THE ST7XDAT OREGOXIAX, PORTLASTD, OCTOBER 1, 1922 UttflctjrOrririmtnn ESTABLISHED BY HEVBT L. FITTOCK Published by The Ore&onlan Pub. Co.. 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. O. A. MO R DEN, EX. B. PIPER.. Manager, Editor. The Oretronlan Is a member of the As sociated Press. The Associated Press im exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper And also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year . IS .00 raliy, Sunday included, six months .. 4.25 lai!y, Sunday included, three months Tjaily,' Sunlajr included, one month .. -i5 Daily, without Sunday, one year "0 Oaily, without Sunday, six months .. Daily, without Sunday, one month -r'0 Sunday one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Dsllv, Sunday included, one year . . . .$9.00 Dally, Sunday included, three months 2.2." Dailv, Sunday included, one month .. .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 7. SO Dailv. without Sunday, three months 1.15 Daily, without Sunday, one month ... .Go How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice address In fuli. Including county and state. Postage Kates 1 to 18 pages, 1 cent: IS to pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 rents; 50 to 14 pages. 4 cents; 66 to 80 pages. 5 cents; 8 to 86 pages. 6 cents. Kastem Business Offices Verree & Cnnklin. 300 Madison avenue. New York; Verree & Conkim, Steger Building. Chi cago; Verree & Conklin. Free Pre build ing, Detroit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Monadnock building, San Francisco. Cal. USCOLN AND K MANCIPATION. Commander-in-Chief Pilcher of the Grand Army of the Republic, In replying to attacks made on the memory of Abraham Lincoln at the Richmond meeting of the Con federate veterans last summer, properly contented himself with deploring the effort there made to awaken animosities that have long since been forgotten by all but a few and the attempt to "disturb the feeling of peace and goodwill between federal and confederate eoldlcrs which now prevails throughout the nation." To have dignified a venomous assault with an elaborate defense would have been vastly to exaggerate the im portance of the Richmond in cident, which has been deeply re gretted by representatives of mod ern opinion in the south, no less than In the north. It Is futile to prolong discussion of the legality of measures of "coercion" by which the integrity of the union was maintained, and profitless to renew the old debate over the ethics of slavery. So, too, the constitutionality of the emancipation proclamation be longs to the category of matters which have been settled,, once and for all, by the inexorable logic of events. It is Interesting to recall, however, that President Lincoln then relied, not upon his ordinary powers as president in time of peace, but upon the extraordinary power implied by the constitution, which makes the president the commander-in-chief of all the armed forces of the nation in war. The validity of such a proclama tion, says an authority on the law of nations, is hardly to be ques tioned seriously and never would have been questioned but for a natural revulsion from so search ing an application of the laws of war in a country which had hitherto enjoyed an almost entire exemption from actual warfare. This and this alone forms the Ibasis of controversy over the issue whether the historic emancipa tion proclamation or the thirteenth amendment actually accomplished the freedom of the slaves. The proclamation indeed bears on its face the evidence '.hat it was but a measure of war and none sought less than did Lincoln in issuing it to exceed the limita tion of the federal constitution. It was issued, not by assumption of any authority directly intrusted to the presidential office, hut "by virtue of the power in him vested as commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States in time of actual armed . rebellion against the authority and govern ment of the United States, and as a fit and necessary war measure for suppressing said rebellion." So reads tho proclamation. Its ef fect in the absolute prohibition of slavery has been reduced to a sub ject for academic theorizing by tho overwhelming dominance of accomplished fact. Slavery was not, however, abol ished in toto by the emancipation proclamation, from the terms of which were expressly excepted cer tain counties of Virginia and par ishes of Louisiana then (in 1863) under federal control. These, as tho proclamation stated, were "for the present left precisely as if this proclamation were not issued." Its singular feature was the declara tion of freedom for slaves on soil which was not then under military occupation, which has been held by some lawyers to lack support of tho principle that "among the powers of commander-in-chief, when governing conquered soil under military occupation, is that of freeing the slaves of the in habitants." These, as has been suggested, are matters of only technical moment when set side by side with the result. Undoubtedly the pro clamation forestalled foreign medi ation by armed force, which was seriously threatened in 1862, and so permitted subsequent progress ive application of the power to emancipate until the time arrived when military occupation was by the surrender of the rebellious forces made complete. It is significant that temperate discussion of these momentous historical events has but served to heal the old breach, while at tempts to foment rancor and re open old wounds, confined to few quarters, have universally failed. Two wars in which a united na tion has participated have obliter ated the last line of difference be tween the states. If department of commerce esti mates that siiKiir consumption by the people of the