II TITK SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, FOKTLAXD, JANUARY" ID, 1919. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Pootoffice as t.erond-cla.ss mail matter, Eubscript'.on rates Invariably in advance: (By Mail.) Iaily, Sunday Included, one year Uaily. Sunday Included, six months Xiaily, Sunday Included, three months.. Ially. Sunday included, one month 3aily. without Sunday, one year 3:illy. without Sunday, six months 3aily. without Sunday, one month.. .... . Weekly, one year Sunday, one ear Sunday and Weekly (By Carrier.) Tally, Sunday included, one year . . . . Tjailv. Sunday included, one month. . ,.$8.00 .. 4.23 B.no 3. -'.". .CO 1.00 2.1 TiO 3.50 ..9.00 Tailv. Sunday included, three months. ... 2.2 "Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.S0 TJally, without Sunday, three months, ..... l.i)."i Xally( without Sunday, one month... ... . .65 How to Remit Send postoff icomoney or fler. express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are. at own er's risk. Give postoffice adi'rj-ss in lull, in cluding county and state. Pontage Rates 12 to 16 pas-s, 1 cent: 18 to 32 pages, 2 cents: 34 o 43 patr-s, :t cents; 60 to HO paftea, 4 cents; 62 to 76 pages, 5 cents: 78 to t2 pates, tt cents. Foreign pott age, double rates. Eastern BuHinem Office Verree & Conk lln, Brunswick building, w York; Veree & Conklln, Steger building. Chicago; Verree Ac Conklln, Free Press buildincr. L:tr!'. Mich.; Kan Francisco representative. H. J. Bidwetl. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively enti tled to the use for republication of ail news dispatches credited to it r n )t otherwise credited to this paper, and also the local news published herein. Alt rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND. SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1919. BOLSHEVIK ECHOES. A general strike to secure a new trial for Thomas Mooney and Warren. Billings is a remedy which does vio lence to the fundamentals of justice and democracy, and can do no good to labor. It is direqX action, with a vengeance. It is a threat against thj orderly processes of government. It voices a demand for interference by the President himself, with a penalty for refusal or Inaction in advance defined, in the paralysis of all Industry. "We will stop," shouted one delegate at the Chicago labor conference, "every wheel in the land, and make the country look like an Arizona desert." Thus the whole country, If the scheme of coercion is carried out, is to be made to suffer for the action of a court in California, which performed its con stitutional function of trying two men for murder and finding them guilty. Whether It was performed well or badly, tho case is California's, not the Nation's. The National Labor Con gress regards Mooney and Billings as innocent, and declares that their con viction was obtained by bribery and perjury. It is well to recall that one of ninety witnesses against Mooney, one Oxman, was tried for perjury and acquitted. It may be fair to add that Billings, who was accused of the same crime as Mooney, was convicted with out the testimony of Oxman, and that the acquittal of Oxman occurred also in California. , Over in Seattle there is an Inter national Workers Defense League which declares that the "courts have failed to give justice to our fighters in the industrial conflict," and which proposes to "use our economic strength and go out on strike to secure justice for our champions." It makes an ap peal for soldiers and sailors to join them, and it asks them not to take a job "until we all go back together. The further demand for amnesty for all political prisoners is made. "The man (in Bulgaria) who was given life imprisonment for anti-war work," it is further said in a Workers' Defense League circular, "is now the head of the government. Will you see that this is done here?" This means Debs, perhaps. Here in Portland there is a frank effort to constitute- a soviet to be known as a soldiers' and sailors' coun cil. It is backed by radical Socialists, who do not hesitate to proclaim their sympathy with Bolshevism. "We are through asking favors from the mas ters," says their leader. "Hereafter, what we want we will take." In Russia, the Bolsheviks, who take what they want and kill off all who resist, are still dominant. In Ger many there has been a test between the Reds, or Spartacans, who are kin to the Bolsheviks, and the conservative Socialists; and the latter have appar ently prevailed. The issue was not joined in any peaceful conflict of minds, but in the old brutal way of armed force: and the strongest won. In ' Poland, there is confusion worse confounded; and there is a powerful Bolshevik element which is seeking to have its way. Chaos is its best chance President Wilson has taken public notice of the Bolshevik menace, and he asks for $100,000,000 to feed the starving millions of Europe as the best means to combat it. But whether or not Bolshevism thrives on starvation and poverty, it is clear that America has a duty of humanity, and will per form it. Bolshevism is a twin of defeatism. and it thrives best in those countries where autocracy has been overthrown as a consequence of the war. The reasons are obvious. A people striving to find itself, bitterly resentful of its sufferings, ' sacrifices and wrongs, is likely to give a ready ear to the prodi gal offerings of those who promise much. The counsels of moderation do not take root easily in preju diced soil. For Germany, however, it is to be said that the habit of order and law-observance is strong, and it is to be expected that the proposals of conservative men are likely in the long run