and Hearst is what he is andi was a journalistic freebooter, a Na tional menace in time of peace and an international menace in time of war. None other in America has im peded so much as Hearst a true un derstanding in America of the wiles of German intrigue and the crimes of German policy, and none but Hearst has done so much to foment possible misunderstandings between the allies. Just now in America the name of Hearst is anathema. He and his papers are everywhere on the defensive, for their attitude in the war and for their dealings with the country's enemies. Lip professions, hig headlines, with constant and conspicuous wavings of the American flag, areo-not in them selves proofs of loyalty. Results count, and motives also. The devious and disreputable ways of Hearst in his public service, or dis service, are in accord with his theory and practice of journalism. He recog nizes ho code of ethics, no standards of professional conduct, but his own. There is a certain comity of fair deal ing between newspapers and news as sociations, for example, in the great business of gathering and disseminat ing news; but Hearst has been a most persistent and unscrupulous violator of its reasonable rules. He takes what he can get, wherever and however he can get it, and calls it his own, and prints and uses it as his own, for his own profit, and defies both the law and the tenets of good faith with his competitor and his public in doing it. Now the Supreme Court of the United States has made a definition of Hearstism, so far as it gathers and purveys news. It puts the stamp of its disapproval upon his methods and forbids him to pursue them. It up holds, throughout, the contention of the Associated Press that it has a right to the legitimate benefits of its own industry and enterprise; and it de scribes as "unfair competition" the outright appropriation by Hearst of the news which it has brought at great expense from all quarters of the earth. The facts about the International News Service are that it is an organi zation which sells news to some 400 newspapers throughout the United States. It sought secretly to obtain the use of the' superior facilities of the Associated Press by bribery of sundry of its agents. This nefarious scheme was exposed, and stopped by court in junction as well as a further plan to induce Associated Press members otherwise to permit Hearst to obtain the news through publication by them. These things were on their face wrong, and no serious effort was made by Hearst to uphold them through judi cial process. The larger question as to whether there is a property right in news, with the related issue as to unfair competi tion, was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States. It was denied by Hearst that the Associated Press had any claim upon the news, or its dispositionafter it had been released for publication anywhere; and it was boldly asserted that he had a right to take it from any newspaper or any edition of any newspaper that printed it, or from any bulletin board that displayed it, and to distribute it among his clients for publication by them. Nor was Hearst, according to his con tention, under any obligations to give credit to the Associated Press; but, on the contrary, he might send it out in the original text or rewrite it, and sell it as his own, and take his pay. It is this practice of Hearst that the Supreme Court condemns by its de cision. It holds that there Is a quasi property interest in news, and that any organization or individual newspaper gathering is entitled to a reasonable opportunity to benefit by its enterprise. Obviously, there is to be no restraint upon the person who may have read the news in any paper in passing it on; nor is the right of the public to receive it, discuss it, and spread it interfered with in any way. The iujtiry to the Associated Press arises solely from the appropriation by a competitor of its property for gainful purposes. It is unfair competition, obviously; and the court says so. Two members of the court took the ground that there was no property right in news, after its release for pub. lication, but agreed that the Hearst practices were unfair competition, and would have required him to credit the Associated Press with its news. It may bo said thr.t the Associated Press was not seeking any mere advertisement by a competitor, and that the dissemi nation of its news by him without compensation to it in itself constitutes damage, and limited to that extent the fair field of its endeavor. Justice Brandeis had his own -singular opinions of the merits of the case. He could see nothing objectionable in the Hearst methods. Ho had evidently the extraordinary idea that there was actual merit in the Hearst failure or refusal to credit Associated Press news to the Associated Press, and in its use as his own; but he agreed that the Associated Press thus suffered injury. But he thought the public all news- papers was entitled to have the news of the Associated Press, and he sug- gr-stod legislation to bring about that result. Thu3 we should have a long step taken toward public control of tho