THE SUXD AT OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND. NOVEMBER 24, 1918. rOBTUXD. OREGON. Entfr-d at Portland (Oregon) Postoffice as s .-ord-etaM mail matter. Subscription rales Invariably la advance: (By Mall.) Tal!r, Sunday Inr:udd. one year ......I.O' Tiy. Sunday Included, six months 4--' Iaily. Sunday Included, three months. ... --I'-" ally. bunday included, one month ..... .75 6 no 3.:.- 1.0 a. so .sa 7 M l.ns .6." raily. without Sunday, one year Ially. without Sunday, tlx months .. 1'aily. without Sunday, one month .. AVeekly. one year Sunday, one year . ............ bunday and Weekly (By Carrier.) IaJ!y. Sunday Included, one year .... Iatly. Sunday included, one month .. Paity. Sunday Included, three months Iaiiy. without Sunday, one year . . . . , laity. without Sunday, three months Xlaiiy, without Sunday, one month . . . How to Remit Send DoatoffiSe- money or der, express or personal check on your local hank, stamps, coin or currency are at own er's risk. Give postoffice address -In full, in cluding county and state. Fiatan Kate. IS to I paces. 1 cent: 18 lo .. pages, u cents: 34 to 4-' pases. 3 cents do to paxes. 4 cents: G- to iti pases. cents: "S to oi pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Kaatera BnineM Offl Verree A Conk Jin, urunswlck building. New York; Verree Conkllu. Sieger building. Chicago: Verree Conklln. Free Press buildlna. Detroit. Mich. eo Francisco representative. R. J. Bidwell. which ia temporary at most. It is a question whether for the long, steady- pull there shall be trained leaders and United States is potentially- the most powerful support of the new code of international law to be framed at Ver educated workers for the task. Stu-1 sallies, but its strength must be de- dents are asking; now, "What shall 1 1 veloped in order to command respect do?" -and the more quickly the an-1 from unruly nations. Because the swer is ready for them the better it j British fleet was ready to 'go to sea will be for America and for the world. I on the instant, the German fleet was shut in and the great initial victory OCR IMPOVERISHED CABINET Ju"es was won n victory wnicii Tl. , . , in its far-reaching- effects over- , t,m!rjn-PeI,,V ,n!,h 5aH 'shadowed all of the Allies- victories on r lv. -1 ' . u land and rendered the German vie MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively enti. tied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news punusneu herein. Ail rights of republication of special dis- pai:nes nerein are also reserved. PORTLAND. SlJiDAY. NOV.I 4, 1918. AX EDUCATIONAL CRISIS. The approximate end of the war has fastened a condition which easily may prove to be a crisis in American edu cational affairs. This is being ob served in all schools, but in particular in the colleges which were chosen as scats of the Students' Army Training corps, me last-named organization, although it is to be continued for the present, is undergoing visible signs of disintegration. "It will be practically impossible, for one thing, to maintain the military spirit with which it was imbued when every student was prospective officer in our Army over seas. As for the academic branches, they already are going back to the old ways. The students may or may not be continued indefinitely upon the payroll of the .Nation: the point is Immaterial by comparison with the 4 confusion now prevailing and which is an enemy of consistent study with a prime purpose in view. These young men who had set out to educate them selves for the service of their country suddenly find themselves adrift. The sooner they are brought down out of the air the better it will be for every one concerned. The S. A. T. C. was an ambitious scheme. It is not disparaging its originators to say that its introduction was attended by mistakes of omission and commission. We expect some waste In war. It is not surprising to be told that it attempted to deal with students in classes which were enor mously too large, or that its sudden intrusion into the orderly scheme of the average university produced pro found confusion. Doubtless the cur riculum, the dormitory facilities and other matters would . have adjusted themselves gradually as time ran on The whole plan, in any event, would have possessed the decided advantage of furnishing a high incentive for serious work. The demands of pa triotism in war time, the glamor of the military side, were mental and moral stimuli of a high order. There was a definite object to bo gained, something which every student might visualize for which to prepare him self. Perhaps not the smallest part of the success of the plan so far as it has gone has been due to the cir cumstance that responsibility for choosing the course of study and ap praising the fitness of students was assumed by the Government. There was to have been, at least in theory, a process of fitting the square and round pegs to their corresponding square and round holes. This in it self had relieved students and parents of an onerous task. The situation bad been accepted cheerfully. But the students are once more adrift upon an uncharted sea. De prived of their purpose to serve their country in the very practical field of war, they are confronted with the ne cessity for making a new - decision. Shall they return to their pre-war tasks? What courses shall they take? tfor what future shall they prepare themselves? To what extent is the cultural going to fit into the coming cheme? Are we going to. have a riot of industrialism, in which men will be judged chiefly or only by their power to produce food and to fabricate "use ful" commodities? And if the latter, shall they turn to chemistry, or engi neering, or foreign trade? It must have been observed by this time that young men are asking