to be accepted. It may be the same in Austria. Russia and Po land present more perplexing prob lems. Tho manifestations of Bolshevism have been slight in the countries vic torious in the war, but here and there outbreaks have occurred. But the masses in the allied nations have no euch grievances as have provoked the conditions of disorder and ruin and poverty, which have led to the rise of the red terror east of the Rhine. They have not hungered, nor starved, nor gone naked; and they have not against their will been driven into a disastrous war. They have had a full part in the triumph of democracy and hu manity; and they know that the prin ciples for which they fought and died are to stand, and that the benefits of the world's peace are to be theirs. Yet the echoes of revolutions and anarchy in parts of Europe are heard here, and some men have lost their heads and are trying to convert them into action in concert with the irre eponsible elements abroad which are striving through force to take what ever they want." The menace of the red flag in America is serious enough, and. should be taken seriously; but it stands for policies of action which run counter to the conscience, spirit and judgment of America, to the rock-bottom prin ciples upon which the republic was founded, and to the old-fashioned tenets of justice, good faith and mor alitf'. So far as there are abuses and inequalities here and there, there is a lawful and rational way to correct them, whether they are abuses and Inequalities of classes or of individuals. There are certain guaranties of life, and liberty, and opportunity, in Amer ica, and on the whole they are ef fective. That there may be instances of injury in the operation of our eco nomic and industrial processes may be freely admitted, and that there may be miscarriage of justice in our courts is only too well known- But whether Mooney is guilty or innocent, whether Billings is guilty or innocent, there is nothing in the procedure in a local court in California which justifies a sweeping vote of censure on our judi cial system, or a proposal to wreck our industrial or political structure. If, by a strike or a threat of a strike, the Labor Conference shall have freed Mooney, they will have done some thing far worse for all citizens, in cluding themselves, than his incarcera tion in prison for life. They will have substituted for our present judicial practices, which, imperfect as they are, are the product of many hundred years of civilization, the right of ap peal from a court to the uninformed opinions and decisions of a class. What could be worse than the administra tion of justice in that way? The Red Flag will not wave over America. It is not the flag of our country, and it never will be. All Americans worth the privilege of citi zenship will join to put it down, and among them will be those thousands and millions of workmen who have just as much at stake in the preserva tion of our institutions as any others. COMPULSORY VOTING. The term compulsory voting as applied to the object of a bill in the Oregon Legislature is somewhat of a misnomer. The maximum object of the bill can only be to compel at tendance at the polls. It is the old proverb in a new form. You can drive the horse to water but you cannot make him drink. In other words, if we shall have "compulsory voting" we shall merely compel the voters to go to the polls The only evidence that an elector has voted is the depositing of his ballot in the ballot box. Nobody is permitted to examine his ballot at the time. It may be wholly blank, for all the judges of election may know. Presumably, the supporters of com pulsory voting argue that the voter will mark his ballot if compelled to go to the polls. Perhaps. Yet in the last general election more than 8500 voters who voted for Governor ex pressed no preference on the contested office of State Treasurer. Actually a minority of the voters of Oregon de termined who should be the Treasurer, for the combined vote of the three candidates was less than 50 per cent of the registration. Here were 8 500 voters who had enough interest in the election of Senator and Governor to take them to the polls, but were frankly indifferent as to the identity of the Treasurer to be elected. It is a reasonable enough assumption that the 100,000 or more who were not attracted to the polls at all would, had they been compelled to go, have gone through with the mo tions of an undesired task as quickly as possible. Some, without doubt, would have voted for a candidate or two on the ticket; many would have voted for none. But what would have been gained if all had been compelled to attend the elections and those who would not without compulsion have attended had voted for a full list of candidates? In what way is the vote of the man or woman who cares not enough about state or local affairs to ascertain the qualifications of competing candidates of value to the community? SOMETHING DONE. It Is necessary in order to compare the Canadian land programme with the programme or lack of one of the United States to make allowance for the circumstance that a large pro portion of Canadian soldiers are out doors men, to whom farm life would be likely to appeal, but a fact that stands out, and will bear emphasis, is that something is already being done. "The Government," said Major G. W. Andrews, a member of Parliament and student of the land laws, "already has advanced $1,300,000 to returned sol diers who own lands to enable them to buy livestock and make improve ments." The point of comparison is contained in the three words, "already has advanced." It might be worth while for the United States