United States will reach 12,320,000,000 pounds this year prove accurate, this will not only make Americans' the largest per capita consumers of sheets in the world, but will exceed their own previous record by more than one-fifth. Normal consumption, which has been rated at 89 or 90 pounds per capita in recent years will be increased to about 111 pounds per capita, and will account for a large proportion of the world Increase from a total of 17,500,000 tons in pre-war times to 18,300.000 tons in 1922. As spice consumption in the late middle ages was an in dex of national prosperity, sugar begins to take the place of that commodity in a modern time, for although sugar is now regarded as a necessity, it remains a luxury in the sense that it is not a prime requisite for existence. Our own forefathers in a not-remote day subsisted on a ration of seven pounds per capita, and thrived and grew strong. SIBGEKY AND MORALS. The train robber, Roy Gardiner, who says he wants the surgeons to operate on him with a view, to removing something or other or relieving a pressure at some point or another so that he will be cured of his criminal inclina tions, is putting responsibility on surgery that he and no one else has the right to assume. Surgery has done wonders in - correcting physical disabilities, and it has even restored brain function where the latter has been impaired. But it has never given ethical direction to a man's intellectual processes and there is no reasonable prob ability that it ever will. On the day that Gardiner en tered prison to serve his present extended term, another convict whose case was reviewed at the time, received a commutation of sentence from life to ten years, of which eight years had .already elapsed. This other convict had won favor by years devoted to expia tion in the best sense of the word. He made no plea of irresponsibil ity, no effort to shift the blame for his misdeeds, but confessed his wrong and so far as possible showed by his deeds that he was on the road to reform. It was the only way to make good, and the parole officials who know his story and have observed his actions believe that he is sincere. "Brain pressure" operations have been tried on criminals, uni formly without success. Gardiner is not mentally handicapped, as his primes have proved, any more than are the thousands of other felons who are in prison simply because they thought that stealing other people's property was easier than working to earn money of their own. The remedy for the ailmenjs -of- Gardiner- and his kind is not the surgeon's knife but a new sense of responsibility and the patient himself is the only phy sician who can effect the slightest improvement. Operation or no operation, while Gardiner fails to comprehend this cardinal principle he does not deserve to be at large. JAZZ AND FOLK MUSIC. A college professor says that Jazz is but the folk music of the age. An encyclopedic authority says that "folk music is the out growth of a people's develop ment." He describes folk tunes as "the wild flowers In the realm of music," as distinguished from the cultivated blossoms. They are indigenous, they grow with out especial care and sometimes without nourishment. Spontane ity, as in the case of Topsy, is their outstanding characteristic, but unlike Topsy they are rep resentative of a class. They are the mode of expression of the aims and aspirations of the body of the people, the "common people" of pre-democracy times. In a country in which there are no common people, or where all are common people, which comes to tho same thing, folk music must be presumed to symbolize the development of the people, as a whole. ' But before accepting the defin ition and the disparaging allusions to our national ideals and aspira tions that, it implies, we. prefer to consult the authorities again. The true foundations of a folk music, says one, go back to a remote antiquity. "Folk music is never the outgrowth of a few centuries; it requires ages of isola tion." The genius of its symbolic character is that it has come up with the people, carrying with it all the wealth of tradition that has marked the progress of the race, modified from time to time as it has been influenced by profound sentiment, but always bearing the stamp of truth. "VVe get a fairly clear idea of what the gypsies are when we listen to their songs, and the rugged nature of the Scot is revealed by the tunes that his pipers play. We should hate to have a stranger judge us by our folk tunes, if jazz is the folk music of America. If we are a nation given to dancing between courses at our dinners, if as a people we habitu ally regard discord as harmony and think in terms of trombone, saxophone and traps, if we cus tomarily stay up till after mid night and read the early editions of the afternoon papers before we go to bed, then our folk music is jazz, and all the ages through which we have thought that we were developing a national char acter have brought us to just that. But if the common people, who are all the people, are not typified by night life, high-stepping, bobbed hair, toreador trousers, loud socks and discordant noise, then jazz is no more folk music than was the ragtime of a few years ago. The passing phenom ena of a brief period and the queer antics of an unrepresentative min ority of a people do not constitute character, and a music that leaves the impression that they do has failed to achieve the universal quality that has distinguished the folk songs of the past. AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION PAYS. An investigation into rural con ditions in New Tork state which disclosed that, the annual income of the farmer who has had an education in an agricultural col lege is more