0 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 20, 1018. roHTiD, uk:mn. Satcred at Portland nirrigo) Poetorflca ee'-i-o-l -etaaa mail niattar. Subacripuua ratea invariably la Advance: IBr aaii. Tai'v. Suadr included, one year ........ 900 Ihi ly. Sunday Include!. etx month..... iKtily. liumliy Included, rhrea tuontha... -.-'" J al ;v. tlumlay Included, one month..... ,7a Wily, vithuut Suuljr. q year. ....... S.oo latly. wit hunt Huuilur. ei moathl 2.23 Iiallv. without Sutler, three oiuQlbs. IhftiiT. atihttui Sunday, one mouth.... Week.l. on year f'Jnd-i. on year ................... . fcoaday nnd weekle t Hjr Carrier.) Paiir. Sunday Included, on, year...... laiy. Ctuuuny in.-luded. on month... f i Hy. w ithout eunday. on year...... Ijny. without runday. tirea montha. . Xetiy. withuut iunday. on month . How to Km It Srod poatoffiee money or der, cxpreaa order or personal vj-.eck on your loel b4ftk. tftataoa. coin or currtnrr ara at wara r i.x. otv, twotornco addroa in full, including county and at ate. toali,o Kates, U lo Is pages, 1 cant: IS to S page. cent ; ii4 to 4a page, a centa . to M parta 4 canto: aj to Ta pages, a rents: to page, a caota. e oral an poatage. doublo rates. laMrni Baalaeaa (rrfere Varrae at Conk Hn. . 1 . . 1 . iM . l.M .SV . .73 . .' interact to preserve peace, added: And be Brethren, that which la built on selfish neaa cannot aland. Tho system of pe rami a I Intaraot muat bo ahlvared to atoms. There fore, ws. who have obeerved tha ! of tiod ro tha past, are waiting' In quiet but awful expectation until be ahall confound thla aya'am. aa ha haa confounded those which neve roii, before And It may bo effected "v convulsions . more terrible and ntora bloody than the world haa aeon. While nien are talklt. of peace and of the great progreea of civilisation, there la heard In the dtetanco tha nolo of arm lea gathering rank on rank, east and weat. north and south, and rotting toward tha crushing thua- dera of universal war. This serrnon waa preached while preparations were being made for the trade expansion which It was believed would follow the holding; of the Crys- ? tal Palace exhibition, the forerunner o I e 1 , i i - i . . This was a (rood many years .before England exrhang-ed the sand spit of Heligoland for comparatively worth less possessions jn Africa, and the were not even rumors of a universal war. audible, to the public ear. But the English preacher, although he set down no dates, and made no attempt elating; clergyman and every news- "ease. Unguided girls are a good paper know thut there are large num- deal safer than they used to be, and hers who act us If fretting married the improvement ought to be pro were something to be kept dark, like gressive in this respect, a crime, or at leant a misdemeanor. But even more significant still is It was not always so and there were the changing sentiment of New York not nearly so many divorces in the old ers themselves. They are now willing days. , to let others have the distinction of Five days In which to think about it living In the "wickedest city in the further ought not to be a real hard- world." There once was a popular ship to a couple whose love Is of the notion that New York could not "get enduring sort. And it probably would along without blood money." This is be better breach 'of promise laws to beingdissipated and a far healthier the contrary notwithstanding if more sentiment is taking its place, folks changed their minds, before the - wedding day. Uctter an inconsequen tial wounding of vanity than the tragedy of a marital misadventure. The Wisconsin law does not promise a substantial remedy, but it will serve a purpose if It leads to suuh uniform ity of action by the states as will curb both the snapshot marriage and the too easy divorce. RTRKK TIFD rr WITH rkd tape. While the Government has been ap- that working women, to whom econ omy in dress would be most desirable, are practically helpless, even when from habit or taste they would rather not buy a garment in the prevailing style. He observes: For instance, a working woman needs a new dreg. . Hhe has neither the skill nor the time to make it herself. She Itoes the round of the shops in search of something that wit! be fitting- and at the same time conservative. She finds that the market of choice is most limited unless she follow the prevailing mode, that the bargains wttiiin the reach of her purse are in gar ments of fashionable cut. bhe ma of th'e speakers. In one of them oc- f curs this passage: Dear General What shall I talk about? My idea is this: To instruct the audience about Robert Fulton . . . Tell me . . . was that his real name or a num de piume? It is customary to sa,y that a man's private letters are interesting because they reveal the "real man." It would be as near the truth to say that Mark Twain's letters reveal the fact that the real man is in his books, too. He stands out as the most natural kes the I and utterly sincere, of men, who wrote best choice under the circumstances not 1 because he liked to write and who what she wants but what she can get. I made a iov of his nrnfessinn no lees i - - , In more romantic days men were I than his casual exchanges of ameni more given to ornamentation in dress ties. It seems possible that there is a than they are now, but there was a lesson here for other authors, who are period in which they seemed to have I trying, without much success, to win obtained the mastery. Changes were I the tavor of a public that has raised made so gradually that it required an I Mark Twain .almost to the topmost ancient wood cut or an engraving of I pinnacle of literary fame. a past age to remind us that they had come about at all. There were, at "arm pais eaa irrru, V errew m vna- i - . Hrunawiek building. New f York; Verree I to denne the specific and Immediate pealing to