Congress to make a not too protracted inquiry into the Canadian method of getting action. In financing first the returned sol diers who already own farms but pos sess inadequate capital, Canada has regard for the needs of the nation as well as the wants of its soldiers. But it is interesting also to note that the entire land programme has taken con crete form, although it is only a little more than two months since the ar mistice was signed. It is proposed to sell farms to actual settlers upon a cash payment of 10 per cent, with twenty years to pay the remainder. and with interest at S per cent. It also will lend the settler $500 with which to build a home and $1500 for livestock and improvements. Details of the scheme are unimpor tant by comparison with the circum stance that something is already be ing done. Forty-three per cent of Canada's returned soldiers have sig nified their desire to become farmers. It is highly improbable that so large proportion of Americans will be drawn toward the land. But the per centage In this country, whatever it may be, of would-be farmers is receiv ing no real encouragement from the Government. Departmental recom mendations and Congressional talk do not take the place of $1,300,000 "al ready advanced" to its soldier-farmers by a country with about one-twelfth the population of the United States. MUIR, INTERPRETER OF THE WEST. Something about the West inspires men to do big things, to write poems expressive of love of both nature and liberty, or in majestic prose to tell of the grandeur of mountain, forest and plain. That something in our tu day has led the 91st, Wild West, Division to perform deeds of valor which have distinguished it in an Army abound ing in heroes. At the same time it has moved a soldier of the Spruce Production Division, an anonymous member of the Loyal Legion, to write songs of spruce which rank among the best war poetry. The West has pro duced many of the best fictionists of the last half century, who have de picted man, freed from the trammels of convention, in contact with raw na ture in its wildest and most awe-in spiring forms. That may explain the enthusiasm of John Muir for the West, which has found vent in his latest book. "Steep Trails." Born in Scotland, that land of old romance, he came to America and studied botany, chemistry and geology in Indiana and Wisconsin. His instinctive love of the open for bade him to immure himself in a col lege and drew him to the Far West, where he explored and lived among mountains, glaciers and forests, de lighting in their wildness and solitude. He has made his country familiar with the glories of the Cascades and Sierras, with the gigantic peaks and glaciers of Alaska, with the big trees of California, with the awful beauties of the Grand Canyon, and with the wonders of the Yellowstone Park. In a special sense, he is the discoverer of the West, for he has shown the. world that the West is more than the land of cowboys, miners, bad men and In dians with a sprinkling of speculative boomers. He has shown it as the land where nature has done her greatest work in her most sublime moods, and he has tempted the people of the East to leave their crowded cities, to turn from the beaten track leading to Eu rope, and to come West to admire. Muir is an example of the West's magnetic power. It first drew the hunter, the gold-seeker and tlte ad venturous on the trail of the explorer and the missionary. Then it drew the builders of big enterprises, men whose combination of courage with con structive genius accepted its chal lenge by spanning its plains with rail roads, by tunneling or climbing its mountains, by mining its minerals, by cutting its forests, by harnessing its waterpower and by building its cities. Among these first comers and the swarm of homebuilders who followed were men of Muir's type, who in terpreted the West to the East and who disproved the shallow assump tion that the West is all raw and un couth. DEFEAT OF THE SPARTACANS. The tragic end of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxembourg as the climax of the Spartacan uprising at Berlin proves that there are strong men at the head of the revolutionary govern ment in Germany. The intent of the Spartacans was avowedly to prevent the election of delegates to the Na tlonal Assembly next Sunday, and their implied motive was to establish their own minority rule, knowing that In an open election they would 'be vastly outnumbered. The vigor and success with which the government crushed the revolt contrasts with the weakness which Kerensky displayed in dealing with the Bolsheviki. He .defeated their first revolt in July, 1917, and had some of their leaders fn his power, but he weakly set them free and attempted compromise with men who were in the pay of Germany and would make no" compromise. He had another oppor tunity when General Korniloff began his march on Petrograd to crush Bol shevism once for all, but he was de ceived into turning against Korniloff and denouncing him as a traitor. Then Kerensky's power ended. President Ebert, of the German re public, was in a more critical position when the Spartacans rose against htm, but he did not flinch. Besieged in one of the government buildings, he called from the window to men' in the crowd to come to defense of the government. and they came, for men will always be found to rally to a strong man who stands for something. Once In the fight, he acted with energy until it was won. This is a new development in the course of a revolution. Usually the extremists have overthrown the moderates until the people weary of bloodshed and react either all the way to despotism or establish a