machinery for tho spread of in telligence. How long would a free press subsist in Government hands? It is one of tho peculiarities of Jus tice Brandeis' logic that it fails to see that the Hearst news policy is based upon the pfactice of common thievery, or but littlo better. He admits the wrong done But finds that it is done in ways not "objectionable." He would not penalize the faker, the taker or the fruits of others' work; but he would penalize the innocent party. Is that the way for a court to do equity? OPPOSIN G TIIE METRIC ST8TEM. ' The bill for the adoption of the metric system, introduced into Con gress by Senator Shafroth. of Colorado, and said to be the forerunner of an effort to have the Peace Conference at Paris adopt the metric system for the whole world, is certain to encoun ter opposition. To the many argu ments in its favor, which are theoret ically simple, the chief rejoinder will be that trade customs, like civil laws, are the result of slow growth, and cannot be overturned by a single ef fort of legislation without profound disturbance of industry. It is possible to show that transactions would be greatly simplified by universal adop tion of a decimal set of standards without at the same time making an effective impression upon men who understand the psychological difficul ties involved. Frederick A. Halsey, secretary "of the American Institute of Weights and Measures, pointed out recently at the annual meeting of the society that the difficulty of learning to think in and to visualize strange values would long continue to be a bar to adoption of metric units. The American-British system now prevails as to a greater output of goods than any other sys tem in the world. Adoption of metric standards by ten countries of Latin America is said to have failed to make a deep impression even in those countries. An even greater obstacle, however, would seem to be the repugnance of most people to making a crime, of a private, harmless and established practice. A storm would follow an attempt, for example, to prose cute an American grocer for selling sugar by the pound. "Fancy," sug gests Mr. Halsey, "art American jury convicting a merchant of a crime for selling drygoods by the yard!" It would be equally hard to imagine a conviction on the charge of selling by the kilogram or the meter, for that matter, if an American merchant were disposed to fly in the face of custom and adopt that strange practice. Che point is that there is a line beyond which official interference is almost universally resented, and maintenance of separate standards for domestic and foreign trade presents difficul ties too obvious to need elaboration. If the Paris Peace Conference is wise it will not add a compulsory metric system to its already multifarious and altogether more important difficulties. MARRYING IX HASTE. The Provost Marshal-General of the Army in the role of censor of soldiers' weddings presents a new manifesta tion of the inconveniences or the benefits, according to the angle from which one views it of military dis cipline. Tet upon reflection it will seem to observers of matrimony in general that the scheme has ita ad vantages. It has been called into vogue at certain centers, notably in New York City, by a sudden rush to the marriage license bureaus by 60l diers who, now that the war is about over, have decided to "settle down" in the conventional way. The War Department feels bound to protect them whenever they seem' to need protection, and so it is stationing offi cers at strategic points whoso duty it is to ascertain the facts in each in stance and where the intended wed ding is the outcome of a "sudden romance" to bid the applicants to "think it over for a day or two." Thinking, it has been shown b-y ex perience, is a cruel enemy of Cupid. The soldier is now required to tell where and when he met the girl, how long ago they decided to get married and whether or not he knows her parents. There is method in the sys tem. Without reverting to the prac tice which once prevailed in some countries of leaving all the arrange ments to the old folks, thero is a good deal to be said in favor of giving the latter an opportunity to be heard. Parents usually have the interests of their children at heart and it Is rea sonably safe to take their judgment into account in most cases, even if it is not always accepted as final. And whether there are parents or not, there are still other arguments in favor of a moderately protracted courtship as the forerunner of the adventure which in the most favorable circumstances is a kind of leap in the dark. Love at first sight is mostly story book stuff. Those who regard mar riage as a serious commitment, if not a sacrament, will agree that affection which is not wholly disassociated from calm deliberation and began in friend ship which subsequently ripened into love, Is more likely to withstand the strain which is sure to be put upon it than the impulses which make busi ness good for justices of the peace in Gretna Green. There is probably no mere coincidence between the grow ing habit of marrying without the pre liminary delights and enlightenments of courtship and the alarming growth of divorce. The chap who wrote "marry in haste and repent at leisure" know what ho was talking about. 