8 TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND. MATtCTI 3, 191S. (Hit Dirtrmri.ro FOBTLASD. OIIOOS. atfttara4 ml rrt'4 lor.oa) rsateffic aa sita4-e!e aia.I ma;!r. lnMuijiM rai.a ia'antly ta i4ni t p Mail T't. "aaaa? tiut.-t. aaa yaer . . . 1. r. fvl'lir Ini-"-!, I mBth4 ... T. 4r ! n-l-i. Ihraa intlt !; . a an .Jar tnr.uSl. aaa moo: A Ja. t, !! nwC 9an Itr. v )ir . Xt r. wi'fiAMt a.,a.'.ar. al snoa'he ... I :.. v. atuc aijr. aaa bm: .... w -". 4r .......... fjMtr. ana var ......... liJi;iaJHt r irt CemaO rarr. Hwt ana yar ....... 1 . ... m . 1 . . In.lu.ll AA. BMttth . J . r. wit imi 9 !. tbn wflRibt. .... 13 Ll V. WltAIUl UAt4T. aa BWRtk ...... .ai Maw ( luu-4 aoaioftira mar er 4f. iirsM aa paraal thf aa aatar lal fcaaa. lunM. 4a ar earra-y ere at efa rlak. aoatrma blilim ka loia. la- e.aSia cauatr ai acatai r kM 1 1 ta IS r- 1 mi: 1 ta 1 - J casta. M la lt ranu. l aa.e. 4 ceo 'a. - ta paa-a. a aaau. T4 la J pas, 4 taa la. IraraKa awel' on the Tuscanla. An hour after thi I greatest gain ever made and has added short-sighted military censor had put I mora to the wealth of the Island than on the lid. It waat wisely taken off by I any equal expenditure of funds at any loe Aajuiani-ueneraj. ana tne rosier i urn, iso account u taaen oc tne of military units was disclosed. I greater economic worth of a soberer There la a fiction that no one In people, but this, too, must be very Ores-on knowa where the Oregon f large. Guam Is fortunate In being l m troops are located: yet The Orego- I under the American flair, and In hav- it nlan has heard from several sources. I lng Roy C Smith for Its Governor. If in ways woicn II anows are win m- 1 v tM . tMl ii laiae WW VerTaa rj. Pa. lir-jn.aura .;lin. Sra Tar. Varraa a C la. aoeaa aukta. Chlcase; arrae aa a. Fr.a t'raaa baliJIa. Detrsll llail. t3 Harasl rat. wmm or thi asooi itid rr"- TKa aawtafad Paa la eacl'iatvair eeilt4 V 19 ia f r ftPUB :atl"a af a. I raws .a. t!cfiM cratlitad la II ar tat aharwwae cra-i- t la I.:. a apar. aoU aM tiia laJ aa4 A. l riM ( i.p-iMlf'lon af iaciai dl yati'haa braia fert alaa r--r I-UBTLAU. SC.XDAY. MARCH s. ISia tub croR-iiir. General March, chief of staff of the American Army, returns from France with the declaration that the press censorship la Its operation Is lamcnt able" and that he purposes to see what can be done to "Like the muzzle off. There ts extant a letter addressed ty Mr. Creel, chief of the Bureau of Information at Washington, written to an Oreffon Congressman la reply to a complaint by The Orenoclan that Its taff correspondent with the Ameri can formed, where certain units are: and . many others also know; and doubt 1 on .M ths first to be Informed waa the Kaiser. Well, what If the Kaiser knows? We have a pretty well-ma tured opinion that the Kaiser knows a treat deal about America s prepa rations for war; but that he does not know It all. If he knew more of the determination of America, and under stood better the vast scope of Its plana, and If he knew that, despite many serious mistakes, the purpose of America Is firm and the movement Into the war tremendous. It would be the worse for him and the better for America. A censorship Is necessary, and no patriotic citizen or newspaper would have It otherwise: but It should be a for no other reason than that these factors have enabled It to rid itself of the triplet economic pests rata, lg-ua- naa and Intoxicants. Judicious censorship, thoroughly un- T'L"". w" derstood and firmly and Impartially 'Jif -t administered There are certain mill- f'?" f ,wa tary plan, and facta which should not mcd men make Vood watchmen, be made public: but It must never be I .V. Tv. "TJ . "...V". ... k" JOBS rOB CBIPPLES. Solution of the problem of finding work for war cripples will be facili tated. In the coming readjustment of Industry, by able-bodied workers, in the opinion of students of the outlook. It Is suggested that those who have possession of all their limbs and facul ties owe a duty to their less fortunate fellows to refrain from learning the trades which can be filled as well by thoee who labor under disadvantage. It has been found most difficult of all to secure places for one-armed men. Even the blind, with both hands. are being provided rapidly with trades and the legless have hlch they can earn a living. If they care to master them. but there are not always enough jobs of this kind to go around. They are also efficient In tending certain types of machinery, and some of them who l l" ', ' , . ,, . " " velop high skill at mechanical trades. have wise reneralahlp. gallant con- . ,, ,ia,ioi forgotten that It ts the people's war, not the war of any nicer, or depart. ment. or class, and that It la Just as Important to have popular and en- duct and complete organization on the field. A good many clerical positions are open to the one-armed, also. The Gov ernment proposes to conduct schools for the education of cripples, and re- LR IUW AIX TAX. I lief for them will be contingent, in a The propaganda to procure from I measure, upon their willingness to do publio officials who are by law exempt 1 their part la their own reconstruction. xiut worx must do given mem alter been found feasible to utilize struc tural features to make the buildings Interesting. Structural features In clude door and window openings, chimneys and porches. The porch Is one of the concessions made to Ameri can taste. It Is not prominent In the English type at Port Sunlight, but is viewed as an Important part of the life of the American family. The case ment window has been adopted for hygienic reasons. Desire to encourage ventilation la strong, and the casement permits 100 per cent ventilation as compared with 60 per cent for the sliding window. Artistio effects, both exterior and Interior, are produced by