themselves, in deeper earnestness than they have ever done before, what they ought to do to make themselves able to bear their share of the burden of their own generation. The war has sobered many minds. Boys have become men overnight The experience of the past nineteen months lias matured us greatly. It seems al most as if there were no happy-go-lucky lads of 16 or thereabouts any more. It would not be accurate to say that there is a sense of foreboding, but there is a feeling of uncertainty, and of appreciation that it means more to take the right or the wrong step than it has meant in less eventful days. Professors are more frequent!) called upon for serious advice. Youth is in a mood to qualify itself and un derstands that the times call for trained men. The outlook becomes less and less parochial. We are ac quiring a broader" social viewpoint. The war has made us understand the , value of service, as it will put a pre mium on the doers of deeds, and as it may cast the mere theorists and preachers of homilies into the rubbish heap. The moment is ripe psychologically to take advantage of the situation thus created. It may mean a good deal of scrapping of old systems, but it would be well to avoid lost motion so far as possible In taking up the slack. If the 8. A. T. C. is to be continued in some form, it ought to be removed from the atmosphere of uncertainty without de lay, and the usual work of the col leges at least should be placed upon an enduring basis. It may be that we shall see fit to revise the work of the lower grades to meet the needs of those who do not intend to seek higher education in the universities. The question will recur now whether the grammar and high schools ought to continue to be way stations, or re vised in accordance with a new idea that they represent all the schooling that a vast majority of young men and women ever will acquire. This issue remains undetermined, and it is important that some action shall be taken before interest is lost again. - The question is broader than that of demobilization and readjustment. -K- .i . iu.nu ana renaerea me uerman vic denied the National prerogative of . , , ... looking for a deeper motive for re- i" ' 7 c. f oecisive resuiu una tirpmonf rVnm t.K r" - efc! J United states needs suh Navy, as " . " "B " """' ready as was the British in July, 1914 expressed in the formal letter of w. . v., We need a great Navy also to pro- rpi. . .. . , , I ici.t vui iasi-iuwiujs mei u-uaui ma.1 me Z ":.T,t." 71.7 . " and our fast-expanding foreign com merce. British shipping and com merce have grown because the British navy followed and guarded them on every sea and inspired respect for the nation in every port. The American resignation. are plausible,, without doubt. Living expenses have vastly increased in Washington, and abinet salaries re main at the old figure. Other Cabinet members have found the living prob- . . ... . uaiiuu in cvcjv uuiu Ilia AU1CI1UIU Iem severe in normal times. It was vti , ji,i- . . ... ., . . I .Nation nas won an enviable place in but recently that Mr. Brvan. then I .. . . . .... . . but recently that Mr. Bryan, then Secretary of State, augmented his sal ary-with pay as a Chautauqua lec the esteem and trust of the world, but it will fortify this position among the well disposed if backed by a show ol ll'iRr01"11 Bom den-ee f sufficient force to restrain the ill uccaau;. jlui mcie me viuei mem bers of the President's Cabinet who do not enjoy independent means, yet seem to exist somehow and keep up their necessary social obligations. We ! disposed. THE PRESIDENT AS PEACEMAKER. It is to be presumed that the Presi- do not recall that there is among them I dent read and considered deeply the a single W anamaker, or one who has I opinions of the newspapers canvassed married great, wealth," like John Hay. I by the New York Times on the subject If there is a deeper motive and it of his going to France. Having read concerns political ambition, one must I and considered deeply, the President, admire the astuteness of Mr. McAdoo. I as usual, decided to adopt his own He retires still in the good graces of judgment. the Administration and his party. He I The opinions quoted by the Times has successfully directed the financ-1 were given prior to the President's ing of a great war. He has converted I decision. He was at that time merely the pooled railroads of the country I considering personal participation in into an efficient wartime machine. the peace conference. Of the journals But it is obvious that in all his activ- I that were other than noncomittal ities he has had behind him a united I nineteen opposed his participation and people, ready to sacrifice or bear bur- I ten approved dens in behalf of a great purpose. I The reasons of the opponents do not In the culinary art there is no such I impress one strongly. There is the thing as a successful unscrambling of I matter of breaking time-honored eggs. The practical politician knows precedent. No President has ever that the equivalent is true in govern- crossed the Atlantic while in- office. mental affairs. The public that sub- I Most precedents are founded on good mitted to higher railroad rates and I and sufficient reasons. Once a jour- curtailed service as a , war measure I ney of this kind would have been ill is quite likely to become restive under I advised. It was a long and somewhat the same conditions in days of peace. I perilous voyage in those early days of But, whether there shall now be re- the Nation when Presidential prece- adjustment or no readjustment, the I dents were formed. Communication head of the railway institution cannot I was uncertain and long on the way. proceed without treading on some- It would then have been a virtual re- one's toes. I tirement