6 ' THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 3, 1916. dill PORTLAXD, OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflce second-class mall matter. Subscription rates Invariably la advance (By Mall.) Ta11r, Sunday Inplwdpfl, one year. ...... .$8. 00 iJally fTjnrtay tneludel, six months -H5 3-aily, Sunday included, three months...- 2.o laity, Sunday included, one month. o 3aily. without Sunday, one year 6.00 3-atly, without Sunday, three months.... 1.75 Tuil'.y, without Uunday. one month...... -0 "Weekly, one year. .................... . 1.50 Sunday, one year .v. . . 2.r0 Sunday and Weekly 3.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year. ....... 9.00 Xal!y. Sunday included, one month 75 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postoftlce address in full, including county and state. PnMoge Rates 12 To la page. 1 cent: IS t paces, 'J cents; 3-1 to 48 pags, 3 cents; n" lo tii pages, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages. 5 cents; 78 to si: pages, ft cents. Foreign post ape, double rutea. Katern Husine Office Verree & Cnnk lln, Brunswick building, N'ew York; Verree Conklin, Stesttr building, Chicago. San Kranclsco representative, K. J. Bldwell, 742 Market street. rORTUM), Sl'.NDAV, IKC. 3. 1916. JAILRIRnS AS LAWGIVERS. In the past it was not uncommon for initiative petition shovers to re sort to the back room of a saloon and there copy names out of the city directory. Once it appeared that ah enterprising gum-shoer had canvassed a cemetery. While these methods of filling a petition perhaps showed origi nality, they were by no means evidence of genius. It remained for one of the workers for the great cause of single tax to develop that trait. For the grand jury has discovered that he solicited the prisoners in the Coun ty Jail! That is real genius. What jailbird, approached by an outsider with stern mien or menacing frown, would dare refuse to sign anything put before him? We hasten to say that it is not charged that coercion was used in this instance. Indeed, the opportuni ties offered the morally weak by this measure to seize others' property without going to jail for it were so enticing that probably a brief and friendly explanation was all that was required. Invasion of the jail for lawgivers was but one incident of the campaign for names for single tax. The peti tions carry in large numbers the names of transients who at the time of signing were lodged in hotels in the old tenderloin district, the names of others who could not write their ad dresses so they could be deciphered, the names of others to whom the pur port of the measure was misrepre sented, the names of others who, so far as can be ascertained, do not exist, and the names of still others who con sidered their approval so lightly that they cannot recall having signed the petition. By such means are intricate and revolutionary measures forced upon the ballot. It is so that no general election is free from initiative scandal or suspicion. Yet we have with us men and newspapers that protest vehemently against passage of any measure to eliminate frauds from direct legislation. One journal. In apparent seriousness, recently called upon "progressivism," in the name of IjaFollette and Governor Johnson, not to permit such an in vasion of the people's rule as this proposed suppression of criminality! It is so easy to shout about the opposition of "money lords" and "vested interests" and "predatory wealth" and "bossism" and "thimble rigging," when one cannot think of sound argument to advance in behalf of a pernicious practice or dubious enterprise. But can "any of these con temptuous names be applied to the Multnomah County grand jury, which recommends regulation of the process by which measures and candidates are placed upon the ballot? Every body knows that the grand jury speaks the truth when it declares that there Is a crying need for reform. The legislature knows it, and the Legis lature will act in the matter unless It is afraid of the abuse that will be heaped upon it for so acting by those who still hope to put something over on the people with the assistance of forgers, jailbirds and the floating pop ulation. SPECLVL TRAINING NEEDED. The field for men with special train ing broadens in proportion, it would Feem, as the opportunity is narrowed for the young man who has given no particular thought to preparation for serious work. Recently, in connection with its efforts to expand our foreign trade, the United States Government has been seeking the services of a limited number of "special agents," to whom it offers salaries of $10 a day or thereabouts, with transportation expenses paid and an additional $4 a day for subsistence, to undertake in vestigations in special lines abroad The impressive fact, however, is that these men must be equipped thorough ly for the work. Talent and deter mination alone will not be enough, The young nan who has wasted his early years is extremely unlikely to fill the bill. Only ten of these agents are wanted at this time, but it is regarded as practically certain that the number will be increased later, as the plan develops. Although the requirements are rigid, the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, which will con duct examinations for the positions on December 6, will have' the entire coun try in which to make its choice. Men ore wanted, for example, to invest! gate the field for motor vehicles in Russia and the Far East and general investment opportunities in Russia fancy