THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JULY 20, 1919. ESTABLISHED BI HEXBI L. PITT OCR. Publlsn-sd by The Oregonian Publishing Co.. 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. A. iIOR.Ii EN. B. B. f IPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated Pre. The Associated Press Is ex clusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited tn this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication o special dispatci.es Heroin are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance: (By Mail.) 0ally, Sunday Included, one year. ..... .$8.00 Taily, Sunday included, six months... Xaily. Sunday included, three months. Xa!ly, Sunday included, one month... Iaily, without Sunday, one year...... raily, without Sunday, 6 months-... -Daily, without Sunday, one month.... Weekly, one year................,.. Sunday, one year EuaAay and weekly ......... 4. 2.25 e!oo S.2S .eo 1 0" 2.50 a. so By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday included, one year 9 29 Xaily. Sunday included, one month .7 5 Daily, Sunday included, three months.. 2.2.1 Daily, without Sunday, one year J.hO Daily, without Sunday, three months... 1.S3 Daily, without Sunday, one month 65 Mow to Remit Send- poatoffice money or der, express or personal cheojf on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at own er's risk. Give postofflce address in lull, in cluding county and state. Postage Batesj 12 to 18 pares. 1 cent: 18 to 32 pages, a cehts; 34 to 4S pages. 3 cents: 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents: 62 to 76 pages. S cents: 78 to 62 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & ' Conk Un, Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklin, Steger building. Chicago: Verree & Conklin, Free Press building, Detroit. Mich. Ban Krancisco representative. R. J. BIdwelL TRYING TO FOOL THE FARMERS. In the Portland rate case, as in any litigation, one can judge of the strength, or weakness of a person's case by the character of the state ments and arguments which he puts forward. That being so, the state ments made by an attorney for the Seattle chamber of commerce in an interview in the Seattle Times give Portland good grounds for confidence. While Seattle is conducting an in dustrious propaganda among the pro ducers of the Columbia basin, this attorney says that Portland is doing precisely the same thing and is lead ing the wheat growers "to believe that this is a fight for lower freight rates." He says 'that is not the issue at all," but that "what Portland wants is not rates which are lower in and of themselves, but which are lower than the rates to Puget Sound, and she would regard this case as having been won if this were brought about by raising the rates to Puget Sound." He proceeds to contend that a dif ferential in rates "would undoubtedly be very detrimental to the people of the inland empire," for "in most in stances the wheat dealers and jobbers in Portland would simply meet the prices of their competitors in the Sound cities and pocket the differ ence in freight rates." Portland does not ask that the rates from the inland empire to the sound be raised, and the railroads are de barred from making that request, for their officials admitted in testifying in former rate cases that existing rates to the Sound were calculated on the basis of cost of service over the mountain roads. Portland asks that the rates to Portland be based on the cost of service by the Columbia river roads, which can be proved beyond dispute to be lower than that by the mountain roads. In saying that this adjustment would not benefit the wheat grower because the Portland dealer would pocket the difference between Port land and Seattle rates, the attorney assumes that the farmer of the inland empire is ignorant of the elementary facts about the market for his own products. The price of wheat is fixed at Liverpool, not at Portland, and the farmer is paid that price less the cost of getting it from the farm or the local elevator to Liverpool. That cost in cludes rail freight to Portland, cost of handling here, ocean freight and insurance to Liverpool. As these items of cost are known factors, the dealer has no chance to "knock down" the difference in rail freight, and he would pay the farmer the bal ance after deducting those items. In order to compete with him, the Se attle dUer would pay the same price, whicfl would be the net price of wheat on the farm or at the country ele vator. The farmer pays the freight, and he .would receive any saving of freight that would be effected by lower rates down the Columbia river. "The people of this state" (Wash ington) are told by this attorney that they "have had good reason for being proud of the enterprise shown by the railroads which operate between the inland empire and Puget sound." The people of the Puget sound cities have much cause for pride, but they are by no means all of the people of Washington. The people of the inland empire have no cause for pride at receiving a low price for their products in con sideration of shipping them to Puget sound ports rather than to Portland. Vancouver feels no pride at seeing products of eastern Washington hauled over the North Bank road right past its docks to the sound at the same rates as would be paid if they were unloaded at Vancouver. There is no perceptible cause for pride in the fact that the public serv ice commission of Washington has taken up the fight to perpetuate the present rate adjustment for the profit of Puget sound ports and to the loss xf the eastern Washington producers and the. port of Vancouver. The Northern Pacific and Great Northern roads may take pride in having made the O.