from office. Today the Likewise, in the flush of patriotism, President would be but very little less sacrifice of money for war taxes does in touch with Washington at Ver- not rest heavily upon the public. But sailles than at Portland, Or. There is let war taxes be continued long into nothing sacred about a precedent as the era of peace and the necessity such. When the reason lor it no longer therefor needs a vast amount of ex-1 exists there is not any serious argu- plaining and encounters a great deal I ment for observing it. f grumbling. ! The further objection that domestic Mr. McAdoo is at the zenith of his Issues, require his attention crumble career as a Cabinet officer. His skill, I under the same analysis, .and there is is earnestness and his wonderful in- I left only the suggestion that the Presi dustry have earned for him an out-1 dent will outrank the other members standing reputation. If he could ac- of the conference. But American del uire the same success during recon- legates, if they rank at all, must either struction and reorganization he would I outrank or underrank the peace dele exhibit elements of greatness. But it I gates from other countries. The United is doubtful if any man, however in-1 States, for example, has no Premier, herently great, could come out of the It is but journalistic fiction so to term later period with a large degree of I the Secretary of State. His functions personal popularity. He who has an I are. not those of a European Premier. ambition to become President may I And all matters of rank in a democ well break the bonds of office in such I racy are more or less fiction. The rcumstances and rest for a while I Presidential ideal is one whose quali under the laurels of a hard-earned I ties of leadership are admitted, one reputation. I whom the people revere and in whom But deeper motives, as already in-1 they have confidence. The President dicated, are matters of speculation. I was but yesterday a private citizen We enjoy the prerogative of discussing! tomorrow he will be that again. them and now turn cheerfully to the But it is not to be denied that the next page of current history with the opinions of the President at the peace lingering hope that the other mem- table would be given greater weight bers of the Cabinet are not so hard I than like opinions expressed by dele greatly in demand in the war, as stated themselves recognize this , when the to be heard from again, and pre- by an authority on the question, was ward reaches the age of dismission, sumably was lost at sea. that "they can go where it is imprac- It is significant that upon their de- Followed a few years in which it ticable for motorcars to penetrate." parture, institutions almost invariably was believed that the "curse of the The reason why they hold up in num- seek to secure for them employment Hapsburgs" had run its course, but bers despite greatly increasing use of including the protection .of homes, so finally the Duchess d'Alcenon, the the automobile seems to be the same, that the immature citizen may start Emperor's sister-in-law, - was burned The automobile and the motor truck in the outside world under favorable to death in a charity bazaar fire in have created a big field of their own circumstances. Such official arrange- Paris. Soon after tha Emperor's without displacing a single horse. I ments, as the report says, are a true I granddaughter eloped from her royal form of child-placing in families. husband and lived with an army of- - The issue is made timely by the ficer, and, to add to the unhappy double inroads of the recent influenza ruler's cup of woe, the Empress, be- epidemic and the war. Of the twain, I lovea above all others by Francis up that they are suffering. POR A STRONG AMERICAV NATT. Secretary Daniels' request to Con- gates less representative of the whole American people. If the United States sought indemnities or territory, or any material gain whatever because of its participation in the war, any policy nrocu - mitkAplh, 4. V. , , ; l .1 -1 I I'd. I l. f. Ill " "V" J ""I 011 that might be construed as a desire .ZT hsen t . e",1Bhtenment to dominate the conference would be k, h"latS. J Wfr haTa ill advised. But we ask nothing, want fiiirf with D!f lk.i nothing material. filled with the pacifist theories of W. J. Bryan. Mr. Daniels' reversal of mental attitude began with the disap pearance of his political mentor from V, Pokln.l -J r .l : j V v T : " v '. y: conqueror. It will be conscious of wM mem-u uy conunuance oi hfc b t d wm toward Briton, elma!?,rUbraarine raTTaEeS and.by th,e Frenchman, Italian or other associat- ;r:h V--.- ed nationality. The stronger its rep- The United States will enter the con ference without jealousy or overpow ering desire for revenge. It will be devoid of the natural rapacity of the evident when he proposes a big Navy in face of the fact that victory is won. that the U-boats are being surrendered to the allies and that no new danger seems to darken -the horizon. The head of the Navy Department at the timewhen the United States entered the war must have been im pressed with the necessity of prepared- resentation the harder its brake upon any movement for other than exact justice. We have fought for a lasting peace and for the permanent safety of free peoples. That we must assure. It is not inconceivable that there will be conflict of interests among the allies that would menace the ideal for which ness to exert immediately superior . w ,v,f,, v. 9 I W r? 1UUKUU T C3 vail Lll s IX sa. Jiv viih- nAWAP of GAO Tt vroa Vita r ntw n I & 0 I., r , " ,,. er mediator among the allies them- vide means of not only protecting our coasts but of making the way safe for a great American Army and a great fleet of supply ships to go to