groceries and furniture in South America; metal-working machinery in Russia and Brazil; jewelry and silver ware in South America; hardware in Africa, the Near East and India; transportation facilities in Russia and the Far East; and mineral resources in the Far East. But no man who has been educated haphazard will have a chance. There will be required, first. knowledge of the particular line under investigation; next, some knowledge of. languages in most instances. No applicant for work in South America will be considered eligible who does not have an excellent knowl edge of Spanish. Portuguese is re garded as requisite for work in Brazil. French is required for the investiga tions in Russia and extra credit will be given for Russian. Applicants will be examined also as to their knowledge of the trade customs of the countries to be visited. Requirements as to knowledge of the particular line to be investigated are especially strict. It is too late for- those who have given the subject no previous thought to qualify for this particular examina tion, but the future is open. The first agents of our Government will be fol lowed by others, without doubt, but there is still a larger field of private enterprise. The big concerns that are planning conquest of the markets are not going to wait for the Government to act, but will send men of their own. and they will be even.more exacting in their requirements. There Is no doubt that we shall need to busy our selves with this trade problem when the European war is over, and that the opportunities for qualified investi gators will increase rather than di minish as time runs on. But they will be opportunities, as has been said, only for men who know certain things thoroughly, and know they know them. We have passed the point when we can afford to trust to guesswork. BY THE HALF MILLION. Five hundred thousand visitors taxed the hotel and lodging-house resources of New York, at the end" of last week, and the adjacent cities of New Jersey had to be called on to accommodate some of the guests. An immediate occasion of the unprece dented rush to the metropolis was the annual football game between An napolis and West Point, but of course not all of the visiting half million can be accounted for In that way. New York has more ample hotel accommodations than any other American city, or for that matter any city anywhere: yet it is surprising to note that the number of first-class hotels is only twenty-five. This is on authority of the proprietor of one of the leading hostelrles as quoted in a New York paper; and It is quite possible that his conception of a high class hotel is not in accord with the average guest's. Reduced to figures, he would probably say that no hotel is entitled to high rank unless it charges $5 per day for a room and bath and the average dinner check is not less than $3. Yet there are many hotels in New York where comfort and even elegance can be procured for far less. Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage; and cinch prices do not make a real hotel. The rush to New York from all parts of the country during the past year has been remarkable. It is partly a reason and wholly a symptom of New York's great prosperity. Busi ness takes many there and pleasure takes many more, for New York is both the financial and commercial metropolis and the pleasure ground of America. The spenders all are drawn there by the magnet of .its superior opportunities for gilt-edged show and double-eagled joy. It fhay be the destiny of New York to be one day a grand, glittering and whirling Coney Island. When the financial and commercial metropolis is moved further inland. New York will indeed then have something left. AX EARLY DAY STATESMAN. The ordinary reader of American history will have no great difficulty in recalling the name and record of John Adams; but not many can tell offhand who Daniel Tompkins was. Probably he will remember that he saw something about somebody named Tompkins in his school history; but so indeed was there an accurate dis- scription of the boundaries and loca tion of Polynesia in everyone's boy hood geography. But where is Poly nesia now, in the ordinary memory? Daniel D. Tompkins was Vice-Presi dent of the United States, not once but twice. He shares with Thomas R. Marshall and John Adams the dis tinction of being one of a very few Vice-Presidents who were re-elected. No Vice-President since Tompkins had been honored by being his own suc cessor, under the same President, un til Marshall. Tompkins presided over the Senate from 1817 till 1825, under James Monroe. Many Presidents have been re elected; but the rule has been that there was a change in the Vice-Presi dency. Washington had John Adams for two terms; but Jefferson had Clinton and Burr; Madison had Clin ton and Gerry; Andrew Jackson had Calhoun and Van Buren; Lincoln had Hamlin and Johnson: Grant had Col fax and Wilson; Cleveland had Hen dricks and Stevenson; McKinley had Hobart and Roosevelt. Mr. Wilson has again Thomas R. Marshall. To give a little more light on Mar shall's predecessor, it may be said that he was a New York lawyer and statesman. He served in Congress and was Governor of New York (1808- 1813); declined Madison's offer to make him Secretary of State: and was elected Vice-President in 1S16. He died in' 1825. The Vice-Presidency 1s not regarded as seriously as it should be, yet five men elected to be Vice-President have, through death of the President, suc ceeded to the Nation's most exalted position. RAISING