moderate democracy. Liebknecht adopted far more radi cal theories than his father, who was leader of the Socialist party thirty years ago and who would have been called a Progressive in this country, The younger Liebknecht opposed the war from the beginning, and became more bitter and more radical after he had been imprisoned for an anti-war speech; In fact, he proved the Kaiser's Nemesis. After his release by Prince Max, he was a popular hero and raised the cry for the Kaiser's deposition Rosa Luxembourg had also suffered Imprisonment for incendiary speeches made during the strikes of the early months of 1917. Popular support of Ebert may have been due to dread of like disasters to those which Bolshevism brought on Russia, and to fear that, if Germany fell into a state of anarchy, the whole country might be occupied by the allies. While stubbornly brave in bat tie, the German is a prudent indi vidual, and, when driven to extremes, plays for safety first. Hence the ar mistice before Germany had suffered devastation, the surrender of the fleet in preference to sure defeat, and the support of Ebert in order to show an established government to the allies, FARMS AND JOBS FOR SOLDIERS While the allies long ago had plan completed to place demobilized sol diers on the land and to find other em ployment for them, the United States has only begun to begin to get ready, though hundreds of thousands of sol diers are returning to civil life every month. Soon after the United States declared war. Secretary of the Interior Lane proposed that the Government provide work and farms for those soldiers who wished to go on the land, by employing them to reclaim great areas of arid, swamp and cut-over land and by then assisting them to make farms on the tracts they had reclaimed, but Congress has gone no farther than to appropriate $200,000 for an examination of the tracts and to consider a bill appropriating $1.- 000.000 for surveys. At this rate, all the soldiers who are to be demobilized will either have found employment or will have-spent months in hunting other jobs before Mr. Lane is ready to put them to work. The way to begin Is to begin, and Representative Sinnott has shown where an actual beginning can be made. Surveys and estimates have al ready been made for reclamation of many arid tracts in the West 2,000. 000 acres in Oregon alone and there Is' need only of funds to begin con struction work and to carry it along until the next session of Congress. Mr. Sinnott's bill contains provisions for establishing soldiers on farms, which are In harmony with Mr. Lane's scheme. He asks for an appropria tion of $1,000,000,000, but all of that sum could not be expended for several years, so that a smaller Immediate appropriation would suffice. While construction of Irrigation work was In progress, an additional bill could be passed for surveys, reclamation and settlement of swamp and logged-off land, and surveys, appraisals and set tlements with individual and corporate owners could be made. There is no reason why irrigation work, for which preliminaries are complete, should await drainage or clearing, for which preliminaries have not even begun, nor indeed why the latter should e connected with the former, unless It be a political, log- rolling reason. Nearly all arid land is owned by the Government, and con tracts can easily be made with occa sional individual owners for irrigation and sale of their tracts. Nearly all swamp and logged-off land is owned by individuals, and there will be much debate and dickering before terms can be made with them. The only owners of Southern swamps and Mid dle Western pine barrens may be un willing to let the West receive a big slice of pie unless each of them gets one too. They would rather let the soldier wait for his farm . or his Job than come away from the pork-bar rel empty-handed. A DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. There is pending in Congress a bill Introduced by Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, to create a Department of Education, the secretary of which would have a place In the Cabinet. The department would take over, at the discretion of the President, the work of other departments and bu reaus which it ought to co-ordinate and supervise. The bill is the result of a joint conference of committees of the American ' Council on Educa tion and the National Education Asso elation, and gives voice to the asplra tions of educators who realize that the whole Nation is affected by backward ness of education in any part of it. and who desire that there shall be practical equalization of advantages and opportunities. The principle is observed occasionally in state educa tional laws, such as those which tax tho richer districts for support of schools in the poorer ones, and It goes to the root of the proposition that inefficiency, or illiteracy, or disloyalty in one section of the country, or among one class of the people, is the concern of every other section and of every other class. The bill makes an appropriation of $100,000,000 a year, to be expended, in co-operation with the states, for the prime purposes of removing illiteracy, promoting "Americanization," extend ing school terms, especially in the more sparsely settled communities, for physical education, and for better preparation of teachers. States, in order to enjoy the benefits of the act, are required to appropriate amounts equal to those received by them for the purposes designated. Apportion ment of funds is not invariably made upon the basis of total population, or school population, but in proportion to needs.