Europe, and for other ships to bring war mate selves than President Wilson. MORE HORSES THAN" EVER. The figures of the Government Sta- rial from all parts of the world to this tistical Abstract rise to confound the country. He lacked those means, and prophets who predicted that the horse was forced to rely on the British navy, would disappear before the advance with some aid from the allies, to make I of motor transportation. Neither in good our deficiencies. Our ships were actual numbers, nor in relative pro- splendid, 6ur men were- the' bravest, portion to population, has the horse most skilled and most patriotic in the shown any decline in the past twenty world, but there were not enough of years, which period covers the devel- them and they could perform but a opnient of the automobile. There were fraction of the work of killing sub- 13,538,000 horses in the United States marines, convoying transports and In 1900, according to the census, and shutting the German fleet in its har- the number in 1917 was 21,210.000. bora. It must have been mortifying to Our population in the former year him, as it was to the whole American was about 75,000,000, in the latter people, to have to lean on an ally, approximately 100,000,000. The numT even so staunch an ally as Great Brit- I ber of horses increased by 56 per cent ain, in such a crisis. He may well I while the population was increased have resolved that, if he could accom-I some 33 per cent. The fact that we plish it, this country should be so I were furnishing horses to the allies strong at sea that it could defend itself I in Europe did not prevent an increase alone, unaided by any other nation. I of some 51,000 in the total number It was often said before the war during the year 1916-17. .And it is that the Monroe doctrine was no I reasonably safe to guess that despite stronger than the navy defending it, I our own participation In the war, and that we owed its maintenance to I there are now more horses in the the naval strength of Great Britain, I country than there were in 1917. not to our own. The war has brought I Consequently-one will be inclined to home to us the truth of those asser- I accept with caution the suggestion tions. and it has changed the view- that the horse is doomed. There ap point of the Administration and Con- I pears still to be work for him to do gress to radically that the lawmakers The fact would seem to be that motor are now ready to act upon that truth, transport has so greatly enlarged the There are still some little Navy men, field of human activity that it has and others have been so filled with created work in which horses are in- optimism by the downfall of autoc- dispensable. accessories. It often hap- racy that they consider no Navy neces- pens that way. Just as labor-saving sary. devices nearly always create a greater All hope that a League of Peace demand for labor instead of having will be formed and will establish its the opposite effect. Mechanical trans- power so firmly that armies and navies portation, by extending the area ,of may be reduced to the minimum I profitable farming,, for example, causes needed to constitute an international I a greater demand for horses lor farm police force, but we have had too work. severe a lesstfn in the folly of over- I it undoubtedly is true at the same optimism to act on that assumption. I time that the horse is undergoing a The world is so profoundly disturbed change. He is no longer in much de that it may not quickly settle down. I mand for pleasure driving, and he is National rivalry and distrust still pre- seldom seen drawing a hearse. The vail and may prevent formation of the I sport" of horse-racing has declined be- league, or may cause some nations to cause the falling off of riding and stay out or, after going in, to resist driving has removed the incentive for its decisions. There are possibilities breeding these specialties of the horse of disturbance of the world's peace in world. Curtailment of free range has the emancipation of Southeastern Eu- reduced the number, of scrubs. There rope. In the reorganization of Russia is. on the other hand, a vast improve- and in the gradual awakening of ment in the quality of work horses in China. Nations which have just found use, as a natural corollary to the in themselves. Just realized their strength, creased cost of feed and forage. Farm are restless, adventurous and impa- ers are learning everywhere the lesson tient of restraint, and they may fol- that inferior animals of any kind do low another ambitious leader as the not pay for their keep. FrgncJa , fallowed. N?Qjfios , T&e .One reason why. horses sere go , SNAP JUDGMENT. The Oregon Legislature, when it adopted the public utilities law, wholly the former is tne more seri0us in this Joseph, although estranged from him. exempted irom ine operations or tne connection, not only because it may was assassinated in 1898. act any utility owned or operated by have orphaned more children, but be- Francis Ferdinand, heir apparent, a municipality. At the time of the cause it has left them without benefit married beneath him and the hum law's adoption no one could foresee of a soldiers' compensation act. The led Emperor was forced to acquiesce that thft dav WrtllM --m n -Cl-Vi nn tha Legislature of 1917 had neither of and- just before the start of the pres- National Government would operate tnese especial purposes in mind. It ent war, this same Francis Ferdinand local utilities. Likely if the Legisla- was concerned chiefly with the dis- and his wife, the Duchess of Hohen ture could have foreseen such a cir- covery if possible of preventive meas- burg, the former Countess Chotek, cumstance it would also have excluded ures"- ' "To answer the child question." were assassinated, this being the pre- Government-operated utilities. The says rr- Slingerland, "we must ana- text for tne war which involved the theory of the exemption seems to lvze the causes of crime, disease and woZjd- have been that government can do no poverty." But when these have been The aed Countess Karolyi's curse wrong. ' 1 analyzed, ana remedies provided so . . .