loggers and lumbermen for death penalty without due process. spruce timber, it has owned large .Montana and Wyoming, with one TtYXCHINGS IN 1917. Statistics of lynchings in 1917 are Interesting aa showing that the burden! of this form of lawlessness still rests upon the South, and that the negro In all but two out of thirty-eight in stances was the victim. Only twelve, however eleven negroes and one white man were charged with the, come aoout at an. mere were, at The problem of immigration wnirn crime or attempted crime which South- least, no such revolutionary changes has giVen some concern in the pasti ern puDtic opinion stoutly maintains eu.nu ric.cui. . man num uu6 may give place to a problem of emi- Justities summary infliction of the out his old clothes before he bought gration after peace is declared in the The Peripterous. Perlpterous A Structure of Columns on All Sides. Having Bows Dictionary. new ones. . kui it now appears mat opinion of experts of the Government. mo uci6iici, isuuuiuciicu "J The floor! tirto w t-o-j ,-.1, in 10(17 (Synopsis of preceding synopses.) The Oregonian, great morning news paper, employs a distinguished literary architect to construct a peripterous. He does it. It lias rows of columns oa east. west, north and south. The Peripterous becomes a Free Audito rium for the expression of Incompetent, ir reievent and immaterial opinion. ner verse and anecdotes. A Pacifist Department of Scientific In vestigation is established and solves many fascinating problems. The Society' for Suppression of War Poetry establishes headquarters and offers anti dotes for war poetry poisoning. ARK YOU AX A. O. V. O.T Organization within these portals f a chapter of the Ancient Order of Vo ciferous Objectors has created almost unheard of enthusiasm. The I'ortland chapter is being: ei-tao-lished by the Most Extreme Vociferino of the Grand Lodge. In a statement issued io the public the Most Extreme Vociferino announces that ability to object vociC erously to thinjfs that are a ..nk in. strfr buiitimg. Chicago; Verree I causes of the great conflict which he bodies of splendid spruce and fir on lynghing each, were the only states success in forcing expenditures upon wnen it285,000 foreigners came to the ls not t,le n'y est of eligibility. To' ''"-iklln. !.afayetle ttltd. letrtlt. Mich. in l4in-!o representative, it. J. Bldweli. J JaVtrket street. Th, Awotiated Preaa la exclusively en titled to tha uaa for republication of all dlapat Ilea credited to it aa- not olher- w ia credited in thla paper, and also the k"l news pubaahed herein. A'l righla of republication of special dls afi has herein are also reeeneU. roRTLAMt. MMltt. JAMTART -. !. foresaw. It is auite as likely as anr of Its own military reservations on the north of the llusoii and Diion line to women, have been working insidi- the prophets to be rroved right. Self- I Pacific Coast, not a stick of which has obtain a"pluce in the record. ously to foist the same conditions upon Interest, enlightened or otherwise, been cut- This timber is ripe and be- The figures have been compiled by men. It is hard to say whether they has failed to accomplish the results I ginning to decay: If it is not cut soon, the division of records and research would have succeeded, but it seems that were expected rrf iu l WAR rROPHKt ll.S. . WHAT KLME IS TIIKRK TO VOT It Is hardly fair to accuse the City Council of bad faith In its purpose to take the (-cent fare ruling into the courts. There has been Insistent demand that the Council do some thing about it, but no wise man has United States, nearly all of them from Kurope, but this dropped in the fiscal year 1916-17 to less than 295,000. of whom 105,000 came from Canada, many of the latter being returning Americans. In the same period 66,000 aliens sailed for Kurope, making the It has been said that no Important come forward with a practical plan vent ever came to pass in the world that did not have a prophet. The forecasters are always busy, especially thoe who predict calamity and woe. It is not remarkable that out of thou sands of them, there should be some to match every event. The prophet who happens to hit off is always sure cf an audience afterward. And then, for staying or countermanding the I'ubllc Service Commission's order. It is suggested, for example, that tha Council might permit return of the Jitneys. The only obstacle to jit ney transportation is a requirement. made law through adoption by the people of an ordinance initiated by the people, that each motor vehicle it will be lost. It is close to navisrable of Tuskeg-ee Institute, a nesxo Indus- that they have been making some water, anda logging roads are near, trial school, with the evident purpose headway. The order of the commer- which can be Quickly extended into it. of calling attention to the discrimina- cial economy board may have been a Kvery condition requisite to rapid tion against this race. Some of the dispensation, mere is no telling to logcing and milling exists. "crimes" enumerated clearly did not what lengths the designers would have The attention, of various bureaus justify extreme measures, even by gone u tney naa jieia mil sway and officers of the War Department lawful agencies, and there is no evi- was railed to this supply of spruce, I dence that the offeyses against women which is in Its own hands, months ago, I would not have been avenged promptly when the cry for spruce first was by judge and jury raised, but nothing has been done ex- I The fact is, indeed, that juries in rent to Dass the buck. Letters are the South are usuallv certain to con- still going the weary rounds of the vict upon reasonable evidence, and Dk that appealed to the mass of the this pr0spect still holds irood. but it Circumlocution Office. Men are ready that judges would not remain long in people was, after