MORE HENS. Champ Clark, whose experience as a member of Congress and whose emi nence as a politician entitle him to speak upon every topic with authority. tells the people of the United States that one way to combat the high cost of living is to "raise more hens." The Speaker of the House hails from a district in which the rural and small town population predominates, and in which the problem of raising poultry on a small scale is relatively a simple one. , His advice is eminently sound and applicable to a large number so situated that the addition to their duties of the care of a small flock will not be burdensome. As to the flat and tenement dweller of the crowded city, of course it is a wholly different matter, but the fact is that if Champ Clark's advice were followed by peo ple of the smaller towns alone, there would be a greater surplus of eggs and poultry for city folk and prices would adjust themselves according to the law of supply and demand. Further hope is held out, also, by Theodore Hewes, secretary of the Chi cago Poultry Show, who says that the dweller in the suburban districts of even the large cities can do his part in reducing the cost of living not only for himself but for others by "raising a few hens in his back yard." He has investigated the subject and has found that those who are following this course are profiting by it. The secret of success in this particular lies In not trying to do too much. At the present prices of grain there is little, if any, profit in eggs, even at prevailing high prices, where the poultryman is compelled to buy all his feed at the store. But the un avoidable waste from the table of an average family, Mr. Hewes points out. is sufficient to feed a small number of fowls, and. the ration is nearly a balanced one, although not ideal. The cash outlay required for grit, char coal, bone and a few other necessary items is small where the size of the flock Is adapted to the circumstances of each case. It is when the number is permitted to reach the point that requires the purchase of expensive feed that loss begins. Mr. Hewes does not attempt to out line a practical course for a profes sional poultry raiser. He says that ten or a dozen hens will thrive In an enclosed space ten or fifteen feet square if due attention is given to cleanliness and to light and air. He has found from his own experience that it is even possible to keep half a dozen hens in a box six feet by three, by moving the box occasionally. Little grain is necessary and exercise is Induced by making the hens dig or scratch for their feed. He has known families to get a moderate number of eggs and at least one free chicken dinner a week from a smay number of hens fed almost entirely on waste from the table. In breeding time, the cockerels should be eaten as soon as they are old enough for the purpose, and sur plus pullets should be similarly dis posed of, in the city scheme. The essence of the plan is that it is not a big one. But there are more than a million families in the larger cities and an unestimated number, in the small towns so situated that they can mafte themselves nearly independent in this respect.. It is easy to guess what the result would be if the advice of Speaker Clark and Secretary Hewes were followed generally. OUR LEGAL PESSIMISTS. The bone-dry amendment Is inef fective without further legislation, ac cording to competent legal opinion; the tax-exemption amendment is in a similar plight, say others, and now former Attorney-General Crawford asserts that the single-item veto amendment is inoperative. So far, no fond hopes have been dashed concern ing the benefits to be derived from the rusal credits amendment, the ship tax exemptien or the repeal of the blue law. But who knows? Now that Thanksgiving is over, it would be just our luck to have some lawyer count us out on one or all of them. The trouble discovered in the sin gle-item veto amendment is its sim plicity. It vests power in the Gov ernor to veto single items In appro priation bills, but provides no specific method for the Legislature to pass items over- the Governor's veto. The existing section of the constitu tion providing for submission of vetoed bills to the Legislature is pre served, but that is all. An item is not a bill; so if the Governor vetoes an item it carries down the whole bill. Thus runs the argument. But there are two other plausible constructions. One is that the veto of an item is final and conclusive; that the Legislature may override a veto only when it is applied to the entire measure. The other is that when the Governor vetoes an item but approves the remainder of the bill the whole bill goes to the Legislature; if two-thirds of each house then vote for the bill the vetoed item is re stored; otherwise the previous major ity vote on the bill stands and the bill becomes a law without the vetoed item. The item veto, as Mr. Crawford con strues the new amendment, has ex isted since adoption of the constitu tion. The Governor always has had power to veto an entire bill because it contained an unworthy item. So we fancy that if it comes to a test, the Supreme Court will find that there was some, definite purpose in adopt ing the amendment. In the mean while we may hope that the tax-limitation amendment will survive as saults and that the Legislature will then have to be so economical that the Governor will find no single items to veto. EZRA MEEKER'S PILGRIMAGE. One of the most valuable and most disinterested acts of public service which have been