1$ is admitted that tho Provost Marshal-General has no intention of carrying his policy to extremes. There is perhaps a special reason why he is now standing guard in tho great cities, where girls are said to be more sophis ticated than elsewhere although we do not know that they arc. But If the young folks, upon reflection for a day or two, are still insistent, even the military authorities will not sty them nay, Tho injunction to "think it over" represents the full extent to which military authority intends to go. Still, judging by tho outcome, the plan seems to have justified itself. Some couples do not return. And who is there who will contend that those who have been so easily diverted from their purpose are fit candidates for matrimony in the first instance? Some thing like the new plan might be adopted with advantage to all con cerned, including society at large. It is worth whilo to consider, for illus tration, whether a law requiring a certain number of days to elapse be tween the application fop a marriage license and tho issuance of it might not produce benefits which would out weigh the inconvenience it would cause. It will interest those w ho are revel ing in unrestricted Christmas food buying to learn that Kngland and Wales, despite tho armistice, are en joying only comparative freedom of action. The Food Controller has per mitted each of four food coupons to bo considered as of double value in the ten days immediately preceding the holiday, but this Is far from guar anteeing an orgy of eating. The amount permitted to be purchased is still limited to eight, pence worth of "butcher's meat" and a similar value in suet or other by-products. By an other special concession, three pounds of poultry for each coupon is per mitted instead of the meat. Fruits and other accessories of tho Christmas dinner are still restricted and exist only in small quantities and the tea rationing system is still in force. Heavy shortage of butter has caused further extension of the privilege of buying margarine. The holiday table today presents a far different aspect from that in the United States. It is encouraging to know that the Cologne Gazette admits that German honor is lost, but it is discouraging to learn that that paper is mistaken as to the occasion of the loss. The Gazette dates it from the surrender of the U-9, the submarine which sank three British warships in the North Sea in 1914. The loss actually dates from the beginning of the war, was confirmed by the invasion of Belgium and further Confirmed by the many other crimes of Germany in the war. The honor won by the U-9 in fair fight against warships was afterwards for feited by murderous attacks on, mer chant craft. Not until the German people admit their crimes can they clear their honor from stain and be come fit to associate with other nations in a league of peace. Minister von Eckhardt may be ex pected not to be the only German diplomat who has become persona non grata to the government to which he is accredited. Other countries than Mexico have been put in an embar rassing position by their tolerance of propaganda under the delusion that Germany was invincible. They are now hastening to get in good standing with the nations which will hereafter regulate the affairs of the world. Pres ident Carranza will also tako note of the fact that the United States has- an Army of some proportions with plenty of guns and aircraft, and that Ameri can soldiers fight and win. Having learned this, he may not provoke an American visit to Tampico. The German seems to have imagined that the armistice would no sooner be signed than the bars would be raised and they would be able to Import any thing from Christmas turkeys to shoes made of real leather. They are now learning tho difference between an armistice and a treaty of peace. Merry Christmas to the Police Bu reau, officers and men. who have done great work for the city in the year past! May their morale never grow less! An evening newspaper wonders how the former Crown Prince will spend this Christmas and the answer is easy: As usual, if not watched too closely. The unanimity with which drivers of automobiles are cleared of respon sibilities for fatalities leads to belief the victims courted death. If you have not joined the Red Cross you do not deserve a merry Christmas, and the chances are you will not have one. The weather people do their best by sending gentle easterly -winds to day, which means hot off the- ice of Mount Hood. - The Tank, unlike the Hun, did not war on children nor kill babies, and cannot help a smile for the little Germans. Give the man in uniform the best to be had today. If we were not for tunate he would be abroad fighting for us. Tou have remembered your sick friends, of course, but suppose you call and make it a personal matter today. The man who goes home late at night or in the early morn, known to carry money, would better take a, taxi. Everybody is saying it, but to be sure none