than twice that of the one who has attended only the district school is but another testi mony to the growing need of defin ite scientific equipment in all modern industry. It puts farm ing, too. in the list of higher even "learned" occupations. We should be inclined to call the modern farmer a professional man. if it were not for the in vidious distinction between the professions and the trades which would be thereby implied. Chemistry, biology, genetics and various aspects of mechanics unite with other sciences to make agri culture the amazingly complex in dustry that it is in the twentieth century. But beneath the surface of these more restricted vocational aspects of the farmer's calling runs the .still greater necessity for education in tho broader sem;e, for the training which develops capacity to think. The old rule of thumb methods are being re jected as inadequate to the de mands of a modern age; in the nature of the business less can be left to chance and men must learn from failure through capacity to study underlying causes. We should starve as a nation if the hit-or-miss processes in vogue a century ago in America now pre vailed. " With a myriad of enemies to combat on every hand, with soil fertility approaching exhaustion in those regions where its con servation is not receiving atten tion, with plant and animal dis eases multiplying and with a growing population making in creased demands on the resources of an area that does not expand proportionately, every resource that science can marshal and trained ingenuity suggest is re quired to keep up with the times. Undoubtedly the farmer who will succeed best in the next generation will be the one best armed with the weapons of exact knowledge and who best apprehends the fundamentals of his job. The ancient method of apprenticeship served well enough in its time, but is too costly for present use. The best evidence that education is appreciated by farmers is the fact that nearly without exception those wh are themselves gradu ates of agricultural colleges are sending their sons to agricultural schools. EVOLUTION AS A GOING CONCERN. Sir Arthur Keith, who discusses in the Nineteenth Century and After the question whether the doc trine of evolution Is enduring the test of time or is succumbing to the attacks of its critics, makes the point that the personal factor has had a good deal to do with the hostility with which every new evi dence of its soundness is received In some quarters. It will not be forgotten that the phrase, "I am not going to let 'those scientists make a monkey out of me," has passed for argument even in recent times, and others than Sir Arthur will have noted that the tendency to disparage Darwinism in its ap plication to the lower forms of life has been by no means as marked as the protest against the imputa tion that there may have been a time when man was not as lovable or as dignified a creature as he now is. A curious inconsistency is ex hibited in refusal to give open minded consideration to a new dis closure bearing on the principles which Darwin made vital, though he did not discover them, by per sons who have no quarrel at all with Luther Burbank and his work and who concede, the validity of testimony that animals and vege tables progress. Wrong interpretation of discus sions and heated arguments in the scientific world has been chiefly to blame for the growing feeling of distrust which Bryan and others have made vocal. Widely circu lated accounts of the rejection of evolution by scientists are usually traceable to this source. Dr. Keith gives an illuminating example. Not long ago Dr. H. F. Osborn, an American scientists of note, created, on the strength of a molar tooth found in Nebraska, a new genus of extinct humanity, which later Dr. Smith Woodward, a Briton, de clared to be the tooth of a Pliocene bear.- "There seems room for a smile as well as for scepticism on the part of the public," Dr. Keith observes, candidly. "That is, however, because the man in the street does not know that the body of English science, as is the case with the body of English law, has been built up by the trial of a long series of contested instances. The meeting rooms of the learned so cieties are the law courts of sci ence; anyone entering when a case, such as the Nebraska tooth, is be ing tried, and listening to the ad vocates for the prosecution and de fense, finds such sharp contradic tions between them that he believes neither and1 expects the 'jury to bring in a verdict against evolu tion." The case that is being tried, how ever, is not the truth of Darwin's theory, but whether a certain tooth is that of an extinct man or an ex tinct bear. The error in assuming that Darwin is the defendant is the equivalent of that which would assume, on hearing a modern law suit, that the fundamental neces sity for a system of jurisprudence was being questioned. The par tisans on both sides in the Ne braska tooth case, were supporters of Darwin. And to the question whether it would not have been better for Dr. Osborn to have kept the tooth in his cupboard until he had further evidence, the obvious answer is that he might have kept it there a lifetime without making further progress. Discussion on the contrary has awakened interest and has enlisted hundreds of eyes in the search for further evidence. The Piltdown skull is but an other example of controverted is sues that have vastly extended the field of research. If Charles Dar win had done nothing else, his work would have been worth while for the spirit of inquiry which it stimulated and by which the doc trine of progress was made a go ing concert. The "Descent of Man," a work of a scant 80,000 words, still stands as the most amazing work of erudition