window groupings. In which the trim Is carried around the entire opening. and by similar devices which do not add to the cost of the building. Value of attention to architectural detail lies in the permanency of the communities now being created, and In the example they furnish for the creation of similar housing groups In the future. Even under the pressure of war it Is desired that the building of "shack towns" shall be avoided. There la a utilitarian as well as an esthetic reason. It has been found that substantially built communities attract and retain a better grade of workmen, and that these men do bet ter work while they are employed. Proof that art has a definite utilitarian value ought to remove the last ob stacle to sane city planning every, where. frnm tha. Infim. lav a vnlnnl.r, A it- . -- v. w-""lona f f VSa nuaatlnna an a Ma-hnH lri amount they would be required to m.n , k. nr,Bd to -sk hiraaeIf pay. If they Had been placed oa the the future la whether the trade he Is ame tax basis as private citizens, la I considering la one that could be filled commendable, and timely, too. The I approximately as well by a cripple. If the mines and who began this fight fact that the example of voluntary I it la. he will avoid overcrowding Its for the mines which the expelled Co- aio,!itioruirv farces Is hampered I lvln WM et y candidate for Gov- ranks, and exercise his own wider lumbla University professor regards IX)RBAI-E AND ITS MEXES. Because the value of the Lorraine Iron and coal mines has been given as a reason for Germany's determination to hold Alsace and Lorraine and for France's determination to recover them. Professor Scott Nearlng sneers at the war as merely a fight for the lnes. With that phrase he won the applause of a recent Bolshevik meet lng In New York. Recital of the historic facts will show how much more Is Involved than ztecdleaaly both la getting legitimate news and la getting It out, wherela he says: Bat ava whtli DsTtnr a eaatral evar ttla caoaorahlp la Franc J am ramlilar wtta Ua aorliai. and 1 da know tnl lna carraaaandaa la "r'rmAca. accradUad aod tujMcraditad. ara aot kapl frum arums to aaaa. but aa Iha atbar baad ara siva a.anr laci:!:r. I him arito yoo thai it aaaal lot k. p tba Mopil ta Isaoraaca. and aai-t tram ta inbr of troopa. t&atr lo- caiina. aad ai&ar mi.ltarr aacraca. ao acrwtia la a.acad apoa a a-af.a xnaa. If rl w ul raa4 Iba artlc.a wntiaa by aocb maa aa Harria. lt-aoa and aortm Paltu.a. In tba Saturday JLvantas Foal, you wl.l fiod taal Ibaa m. a aad ba Iroub. wbatavar 4a avaryt.-ilaa aad writ ovarytblns. Tba aama bo;oa tru a-ttb racard to avary acbar aaa la Irraac. Soidiara ar aacour. ad I arlt lallar la lb aaaapapara. W aaar bava tbra llmaa tba Rualwr of cor- raapoad.ata a.:oad by attbar tba 'raacb r tnj.ian. aal thara la aa canaorablp at ail la taa aaaaa taat rsa kaaa baa sa t the plan. Indeed, it helpa Possibly the candidate for Governor, now hold ing a fat position, might not have thought of doing It If he had not been a candidate. There la nothing com. parable to the publio spirit of a can. didate. We have no Idea, of course, that the I officials who have hurried forward to pay an Income tax have neglected their duties to give to good causes heretofore. There Is and has been no law exempting them from the meral obligation to make contributions to the Ked Cross, the X. M. C A. and the like, or to subscribe for the various liberty loans. Doubtless ail the o fa cials who are so severely pained to No posaible fault can be found with I think that they need not pay the la the statements of Mr. Creel. In his I come tax have corrected the over. understanding of the censorship, and light of the Government la their own the American prera la. bcal iea, la gen- I way, and have more than done their era! harmony with the rulea for the I full duty aa volunteers In these good publication of free news matter and causes. .Ooubtlesa. It may seem just for the exclusion of certain other la trifle Impertinent, but Inasmuch as non-prtvtlcired matter, laid down by some of our public officials who are the Creel bureau. It U to be added I candidates, and who have painstak- that, so far aa arbitrary or authorita- tngly notified the tax collector to come tlve control by the Creel censorship around and see them, have told us goes. It does not exist for news origl- about It, they will also let ua know sating la America; but there Is a com- Just how much they have given the ptete military censorship over events I Ked Cross and the T. M. C A. and both la Great Britain and France, and I how large were their liberty loan pur. elsewhere la the war zone, and the I chases. American newspapers may receive I It will be fine If they all caa assure cabled reports and comment only I their constituents that they will be through grace of a uniformed critic. I Just as generoua as ever for such mentor and watchman, otherwise a I beneficences, even though they may censor. .Not many newspapers have I have assessed themselves for an ln ought. however, to violate the cen- I come tax. which, by the way, need; not eorshlp. actual or voluntary, and few I be Included la the official report of have beea out of harmony with Its I their campaign expenses. announced principles: but practically all have united In a proteat against various phases of Its operation. ernor, and that the other candidates I range of choice. So long as the mak-1 with such contempt. France began for Governor, or for re-election to I lng of cripples la a cart of war. these I the annexation of Lorraine from the various offices, are falling la line I victims ought to have first chance at Holy Roman Empire in the middle of does not detract from the merle of I least to earn their own living as a re- I the sixteenth century, and completed it ward