8 ' TFTR SUNDAY ORFGOXTAX. PORTLAND, OCTOBER 23, 1921 ESTABUBHED BV HE5RI I- I'lTTWh. Published b. The Oregonlan Publishing Co.. lii Sixth Street, Vorlland. Oregon. C. MOKDEN, K. B. PIPKR, sl&naser. Kultor. The Oreaonlan la a member of tha Asso ciated Press. Tlis Associated Frets La ex ciusivelv entitled to tn use tor publication of all news dUpatches credited to it ur Dot otherwise credited In this paper and also to local news published herein. AIL rlgats of publication of -pciai ulnpalches herein arc also recurved. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall.) Pally, Sunday Included, one year IS 00 Ially, Hnnday Included, si niontha ... 4.23 lal)y, Sunday Induced, three months.. 2.2."i iJaily, Sunday Included, one month ... ?.' Dally, without Sunday, or.e year 6.00 I-iaily, without Sunday, six niontha .... 3.23 I'ally, without Sunday, one monlb no Weekly, one year 1.00 Sunday, one year - 2.50 (By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year !!. 00 Dally, Sunday Included, three montba. . 2.25 Dally, Bunday Included, one inontb ... .73 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Dally, without Sunday, three months,. l.!- Dally, without Sunday, one month .... ,U3 How t Rmlt -Send poetofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner' risk, liive poatotflce addresa In fu'l. inolullnr county and state. Postage Kates 1 to 10 pages. 1 cent: 11 to 32 pufes, 2 cents: S4 to 48 page!, 3 cents; 60 to 14 pages. 4 cents: 64 to AO fages, a cents; h2 to 90 pages. 6 centa 't reign poataaa double rate. Eastern Business Office Verres A Conk- lln, 8u0 Madtsoc avenue. New Tork: Verree eV Conklin, Sieger building. Chicaeo; Ver res & Conklin, Free Press building. De troit. Mich. : Verree & Conklin. Selling building, Portland. THE IXKNOH'N DEAD. In the multiplex hazards of battle It chanced that many a lad went down to death among the unknown slain. They had a rendezvous with death, "by some disputed barricade," and fate decreed that they should reach the port of missing men. Bat tered by shell or bomb, or wasted by the rains that fell so dismally upon the Btark terrain, the searchers found them presently and set above their heads the wooden Crowes that bade men know there slept a soldier unidentified unknown. Each "lay like a warrior taking his rest," but somewhere overseas there were hearts that throughout life should mourn the triple bitterness of that terse report "Missing." Perhaps not all of them were heroes by the test of splendid deeds. Yet In their grim acceptance of the humblest role, merely to fight and forfeit all they had, each symbolized the spirit of the corps, the soul of armies splendor enough for any man who hears the call of country. No bright battalions on parade, far from the muddy trenches, would ever witness one of them stand forth to claim the medal of valor. When war had sheathed Its swords and sounded the recall these might not march through fond familiar streets, and hear with pride the cheers of wel come from the folks at home. Tommy and pollu and doughboys, comrades In the fellowship of sacri fice, fate had no record of their service save the terse, "Unknown." The war brought fame to many, fortune to some. Fame to colonels and generals and plain privates, who by circumstances were cast In stellar parts; fortune to profiteers In every land to Hugo Stlnnes, the gargan tuan financier of Germa'ny, for one. To various nations it gave lands and ports and even nationalities gifts above which they growl and grumble like so many ill-tempered dogs, threatening to fight again with harper fangs. But to the man in the ranks It sufficed that he receive the wage of wounds and death and quick forgetfulness. Those who came back marched at the first through lanes of shouting patriots right glad to see the boys again, to know that peace had come yet soon, and very soon, to forgot these servants of the rifle In tha enjoyment and demands of peace. There was no selfishness In this, no deep desire to underesti mate the worth of service, but merely the natural impulse to forget as spocdily as might be all that per tained to war. It was a phase of the "return to normalcy." Not long ago In France and Eng land two soldier sons of these al lies, two of the unknown dead, were given sepulchre In princely state. Boon there will come home from France the body of an unknown American, whose tomb shall be a shrine' of the people. How the heart leaps and the eyes fill to the thought that this tribute, more than j any other, testifies to the intensity of our feelings for the lost, the unidentified dead whose worth was more than aught that could be shown by shoulder-straps arid stars. A glorious thing it Is to say that we but render homage where homage is due, and celebrate the sacrifice of men whose very names have been forgot. It is a symbol, yet on that pregnant No vember day when the diplomats of nations take up the task of disarma ment, this country, and Its fellow participants, need not to forget the significance of such a sign. For it were an empty and vainglorious thing, and blasphemous, to turn from such a tribute to smooth de ceitful ways of renewed intrigue, re newed sophistries, renewed prepara tions for another sacrifice and other symbols. It was said of the war, when Its horror was heavy upon us, that come what might in after years, a certain lesson had been learned by rote. We ahould not war again. The Infernal capabilities of science, the dread re sources of the human mind. Were so shudderingly obvious as to preclude the possibility. A league was formed to perpetuate the lesson and glean . profit from its page But bigger and .blacker and more ominous than ever before the clouds gathered and took threatening form. There were not only rumors of war, but war it self, to prove the bestial hypocrisy of the world's new vows. And those who did not war with one another bent every resource, every energy, to the shaping of new and more mur derous devices against a more dread ful day. The race for naval su premacy began, -with super-ships leaving their ways in splendid mo notony. The race for chemical su premacy began, with thousands of chemists bending eagerly above their