-W. R. & N. road party to an arrangement by which large proportion of the latter road's traffic is diverted to its competitors end from its own deep water terminus to Puget sound ports, but the O.-W. K. & N. can surely take no pride in having been inveigled into such an arrangement. In fact, the feeling of pride among the people of Washington and among the railroads concerned must be mixed with anger tn the ratio of about 50-50. When the hearing begins, we shall see which are proud and which are angry. RECLAIMING CRIPrLED CHILDREN. Dr. Abraham Jacob!, who died in New York recently at the age of 89, deserves more than a passing eulogy because of the pioneer work he did for children. He was the first man in the United States to hold a chair of pediatrics in a medical college, and one of the first to interest himself in a large way in the reclamation of deformed little ones. Practically all that" has been accomplished in this direction has been done since he es tablished this important branch of medical science in New York Medical college in I860. Probably there is a not remote con nection between the setting up nearly sixty years ago of a special depart ment for the study of children's needs and the Oregon law which provides for state aid for sick and deformed -children whose parents are unable to pay for treatment. This law. which was enacted by the 1917 legislature, and is recorded in chapter 145 of the general laws of that year, provides the method by which any school offi cer or teacher or any physician by filing a petition with the county judge may initiate proceedings under which a physician designated by the court shall report on the probability of affording relief. If reasonable hope is held out. the child may be sent to a hospital under the direction of the medical college of the University of Oregon. It is provided that no com pensation shall be allowed for medical or surgical services, and that neces sary hospital expenses shall be paid for by the county. Experimentation is expressly forbidden. Results from operation of similar laws in other states indicate that more than 90 per cent of children treated have been made self-supporting. Ex istence of the law, which is not as widely known as it ought to be, inci dentally also illustrates the situation of a large middle clas" with respect to medical attention. Those who are well able to pay do not need the law to help them, and the indigent are generously provided for. But the attorney-general has held that there is no warrant for payment. of part of the cost by parents or guardians who are able to do so. The humanitarian re sult achieved probably would warrant parents unable to pay the entire bill in availing themselves of the privilege bestowed on the indigent. But there are considerations of pride, which are reluctantly overcome, that make this difficult. But every crippled child is entitled to its chance, and it is to be hoped that this chapter of the law will not be suffered to go unnoticed by any who need its benefits. A REAL FATHERS' DAT. Representative Snell of New Tork has encountered opposition to his resolution calling on the president to designate the third Sunday in June as Fathers' day." Protests are chiefly directed, however, at selection of Sunday rather than a week day, there being a large body of opinion to the effect that father deserves a holiday of his own, and that Sunday would be chiefly observed by him in his usual occupation of bathing, fixing the furnace and cleaning up the back yard. If he. is to be signally honored, as all will agree he deserves to be. something distinctive in days is de manded. The resolution, which also nominates "roses of any color as em blematical of the day and thought," has gone to the library committee, which bodes ill for it. The library committees of congress are notorious for inaction and as repositories of measures that the members wish to lose sight of without the formality of negative votes. VACATION LAND. The federal forest service, in calling official- attention to the "ideal vacation land" which exists in the national forests of the country discloses a fact not as widely known as it ought to be, that these great spaces are not only not fenced against the public, but invite the presence of all who can use them. "The only signs you will find," says a recent forestry announce ment, "are those which point you on your way or ask your co-operation in preserving the beauty and value of these recreation grounds and their re sources." Firearms are not barred and hunting and fishing are restricted only to the requirements of state game laws. Necessary firewood and forage are made available and the government seeks in every possible way to make camping popular and inexpen sive. This is part of the national movement for better health, and it fits nicely into the see-America-first scheme. The forests of the Pacific northwest are particularly accessible, and when their beauties are known they ought to attract not only the people at home but many tourists from other states. AMERICAN PHYSICAL STANDARDS. The first adequate physical survey of the people of the United States was made possible by the recent draft, and the report of the surgeon-general of the army presents some illuminating data on this topic. Exaggerated state ments as to the unfitness of Americans as a whole for military duty -are cor rected by the report. Thus it is shown that of the 2,510,000 