done for the Amer ican people was that of Ezra Meeker in perpetuating the Oregon Trail. This road is the visible memorial of one of the heroic episodes in American history, yet it was gradually being obliterated and was fading from mem ory when Mr. Meeker took up his self imposed task. In an ox-drawn prairie schooner of the same kind as that in which he and his family traveled west in 1852, he retraced his steps in 1906 enlisting the aid of each community in placing memorial stones along the way. This was truly, a labor of love. service of permanent value to the Na tion. The treatment accorded the white-bearded old pioneer, then in his 76th year, by the people of the dif ferent cities through which he passed was eloquent of their temper. Almost invariably in the West he was wel corned and honored. The citizens re ceived him hospitably and raised funds to erect markers on the Trail The children gave their dimes to the cause, and assembled in hosts at the dedication ceremonies. As he traveled eastward interest grew less. At North Platte, Neb., the business men refused to give up any time to him, but the W. C. T. TT. took the work in hand and one citizen donated a handsome monument. At Kearney the people expressed approval of his purpose, but the business men refused to become interested and the president of the Commercial Club declined to call a special meeting. After crossing the Missouri, the old pioneer "had a foreboding that might be mistaken for a faker and looked upon either as an adventurer or a sort of a "wandering Jew.' " He was compelled to explain that he was not a corn doctor or any kind of doc tor, that he had no patent medicine to sell and was neither soliciting nor receiving contributions for the sup port of the expedition. Many sua pected graft or speculation, though the newspapers understood and spoke well of the enterprise, with the one exception of William Allen White, who wrote of his suspicions. All the Incidents of the memorable journey are related in Mr. Meeker's book, "A Busy Life," which he wrote and pub lished in his 86th year. Ohio and Indiana were generally hospitable, but when the pilgrim reached Buffalo the Mayor demanded $100 license fee, as though he were running a traveling show. He put the churlish official to shame by vol untarily representing an emigrant in a circus given for the benefit of hospital. At Albany, says the author, "the Mayor would not talk to me after once taking a look at . my long hair. The official is thus pilloried: He was an old man and, as X was after ward told, a broken-down politician. At New York, though Mayor Mc Clellan told the police not to molest him, he was arrested for driving cattle through the city, and, though after wards released, got tangled in city ordinances. He drove the length of Broadway with his ox-team, but thirty days of New York was enough for him, though he stayed sixty days. His wagon attracted such crowds as to block traffic and he was constantly compelled to move. His dog was stolen, and he paid $20 ransom to the thief. He was glad to get out of the big city, but "did not receive much recognition between Elizabeth City and Washington." He says: "Wilm ington would have none of it except for pay," and at Baltimore "I got cold shoulder," but Philadelphia opened its heart to him. At Washington, however, President Roosevelt gave him "a royal wel come," for the Colonel Is Western In spirit and honors the pioneers and their deeds. The Colonel needed no explanations, showed a lively interest from the start, was photographed with Mr. Meeker standing beside the team and supported the bill In Congress for marking the Trail. The varieties of reception tendered to Mr. Meeker are illuminating as to the people's understanding of the great events in their own history. All should be well enough informed to know the great part which" the migration to Oregon played In the expansion of our territory to the Pacific Coast, but many were so ignorant that they re garded the venerable pioneer as a wandering faker. . The Oregon emigration in fact Bur passed in many particulars other, his toric migrations. It far exceeded in distance traveled the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt. It is com parable to the descent of the Ger manic tribes on the Roman Empire, but it was a marked contrast to- that movement. The Invaders of Rome were barbarians coming from a wil derness into a civilized, highly de veloped country. The Oregon pioneers were civilized people traversing a trackless desert to take possession of wild country occupied only by small bands of savages. The European mi gration caused a return to barbarism, while the Oregon migration carried forward the civilization which had al ready peopled the East and Middle West. WAR-MADE PROSPERITY. Our Rood friend The Oregonian seems much gratified that Portland is becoming I especially prosperous on account of the ship- ulldlng going on within her limits, or near hem. The balance of the state rejoices with her In her new-found prosperity, but t the same time hopes that Portland will ot reject that prosperity because it Is caused by the war rather than a tariff law. lem Capital Journal. - Prosperity through the present tariff being impossible, Portland does the next best thing. It is not furnish ing ammunition or guns or torpedoes to kill soldiers or non-combatants, but hips to carry trade to the nations of the world. The ships will in part take the place of other ships destroyed in the war. So Portland's share in the "war-made prosperity" is