--, ciiiaiciiuj, even longer It follows that if it were the citv far as possible, there still remain chil- t " "IB "le 01 lne emperor. F rancis nf Pnrti.-.nrf rati,r dren orDhanei and denendent throueh JOS?Pi died, as he had lived, amid Postoff ice DeDartment which operates the visible fault of no one. And it is intense sorrow, with his people, whom niot e r;s mi i c I easipr tn Tinmill.n unnn crime, dis- ne proressed to love deeply, eneraeed in v. iuo x ai.1111; icicuuuiic a . . TeleeTanh Comnanv. thn hitrher rates ease and poverty than it is even for n"Snty war with powerful foes now in controversy could be applied the most confident reformer to abol- Pressing on all sides. Now his heir, without interference by the Public ish them. Meanwhile there are or- paries Francis, nephew of the mur Service Commission phans to be cared for and their care fred b rancis Ferdinand, after less Yet the one incident indicates thai cannot wait on the settlement of other VL gn, nas aDdicatea, government is not always considerate questions. , Z7( utterly defeated and of the patrons of a utility it operates. There is, indeed, sound argument ced to capitulate unconditionally to So far as reports go, there has been In favor of the stimulation of private ;al'anoanaIh!a armies. his em no detailed study by the Postoffice philanthropy. Attainment of the so- 'hI1t as"nd?r y "volutin and Department of the need of the local cial "ideal," the entire support, of all eU'nad T tdrea,mii of emP" telephone company for the exact fig- dependent classes from the "results " " . ,f 7 lor"er; nl ure of the increase proposed, or for of an equitable taxation of the entire V'h t?ryK at arms of l,h any increase. The company has sub- population of the state," even if it fif d .ut by those fevol- mitted to, the Postmaster-General an were practicable, would still deny the ,'adershin rff ,f D?ry ndef !he estimate of the additional revenues important benefits to be gained from i!!5 Pw' U"t fro'y'. of the required to provide for contemplated the "perennial springs of humane U1 "unarlan fami'y w.hse i, ,.i.ri od helDfulness." which the report recog- nty)ears ago uttered the the Postmaster-General has accepted nizes as a continued testimony to the .1 . 1 : I tnnu7inc cinnTi'ithv ond irnnn will nr LJies iciuii ita v.. I '- n . t j s i . . , There may naturally be the sup- people generally and wmcn wouia not t ""'"tiiieiii m going - over position on the part of the Postoffice "no outlet or opportunity ior aeveiop- u..u.cu war wont drive Department .that, inasmuch as the ment through payment of taxes. WeP?ltn a subscription of. twelve times company has no financial interest in commend this extract from tne writ- "" "8ueu to mat country any proposed increase, its recommen- ings of another of the Russell Sage D Ur- Mott derives its especial sig- dations must be accurate and impar- Foundation's staff, Dr. L. Walter nmcance from the fact that 90 per . . -. Pont rr a t : 1 : - tial. But there are the possible ele- Mason, as expressive or a line idea:. ""luuuons are irom ments of error, unnecessary overhead, The highest excellencies of human char- i"nSf: The amount is not large in extravagance, mismanagement, any or acter can only come from the sense or oh- i" l" lne ereal Population or all of which might be discovered and K"d" rTnow'in. that 7 the er' ZrVr:ulm. -lc 13 corrected if an independent investi- can be no return save the satisfaction which ue'.lu.lB an aw aKening or tne gation were had. A forehanded cor- comes from the exercise of the highest ot social responsibility in a coun- poration, too, might look to the future, K""" T . ' ', "een udio- whpn it's nrnnprtv would be returned , """"'J anuus to ine needs or even its to ttfiroXmtSTjH AS a matter f fact WG are HOWn people and in which the victims tO It IOr ItS OWn management dnu UP 1 formo nnUo o:lY f ta nnnn 9. i j ; , aMtinn I ' - I -,a.a5 nuuua mm lamines nave era-LlOn. I e- V tilrnn sqva v V10 I K , , There is sound reason why the pro- ' , vl -n. T T" u'i Danaoa .lo.tne,r nnpd incronsp in ratps should take -. '"" cpteau 01 tne spirit or cnarity thl reiur course before the State "bUt nIy & feW Powers." And to the Orient is likely to prove a pow- tne regular COUn8 ueiure mo H nnnlH on ill.xnnc dorod Kvstom I s. . Public Service Commission. Snap " ,T,d d;;, 'ee""rauo" a"a judgment, when it means something ,i rnl ,co am tn.e Your Boy in France. What He Ia Doing and Thinking About, as Glrnnrd From The Mara and Stripes, Official Newspaper of the A. K. K. to nearly every purse in the comma powers or refuse them opportunity for work in Europe will flow back with self-expression. though, as in this case, excessive profits, if any there be, would go to the Government. The case suggests that there is wisdom in having an in added increment of selp-helpfulness to tne source from which it came. A WAITER OPPOSES TIPPING. The most encouraging sign in recent The great Government sale of saw- times that the "tinrjintr evil" mav be mills, railroads and logging outfits is dependent restraining hand on any ftbated may be read in tne statement al very wel1- but at 'east one spruce sort of Government control of public utilities. CARE OF DEPENDENT CJrllTDREJf. Dr. W. H.. Slingerland, the special agent of the department of child helping of the Russell Sage Founda tion who was retained by the Oregon Child Welfare Commission to aid in the inquiry into