men between the ages of 21 and 31 who were examined by local boards, 730,000, or 29.1 per cent, were rejected on physical grounds. But the showing is not so bad as many had supposed it would be, and it is not particularly serious in the case of a people bent chiefly on the practice of the peaceful arts. The major cause of rejection was flat feet, an affliction that strikes one man in every five. The significance of this in civil life may be small. Men with flat feet make exceedingly useful members of society, although their presence among combatant troops de pedent for their efficiency upon a high degree of mobility, may be embar rassing. The same thing is true as to defects of the sense organs, and, as the surgeon-general says, "the stress of struggle, work and excitement on the battlefield requires a degree of perfection of heart action and inner vation that is rarely demanded in civil life." On the other hand, the nervous and ..mental group, and also tuber culosis and the symptoms of the so called social diseases are a handicap to the everyday citizen. These do not constitute a large proportion of the total causes for which drafted men were rejected. The relative healthfulness of city and rural life is not conclusively deter mined by the report. It will surprise most persons to learn that the social diseases are more common among re cruits from the rural districts. Drug addiction is much more prevalent in the cities. Defects of vision are much more common in the large cities. This is accounted for on the theory that the races having con genitally weak eyes are much more likely to settle in the large centers. A revelation is that tuberculosis was strikingly uncommon among recruits from New York city, notwithstanding overcrowded conditions of housing. Nature works in its own way to save the race. The report suggests that the small amount of tuberculosis and ton silitis among recruits from the con gested districts indicates a highly resistant population. probably ren dered immune through crowding either in preceding generations or the present one. Nevertheless, the charts accompany ing the report indicate that country life upon the whole tends to greater physical fitness. The states which appear in white, indicating that they sent the largest percentage of fit men, are all mainly farming states, except Pennsylvania, with its mines and manufactures, but this state has a large American population. It will not be easy to understand why the moun tain states of Montana and Idaho shouBd, with Maine, in the extreme northeast, and Florida in the extreme southeast, be printed in black, denot ing the largest percentages of rejec tions. Clearly there is something yet to be done in the way of analysis of the figures. The proportion of men with defective vision is six times as large in Massachusetts as in Oregon. Arkansas leads the list of states in prevalence of tuberculosis, and Ar kansas is commonly regarded as a state where people lead an outdoor life. Drug addiction Is commonest in Florida, with New York second, and It is least common in Pennsylvania. Oregon, as has been told before, stands at the head of the honor roll as re gards venereal infection. We are by no means a decadent people. The statistics, though they point to certain precautions, are heart ening as a whole. We shall not worry much, for example, over the number of rejections for "underweight." Small men sometimes even have the advan tage in civil employment. About 48 per cent of all those rejected for every cause were practically unhandicapped in their ordinary work. We know, of course, that those who were accepted were a fine body of men. The stand ard for the people as a whole is higher than the early pessimists would have had us believe. MAKING WORLD SMALLER. The ultimate meaning of the pro jected tunnels under the English chan nel and the strait of Gibraltar is in dicated by a trade map recently printed which shows that they will reduce the distance between London and Rio de Janeiro to 519 6 miles, by comparison with 5621 miles from New York to the same Brazilian port. The obstacles are chiefly political, as cost of the Gibraltar tunnel, estimated at J3S. 000.000, is not prohibitive. From Ceuta, Morocco, to Dakar, which would be made the steam ship terminal, is 1800 miles, and the railway would traverse 750 miles of Spanish zone, which is a task to which diplomats rather than engineers must address themselves. Spain, how ever, has profited immenselj by her neutrality and is expected to finance the construction of the entire line through her own territory. Since the line would also lay the foundation for a short route to the Congo and the Cape of Good Hope, the entire cost, $160,000,000, would not 'be excessive In comparison with benefits obtained. WHAT WOULD 'WASHINGTON DO? Opponents of a league of nations never weary of quoting warnings by Presidents Washington, Jefferson and Monroe against alliances with Euro pean nations and against meddling in the affairs of Europe, as though they applied to the present situation and should be conclusive against the league. It is no reflection on the wisdom of these early American statesmen to say that what was true of the America and Europe of a cen tury ago Is not true today or that the policy which was wise then would not be wise today. To go back an even century, in 1819 the United States was a republic of lees than 10,000,000 people, and the other American republics were Just struggling into life by rebellion. This nation was engrossed in settling and developing Its own territory, and