for their sacrifice. GOVERNMENT MONOPOLY OF CAPITAL. The American people have traveled far since the days when any little group of men for the cost of lncor- flcatea could go into the money market In' 1766, but for centuries before that time the province had been French in language and civilization. In 1871 the people wished to remain citizens of France, not subjects of Germany, but because she had discovered that the country was rich in iron and coal and for capital to finance an enterprise without restraint by any authority whatever. When laws were first pro posed to prevent promoters from capi talizing everything up to the bright blue sky, there was a great outcry against any restraint on individual en terprise. It Is now proposed that no corporation, state or municipality shall bo permitted to offer securities for sale without consent of a Federal commis sion, and scarcely a murmur of pro test Is heard. Such Is the revolution of our mental attitude which war has caused. It Is conceded that all our resources In money as well as In everything else should be devoted to success in the war. All other things must be subor dinated to that end. and preference must be given to undertakings which senaa It. So great are the direct financial needs of the Government that even great corporations which must supply Its needs In material cannot go directly Into the money market to ob tain capital without paying exorbitant rates of Interest, which would enhance the cost of the war. Germany took the province against the will of Its inhabitants. In demanding return of Lorraine, together with Al sace, France merely seeks to take back her stolen citizens and the stolen mines. Germany wants to keep the mines la order to use their products in stealing other people and provinces In the same way. The Bolahevlkl, whose plaudits Pro fessor Nearlng won, have proclaimed the principle of self-determination of peoples. On that principle Lorraine belongs to France, for its people, ex cluding "German officials, soldiers and immigrants, are French, but this sham friend of liberty woujil leave them under the German yoke. He has the Impudence to Blander France In exer cise of that right of free speech for which he Is so jealous and which would be denied him in Germany. He should be deported to the land he seems to love better than that which gave him birth. Those best known for their military prowess had vaulting ambition, and some had greed for personal power, bnt no one spared himself, and all buoyed themselves with the Jelief, vain thoughit may have been, that the world wo'nld be better If the sys tems which they sought to establish should prevail. A good deal of the fundamental philosophy of the whole question is comprehended In a bit of verse In the readers of our boyhood days How bis was Alexander, Fa, That people called him sreatt It is true that it 'misses Alexander's conception of a great empire, and does slight credit to his plans for the development of trade intercourse throughout the world, and Ignores the fact that he broadened the outlook of his own people and made the Hellenic less provincial than he had ever been. But his Idea of a great empire was none the less than of an empire built on the Alexandrian model. Justinian ranks high among legislators, but as a codifier of laws rather than as the proponent of a system of righteous living. Impartial historians are con- much, but with the guarantee of the United States it is the safest form of investment conceivable. It need not wholly supplant in our ultimate finan cial life the spirit that seeks big en terprise, but it ought to constitute a "safety fund" in every man's strong box. The desire of every normal man is to avoid dependency; and the cold, inexorable statistics show that con servatism is a safer prop than luck in a vast proportion of Instances. The Peripterous. Perlpterooa A Structure Having Rows of Columns on All Sides. Dictionary. GERMAN NAMES OJf THE MAP. The pastime of eliminating German names from the maps still furnishes pleasure to the geographers of the allies. Berlin, O.. having changed its name to North Canton, "and Hutchin son, Kan., having decided on Funston, instead of Bismarck, as the name of one ofgfts streets, it is proposed by the more ambitious to abolish North Sea, known to sailors everywhere as the "German Ocean," and x British Ocean has been suggested in its place. Nord' See is the German name, and Mare Germanlcus the one given it by the Romans in a period when they S (Synopsis of preceding; synopses.) The OreKoniao, a great morning news paper, employs a distinguished literary architect to construct a peripterous. He does It. It has rows of columns oa east. west, north and south. The Peripterous becomes a Free Audito rium for the expression of incompetent. Ir relevant and immaterial opinion aei versa and anecdotes. thought it was a Erreater body of water lent. o creau xsapoieon wicn a em- tharl It has since Droved to be. The cere desire to make the world better Danes call It the Western Sea. which after his own fashion. And Charle- shows how much depends upon the uuigua uenves a certain amount ol i point of view. real glory rrom his patronage or sci- The Bl.ltlSn claim to the new name ence and the arts, which was lncl- i. baser! unon lpnrth of shoreland dental to his conquest of peoples who which from the Shetland Islands to difTered widely in their political tra- North Foreland is 875 miles, while ditions and in their own desires for thn rnmhinod mtnrals of all other self-expression. But people then, nol countries measure onlv S40 miles. But more man now. wantea to do upniiea the ultimate decision, like that of by force of arms. The world will manv other minor issues of the war. never get over its aversion to having nrobablv will be made on the