the care of dependent, delinquent and defective children in this state which was authorized by the last State Legislature, makes a nice distinction in the report prepared under his direction between the terms made by Benjamin F. Parker, presi dent of the Chicago Waiters' Associa- I cut-up mill should be reserved to sup ply the Army. Aircraft will play as tion. Speaking presumably on behalf 7 m,1" -if i t nn i-n matenals wiI1 e as necessary as ar 1" "" sonnla novo Moon i t . that the custom of tipping is an imported, .non-American institution." IUIU,C'' "c well to reserve an ample supply for man who serves a slice of roast beef I ,,,,, . , v o.y senals have been. too much airplane spruce in the coun try, and the Government would d and a baked potato to me is any worse military needs, for spruce is superio I onir ntiiAF ... ,-. ,1 ; u ; 1 ....... . than the clerk who sells me an under- "s"""s ii. Mr' -PaT-Vor Pxhihits a. mistaken This is a good time, for the merely no ,.,non 1,0 Qin curious to stay away from Europe, no no "uo i r.rHH a sn-1 They Jiave only a morbid desire to . . . ... o PrAhohhr in tno mind " wuunuo ui BuucrillB ua study" and "investigation" as applied , " " V ""; v io tions, and they would be in the way Ui, cuts av ci age nmci n-aii i . , , . , ., garded as nothing of the kind. The fJnhse must blnd P those to research efforts. He rejects its implication, and as ' "in vestigation" as usually destructive m b"" ; , wounds. There is so much hard, seri leaving a bad f VT- VVoc,fo; ous work ahead in Europe for the taste in one's mouth," whereas the l'"s -uu"u ,M . v.i CZ next few years that tourists should term "study" relates to good as well as to bad, almost invariably has a con- much of this kind of snobbishness. There are waiters who succeed in not be tolerated. ment and betterment. With this dis tinction most students will agree. It is significant of the "study" so ..... . .t -. , malrine- themselves exceedingly well strucuve spim ana . appneauon ana - f and tnee others who Indianapolis exhibits a smug self- nas ior us central purposes aavance- - - . t. ,ri, jiff00 satisfaction because it is ahle to "sit. UO X1UL. DUb liic uiatciiai uumi i - - hotwoon tho. waiter and the clerk is back with money in the war chest that the latter does not exact a gra- wnne tne rest oi tne JNation nas been i v. i? . T 1 . i7 x. tuitv for his services, while the former, busy digging up for the war work made by Dr. Slingerland that although tuity for t i service drive! of duty of the "atrrolssuml the re! -only doei The slice of roast beef is missing in not being privileged to i.!ii i o,ontnood undoubtedly is as necessary a. cum- .""" IVvuiiiiiii 6"'" I 4V. ;t;mta opinio woa r- for the children within its borders, " 77 Y", ",7'a they do not construe this to mean that lng apparei, uul the state shall rear-its needy children in institutions, or that the poorest I? of inferiority is never ra sed. One of the finest testimonials ever nnnn to fee the clerk, and hence the given to American efficiency was cpn 1 - . . I . . -3 : .. . i. i .l . . . . , . , of the Belgian Relief Commission be up ... , : . I we 1 L as wen Bivc snail OB aemea me ueucuu. oj. iiuvauo ...., tt tn.,,h nnnlied in Germanv. Rut tlio nAcossi- home. The report, indeed, if its most - dining ties of the situations were far differ- important cnapter o cons merect out -?-- his has Deen tried. and it ent, as it now appears. oi tne oraer in wnicu it is prnncu, i ... t. tvi i .v. Ulwavs has failed. The same thin- may oe regarueu . a. xUi ... skinned sensitiveness to what other Those 100,000 who have already Se thTnk which causes Mr. Par- applied for passports to go abroad placing. IhlS, It IS admitted, SnOUia t- t.ji "Coolol nit. nood nnlvr'ho Txotiont and thou- onnn be aried. but the lo - trhet. will be able to travel over a good favor of the system are well-nigh un- fast is exm,ieu wifhm n nnrt answerable. Financial economy is c.on""e" nornnn, tho lpast. of these. The "nor- rendered a man wnuo v,k'"-" - r maUtyV of the method is the point conduct need not be considered ux in tne Puttonno.e. .. . .....i.j hf the waiters themselves decide that I fact " says the report "that children tipping is "non-American." and if they The ultimate consumer won't care !af ' . f?L,,foPn a absorb enough of the spirit of Amen- much, with the December east wind relations to family life and society so canism to make them willing to deny blowing:, whether the styles in straw CUJf oj i - . . . I -t . J -.- 1, long as they are thus massed." When tlemseives ior a iin'i"-. "' T " J'c lu"6 1 J .1 :,i i rt o-o I will hft n. riiKh fnr thom when thpv 11 1 1 ... rrr. , o VO rt COf W ill XlCt V JS LVJ t - , J L 1 1 L V 1111C11V cmcigc iucj e I away from institutional habits and customs and Jearn the ways of pri- the CXRSE of the HAPSBURGS. -vate homes and communities. From count Karolyi, one of an ancient are put on the market next Summer. It Is not too much to hope that the these handicaps the child placed earl, I a ,ong powerful Hungarian family prtiple of price regulation ? Tr7trh. tnTd thnt is in charge or ariairs ox iruuuicu m remember a Southern staple It will interest many to be told that ..i.,. Trine- of .:-v. i . i .v. ... tl MU.IIn. n-d.m 1 35 00 vpars sxaie Ul nuii6J. - w llitll ciucis Ktieeij mm .lie inniu- XVd ond that Tt w fli letallv and H"W and Emperor or Austria- facture of cloth, old and that it was first legally and abdicated his throne. . i-L -r ( 1 I t"1 11 II 11 i I V - JlcVa auun-wi-vu nationally used oy ine oewa, wuo I ha famous Hapsburg IZl ,ont" Ze ' other peon e n dynasty and the rise to power of WIti1-BO' keon a sense of the pressure work longer than any otner people m I , to mind the traeric his- .v. li. ni ; iiui vij - 1 ui t-iir; J11511 t-ijit