in its time. Dr. Keith, who as a pro fessional student of the human body has taken pains to scrutinize its statements of fact in the light of discoveries in more recent years, is impressed by the circumstance that if a new edition were to be prepared, few alterations would be required. though its footnotes might advantageously be expanded to several times the size of the ori ginal book. "In .some instances," he observes, "it is possible to ques tion his interpretations, but on the whole this classic stands, as do all of Darwin's books, a remarkable monument of accuracy, learning, industry and intuition." It is doubtful whether the will ingness to learn which is un doubtedly chief among the phe nomena of the present century, and of which an enormous output of scientific literature is a local mani festation, would be as marked as it is but for the work that Darwin did within the memory of men still living. Darwin's conclusions need not be accepted in all their par ticulars to justify the judgment which Sir Arthur pronounces, that "it was he who first made us realize that the palace and the cathedral had arisen from a human habitation little better than a wind ' screen; everything on our backs. word in our mouths and thought in our heads was seen to have its simple beginnings and its elaborate history." Belief in the general soundness of the doctrine of evolu tion is but a small part of the change in the direction of human thought which the man who first made that doctrine tangible has wrought. I LEARNING ABOUT MABs. The observations of M. Jarry Desloges, the French astronomer, on the weather of Mars are worthy of record chiefly because they mark a step toward larger know ledge of the- ways of the universe. By themselves the French scien tist's findings cannot be said to be very impressive. M. Desloges says that examina tion of the red planet this year and comparison of findings with those of 1907, when Mars was in nearly the same relative proximity to the earth, indicates that there are seasonal changes on Mars just as on earth, and that in all prob ability climate varies ' from one year to another, just as it does here. At about the close of May in both years the air in the south ern Martian hemisphere began to clear, showing progress from spring to summer. He marks also what seems to be physical changes on the planet, but concedes that these may be mere atmospheric il lusions. His most important con tribution to astronomical . lore, if it is ' verified, will be his conclu sion that conditions on Mars are very much like those on earth. Communication with . distant planets remains as indefinitely a matter for the future as it ever did, so far as scientific achieve ment seems to have gone. But it should not be hastily concluded on that account that M. Desloges and his co-workers are, wasting their time. It will not be forgot ten that we now know more about Mars than Aristotle knew about our own planet west of the rock of Gibraltar. It is impossible to forecast what marvels the spirit of .scientific curiosity may reveal or to place a limit on the value of any single newly-discovered fact. MILLIONS BUT NOT ENOUGH. The total of savings deposits in banks of the United States, re ported by the savings bank division of the American Bankers' associa tion as $16,618,595,000 is less im pressive than the total number of accounts reported, which run some what in excess of 30,000,000, of which 26,637,831 are deposited in institutions for which official sta tistics have been obtained. The re mainder consist of accounts in banks in non-reporting states, in cluding all of the south except Vir ginia and -also a number of states in the west; of time certificates which are used instead of savings accounts in some rural sections; of patrons of the postal savings sys tem; and of investments in build ing and loan associations and other and similar enterprises. The fact of importance, however, in deter mining the extent to which the thrift lesson has been learned is the number of individual depositers. This is vastly more significant than the total, however great, of cash held in the names of those who have something laid by for the proverbial rainy day. Thrift has not yet become a na tional habit of Americans to the extent that it prevails in other countries. The figures of the American Bankers' association in clude many duplications, as is shown by the estimate that but ninety-nine Americans in every 1000 are savings depositors. Eu ropeans do better than we do. The Swiss, who are proverbially long headed in matters of finance, have 554 in 1000, due to the practice of inculcating the habit even in the very young. England has 302 and France 346, notwithstanding the pecuniary exactions of a great war. The number of individual deposi tors, which is about a third of the number of accounts, due to the number of persons who keep their money in more than one institu tion, still has room for improve ment, as the comparative statistics show. The value of the larger number of individual depositors lies in the testimony thus furnished that the practice of saving is rooted in na tional custom. It is so much easier to follow an example than to set one. that incentives for thrift are increased when it is indulged in by groups " and diminished in com munities in which opposite stand ards prevail. Saving moreover is but the forerunner of investment, whether by individuals directly or indirectly by the custodians of 'their funds, and it contributes to stability by giving great numbers of people a visible and tangible in terest in the institutions of govern ment upon which the security of their investments depends. The campaign of education for thrift has borne fruit, of which the total of more