western any special urana at xunur crammea I front. down its throat. Charlemagne s pat ronage of the scholars of his age, and the churches that Justinian built and MORE LABOR TO BUILD SHIPS. Napoleon's dreams of an agricultural I By this time every well-informed millennium probably will not be held American knows that ships are the to atone for the essential cruelty of first requisite to full participation of the methods they adopted to impress the United States in the war. We have their own personalities upon history, the men, the natural resources, the There are, as has been said, three I industries and the military and in- non-military names on the Camp I ventive genius, but these are of no Lewis list Lincoln, Edison and Shake- I effect until they reach the battle front speare. The greatness of these men I in France, ana 6hlps are needed to will not be questioned. Whether they take them there. We have enough redeem the lists on which they appear, I food to supply our allies as well as or whether those lists need redemp tion, it would not be the part of pru dence for us to attempt to decide The difficulty lies in the utter absence of a rule of measurement. Americans like to think that there was in Lin. ourselves, but ships are needed to take it to them. "Ships, ships, and yet more ships," is the burden of the speeches of British statesmen. The United States has enough lum ber, steel and machinery to build KAT9, IGCA.HA9 AND BOOZE. TTa4.a V.-It.. J 1 a f as The trouble appears to be mainly " l"c,unt a.urs too many censors, aad too few censor "I" w"or cl ur w,lvmvu ui ms racuic, uimid. Is turning his attention to ridding the territory of two other nuisances, rats and Iguanas. With the rat and Its destructive propensities the people of all countries are familiar. It Is not known to so many that the Iguana Is a kind of llxard. comnrisinr some fifty-five genera and more than 250 spec Ira, which lives largely on a vege table diet. It has been making heavy Inroads upon the crops of Guam, Our Governor of Guam began his campaign against the rats and Iguanas at a time which would have seemed to some leaa optimistic administrators to bo unfortultous. Without booze upon which to levy a tax. It might have seemed that the Island would be sadly put out for funds. That Is the way some folks reason It out. Not so the Governor, who takes a refresh Ingly broad view of the economics of the situation. For example, as re ported ta the Guam New Letter, he said: who know how to censor, even ac cording to a prescribed formula. There la la France the French censorship, and la Great Britain the British cen sorship, and la both countries the American censorship, and there ts also la America the Ameriraa voluntary censorship. General Fershing has con trol la France, and nobody has con trol la the United Sutra, but every body assumes to have It. Time and again publication of an article for bidden by on department has been prmittel by another. Time aad again Information oa the Index expurga tortus of the Creel bureau has been given out oy Secretary Daniels or Sec retary Baker or Srcretary Lansing, or somebody elsak There Is confusion. perplexity, contradiction, It has lately been relieved somewhat by a revuioa of tha Creel rules and by a better understanding la working ar rangement among the Washington bureaus. It has beta said, too, that greater liberties are to be given to accredlte-1 correspondents In the war Bone. But have restalts shown It? The Oreconlaa had yesterday a cabled account, through the Asso ciated Tress, of a lively .encounter be tween American and German forces on the battle front, wherela aa Amer ican Captain was killed. The la for mation was voorhsafed that he was a graduate of West Point, class of Sill. The name, however, was mlsa tnir, having been carefully deleted, no doubt, by some overxealous censor. What Is the result? There are prob ably a hundred, or more, graduates of West I'olnt. class of 1J17. and the families, friends and relatives of very one of them are thus thought lessly and needlessly thrown Into a panic of apprehension. No doubt the name will come along In due time. But why the alarm and anxiety thus caused among so many people? The Tuscanla was sunk about ( o'clock P. M. Tuesday, February S; and the news waa announced from Washington twenty-four hours later. The first Information was that more than a thousand American soldiers were lost or missing. But the mili tary censor notified the Inquiring and Insistent newspaper reporters that no names would be given out until com plete reports had been received, and also that nothing would be dlvulcrd as to the military units aboard the ship. The censor appeared to have a notion that he would thus spare Biany -jwople unnecessary worry. But the first consequence, of course, was that every person In the United States who did not know the exact where abouts of a son. or brother, or father, la the service, but who knew that he was either oa his way to France, or about to leave, was thus to be put vpoo notice that the soldier la whom he or she was most Interested may have bee'n drowned on the Tuscanla. Where hundreds may have been given uneasiness, or even outfight apprehen sion by the facts, so far as known, thousands upon thousands were de ld the relief that might well have been afforded them If they had beea glvaa the opportunity to assure them selves that the company to which any certain soldier had belonged was sot Taa great Joea af revaaaa la do to chaaaee la m liquor law. Ooa-thlrd of in reveau or la laiaad waa derived form arly from tba llooor taa. Tbie haa arad a.:y fat, .a off aad wiu la um diaappaear entirety, irui la a aardsblp in tha matter ei administration, out It la la ether re spaets a distinct yala for lha Island. The money that would have beea