- Thus, for example, three fortieths of the whole amount is to be devoted to instruction of illiterates 10 years old and over, not including the foreign-born, and this is to be appor tioned in accordance with the native- born illiterate population. A similar amount is to be devoted to teaching immigrants of similar ages to speak and read English and to instruct them in the duties of citizenship, and also to "develop among them an apprecia tion of and respect for the civic and social Institutions of the United States," and this sum is divided in the ratio dY Immigrant Illiterate population. A state which will draw most heavily upon one part of the fund, and con tribute to it, may not be much affected by the other. The South just now Is the center of native-born adult illiter acy, and New England and New York have their special problems of adult Immigrant education. Half of the entire sum Is to be de voted to improvement of schools of less than college grade, "with the definite aim of extending school terms and of stimulating state and local in terests in improving, through better instruction and gradation, and through consolidation and supervision, the rurart schools and schools in sparsely settled locations." This is to be apportioned in proportion to the number of teach ers in the public schools of the states. It is interesting to note, in addition, that states which avail themselves of this provision are required to compel every public school district to maintain a minimum school term of twenty-four weeks, to enact and enforce a com pulsory attendance law and to require that only English shall be employed as the basic language of instruction. A fifth of the. total sum, distributed in proportion to population, would be devoted to physical education, which would include the rudiments of medi cal and dental instruction, determina tion of medical and physical defects, employment of school nurses, estab lishment of dental clinics and "Instruc tion of all the people In the principles of health and sanitation." The final provision, as to apportionment of money, devotes the remaining three twentieths of the whole, in proportion to number of teachers, to Improvement of the teaching staff, present and prospective, and to encouragement, "through scholarships or otherwise," of a greater number of talented young people to make adequate preparation The National Education Association seems determined to show that In edu cation. If not In physics, momentum may be derived from a force within the body itself. The teachers would undertake the task of reforming edu cation. But if they ask for aid from without, their plea in justification is logical enough. It is that the profes sion of education is less attractive than it used to be for reasons over which teachers themselves have had no con trol. Never overpaid. It was neverthe less In a bygone period more attractive than It Is now, with the cost of living far outstripping the liberality of school boards and taxpayers. Even with a combined fund of $200,000,000. which is only $2 per capita of the population, something may be hoped for in the way of stimulus to better education along practical, financial lines. Aside from its appropriation feature. the bill to create a Department of Edu cation is regarded by schoolmen as appealing when it is considered that the Federal Government already is In the field to the extent of about $139. 000.000 a year, that practically every Government department is engaged In some form of educational activity, and that the Bureau of Education receives only about $200,000. There are agri cultural schools, and Indian schools, the War and Navy Departments have their schools, and educational propa ganda is widespread, but it is without co-ordination. There Is at present no scientific budget and there Is no center of responsibility. Undoubtedly there is much overlapping which ought to be avoided. The idea of dignifying education with a place In the Cabinet Is not new in the world; many foreign countries have their ministers of edu cation. In pressing this feature of his bill. Senator Smith will have the sup port of many precedents. We probably are not in danger of too great "standardization" of our educational systems, especially in the higher . Institutions, which is a peril that some of the opponents of the measure profess to foresee. It is not an unattractive phase of the present method that it affords a wide field of choice. But there is also need of greater thoroughness, and of a gener ally higher standard, and of such wider opportunities as are represented in the effort to eradicate adult Illiteracy and to extend 'education In Americanism and all that this Implies. This it would be the natural function of a Federal department to promote. Our foreign educational relations present another argument for the bill. We shall pres ently come in contact, to a greater ex tent than ever, with other countries. France, Italy and parts of South America are already looking to us for advice. It seems likely that we shall be called upon to act as counsellor to Russia after the present turmoil is over. The Orient, which has been In clined toward Germany In the past, will turn more toward the United State's in the future. This does not necessarily mean that the world sys tem will be "Americanized," but it does mean that there will be systems of exchange upon broadly national and international lines, and the proponents of the new department have a strong irnimpnt in this. It will seem reason able that this country should have to deal with other ministries of educa tion through the minor agency of a bureau in a department of the Govern ment which has many other interest to look after. Senator Smith's