had neitfcer energy nor power to take a leading part in the affairs of the world in general. There was no cause for it to do so, for Europe was as willing to let it alone as it was to let Europe alone. The only serious sign of a different disposition on the part of Europe was given by the holy alliance when it threatened to recon quer Spain's rebellious colonies, but it drew back when Monroe proclaimed his doctrine and Great Britain ex pressed readiness to back him. In 1819 Europe had nothing In common with this country politically. Switzerland was then the only repub lic. Great Britain was a constitutional monarchy but with so narrow a fran chise that it was practically an oil garchy. and all other countries were ruled more or less absolutely by kings and emperors. When they did inter vene on behalf of people struggling for freedom, like the Greeks, motives of imperialist policy governed and re' stricted the area set free. The theory that might was right prevailed, there fore Americans did not care which party won a war. In every respect the conditions which prevail in 1919 are in direct contrast to those of 1819. Autocracy has been extinguished in Europe, and the monarchies which survive are so in name only, for in them the people rule as fully- as in a republic. In order to find any, surviving autocra cies, we must go to remote parts of Asia and Africa. Our participation In the war has been largely instru mental in bringing to life the new republics of Poland and Czecho slovakia, and Poles and Czechs re turned from this country have taken the leading part In organizing them. This country wfes forced into the war by a direct attack of the worst autoc racy, has poured out blood and money in helping Europe to win or preserve its freedom, and Europe looks to it as the great power which will protect democracy from revival of autocracy. Europe's position toward America has changed, but 'so has America's position toward Europe. Our popu lation has grown in a century from ten to one hundred millions, and our national wealth exceeds that of all the European allies combined. Al though the war was fast becoming world-wide we tried to hold aloof, but failed, for the head of the leagued autocracies directly attacked us and plainly intimated that, if he should crush his other enemies, it would be America's turn next. The conclusion from those facts is plain. European quarrels and the forms of government adopted by the peoples of Europe are no longer matters of Indifference to us, for an autocrat reached across the ocean and dragged us Into his quarrel and in defeating him we brought into being republics and united severed nations which we can not In honor desert. Our own inter est points the same way, for it these nations fell under the sway of a despot, we should face the same dan ger as in 1917. Europe did not and will not let America alone. The mailed fist of autocracy struck at us; democracy called on us for help. Our best se curity against autocracy Is to help democracy to live and grow strong. Though autocracy is ostensibly de stroyed, its revival is still possible. We are confronted by two enemies unbroken, unrepentant Germany with its militarists pulling the strings of its republican government, and bol shevism. which after tearing the Vitals out of Russia has fastened its clutch on Hungary and . reaches out after Italy and other countries. Who can doubt that If Washington lived . today, he would see that the one way to make America safe would be to make Europe safe against these twin foes? He would see that the best assurance of safety would be to league American democracy with the free nations of Europe in establishing the reign of justice and reason in place of the reign of brute force and hate. He stood aloof from a Europe ruled by despots, but he would reach out his hand to help the Europe of to day, which has won its freedom at the cost almost of its life. LIBRARY SERVICE. The annual report of the librarian of the Portland public library is a re minder of the complete revolution of the attitude of the librarian toward the public which has taken place In a generation. The time is well within the memory of the middle-aged when books were treated as precious docu ments, so carefully guarded as to be almost Inaccessible except to persons possessing inexhaustible patience. Membership cards were wound up in red tape and strange visitors to the library viewed with suspicion. The open shelf system, which marked the beginning of popular usefulness of a public library, is a comparatively re cent innovation. It had a good deal of resistance to overcome at first. Ex tended loans of books to readers en gaged in study of especial subjects have been made for only a few years. An authority on library administra tion, writing ten years ago. said that "many libraries allow a second book to be lent, not fiction." This was a radical departure from the estab lished rule at that time. Now the application of a discharged soldter with his right arm missing for a book of left-handed piano mu sic, which Miss Isom has chosen as typifying the wide variety of service which is expected of a public library. is illustrative also of the increasing j confidence of the people in an insti tution which they are rightfully com ing to regard as their own. We may hope that the one-armed soldier was not sent away empty-handed, and we think that it would not have occurred to him to go to a public library for help twenty-five years ago. "A lend ing library," said a writer on libraries a decade ago, "is ceasing to be a mere