retorts to descry the first v hellish vapor of some gas that should be as dreadful as the doom which over took the Assyrian. All this while the first nations were laying wreaths of laurel and bay on the graves of their gallant unknown. We must be very sure, Indeed, that the disarmament conference shall above all prove incontestably the sincerity of the participant nations: that It shall bring to us, as Wells Imagines, the dawn of a better day that it shall, at the least, begin to etrjp from the war-god the trappings of his terrible trade. For the con ference is pre-eminently the world's opportunity to prove its faith in peace, its wish for peace, its deter mination to abandon that crushing weight of militarism which is bar baric in its exactions. Our trust in the certainty of civilized progress may well be shaken or confirmed by tha discussion which will arise on Armistice day. Meantime The world is fussing with poison gases. The lands that blenched with horror at the thought of this Prus sian expedient, that cursed the evil minds which gave it birth, are secretly brewing more deadly potions to make the game of war efficient. Efficiency in warfare has attained a new definition. Today it means the total subjection, by most treacherous and unforeseen death, of an enemy people. There were fifty different varieties of lethal gases at the beck of the allies when the war came to end, each springing from the cruel inspiration of that April day, in 1915, when the British line perceived a strange cloud of colored vapor writhing and twisting toward its trenches. How many there are today only the cheraists know the chem ists and the war departments but that there are gases more deadly than the lightning stroke is an open secret. , Science has been degraded, prostituted, as never before, to the service of slaughter. The American soldier, unknown, will be buried at 'home on the day that the conference convenes. The world knows what he died for. It was no "port to export prunes." The world knows as well what his allies, the two who sleep in France and England under their magnificent monuments, yielded up life to pre serve. It was peace, was it not, when the reason is stripped of its verbiage? It must keep faith with them. BULKING CP A RIVAL'S COMMERCE. There is a prevailing impression that one use of. the shipping board vessels is to build up commerce through American ports and over American railroads, but according to the following extract from the Oc tober 1 issue of the Nautical Gazette, a reliable weekly shipping paper, that Impression is erroneous: Canadian Pacific ports are expecting much from the fact that the United States shipping board liner 6ilver State, operated in the oriental service by the Admiral line, recently reached Victoria In the com pletion of her maiden voyage a day ahead of schedule, and with the best record of any ships of ths Una on the trans-Pacifio route. The Silver State landed 31)0 bales of silk to be sent to Vancouver. Tha gen eral passenger agent of the line stated that the silk was to ba sent to Newark. A. J., over the Canadian Paclfio as an experi ment. "What we are seeking is fast time across the continent." be said, "and if we can effect a aaving in tlma over Canadian roads, we intend to do so. Instead of the 800 bales we are putting ashore to night, on future voyages we may be ship ping 30O0 or more." The Admiral line la free of connections and agreements with the United States roads and can do what routine; is thought advisable. Silk, with Its liability to dam age and consequent high Insurance rates. Is the most valuable trans-Pacific freight carried, and time Is. the main factor tn lta transport In view of the large sums drawn from the United States treasury to make good deficits incurred on op eration of shipping board vessels by the Admiral line, some consideration should be given to the development of traffic through American ports, especially as the Canadian govern ment and the Canadian Pacific rail road operate ships from Victoria in competition with those of the United States. Any one of several American transcontinental railroads and their connecting lines could probably transport silk from Pacific ports to the Atlantic coast in as short time as the Canadian Pacific, and would be willing to make the attempt, even to the extent of attaching a few freight cars to a passenger train, or if the shipment were large enough, of run ning express freight trains across the continent. When adverse comment is made on traffic contracts between Ameri can rajlroads and foreign steamship lines, it is hardly consistent for the shipping board to permit its vessels to show preference for a Canadian port and a Canadian railroad. On account of its high value, silk would make a valuable addition to the im ports of our ports and to the traffic of our railroads. THE HEART OP A WOMAN. A most positive person is the correspondent, "Secretary," who joins the discussion of "Why Some Men Drink" by flatly asserting that If she had such a husband she would re nounce hor wifely vows and leave him to his maudlin fate. This she would do, she declares, in all pity and forgiving kindness. There, In the solitude of his forsaken home, the black bottle before him, he might sit and ponder on the price of his folly. Meanwhile the unshackled "Secretary," superbly sure of herself, would be wresting her own living from a world too dazed to decline. Fortunately for the world, and for the peace of its hearths and hearts, this secretarial coldness toward the frailties of husbands is more honored in the breach than the observance. "Secretary" is so complacently con fident of her own hypothetical course that it seems cruel to remind her of the many, many women, through many years, who have vowed the same vow and been spared from its bitterness by the depth of compas sionate love that finds its well In woman's heart. All of which is rather reminiscent of the late Ella Wheeler Wilcox or Dorothy Dix, but true enough nevertheless. Leave It to a woman to know the heart of a sister. It Is the undeniable fact that wives for the most part are moved by the strong urge of a maternal affection, if not by the memory of the