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Stamps, coin or currency are at own er's risk. Give postoffice address in lull. In cluding county and state. Postage Rates 12 to 16 pages. 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents: 34 to 4 pages, 3 cents; 60 to B0 pages. 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, S cents; 78 to 2 pages. 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern. Business Office Verree Sc Conk lfn. Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklln. Steger building. Chicago Verree & Conklln. Free Press building, Detroit, Mich.; au Francisco representative. B- J Bldwell. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively enti tled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it oi not otherwise credited to this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, DEC. 82. 1918. THOSE GERMAN WARS TUPS. The suggestion that the allies should avoid all possibility of dissension in regard to the disposition to be made of the surrendered German -warships by sinking them does not speak well for the prospect of agreement among them on peace terms. If they are to despair so easily of agreement on di vision of this booty, how can they ex pect to agree on far weightier and more controversial matters? The big belligerents may have small need to reinforce their navies with the spoil of Germany, although. France and Italy have suffered loss out of proportion to their naval strength. Great Britain's naval supremacy is se cure, even if all the German warships should go to a single other nation. The United States would scorn to take them, for by so doing we should throw to the winds the renunciation of un selfish ends with which we entered the war. But the allies are about to set up several young nations in business for themselves. If custom should be fol lowed, they will start with a heavy load of debt, for they would assume a share of the debt of the country from which they were separated. All of these countries having a seaboard will need some warships. Why should not the big allies settle the matter by dividing the German ships among the little ones which are just starting life? Jugo-Slavia will have a part of the Adriatic coast; Albania, to which Italy has pledged independence, will have another; Poland will have a strip of the Baltic coast; Armenia may have a seaboard on both the Black and Mediterranean Seas; Arabia fronts on the Red Sea; the new states of Pales tine and Syria will front on the Medi terranean; Mesopotamia will have an outlet on the Persian Gulf. These states will have work for navies on a small scale, and If all the Captured ships were divided among them, none would have so many as to constitute a danger to anybody. The last thing to do with the ships Is to sink them. The war has caused a world-wide campaign against waste, yet by sinking the ships the allies would waste the great quantities of steel and other material which they contain. It would be a spectacle to make all Germany laugh. I.AM) FOR RETURNED SOLDIERS. Secretary Lane is not mistaken in supposing that the subject of making provision for our returning soldiers is of paramount interest in any discus sion of the problems of the Depart ment of the Interior and this, there fore, fitly occupies the place of honor at the beginning of his annual report. But even more significant is the em phasis which he places upon the need of an immediate programme, and his suggestion that there should first be offered "an opportunity upon our present irrigation projects for all who wish work at clearing and leveling the land not now cultivated but for which water is available, or to which water can be brought under the pres ent irrigation system." Let us hope that Congress, upon whom will fall the task of working out the construc tive details, will not procrastinate until the time has passed for reaping one of .the chief benefits of prompt action: Speedy conclusion is neces sary if public land improvement is utilized, as it ought to be, as a kind of labor safety valve during the period of demobilization. Four things, as Mr. Lane points out, constitute the essence of an enlight ened land programme, having due ref- erence to the situation created by the war. First of these is that there shall be work ready for the men on their return. As to this, it will be observed that time already is flying. The second is that the work shall contribute to the making of America, a requirement which is fully met by the policy of making homes for Americans on the land, of checking drift to cities, and of contributing to reduction of the cost of living. The third, that the money expended shall be returned with interest to the Government which ' advances it, is essential if it is to be made plain that the soldier is receiv ing no "charity," as such, but only the plain due of a real man; and the fourth condition mentioned by the Secretary, that the land shall be platted as part of an organized com munity, goes to the very root, we think, of the failure of many land projects in the past. These took no account of the social requirements of the day; they ignored the gregarious instinct which has populated cities and created slums; they failed to consider the sense of interdependence which is manifest everywhere. "The farm to be a going concern as part of a com munity that Is a going concern" is an ambitious, but not impossible goal for which to strive. ' Another cause of failure of back-to-the-land movements in the past is sympathetically interpreted by Mr. Lane through the emphasis he places upon the furnishing of opportunity