8 THE SUNDAY OREGONTAN, PORTLAND, JUNE 1, 1919. Jlimtlag (8v$$nmx ESTABLISHED BY HESBT I- FITTOCK. Published by The OreKOnian Publishing Co.. io5 Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C. A. JIOBDEX, li. B- PIPER, Ma-nager. Editor. The Cresonian Is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press Is ex clusively entitled to the use for publica tion, of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, ana also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ' Subscription rates Invariably in advance: By Mail.) ,, Dally, Sunday included, one year.. ..,58.00 -Daily. Sunday included, six months. . . -Daily, Sunday Included, three months. . Daily. Sunday include?,' one month.. . . Daily, without Sunday, one year. ...... Daily, without Sunday, six months. .. Daily, without Sunday,, one month...... "Weekly, one year. ...... Sunday, one year. ..................... 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It is hard to remove from some minds the delusion that the league of nations as drafted at Paris would im pair American sovereignty by setting a. world-government in authority over our own government, with power to decide the strength of our army and navy, decide when we should make war and to impose Its will in settle ment of our disputes with other na tions. Such minds also seem unable to distinguish between the interna tionalism of he league and that of the socialists, though they have diamet rically opposed aims, and each would render the other impossible. That is the impression given by a letter from a correspondent of undoubted patriot ism and free from prejudice against the nations which have been our com rades in war. He says: Mv on-Dosltlon does not arise from any ruck of regard for the nations who fought and won the war. The internationalists did not win it and I see no reason why the peace treaty should be used as a means of foist ing internationalism on us in the guise of a. league of nations. Many of the instructors In our colleges are teaching internationalism, a philosophy that originated In Germany and was a part of that propaganda which was to prepare the world for German rule. It is the doctrine of Lenine and Trotsky. I do not refer to the Scott Xearings, David Starr Jordans, the Da-nas, Eatons. etc but to such men aa Dr. Bonn of Columbia, who toured Oregon on the Chautauqua circuit in iyl7 delivering a lecture on the mind of Germany in which he said that "patriotism Is a superstition of yesterday which we must outgrow," and similar rot. The propaganda carried on by such men their writings, speeches, interviews may easily be mistaken for the sentiment of the American people unless some such opportunity as the No vember. 1918, general election affords an op portunity of registering their views. But conceding that a- majority of the people may favor a league of nations at the present time, is it not reasonable to believe that as soon as they are aware that our liberty of action, our independence, our sov ereignty will be surrendered if we become a member and live up to our covenants, they will not only reject the proposition but send to political oblivion all those who have had a part in Its composition. We can rely upon such patriotic Americans as Lodge. Hrande gee, Borah, Poindexter, Knox and others w hen the doeement reaches the United States senate to show its true character. 1 know you have read it the purported draught and 1 cannot understand how you can ap prove articles 10, 16 and the reference to the Monroe doctrine In article 21, as a regional understanding for the promotion of peace, etc. It can only promote peace as the decla ration of a powerful nation that It will pro tect the weaker nations of the western hem isphere In maintaining popular government and from being subjects for exploitation by old-world powers, even to the extent of waging wax. The covenant binds us to surrender of "liberty of action, independence, sovereignty" to the same degree as and no more than any treaty or inter national agreement. So long as na tions have intercourse they will make treaties which by binding them to do or not to do certain things restrict their independence or freedom- of ac tion, but no such alarm has been raised about treaties in the past. The serious ground of complaint is that the league would, bind us in certain con tingencies to make war, to impose a commercial boycott, to submit a dis pute to arbitration or to mediation and to accept the award, also to restrict our army and navy to certain limits. Hut war or the boycott is only to be declared by the unanimous judgment of at least nine of the principal na tions, among which the United States will be one, and congress would still retain power to decide whether the contingency contemplated by the. cov enant had 'arisen and to declare war as its judgment dictated. The final decision would still remain with us. As this 'country has led in advocacy and practice of arbitration and . of making that system compulsory in justiciable cases, it should not balk at general acceptance of its own prin ciples or at their application to itself. The covenant does not, as our cor respondent assumes, "take from the representatives of the people the right to determine whether the nation shall or shall not make war." It binds all members to boycott a covenant-breaking nation and to aid "the forces of any of the members of the league which are co-operating to protect the covenant of the league." The council is only to "recommend" what forces each member shall contribute. Con press would be free to determine whether the contingency rendering war advisable had arrived and whether it would comply with the