bill promises at least to arouse further Interest In subject which is Just now very close to the popular heart. Discussion of it In the Senate ought to be highly instructive. It is safe to forecast criticism on the ground that too com plete "standardization" of the schools is undesirable. Standardization of Americanism, however, which is pro posed, and equalization of educational opportunities, and Federal aid, if not supervision, in maintaining a high state of health and efficiency will present a common ground for discus sion. With the bill before it. Congress is sure of a subject which will not be exhausted in a single session. GET READT TO SPRAT. Increase in number of plant pests which was noted last season as the re sult of neglect, for which the war was given as the excuse, makes timely the warning to farmers and fruit grow ers recently issued by the American Phytopathological Society not to neg lect to provide themselves early in the present year with supplies of fungi cides and Insecticides and machinery with which to apply them. The so ciety includes most of the experts In plant diseases in the United States and Canada, and has recently conducted an investigation which shows that there Is danger of shortage of both chemicals and implements. The shortage, formerly due to di version of raw materials for war work. Is now likely to continue because of delay of manufacturers in turning their plants back to the industry of peace. Individual buyers can do much to hasten the reconstruction by filing estimates of their needs at once. The food needs of the world are still too acute to warrant waste, such as resulted in the season of 1918 from neglect of the important duty of spraying. Although the nutritional value of the food grown in the coun try in that year was estimated as 15 per cent above normal, it is also esti mated that it would have been another 15 per cent greater If It had not been for the ravages of plant enemies which could have been controlled by sprays. The loss to fruitgrowers was particu larly large. Suspension of hostilities should en able chemical manufacturers to meet farmers' needs if they are prompt In readjusting their affairs. The impor tant ingredients, copper sulphate and commercial sulphur, and also formal dehyde, which were affected directly by war. are relieved of the restrictions under which they have been laboring. It Is obviously the duty of farmers to count on a spraying campaign during the coming season, and prudent ones will make preparation well In advance. Plant pests multiply rapidly and an other season of neglect is likely to be far more costly than that of 1918. FLETCHERISM. Horace Fletcher suffered In contem porary judgment somewhat as did Professor Elie Metchnikoff, in the respect that his name was associated in the popular mind with an achieve ment that in fact constituted only a minor part of his work. The pains taking researches of Metchnikoff have been dwarfed in public estimation by his association with the theory that a certain kind of buttermilk promoted development of bacteria in the alimen tary tract which would prolong life Indefinitely. Similarly. Fletcher, who was a philosopher of a highly optimis tic school, is known to fame as the exponent of thorough mastication of food as a recipe for health and lon gevity. Indeed, the verb "to fletcher Ize" has an established place in our language, and has already found Its way Into the dictionaries. "Fletcher was not the long-haired apostle of a vague cult, but a highly successful business man, who made a fortune by his own efforts. He had been an athlete in youth, but when he stopped training became immensely obese. He traveled in the Orient, where he conceived the idea of In troducing Oriental knicknacks to his countrymen, and he was the proprietor of a, famous business with a Japanese name in a Pacific Coast city. He was rich at 35, when he retired from money-making to pursue the substan tial pleasures of life. He studied painting and produced some creditable works. He was, indeed, a many-sided man. But his greatest satisfaction. his profoundest pleasures, grew out of his philosophy of optimism. "I am," he 'said, "an instance of a man who acquired optimism, who de liberately set out to attain it." He preached suppression of the "fear- thought," and urged against the "self suggestion of inferiority." It was not inferiority to other men to which he alluded, but Inferiority to any circum stances. He said that It was the easiest thing In life to rid oneself of the fear of death. He began by ban ishing anger and worry, and then by questioning whether It was necessary that they should exist in the first in stance. He said that he had found that actual physical pain was not un bearable: that it was the fear of pain that made men sicken with It. He tested his own theory In the dentist's chair, which most of us will concede was a fair enough test. But his phys leal condition led to certain expert ments since his was a nature given to experimentation which resulted gradually in the merging of the phil osophy that a sound mind operated to produce a sound body and the theory that a sound body also was an aid in preserving a sound mind. His studies In nutrition were conducted from the point of view of a sociologist no less than that of a dietician. The dietary rules of Horace Fletcher were reduced to five, at some sacrl flee of completeness for the sake of epigrammatic terseness. He was not precisely a disciple of fasting, as was Dr. Tanner, but he frequently fasted He ran counter to the teachings of physicians who placed emphasis upon regularity of hours of eating when he advocated "waiting for a