paid la taxes la still la tbe Islaad. la addition to the mac a lers.r amount taat wauia have baa speal lor liquor. So it has been found necessary to levy new taxes. In order to complete the rat campaign. But "though we have lost In revenue, we have gained In wealth, and we caa now afford the special tax that will be necessary." Ia other words. It is not necessary to sell a man several dollars' worth of booze In order to extract a compara tively few cents to be devoted to rat extermination or some other benefi cent purpose without apprising him of the fact that he Is being taxed. The frank, open and direct tax finds the people with money la hand to pay it, and no doubt the time will come when the people of Guam will look back at the old custom of alcohol-coated taxa tion and wonder why they ever toler ated It. The Ingenious plan has been adopted of taxing the people "one rat per an num for every dollar's worth of su burban property at Its assessed valua tion. To obviate the expense and compilation of tbe elaborate book keeping system that otherwise would be required, the tax Is commuted Into a money value of 2 cents a rat. which ! la subject to Immediate refund on presentation of the rats, without re gard to the number presented by any Individual. Thus the expenditure ts practically nothing, for the total amount goes back at once to the peo ple, "who," says the Governor, "thus have all they had before, leas the rats." The bounty on Iguanas ranges from 5 to 15 cents, according to size, and an arrangement haa been made to sell the skins of the larger ones In Japan, thus adding to the Island reve nues. Perhaps some day similar dis position will be made of the rat skina. In the sixteen months ended with December. 77.(7. rats and H.J71 Iguanas were destroyed. The ridding WHAT IS GREATNESS? "The leisure hours of a soldier's Therefore the itf0 writes a correspondent of The uovernment must icno. tneni its creoit, 0resonian at CamJ) Lewis, "often moadera?.r.nrereilaVe " P- many exchange, of opinion on There follow twin schemes of Gov- Breatness or men tnrougnout all emment control over capital. A com- history." As a result of such a dis mission haa been established without I cussion at Camp Lewis, three young the consent of which no securities ex- I men have prepared lists of five names ccedlng lioo.ooo, other than those or each, arbitration of which is Invited. trie isovernmeni may oe oucreu iui sale. A corporation financed and di rected by the Government Is to make loans to persons and corporations en gaged lb activities essential to the war. By these means those who help di rectly la providing material for war are assured capital on about the same terms as the Government borrows, and those who help Indirectly are per mitted to borrow on the best terms which they can obtain, but all others are shut out. Ia adopting these measures the Government risks grave abuse, but that Is one of the unavoidable risks of war. How great that risk is may be Inferred from the Hog Island shipyard scandal. The plant is being erected by a private corporation with money supplied by the Shipping Board, and was supposed to be under such rigid Inspection that the estimated cost of about 121,000,000 could not be ex ceeded and that no money could be misapplied, but the cost threatens to be two or three times that sum, work haa been delayed and there la talk of padded payrolls. The risk is much less with concerns to which loans are made, but vigilance will be needed to prevent waste of money so easily ob tained and to Insure repayment. Only a general raising of the stand ard of public Integrity will cause many citizens to apply the same standard of honesty to their dealings with the Government as they practice with each other. That should be a valuable by product of the general stimulus which the war has given to the sense of pub lic duty. It Is desired that greatness In its most liberal Interpretation" shall be considered, and It is specifically stated that by common consent Christ has been omitted, because "all agree that he ia first-' The debaters also solicit consideration of the men who have "covered the largest field" la making a choice. Then follow the lists of names. "A. L." puts Alexander first, then Charle. magne, and after him Justinian, Na. poleon and Julius Caesar, In the order named. "W. R. B." names Justinian first, Caesar second and then Charle. magne, Abraham Lincoln and Thomas A. Edison. "W. R. W." heads his list with Napoleon, then gives place to Shakespeare, and follows with Edison, Justinian and Lincoln. Justinian alone finds a placA on all three lists. Alexander the Great and Shakespeare are the only ones to receive only a vote apiece. Charlemagne, Napoleon, Caesar, Lincoln and Edison stand equal in votes, although allowance for their relative prominence in each list gives Charlemagne and Napoleon the lead and puts Lincoln at the bottom. There is a slight advantage in favor of Julius Caesar over Thomas A. Edi son. The subject Is Interesting because It raises the entire question, what con stitutes true greatness? Emerson has given us a guide by saying that "great men are they who see that the spirit ual is stronger than any material force: that thought rules the world. And Milton helped a good many men to put their own thoughts into words when he said that "he alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with suitable majesty when they have been done." He has fortunately illuminated this with a definition of what "great things" are. They are, he says, only those "which tend to render life more happy, which increase the innocent HOCSLNQ WORKMEN. Appropriation by Congress of $35,- 000,000 to finance the construction of homes for workmen in large indus trial centers has given American architects an opportunity which they long have sought to plan community development In which It could be demonstrated that speed In building Is comforts and enjoyments of existence, not Incompatible with regard for the I or which pave the way to a future esthetic side. It Is recognized that state of blisa more permanent and wails and a roof alone do not const!