recommenda tion. Refusal would not stain the na tional honor by treating the covenant as "a scrap of paper." If some nation were to violate the covenant so flagrantly that the dele pates from the nine chief nations, in cluding the United States, would call down this penalty on it, is there any reason to doubt that congress would promptly indorse its action or that public opinion in this country would be expressed so strongly as to end any hesitation on the part of congress? If there were serious difference of opin ion in this country would it not ex tend to other countries and prevent that unanimity in the league council without which a league war or boycott would be impossible? These questions would be considered in the light of recent history. The fair conclusion is that by assuming the obligations, we should agree to do that which when the time came we should be willing to do. Therefore we should not make a contract which wro might be unwilling to fulfill. This is not the internationalism which supplants patriotism. It puts the capstone on the structure which patriots of all nations would build by uniting them to defend their countries more effectually without war than they have done hitherto by war. It would defend and strengthen the in dividuality of each nation, not absorb them all in Pan-Germany as the Ger mans planned or melt all nations into one and then redivide them into classes with the proletariat supreme, as the socialists plan. U-'hose. persona- who- fchy at the- pro- posed guaranty of each 1 eigne mem ber's Integrity, as provided by article 10, do not seem to realize- that in order to form a league at all It was neces sary to start on some foundation, or that the peace conference is remaking; the boundaries of Europe and western Asia for newly liberated nations which most need a guaranty that they may gain strength with security. In effect this clause puts the power of the whole league behind the American republics, to support which the Monroe .doctrine exists. If any old boundaries are un fair to any nation, there is opportunity for their revision under article 11, which declares: The fundamental right of eacb member to bring- to the attention .of the- assembly or of the rntiuHl anv rln-nrnit,ni whatever affecting international relations which tnreat- ens to disturb either the peace or the good unuerstanatng oetween nations. That same opportunity also exists under the arbitration and mediation clauses. f so I '3 not cas3r to understand the ob l.3 I jection to the indorsement of the Mon- .rAe (To -1 r i n Thiph mnnv T-fl1s Anv such indorsement by all the law-abiding nations of the world would have been hailed with joy ten years ago. One cause of distrust of Germany was refusal to accept the Monroe doctrine. It would" seem that now that we have got what we wanted, some no longer want it.- The effect of the league declaration is that the United States is recognized as the arbiter of the western hemisphere, and that other nations pledge -themselves not to at tempt any encroachment in this part of the world. It is no reflection on" the patriotism or sincerity of the senators who criti cise the league to say that they do not seem to have realized the revolution which the war has effected in the relations of the United States to other nations. They are still thinking the thoughts of 1914, though five years have wrought a change which compel our thoughts to leap forward fifty years or more in order to overtake the developments of those five years and to reason soundly. It is & time to scrap old opinions, to grasp new premises and to begin to reason anew from them. The more successfully we do this the better able we shall be to appraise the league covenant at its true value. It js not perfect, but it is the best plan available for building a new world in which wars shall be fewer until they may be no more. THE MOTHER SHIPTON HOAX. To those who doubt the wisdom of Sophocles and still believe in modern necromancy, recent events in aviation, culminating in the crossing of the At lantic ocean, will seem to be another verification of the famous "prophecy" of Mother Shipton, supposed to have been made in the time of the Tudors, late in the fifteenth century, and part of which was: Carriages withoa-t norses enaTI go. And accidents fill the world with, woe. Around the world thoughts shall fly In the twinkling of an eye. Waters shall yet more wonders do, Now strange, shall yet be true. Through hills man shall ride. And no horse or ass be at his side. Under water men shall walk. bbaJl ride, shall sleep, shall talk. In the air men shall be seen. In white, in black, in green. Unfortunately, however, for the Idol-worshipers, the Mother Shipton "prophecy" was Just a hoax, to which Charles Hindley confessed in 1873. Richard Head wrote in 1684 a "Life and Death of Mother Shipton," in which he endeavored to prove the existence some two centuries previous ly of a seeress who, among other things, had foretold the death of Car dinal Wolsey. He did not succeed in establishing to the satisfaction of later investigators that she ever lived at all. But the wonderful prophecy in question collapses under the weight of Hindley"s own story. Hindley reprinted Head's book in 1862, and garbled it. The prophecy in question was Hind- ley's and not Mother Shipton's, and was" made in a spirit of jest- He no more laid claim to supernatural gifts than would I. G. Wells. Another of the bogus Mother Ship- ton prophecies menaced a village in Somerset, England, with destruction by earthquake and flood in 1879, and was so widely believed that hundreds of families abandoned their homes on the eve of the expected disaster, while spectators