J a. ii v mg cui to ijvu The people will regret that a man history." To continue: tnrv nf the hOUSO Of Hapsburg Since .....j y. -M- --A Jnn .annnt romain In tha laws of Moses, recorded in the . . spventv vears ago when the L noJition in tho nonmont Bible, and in the Talmud, a body or law. " ' ,vj ronounced the " & S and comments not lneiuaea in tne renin- . agcu w - teuch. we find the first historical records I "curse of the Hapsburgs upon X ran- of .child welfare work: and they are the Joseph. Emperor of Austria. only careful and aennue provision ior or- - T i. vj ,i tn . , 1 J . i ... . .. .. V. i 1 .1 . lnnwn .... I' TILIIC 13 JUaCPU h,ful1 - p.. All UUU UCBULULO V ....... .... ...... -- .. ...... I - . ,.,nin, mnv nation of th ancient world. I rpmpmher the name oi K.aroiyi. xnis the Peru and Chile might as well arbi trate. No war that they can stage will get them a first-page position while the European peace congress is in session. It was required that children lacking- par- .i.r often referred to as the "Em Snt"A. B.h.oul.?."?af,e mmle" ' ..,.! oeror of Sorrows" because of able, and if none were, some other house- many tragedies in his household, was Douglas County is in a position to hold; and the children must be trained up believed by many of his superstitious! , ... iPi,..vi,H- for efficient adult life. According to the I ,-o noon nndpr trip hane- 1.15" .-e..-".t, Talmud, the custom in reg-ard to foundlings sublets to have been under the Dane turkeys with a deg.ree of equanimity not vouchsafed to the rest of. the state. THE latest Stars and Stripes received is October 25 and "On to Berlin is declared to be the slogai at all of the nine base ports which tho Ameri cans have established in France. France has great difficulty in under standing the Americans. Small won der, too, when the Yankee doughboy calls the big battle a "show" and in sists on treating everything with a lev ity more befitting a comic opera than the greatest war the world has ever known. t And the least understandable part of it all is that the- biggest funniaker In the company is the best fighter when the time comes to rush a machine-gun nest. The great majority of the Americans never really knew what hard work was until they joined tha Army and now the harder it is the more Inclined they are to make play of it. For example, the unloading of the "argosies," as they call the food and munitions ships at the various basa ports, is made a great 'game or contest in which the men at each port strive to outdo all the others. This rivalry has been going on for some time, but an nouncement was made officially that beginning November 3 records would be kept, on approval of the commanding general, who has appointed contest of ficers to keep ta-lly on freight unloaded. Moving pictures of the men at work are being made for exhibition In tho United States, so it may be possible to see your husband or your son hustling cargo as he never hustled before. During the contest the port which is In the lead for any' one week will bo allowed to fly a special banner signi fying its lead. This must be taken down if it loses its position. Brassards also may be worn by small units of men, platoons, companies or detach ments, who make the best showing at thoir respective ports. The armistice will probably have little effect on this contest, for ships have to be unloaded as before, though now there will ba more food and less munitions. Prizes for individuals who make tho best showing are announced as a special 10 days' leave of absence. This little paragraph well illustrates the spirit of fun that pervades every thing the Yankee boy dots, even the dowufall of the Kaiser, and Trussian frightfulness: "William Hohenzollern & Co. can pro ceed with the presentation of their . roaring farce, "The KinK and the Vol cano," or "Peace Before It Goes Off." There never seems to have beon a doubt in the minds of those brav fel lows in France that the war would be over before AVinter. w that each such child was taken into the ful influence or tne curse upon mm. home of a childless couple, who brought it I The "curse" was pronounced by "-oor.ThH.H.n. w wn.n. -.r. Countess Karolyi, whose son was put mainly Jews, took into the new church the to death for participation in the Hun- child welfare methods of the older org-aniza- I garian uprising of 1848 tion. For nearly 200 years child-placing !n Countess Karolyi denounced the xamiues was me oniy memoa ior tne care or 1 . . . dmendents used by the christian church, it I Emperor in the most scathing terms. became customary for the bishops to place I she prayed that his life might be de- orpaau snu inner uepenueni. cnuaren. ior f haPPlneSS: that misery and whom no permanent family home at once 77 7 J tl ,.,j t. offered, in the care of selected widows at suffering come to those dearest to church expense, thus establishing the equiva- him, and that he be crushed in de tent 01 ine mwmins-oui system pracucea Dy 1 gpajp uiuuri 11 Bocteues. itier, institutions were I . , . -. , rt . . . founded, but chiid-Dtacin in faWiiea nevet From that time sorrow filled the was abandoned, and la in operation today on house of Hapsburg. The Emperor's a larger scale, and with more systematic brother, Maximilian, was sent to Mex- methods, than ever In past ages. ico as Emperor, where, after a snort The universality of a plan does not reien. he was executed by Mexican always recommend it, but in this in- I soldiers. Garlotta, wife of Maximilian, stance it would se.em that the state- went insane as a result of her hus- ment that "the laws of every state in band's execution. The Emperor, was the Union recognize the method in wounded by an assassin who tried to some form" is a natural corollary kill him with a knife in 1853. Again to the