storehouse for books, but alms to In duce its readers to borrow better books by restricting the supply of the less desirable and inciting Interest n the best by annotated lists, by illus trated bulletins, by personal sugges tions and by shelves open freely for all to browse among tempting books." A large net gain In circulation of books is significant even without de tails as to the kind of books circu lated. It is an accepted rule that the habit of reading feeds upon itself, and that It Is largely In the interests of education. It is known also that In the case of the well-managed library the public taste as to reading advances progressively. What may be called the "extension service" in connection with public library work is one of Its most important recent additions. We not only make-the library Itself less forbidding, but we carry its work and its message to the outer world. The shelf of .books in the restroom of a laundry, the proposal to keep up to date the loans made to the library of a local jail, the movement to fos ter reading clubs, are- a few of the signs of the time which points to the library's educational possibilities. Now the Americanization of foreigners, which looms large in the scheme of the future, suggests still other ways In which the library can be made useful. Future support of public libraries Is a subject of public concern. In the matter of personnel the situation is similar to that which confronts the public schools, except that it is not quite so close to the public heart. Pre paration required of the efficient librarian Is analagous to that of the teacher, and salaries, it must be ad mitted, are not advancing in propor tion to the declining value of the dol lar. But there are many other factors of cost In the maintenance of a good library and its ambitious new depart ments, and these too must be provided for unless there Is to be frank aban donment or at least -limitation of the library as an educational agency. Not many who know what the public libraries are doing would be willing to go back to the old days of mere book warehouses, but those who desire to see them continue to grow must be prepared to foot the bill. AN OLD-TIME BEST-SELLER, To have achieved a sale of half a million copies was so noteworthy for a, book printed in the middle of the last century, when book publishing was not the fine art that it is now, that it would be supposed that a work that could have so held our grand fathers would be known today. Yet how many are there who recall "The Wide, Wide World." which made Taine wonder what the American people found in a "three-volume novel devoted to the moral progress of a girl of thirteen," or who remem ber that the author was Susan Warner, who was born a hundred years ago this month. "The Wide, Wide World" was the literary phenomenon of its time Published in 1849 (In two vol. times, not three) it not only took the country by storm but was translated Into French and German, and had an extended vogue in England. Susan Warner and her sister, Anna, were noted figures in their time. Susan adopted the pen name "Eliza beth Wetherall." Anna that or "Amy Lothrop." Susan's first book was scorned by the critics, after having been all but rejected by the pub lishers. It was read in competition with Charles Dickens' "Dombey and Son." which was published In 184S, and with the tatter's Incomparable "David Copperfleld." first printed in 1850. Thackeray had just assumed his place of eminence In English lit erature by publication of "Vanity Fair" in 1S46-48 as a monthly serial, and wrote his other great novels. "Pendennls" (1849-50). "Henry Es mond" (185!) and "The Newcomes' (1854-55). while The Wide., Wide World" was before the public. The generation did not want for good read ing, and the literary work of the Misses Warner hardly Justifies com parison with that of Dickens and Thackeray and some others of that day. The critics were right and the public was wrong, but It was the publlo that bought the books and the venture as to "The Wide. Wide World" justified Itself from the commercial viewpoint. We were perhaps mora orthodox In our religious views then, and Susan Warner commended herself to a large clientele by her deep religious feel ing. She did not confine herself to novel writing. One of the popular works of her pen, after she had basked a while In the fame which her first novel brought hert was The Law and the Testimony." This used to be found on nearly every bookshelf, and it probably survives now in a good many garrets In the older-settled country. In It were grouped, under appropriate headings, biblical texts establishing the cardinal doctrines of Christianity. This was followed by a story full of scenlo descriptions, "The Hills of the Shatemuc," and she also wrote a second success, which almost but not quite reached the selling record of "The Wide. Wide World." It was "Queechy," which had a tear ful heroine named Fleda, in whom tender memories were always stirring and whom she presented with such sympathy that emotional readers could always find a parallel between her sufferings and their own commonplace tribulations. For in nothing that Miss Warner ever wrote did the extraordi nary appear. Her characters were quite commonplace people, doing quite ordinary things in a simple way. They would be called "goody-goody" nowa days. In any event, Susan Warner took herself seriously enough to prepare tn all possible ways for the career of authorship: Anna Warner wrote her biography only a few years ago In which she showed that at an exceed ingly early age Susan