- I more pure.' tute a satisfying home. Families who It is one of the enduring merits of are desired as permanent residents I such subjects of debate as the relative are Influenced by the artistic appear- greatness of men that they furnish ance not only of the house In which material for agreeable and Intellectual they live, but of the entire group. conversation without any danger that One of the features of the exhibit the subject ever will be exhausted. of the Architectural League held re- I The Emersonian definition would seem cently In New York was a series of I to put greatness upon a higher plane plans and models of a typical Indus-1 than that of Milton, for It takes Re trial village projected by the mer-! count of the value of spiritual force. chants of a Pennsylvania Industrial in its broadest conception. Of those town which has been greatly expanded who accept literally Milton's interpre wlrhln a year by demands for a large tation of great things as those which output of finished war material. The "increase the Innocent enjoyments and builders have been guided by the ex- comforts of existence," there in ex perience of English promoters of si ail- tably will be some who will argue that lar enterprises, and notably by the enjoyment and comfort are not the example of Port Sunlight, near Liver- I chief ends of man. This will always pool, which la now regarded as a be a vale of tears to those who view classic In Industrial village architec- the present life as a period of prepa- ture. The result has been to create ration, who rejoice in the spiritual a town resembling an English town benefits of suffering and who accept la many particulars, but with certain martyrdom as a crown. We doubt changes as concessions to American whether any of the eight men named taste. designated on the three lists submit- It Is particularly Interesting to I ted by the correspondent cherished architects to note that although de-1 any such ambition for themselves. mands for economy have dictated the None, so far as we are aware, set omission of unnecessary exterior nrna. I much store bv either the innocent en. of the Island of the J cats la the I mentation. o far as possible. It has Joymeats or the comforts of exiatencej coin something very nearly akin to many more ships than are now on the the spark of divinity. It is certain ways. The sole limit on production is that he was one of those "who see lack of labor. The testimony of all that the spiritual is stronger than any I the officials in charge of the Govern material force." But they would not ment shipbuilding programme was to decry the genius of Edison, who has the same effect that further contracts added so much to the comforts of ex- I for ships were not let because labor istence, or that of Shakespeare, who I was not available to man more yards is still incomparable in his own pe- I and that to begin work on more ships culiar field. I would only delay completion of those There Is a kind of greatness which already under construction without is estimated by the hold it takes upon adding to the tonnage afloat in time the imaginations of men, rather than for use in the war. upon its influence, beneficent or other- Hence it is the patriotic duty of wise.upon the material world. "Thever- I every man who has skill useful in diet of mankind," says a philosopher shipbuilding to register for such work, whose name has escaped us, "awards subject to call whenever he is needed, the highest distinction, not to prudent and it is the duty of everybody who mediocrity that shuns the chances of knows of such a man to urge that he failure and leaves no lasting mark, register. Labor Is the one thing lack- but to the eager soul that grandly lng to speed up and. increase produc dares, mightily achieves and holds the tion of ships. hearts of millions amidst his ruin and I By doing this, citizens of Oregon and theirs." By any of the classic deflni- of Portland will render a service not tions of greatness which we have only to their country, but to their state cited the list could be indefinitely ex- and city. When men are available for tended. It is a pity that Winter is a second and third shift, ships now over. It would make a fine subject building can be hurried to completion for debate in every college and can- and contracts will be let for more tonment and camp and field In the land- ships to occupy the ways. When men are available not only for existing ways and yards but for new ones, ships will be ordered from men who stand ready to build new ways and new yards. The present limit to the expansion of the industry is the limit to the supply of labor. SAFE EN-VESTMENTS AND OLD AGE. In order to emphasize as strongly as possible the value of the Government bond with its assurance of regular payment of interest, by comparison with nthAr InvMrmonte. xvViich nrnmisA "biff returns." but keep the promise MaJr F- H- Albee- of the United only part of the time, the American States Medical Reserve Corps, says Bankers' Association has prepared a tflat mankind in the long run will be striking summary of the financial life greatly benefited by the discoveries in history of several thousand men of reconstruction treatment 01 wounueu more than average business capacity, made in the present war. While The list excludes the notoriously H mav ta0 tne Peoples many years hnfrTooa fr,o inzv nnri rha iinamhi. to recuperate, he believes that the tlous, and deals with men of good