to build up, not to tear down. We would just as soon think of .de clining to make and sell ships as to refuse to grow and sell prunes to belligerent or neutral. Does our Sa lem neighbor suggest one rule for the Oregon shipbuilder and another for the Salem fruit grower? After the war the question of the tariff will be important, not 'to say vital. The present tariff was made by the politicians with disastrous re sults and was signed by a President who -publicly sneered at "experts," tariff and otherwise. Now we find the same President and the same party ardently for a non-partisan tariff commission. We . hope they mean it. REFORMING THE. PATENT LAWS. That the path to reform of the patent laws is not yet a plain and open one is pointed out by Commissioner Thomas Ewing, of the Patent Office, in a recent statement in which he op poses enactment of laws requiring either compulsory license or compul sory working. He declares that com pulsion, if it, operates in defiance of economic laws, cannot be said to have accomplished any good where it has been tried. Briefly, the two proposals are: Compulsory license would per mit anyone deslfTng to do so to enter the field as a manufacturer of an article patented by another, being re quired only to pay to the patentee a royalty fixed by a court. The com pulsory working provision would mean that the patentee must manufacture in the country in which the patent is granted either a whole or part of his products, as the law may specify. Recently there has been general dis cussion of the advisability of enacting both laws. Compulsion in each instance is be set with domestic and international difficulties. Germany has compulsory laws, but the United States has not, but by treaty Germany has waived its requirement as to the United States. The treaty would automatically be come invalid upon passage of a com pulsory law by the United States. The present arrangement, however, is re-J garded in normal times as a great ad vantage to American manufacturers. It is assumed that passage of a com pulsory law would be followed also by similar action on the part of other countries, which would .be costly in the long run to our own industries. A substantial impediment in the way of successful operation under compulsory laws, it is declared, would be the difficulty of obtaining capital for exploitation. The successful pat ented article, even under present con ditions, is the only one heard from; nothing is said about the efforts made to put on the market the thousands of others that have failed. The in ventor stands in the same attitude as the prospector. It is the bonanza that gets into the news. The thousands of prospectors who spend their lives without making a strike are never heard from. The patent that gives a large return to the investor is perhaps as rare as a paying gold mine; at any rate, more than a million patents have been issued and only a small proportion of them have been the basis of large fortunes. Injustice of the compulsory license is pointed out, in the respect that it does not take account of unsuccessful experiments that are a legitimate part of the economic cost of the whole un dertaking. The patentee and the in ventor would take the risk involved in establishing the success of the article and then would be compelled to com pete in its manufacture, with only a royalty compensation, with others who had held back until its entire success was determined before entering the field. The licensee would wait until the patentee had made all the mis takes, and then reap the benefit of them. The value of the patent would then be staked on litigation to an even greater extent than at present, and litigation Is now the chief burden of patentees. Difficulty in fixing just ' royalties under compulsory licensing is illus trated by the experience of a widely known drug, which was the result of several hundred experiments. Two of the later experiments were successful, one conspicuously so. If license to manufacture were granted upon the basis of the cost of the two successful experiments, injustice would result. On the other hand, effort to determine the cost of all the steps leading to final success would open the way to almost unlimited possibilities for de ception and fraud. Demand for compulsory manufac ture is based in part on the - feeling that many inventions are suppressed. Commissioner Ewing holds that this practice is not general enough to af fect the general principle, and that to compel the manufacture of ma chines that did not fit Into the gen eral purpose of industry would be an economic burden. Similarly, to. com pel manufacture in this country under reciprocal patents would lead natural ly to similar compulsion on the part of foreign nations and would cause unnecessary duplication of plants by our own manufacturers and loss of work at home which would not be atoned for by any gains that might be made. A POET OF TIIE GREAT CITY. " It is a curious fact that Emlle Ver haeren, the Belgian poet, who met a tragic death the other day under a train In the French city of Rouen, and whose most recent noteworthy literary work was -a savage arraignment of the German conquest of Belgium, was claimed tefore the beginning of the war by German critics as "a German poet who by accident writes in French," to quote the words of his English reviewer, Jethro Bithell. Ver haeren was, as a matter of fact, a Fleming,, with the dominant char acteristics of his race, which compare rather with those of the Prussian than the Frenchman, but