began to chafe over every moment of wasted time, At 17 she had, decided to read some Of the works of the French theolo gians, conceiving this to be necessary to her spiritual education-. The quef tion was whether It should be Bossuet, Bourdaloue or Fenelon. "More than one consultation I held with myself. she wrote in a letter, "before I pitched upon Bossuet." Young women of 17 Of the present generation who long for a literary career may find It advantageous as a kind of discipline to try to read Bossuet. But Susan did read some of him, as she afterwards recorded: I have read part of one sermon, which I hope to finish today: but how e-f y It is to trifle away whole days doing nothing, and how hard to one not accustomed to ular and useful employment to spend, one hour In appllcatior to something worth while. For some months past 1 have been rather at a standstill; let us hop that the months to come will be turned to better account. I am almost 17. How much may Justly be expected of me, and how am I pre pared to met these expectations? I oncht to exert myself; but I think far too little of what I ought to dof it Is always what I would like to do. One thins I ought never to do, at least for some time, and that la to read novels. I know they have dona mis chief enough already. It Is a singular view, that one ought not to read novels who Is destined to become & novelist. Yet much allow, ance win be made when one considers that she was then only 17. an age when few girls nowadays are giving much thought to the great things which may be justly expected of them. Only a few days later she wrote: I have been amused by a little book. "An Excursion to the Monssteries of Alcobada and Batallla." by Mr. Beckford. The ac count of the dinners and suppers Is enough to make one's mouth water. 1 Jove to read about good eaUng. Presently she was to like to write about good eating. Her sister says that she was beset for years wltD letters from strangers asking for recipes for the biscuit on which Captain Parry" set his paw; and ror 'splitters' and for "the cake that Desire made." It may have been the deep sincerity Impressed upon all that .she wrote that made her books popular. The Warner sisters collaborated in several juvenile books, one of which. "Say and Seal," had a wide circle of readers. But It Is a curious commentary on the fickleness of literary taste that the second-best seller in American fiction "Uncle Tom's Cabin" still holding first place was a book that Is seldom heard of by the present generation. Now the- purists are Jumping all over Vice-President Marsnau tor saying that opposition to the league of nations is melting like a snowball in July. They want to know where n ever saw a snowball melt in July No one ever saw a snowball in the circumstances which are more com monly depicted in the metaphor, but everybody knows precisely what is meant. The forest fires In Idaho and Mon tana suggest the need of aerial fire engines. If a dirigible balloon carry ing a water tank could fly over an Incipient firs and accurately drop its load, the land fire-fighters' Job would be easy. The Lane County Fair association may not Induce Governor Olcott to jump dally from a parachute in the clouds, but the associations press agent deserves credit for thinking up the scheme of inviting him to do it. If a Bourbon is a man who refuses to learn anything from experience, the Turks who are proposing to set up an Independent government are the bourbonlst chaps that history tells anything about. The correspondent who wants the kaiser tried In the United States has overlooked the fact, perhaps, that it would be cruel and unusual punish ment to deprive htm of his beer. John D. Rockefeller in his youth wanted to become a musician, but that was in the days before dinner music was Invented, and he abandoned the career as probably unprofitable When one reads of the plight of millions of hungry children in Eu rope, the Inclination to sav food in th face even of a bumper crop pros pect Is well-nigh irresistible. A newly discovered wheat pest has been named "take-all" by th scten tlsts, which is much easier to re mem us-r than the Greek equivalent of take all, whatever tt Is, would be. Th fine for setting fire to a forest Is heavier than th penalty for beating one's wire. But It is easier to ret a new wife than to restore a forest after it has been burned. We still do not hear of tramps any more, which suggests that those who went to work to avoid fighting have found that work Is not th wo rax thing in the world, after all. Removal of trading-wlth-the-enemy restrictions does not mean that ther will be a sudden demand for German made goods in the United States. Airplane mall now takes th regular rate of 2 cents an ounce, flying being thus accepted as all in the day's work of an American, With an apple crop of 24,454.000 barrels in sight, vry loyal Oregonian will proceed at once to do hid duty. General Pershing will have a recep tion by the American people, without consideration for red tape POLITICAL REVULSION IS CERTAIN aatocratie Auuptlea Not Lesrse Cea- venaat Is the Logical Isaac. GOLD HILL. July 17. (To the Edi tor.) I have been a reader of The Ore- gonlaa for almost 50 years. Sinoe the beginning of the war Just closed. I have, perhaps, been as close a reader and student of the muddled affairs Into which Christendom has been plunged as any other ordinary person. I am a re- pub 11 can and haw always been one. 1" was on of the Garfield electors for Oregon and the messenger that carried Us vote to Washington. I simply state this