marriage pledge, to sorrowful faith in the redemption of the rogues they wedded. Thus it appears that the woman who is sure of herself, certain that an erring husband must be punished, discovers in the test that she is far too fine for such Spartan philosophy and that there is a prompting stronger than reason which bids her wring a cold towel and lave the brow of her miscreant lord, and feel a womanly pity for his folly and its aftermath. It is likely that, how ever wasted such affection may sometimes be, it often is more provoc ative of remorse and penitence and reform than- the shrill cries of the scold or the calm dignity of the woman who prepares to quit the house. This is no brief for the sins of the husband. Poor witless duffer, he too often lingers where convivial spirits congregate; too often has he quaffed so deeply that debt follows his debauch: too often has he am bitiously essayed to drink all the liquor in the world. He is a sorry scamp, and his wife would be well rid, of him. But it is a plain state ment of the eternal truth that women are not made that way. Theirs is a faith and charity such a no drunkard deserve., but which J he receives nevertheless. It Is one of the inexplicable verities. Marriage, as "Secretary" must know, is a contract of mutual con cessions and forbearance. The document attesting it is no more than a fleeting record of sentiments that may never be expressed in the inadequacy of the printed word. It is a partnership that now and again, on either hand, proudly or fondly refuses to admit its disillusionment, but smiles and forges on and there by attains much happiness. WHY THE CIULDRKX 8HOCLD BE SAVED. In centering its efforts on salva tion of the children of the war stricken countries the American Red Cross does the greatest permanent good poroible with the means at its disposal. To restore to health and strength all the afflicted of a whole continent is a task that would tax the resources of the American people and might weaken the incentive for many to make an effort on their rown behalf. The only course was to concentrate on that part of the pop ulation which was least able to help Itself and the preservation of which would confer the most benefit on their country and the world. This part was certainly the chil dren. If they should die off, an en tire generation would be almost lost and a permanent decrease in popu lation would result. If they should grow up stunted in mind and body, future generations would be debili tated and whole nations might de cay. By keeping the children alive, feeding and clothing them well and keeping them free from disease, the Rd Cross insures the greatest pos sible vigor for the next generation, and for those that will follow. Men and women in the prime of life can fend for themselves, and all that can be done for them is to fight epi demics and guard them from actual famine, but the children are the hope of the nations. Broad policy is behind the de cision of the Red Cross to do that which appeals most strongly to sentiments of humanity. Notwith standing the crime of war, the white race still leads all others In all that goes to make civilization, and its preservation is necessary to prevent a disastrous halt in human progress. If it should shrink both in numbers and physical and mental vigor, it might be overwhelmed by the vastly superior numbers of Asia. Then our civilization might perish as did that of the ancient empires of Greece and Rome, and the race might again begin the toilsome climb upward, as it did after the barbarians overran Europe. From the beginning of those incursions to the. renaissance, from which we date modern civil ization, was about a thousand years. It is not pleasant to contemplate another thousand years of barbarism before another renaissance. DO THE DEAD SPEAK f The wrong way to approach the field of psychic research is by the path of levity and intolerance. Such a mood) gains nothing, learns noth ing, and achieves nothing. In occa sional discussion of spiritualism The Oregonian believes that it has never violated the rule of fairness, however much it may be reproached because it will not accept that which science herself is muddled over. It holds that this Inquiry Into the after-life, this earthly search for definite proof of communication with the dead is not to be smirched with ridicule, though unbelief be strong. Too many hearts are bound to it, too many pa tient minds are consecrated to the quest and fine minds, at that for the cynic to avail himself of the target. Is there proof through spiritualism that the dead speak? The answers clash in argument, and more than ever before is fostered that splendid faith which believes, and will con tinue to believe, in the survival of the spirit; that seeks no proof, that asks no inquiry. It is not that the world is loth to believe in the de clared visions of spiritualism, but that it will not grasp these things as certainties until irrefutable proof is before it. It watches with eagerness the scientists who attempt to read the riddle, it waits impatiently for some word of scientific confirmation, and all that comes to it is the" old message-"We do not know." There is disagreement, of course, but dis agreement in science signifies to those who wait the futility of any save a passive attitude as to the so called psychic phenomenon. If our savants are in argument, what then is left to us save personal inquiry, each for himself, and faith in these individual findings? Too bitterly are we aware that there are rogues in the temple. Too constantly does there arise before us the warning to be temperate in our enthusiasms, at least until we know the mysteries of the mind itself. Unthinkably distant is that day when man first dreamed of his soul; when, musing, he said to himself "There are two of me." The faith in soul survival was not born, as cynics profess to think, from the mean wish to live forever. Rather did it arise from the awed conviction that the Intellect, the conscience,. the spiritual nature, If you please, were an entity aside and apart from the unworthy caravanserai of the flesh. Men said, "Surely omnipotence has another destiny for this inhabitant