true, earned appetite." He was inclined toward the practice of vegetarianism, but he did not place as much stress upon this as do most so-called vegetarians. His counsel was to select from the food available "that which appeals most to ppetite, in the order called for by appetite." He did not disdain the pleasures of the palate. An incidental purpose of "fletchertzing." which con sisted in painstaking mastication, was to "get all the good taste out of the food In the mouth." The essence of the practice consisted in swallowing the food only when it "practically swallowed itself." "Enjoy," he said, "the good taste for all It is worth. Do not allow any diverting feeling to in trude upon the ceremony." And then there was the final rule: "Walt, take and enjoy as much as possible. Na ture will do the rest," he added. This philosopher borrowed from an cients and moderns alike. Was it not Dr. Holmes who proposed that we chew each mouthful of food thirty two times one time for each tooth in the head? There was Emerson, who said that it was a "greater dis grace to be sick than to be in the penitentiary." because when one was arrested It was because? one had broken a man-made statute, but when he was ill it was because of diso bedience to one of God's laws. Were there not ancients who believed that the mysterious something which they called the soul was located In the stomach and not In the heart or brain? Fletcher said that there was sound logic In the ancient notion, because the bad effect of unhappy thought that "touches the heart" is first felt In the stomach, if the stomach has any troubles of Its own to worry about. To the habitual Fletcherite he insisted such double disaster could not come. There thus appears in the Fletcher philosophy a curious mingling of the physical and the psychological. The process of digestion, having been be gun in a thoroughly normal manner, was capable of arrestatlon by un favorable psychic Influences without producing "those poisons which wear out the body faster than any other cause." One who ate slowly might bear the shock of the most terrible news the physical shock, at least and the misfortune, or its opposite in disguise, would not set up a vicious circle of accumulating bad effects. "The faithful one is ever ready to go before the bar of Death's tribunal for the approving judgment his dietetic righteousness is sure to secure. " Thus spoke Fletcher In one of his books. "Dietetic righteousness" is putting it rather strongly, perhaps, but there is a good deal to be said for any philos ophy which gives real promise of set ting In motion a healthy circle of causes and effects. It is conceded that as a people we eat too fast, to put it bluntly, and it is worth while to in quire where there is any connection between this fact and certain Nationa neuroses which are also admitted to exist. We may not be ready to go to the Fletcher extreme of "chewing liquids" thoroughly, but any physician will indorse the main article of the Fletcher creed. Fletcher did not. any more than did Metchnikoff. attain the great age which it is said was the desire of both men. But life is not measured in years alone. It is pretty well estab lished that he lived happily, and that most of his 69 years were free from bodily cares. We are unable to appor tion the credit equitably between ban ishment of the "fear-thought" and in tensive mastication. Doubtless both helped, each In Its own way. Those who possess untroubled consciences and unimpaired digestions will not concern themselves too much to in quire which is the cause and which the effect. The tonnage of British ships de stroyed in the war causes a more ur gent demand for new tonnage in England than exists In this, country, but that fact does not prevent British yards from being allowed to build a million deadweight tons for France. The Foundation yard in Portland. however, is kept idle because Presi dent Wilson objects to its building for foreign account. An injury is thus done to the men who would be em ployed, to the owners of the yard, and to France, which needs the tonnage. The estimate that there is an actual shortage of labor of 4 5.000 men In the Scranton district of Pennsylvania is encouraging news from the employ ment standpoint, provided it is not off set by too great an advance in the price of coal. Those who think that the airplane will prevent railway development are just natural pessimists. It is more reasonable to suppose that it will be employed in scouting out land to be opened by permanent rail communi cation. It undoubtedly Is the duty of every citizen to go to the polls and vote, but the thought obtrudes itself that the citizen who requires compulsion may not be a voter whose Judgment is much worth while. Before the Bolsheviki in this coun try ask us to adopt their way of think ing, it might be well for them to wait for their Russian brethren to do some thing to prove their right to leader ship. Sane plans for the welfare of re turning soldiers, of course, will not have all their eggs In the back-to-the-land basket. There are still men who yearn for other pursuits than farming. If those women who are kindling fires in the streets of Washington had been asked to kindle the fire at home we would have heard talk of divorce before now. Better a starving garbage can than a starving people. The need of thrift still exists, with a mouth waiting for every morsel of food we can possibly produce. Those who do not like to live in the United States will soon be free to go elsewhere, but there are many places to which we think they will not care to go. The Kaiser is still sawing wood, at the risk of becoming overheated, and saying