swarmed in from far around to see the town destroyed. The will ingnes3 of some persons to be hum bugged, notwithstanding experience, was shown by the fact that, although the prophecy for 1879 failed complete ly. the fradulent lines supplied by Hindley And this world to an end shall come In eighteen hundred and eighty-one. caused great alarm throughout Eng land and even in other countries Id that year, and resulted in the moving of many thousands of persons from their homes into the fields. The tend ency of the credulous to sever all home tie3 on the supposed approach of the crack of doom. has never been satis factorily explained by the psycholo gists. Flying has fulfilled the last of the so-called prophecies of the famous, but probably non-existent old witch, except those to which reference has been made. Forecasting the death of Wolsey, if indeed it was done at all ought not to have been difficult in the troublous time in which Wolsey lived. Some of the other "prophecies' already had come to pass wnen Hind ley wrote his forgery of Head's book. Aeronautics had reached a primitive stage of development half a century before Hindley wrote, and no fewer than 14 submarines had been patented in England prior to 1727. Hindley was not even a man of imagination. He was merely a practical Joker, who fooled more credulous people than any other man in his century. MARRIAGE KATE INCREASING. There is a crumb of comfort in the census figures as to marriage and divorce in the United States, which is reflected in demand throughout the country for relatively small houses and apartments, reported by the United States homes registration service. It is true that the divorce rate increased from 53 per 100,000 in 1890 to 112 per 100,000 in 1916, while the mar riage rate increased only from 91 per 10,000 in 1890 to 105 per 10,000 in 1916. The disparity in rate of in crease is bad enough. But the actual number of marriages nevertheless shows a material gain due to increase of population, but a gain just the same. There were 33,197 divorces in 1890, and 112,036 in 1916; but there were 538,891 marriages in the former year and 1,040.778 in the latter. Actual in crease of 73.847 divorces is consider ably more than offset by an actual increase of 501,887 in marriages. It is the observation of the homes registration service, moreover, that a largely increasing number of mar riages is now taking place, following the return of the soldiers to civil life. It is too early to make comparisons with the official statistics of previous years, but the service is convinced that marriage is mora popular; this year than it ever has been. It is quite probable that when the figures for 1918 and 1919 are compiled officially a much better showing in behalf of the good old institution will be made. The homes service derives its chief interest in the subject from the cir cumstance that there is practically no city of considerable size in the United States in which there is a sufficient number of small cottages and apart ments. The . new brides and bride grooms alone constitute a host. It is for accommodations of the relatively smaller type that the registration serv ice is receiving the most freqnent applications. The home famine is further accen tuated by an opposite cause. Demand comes in part from families which during the absence of husband or father have been living in single rooms or boarding, and which now seek per manent homes. The federal service acts only in an advisory capacity, but it is performing a valuable function by preserving a broad outlook. Its in vestigations as to the country as a whole warrant the conclusion that a fresh supply of smaller houses may prove an important factor in the fur ther encouragement of matrimony. TRIFLING WITH BOLSHEVISM. Oswald Garrison Villard advocated a soviet form of government for the United States in a recent speech in New York, saying: Changing the basis of our representation to the soviet form would not only give us a different government, but would give us a aillerent feeling toward our government. We have lost all respect for our legislative bodies. I found that the soviet in Munich, which Is composed of proletarians only, com pares most favorably with the Albany and Ha-rrlsburg legislatures. Thus lightly does a man whose mind has been so concentrated on the im perfections of American democracy that he cannot see its inherent and ineradicable virtues turn to a system which is the negation of liberty, in fact is the bloodiest despotism masquerad ing as liberty. As usual with such men, he grossly exaggerates when he says we have "lost all respect for our legislative bodies." . Respect for some of these bodies is diminished but not lost, and even those which meet at Albany and Harrisburg are much to be preferred to a Russian soviet. There is at least the opportunity of peace fully changing them, while nothing but a bloody revolution can get rid of a soviet, for it knows no law but force. The influence of such parlor bol- shevists on the administration is seen in the announcement in the parallel column of a New York paper that the allies are inclined to recognize the bolshevist government of Bela Kun at Budapest and that the American and British governments have checked the advance of the Roumanian army on that city. Communism gained power in Hungary by violence the same means by which President Tinoco won power in Costa Rica but President Wilson seems disposed to extend recog nition to Bela Kun while denying it to Tinoco. Tinoco's authority has re mained undisputed and he declared war on Germany. Bela Kun's position Is at best shaky, and his first act was to form an alliance with his old com