claim that these arrangements in 1882 he was a target for an assas- are not declining remnants of former sin's bullet and later that same year processes, -but are the up-to-date de-1 he barely escaped .bombs placed by velopments of all the leading states I anarchists. The Crown Prince Ru- of the Union. Final place is given, I dolph and Baroness Vetsera were as a fitting climax, to the contention found dead together in 1889 and the that, "whatever makeshifts we create mystery of the death has never been and use In the care or dependent chil-I cleared. Then the Archduke, John dren, the family home is the ultimate I Salvator, nephew to Frapcis Joseph, institution." The child finally, whether I renounced his succession to the he wills it or. not, returns to ordi-1 throne, assumed the name of John nary social conditions, Institutions I Orth. and sailed for America, never The dollar-a-year men who are re signing, unfortunately for the taxpay ers, do not greatly reduce the cost of Government by getting out of it. The American Red Cross will go in triumph right through Germany, though the American Army may stop just across the Rhine. t An interesting subject for specula tion is: What would the French people do to the Kaiser if they got their hands on him? Landing fields and repair shops for airplanes are now a requisite of every up-to-date city, so Portland gets in line. Those Canadian slackers would have had a far easier time if they had sub mitted to draft. Denver failed to "knock wood" when it called off its influenza re strictions. Tou realize on your Red Cross dol lars, as the tales come across the sea. "Heaven, hell or lloboltcn before Christmas" was no idle boast, and who can doubt that those whose bodies now lio in French soil have won the firrt in their glorious victory for justice and righteousness? The battle of the Argonne' is still th principal topic of news in the official paper of the A. K. F. and thrilling ac counts of heroic fighting are given on nearly every page. "The setting of to morrow's sun," says one writer, "will bring to an end the first month of tho Battle of the Argonne, which, measured by the number of troops engaged, iu fur and away the biggest battle in Amer ican history." Another writer says: "When the American conquest of Argonne recedes into history it will tako form as a dogged, inch-by-inch, foot-by-foot fight for a desolate and difficult land. And 3 the successive hilltops of that land rise now above the all-blanketing Oc tober fog that hides the valleys, so memory will hold fast to certain hill tops that will rise sharp and clear above the mists of time." To the Americans was assigned tho task of striking at the enemy's vitals, striking where it was known he would defend himself most passionately. Ahead of the Americans the German de fensive line converged toward an cast- em pivot like the sticks in a lady's fan, drawing close to protect the Mezlcrua Longuyon railroad shuttle, the vital ar tery of Germany's army of occupation. Break through in the Argonne and tho whole tottering German machine in France will crumble to pieces," the Americans were told. And it did. Now it can be understood why :10 German divisions, fresh or weary, whole or decimated, every available man of all ages, in fact, were thrown in to dam the steadily advancing Yankee tide. No army ever had a harder task than these brave American boys. More than a month of steady fighting. through drenching rain t.nd knee- deep mud, through swamp and foresi, up frowning hills only to meet another just ahead on and on inch by inch. foot by foot, but ever advancing! After the first fine rush there was no swift movement. Rather it must be said that "the Yanks gnawci their way to the Kriemhilde line and through it. hacked and chewed their way past thousands of machine guns, finding even conquered ground treacii- rous with acid mines, exploding 10 days after it had been wrung from tha nemy. Of course the ne s of the first roping of the Germans after peace was flashed to ine outermost post n Argonne. and rumor ran wild. The Kaiser abdicated daily a d Metz sur rendered every night, but the. Yankees paid no heed, just slogged on. Here is one order that served to nimate our men just before they charged the enemy: The Division Commander directs that the enlisted men of this command have ex plained to them by their officers the de- irability and necessity or striking, at tnts particular time, hard blows. The enemy s peace offers are extended that he may pre serve from destruction his fighting forces. The peace and security of the world in our time and generation can only be assured by the destruction of his army. Hard blows ?lone will wring from him the long pace to which we are entitled. The Commanding General cautions all that upon tho entrance Into action of this division, they muut ba prepared to endure hunger, cold and fatigue, and points out that the surest way to alle viate these conditions is to conquer. The utmost limit of endurance and achievement ii required. How well they did what they ware called upon to do the world now knows, as well a-3 the beaten, humili ated and broken Germany that will never again endanger the peace of the world. What to pack in the 9x4x3 Christmas box allowed to be sent to each soldier, has been the subject of much discussion and many suggestions have been printed. One of the best is the scientific packing outlined by a quartermaster sergeant as follows: Cubic Inches. :0 Candies, silver wrapped 110 box sweet biscuits 12 Ismail can jam "-"1 1 box figs 1'J 1 quantity shelled nuts 1.1 1 supply cotton, needles, shirt, under wear and pants buttons 4 1 dozen razor blades, popular brand.... t 1 face cloth 4 3 handkerchiefs, khaki s Spare space for sundries 7 Total ..... ..........7loi