earning, capacity who desire to get ahead in the world. One hundred of these men are enu merated at the age of 25. Ten years later five have died. Of the remain der, at the age of 35, ten are wealthy. ten are In "good circumstances. forty have moderate means and thirty- five have saved nothing. effect of this new knowledge will be folt for a thousand years. The most important development, from the point of . view of the victims of Industrial accidents, has been the substitution of appropriate physical tasks in a laboratory workshop for manipula tion by special apparatus The pas sive exercises were found to fix the attention of the patient upon his dis- At the age of 45 sixteen have died, abilities, whereas the work takes him three are wealthy, sixty-five are self- ut OI nimsen as ne Decomes more supporting but without resources, and and more eager to master it, and he The Department of Scientific Investi gation has secured the services of Dr. Josh Allguyer. the well-known savant, to head an expedition into the remote sartorial past. Dr. Allguyer sends his first report from Astoria, but it is not exactly what was expected. Probably the good doctor, who is a little hard of hearing, understood the Department, when It gave its instructions, to say "crinoline age" when "pliocene age" was the term used. However, the De partment cannot afford to throw away the doctor's material, as he Is a high priced man. ASTORIA, Or, March 1. (To the Per ipterous Censor.) Herewith I hand you a short treatise covering a long period of time and incidentally the human form divine partially. If my memory is not faulty, along about A. D. I860, Just prior to .the Civil War, wom en's wearing apparel waa very differ ent from that seen at the present time. Then her gowns were made with a high collar, extending close up under her dimpled chin, trimmed with a ruf fle, waspish waists, immense skirt (I think it was called a hoop-skirt) 9 feet 3 inches in. diameter, 27 feet 9 Inches in circumference. We get the dimensions by the use of the Infinitesimal Calcu lus, same as used by Newton and Lieb nitz when they wanted to get at things like the fourth dimension, the Irreduc ible minimum, the ultimate maximum, etc I had no intention of getting off the trail of the skirt, and will endeavor to stick to it closely. The split skirt had no trail, but it had a full visible waist and is much in evidence yet It seems to have dis placed the V-neck end peekaboo al most entirely. The bustle was intro duced .to posterity about two decades after the Civil War. I am not prepared to make anything Ilka a detailed de scription of it. All I can say of it is that it was a posterior .adjunct, capable of exaggerated effect As to lingerie. In legal parlance I confess my evidence would be imma terial, irrelevant and incompetent; tha curtain drops, the bewitching vision fades. We need not much concern our selves about such things. What lovely woman wants she will have, don't you think? We know she will, and has. ever since the Fig-Leaf Episode. JOSH ALLGUYER,hD., LLD. Addendum: Red. white and blue hos iery was worn with the spilt skirt, and so far as my observation went, it waa not gartered below the knees. Honl- soit-qui-mal-y-pense, E pluribua unum, sic-em-tlge. sixteen are no longer self-supporting. Then, as life progresses, riches con tinue to take wings. One man, at the age of 65, has become very wealthy; three are in good circumstances, forty- six are self-supporting but without means, and thirty are dependent on relatives or on charity. Twenty have j died at this age, some of them in de pendent circumstances. uses the detective memoer uncon sciously without flinching from what would .otherwise be discomfort. Dr, Albce thinks that the fact that we are at war should not blind us to the fact that German surgeons were first to see the value of this system. Austria has bowed to the will of Germany and reconsidered her deter. The proportion of those still living mination not to join in the attack on who are dependent on others Increases I Russia, which clinches the opinion rapidly in the subsequent years. Sixty- heretofore prevailing in most quar- four are still alive at the age of 65, ters that Austria is reduced to a state but fifty-four of these are not self- I of vassalage from which only a vie supporting. Fifty years from the be- tory of the allies can rescue her. ginning of the count, sixty-three are dead, of whom sixty left no estate. The alleged theosophist who claims and thirty-rour or tne tnirty-seven iiv- exemption on .the ground that 100 lng are dependent, of whom 95 per nersons are dependent upon him for cent win not nave sumcieni means to spiritual advice is Interesting chiefly defray funeral expenses. aa a curiosity. The excuse is not as This constant decrease In the pro- remarkable as the state of mind which portion of men of even moderate thought that any one would accept it means as the years pass is attributable as valid. to the fortunes of business and the quest tor greater returns on an invest- winter wheat dolnff weU and ment than are compatible with abso- tTin ...,. of SDrinir wheat mounting lute safety. The gambling spirit per- outi0ok for our allies brightens per sists, even though blue sky laws are ceptlblyi but stay-at-homes needn't eiiaciou lu -' ,." V", think they are going to be turned yruic.. invBOLuia loose ia the granary yet awhile. gigantic frauds as the South Sea bub ble and the Mississippi scheme of John Law in the early part of the eighteenth century have, perhaps, been made im possible of repetition, but ordinary business still has its ups and downs. The statistics prepared by the Bank- era AOOUUttUUU AClAbO Ll.il.il .v r,,.