of mine a destiny beyond the lusts, the hatreds; the drossness of life in the physical sense." There has been through all the ages, if we except religious belief, no definite answer to this speculation. But there have been, as the rec ords of every race attest, mysteri ous manifestations that seem super natural, metaphysical, in their essen tial oddity. Telepathy swept aside innumerable instances as natural phenomena. There were abundant proofs that in some mental fourth dimension the mind had powers and freedom such as we had not ven tured to dream. There were, as well, problems that have not yet been solved; mysteries that continue to baffle. These, say the true believers, are the messages of eternity. Per haps. One would most dearly desire to think they were. Even now we may be at the verge of proof, but none shall say with full authority that we are. The veil still holds. Three French scientists have re cently, after years of research and opportunities that the laity cannot hope for. given to the world their findings on the materialization of spirits. They are Camllle Flamma rion. the astronomer; Doctor Geley, director of the Metaphysical Insti tute; and Professor Charles RIchet, famous scientist. They answer: Flammsrlon I have studied for sixty oa Vuev. HuTiIr-l will answer, "I do not know." I will atata one thing, however, and that Is that la un questionably genuine demonstrations of spiritualism or of psychic phenomena it has been proved that auto-suggestion plays the greatest part. Ricbet I do not believe in one single spiritual phenomenon. 1 believe that hu man intelligence has methods of knowl edge we do not understand. I believe such knowledge haa a tendency to attach Itself to a single personality, and generally finda this personality among those who are already dead. It Is absurd to think that wa as yet know aU the processes Tfl nature. . Geley Spiritualism cannot be doubted; it has already been proved. There la no need to go Into these things now. because they are established truths; they have been exhaustively dealt wltb in doxens of books. Psychical materialism la possible. Humility, denial, conviction these are typical of the varying attitudes toward the unknown. With the in tolerant vigor of denial we should be as wary as of the confirmed assur ance of belief. Flammarion seems on safe ground. He has tested the limitations of mortal comprehension and is humbled. He does not know. A REVOLUTION IN TRAFFIC ROUTES. The principle successfully invoked by Portland in the Columbia basin rate case, that In the making of rates this port has a right to the natural advantages of its location. Is being given wide application by other ports which may bring about many changes in transportation routes. Texas ports protest against low rate from points a couple of hundred miles inland to Pacific ports, under which cotton is hauled from their very back doors to be carried from the Pacific coast to the orient. At lantic ports like Philadelphia and New Tork object to export rates in steel from Pittsburg to the Pacific coast, contending that steel should make the short rail haul to the At lantic coast and be loaded on ships there for the orient. Each port claims a prior right to the traffic originating in its own tributary ter ritory and denies the right of other ports to invade that territory by means of reduced rail rates for long hauls. . . This is a result of the Panama canal. It has so reduced the distance between our Pacific coast and our Atlantic and gulf coast that it has not only diverted a large amount of traffic from the railroads to the water, but it has brought the ports of the two coasts into direct com petition for this traffic. Each port reaches as far inland as possible for business and its railroads co-operate with it, for the long haul of train loads for export is what they most covet. In so doing they come into competition irrthe interior at much shorter distances than before there was a canal. Then Galveston had no chance at cotton tor Japan as against the Pacific ports; now it could draw cotton from a great distance but for export rates to the Pacific coast. The traffic revolution consequent on opening of the canal is in full swing, hastened by high rail rates and a surplus of cheap tonnage. It makes the short rail haul of a few hundred miles to the coast and the sea voyage, either between the two coasts or to foreign ports, cheaper than the long rail haul across the continent. It promises to fix some central point in mldcontlnent whence traffic routes will radiate east, west and south to the coast, or to leave some debatable ground where the lines cross and in which all ports and their railroads will fight for traffic. If Portland has no right to take Texas cotton away from Galves ton, Boston has - no right to take Oregon wool from Portland with a competitive rail rate. The result promises to be 'rapid development from each coast for several hundred miles inland, leaving a great central area which must pay rail rates for long hauls in every direction. That situation may turn the energies of the interior to full development and use of inland waterways, when water transportation will come fully into its own. Railroads are already be coming extensions of water lines into the interior instead of being their competitors. This adds interest to the Inquiry now being made by General Beach, chief of army engineers, into natural routes of traffic and Into port and rail terminals. That inquiry may bring out a strong point of Port land's position. As a port its water grade will enable Its railroads to reach farther into the interior than any Pacific coast competitor before they encounter other roads carrying traffic at lower cost to gulf or At lantic ports. When the upper Co lumbia river is improved - by dams and locks as a slackwater waterway, it will enable Portland to reach still farther back into the country. Then though Texas ports may take all Texas cotton, Portland will still be the mouth of the funnel through which the traffic of the Pacific northwest will flow to the sea. I'LL SAT WE ABE! It appears that Mistress Hylan, wife of New York's mayor, has at length and by dint of much