all, the one most seen that readjustment of industrial to buna railroads to It and to cut it. I office who did not impose full penal- worth writing. It is interesting to conditions is certain to follow, and qualify for membership one must be wholly unable to suggest means of cor recting the things to which he vocifer ously objects. This announcement has created more satisfaction than anythins that has happened since the resignation of net gain to our foreign population the Bryan as Secretary of State. Applk-a- MARK TWAIN. LETTER WRITER. "The literary theory of Mark Twain, as set forth in his recently published letters, seems to have been that the smallest since the beginning of the century. Prior to the entry of the United States into the war, an official survey indicated that 3,000,000 aliens were planning to return to their homes, which would offset all the immiKra tion of the fout- years from 1913 to 1917. It is impossible to say whether is tions for membership hav been com ing in bales and it is now believed that the new lodge will be the largest in tho city. It has already been made known that at the first monthly meeting of the order speakers possessing special qualifications will vociferate. Not only will there be several who will object with choicest expletives to like Madame Thebes, he la honored operated for hire be bonded for $2500 until history discredits him. Recent publication by the Journal de Geneve of a collection of ancient prophecies said by an Italian cleric to have been made by Fra Gioviannl about the year- 1600, In which the for the protection of its patrons. The bond ls an obstacle only be cause bonding companies will not bond jitneys at a price the jitneys can afford to pay. Clearly the only rea son for that is that the operation of just been collected by Albert Bigelow Paine and published by Harper's, his view of the opinion of some critics that his work was "coarse," or com. mon. It is a striking coincidence that chinery on a larger scale than ever facturer of clay pigreons and other war will be necessary if the United States time necessities has been engaged to is to hold its position of pre-eminence vociferate against tho fuel shortage in trade. . shutdown. A renowned astronomer has also been nnest fnr.tnlri a war in which more Jitneys is naxaraous. 13 a veroici lives would be sacrificed than ancient established by actuarial statistics. Itome had for Inhabitants, recalls a passage from Heine's "History of Re ligion and Philosophy In Germany." which ia being quoted widely since the present war began. Three striking fcttures of Heine's prophecy, viewed in the after-light of the present, are Ills forecast that the Germans would destroy the cathedrals of thelr,enemy. that aviators would be brought down from the sky. and that the . British would be at war in the deserts of Africa. He foretold that the day would come when "the fury of the oM contests will reappear the wild eagerness of which the Northern bards have sung." and when the stone gods would raise themselves from their for gotten rubbish heaps and rub the dust of a thousand years from their eyes. And then: . Trior, with his giant's hammer, wilt spring forth and ahatter tha tSothlc cathedrals. ... Tha tttouaht lues before tha dead, aa the lightning before tha thunder. Tha Ger man thunder la Indeed German, and Dot tery atmble. and moree along after a somewhat aaiwurely faaaloo. but Ua lima will coma. The Council has authority to re peal a people's law. but such repeals have been condemned, in the past by those most insistent for return of the Jitneys. Furthermore, it is a pro posal to turn loose a transportation system dangerous to those who patron ize It. in order that those who will not accept Its hazard may save a few pennies. The Oregonian does not believe that wish to aid the streetcar company actuated the public when it adopted the bonding ordinance. Rather It was realization, dearly bought by loss of lives, that public safety is more im portant than an irresponsible, unregu lated transportation system. Did not the same pople who imposed the bond requirement approve four jit ney franchises in the same election? If some wise man will point out a more practical, more sensible means of securing return to the 6-cent fare. he will then be justified in criticising the Council for doing something else. but it is surrounded by a barrier of ties. But such offenses as "refusing read. amonir these, letters, which have I that production by labor-savine ma- the 6-cent fare, but an Eastern manu red tape .mar. is more impeneiraDie to get out or tne road ana Doing inso- than a barbed wire entanglement, lent," "writing insolent letters," "steal- If this timber were owned by an in-I ing a coat," "vagrancy" and "disput- dividual. his attention would no soon-I ing a white man's word," upon which er be called to its existence and to the some other lynchings were based, fell urgent aemana ior it man ne wouia short of offering even an excuse wnicn mon. it is a siriKing coincidence mat a ,-, snStr i,, kMn ensued to evni.iin the nv(i that mav set to work to cut it, but not so with any community proud of its law- his letter on this particular topic to the ministers of more than 50.000 rise from the total eclinse of the sun the Government. Everything must be abiding character would regard as suf- should have been written 'to Andrew churches to requests for directions next June and to object vociferously to acme lactjormng to tne sacreo. ritual o ficient. Lang, who was one of his sincere ad- what they can best do for enlisted this forthcomin ii. o nuij itnupio oi neu tape. iiiai it ls easier to tneorize man to appiy mi, j ,, ,,, . c;,i men nnH to hln win th Th. takes time, which is extremely valu- a practical remedy. But it would admire anything that was either coarse burden of the answer is