rade, Lenine, and to threaten renewed war on the allies. Such trifling with bolshevism gives it strength, and encourages men like Villard to talk sedition. If the allies were to -treat it as what it is organ ized crime of every kind in Russia and anarchy everywhere they could quickly extinguish it, and men like Villard would find some other occu pation for their disordered intellects. I NO KFXOJIJIEXDATIOS. j The Oregonian is asked to state ex plicitly the reasons why it is unable to recommend to the voters of Ore gon the referendum bill to provide financial aid for the education of sol diers, sailors and marines honorably discharged from service in the recent war with Germany. It is well enough for The Oregonian to say again that it approves the principle of the act, or any other act reasonably designed to show the state's gratitude for the service of its valiant sons, and to make up to them some measure of the time and opportunity lost at home by their absence in the cause of their country. The Oregonian would glad ly have the state raise through taxa tion a fund of $200,000 per year for four years to send the soldiers to any genuine "institution of learning," giv ing each of them $25 per month- So the proposed statute reads. But what is an "institution of learn ing?" It is provided in the act that the discharged soldier or sailor or marine may make his application to the "executive head" of the "institu tion of learning," whether it be "pub lic or private," and that, if he ap prove, the soldier or sailor or marine may pursue any "course or courses." The executive head shall provide "lodging, board and other necessities" required by the applicant and he shall render a statement each month to the secretary of state, who shall pay to the institution of learning for .each such soldier, sailor or marine, not more than $25 monthly. . What is an institution of learning? Evidently it is intended -to give wide latitude to any official definition, for it may be "public or private." It may not have a president, but it must have an "executive head." It may therefore be a state university or a denominational college, or a literary or theological academy, or a technical school, or a professional school, or a trade school. So far, so good. But it may also be a correspondence school, or a theosophical seminary, or a psychological gymnasium, or a barber college, or a chiropractic theater, or a massage verein, or any of a thousand and one schemes and fads of private operators. It may or may not be indeed that the institu tions enumerated in the latter classi fication are objectionable. If con ducted under proper auspices. We do not say they are. We know many of them are all right. But who does not know that too many of them are organized for private profit and not for any real educational object, and that they are unworthy of public sup port or confidence? There are 30,000 Oregon men who were or are in the service. If each sought to avail himself of the benefits of the act the fund required would be $6,000,000 a year or $24,000,000 in all. The act provides a fund of $200,000 a year, or for one-thirtieth of the service mem There is no admin istration board. Payments are virtu ally automatic The act thus invites the fly-by-night institution to solicit school enrollment of 30,000 men enrollment that may purport to offer any sort of supplemental instruction that the service man may take and continue at his employment. If such activity prevailed the questions as to who would receive the $200,000, and whether a liability had not accrued J against the state- for more than, $200,. 000 would arise. The Oregonlan can not answer the questions. It is quite clear that under the law there would be opportunity for grave and costly abuses, utterly defeating its worthy designs, and loading bene fits on individuals who have no proper claim. It will be easy to start a mushroom "institution of learning" of any kind, and it will be easy for the "executive head," if he shall be able to muster up a roster. of soldiers or sailors or marines, to demand $25 monthly for each of them for four years. Perhaps he will give them "board, lodging and other necessities." The secretary of state will have no alternative but to pay. The Oregonlan does not approve the act. But, in view of its laudable ob jects, it has not registered its disap proval. It has thought, however, that the public is entitled to know not only its merits, but its demerits. If. out of a generous and proper desire to re ward the men who have served their country faithfully, the people think that the chances for scandal or wrong ful gain under the act may well be taken, The Oregonlan will be con tent. It is for them to decide. It may well be that public knowledge of what may be done in wrongful ways will serve as a safeguard. Perhaps a sufficient safeguard. TEACHING JOURNALISM. News that Dr. Talcott Williams has resigned as director of the Pulitzer School of Journalism in Columbia uni versity brings to attention the fact that formal study of practical news paper work has been undertaken in colleges only within comparatively few years. The courses in "journalism" which have been offered sporadically in many universities ever since the Civil war, and which as a rule were given by professors of English who desired to sugar-coat the pill of an otherwise unpopular study, are not to j be confounded with the movement of which the Pulitzer school was the real pioneer. There are perhaps forty universities in the United States offer ing courses in "journalism" by Eng lish professors. Oregon university had one several years ago. Washington college, afterward Washington and Lee university, is