is omitted, here ' it is: "Merry Christmas to one and all!" The boys are out of the trenches and Roosevelt is out of the hospital today, and can more be desired? One of the first tasks before the League of Nations will be to establish a quarantine against Bolshevism. One of the contraries of city life is shown in extension of the parking ban as the cars increase in number. This is good Christmas weather, but four inches of snow or an Oregon rain would be more to the liking. - Popularity of "The Watch on' the Rhine" in Germany is contingent on who does the watching. Enemy aliens have the freedom of the city tor a Christmas gift. Those Who Come and Go. Chief Engineer George E. Wilcox, connected with, the Shipping Board on the side of navigation, is at tho Mult nomah. Under Captain C. S. Auies. hn will soon assist in taking out the West Warnekc. a steel ship being; con structed by the Columbia River Com pany. Engineer Wilcox sailed the war zone aboard the Wcstlake, known as tho David Rogers, when she sailed the Pacific. lie saw -the Buena Ventura, of San Francisco, sunk by submarines, but bis own vessel was not attacked. G. L. West, Mrs. West and ton and W. T. West, Jr.. arrived from Seatttle yesterday and are at the Benson toj celebrate Christmas. W. T. West, Jr., is in tho military service. As Captain A. W. Clothier, at Camp Ixswis, was unable to secure a fur lough to visit his fireside for Christ mas, Mrs. Clothier, accompanied by hert three children, arrived in Portland from Wasco yesterday on their way to spend Christmas with, the husband and father. Two of the littlo boya made-brave figures In their soldier suits and were practicing in the lobby of the Imperial how they would salute their father. -Make it snappy." or dered the youngest. J. II. Barton, a merchant of Boise. Idaho, is observing the holidays In Portland and is staying at the Wash ington. Thirty-ylx sailors and soldiers were housed at the Multnomah Monday night at the expense of Emery Olm tead. vice-president of the North western National Bank. Mr. Olmstead found the boys at the Union Depot, ordered tho company to fall in and. after having had the pleasure of com manding them on the journey uptown, he cheerfully paid for their beds. The boys declare ho is one of the best captains they ever took orders from. Colonel Emmet Callahan, erstwhile Progressive, returned yesterday from Washington, D. C, where he had been on business. He is registered at the Hotel Portland. Nicholl Hernandez, a tourist from San Juan, Porto Rico, is at the Ben son for Christmas. , Mr. and Mrs. J. C. James, well known residents of Pendleton, are at the Hotel Oregon for the big day. Charles W. Brown, a chrome miner operator of Canyon City, arrived at the Imperial yesterday on his way to spend the holidays with his family. W. B. Hubbard, assistant to the president of the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company and owner of the Spo kane Hotel, paused at the Multnomah yesterday while en route north from California. Mr. Hubbard says that the epidemic of influenza, which has been exceedingly bad in Southern "California, is ..receding and that the hotel men down there are expecting a fine busi ness during the balance of the Winter. L. IC Elaln, a rancher, of Elaln, Or., is at the Washington Hotel for Christmas. C. H. Kappers, a logging operator from Scappoose. is at the Hotel Port land. Lester Wade, a merchant and stock raiser of Olex, Or., Is at the Imperial. E. I. Ballaugh, of St. Helens, was at the Imperial yesterday. - Mr. Bal laugh is Representative for Columbia County in the coming Legislature. Mrs. E. I Howe, of Mosier, accom panied by Miss Biles, is at the Mult nomah, for Christmas. lttlk C'aaait Artillery.. AURORA. Or., Dec. 23. CTo the Ed itor.) Our son was in the 16Gth Depot Brigade at Camp Lewis, was then transferred to the Eighth Company and later to the 16th Company, Coast Artil lery. He started East for Prance on October 1 and last wrote from Sharon. Pa. Wc received the card stating he had arrived safely overseas. We also got the slip for his Christmas package. It gave the address as "Second Det., O. A. R. D., Fort Stevens, Or.," but the package was to be sent to Hoboken, N. J. What we would like to know is what division he was put in and where his unit Is situated, also if it will be sent home soon. MRS. S. SEDORE. Coast artillery units were never as signed to divisions. Your soil's is such a small contingent no mention may ever be mads of It In official reports. Tou may rest assured, however, that it will be soon sent home. Some of the units which reached France just as the armistice was signed were re turned without being permitted to land. Address letters just as you did the package. Federal Ileserve Bank Members. PORTLAND. Dec. 24. (To the Ed itor.) While discussing; the purpose of the regional bank I claimed that all banks had to be members of the Federal Reserve Bank and if they did not be come such the Government would re volte their charter. My friend claimed that all banks did not have to be members of the Federal Reserve Bank, that it depended upon their capitalization, while I