fact to show that I am not moved by partisan politics. I have noticed all The Oregonlan's editorials In regard to the league of nations controversy and in the main am In hearty agreement with you. I am cot indifferent to the autocratic manner In which President Wilson has borne himself toward the senate snd resent, as I bellevs all patriotic citi sens ought to. his assumption that this la his own personal affair. He talks like a democrat, but acts like an auto crat. He adjourned the politics of re publicans, but admonished his demo cratic followers to "whoop r up" for the administration. All of which looks absurd. I voted for Hughes, but am Inclined now to bellevs that his election, would havs bean a great misfortune. Wilson was elected on the Issue that "he kept us out of war." He knew that war was inevitable, but accepted this props gsnda for political purposes. When the war cams republicans all over the country, voluntarily "adjourned poll tics" and flocked to the support of the administration. The only monkey wrenches that were thrown into the machinery, were those of his pacifist friends and I. W. W. traitors. Had Hughes been elected. Is It likely that the country would have risen en masse In support of the administration in the prosecution of the war? You can c - pend on 't that a large majority of Mr. Wilson s supporters, who acclsim-ed him so highly tor "keeping us out of war" would have followed their exalted leader In his resentment snd we should have had a divided country. The wsr would havs been charged to republi can success and the result. It Is likely, would have been a world disaster. I do not believe that our government Is In any great dsngsr from the lessrue or nations covenant. The whole world is hungry for peace and it looks ss though a method therefor has been provided. If hot-headed statesmen with political chips on their shoulders would continue the patriotic attitude which they evinced all along until the school master from Princeton. In his self-con stituted mightiness, rose above the constitution tn his autocratic ambition to dominate the world. It Is not ex pected that this league of nstons will prove to be perfect. Even our con stltutlon has been amended from time to time: so can this covenant. The statement that Great Britain has six votes to our one, la shown to be i fallacy. The requirement of a unanl mous vote, Is a perfect shield. The greatest trouble I ses Is the likelihood that a unanimous vote can never bs secured on any question likely to arise. Again, the great shibboleth of the democratic party has always been states' rights On of the greatest bug-a-boos that has never failed to arouse th Ira of the democratic party nas Deen a strong centralised govern ment They have always charged that the republican party seeks to Invest the central government with too much power snd thus -encroach on the rights of the states. The great "Jackson Ian and Jeffersonlan principles," the shout ing of which opens every democratic campaign, it seems to me have been smashed to mltherens by his Majesty Woodrow. So much power was neve before given to any president. No other has ever had the audacity to "request what Wilson has demanded and re oslved. Alexander Hamilton never dreamed of such centralization of power, as this democratlo admlnlstra tion has demanded and exercised. "War powers" were asked, that were not pu into use until the war had closed and were then made use of In pursuance of the theory of Wilson, with his strike Burleson cracking his whip. Wilson' treatment of baslo principles of the democratlo party is a violation of them, such as no other man has ever dsred to undertake and has alienated such stal wart democratlo leaders as Colonel W atterson. Colonel Harvey, Senato Chamberlain. Senator Keed and many others. If senators such as Borah. Lodge, Johnson, 1'olndexter. Sherman and few others can find an antidote for their attack of hysteria in the lnevl table revulsion which will sweep th country when normal conditions shall ones more prevail, ther will find satis faction in a mors substantial way thsn will te secured by attempting to mak this question a political issue now. W can trust to th world's estimate of the United States as ths greatest and most potent power on ths face of th earth at this time as an assurance ths no other nation will dara to flout I as they seem to fear will be dona W can also depend on It that the hetero geneous mass of smaller nations can never unite on any single purpose- against us. Such an effort would In evitably tighten the friendly relation Of th "three big ones. Wilson's Idealism and skill as phrase maker, thrown upon th world In these excitable and excited times. when "mob psychology" Is In th saddle has found a people In the hea of fever susceptible to such Influences. Lenlne Is no less an Idealist and almos as skillful tn phrase making: thoug his line Is a different on, either on of which carried to an extreme will re suit in th most serious consequence to tn world. Idealism. If held wtthl reasonable bounds. Is good, but when allowed to run away with a strongl imaginative ana ambitious man likely to lead his procession into Oestrucuv collision. C B. WATSON, T"HB DAT. MORNING. As brooding night trailing her somber robes departs Fha leaves unto her hand-mad daw Th bringing of the morning light. Fair dawn with rosk finger-tips. Th hovering clouds of pearly gray. Draws softly bsck. Th sun looks forth and, lo, 'tis day. NOON. Th sun rides high, nor tree nor lea Is stirred, for e'en th breeze Is still, And til around hushed brooding peace MDiaes: tn cattle witnin. Th shadowed pool, th rich, worn soil Awaits the hand that guides the plow. 