that they " i "". seem as n tne development oi cum- or common- But we may be thankful should make special efforts to "enlist mmgs must oe cone mat a me munity pride ought some day to solve to the critics , that d lf for no the men in the pews" who heretofore way they always have been done or the problem. Men who resort to I tl,0 ,.a.,n than tHat . J have not been active to rio the work lynching, or stand idly by while it is Mark Twain a text for the letter he of the church formerly in the hands Deing perpetrated, ao not Heem m wrote in reply. . of those who have entered the Na realize that by their actions tney con they shall not be done at all The last resort of the devotee of red tape, when called upon to think and act in disregard of the ritual, is to plead that he ha3 no official infor- outrage. a The members of the order are as sured by the Most Extreme Vociferino that none of the deliberations or business of the meetine will h rlis- otner reason tnan tnat they, gave ""i- "ecu active, to uo me worn turbed by presentation of relief meas ures, which, as everybody knows, lead wrote in reply. i muoo wuu It was his view that "tho thin ton tional service. These are to be told fess their incapacity Jor maintaining crU!jt of humanity the cultivated that the home base must be kept orderly government. Yet if it were The philosopher went on to say that at the sound of the German thunder the eagles would fall dead from the air. and the lions in the farthest d ca rnation. For example, the spruce intimated to them that they were not business, may be none of his business, for self-government, they would but ne may Know intimately the man hotly resent the insinuation. wnose otisiness it is. wouia ne mane a frlendlv stitrtrestion thnt. it wottlrl be a coo thing to cut the snruce on mil- THE NEED OF CHAPLArXS. itary .reservations? Never in a thou- There has been an lntere.stitng ais- sand years. Ready as his friend may cussion recently of things that make be to adoDt a suceestion as to personal the ideal Army chaplain. - It seems to affairs, he would be highly affronted be agreed that a high degree of tact f officially, of course) by a sucrErestion ls the first essential, bermon corn- regarding official business with which position and the tweedle nee ana the other man had nothing, officially, tweedle dum of theology are perhaps to do. His brain Is divided into two the least useful knowledge. The chap- eomnnrtmentH liv a. solid wall When I Iain is a commissioned Officer, DUt his official brain was workiner. he with a certain difference in the aisci- might walk right up to a spruce tree, plinary scheme between him and other but he would not know that that tree commissioned officers. His relation was there until he had raised a bump with officers and privates is intimate on his unofficial forehead. and confidential. Yet it is easy for The Sacred Order of Red Tare Is a chaplain to overdo the "good fel- flrmlv determined that this war shall low" attitude. The wrong kind of spartn nrr rnr tmmr. Remedy for railroad congestion is be fought in strict accord with its familiarity breeds contempt. Dignity largely a matter of distributing the ritual. Rather let it be lost than won Kullr e, Ipnfflii nvae n eiMatoe nnmhap blT rl inrrscof II 1 1 V Irracnillir linoffintnl erts of Africa would droop their tails of roada and of diverting a large part methods. It. matters not that the of it to water lines. . The blockade I Germans, duly reverent as they are to in the Northeastern states Is caused I their own red tape, have no respect be ready to share the risks as well as by the attempt to force 80-per cent whatever for the American brand. I the hardships of the service, oiucn is of the Imports and exports through I The first requisite to victory is to summed up in the expression a man s ing to uplift, but the "mighty mass of the uncultivated who are under neath." This letter is, perhaps, the most "illuminating of the entire col lection. In it Twain goes on to say: That mass will never see the Old Masters that sight is for the few: but the chromo maker can lift them all one step upward toward appreciation of art; they cannot have tne opera, but the hurdy-gurdy and the sing ing class lift them a little way toward that far light: they will never know Homer, but the passing rhymster of their day leaves them higher than he found them; they may never even hear of the Latin classics, but they will strike step with Kipling's drum-beat, and they will march; for all Jonathan Edwards' help they would die in their slums, but the Salvation Army will beguile some of them up to pure air and a cleaner life; they know no Scripture, the Venus is not even a name that is not forced is necessary to com- I to them, but they are a grade higher in the are worth pacifying, worth pleasing, strong, and no door closed for lack of worth coddling," but that the job of men. Other things recommended are catering to that faction was "no very tlie preparation and dedication of dignified or valuable occupation." It service flags, keeping in touch with was not the minority who are already all members at the front, co-operation saved that he regarded as worth try- with reform agencies and "constant presentation irom the pulpit of the general cause of Christian democracy for which the war, is waged." War councils of many denominations are establishing bureaus to give special emphasis to these points, to answer inquiries and to foster the organiza tion of all desirable war-time ac tivities. only to profitless discussib'n and ill- feeling. This is a strictly vocifeTa rating order. Progrreas ol Civilization. Skull Spring Sentinel! This thriving village takes nobody's dust figuratively speaking this being a sagebrush country. It now boasts possession of one of the best and busi est self-kidders east of Wagon Tire Mountain. He