claimed It did not depend on the capital of the bank. Kindly tell me who la rieht on this point. CHARLES D. KINO. All National banks, without regard to capital, must be members of the Federal Reserve Bank or forfeit their charters. It is optional with state banks whether they become members, but if they do not they cannot avail themselves of the rediscount privilege of the Federal Reserve banks, except though a member-bank. Demoblllaatlem ( Medical Corps. REEDSPOHT, Or., Dec 23. (To the Editor.) Has the War Department made any. announcement at all about demobilisation of the Medical Corps? especially want to know of those overseas In evacuation hospitals In re serve corps. SUBSCRIBER. No announcement has been made. Re turn of hospital units promises to be a slow process, scattered over a long period. Foorth Engineers la Battle. ST. JOHNS, Or., Dec 24. (To the Editor.) Did the Fourth Engineers take part in- any battles? If bo, please state the battles and if they received any honors. Q. M. B. K. Official data answering your queries is lacking. Possibly some reader will recall if mention of honors to the regi ment has been made in press dispatches. - 120th Machine Gun Battalion. PORTLAND. Dec. 24. (To the Ed itor.) Would you kindly aive me the whereabouts and division of the" 12"th Maohine Oun Battalion, alno if they are listed to return soon? MRS. E. L. O. So -far as records reveal the unit was in the 32d Division, now in the Army of Occupation. 373d Air Squadron. ASHLAND. Or., Dec 23. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly tell mo if possible whether the 373d Aero Squadron Is list ed to return soon from Prance, and If not. how lonnT it is likely to remain there. . A SUBSCRIBER. It Is listed for convoy home In the Official Bulletin of December 14. m:w iiki.i favored by company Telephone Operator Comphiins That Kalthful Servire Is ."Not Ilecosniaed. POKTI.AXD. Pec. 2t. (To the Ed itor.) As I am one of Portland's oll-ot-t operators working for the Paciuc Telephone & Telegraph. Company, per mit mc the time and ppace to enlisrhtP" tho thinking: peoplo of Iorllund as to tho principal reasons of poor service and poorer telephone operators. I have worked in Seattle, Taconia and Spokane, but tho longest period of time I have H'fnt In Portland about eight years, I believe joining the ranks of telephone girls at the ago of 13. ' First of all, the company constantly advance new help in preference to the older and ntoro experienced operator?, evidently working tinder the tlnory that the older onrn will stay a whilo longer anyway. They are not so i-ure about tho new girls, jo they put polite of them on "the Iloor" as supervisors" and pay ihera $2 per week more than any day operator can get. no matter how many years she has worked. The older Bills have absolutely no em-ouragemont und foci that they have nothing to work for. I am Hire my readers will agree with me that unless a girl lias Fome incentive for hard work and a goal that she may reach at lust ehe soon lones !irterett. A pood many of us feel "JkVhafs tho ilse?" We all end up in nervous wrecks anyway and then after many years as a telephone oper ator a girl is unfitted for other work. As for the Telephone Operator Girls' Union, the company excludes union op erators as far as possible. It is also true that many operators marry every month, but It is an undis puted fact that only about one in ten marries a -man that can support her. The result iy. back to the switchboard in a month or two. As for the recent wago increase, the new operators received the, largest raise, tho older girls like myself re ceiving from 25 cents a week more up to $1.50 per week more, or from J 1 to S,S more a month. That la the first raise since the strike in November, 1U17. At the close of the strike we all got 60 cents a week more, union and nonunion girls alike. I 'believe in giving credit where credit is due of course, and the company cer tainly did do everything in their power for the comfort of tho girls during the strike last year, but that Is a thing of the past now and what the girls want is a salary Increase according to length of service with the company and also to be given a chance for other work when their turn comes. The company also have certain "su pervisors" who "listen in" with opera tors at certain times every day. correct ing them for every wrong phrase used, when the phrases themselves really have nothing to do with the service at all. After all, the people of Portland want service pure and simple and ordi nary courtesy. That's all they ask. Surely are they not entitled to It and are we girls not entitled to "our chance" after several years' service? ONE OF THE GIRLS. MEMORIAL SHOULD BE CHEERFUL Enonitk Sadness Without Hospital Re minder, Say a Road Advocate. PORTLAND. Dec. 24. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly allow me a few words in favor of the liberty highway to Mount Hood as a monument to the Ore gon boys. My father crossed over the Barlow road In '52. The writer was born near Eugene in '61 and remembers crossing over the road in 'CO. It was then a toll road and has been ever since. If Mr. Joseph has offered to give the road, I think the commission should consider the offer seriously before turning it down. It would not be much of a task to build a road from Government Camp to timber iie that motor cars could go over.'where one of the finest views in OreBon may be had. Then if the toll road was discontinued. Southeastern Wasco County and Northern Crook would Join in and make a good road up from the east sid- and the loop could-be made via Wapinitia. Tygli Valley. Dufur and The Dalies and back over the Columbia River Highway. Numerous motor cars come up from the east side to Government Camp every Summer for pleasure, bad as the roads now are. The writer ha spent many happy weeks around the foot of old Mount Hood, hunting-, fishing and berrying, and the game and berries are still plentiful in season. I have heard somo talk of a hospital as a monument. The thought causes the question to arise, why not dig their graves or have their coffins ordered? Npt one in 20 would have any use for a hospital or ever go near it. It would seem that we have had sadness enough to last several years and the memorial should be something that we all could enjoy and not something that is con sidered more of a private an'air. I was over the road from Portland to Mount Hood once this Summer and I know I could take fix good men and In a week could improve the road from the toll gate to Government Camp SO per cent- BUD ZUMWAL.T. DAYS OF WILD Pir.KOXS RECALLED Birds Clnlibed Out of Itooatlnit Placea by Indiana Hunter. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Dec, 19. (To tho Editor.) I read with interest an article on passenger pigeons printed iu The Oregonian. As a farmer's son living in the north end of this state in the "tius 1 frequently hunted the American red-breasted pigeon, which you have called the pas senger pigeon. 1 recall one instance when In company with a brother-in-law. He discharged one barrel of a shotguu into an oak tree and we picked up 48 pigeons as a result. I think it was about or S67knd I recall that about that time the Chicago dallies made mention that tho fiisht over that city was so dense as to obscure tho ligh of the sun. I recall also the $3000 offer you men tion, but I think your data are wrong as to latt nestins; or roosting place be ing In Michigan. Rather it was near Vincennes. Ind., where the hunters went at night with bright liighta and used clubs to beat them off trees in very large numbers. 1 have also engaged In trapping them, using a large net trap set on a ilgure 4 trigger in the recently sown wheat fields, where a single catch would run iia the hundreds. It lias always been my impression that the cause of their decimation was the change in the plan of sowing the grain to that of drilling, thus placing the grain so deep in the soli that they could not get it. 1 think that comes nearer the real fact than the one as signed by your article. ' I am glad indeed to believe that they will again grace our land and skies. I think it would.be hard for me to shoot one now, even if they do come back. Because they are, as I understand it, strictly an American bird, 1 would feel sentiment enough to cause me to let them pass unharmed. Please consider this letter simply a contribution to the pigeon statistics. If they are coming back I for one will welcome them to our shores. W. T. C A US K ADDON. nelease of Men in Navy. CORVALLIS, Or.. Dec. 23. (To the Editor.) According to report the sail ors on the Atlantic Coast are being dis charged upon presenting an affidavit sworn to by their parents Matin need for them at home. Does this apply to the Pacific Coast and to the Navy Re serve as well as the regular Navy? CONSTANT READER. Application to be placed on inactive duty may be filed by Navy and Naval Reserve members on duty anywhere. Tho difference between being dis charged and being placed on inactive duty is that the man is subject to ser vice again If emergency arises. The Navy does not discharge men ' whose terms of enlistment has not expired. In Other Days. Tnesty-fhe Venn A sro. From The Oreeonlan December 2.", 1S0.T. Baker City. Or., Dec 21. A rich vein of oro has been uncovered in the Sc. -lohni mine, located near the While S :i it. At a meeting of the Ft ock holders of Hie Masonic Building Association last Saturday Theodore Wygarit. II. W. Cor-bett- I. W. Pratt and Thomas Oray were re-elected directors for the en suing year. Woodbtirn. TMrleen tin i Irll n f- irprfl destroyed here last nlirht lv fire, -with a total loss estimated at JlO.OUti. The bondholders of tho Cable Rail- WaV t'lMnnutiV Ii:iva ni-.A,itl r, il check to both the conductor and the luotortnan who stuck to their posts and succeeded in btoppins; the car which ran away on the incline from the Heights a few days since. Pllly tears Ago. (Krom the Or-gotilan, rvcctnher 2". lsr.s. The Council laFt night adopted a res olution declaring that tho members do not indorse the masterly inactivity of the Street Commissioner and ordering that ho be Instructed to proceed forth with to enforce and carry out all tho ordinances of tho Council wherein lie. is authorized to act. Hon. w. Carey Johnson, late Senator from Clackamas County, and Miss Josephine DeVore, of thia city, -will b married at tho Methodist Episcopal Church at Oregon City today. London. Tho Sultan has extended to three weeks tho tunc for the departure of the "iteek.