he was educated in French, and he never troubled him self with the task of mastering what was really his native tongue. Nor did he write in it at all, although we have the word of his French critics that he was not, either, a master of their language. He was so much a Flem ing that, as Bithell says, tils French seemed rather a- translated Flemish and the idea seems quite clear. His nationalism was not aroused. however, until after the war began. Until that time he had been inter national. His vogue in Germany was general, but so was he widely read in France and fervidly admired in Eng land. He was essentially a lyric poet. He had failed to exhibit early in life any adaptability to succeed to the management of an oil works owned by a wealthy uncle, and when he was apprenticed to the law he was told with all kindness that this was obvi ously not the career for him. He was for a time a student at Louvain, where he formed a close friendship with Maeterlinck. But he was des tined from the first to be a man of letters, and nothing else. He has left in his poems a series of pictures of the everyday life of his people such as seldom have been produced in verse. In a different sense, yet with similar fidelity to detail, he pictured the life of his own people as Henryk Sienkiewifz, who died only a few days before him, portrayed the life of the Poles. But Sienkiewicz wrote novels of action and feeling; Verhaeren was a poet of the life of a people who were at peace and who hoped only to con tinue in the pursuit of domestic joys. Verhaeren represented in his later poems the antithesis of the "back-to-the-farm" movement of which lately we in America have begun to hear so much. He pictured the city as the necessary, absorbing element in hu man progress; he held that however wanton and cruel the city might be. it was swallowing up the country by virtue of its abnormal manifestation of the "spirit of efficiency." The country, as he viewed it, was doomed to exist ultimately only by sufferance of the town. He was prone to deify the energy incarnate in the machine shop and the factory. He has much to say, first and last, of the beauties of Nature, and he sings them well, but to him there is poetry in the belching chimneys and roaring of many wheels, where other, poets have seen only smoke and grime and hate fulness. The idyllic countryside is being ravaged to make the cities great: the best blood oj the farms is being drained into the marts of trade; but Verhaeren sees only that it is in the nature of events that it should be so, for Energy created the world and Energy must find expression al ways and everywhere. It was, as Bithell expresses it, that the beauty of a thing does not lie in its outward form, but in the power it expresses. "The panting in multiplied effort of the machinery has the rhythms of stu pendous poetry." It was a daring con ception that gave the poet a picture such as this, in his "Les Campagnes Hallucinees": . A river of pitch and naptha. rolls By wooden bridges and mortared moles: And the taw whistles of the ships Howl with fright In the fog that grips; With a red signal light they peer Toward the sea to which they steer. Quays with clashing buffers groan; Carts grate o'er the cobble stone; Bridges, opening, lift a vast Gibbet till the ships have passed. letters of bras inscribe the world, 1 On roofs, and walls, and shop fronts curled. Face to face in battle massed. There is more description of the city's "crowd inextricably twined," and "whose eyes are filled with hate and whose teeth snatch at the time they cannot catch," and yet, after the day is done Such is the day and when the eves With ebony hammers carve the skies. Over the plain the city heaves Her shimmer of colossal lies; Her haunting, gilt desires arise; Her radiance to. the stars Is cast. She gathers her' gas in golden sheaves; Her tail are highways flying fast To the mirage of happtnes That strength and fortune seem to bless; Like a great army swell her walls; And till the smoke she still sends down Reaches the- field In radiant calls. It is not altogether a lovely picture, as Verhaeren draws it, but it is strong and not deficient as to truthfulness. It is intended as a picture of the city as it exists in all its unloveliness to the poet's eye yet a stern necessity. Just the same. Nevertheless, lie writes much of the country and its joys and sorrows, and always faithfully to life. Purely as a descriptive poet, he stands high. His metaphor is simple and vivid. He pictures the rain as "with its nails of grey, athwart the dull grey day" raking the green window pane, and after a time The long, long rain. lta.ln and Its threads identical. And Its nails systematical. Weaving the garment, mesh by mesh amain, Ot destitution for each house and wall. Ana xences tnat enrold The villages, neglected, grey and old. It rains in Flanders.' It is raining there now, and with modifications to suit conditions of life in the trenches, it is now probably just such a day or series of days as the poet depicted In "Les Villages Illusoires" years ago. Of all the work he has done, how ever, critics give first place to that in which he has given his conception of the titanic contest between City and Country. No other poet has used this as a principal theme. The poetic side of the struggle, a struggle essen tially of modern times, has escaped the observation of others. If he had written nothing else, Verhaeren would, by his "Les Campagnes Hallucinees" and "Les Villes Tentaculaires," have written himself