is Sim Flicker, son of S. S. Flicker, proprietor of the Skull Spring Mercantile Emporium. Sim, by staying away from the movies, acquired enough money to buy what was left of Pike Disher's tin lizzie after the Mew Year's party in other words, the running gear. Sim Reports that the Krupps intend to establish a new plant at Munich. Ba varia, indicate that they are preparing has put an extra large coal skuttle over for the possibility that their main plant at Essen will fall into the hands of the allies, as it is only sixty miles : Is. But the prophecy other Atianc porta all the way .wWek Vth ,'T?'ct Maine to Florida are capable of and creep into their royal dens. Read r of prophecies, who muat be learned In the language of, symbolism, trans late "eagles of the air" as the aviators of the present day, and see In the ref erence to the lion the British nation whose emblem It is. would seem to to the creeping of the lion Into its den. Africa has been the scene of a series of rather complete victories for the allies, and the British lion has made headway at every desert point where he has been engaged. A restored Kgypt and recent advances in I 'ales tine, and the declaration of Arabs In favor of the allies have gone far to confute the prophet. The Italian priest was even more specific. He Is quoted by his sponsor, who bean Italian of the present time, as declaring that the "real Antichrist will be a monarch, a son of Luther." He will have only one arm, and "his Innumerable armies, the motto of which wilt be God with us.' will re semble infernal legions." The de scription fits the Kaiser with exacti tude. Kqually precise would seem to b the declaration that "his sword will be like that of the Christians, but hit arts will take for their patterns those of Nero and of the Roman persecu tors." Also "he will have pity for no one: he will massacre priests, monks, women, old men and children; and. like the barbarians of old. he will carry a torch in his hand with which he wilt overrun the world In the name of God." There Is another record of a proph ecy, not o well authenticated but In teresting because of the details which It gives, said to have been unearthed In the razing of an old monastery in Mecklenberg. which describes the murder of a Prince which shall pre cipitate a war. in which a "sovereign who mounts hi horse from the wrong side" will be encompassed by a ring of enemies. There will be wagons without horses and dragons will fly through the air, and men will lie In wait in the seas for their prey. But mand respect. The ideal chaplain is absolutely fearless, but not foolhardy. He must scale of civilization by the ministrations of the plaster-cast than they were before it took Its place upon their mantel and made it beautiful to their unexacting eyes. Twain could not read George Eliot or Hawthorne with patience, and Sir Walter Scott was anathema to him. the bottle neck leading to New York I shove the whole red tape brigade into man," which is not easy to define. But and his letters show that he did not harbor, while the roads leading to from han dllng a larger volume of traffic, and other porta than New York are in the same position as these roads. Relief the Potomac River. there must be no question about it rcgard it as honest to pretend to like The chaplain who does not measure an author just because he was podu- up to this standard would better stayiar in the upper literary circles and home. I it was "the thing to do." The fact Not the least important phase or nis that stands out in the letters is his wieV frnrrt thA Tloint Of VI P W Of the I 0-eAof clnnapltir a n A fhia t,a aiiKI aaillO pusiliuu aus uieacj luuus. ncul:l nat faw van ea wotil.l unonl t Tiava I ' - - &, tw tj.ut;, .ij , emu L , uvutsb, could be had by distributing 'traffic . . ?o,inH ot r.Hmi rn church in general, is the opportunity wUi account for a large measure of his among all Atlantic ports and among v. JTI?,"!. -. "- 't Sivo to inspire interest in re- almost universal popularity. They ligion that shall endure after the war I showed that he wrote, as he read, for is over. It is conceded that our new the joy of doing it, and without hy'poc- COXTROLLING VICE. The experience of New York in con trolling commercialized vice In the I K all Atlantic ports and among I . , h ev ail the roads which serve them, and I dpr tnose wno nav. persistentIy uy ai.tit, . .u.ri , mo contended that the thing simply can- from the Belgian frontier, and only 150 miles from Verdun as aircraft would travel. If the allies should reach the Rhine in Westphalia, Essen would be only fifteen miles from the battlefront and might be bombarded so frequently from the air as to be untenable for the civil population. Munich is farther toward the interior of Germany, near the foothills of the Alps, and in a more secure position. Location of the Krupp works there would please the Bavarians, who have been restive under Prussian control and have been inclined to join Austria in the peace movement. An armament works would be an aid to militarism. the engine arrff has installed a sort of reclining seat and a muffler cut out. When Sim steps on her he has no difficulty at all in kidding himself that he is a Speed Demon from Some- where. Some folks have no trouble at all in getting pleasure out of life. also. A parallel situation exists on the Pacific Coast, though in less aggra vated form. Traffic has become con centrated at San Francisco, when it should be divided among all ports all the way from Blaine to San Diego. Attention should be given not only to fuller use of I'ortland and of other Puget Sound ports than Seattle, but to use and development of all the lesser ports cf the entire Coast. The transportation and port system of the country suffers from the same lop sided development, which Ben Hur avoided when, as a galley 'slave, he