particularly to men who are fitted by nature and experience for farm work, it is not Intended hastily to dump a large number of men possessing no agricultural experience upon . farms and then to leave them to their own resources. Reference to the fact that "more than one-third, probably nearer one-half, of the men who are in France have come from farms" shown that there is plenty of promising material from which to draw. These are not, it is true, farm owners principally; many of them have been farm hands and some of them tenant farmers. But for these, and others who seri ously contemplate becoming farm ers under the most approved modern system, might receive agricultural edu cation while still in foreign camps. This is. in line with the policy already announced by our so-called "Khaki University," and borrows from the ex perience of Canada, which has already established the work. Farms for those who want them, and work for those who want It, and neither compulsion nor undue induce ment in either instance place the new programme upon a high plane in both the .utilitarian and the social sense. The returning soldier is to remain a free agent. He may, if he chooses, return to his former status. For those who prefer an outdoor life, there will be work at the current rate of wages. An irrigation- project, for example, would require to have great dams con structed, miles of canals and land to be leveled, fenced and broken. This would mean work at good wages, "and at the end a piece of land," as the Sec retary points out, "on which would be erected a house and barn, a farm home in a group of farm homes." For this, indeed, he must pay, but he ought to have saved out of his wages the neces sary first installment of 10 or 15 per cent, and the balance with interest he can pay in forty annual installments, or sooner if he can. The Secretary approaches the finan cial phase of the question in the spirit of optimism. How great will be the cost? Less than many a strike has cost the country. As much in two years as it has cost to conduct the war for a single week. Would a peo ple who gave out of hand, he asks, $500,000,000 for the entertainment and care of these boys hesitate to buy bonds of this country for a like amount to provide peace work, home work and homes for these same boys? To stand paralyzed In the presence of a debt, as Mr. Lane observes. Is to become its victim. Plainly, the ques tion of cost is not the chief considera tion. But Congress must act promptly or the plan will fail. So, too, must the Legislatures, of the states-. The need of state and National co-operation will not be overlooked if the broadest interests of both are to be served.. WHAT WILL HE DOT La Marquise de Fontenoy,' who writes for several newspapers on European customs and events, presents the ab sorbing information that when the ruler or chief executive of a nation visits a European capital it - is cus tomary for him to leave with the chief functionary of the city a large sum of money for distribution among the poor. Nor is that all. When entertained by royalty or by a ruling head he is supposed to confer upon the household or court dignitaries orders and decora tions. When such are not available some trifle, like a solid gold cigarette case, or a pearl scarf pin will do for each. . As an example of what is expected it Is recalled that when President Poincare visited Petrograd in 1914 he left with the minister of the imperial household $20,000 for distribution among the domestic servants. Then he went over to Stockholm and when he left the royal household was richer by $10,000. Such distributions vary with the importance and means of the ruler, and in other instances are said to have gone as high as $30,000. It must be conceded' that President Wilson Is important. , Also he is Presi dent of a people generally reputed in Europe to be rolling in wealth. Yet the President is a persistent breaker of precedent. He has gone abroad for one thing and that is something no other President of the United States has. done. He also has pronounced ideas on the subject of democracy. Will it ceem democratic to him to scatter largess in England, France and Italy? cr Still, we have heard " that buried somewhere in the war revenue bill is provision for a large fund which may be expended by the President without restriction or accounting. Also, while having no official decorations or orders to confer, a badge signifying honorary membership in the Third House would probably be highly prized, would be Just as useful as a European decora tion and could be prepared on short order. .We shall wait with interest to learn what the President is going to do about it. THE SHORTEST DAY. The sun, according to the calendar for this latitude, rises on December 22 at 7:26 A. M. and sets at 4:31 P. M. This day is commonly set down as the shortest day of the year. It is true that the sun will continue to rise later each morning for several days, al though this does not quite keep pace with its later setting. There are sev eral days in the latter part of Decem ber the length of which is to all in tents and purposes equal. Only, an astronomer is competent to make the nice calculations necessary to demon strate that December 22 is, indeed, the "shortest day of the year." But to the average man in the street, the shortest day of the year passed some time ago. Probably not one man in a hundred takes account of the rising of the sun. All mornings are apt to be dull and gray. We are aroused from slumber by the alarm clock at a fixed hour, dress, breakfast and hasten to work according to a schedule that does not vary