than sixteen billions of savings is undoubted" proof, but ought not to be abandoned until I the number of individual deposi tors more closely approaches the standards of Switzerland, England and France. FINGER-PRINT IDENTIFICATIONS'. The holding of an international convention on personal identifica tion not only testifies to the growing- practice of conference but it calls attention to the strides made by the science of classifying indi viduals in the thirty years since Francis Galton's epochal book on the subject of finger prints was published. It is not a long time as history runs, but it has sufficed to create the widespread associa tion of the system with criminal activities and this has operated to retard development along - other useful lines. An important task of the international convention has been to devise means to counteract the prejudice that has constituted one of the first fruits of the method in question. Stigma ought not to attach to a scheme that promises to furnish final and conclusive evidence of in dividual identity and it would not if it were understood that its need in ordinary civil affairs is many times as great as the occasions for its employment for the detection of criminals are numerous. Experts know that society would profit in many ways by its general adoption, which is made desirable by the in creasing complexity of human re lations. In a former time, when few persons strayed far from the communities in which they were born, when business transactions were conducted between people who knew each other, when credits were limited and travelers' checks unknown, identification commonly took care of itself." Conditions cre ated by fast transportation, by enormous expansion of commerce and by the exacting requirement for security of property as well as lives are far different from those of even half a century ago. A good deal would be gained if only the administrative side of the identification of criminals were perfected, since crime becomes more and more interstate and In ternational in character. The same phenomena which made expedient the enactment of a federal law re lating to the stealing of automo biles give point to the prayer of the recent conference that a na tional clearing house of identifi cation be established, but this, too, puts emphasis on the criminal as pect of the matter, which is a sub sidiary issue, instead of on the civil phases, which affect a much larger number of people. The latter have their beginning at the birth of the Individual, when immediate means of identification would prevent con fusion of infants in maternity hos pitals and day nurseries. In child hood it would reduce the number of lost and unidentified children to zero. In adult life it would make forgery of checks and other finan cial obligations impossible, would enable perfect identification in the use of passports and letters of credit, it would prevent Imposture in personal relations and furnish certain proof, in the interest not only of insurance companies and administrators but also of true heirs and claimants of legacies, in surance payments and pensions. These are the arguments advanced by the advocates ef adoption of finger print registry as a universal practice throughout the country. Compulsory registration, which carries a certain offensiveness of connotation, was not seriously urged by the most conservative of the scientists who attended " the conference, although this does not in fact Involve a more radical de parture from established usages than the collection of vital and other census statistics represents by comparison with the former incog nito of individuals. The conference Is content first to let education do Its work and found its hope of fu ture success on the gradual de velopment of the system through the pressure of self-interest in in dividual instances. This increases as population grows and commer cial transactions become more in tricate, and points to the day when identification of the law-abiding will be regarded as of equal im portance with that of men bent on committing crime. AN ARISTOCRACY OF BRAINS. There are at least two objections in practice to the suggestion made by President Hopkins of Dart mouth college, that opportunities in college should be reserved to the "aristocracy of brains," and these are the obvious difficulty' of ascertaining who are genuinely and authentically the members of the intellectually elect and the inex pediency of shutting the door on ambition, even if we possessed the magic touchstone wherewith to de termine who the aristocracy are. Both are practical problems, as President Hopkins himself would be among the last to deny, and their complexity he concedes when he observes that "it behooves all of us to avoid confusing the sym bols and the facts of intellectual ity," and in particular that under any circumstances it is to be hoped that we "might avoid confusing mental gymnastics and facility in appropriating the thoughts .of others with genuine thinking." The overcrowding of the colleges is no more an admitted fact than is the universal desire that their facilities shall be employed in the ultimate best interests of society as a whole. Any sane programme of selec tion therefore will exclude the drone and the student who is only seeking "membership in a social organization which has a reputa tion for affording an education, from which reputation he expects to benefit if he can avoid being detached from the association." So. too, it is incompatible, as Presi dent Hopkins says, with all of our conceptions of a democracy to as sume that that privilege of higher education should be restricted' to any class defined by the accident of birth or by the fortuitous cir cumstance of possession of