'Tls non th hour twixt toll and toll. NIGHT. We rest tn peace, for while w sleep The latner turns the virgin page And bids us go and sin no mora. So with each dawn w stsrt anew. Our past erased on day before. . TWILIGHT. When twilight fall It seems as though Dear mother nature must have paused To lay bar weary hands upon Her lap and close her tired eyas Awhile against th light of dsy. That ah may have quiet hour To gather strength and better solve Tha problems of .the coming day. EMMA CHURCHMAN HEWITT, Tenafly. X. J. OMAR OP THE EAST. A book of verses underneath the bough A loaf or bread, a Jug of win, and thou. No longer seem th pair o' die they ouahtar For, since July arrived, th Jug Is full of water: s-JBX Ar.Nfa triTT . Imitator. By Grace, E. BaTL Th power dlvtn creates all things that grow. Ther (s no greater argument. I claim. Of man's descent from God, than that oeiow. No power creates new life. It Is th same n every realm; th man-mad things stand still. Though honors com through clever ness and sain: And though he win to fame, still son may shirk Th truth: ther Is no life-spark In his wora: Thar Is unceasing action in God's trees They are adorned as seasons com and go: He starts th brooklets singing to wards th seas They but obey and ever onward flow; He hides rich germs In myriad shrubs. and Men They lift their flaming foliage towards th sky; H places vital power within th air. And in Its braath bloom roses rich and rare. God touches sleeping seeds beneath the grass. And miracles in growth soon com to pass; v Gcd gives on gift of life-forc to his son Th gift of re-production, snd that on Is th so: gift. Man ever Imitates: He sets sn easel by th sylvan gates. Where fairies play amid th woodland bowers. And. striving ther through long and careful hours. H paints upon a canvas stiff green trees But never do they sway In passing brease! H fashions for th aye a beauteous stream. Dashing through mountain gorge, but ne er a gleam Of lit lights up that sluggish painted river N'o ripple ever sets its blue a-qulverl Tt earth abounds tn maglo God hath wrought: Man imitates, as bast h can, each thought. God's caricatures In human form Impart To gifted artists. Ideas; yet their art la but again mere child's play. Every where Thy copy, but their efforts ner com- rtara With what Is placed before them; and th flam Or llf is ever lacking. God doth claim That power alone: and though great work shall ten Of brlllla.it minds that feel th sub- 11m spall Of art. and labor all their days. They ar but children aping Fa-thar's" way a They shall go on. as aarthly children go. Learning th dally lessons they must know. And when divinity at last shall place its brana Upon their mental force, they'll un der tan d. LIKE MOTHER DOES. My daddy Is a soldier man. My mamma's out to tea. And she told me when she left horn ah d leave tha nous to me. Now what should I b doing L with so many caresT There ar so many things to mend. So many rips and tears: Wall, first Til wash tha dishes. And than I'll wash my head. And thsn I'll do the living room. And than I'll mak my bed. I guess ril do the Ironing. Then cew some buttons on: Then mothsr'U b so much surprise At what's don while she s gone. I ought to knit a sweater I ought to mak a dress: I ought to clean the silverware But I won't. I guess. I ought to call up slater's besu And mak a date. I'm sure But he I such a funny man I really can't endure. I Just must bath old poodle. But ho hasn't had hi food. rm sure that my mamma would thlnJg I ought to fetch th wood. Now. who I that ther at th door? Why. mamma. It Is you! And her I sit upon th floor Thinking of things to do! Well, mamma, you've been gon Three hour ty tn ciock. And I was planning on th work When 1 heard your quiet knock, I've Just bean planning out th tasks As you do Just this way And here 'It now la dinner Mm. And I've lost half a day! M. A. TOTHERS. A WAT FROM TOr. If I should leave you, desr. tonight (An unkind fat might will It so. Th stars would never seem ss bright O'er any land where I might go. And thotigh th sky war cloudless, quite, Whll" others praised Its flawless blu. Td always rind It gray a mlt Because It spread not over you. Though loved by sunlight's ardent rays, Th wtnd breathed soft across the sea. In dreaming of these heart-wsrm days Twould always hold soma chill for m. Th birds might trill their sweetest notes And fill th air with cadence true. Tet dull th music from their throats Were you not there to hear it. too. Though roses of a tint most rare Should bloom in lands where I might be. I would not find them quit so fair If you could not be ther to see. If fame should mount each sunny slop And call to me In dulcet ton. Her message would bear less of hop Were I to bear It all alon. So blow winds east, or blow them west. Or blow them ill. or blow them fair. Til always think that wind th bast That's fanned your cheek and touched your hair MART HESTER FORCE. MT PAITH. They sav you ar dead, but I know better; Tou hav simply gon away. Though now you ar bound by an un known fettar. I know you'll come back some day. Ycur kiss I shall feel in th sweat breezes blowing Caress my hands snd face; Tour laughter will rippl tn the brook let flowing 'Neath the mosses and feres green lace. Tour smile will shine tender In the sun's blessing; Tour eyes blue in the heavens above; Tour thought of ma comes through Nature's confessing. For tha bil between us Is Ixv. BELMA, M. RICUARDSOX. Rainier, On; i