much. We are sensible, however, of the approach of dusk, which finds us wide awake to observe its coming. The day. in actual experience, is long or short accordingly as the. sun sets, and not as it rises. And, by this standard the days have been growing longer for nearly three weeks. On December 2 the sun set at 4:28 P. M. On December ,22 it is scheduled to remain above the horizon until 4:31. The latter day is mathematically thirteen minutes shorter than the former; in its con scious effect upon us it is three min utes longer. But either way one may reckon it, the worst is passed. The northern hemisphere once more is inclining toward the- sun. , Longer days mean more cheerful spirits. Winter may actually have only just begun, but we shall bear, it more and more cheerfully because there will be increasing light. The child's dreed of the dark survives in the grownup in depression which he does not always struggle to over come." It is easier for most persons to be optimistic when they know that the sun is shining. It is a wise pro vision which gives us twenty-three days .of lengthening afternoons as a preparation for Christmas time. The important part which aviation plays in naval as well as land wars is indicated by the fact that the Avia tion Division of the Navy now com prises 42.5S4 officers and men. of whom 20.113 are abroad and of whom 4729 are detailed to flying duty. This latter number is an increase from 600 in one year. Aircraft have done valuable work In scouting with, con voys for submarines and mines, in hunting and bombing submarines and in patroling. The Navy had sixteen aviation stations in France, and its aircraft had a good part in bombing the naval bases on the Belgian coast Much of the coast patrol work will no doubt be done by airplanes, and they will do the scouting In advance of a battle fleet, having a far wider range of vision than any ship. ACTS OF HEROISM. Among the. many acts of extraordi nary heroism which are described in orders citing the recipients of the dis tinguished service cross it is difficult to choose those which appeal most strongly to the imagination. Officers and men, soldiers, sailors and marines, all seem to have been Inspired by the common purpose to do their duty as they saw it and at whatever cost. There appears, for example, in a re cently published list, the name of Cook Reginald Johnson, of Tacoma. "Under heavy shell fire, and badly wounded, he constantly assisted for three days in cooking for an entire battalion in the front line," says the official report. Now, here was a man, in a fighting unit to be sure, but en gaged in a highly prosaic occupation, who won his spurs by simply sticking to his guns (to employ a justifiable metaphor in describing pots and pans), and who proved his "extraordinary heroism" by no more complicated process than simply doing the thing nearest at hand in the best manner possible. Others trained their weapons on the boches, or threw their grenades or made the enemy feel the touch of cold steel, while Cook Johnson pre pared the mulligan and beans', kept the coffee hot and saw to it that there always should be enough to go around among his comrades. Yet Cook Johnson, it will be con ceded, deserved every honor that has come to him. How greatly by his coolness and devotion he Inspired others to deeds of valor it Is impos sible to estimate accurately, but we know that by keeping the pot boiling he almost inestimably aided in pre serving morale. The cheer which he dispensed in the form of well-prepared 'food must have contributed in no small measure to the discomfiture of the enemy. Cook Johnson was a man with pride in his profession, and a standard to maintain, and he was not to be turned aside by all the shell fire in the world. He deserves his cross as much as if he had slain a score of Prussians, and we think he is the kind of soldier who will make a success in civil life after the demobilization, because he knows the importance of doing plain thing! well. BOOKS AFTER THE WAR. A good many publishers are now asking themselves in all seriousness for the question deeply concerns the bread and tutter side of the business what kind of books will be most read after the-war. It is, indeed, a problem not peculiar to the publisher, that of determining the direction of demand, the source of raw material, the extent and absorptive power of markets, and so forth. There is not a commercial enterprise of magnitude in which the issue had not arisen. The sudden conclusion of the armistice has left business in a situation not less critical than that -which was precipitated by our entry into war. Those not familiar with the me chanical details of publishing will fail to appreciate the losses which may already have resulted from the sudden transition. We were only fairly en tering upon a period of preparation, spiritually speaking, for the work be fore us. It had taken time, of course, to reach the conclusion that during the war people would read chiefly books about war. That it was unsafe to generalize even upon this topic is now realized, but meanwhile many books have been edited and even sent to press which it is unlikely will ever see the market. Perspective has been amazingly transformed. Mental atti tude toward reading has changed no less, perhaps, than the geography of the world. It Is nevertheless reasonably safe to predict that the decline of hammock literature which was observed in the years Immediately preceding the war will continue. There are definite rea sons for this, which do not imply that people- have lost their taste for enter tainment, but indicate that other fac tors are competing successfully with the book as means of relieving the tedium of leisure hours. The motion picture is probably chief of these; the automobile has contributed its share. By furnishing new outlets for those who formerly made the market for flimsy literature they have doomed a certain class of books to the scrap heap which it will be quite generally agreed ought to have been sent there long ago. But this process has been gradual and was noticeable even be fore the outbreak of war in 1914. Its continuance was accelerated, however, by the events which followed. Figures of book production are available for comparison in three periods, each separated by a decade. In 1866, for example. 