said to have tried the plan under the presidency of Robert E. Lee. Ten universities, in cluding Oregon, are giving specific work in journalism, in organized schools or departments conducted by experienced newspaper men. A good many interesting facts will be developed by study of the history of the movement which Joseph Pulit zer began when he announced fifteen years ago this year that he intended to endow Columbia with a gift of $2,000,000 for the specific purpose mentioned. One of these is the broad grounds of general culture and disci pline which have been urged in behalf of study of newspaper work, whether or not the young student intends to take it up as a bread-winning career. Another is recalled by the historic controversy between Mr. Pulitzer and Dr. Eliot of Harvard over the type of Journalism teaching that a university ought to offer. This was marked by a curious anomaly. The publisher ar gued for a conventional education for a man to be a writer chiefly; the col lege president favored studies extend ing into all branches of newspaper work, including advertising, circula tion, manufacture and financing. Mr. Pulitzer, himself a product of the in tensely practical school, occupied the position in which the college president might logically have been expected to be found. The type which Dr. Eliot then favored has become, for various reasons, the one which most generally prevails where schools of Journalism exist. Mr. Pulitzer's conception, as one views it now, may have been founded on his own experience in procuring the kind of assistants he desired in developing the great metropolitan newspaper which he owned. Uhe early arguments for Journalistic training at Columbia were that New York was the center of the country, economically and journalistically speaking, and that in no other city could so complete a "laboratory' for practical teaching be found. But this ignored certain patent facts as to the genius of Ameri can journalism. By equipping young men to become cogs in a great ma chine, however efficient and smooth running, it did not offer them the prospect of leadership upon which the great body of Journalism of the whole country depends. The all-around training which Dr. Eliot advocated. which later was embodied in the course introduced at the University of Missouri as a full school under the deanship of a newspaper owner, and which since then has been extended to other universities, has departed from the first design of Mr. Pulitzer in that it has not- aimed so much to create metropolitan newspaper special ists as to build a foundation that would give the student confidence to acquire a newspaper, or to succeed if promoted on a larger newspaper to a position which would bring him in touch with business and mechanical problems. It has recognized," as the metropolitan idea did not do, the growing power and influence of the newspapers of the "provinces," and in particular the possibilities of the small town newspapers. For those who take the courses for their vocational as well as their cultural value, the ten dency is toward encouraging men to put their money as well as their brains and their youth into journalism. Dr. Williams was an idealist. He succeeded in time in creating that which amounted practically to a uni versity all its own. He was not al ways content to send his students to other departments, such, for example, as history and general literature, which had been devised originally without reference to the special needs of students of journalism. There are a good many persons who still believe that the latter have fewer special needs than Dr. Williams may have supposed. And study'of the "path of promotion" led to discovery of a fact which even Mr. Pulitzer seemed to have overlooked, that the leaders in I the profession were seldom those who I had begun as metropolitan reporters. Mr. Pulitzer himself was a shining example of this. He made his start "out west." in the then inconsiderable town of St. Louis. The school of Journalism performs another interesting function, however, by introducing another point of view into education. Perhaps it is this, rather than its elaborate and expen sive "laboratories," which accounts for its large growth in about a decade. There is, in the public mind, a ro mantic idea of the duties and privi leges of the newspaper worker. A good many students have been matriculated in journalism schools who have not gone into newspaper work. But these will testify, we believe, that they have found their training highly useful in other lines. By learning to weigh facts with precision, and to avoid jumping at conclusions, and to report exactly what they have seen or heard without modification (It is not as easy as the novice will suppose) they qualify themselves the better for not a few callings in which this training is ad vantageous. There is still another function and that is that it takes young men and women afflicted with what we shall call the "newspaper itch" and induces them to stay on the campus longer than they otherwise would, picking up general education in education, history, science. English and other things that at first they wanted to skip entirely. From the point of view of the university, if not of the newspaper industry, this is a not inconsiderable credit to the school of journalism scheme. Education in America, fortunately, is not run into a mold. Mr. Pulitzer's vision and Dr. Williams' work of or ganization are not discredited by the circumstance that the school which Mr. Pulitzer made possible has had few slavish imitators. The school of Missouri university, which was estab lished before the Pulitzer foundation had found fruition, is