nothing, perhaps, for fear of the same peril. There seems to be a confusion of "self-determination" with "self-extermination" in certain European quar ters. Artificial limbs are attachments that ought to be exempt from attachment. The bootlegger Is gradually drawing to the end of his rope. First signs of Spring Vader wants a newspaper. PAXCT TIME. Oh. I want to wander back again In memory, for today. To a snappy, frosty morning in an old home far away. Where a miracle in pictures, which no human s brush e'er made. In a tracery of frostwork on the win dow-pane is laid. There are fern leaves fine and filmy. uuno wim wonarous (Kill and care. Pressed as for some sacred purpose on that surface white and nn ua- - And sometimes In a marvelous land scape, fleecy clouds and ragged trees Stand upon that coated canvas and defy the chilling breeze: There are mountains topped with snnw. shine there are hills and valleva. too And sometimes a gleaming river and a pnantom white canoe. "Twas a field at glorious fancy that my "uuuui mtna aia roam. When the Frost King did his etching n me window-panes ' "back, home": Oft there comes an ache and longinu lor those rtavs no mor t r m-. Best of days, though countless others offer all they hold, to me. Oh. how far the tides have traveled on life's restless, surging main. Since 1 took those fancv lr,nrn,v. that stenciled u-lnris,-n.....l Would that We Illic-hr evee ,.,.,.- where the fanrv rivn,. -iia.. Loiter there, and calmly ponder, as we glimpsed the passing tide: Feel the eager blood a-pulsing through our quickened, tingling vein. ith the thrills we knew in taken on those frosty panes! ,, a RACK K. HALL. o"7 East Fortv.nimh o, ...... v .... Portland. Or. . ' IICRALDS OK PKACr,. Upon the mountain slopes did the un seen Heralds glide Down from the snow-crowned sum mits: past crevasse and rook They came with air of Heaven, and God-inspiring words. By the grassy pathways: did they th- forest-fastnesses unlock. As aid and guide'. By sheepcotes of the herders; valleva of streams and rills: Across the plains and prairies. to Bahel-haunts of men. These Heralds of good tidings. Heralds of I'eace once more: For cometh not the Christ of Peace to this poor earth again The Christ of now and yore? And Sharon's rose and heartsease flow ers will ever bloom; From deserts parched and dry doth war and discord fly. "The arts of Peace alone will live!" the Heralds sins; "The battlo armaments and trophies droop and die. Forever buried lie"' And we. too. must be Angels in this Mission great. Spread wines and hasten footsteps. as Messengers of peace Keep dissolved the feuds of nations; by Prayer bring Heaven here. By wlt-e and gentle suasion help quarrels cease, Ushering the world's new Plrth! LOUISA A'HML'TV NASH. Nashville, Or. TIIK CHHISTMA THEK. It was two weeks or more after Christ mas had gone When a little green fir tree lay out on the lawn. And I thought, as I looked on it, lying out there In the rain and cold, so neglected and bare. Of the joys it awakened that Christmas morn. When our thoughts turned back to the Christ that was born: Of the light that It kindled in child hood s glad eves. Who beheld it with wonder and joyous surprise. Arrayed in its trimmings so splendid and lair. And the gifts that Its wide-spreading branches did bear. Oh. the bright, happy faces that looked on it them. With a rapture .that cannot be told bv this pen! And now. as I look on it there on the lawn. My memory goes back o'er the years that are gone. To the happy reunion of one little band To a circle unbroken by death's cruci hand: The love and the cheer and the gifts that were given Seemed a foretaste while here of re unions in heaven. But farewell, little tree, you have not lived In vain! You w ill live in our hearts till the day comes again. And the joys of the past unforgotten will be. While we cherish thy memorv. dear Christmas tree. DR. J. J. WIGGINS. FAITH. I won't believe the things they say I know they can't be true. For nothing false could ever live In you, dear heart. In you. How can they think your lips deceive, lour eyes express a lie? They cannot see. they cannot know Tour heart, your soul, as I. I do not Judge the words, dear heart. You may to others speak: Who. hearing them, account you false- I know the flesh is weak. ' The many things we say and do. Because we are of clay. Do not reveal th soul of us. Or show the truth alway. I read your lips not what they speak. But what they can't declare. I read your eyes: not what they say. But what is masked there. .Though mortal life may never bring Your own dear self to me. Since it must go the earthly way To reach eternity. Yet faith will make me strong, dear heart : Tour soul, I know. Is true: Through all man's condemnation. love, 1 keep my trust in you I won't believe the things they say; I know they can't be true; For nothing false could ever live .In you, dear heart, in vou. MARGAHKT M. NELSON. University of Oregon. VIA DK MORTK. Who rldeth here, the bloody way. Bordered by poppy fields of France? In mud and blood 'neath skies of gray Halt and let the King advance! The King of Death, he is reme: This is his highway: let him go by. His darkness lighted by the gleam Of shell fire in the midnight sky. What cares he for moans and groans Of dying in the poppy fields? Of shattered limbs and broken bones. And all the pain that warfare yields? He Is the King, the conqueror. Who never yet has known defeat; The Kings of earth, gone on before. Have never moved him from his seat. His cities on a thousand hills. With all their chiseled monument; Ah. how- the cold mausoleum chllla And kills their sad illuslonments. CALVIN G09S. North Powder, Or.