23.1 per cent of the entire number of books pub lished were classed as fiction. Ten years later the proportion had declined to 19.5 per cent; in 1916 it was only 8.91 per cent.. Meanwhile, however, book production as a whole had more than kept pace with increase of popu lation. The total number of titles -in 1896 was 5703, of which fiction was represented by 1114; in 1916 the total number of titles had almost doubled, reaching 10,445, while the number of fiction titles had fallen to 932. A note worthy development of very recent years has been the rise of poetry and drama. This classification, formerly occupying an unobserved place near the foot of the list, suddenly loomed into prominence near the top. There were 800 such works two years ago; figures for the current year have not been completed, but there is promise that the number will be even exceeded in 1918. It seems inevitable that works on sociology will continue to increase. This is a topic which de rives heightened interest from the problems of reconstruction. Jleligion and theology appear to be having their ups and downs. It is not easy to frame a satisfactory conclusion from the fluctuating figures of production. Failure of a great many war books during the present year points, we think, to discriminating taste on the part of the public rather than to lack of interest in the war itself. There was a tendency on the part of pub lishers . to print anything, of even passable quality, on the topic which was uppermost In the public mind. I But the result has vindicated the judg ment 01 inosc w no oeiieve inat autnor shlp, after all. is a matter for careful preparation. Those who assumed that novel, or even tremendously tragic, experiences would suffice to make the book attractive, regardless of technical skill of presentation, have learned their mistake. Out of the vast con glomeration of war books only a few have conspicuously succeeded; most of them have been a waste of paper and printer's ink. "Timeliness," it appears, is not the only requirement of a book, any more than of an article for the current magazines. The publishers who made mere timeliness their watch word have paid for their lack of broader vision with their coin. There have been, on the other hand, some noteworthy successes by books which touched lightly upon, if they did not altogether ignore, tho war. There is a certain class of literary critics who harp upon the "decadence" of literature in their time. They con tinue to compare the surviving classics of the "golden age" of literature with the casually chosen works of the pres ent, preferring to ignore the fact that the winnowing process has been com pleted for the former while as to the latter it has hardly begun. The past few years, it is true, have not produced an outstanding work, or even one which we may suppose will be read a century or two hence, but it seems upon the whole that popular taste is greatly improving, that the average of all the books which find a market is higher than it used to be, and less rubbish is published for the edifica tion of the multitude than ever before in history. . s There continues to appear a sur Brising number of names of authors of whom we have never before heard. The wail that one must possess a great name to find a publisher comes mostly, from those whose literary product is not worth while. In this respect there is more hope than ever for the writer who really has a mes sage and who knows how to convey it. Real excellence seems to be the stand ard rather than synchronism of the topic with the supposed -interest of the passing day. In this respect,, the encouraging factor is an increasingly discriminating public taste. We may not be favored with a surpassing genius in the coming year, but the average will be higher than formerly and the unworthy book will be more certain to fail. The apparent financial success of sundry new ventures at publishing classics in popular form indicates that good reading will be in demand, and that if present-day authors cannot produce it people will draw upon the past. SOLDIERS 6TTIX WANT SONGS. More than a year ago the National Art Club offered a prize of $250 for the best song, suitable for camp sing ing. There were about 4000 con testants, and the award was made' to a bard named Arthur M. Henderson, for his "The Road to France." Re cently Brigadier-General Monson, of the morale branch of the General Staff of the Army, began making a collec tion of songs in all the camps which had proved popular. It would be in teresting to know why "The Road to France" is not conspicuous among those which are actually being sung by soldiers, and why others of the 4000 failed to make headway in the affec tions of our men. Now, however, that an effort is be ing' made to collect the songs of all the camps, it is possible that we shall have reliable data for purposes of comparison. The composer of a song which has set his