perhaps the real pioneer; at least it represents the Idea now prevailing in the west. There are excellent schools of journal ism in the Lniversities of Oregon and Washington. The western idea on the whole has held its own. There is still no royal road to newspaper training, and the school Itself will be the last to contend that it can create a fin ished product from unsuitable raw material. But the venture would have justified itself on broad educational grounds, by furnishing a new motive and a new viewpoint, if it had done nothing else. THE VOCABULARY OF AY1ATJOX. Aviation is contributing its quota to our rapidly expanding vocabulary. The tendency here observed is to take short Cuts, as the mass of npnnlo nv rten doing ever since language was in- vented. Words like "hydroaeroplane" were doomed from the beginning. Even "aeroplane" has already been dropped into the lexicographical waste basket. The shorter the better is the rule with the men who do the things that words are designed to describe. It is this passion for verbal time saving, coupled with Anglo-Saxon modesty in dealing with its own achievements, that puts the shorter and not always logical word in the place of the more descriptive polysyllable. Thus, aviation has given us "blimp." rather than "non-rigid dirigible bal loon." The latter is, perhaps, easier to remember, but the former is easier to use. It will win a place in the dic tionary. "Aerobatics" is a particularly deserving word, because it nearly ex plains itself. It is a shortened form of "aerial aerobatics," and is better than "stunt," which did duty a few years ago, because it is more specific and because "stunt" has been over worked. But "dope," which is now understood by all airmen to mean the special varnish-lika .liquid which is applied to wing fabric to lessen its friction through the air, and "dud" and "hop" have been frankly borrowed from other fields of human activity. Nevertheless they are excellent words to use in talking to an aviator. A dud" in aviation is a thing as useless as in land warfare is a shell that fails to explode. It represents a condition of being without life or power. An engine or a pilot may be a dud, or a day unsuited for flying may be the same thing. The "hop" represents the lightsome spirit of self - deprecation which would treat, for example, a pio neer voyage across the Atlantic as an affair "all in the day's work." Hawkei and Grieve and Read and Towers "hopped off" when they started on their epochal voyages. "Crash" was probably borrowed from the newspaper headlines, but it is helped in aviation by certain adjec- tival qualifications. A "class A crash" is a complete "washout." The student will be interested in knowing that a "washout" is anything useless, from a wrecked machine to a pilot who has lost his nerve. It is almost but not quite a synonym for "dud." One must absorb tho spirit of the game to appre ciate the refinements of its near synonyms. "Pancake" and taxl" are old words worked over into verbs of aviation. To "pancake" is to come almost to a stop near Uie ground and then to drop to a landing. It is a useful maneuver when an aviator has lost his running gear or is about to land on a difficult field. It alone made Vedrine's feat of landing on a small Paris roof possible. Doubtless it got into the language be cause it expresses the idea of flatness which we associate with a pancake. To "taxi" is to move either airplane or seaplane under Its own , power from place to place, but this does not em brace the speeding of the machine preparatory to the "take-off." The NC-3 recently "taxied" more than 200 miles into the Azores on the third let, of her flight. The new words, and others which the new science has created, have yet to stand the test of popular acceptance. But some of them will survive. If dic tionary makers are wise they will be alert. lest the language of the common people shall get ahead of them. TRY DECENTRALIZATION. If the land reclamation and soldier settlement bill, which will surely pass congress, is to be efficiently adminis tered, execution of the law will have to be entrusted in large degree to authorities in the states where the lands lie, not centered in Washington. The chief cause of the growing inef ficiency and extravagance of the gov ernment is centralization of all au thority in the capital. This practice has made the government such a huge machine that it moves more slowly just when the needs of the time de mand that it speed up. Every move must be approved by so many offi cials that it is Inordinately delayed. Each official is jealous for his little bit of authority, but seeks to evade responsibility, hence frequent post ponement of decisions. A horde of sub ordinates has been appointed through political favor in disregard of the civil service law, patronage has grown to enormous proportions, and the govern ment machine includes so many per sons as to constitute danger to the freedom of the people. It suffers from a species of political fatty degenera tion of the heart. Land reclamation and settlement constitute a public enterprise which can best be carried out by devolution of a very large measure of authority to the states or to sub-commissions which should contract for improve ment of land, should supervise the work and should locate settlers on the land and make financial arrangements with them. Reference of all these af fairs to Washington would result in delay, confusion, and often in things not being done at all. How can a man in Washington direct wisely what is done in Oregon or Louisiana except in the most general way? The man to run, things is the man on. the ground. The man In Washington needs only to