Induced his master to let him .row turn about with each arm and thus Insure symmetrical muscular develop ment. The same statement applies to non use of waterways. A 1000-ton barge on the Erie Canal would release twenty freight cars for loading in the west and would relieve the glut of traffic of terminals to that extent. If the waterways were developed and used the railroads would need little of that billion dollars a year for iru provements of which the late J. J. Hill spoke. not be done in a large city. Upon this point the report of the Bureau of Social Hygiene, established by John I. Rockefeller. Jr., in 1912. is illu minating. It shows that the police can do their duty, if they will, and peace problems will be complicatea rjsy: that he put his real self into and that the church will nave tne every line. chance of its life to become a ractor it wm be remembered that when In the social readjustment that is ex- -x Connecticut Yankee at King oected. The minister who has served Arthur's Court" was offered to the as chaplain will be the possessor of a British public, the book was coldly liberal education in the hunianities received because of its irreverent atti- The utter failure of the doctrinaires to comprehend the practical side of a problem is illustrated by the proposal of a New York Alderman that the city I for a census to determine which has the The Society for the Suppression of War Poetry, which meets exclusively in the Peripterous, as will be noted by the most-casual inspection of the Pub lie Forum, is about ready to " a up. Its prose anfidotes for war poetry poisoning do not seem to allay tno epidemic. The society has expressed a desire to submit its problem to tho Pacifist Board of Scientific Investiga tion, but has found that organization overwhelmed with a corelated problem. The Pacifist Board is now feverishly engaged in preliminary organization purchase 75,000 tons of coal to relieve the fuel shortage. But if the city could purchase that much coal, there would be no famine to relieve. that publicity Is a powerful social I e(lucation that he could obtain in tude toward accepted Institutions. prophylactic, It no other way. The. ex-chaplains of I js not so well known that the author's There is a fine symbolism in the planting of acorns on the campus of a , , . - , 1 1 U IfllH., - - 1 io v Y, t II xtuuwu iliac hid auiuui a The latest report of the Bureau of , ho.ild he miehtv force i ,.kiii,. .... ,ii Social Hygiene is a comprehensive f goodif the right men are chosen of the book to meet the popular taste. state university No student now at fnmnarUAn or nraMnnr eftnrtitioni wltn I I I t." ........ n,iii i;,.A .-; t ;n .v.- .. i, . . , j nj comparison of present conditions with those of five years ago. That which Is roughly classified as "commercial ized vice" was in its heydey in 1912, when suppressive measures were un dertaken. These measures at first compelled withdrawal of vice from its established resorts, and efforts were made to reestablish it In new forms or in unaccustomed places. But the campaign was continued, and it at the outset. KCONO.HY A1 STYLE. The recent appeal of the commercial economy board of the Council of Na tional Defense to manufacturers of men's clothing to "reduce still fur ther. If oossible. the number of models, and to avoid models that use cloth for needless adornment," will was found that with every enforced come as a surprise to those who sup- change the vice resort was materially posed that women had a monopoly of weakened. .The net result has been re- frills ami furbelows and that men were duction in the number' of resorts in little Influenced by the modes In their He replied that he had shown the 'Yankee" to William Dean Howells, to Edmund Clarence Stedman and to Mrs. Clemens, and that Mrs. Clemens had persuaded him to strike out sev eral passages and to soften others. But further than that he would not go. He may have had in mind the storm caused on this side of the Atlantic by the caricature of Americans by Charles Dickens, particularly in "Martin Chuz- zlewitt," when he added: We are spoken of by the Englishmen as a. thin-skinned people. It is you who are thin- ikinned. An Englishman may write with Eugene will live' to sit in the shade of the trees, but it is pleasing to think that some may perform deeds that will be remembered as long as the oaks endure. The Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeit- ung says that our Army in France con sists mostly of doctors, woodcutters and railway men. Even if that were true, we have never heard that the professions mentioned disqualified men from making good on a march to Berlin. Until those ships, loaded with sup- ODeration. reduction In number of ner- choice of garb. The average business the moat brutal frankness about any man or sons engaged in the business, and also man will have impressed the casual f."7""" nisa for o,.r allies have snrreeoVo in In compelling a degree of secrecy which observer as having been cast in a a .ord But England cannot stand that fining their bunkers. Dr. Garfield will greatly reduced temptation. It is not I mold. Slight variations of style have kind of a book written about herself, it is I have a long way the bettea of the ar- ciaimea mat tne institution nas been been made in tne past iew years, dui """- .