denial succeeded In downing that classic canard about her breezy employment of American slang. Two continents laughed more or less boisterously over the report that the good woman. carried away by her enthusiasm for Gotham's greatness, capped the praise of the Prince of Wales, who had voiced the British equivalent for "Some ' city!" by answering, "Gee, you said a mouthful!" Another ver sion of the same merry yarn had it that the remark was addressed to Albert, king of the Belgians: The story caused her much chagrin and embarrassment, though it was en tirely the fancy of some wag who could not resist his favorite demon. Now that the falsehood is laid by the heels, it seems pertinent to in quire whether Americans are slangy, as they have been represented. We'll say they are! There is an epigrammatic terseness about Ameri can slang that appeals alike to the loftiest high-brow and the lowliest urchin. It is expressive of much that cannot quite be compassed In cul tured speech, and though it is both poor taste and diction to drag it con tinually into conversation, there are times when, as the deep-sea sailor yearned for his oath, the true American yearns for his slang. It gets across. It got across quite as neatly In Shakesperian days. The bard of Avon did greatly delight to employ it. He was wise in his day and generation. The basis of slang is sound and seemly metaphor. Why, even the term itself slang was the inspiration of some medieval slangster. The lexicographers be lieve that it was born of the archaic preterite "slang," regarded as a participle of sling to fling, to throw. Do you get it? tven though Mis tress Hylan, forfjetful for the nonce of her high estate and of the prince- J ly dignity of her guest, had slipped j into sling there would or should be no reason why the lapse should pain 'readily apparent that tome other i her. She should worry. A great I force besides the antipathy of man many famous folk, a great many i kind and his strife against obnoxious literary people, and all of the demo- 1 and dangerous insects is at work to ! cratic average, would bear her com- 1 hold the foe at bay. The prolificacy pany. The dictionary bristles wltn words that once were slang, and now ! are of the elite, with phrases that though colloquial are nevertheless sound and sane and everywhere ad missible. The western word for a swirling, blinding, driving, over whelming snow storm is blizzard. Another bit of slang, expressive of the storm." In a far day, when Buffalo Bill was earning his sobri quet, the western camps knew a blizzard as a blow of the fist, a knock-out, a fistic finis. It is now with entire propriety, "a high cold wind -accompanied by blinding snow." Ashamed of slang? . Get out! Say, listen: The Importance of slang In the semael- ologlcal development of language can hardly be overestimated. Not only must a language be enriched with new words. If It is to aurvlve. but It must be augmented by new meanings of tha terms which It al ready contains: and one of the chief fac tors of this Increase of slgnlllcations and applications of words Is slang. The con demnation of srang. therefore, finds no support from a linguistic point of view. On the contrary, tha use of slang tn Itself, insofar as It does not usurp the functions of the standard 'language to too great degree, ts to be encouraged. Slang Is the the radical counterpart of conservative purism- There spoke authority, and, as Mistress Hylan did not say. It spoke a mouthful. To speak slang before kings is not a dire offense, neither is it necessarily a proof that the user Is not as well born and well bred as the king himself. We should be sorry to Imagine that the sprightly young Prince of Wales, who seems to be a little bit of all right. Is not aware of the bright lexicon of Brit ish slang-terms, or that in his un official moments he does not employ them more or less to his great edifi cation and advantage. Eh, what? And, after all, what could possibly be more expressive of entire accord, or hearty agreement, than that lowly but lambent phrase, "You said a mouthful"? As has been previously remarked, it matters little whether Mistress Hylan used the words at tributed to her by the godless, or whether she did not use-'em. In either event, she should worry. THE SITUATION WEIL IN HAND. The ant is a comical little chap, and clever too. The yellow-jacket is our good friend. The livelong day he pursues and pounces upon house files. He who has seen a fairy troop of trout flies issue from some drip ping cavern of the rock, to live and dance their hour or two, has wit nessed a happy mood of, nature wherein phe is meticulous for per fection. ' Great lazy butterflies, sable and crimson and orange, drifting be fore a summer breeze are winged poetry and no less A daddy-longlegs has been known to indicate the straying cows. The variety of this quite interesting planet would be perceptibly, almost painfully, les sened if we were to wake some morning to find that all the insects had been gathered to their fathers their unthinkably multitudinous an cestors. We have warred with the Insect world, but never have we regarded its fierce or fragile little citizens as potential foemen who might conceiv ably contend with us for the right to survive. It has not alarmed us par ticularly to know that many insects are tartars, indeed, ruthless and ter ribleeither by sting or depredation. Most of them are but mildly pestif erous, and though occasionally they are the agents of death wa accept the hazard until such time as science may have conquered them. Yet oc casionally some dreamer of phan tasms, some writer of fearful fiction, visions a day when mankind will be engaged In a war for survival with its insect enemies. Arthur Machen, an English author with a penchant for alarming fancies, forecasts such a struggle with both animals and in sects. It was H. G. Wells, back in the years when he wrote fantastic novels, who caused one of his fictional char acters, a gentle old English scientist, to segregate the vital elements of nu trition, the growth-producing prop erties, and blend them in a strange staple that he termed the "food of the gods." His purpose was to cre ate a