-t from Constantinople, and the Urecin government is rapidly preparing for war. The Oddfellows of this city will go to Oregon City today to attend the funeral obsequies of Fred Charman. BODY HAS NO NEED OF TOBACCO Effect of 1-1 rt Van la Man of fhyslcal Rebellion. PORTLAND. Dec. 24. (To the Ed itor.) I ask space to reply to O. L. Drain, who has smoked for 20 years. I wish to tjivo a few of the harmful re sults to the constant user of tobacco and also to the beginner. Tobacco has the efToct of a narcotic on most people. That the healthy body has no need of It is quite well evi denced in the effect it produces, as a rule, upon the beginner.' The dizziness, faintness, headache and nausea go to show that the healthy body. 3pecially of the youns person, strongly rebels against its use. There is a tUirerenca of opinion as to the effect of tobacco on the adult. Much seems to depend on the individual. Certain things are definitely known, however, that indi cate the harmful nature of tobacco. It always increases the 'blood pressure. This surely tends to cause, sooner or later, a diseased condition of the blood vessels, especially of the arteries. It tends also just as certainly to Insta bility of the heart- "Tobacco heart"' is a form of heart disease that results from excessive and habitual ue of this narcotic. The feeling of palpitation and the irregularity of the pulse, in a person suffering from this disorder, are caused by the toxic t poisonous) effect of tho nicotine in tobacco upon the nerves that control the heart's action. About one-fourth of those who smoke have narcotism of the heart. The chief menial effect of excessive use of tobacco is that It encourages dreaming rather than doiii?. The cig arette habit saps the bodily vigor, stu pulies tho intellect and perverts the moral nature of many boys and young men. Healthy bodies and minds need no stimulant. Mr. I "rain says that "It also keeps microbes out of the system." Couldn'-t we iu this modern aye of science tind some other medicine to take the mi crobes out of our mouths? If Mr. Drain would invest 10 cents or so at the cor ner drug store, he would find a more suitable mouth wash, one that does not cause degeneracy. I have been a user of tobacco for the last five years and would still be using it had I not awak ened to its harmful effects. L F. I. THE TWO MOTHERS. My reiRhbor's house is gay tonight, (Loud beat the wind and the rain!) With candles set in rows, alight Before each wreathed pane. My neighbor, too. Is gay and fair; (Ah. but my heart lies dead ! She weareth a red rose In her hair And the Yuletide feast is spread. The feast is spread, the ship hath coma; (Dear God, my house seems still!) Her soldier son is hastening home To the white bouse on the bill. While I I have a tryst to kep In a place where crosses white Mark the graves where soldiers s'.eep Who fell in tho thickest fight. My neighbor today no tears will shed; While I shall keep my tryst with thw tlead. M. II. JONES. Delay In Mail From France. PORTLAND, Dec 2 4. (To the Ed itor.) Please tell me how the mail from France is handled why it seems to arrive here for five or six days at a stretch and then no more will come for about a week and a half. Are the 31Sth Engineers In the 91st Division? Were they working in Bel gium at tho time the armistice was signed? Are they scheduled for an early return? SUBSCRIBER. There are delays in handling and transmitting the mail from a given boat after it arrives. Boats carrying mails do not arrive every day. The 317th Enginers were In the 92d Di vision, so you probably have the 317th Engineers properly placed. Headquar ters of the 91st is at Denterghem, Bel gium. Answers to your other ques tions would be mere guesses. llOlat Air Squadron. BAND ON, Or.. Pec. 22. (To the Ed itor.) IMeaso inform 'mo in what di vision the 1101st Replacement Squad ron. Air Service, is and if it is desig nated for early return. This squadron is of the mechanical division. Will it be necessary for any airplane mechan ics to remain for a long period in France? A READER. Not yet officially, listed for return. Air squadrons aro rapidly being re turned, but as to how many may be kept in Franco is entirely problemati cal. Troop B. 311th M. I. ROOSEVELT. Wash., Dec. 23. (To the Edtor.) Kindly publish where Troop B, 514th Military Police, la and if they will be discharged soon. W. A. RIPLET. Doubtless with the 514th Regiment. 89th Division, in the Army Occupation. Pa Makes a lx-llnltlon. Kansas City Journal. ."Dad. I see in many wars there have been privateers."' "Well"."' "Was a privateer the same as a profiteer?" "By no means. A privateer preyed on the enemy, my son." Iluahaaal In Comforted. Boston Transcript. He Mr. Oadby refused, to recognize me today. Thinks, I suppose, that I am not his equal. She Ridiculous! Of course you are. Why, bo's nothing but a conceited Idiot.