whole camp to sing ing stands a chance even yet to ac quire more than local fame. Some of them, it may be, have not had a fair chance, for the war had only begun to develop the spirit of camp singing when the armistice was signed. There was yet time, if hostilities had con tinued as long as the Civil War, to bring out a minstrel who, like George F. Root, would strike the Na tional note. It will be remembered that in our earlier war the songs were of slow growth. "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys Are Marching" could not have been written in the beginning. Root's "Rally Round the Flag" was inspired by conditions behind the lines with which we have not yet had to contend in the present war. Trials no less than victories, and perhaps more than they, seem to be necessary to war minstrelsy. Still, the war has developed a num ber of songs, which, although they followed no rule, have served greatly to raise the spirits of our men. The marines took one of them, with its boast that the streets of heaven al ready were guarded by the corps, which might have served as a rally ing cry for all branches if it had had a wider application. It is possible that there is no mere coincidence be tween the' recent statement that with more than 4000 casualties out of 8000 men in action only fifty-seven marines were taken prisoner and the words of the rallying song, the first stanza of which is: From the halls of Mantflziuu, To the shores of Tripoli, We fight our country's battles On the land and on the sea. First to fight for right and freedom And to keep our honor clean. We are proud to claim the title Of United States Marine. And the concluding lines: If the Army and the Navy Kver look on heaven's scenes. They will find the street are tuarded sy United States Marines. But songs, as has been said, grow with occasion. This is even true of "The Marine's Hymn," which had no sooner been tried on the battlefields of France than it came in for amend ment. The halls of Montezuma and the shores of Tripoli seemed far, far away from the brim realities of mod ern trench warfare. From the shores of the old V. JB. A. To the sunny clime of France. We are going to get the Kaiser If he gives us half a chance. may not have been an improvement, in a literary sense, over" the original, but it was one of those inspirations of occasion which serve their purpose. and it is likely to be sung in honor of the marines who fell in battle long after tho Kaiser has been removed from the scene of action. There is a curious coincidence be tween "Joan of Arc," which has been one of the most popular songs of the war, and "I Didn't Raise- My Boy to Be a Soldier," which was so prime a favorite among the pro-Germans be fore we entered the war. Alfred Bryan wrote both of them. "Joan of Arc" was greatly helped by Its music, which Bryan did not write, and it might have lived longer as a song if the words had been less commonplace. Cohan and Irving Berlin still stand as the best-remembered song writers of the present war, although there are a few others, and neither of these won success in a formal competition. Critics probably are overenthusiastlc in rating "Over There" with the "John Brown's Body" of the Civil War, but it is a good song nevertheless, and might have risen to even greater heights of popularity. "Keep the Home Fires Burning" was not pri marily a song for this war. but it was so well adapted to the purpose that it deserves all the credit that may be given it. The losing .side of our Civil War produced two really great songs, "My Maryland" and "The Bonnie Blue Flag," and its 'Dixie" Is comparable with "The Long. Long Trail" of the present day In that neither of the latter songs was written with the war In mind, but, also like the "Hot Time" of the Spanish war, was appropriated for the purpose by the soldiers acting spontaneously. "Dixie" originally was a minstrel "walk-around." "When the Boys Come Home" was written by John Hay in Civil War days, but was not set to music until 1917. It is perhaps the only link between the two wars which has survived in verse or song. There is no telling the lengths to which the official song of the Great Lakes naval training station might have run if the war had lasted a few years longer. "Fall In. Fall Out." it is called, and it already had run Into several hundred verses, each the work of a different man. Like the song of the marines, it lacked universality of application, but it was a contributing force to the morale of the Navy. The artillerymen had a song in a serious vein, "The Flag." but there was noth ing serious about that of the tank corps except its reiterated determina tion to "treat 'em rough" and to "roll right through to Berlin." The Coast Artillery was inspired by its promise of duty in France to adopt a song that had real music in it, and there are many other divisional and regimental songs, each with a captivating swing In the music but expressing strongly partisan preference for its own unit of the service which excludes it from general adoption. The new "Army Song Book" which is being furnished to men in the serv ice contains some stirring remlnis censes of former days. "The S tar Spangled Banner." "America" and "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" are included, of course. In France our soldiers are now singing- "La Marseil laise," "La Brabanconne" and the "Garibaldi Hymn." That they are singing makes it plain enough that they are not apt td be cast down even by the tedium of life with an Army of Occupation. And it is to keep up their spirits that the Department of Camp Music is still