wealth. But also it is inconsistent with the spirit of our institutions to at tempt to create a fixed situation, in which the individual who has been condemned to it must for ever remain, or to deny the value of mere willingness to strive to reach the top. So much has been accomplished on the. whole by patient workers in whom the spark of genius flickers but feebly, and so often has the fable of the hare and the tortoise been proved sym bolically true, that it is a daring educator who will affirm that the world is yet ready to set the boun daries of an aristocracy of brains. Pending the day when men shall be more nearly infallible than they are now, the theory that intellec tual superiority and it alone shall constitute the magic key to oppor tunity may well be received with reserve. In all probability no better test could be devised for the present than one which wbuld determine as nearly as possible the earnest ness of purpose of the aspirant for better things. Excepting for the obviously mentally unfit, who ought normally to have been weeded out in the intermediate grades and who in any evet are not a major perplexity in the life of a college executive, the choice would seem to lie between those who have a false conception of the function of higher education and those who are determined to make the most of themselves. Ambition may not be essentially a measure of brains, nor is the spirit of dedi cation to service, but the point is that they are a fairly good standard by which' to separate the deserving from the undeserving and that by recognizing them the best possible incentive is given for the improve ment of material too valuable to be put aside. Tire need of the world is less for towering intellec tuals which have a way of taking care of themselves whether colleges are provided for them or not than for men and women imbued with the idea that even a moderate 'Intellectual capacity is a trust of which its stewards ought to render account, and that the direction in I which it is employed may be as I important as the particular use to which it is put. Beelzebub in all likelihood would have no difficulty in passing the strictest of college entrance examinations, while we are restrained from a too ready tendency to generalization by the many plodders in school who later in life have made good. It is undeniable that some method of exclusion will be forced on the colleges soon or late. "The funds available for appropriation to the uses of higher education," says Dr. Hopkins with truth, "are not limit less and cannot be made so, whether their origin be sought in the resources of public taxation or in the securable benefactions for the enhancing of private endow ments." This is as essentially true of a public college as of a private one; the issue of selection, which involves exclusion, is likely within a measurable period to confront both alike. But inherent brain capacity, while in all probability a fixed quantity which it would be highly desirable to reduce to a series of. standards in the interest of purely scientific abstraction, is so far from being the only desid eratum . in those chosen to enjoy the privileges of education that the very phrase "aristocracy of brains" and all the denials that it implies are peculiarly calculated to offend. "Vitamode" shows both our ready facility in word mintage and our credulity in all matters affect ing the prospect of longer life. The exponent of a queer theory of vitality tells the Chicago Society of Anthropology that the divine spark "manifests itself in a series of tenso-laxing movements" in other words a series of alternate con tractions and relaxations and says that he has succeeded in restoring "life'' to a dead dog, and, presto! a lot of us begin to believe that, no matter what happens, we are going to be snatched from the very depths of the grave. Unfortun ately, the process does not yet offer hope that anything more than mechanical capacity can be re stored. Intelligence, which lies deeper than motor function, baffles the well-meaning savant. In all the circumstances "vitamode" does not offer a pleasing prospect. Modern living, with its myriad complexities, makes all too heavy exactions upon such measures of intelligence as we now possess. A new tie that ought forever to unite the old world and the new is suggested by the report of A,rthur Newton Pack, European commis sioner of the American Forestry association, who says that tree seeds from America ure playing a large part in healing the scars of war. In France, where more than 2,000,000 acres of forest in one zone were leveled; in Belgium, which suffered heavily, and in England, whose woods were cut down to furnish props for trenches and mines, American species of trees are already growing. A hun dred million trees in France alone are the result of the forestry cam paign. It is nearly a century since early visitors to the Oregon coun try called attention to the desir ability of western hemlock and pin and fir for transplantation to European countries a century in which, if their counsel had been heeded, an immense wealth In timber might have been produced. War, says a Hindu leader, would alienate 75,000,000 Moslems in In dia. What are a few more millions added to the. hosts in all parts of the world that seem to have been totally alienated from the idea of peace? One way to abate the outcry for a book censorship would be to stop writing books i that stimulate it. Has the author's league, in the midst of consideration of voluntary censorship, ever thought of that? Baby Guy has been declared officially to be a Stillman, which ought to stifle a lot of scandal; but baby Guy's father has been found guilty of much misconduct, and the talk simply is switched. The