--"-- V greater output, the war Knitters or the war versifiers. On return from its errand of inquiry at the headquarters or the facltist Board of Scientific Investigation the Society for the Suppression of War Poetry was further discouraged by finding that that sweet singer of sym phonious pseudonym, Alyce Rosalyee Rustung, had been stricken by tho epi demio. This is hern: Cased I11II. The poets are chanting "Old Berlin" To drown the deaf'ning cannon's din; There's naught we want in old Berlin, Except the Kaiser's tough old skin. But why not trap him safe and sound Then cage exhibit him around: No such wild beast was ever found On this green earth nor Satan's ground. War loans and bonds could cease to bey For billions would be paid to see CAGiilJ BILii we know his pedigree a Throughout this country of the free. wiped out,-out me lact mat tne num- until recently tney naa ueen negutiuie, my languaKn which have been made in my bcr of resorts has been reduced to 1 7 I upon the whole. English editions to fit them for the seusi HASTY MARKIAGE-. per cent of the number in existence But it appears that there ls room tive English palate. Ministers of Milwaukee who have in 1912 ls rather convincing testimony for economy in the fashioning of men's But, even then, no doubt, Mark risen In arms against the so-called to the effectiveness of determined pub- suits. 'The economy board asks for Twain was enjoying himself. It is one "red tape" marriage law enacted by lie sentiment, exercised through the the elimination of yokes and pleats, thing to be a humorist and quite an the last Wisconsin Legislature have agency of a vigorous police depart- of patch pockets from fully lined other to be always in a good humor, stirred up a live topic for discussion, ment. coats, of collars. from vests, flaps from When one thinks of the long list of there are flaws in both these prophe- whether or not Governor Phllipp ac- The method of attack In New York trousers' pockets, cloth belts from modern authors who take their lives cies. gument in support of a fuel embargo. Despite the mistakes of the past, a condition and not a theory now con fronts us. Also, the physician and surgeon in charge of the campaign against the war poetry epidemic found this right on his instrument, where it was left, it ls be lieved, by the now well-known poet of mystery, disguised this time as a Ked It would be a serious mistake to neglect the war garden in 1918, and the state campaign proposed by the I Cross nurse: A Tip to Wllhelm When Billy Bryan starts to booze. Oregon Agricultural College deserves That of Fra Gioviannl placed cedes to their request to include the has been the one known in the par- trousers, fancy pocket flaps, and a lot and themselves too seriously, one is . . n.rsistence tn well-doine- will be the date of the beginning of "the war subject in his call for a special session lance as "keeping them on the run." of other unnecessary frills which have all the more thankful to Mark Twain npdd in everv department to win the at 2000 A. D. The Mecklenberg seer I of the Legislature. The objectionable Vice cannot flourish under, conditions been added almost without our realiz- for having lived. Mark Twain was was careful not to commit himself as I feature of the law seems to be the I so adverse as those created by the po- ing it. Double-breasted coats are to essentially not a pot-DOiier sort or to the time of beginning, but he ers. I provision that the names Of aoplicants 1 lice with the assistance of determined be placed under the ban. as a measure author. We know that there were dieted that the conflict would reach! for marriage licenses shall be posted citizens. Concurrent measures in- of National economy. Some millions times when he was hard pressed flnan- Its height -when the cherries bloom I on a bulletin board in the office of the eluded enactment of a state law re- of yards of cloth, in the aggregate, cially, but that'ne did not write merely the third time." and that peace would County Cleric for five days preceding quiring licenses for certain occupa- will be saved for other uses with no for the money to be derived from be consummated "in time for the I the marriage. The ministers denv that I tions. legitimate in themselves, but I corresponding sacrifice of utility. writing. His letters and his books Christmas mass." That time Is already I they are Influenced by mercenary mo- I which had been employed as a cloak I It Is worthy of note that the appeal I breathe the same spirit. He made In the past. I lives, although 60 per cent of those for vice. This resulted in no embar- was directed to the manufacturers good bargains witn his publishers Heine, as a matter of fact, mar not who would normally be married in I rassment to those legitimately em- themselves. It shows us that men, no when he could, but he did not speed have claimed for himself the gifts I Wisconsin are said to be going to ad-1 ployed. Saloons which formerly ca- less than women, are quite helpless up production on account of them, or which are now attributed to him. joining states, and the loss in marriage tered to Immoral trade were reached when it comes to fixing styles, al- give poor measure if he thought he needed in every department to win the war. The libraries are still culling for good books for the soldiers. If every one would contribute the books he owns but does not read and never will read, the call would be not for books but for a lot of big buildings in which to house them. He wrote as a philosopher deeply! fees In -Milwaukee alone Is estimated I through the license bureau. It was acquainted with the well-springs of I at $25,000 a year. found that control of conditions on the German' nature. He knew the! Although Jhe law contains the seeds I the streets was a simple matterof de- ptople of whom he wrote, and the I of its own evasion, and ls unenforce-1 tective work. Vice, once bold and probably sensed the reign of force table as to those who are most In need I aggressive, now slinks in the shadows which he typifies in his reference to I of It. and. therefore, perhaps ls un-1 and lurks in the. byways. But it can the great rod Trior. It would require I wise. It will serve as a reminder that not prosper on a large scale in this no supernatural provision, for ex-1 the practice of marrying in haste ls I manner, and great numbers of .social