continuing its work. It is hoped that still more songs may be writtetn for the occasion, al though there Is no reason for expect ing a "Battle Hymn" or a "Bonnie Blue Flag." Another "K-K-K-Katy" or a "Good Morning. Mr. Zip," is now regarded as the most that can reason ably be expected. It will be generally agreed that the London banker's estimate that the bill against Germany will be about $7,500, 000,000 is an exceedingly conservative one. It at least leaves no margin for punitive damages, and it is doubtful whether it actually covers the amount of wanton damage done which was not necessary for the accomplishment of military ends. In the case of Belgium, half a billion is merely a return of money taken from the Belgians In the form of forced levies and fines im posed upon various flimsy pretexts, in both Belgium and France there was an organized effort to destroy industry for the purpose of crippling the people as competitors after the war. If, as a matter of fact, the levy upon the Ger mans does not exceed the amount stated, the allies will be showing com mendable repression by comparison with the Germans In 1871. On that occasion they insisted upon -being re imbursed fpr the entire cost to them of the war, and exacted huge punitive damages besides. The profession of chemical engi neering has newly justified Itself with announcement of the perfection of a process of dehydrating meats which overcomes former objections that the treatment coagulated the protein and rendered It unpalatable. The new process removes all of the water and renders the product sterile, so that it can be kept indefinitely. It dispenses with the use of brine, refrigeration or any other artificial agency, and the two chief economic arguments in its favor are that it saves about eleven twelfths of transportation space now required and calls for no especial pro visions for Its preservation. The scien tists point out that these factors would make the new product especially de sirable for relief work in Europe, that it would be ideal for vessels On long voyages and that by avoiding refriger ation costs it ought to contribute some thing toward reducing the cost of living. Possibly the discussion about secret sessions of the Peace Congress will be ended by adoption of the Senate's practice with regard to executive ses sions. That highly secretive body swears all its members to secrecy, and when its proceedings are fully pub lished In next morning's newspapers all the Senators abuse each other for breaking their pledge. A man even a statesman cannot keep a secret any better than a woman can. Germans who have already begun to talk about the next war say that it will be won in the air. They are the same ones who a , few months ago thought that this war was going to be won by the submarine. Either way, however. LheV are beaten before they start. Our aviation section, including the spruce divisions, was just begin ning to get its stride when the ar mistice was signed. The spirit of Christmas will bo lost by those who confine 'their good cheer to the day alone. Let there be a holi day feeling also with the coming of the cold, gray dawn of the morning after. The stream of transports arriving at "an Atlantic port" is exceeded only in the unpublished reports of those which sailed from there only a few months ago. Without doubt President Wilson will have the best spare room in Bucking bam, with lavender in the sheets and all the necessary trimmings of hospi tality. The Kaiser will get writer's cramp long before he succeeds in writing a convincing justification of his mis deeds.. Even without that distinguished service medal for Pershing. Americans know that he has done a good job. We shall now be treated to a demon stration of what a lot of shopping can be compressed into a single day. If Austria, had insisted upon the principle of self-determination in 1914 there would have been no war. Every day, in the view of the United States fisheries commission, will be Friday by and by. For turkey at any price, it appears, the people will tolerate no substitute. CITY SHOULD NOW LOOK 1XLAND Port Developments Now Aaanre Taat Cargoes WU1 Take tfce Water Here. BY CHARLES B. MOORES. At a luncheon of the Realty Board H. H. Ward made a very Interesting and Instructive plea for a Port of Co lumbia Commission and for harmony and co-ordination. A friendly analysis and dissent from some of his conclu sions should not be construed as a knock of any particular interest or lo cality. Any suggestion of an attempt to minimize Portland's manifest - ad vantages Is a legitimate subject of dis cussion. The figures given by Mr. Ward show ing the remarkable - increase of ship ping at Seattle, while doubtless accu rate, are deceptive, and .have little, if any. bearing on the relations of Port land and Astoria, nor indeed upon the real relations of Portland and Seattle. As given they simply exploit the custom-house prosperity of Seattle. We are told that nearly 90 per cent or these figures represent what is called trans-shipment commerce that shows larger at the custom-house than it does In community revenue. With nothing but her trans-shipments Seat tle wouldn't last over night. A great port must be something more than a mere traffic transfer station. It isn't everything that you shoot through a hog that makes him fat. It is what he absorbs and assimilates. We admit that Seattle leads us. but don't ask us to admit too much. A bet ter criterion of the relative business conditions of Seattle and Portland is their bank clearances, in which Seattle leads us only 15 or 20 per cent. Her custom-house prosperity is sometimes cited as showing her to be as great a seaport as San Francisco, but the San Francisco waterfront tells a different story. San Francisco's bank clear ances are three or four times as large as those of Seattle, and the business on her waterfront from river traffic alone, which neyer gets wlthinn hailing dis tance of a custom-house,, is over $100. 