dangerous experiment of leaving the near east to its own re sources to see what will happen is on the verge of being made again, and it is a safe prediction that the usual consequences will ensue. A German baron proposes that wars be decided by boxing matches between the rulers of nations, which would naturally make the United States and Senegal the rul ing powers of the world. The fellow who always charges every war to the "interests" might look into the possibility of con nection 'between the present near east disturbances and the map maker's trust. Now the "derby" is reported on the way back. A most useful tile the derby when one is likely to be hit by an automobile any mo ment and land on his head. Berlin royalists complain that the ex-kaiser's fiancee is not of royal lineage. But even an ex kaiser cannot, in times like these, hope to pick and choose. The estimate that a million bicy cles will be manufactured in 1922 will be the first news to some that there were that many people not riding in automobiles. One thing the country needs is a lot of workers with the persist ence of a codlin moth and the stick-to-it-iveness of a San Jose scale. The new army airplane capable of carrying a five-ton bomb will be a lot better employed if it is put to carrying five tons of mail. Women will lengthen their skirts as the muddy season approaches. But when did a thought of utility ever govern the modes? Nature is doing its best. A few more weeks of this kind of weather will aid materially in atoning for the shortage in coal. Life is just one thing after an other. The Rtrikes are no sooner settled than the political campaign! begin to wax warm. It is the desire of all Americans that "safety week" may be appro- priately observed in the Near East. ' The Listening Post. Br DeWItt Harry, A CANADIAN exchange recalls four years ago when the Maple Leaf corps were driving through the last remnants of the concrete fortified line in the north of France. It serves to bring back remem brance of our padre of that last drive. ' The battalion had been 1" straight months in action with but two five-day Iperloda of rest. As a fantasmagoria come back thoae scenes. Bits and snatches of high elation and dismal depression. What daya what a life so close to death! The padre was the connecting link to keep us prepared to meet our maker. Men lasted an average of three months with the battalion; padres five. He was the tenth one in serv ice with the unit, in 48 montha. He was near 60, not like his younger predecessors, but his heart was in the work. With all that he was a tremendous responsibility for the men of the battalion, for he did not know war and was continually get ting into some tight place that re quired some daring in extrication. The padres could not deliver much "gospel pap." they were more "cheerio" ' boys; tried to keep the men's spirits up. The men needed It after a continual how of over four years. The padre came about the last battle of Arras, the Jumpoff through the four miles of pill boxes, concrete forts and wire. He con sidered his duty to be In the thick of things. Lying one night on the bank of the Canal du Nord. a kilometer in front of the front line, two platoons heard a terrific uproar on their right where the metaled Arras Cambral highway crossed the canal. It was 'the padre. He had decided to visit the outposts and took the most direct route, down the wide paved road. The Jerry outposts eaw him and. not taking any risks, opened up. The streams of bullets from half a dozen machine guna poured In all about him. rlchocheted from the hard road, knocked his tilt hat off. punctured his gas mask and penetrated his uniform at several points, but he came blithely on. A scout went back and ap proached the side of the road like a snake and called the old man off and got him to lie down. "Gott im himmel what dumb hounda thoae Canadians were." He was not touched and when he was lead back and told how close he had been to his maker, he only smiled. He had proved that he could "walk right Into' it" like the boys he was serv ing with. LANDLOCKED. I would go yachting, O heart of mine;. Out where the spume flies free. You are continually sailing the . brine When next you must go take me! 1 would go with you rebellious thing. I tire of the Inland, too. t long for the combers that roar, and fling Circles of white on the wide deep blue. Give me a day for a talisman, heart Under a creaking boom A day in the wind where the pulses start A charm against dullness and gloom: An amulet potent to hold In my soul. In the length of the years to be; A day that can never be caught for toll. O heart when vou go take me! JOSEPH ANDREW GALAHAD. Five men were seated around a table In a hotel in a brilliantly lighted room intent upon the vary ing chances attendant upon 62 plecea of cardboard. They were eagerly scanning five of these squared pieces of paper, discard ing and drawing, betting and bluff ing and doing everything consonant with the national game of draw. The tables and walla of the room were covered with rugs, tapestries and carpets worth a king's ransom. A rug covering the greater part of the floor was of exquisite design and color. The soft effu'.gent raya of sunrise, with the brilliant colors of an Oregon sunset seemed to blend harmoniously in the rug's scheme of color. The myetery of this display was explained when it was stated that the apartment was a sample room being used by a traveling salesman for a large Im porting carpet concern. One of the party looked en viously at the magnificent specimen of the weavers art that lay stretched upon the" floor and evi dently thoaght how it would grace his mansion. Raking in a pot of generous proportions he felt opu lent and in a moment of abstraction