I see that the local men conform with ; the law and with general policy he needs to co-ordinate the efforts of all , and to apportion funds among them. Other countries have passed or are passing similar laws, and they carry out their plans through the local au thorities. Great Britain is only a fraction of the size of this country and could better manage its soldier settlement and housing schemes through the central government than this nation can. But it simply passes a general law which practically enables the county councils to buy, improve and settle land, and another law en abling cities and boroughs to build houses. The government only provides a share of the funds and sees that the local authorities conform to the law. One of the best things which could happen to the horde of government clerks which scratches a living in Washington would be to be driven out and scattered over the country to dig and clear land and make farms and grow crops. They would have aching backs and calloused hands for a while, but they would be vastly improved in health and pocket and would become of much more use to themselves and the country. The more the national divorce sta tistics are studied, the more puzzling they become. The theory, for ex ample, that increasing divorce is due to growing desire for freedom on the part of women, and to their economic independence, does not correspond with the fact that more and more women demand and receive alimony, which indicates that freedom is not the only object sought. In the twenty- year period prior to 1906 alimony was sought in only 13.2 per cent ol cases and granted in only 9.2 per cent In 1916 alimony was sought In 20.2 per cent of cases and granted in 15.2 per cent. It is practically always the wife who gets the alimony. The ease with which alimony is obtained, how ever, varies greatly in the states. It is granted in less than 1 per cent of cases in Pennsylvania and in 61 per cent of cases in Michigan. Children figure in a diminishing proportion of cases, a fact which is also referred. for what it may be worth, to those who like to moralize. The high cost of moving, on top of the high cost of staying where you are, promises to operate as an unex pected stimulus to the own-your-home movement. One business man who is quoted by the United States depart ment of labor recently found that he could have made an advance payment on a house of his own for the cost of moving from a rented house into an apartment. "Three removes are as good as a fire" was substantially true in Ben Franklin's time, but it is much nearer true now. The increase is due not only to higher prices for all the articlesof furniture and other replace ments which inevitably accompany moving, but also to the higher cost of odd jobs of every kind. The semi annual moving day common in some parts of the country promises to be prohibited by rising prices, and the department predicts a boom in home buying as soon as communities are organized to finance adequate build ing of the right kind. The minds of the senators are prob ably made up on suffrage, and it would seem that a policy of obstruc tion would only delay other matters without accomplishing any real good And the obstructionists will be care ful, if they are wise, not to have any presidential bees in the future. The husband who did not discover until after marriage that his wife j could neither read nor write cannot be said to have been as well acquaint ed with his sweetheart as even a love lorn young man ought to be before committing himself to a serious ad venture. "It is idle," says Homer S. Cum mings, "to talk about third terms, or of presidential candidates." In say ing which Mr. Cummings still cannot be said to have committed himself. The occasional appearance of a dis patch telling of the defalcation of a bank clerk shows that there are still a few misguided men who will not profit by the experience of others. The most popular form of interna tionalism is marriage between Ameri can soldiers and French and English girls that is, among all except the girls whom the boys left behind. There isn't much use discussing how long the material in a building will last when houses go out of style more rapidly than the stuff of which they are constructed wears out The Newark bay shipyard claims a record of fifty-two ships in a year, but nothing is said as to what the Colum bia river yards could do if all restric tions were removed. It seems rather cool for this time of year, but we are so accustomed to having balmy springs in Oregon that the slightest variation always sets us to grumbling. One never hears a brass band now adays without wishing there might be more of them. The outdoor concert is a fine antidote for treason, stratagems and spoils. "Hit and run is 1919 rule." says a headline, which, upon examination, proves to be over a baseball item and not a description of Hun military pol icy. If Seattle should find adoption of the 6-cent fare unavoidable after all. it may wish to hand the street cars back to the company. The NC-4 takes a few more jump than were expected, but its motto, "Better safe than sorry." is justified by the event. Berlin Is "pessimistic." It takes some fellows a long while to wake up to a fact that everybody else knew long ago. Hawker as a squawker bids fair to diminish his popularity among the good sportsmen of his own country. If the peace is to be measured by the time it takes to arrive at it, it ought to last a long while. The rule still seems to hold good that the best rustlers have the greatest success in finding Jobs. The family reunion of the Hohen zollerns was not held on the old home stead. Versailles or Berlin which I Election Recommendations. In the following The Oregonlan gives a brief analysis of all measures on the state, city and port ballots in the elec- . tlon of June 3. and its advice thereon) STATE BALLOT, St Per Cent County Indebtedness for Permanent Roads Amendment- SOA, Tw : 801. no. Counties are now restricted In Incur- ring indebtedness for permanent roads to t per cent of their assessed valua tion. Several counties find It impos sible to carry on road plana If given this authority, they will hold elections to determine whether additional bonds shall be issued. Vote SOO YES, Industrial and Reconstruction TTramft.l Amendment. 