000.000 annually. Mr. Ward rightfully protests against the Injustice of lifting freight over mountain ranges, or adding a haul of 200 miles after it has come down the river grade to Portland. In order to .carry it to sea through Seattle, and the same logic applies to carrying it a hundred miles by rail to Astoria, when it would (ro far cheaper in the hold of an ocean liner. The extra cost of the mountain lift or of the extra 200 miles to Seattle, or the extra 100 miles to As toria, Is not absorbed by the carriers except In a purely technical sense. Somebody is paying for it. and when the producer and consumer finally wake up and find out what it is costing them they ought to be able in some way to end the iniquitous abuse. The suggestion that ocean liners will come to Astoria, but not to Portland, is fallacious. The best authorities tell us that a 30-foot channel is ample for 95 per cent of the commerce of the world. In passing, though it is not In point, it is not amiss to say that the Rhine does business on less than one-third of that depth. At ordinary stages it is only 10 feet deep, and at Strassburg only four, but it has the largest traffic of any Tiver In the world and its freight business Is almost half that of the whole German Empire. Here in Portland we are building 8800-ton steel ships, presumably, because after figur lng on the items of machinery, fuel, speed, cargo capacity, etc.. they are more profitable than larger ships. Notwithstanding the remarkable devel opment of the last 10 years, the number J of ships of extremely large dimensions Is relatively few. The British mercantile marine in 1910 owned 11.495 steel ships of 100 tons gross and upward. Of these only 328 Individually exceeded 7000 tons gross: 107 exceeded 10.000 tons gross, and 20 exceeded 15.000 tons. At the same time there were about 5000 steel ships in the BritiBh registry of from 2000 to 6999 tons gross In individual tonnage, and over 6000 ships of from 100 to 1999 tons. The best authorities seem to agree that the bulk of the maritime business will be done by ships of rela tively moderate dimensions, and they will continue to be the largest con tributors to the revenue of a port. Since 1899 the lengths and depths of trans-Atlantic steamships have been increased about 30 per cent, the breadth nearly 40 per cent, but deep water draughts only 10 per cent. Hamburg, the greatest port In Eu rope, is 85 miles from the mouth of the River Elbe. The Hamburg-American line at one time undertook the experi ment of dispatching its vessels from Cuxhaven, at the mouth of the river, but gave It up after one year's trial. The present depth of the Elbe channel to the sea is 26', i feet at low water and 32.8 at high water, and vessels of the greatest draught now go into the har bor at Hamburg, including the great Kaiserin Augusts Victoria, which has a gross register tonnage of 25.000. The tounave of the Dakota and Minnesota. Jim Hill's great, unwieldy ships, was only 20,718 gross each. Ocean commerce has always sought the seat of production and the heart of Industrial activity, and if universal precedent counts for anything it al ways will. Portland's channel condi tions are among the least of her trou bles. Ten or 15 years ago our wisest engineers were sneering at a 40-foot depth over the bar as an idle dream. We now have it. with a 30-foot river channel, and if future needs call for 35 feet we shall find a way to get it. Portland's real problem is how best to realise, develop and utilize the indus trial resources of the Columbia water shed, the Willamette Valley and South ern Oregon, with which she Is In imme diate geographical touch. An Indus trial empire such as her Immediate hinterland is capable of developing will furnish return cargoes for all the ships that choose to come, and those cargoes will take the water here because they can go 100 miles down the river in the hold of a great liner cheaper than they can by rail. Let Astoria work out her own des tiny without our attempting- to block her way. She may take some of our business, but her help in bringing ad ditional commerce Into the Columbia will end In additional ships finding their way farther up the channel. Ships will come to Portland in increas ing numbers, and they will continue to find their way past Port Angel's and Port Townsrnd 150 miles to Seattle and to Hamburg, 85 miles past Cux haven, and to Montreal. 200 miles past Quebec, and even past Liverpool. 35 miles up a canal only 28 feet deep to Manchester, and 90 miles through a low-water channel of only 22 feet to Glastrow, Scotland's greatest seaport, and 175 miles to Baltimore and 95 mjles to Philadelphia, and over 100 miles to New Orleans, throucth channels no bet ter than. If as good as. the channel from Portland to tho sea. Orla-ln of fMnylna Cards. WALTON. Or.. Deo. 19. (To the Edi tor.) Please publish f-omethlng of the origin of the common plavinsr cards. A SUBSCRIBER. Their origin is of remote antiquity. They were In use in Egypt In the time of Joseph, and In Hindustan anH China long before they appeared in Europe. Soma antiquarians maintain they fol lowed the invading Saracens into Eu rope in 711. while others claim the Crusaders brought their use from the East, There Is documentary proof that they were In use In England in 1240. in Spain in 1267; in Italy in 1299, In Ger many in 1300 and in France In 1361. Spain Introduced cards Into the New World. A DRKA3L Have you ever sat In a du7-rC In the cold, blurred black of night. When you couldn't even light a fag. For 'twas death to strike a light? And all around was rain and mud. Not even a pale star shone. And you closed your eyes To the blinking skies. And straightway dreamed of home? And you sat In front of a gleaming hearth. And harked to soft, sweet music tones. That brushed away all cares. Close to your arm a lady clings. And her hair Is stiver white. And you blessed the eyes Where the lovelight lies. And you're glad you are home tonight. And snuggling close on the other side Is one, so sweet and fair. And her eyes are soft with tender love. Oh! 