turned to the itinerant merchant and expressed the purpose of buy ing a rug. "How much would you be willing to pay for oner' the drummer asked. "Three or four yes, I would go as high as $500." In a tone, every intonation signifying sarcasm, the rug dealer aald; "The rug you're spitting on Is valued at 15000." e Noticed your Initials story in the Listening Post. You forgot Harvey A- Thatcher, lieutenant of de tectives. Harvey recently went into a store to buy a hat. He chose one and the clerk aaked him what Initials to put in It. H. A T said Harvey. "Hell, said the clerk, "anyone would know It was a hat." HARVEY. "Mama, cows are just' like us, ain't they?" the little girl chattered at Salem. "Oh, no. dear." patiently replied the mother, "eowa are animals." "Don't any of them stay on the farm?" little wonder then asked. "Of course, there are lota of them there, dear." "No, no. mama, they're juat like us. They all came o the state fair." He came up the tank in a smother of foam. Two fair and shapely young things watched his speed. "Some of hla ancestors mua have been fish." said No. 1. "Yea." agreed No. 2, "his father was a bloater." The Day. Br (irsrt K. Mall. A stooped old man. dressed all tn palest gray. Goes down the road and creeps across the hills; No power on earth can make him pauae or stay. Nor anyone relieve him of his II'- No human force can halt his sure retreat. The whole world can but pause and see him go. The soul grows faint at times, as with defeat. When he goes out to lands we do not know. Each unkind cut, each wound no skill can heal. These are his lot he comes not back to plead; The bruisea that were his ha still must feel. The hearts that bleed because of him. must bleed. A stooped old man, dressed all tn palest gray. Goes out to meet each twilight, with his park; He climbs the hills and sadly goes away. With pain and grief and trouble on hia back. WONDF.R. I wonder where our mlnda would ' 8, If you were here with me today? In what eweet. strange untraveled land Our minds, like children, hand In hand. Would aeek the truth, the way! We would stand where the hoary aalnt Came frowning down from Sinai's height, Miat wrapped, within a Ood-bullt cloud. With angry thunders breathing loud Upon our trembling sight Or we would watch while Israel's king His loyal soldiers round; Water from Bethlehem's sacred spring, Poured as a holy offering To God, vpon the ground. And I would follow, dear, with you. The winding rptral of your thought. Till, far below. In lustrous heat. The life lay, glistening at our feet. That love and light had brought. My eyes would e- with, yours, my dear. And in my hetrt your own would stray, . And earth and heaven would be our priz-. With all the treasure of the sklea; If vou were here with me today! MARY ALET1IKA WOODWARD. ' THE AUTUMN TIMK. Oh, the autumn time la coming! Don't you hear the beea a-hummlng Aa 4hey gather In their stores 'while yet they may? For they know that winter weather Soon must house them altogether So they make the most of every passing day. Oh, the tree with fruits are laden. And each bleHsed man and maiden Kinds a pleasure in the rustling of the leaves: Wavy corn In fields before us. Ytllow. red and brown leaves o'er u. While the barns are more than full of garnered sheaves. Over mountain, hill and valley Gorgeous colors seem to rally. Glorifying every bunh and vine and tree; In the woodland nuts are fulling: ' From the thicket birds are calling: Autumn upeaks to us from every thing we see. Oh. If we could only hold II! And to weary hear's enfold It! This sweet cltflrm that rnmes with autumn's fragrant air! Rut the winter time la coming, When the bees will teaae their h u in m i n g So we'll make the moat of autumn's treasures rare! , CARRIE B. ADAMS. I UOMM'H. Some day I hope to travel To a new and better clime; And yet I often wonder If I'll have a better time. The sun will shine no brighter In the place I hope to go. And the flowers will be no sweeter Than the ones that now I know. Will there be a wood enchanted. Fragrant with the pines' cool breath ? Will there be a aun-flecked brooklet In that land of after-death? Will there be a wood bird calling To hia mate upon the bough? Will there be a gold-haired young ster Such as one that I know now? Will there be a mlst-clud mountain Rising up to greet the sun? Will there be a friend's warm pres ence When at lant the Journey's done? Why. my brothera, this is heaven. And it'a made for u to share To live in friendly fashion A life that's true and square. KELSEY OUILKOIL. IK A FELLER DOWN AND Ol'T. If a feller"a down an out. An' feelin' kinder blue; It s time to "stop, an' look, an" listen." An' do some thlnkln' tool A feelin' blue don't make it right. It only makea It worse; The guy what wears the longest face. Ain't the guy whats got the purse! An" what you needs and needs It now. Is air. yes sir: freah air! Look up and kinder breathe a hit Did yer know the sky waa fair? Ar' did you aay 'twas ralnin' yet? Aw shucks. Where's your humor of man? An' where would you be if It never ruined ? In the desert a diggln' san'. Say feller, yon ain't down and out. You only thinks you are; No matter what the trouble la. You're better off then some by far! FLORENCE R. WILLIAMS. THK PICTt'BK. A decayed land, spaceless, hor'ron less. Crammed with the huks. led hu-k. black husks Of castaway thoughts a land Im bedded In mint! Where rlouria beat upon grey and And black boata in mangled heap atrew A glutted shore with new dehrla While in the background, factoi. HinokeMacks Lurch long rythms of rmoke blackly To the heart throbs of sooty, dull faced, grimy men With gnarled flnsera A few gtanc-d tdiy. yawned and turned To join the multitude n blowing on knot. KATHRYN EASTHAM.