growing, and will suggest -the thought I parasitica have been compelled to that this may account for the concur- seek honest employment to live, rent Increase in the number of di- It Is perhaps true that men and vorces which Is giving genuine con- women cannot be made moral by law, cern to sociologists. It is probably aa but It Is shown to be reasonably pos- true as it ever was that those who sible to creute better conditions for a marry without deliberation are likely rising generation, while the more to repent when they have time for re- hardened sinners of the present are flection. Easy divorce has stimulated being chastened. The chief gain by fhe New 1 ork campaign has been the ample, to say: Tie aura that hour will coma. Aa upon tha ateps of aa amphitheater arlll tha na tions of tha earth group themselvea around titrmknr. ... Toa know that whaa we make up out mlrda to quarrel with you wa ahall aaae a difficulty la finding suf Octant grouSHla. An example of prophecy in Its legitl. mate function Is furnished by the Rev. Frederick W. Robertson, who preached I hasty marriages, and the hasty mar- a sermon In 1S52 In tendon in which nage has Increased the number of dl- he said that the world had tried to vorces. The chain has no end. But construct itself Into a family, first by It does not help the situation, the sword, second by an ecclesiastical It Is not easy to understand why tem. and. third, by the development some persons objm-t to publicity about of commerce. The first two had failed, their weddings. They are nothing to he declared, and the third was about I be ashamed of quite the contrary. to fail. He denied the power of self -1 Yet every license clerk and every ofli- blow it has dealt to the business of recruiting for vice, and the destruc tion of the profits of exploiters. The vicious "cadet" system has gone on the rocks. There Is no profit in it, as of old. It is no Knger practical to mislead the ignerant with tales of the attractiveness of a life of shameful though it is still doubtful whether had been badly treated, as he said they could be Induced to be bound byl whimsically that he had been when them quite so slavishly. It has long Howells paid him only twenty dollars vAn -vnnMn th.i ,a nunea of fmi I a no p-a for bin "old Mississippi" nine dress reform was quite out of the sketches which were published in the government. control of women. The classical I Atlantic. It seems clear that he was method of stimulating trade has been possessed all his life by the desire to to introduce new fashions befere gar- write whatever occurred to his excep- ments bought in the .preceding season tionally active mind, and that he put had been worn out. And because we as much of himself into his letters to live In an age of ready-made, it was his friends as he did into the articles auite Impossible for those who wished he wrote for publication to dress "sensibly" to do so. if the Letters that he wrote but never vogue happened to be otherwise. The I mailed are among the gems of the col When Pershing gets cold feet, When Billy Sunday prays for you. When Woodrow starts to cheat When Spreckels starts to Hooverize, When Teddy put wilt stay, When you look like George Washing ton You'll lick the U. S. A. When Sahara winds start freezin". When sky ain't sky no more, When the sun gets cold as Iceland, When three times six is four When the stars quit shinin', Willy, When apple trees grow hay. When Uncle Sam ain't worth a d m You'll lick the U. S. A. Democracy may be not quite so effi cient as autocracy when it comes to preparing for war, but it is yet to be demonstrated that people who have tasted it prefer any other brand of when John D. dies a pauper. When us folks is all dubs. When boys and girls stop spoonin' retailer was no more to blame than the ultimate "consumer." It is a curi ous fact that merchants who really believed that they were following pub lic demand were only following the dictates of the manufacturer. The chain of responsibility was endless; the effect always was the same a needless waste of clothing. ' J'A Looker On," writing in the Bos ton Pilot, which is published near the center of the textile industry, notes lection. Mr. Paine says that Twain often wrote on the spur of the mo ment, and then, after having freed his mind, suppressed what he had writ ten. It is a practice worth commend ing to a good many others. Among these unmailed letters are a dozen which reveal that Twain and General Grant, son of the President, planned a bogus correspondence about a benefit for the Robert Fulton Memorial Asso ciation, at which Twain was to be one Those young people who are plan ning to call off their dance early to save fuel should .cultivate some of the old-fashioned steps, which furnish plenty of exercise to keep one warm. When we make war with clubs When the moon elopes with Venus, When lambs with tigers play. When you've licked ev'ry Yankee lad You'll lick the U. S. A. Wouldn't it be a good idea for the style makers to decree that o'eralls are fashionable, and for their wearers to try to live up to their clothes until the war is over? The Bolsheviki are long on talk and short on effective administration. While they are planning a workless life for the proletariat, it is next to impossible to get food in Petrograd. The less a dollar will buy the mon we want one. How to Get Family Allowance. PORTLAND, Jan. 18. (To the Edi tor.) About one year ago my son, aged IS years, enlisted in the regular Army. Before enlisting he gave me Jo per month toward the support of my self and three other children, all younger than him, I being a wftlow. Since enlisting he has only been able to send $10 each month. I am told that the Government pays an additional 115 per month. To whom should I apply? a subscribe:. Write su: a nee. In K:ireau o Wai hingtcn, r War D. C. Riak Ai-