an exceptional man. M. Diaghileff, who is a Russian and a ballet master, says that Americans are snobs,, and he specifies. .It:. is because. In spite of the many things we have in our country to admire, we are constantly aping foreign things. It is refreshing to hear him talk, be cause, after all, he is so compli mentary. He says we have splendid women, magnificent architecture wonderful orchestras, and he mentions our cocktails evidently not having been in the country long enough to observe the tendency of the times and our rhythmic motion as we hurry along the streets on our way to and from our work. For a man who can discover so many virtues in us, even after having called us by the unpleas ant name of snob, we can have only feelings of friendship. For In at least that one respect, we are international. Who is there who does not enjoy be ing praised, and who is there who will not believe that praise of him self is from the heart? Our women, our architecture, our orchestras and our cocktails are wonderful yes, M. Diaghlleff certainly is right. A PLAGCE OF GOLD. The American people are in the anomalous position of having more gold than they know how to use in legitimate business. The further ano malies exist of Great Britain pouring more gold into our hands and of American bankers urging clients who sell goods to Britain to take payment in credits, without collateral, not in gold. The motive for Britain's policy is selfish. So long as that country ships gold to the United States, it increases the volume of credit available two and a half times the amount of gold it ships, it makes credit cheap in this country and thus Improves the oppor tunity to borrow at low interest. The advice of our bankers is in the interest of our people. An excess of gold tempts to speculation by making money cheap. Those who have money are anxious to earn interest on it, and those who have speculative schemes are tempted to borrow from them. An era of speculation leads to an era of distrust during which gold is hoarded, credit becomes dear and speculative enter prises crash. That means hard times. By making gold cheap, an excess of that metal beyond the country's proper requirements raises the price of com modifies and takes away " from the workman the benefit of high wages. It bears especially hard on the person of fixed income by reducing "the pur chasing power of his money. The bankers who have advised against taking gold in payment for exports and in favor of extending credit have been accused of being actuated by a desire to assist the al lies. Wrhether that be the motive or not, the American people will benefit if their advice is followed, for both speculation and the advance of prices will be checked. The United States has been con gratu'ated on having one-third of the world's supply of gold and on the prospect of having one-half of the total. It is no cause for congratula tion; It is cause for alarm. We do not need it.. We cannot iise it. It Is a source of danger. The suggestion made by a Briton that if the United States declared a food embargo it might subject itself to reprisals, is accompanied by a hint that, for example, Canada could, by a retaliatory embargo on logs and pulp, cause a serious, paper shortage in the United States at once. But there are also at least two other com modities an embargo on which, by way of reprisal, would be even more se rious. The United States is dependent upon outside sources for its rubber and its tin, not to mention other things. It is the largest consumer of rubber in the world, not excepting any of the countries at war. It is not enough to say that we could in that event resort to still further em bargoes, for in doing so we would, de prive ourselves of markets that are profitable to us and which we hope to continue to possess. The question se riously to be considered is whether prices, high as they are, are more serious than would be a war of trade reprisal in which no one could foresee the .end. Tt is a poor day that does not bring a discovery in the way of a dye guar anteed to break the blockade and solve the problem of the American textile industry for all time. The United States Consul-General at Bue nos Aires reports on a new material called algarrobin. obtained from the wood of the carob tree. The materia is said to lend itself to a wide variety of uses, both alone and in combina tion with extracts, such as fustic hypernic and logwood, and so em ployed gives a large number of fast colors. It is also suitable as a base for various coal-tar dyes, the advan tage therein being that it effects an economy of 50 to 90 per cent of the latter and more expensive products. Altogether, it promises as many won derful results as any newly developed material that has come into promt nence recently. A factory for its manufacture already is in , operation In Argentina. A stenographers' union is said to have been organized to demand a curb on all profanity during office hours. Still, a moderate amount of mild profanity would be preferable to hearing, "Well, what do you know about that?" all day long. We are glad to see that the Uni versity of Oregon students have de cided to bar flowers and evening clothes from the annual formal dance. We must do something to keep down this ever-increasing cost of living. What we really need is $2 wheat for our farmers and flour at about $4 a barrel for our housewives. This of fers a splendid chance for those analytical chemist fellows to do something worth talking about. After having read of the defense