race of mortal giants, thewed as the gods, and in this he succeeded, though the Lilliputian majority made outlaws of them and shot to kill. But the calamitous by-product of the experiment, unforeseen by the old gentleman, was the horrified proportions to which insects and animals grew when they bad tasted his potent rations. Rural England seized pitchfork and shotgun to fight for life against the savage attacks of rats as huge as plow-horses, or wasps as bulky as eagles. One of the in escapable conclusions reached on reading this diverting tale was that all should be grateful for nature's limitations in the stature of spar rows, let us say. Mr. Machen, however, deems the unregarded animals and insects to be sufficiently formidable as they are, and presupposes for them an hour in which all shall revolt and turn with common rancor and enthusiasm against man. In that dread moment the nations will forget their petty bickerings and bend every resource, every energy, to the stern suppres sion of this unthinkable insurrection. The tabby will turn upon her mis tress, the watchdog spring at the throat of his master, the haltered horse scream murderously as he lunges at the groom. The insects, the redoubtable, fearless insects, whose cosmos has already been an eerie mystery to man, will march forward in never-ending attack content to die in hordes as zealots die if but one thrust goes home. Our thanks to Mr. Machen for a direful prophecy. The white ants of Africa, so report hath it, go ever forward. If .a tree obstruct their punitive pilgrimage a million gnash ing mandibles fell it. All living creatures flee or perish. Leo the lion roars with dismay and leaps aside, racing to safety like any terror stricken kitten. If all creatures were suddenly to become as valiant as the white ant, and make united cause against their, overlord, we should gain in a day, in an hour. In a mo ment, the full terror of the author's fictional forecast. If only the insects were to revolt, and with intelligence, the carnage would be dreadful, in deed. Occasionally we stand in need of some such tortured visionary as Mr. Machen, to teach us by contrast how truly happy and contented we ought to be. . There are 400,000 listed species of Insects, and doubtless as many more uncatalogued by science, while of all other species of life there are but 114.500. Mammalian life Is repre sented by but 4500 specie3. It is of insect life, if undisturbed by other agency than our hostility, soon would cloud the world with terror. The hop louse, it is said, requires but a single season in which to become the venerated ancestor of nine and one half quadrillions of hop lice hopeful of duplicating, each for Itself, the achievement of the original pair. Against such fecundity, peculiar to the Insect world, science .would stand aghast. There it is that Dame Nature, the' wise old woman of the universe, steps in with her most admirable system of checks and bal ances. Remorselessly she decrees that the infant mortality among hop lice shall be tremendous. If it were not so the hop louse would soon possess the planet. The natural system of checks and balances is a savage one, funda mentally, but beneficent in its broader aspects. It is admirably illustrated by the Pacific coast sal mon. Cruising up from the ocean, the fish once took possession of their spawning beds and deposited their eggs. There were, as tradition and memory attest, vast runs of salmon In those days yet the significant truth is that the runs never ex ceeded the natural provisions of the spawning streams. No time could possibly arrive when the annual in crease would choke the river itself, a presumption of almost arithemat ical certainty if but the average of reproduction exceeded the average of the run of -adult fish. The truth was that the runs were as large as they ever were destined to be, and that Inexorable nature allowed the migrants but one Infant salmon apiece. The point of exact balance had been reached. Multiplied perils wasted all save two eggs of the, many hundreds that the mother deposited and the sire defended. As a matter of fact, when commercial fishing first intruded on these virgin streams, depleting the run itself, the succeeding runs were increased, owing to the Improved opportunities for infant survival. The methods of nature are so de liberate, so secret, that they are mostly unperceived. A million years from now, what will be will be. But it would seem that mankind, pos sessed of superior intelligence. Is making the most of his superior chances for a flourishing and pro longed existence. If he falls, no bug will have brought him low. He will be humbled by his own folly. Have you ever heard of the folly, the conspicuous folly, of throwing good money after bad? Something of the sort is happening in the Arbuckle case. The San Francisco Bulletin chronicles the Interesting report that motion picture magnates are wishfuL of establishing the fat ex-comedian's innocence, and are even now in conference to prepare his defense. This, you say, is true fraternalism? The facts are that something like $2,000,000 is invested in Arbuckle pictures, and there is more than a- suspicion that these friends of Fatty's are urged to his aid by the hazardous predicament of so much money. Their solicitude may be natural but it is ill-advised. However thoroughly the whitewash may be applied to Arbuckle's jewel reputation, the public will never again permit itself to lauglkwith or at him. His films are junk. "I find, as the years go by," said the hermit of Rocky butte, "that I am losing my earlier Illusions about folks. They run average Just aver age. Every time I hear the quail whistle for 'Bob White! Bob White! I catch myself wondering who the fellow is and whether he is worth it. There's more silver in that call than you'll find in a stack of dollars. Was a quail come to my yard the other day and squatted there hunched to fly, but ready to pick around if I'd let him. He put his head on one side and looked at me. Well, sir, I stepped inside and laid my hand on the old shotgun, for it's a mile to the butcher shop. But I never took her down. 