802. yes: 803. no. This Is only a grant of authority to locate a -reconstruction hospital else where than at the state capital. An appropriation for this hospital Is con- alned in the reconstruction bonding bill, the seventh measure on the ballot. Vote 302 YES. State Send Pavmen. .f T 1h.Im - Drainage District Bond Interest. 804. yes; 805, no. By the terms of this measure the state Is authorised to underwrite bonds of officially approved Irrigation and drainage districts to the sole extent of the Interest thereon for a period or live years. The object Is to pro mote a better price for Irrigation and district bonds. As guarantor, the state would be called on to pay the Interest only in the event the property of the district defaulted. Interest thus ad vanced would become a lien against the district and be ultimately returned to the state. Vete 304 YES. Five Million Dollar T?Anr...n.,ln- ex. ing Amendment. 80S. yes; S07. no. This is another grant of authority. In itself it provides for no bond issue. but is a companion amendment to the reconstruction bonding bill (S12, yes). Vote SOe Y ES. Lieutenant Governor Constitutional imlil. menu 30a. yes: ao. no. The amendment creates a new office with a salary of $400 In each bl-enniirra. The lieutenant-governor would be the presiding officer of the senate, but the primary purpose of the bill Is to pro vide a successor other than the secre tary of state la the event of the death or disability of the governor. Tote 309 NO. Roosevelt Coast Xlllltai-v P!rh, -Rm 310. yes; 811. no. This is an appropriation of J 2.600.000 for assisting the government in build ing a highway from Astoria along the coast to the California line. It is con tingent upon an equal appropriation ty the government Vote 310 YES. Reconstruction Bonding? Bill- 312. 313. no. This Is a contingent bond Issue of $5,000,000. Of the total, 83.000.000 lg to be used only in the event the govern ment provides an equal sura for land reclamation. The further sum of $657. 500 is set aside for a state land set tlement enterprise. The remainder is to be available for construction of pub lic buildings only If there is a condi tion of unemployment or a demonstrat ed Immediate need for them. Vote 313 YES. Soldier". Pallors' and Marines' Kdileation- al Financial Aid Bill. 814. yes: 8 If., no. Levies two-tenths of a mill tax to provide $200 a year to aid in educating any honorably discharged Oregon sol dier, sailor or marine. V o reconunendstlea. Market Roads Tax BilL S16, yes; 817, no. Levies a tax of 1 mill to create a fund to be apportioned among the sev eral counties for market road construc tion. To obtain an allotment a county must raise by county taxation an equal amount. Vote 316 YES. CITY BALLOT. Bond Issue of $527,000 for Parle and Boulevard Improvements. 500. yea: AOL, no. A proposal to provide at once money for carrying on a fixed programme of pi.rk and boulevard Improvement, part of which nas been delayed by the war. A reeojaucndsHoa, Amendment to Annex Property Surround ed by the Present City of Portland. 602. yes; 503. no. Takes in certain peninsula bottom lands occupied principally by a mill property now receiving the benefits of city facilities, but paying no city taxes. Vote 603 YES. Bond Issue of fSn.ooo for a Police Tele phone System. 004. yes; 605, no. Proposes a convenience for keeping In touch with patrolmen. Vote SOS SO., Bond Issue of $100,000 to Tioide Tw Police Stations on Kast Side. 60S. yea: 607. no. Propost-d wholly new enlargement of police facilities, of which this bond issue would be but first cost Vote 607 SO. Bond Issue of $200,000 for Rerlaclnc and Repairing; Fire Stations. 608. yes; 60l, no. Provides for necessary reconstruction and repair of several stations now in disgraceful condition. Vote 60S YES. Bond Issue of $250,000 for Repairing, Re modeling; and Renovating City xiall. 610, yes; 61L, no. Designed to relievo crowded condi tions la some offices, and to provide more vault space. Vote 611 NO. Bond Issue of $500,000 for New Parks sad Playgrounds. 612. yes; 613. no. Provides for ten new parks and play grounds in districts not having imme diate access to such conveniences. 3io recommeasattes. Amendment Affeetlns Method of EstaH ltKhinic and Chantrlnc Streets. 614. yea; 515, no. Designed to enable council to adjust remonstrances without Incurring large court costs, but preserving right of appeal. Vote 614 YES. Amendment Specifying Persons Entitled to Police Pension Benefits. 616, yes; 617. no. Corrects technical error in present law. Appropriates no additional money. Vote 61 YES. Amendment Authorizing Two-Mill Levy for Paying Better tialaries and Wages. 618, yes; 61S. no. An act to enable the city to pay its employes salaries and wages com mensurate with those paid la private employment. Vote 618 YES. s PORT BALLOT. Bond Issue of $1,000,000 for Aiding Estab lishment of Water Transportation LJnea. 12. yes; 13. no Provides working capital to guaran tee certain port facilities, and to en able port commission to go out and get business for the port. Vota 12 YES.