-l I 1 . , 1. iV1n 71 'rL V, left that la free, since it has come to First we need inland waterways, and when we get them we have no barges to put on them. Wouldn't it be a pleasant world if everything could be finished together and on time just once? their protection, who have more than average ability to look out for them selves, and who accept their risks with their eyes open. But these same figures show that If all of these men had pursued a more conservative course from the begin ning, as to the disposition of at least part of their earlier accumulations, they would have been much more prosperous, considered as a whole. The Government bond and the land mort gage have not figured to a sufficiently large extent in their calculations. Four, five and six per cent have seemed un attractive In early and middle life. Later these men, living upon the bounty of relatives and the charity of the community, have a different view, but it Is then too late." The lesson of the statistics is ob vious at a time when the Government is offering thrift stamps, savings cer tificates and bonds for Investment to people of small, as well as average. mean 3, x our. per. ficat may, te the point where even .a man with a pass to the movies must pay a war tax on it. Now that we are being urged to eat bananas as a substitute for other foods, it is almost a cinch that ba nanas are also due for a rise in price. A proposal to give Siberia outright to the Japanese would not be without popular support at this stage of the game. The man "with a vacant lot and no time to plant can do his bit by lend ing the land to some one who can use it- March came In like a lamb this year, and it will be all right with the farmers if it will go out the same way. Even the hopyards are being turned Into wax. gardens this season, Major Bleeder on Spy Hunt. Somewhere north of Judklns Point and south of Skinner's Butte, March 1. (To the Architect.) Major Bill Bleeder was In from Long Tom yesterday and your correspondent, after dodging him all forenoon, finally secured an inter view with him. As the full typewrit ten interview Major Bleeder furnished was too long, same has been condensed. The Major, who is a cousin of Pancho Villa, the great Mexican strategist, and who has studied the situation here on the Coast very thoroughly while cam paigning with his famous relative, la of the firm opinion that Oregon Is In grave danger of being overwhelmed and captured by Germans, making an at tack, not from the outside, but from the inside. The first step in this fiendish scheme was taken, he says, last Summer, when he says it will be remembered (and no doubt It will now that he mentions it; that several suspicious and unknown parties of men of Teutonin cast of lunch basket were observed prowling about Mount Hood. Fragments of pretzel were found by guides in unfrequented places and once a dill pickle was seen sliding across the face of a glacier. No doubt exists in Major Bleeder's mind that at that time the great mountain was tunneled from some remote spot and vast quantities of chemicals and ex plosives stored in this subterranean chamber, sufficient when the appointed time comes to blow off the top of the peak and produce a tremendous erup tion or series of eruptions which will destroy the city of Portland and Intimi date the citizenry of that whole section. In the meantime large numbers of German reservists have been slipping Into the country camouflaged as Irish men with green whiskers and clay pipes or Swedes with loggers' boots and boxes of snuff. The Major himself saw a suspicious character on the train the last time he went to- Portland. This person aroused the Major's suspicions by the English he used in replying to the peanut butcher, and for the rest of the Journey our military friend gave him close attention. Although the stranerer carried on a conversation with a fellow passenger almost constantly for two hours the Major, who Is quite a purist himself, detected not a single error of grammar or diction. 'He is con fident this record could not have been made by anyone less than a German officer of high rank, probably one of the rankest. To resume. The erup tions of Mount Hood the invaders will make use of to manufacture large quantities of deadly gas with which to repel attacks. This Is a frightful pic-, ture. but Major Bleeder believes he is justified in painting it if by eo doing he may avoid the catastrophe. He is now busily engaged in selling stock in" a company which he has fathered which will manufacture gas masks so that the population of this fair commonwealth may be protected In the hour of need. He also recommends the formation of a volunteer body of detectives to ferret out and expose all claiming to be Irish who are not Irish or who are excessive ly Irish and all Swedes who say John son instead of Yonson. If this Interview Is printed the Major will likely have another ready soon in fact, it is probably ready now, since he is quite forehanded in such matters. E. PLURIBUS ONION. Furthermore and moreover, she's go-, lag away. Mara. A trip to Mars I'll have to take. Because this world's a grand old faket The cops down here are always bent On making us poor souls repent. It's me for Mars up In the sky Goodby, old earth, goodby. In Mars the streets are curbed with gold And there it's neither hot nor cold. Some parts are wet and some are dry. So then it's mo for Mars, up high. This earth's too bum a place for sne A better world I'm bound to see! Why, up in Mars the grub Is cheap And there you have long hours to sleep! No shrieking whistles wreck your nerve Nor summon you some man to eerve; Then what's the use of living here. When Mars looms up so very near? ril kick this dust from oft my feet. And hie away to Mars' Main Street; Up there, serenely In the sky. I'll watch you earth-worms crawling by. un, yes, i n go witnout on sign. For I'm cure giad to eay 'moodby'!