'Quail,' I said, 'make yourself to home seems like I'm happier when I'm hungry.' " While the endowment campaign is on to raise "a million or two" for Pacific university, the Forest Grove News-Times is appearing as a daily newspaper to record progress of the money-getters mainly and inciden tally tell the news of the day. Editor Scott would better beware, though; people may get the habit and de mand the daily right along, if the first numbers are to be taken as samples. A Cottage Grove man who, while drunk, collided with a boxcar, has had his license taken away. That is hard punishment for a man so con siderate in picking something to hit To be sure, he broke his collarbone at another time, but it was his own neck, not that of another. The au thorities are "picking" on him. The food show Is a meritorious display, well worthy of continuance. Yet the food show that will hold the public favor at all times and seasons is the groaning board at home. When Colonel House laid dignity aside and visited Mr. Wilson he lent emphasis to an ancient adage, and a wise one. There are, after all, no friends like the old friends. Those North Dakota banks seem to be more troublesome than the toy ones of childhood's day the sort you bad to operate on with a knife to remove your nickle. "Food to be moved in spite of strike," says a headline. That's good. If the public ever begins to miss its meals something is liable to happen. A man who asserts he was robbed by a negress cannot have much standing in court. These "ladies" seem to know how to pick their vic tims. This is the fretful season of the year, when Mr. Suburbanite begins to wonder when In thunderation those pullets are going to lay. There's not a smile In Russia, so one reads. There isn't a doughnut, either, while we're on the subject. The spinster who bequeathed $60, 000 to kittycats evidently believed that cream makes pussy purr. The roses of Roseway, ah, they're the fellows who will talk to the tourist! The Listening Post. By DeWItt Harry. "W his money and you can tell what manner of man he is," said a well-known banker one day. j Have ypu ever tried it? Your typi cal American, free with his change, has It all loose in his trousers pocket. The frugal man never carries more money with him than he is likely to need during the day. It has been estimated that millions are lost-yearly in interest on capital that never works capital that is on a perpetual vacation in America's pockets. With the spread of modern banking facilities greater reliance is being placed on the checking account. This Is likely the aystem used by the aver age business or professional man. Carelessness with change is not so fashionable as it was a few years back. The plethoric bankroll does, not convey an Impression of wealth any more the money should be In the bank. One of the best fathers it was the writer's good fortune ever to meet started his children in on the right fcot as far as finances were con cerned. Each one was given a sav ings accqunt and made to keep his or her own books. Their allowances were paid regularly, their extras for school books and supplies all placed In their own charge and the children did their own buying. Dad allowed for new books, but if the youngsters could find second-hand books at a saving they had just that much more for their bank. One of the first' gifts they received was a fine pocketbook so that they would not carry their cash loose. Notice your thrifty man and he usually carries a pocketbook and buys car tickets. . e a The spirit of revolt against the new traffic ordinance recalls some dis cussion on the subject of parking abuse with one of the police a few months ago. He told of people who persisted in using the streets for a garage. "Why, there are many people in Portland who own cars and have no place to keep them," was one of his surprising statements. "What would you think if you did not have a home? It's just about that same thing. They have no right to an automobile. "One merchant reported to-me that a certain car had been standing In front of his place for three days (this conversation was in August). We moved the machine to the police ga rage and the next day the owner came looking for it. He had been to the beach for a few days and figured that it would be cheaper to park his car than pay garage rent. "It encourages '.hieves. There are any number of residents of this city who drive home in their cars at night and leave them at the curb in front of the house during the summer, fig uring that they will rent garage space when bad weather comes, and that this will be cheaper than to build their own. Many other owners about tbe city park in nearby vacant lots at night, some of them using this property the year round, covering their cars with canvas during rains." as One of the tragedies of modern commercial life is a closed manufac turing plant. To the ordinary ob server it bears no grim omen, yet to the man in touch with details it means more than a mere closing. Re trenchment policies often cause shut downs. The presumption U that the operators of mills are saving by slic ing their payroll. The fact is that in many cases they lose. In the first place the main item Is interest on the investment, and then comes depreciation. Plants not in operation cannot pay Interest and they depreciate much faster than those in the running and being kept in repair. Then the trade channels slack off, the men lose their touch and have to work under inefficiency when the start is made again, the sources of raw materials suffer through non-functioning. Insurance charges mount when a factory Is idle, and there is necessity for watchmen and frequent Inspection. Fire dan gers grow, costly machinery rusts, the sales force has nothing to push, and the executives worry and lose some of their efficiency. It would be an Interesting subject for an exhaustive analysis, and it ii likely that it has been done more than once. An informant states that frequently the loss from even a week's holiday Is appalling. Few local plants are closed even during this period of difficult times in other sections, and many of them are work ing with double crews. Not all good cooks are married, and, thdugh it seems to be generally accepted