'TIs good to be sitting there. And a little lad with locks of gold Sits tightly on your knee. And harks to the story Of how you sought srlory. In the land of the Fleur-de-Lis. And father sits in his big arm chair. And hears with parental pride. The tales you've brought and how you fought. And how good comrades died. And stretched on the rug lies the old black cat. And hears but the ticking clock. And knows full well. In a very short spell That he will be ushered out. For the war Is o'er, and you're homo' again. And the deeds of strife are past. Though they were hard in the mak ing thereof. You find pleasure In them at last. And "Como on you. roll out of that. We're moving, come, stir your bones!" "Say. what the hell Do you" "Oh, well. Say fellows, I thought I was home," LIEUTENANT R. E. DANIEL. 14Sth Field Artillery. September 8, 1918 In front of Verdun. TO MOT ITER, MIF. . Sweet mother mine drive grief away, "lis false to tell thee I Am over there In Flanders grave. That I, thy loved, didst die. 'Twas but a body not a life Returned to earth whence came: Whilst I have hastened back to thee. And live with thee the same. Sweet mother mine I live and know. The thing called death by thee Is but release of that called life. To realms where life Is free. 'Tis hut a point, which measured from. Life's earthly work is o'er And soul, divorced from selfish mind. Directs thee evermore. All soul Is truth and good and love. Unchanged by time or clod Of earthly clay sweet mother mine. It has its like in God. Its will Is his. so Is the way, Undlmmed by false belief. It leads my life in freer sphere. To wait for thy relief. If void there seems. It doth but seem To erring, human sense But leave thy soul speak truth to thee. And take thy recompense Of happy peace, fixed In a faith. That's given those who hark. To guide them through the night that Is. To those unheedful, dark. Thy soul will tell thee mother mine. To brush away thy tears Thy heartache is my only pain. I suffer through thy fears. 'Twas but a body not a life Returned to earth whence came; Whilst I have hastened back to thee. And live with thee the tm. GENE SMITH. AT THE PEACE TABLE. Mr. Wilson what you done Over In Old Gay Paree? AInt you skcered "twill be your ruin. So much aristocracy? Please remember this December Is the date set that mast see Consummations by the nations ' In the causf of liberty, Bravely stand upon your platform Of the fourteen points you made: Put it to them just in that form. Show them that you're not afraid. Of the Prussians or the Russians, -Of the Germans or the Dutch; Pass no buns unto the Huns, Though they clamor over much. Don't forget the devastation That has ruined Belgium Tet yield not to exultation That swift punishment has com To Old Willie, the Attila. In his exile and disgrace I have a hunch I'd like to punch That old villain's fiendish face. He it was caused all the trouble. And there'd be no peace to make. Had we dared not prick his bubble The old egotist and fake. He found we'd fight; I guess that'i right. And he'll find wo can make peace. That will neatly and completely Bid his reign of ruin cease. CALVIN GOSS. North Powder. Or. THE ItBO CROSS STAR. Once a star shone white at Christmas, Peace and joy it showered then; Now a star glows red at Christmas. Bringing still good will to men. That white star In age departed. Hung o'er manger-cradle low; This red star o'er brokenhearted Sheds today Its welcome glow. That white star, unto the Saviour, Wise men guided, at his birth; This red star proclaims that Saviour Tho Redeemer of the earth! Shine. O Red Cross Slar in beauty. Red as our Redeemers blood! Teach our hearts to do their duty; Lead our spirits up to God. M IN A HALL EPLET. T1IE STATION GATE. Like the maw of a mighty monster hi that g-ato a-swinglng wide T the fretted, endless traffic that is known as the human tide: And we yield to las ceaseless luring the ones that we Ioto the bes:. And we see them go In the pulsing flow of the tides that never rest. Llko an arch to enchanted gardens seems that wonderful swinging gate. As we study Its rusty Iron bar and thrilllngly watch and wait. We grasp our atom from passing Jdo and in ecstacy laugh or cry; And a beautiful gleam Is on the stream as wo see It flowing by. GRACE E. HALL a rirr.Fn. When you're down and out and busted. And everything's gone wrong: When the tide is dead against yero. And it's running mighty strong: When your burdens seem too heavy. There's no relief. I ween. Like the old pipes friendly fragrance. And tho breath of nicotlno. How Its warm breath calms yeer worries: How its fragrance brings you rest; How it teaches Ood Is gracious. And bis ways are for the best: How its soothing vapor strengthens Doubting heart and tired brain: Stiffens up your drooping couraf. .Canria von out to fight S rain.