of Verdun, we confess that there is a certain absence of thrill in the ac counts of General Trevino's stand at Chihuahua. It does seem as if King Constan tine's prediction as to the future of Roumania is about to be fulfilled. Judging from the November liquor Imports, Ihe "safety first" propaganda has not fallen on stony ground. The hobos ape to have a college. Doubtless the course in transportation will be popular. So we are not going to let San Domingo work out her own salvation, after all! Anyway, the bum actors are not complaining about the advancing price of eggs. Perhaps Villa Is vexed because he, too, was not asked to sign the protocol. Gleams Through the Mist By Dean Collins. IV THE GARDEN, Gone is the boom of the brown bees bustle. Dried are the founts of the honey brew; Only the wind goes rustle, rustle. The stiff, dry vines of the sweet peas through: Ti Geranium leaves are seared and cros.d By the biting kiss of the bitter frost. A tiny bud on the rosebush lingers. Bent like a battered coral charm: Clenched like a baby's tiny fingers To guard some bit of a toy from harm: But well though the souls of the blos soms sleep. The chill of the Winter bites full deep. Open and loose the gate is swinging Where the souls of my garden, one by one. Swept away to the southward singing Their songs of the land of endless sun. The frost Imps shattered their shrines. and then Look where, the withered vines are clinging; Can the gods of my garden come back again? "Sir," said the Courteous Office Boy, changing the wet towel on his head and pursuing avidily the last bit of Ice In the water pitcher, "I honor and celebrate the Chicago Diet Squad." 'W hy so, my son?" I queried, snatch ing the ice from him and putting it on my own fevered brow. "They may have missed the big show on Thanksgiving day." said the C. O. B., "but they also were privileged to miss the morning after." And the C. O." B. belled his repent ance by getting the calendar and be ginning to figure how many days till Christmas. VILLA'S RIDING SONG. I pome from haunts no one can learn. I make a sudden sally. And when Carranza's troopers turn. I skittle up an alley. I make myself a president Whene'er my fancy cares to; Then when my fortunes get a dent. I make myself right scarce, too. On many battlefields I die. And when my foes cry, "Ha-ha!" I'm resurrected by and by. And chase them from Chihuahua! I dart across the border line. And when my merry run's done. I seek the highland and haunts of mine And shake my fist at Funston. And notes they fly and heads they lie Uneasy when I rally To bid my merry bandits hie. And bicker down the valley. I die, I live, I croak. I blow: No stroke my life can sever. For men may come and raer may go But I go on forever. CHANT MILITANT. (Sung by the housewives.) The housewife to the war has gone. Against the strange devices. Which, through the seasons off andi on. Have boosted tip food prices. The carp that in the storage stall A frozen luster shed. Still hangs there, left upon .he wall, And gets more dead and dead. The turkey, chickens and the grub. The storage men were holding They soak them' with a boycott club (A better plan than scolding). In silent woe the storage quakes. While housewives still raise hob. And now and then the market breaks. To prove they're on the job. A SONG OK THE LINK. (Such as may be sung almost any time in the entrance of Wells-Fargo building in these troublous times.) Stand to the line and be strong. Halting not in your ways. For soon they will ring the gong In a matter of thirty days. Shove on the line and haste. For soon It will be too late: For there Isn't much time to waste In the fringe of a bone-dry state. DRV STIFF. The foregoing song of the line was sung for no especial moral purpose, except to preface a return to our dis cussion of last week with Orr O. Smith. True to our promise, we allowed him to wome into the colyum and tack down a strip of lamentation about the impending bone-dry state on condition that we should hold the authority to allow someone else to come In with a package of poesie devoted to the other side of the question. "Omar Nix" is the signature given by the second minstrel in this great Bards' Bone-Dry Saengerfest. "I wouldn't put my name on this for ten dollars ($10)," he explains. "Call it yours if you wish ahem!" But far be it from us to take one Jot or tittle from the glory of Omar Nix. So we pass him the dulcimer anc he sings as follows: Banished Roose. Wake! For the Sun that scattered into Flight The bars before him from the Field of Night. Drives shipments with them from the Town, and strikes Wells-Fargo's office with a bhaft of Fright. And as the Clock struck. those who stood before Wells-Fargo's shouted:; "Open, then, the door! You know how long a while we have to wait. And. once departed, dare return no more." Booze is indeed gone with all of his crew. And the bar's shiny glass that we all knew But still the Logan grows upon the Bush, And many a garden has the Concord blue. (Our next minstrel, we fear, is mor of a free-verse singer than we could desire, but in spite of that we shall let him uncork his lamentation Tues day, without let or hindrance, al thouEh we may give some slight serv ices In chiropody ere we allow him to burst into song. Ed.) An Easy Lesson, bat From the Boston Transcript, Teacher Robert, how is it that you haven't your lesson? It couldn't have been so very hard to learn. Bobby No, please, teacher; it -wasn't because it was so hard to learn, but because it was so easy to forget.