that the "way to a man's heart Is via his stomach," there are many men who marry pretty faces and eat out. It was at the Girls' Polytechnic high school. A rather flashll dressed woman brought her daughter, about 14, to the domestic science teacher. "I want her to learn to cook and sew so that she can get a husband." "Oh, I don't know about that be ing so sure a way," the teacher ob served, as her eyes twinkled. "You see, I teach both, and 1 am not married." Banks have a rule against cashing checks for strangers. The other day an old man who lives over on tha east side dropped Into the First Na tional bank to cash a check. He was not acquainted in the Institution, but the bronze button- In his lapel Indi cated that he was one of those who answered the call to arms back in 1S61. The man in the teller's cage didn't know him and directed him to another window after a question or two. Then he was sent to still an other teller, then to an assistant cashier or two, and finally landed at the desk of Vice-President Jones. "Do you know anybody in this bank?" asked Mr. Jones. "I know everybody in the bank," responded the veteran, "I have been passed from one to another and you are the last man." Mr. Jones cashed the check. s She stood Just across from Llcbes' when Monte Austin spotted , her. Well-dressed, middle-aged, apparently prosperous, she wonld hardly differ on the surface from any of a hundred similar women encountered every day. But it was her (occupation. She car ried a paper bag and was "Shooting anlpes." WouluV carefully watch to see that no one was looking her way and bend over and gather old cigar or cigarette butts Roosevelt. By Grace K. Hall. One night, led on and on by phantom hand, I walked in spirit through a hun dred vears. And came at last to my own cherished land. To read Its history through loving tears. But suddenly In silenced awe I stood Within a vast salon of priceless things Rare treasures that a century called good Were massed where Honor, undis puted, brings Her very best to Jive forevermore. And warm the hearts of men with strong desire; And. humbled and abashed, Inside tha door I felt the presence of the Past in spire Thrilled with the old devotion strong and true. To Ideals of my land, that once I knew. Marble and bronze and every work of art Stood in this great salon; yet fen who passed Of all that eager throng had vital part Or interest In ths marvels, that would last; ' And patina, that speaks uncounted age. Lay on the bronxes all a telling ruBt. When lo! I stood before a splendid stage. Whereon was one imposing master bust, And, gathered round, I saw a phan tom host Bowed down, and heard their min gled voices low Blend In a tender threnody; and moat Impelled by wonderment, I sought to know Why this alone of all the treasures there Commanded such deep homage and so rare. No patina discolored1 this one face It shone with such a luster that I knew It must embody Ideals of a rare That all the world acknowledged great and true. Then passed this lingering host, and others came To gaze and weep and' strength enedgo their way. And. 'roused to glimpse this Idol known to fame Throughout the years, although of human clay. I crowded close and viewed that mas sive bust, Kept by a nation's homage brightly clean. And sensed at last why never lay the rest Upon that countenance, steadfast, serene: Yea, knew the reason', too, of dirge and tears; For seldom has God built to nobler plan; And true Americans through endless years Shall hrmor pay to Roosevol'., the man! OLD FREACH CHKKK. Old French creek loafs along Its way In hazy, sweet September, As if to lengthen out Its stay And summer Joys remember. The goldenrod upon Its brink It sways with gentle fingers, And gives, where asters stoop to drink, A farewell touch that lingers. The willows bending o'er its tide It stirs to tender sighing, As If In grief they softly sighed, "Oh, why must time be flying?" The falling leaves upon Its breast It bears with kindly current. And, like a sad-departing guest. Clasps hands with vines deterrent. It UnKcrs by an ola oak tree. It lags beneath an alder. And searches where the cresses be Behind an ancient boulder. Where'er Its lofty banks descend, It loiters 'mid the grases, ' And murmurs where the rushes bend A goodby as It passes. Old French creek BWiftly flows in May. But loafs, ns I remember. As if it welcomed each delay In hazy, Hweet September. MARY HESTER FORCE. LITTLF, FLY, GOODIIV. MyRterious little Insect With those all-seeing eyes. You crawl and creep When I would sleep Your antics I despise. At the first tint of day-dawn You gyrato, twist and flop You buzz and burr. Drone, drum and whirr, It seems you never stop. You prance upon my bill-of-fare. You wallow in my stew Though I protest 'Tis but a Jest A princely Joke to you. Tho niore I try to pass you by The more you pester me; I seek retreat Your plans to beat. You find me easily. For in the shade though I have laid, Where cool sea-breexes blow. You crawl and sing. Bite, Jazz and sting Though it is ten below. Envoi. I'm going to Join the submarines That ply beneath the sea. So little fly I'll say, Goodby, s Don't try to follow me. MILTON C. ARMSTRONG. Sf.VSKT ON THE rOl.l'MBIA HIVF.n. The laboring,, twilight slowly binds and reaps The shining harvest of the thrifty sun; The waves, the river's children, cease to run And play beneath the dyke, and each one creeps To soft, translucent dreams within the Hpens. And as a soldier rests when strife is done, .Mount Hood stands flushed, a glorious fhnmlllnn. To keep tha watch while earth's bat talion sleeps. As once that lathe. Joyous, ran greet His child, tear stained, and weighted with the world. So God now comes, my hungry so i to meet. So swift 1 run, and in his arms !! curled! The ring, the robe, love's light uiion my face. The soul at last. In its abiding plure! MARY ALETHEA WOODWARD. imiii tiii.i:. I have done that which men call lil And found In it much iroodness still I have done thut which men call good And found therein no brotherhood. But in the clash of mortal life Where manliness is born of strife, I have learned this, that stood or 111. I need 40 naught save what I will. GRACE UAi.NiJ.