THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20, 1914. THE "JOURNAL ah tntr.rr,STiKsv kkwrpapeb. C S. jaCKSOK. rnb'1be. I u4tak Try enta (nnpt Snodarl M ry aaaaar moraine at l& Journal Bona. .un-rd at tb portoffie t fortituMl. or for tranamlMloe Uiroa tke t&aila second class aMtta. --'V 1KLKPHONKS MaJa TITS; Hob. A-SU61. AU i)rpTtncaa rawM by tbeae aaabera. Tall Iba ovaratwe arbal detiai liot oa waot. kOUkUUN AXlVrKTialNU aiCIHlCKNTATlV BnJfil Kaartna Co., Brananrick . BldCt Zft rirtk Are., Hew YtMtk. Ull Pavete U BMar.. ChVaao, auiMcnpiioa rtraii by aoali r a aa , aa rcaa lav tb Cattail Statae ur Mtxlee: DAILY. . to yaar fS.oo i Oth aaaatk 4 SO!tDAT. . ' ta faar. .... .flAA t On ainf....9 DAU. AXD It 09 DAT. : Cm rear 17.BO I Ou BuBtb......S .S only . supplied her own needs' but 'comes of the relation of mutual the, 'world's demands. . More than f esteem and confidence - between A protective tariff , American man ufacturer need the lesson of Ger man painstaking methods.5-. counsel and client when the formu lation, of one of - the most sacred A msn Af a ittniMr fine tlRfl and solemn acts of life, the makthls handy instrument of death, at a farm house, on which occasion tha a ROBKUT J. BUIIDETTE T mg of tne last wm ana testament, t is turned over to the clerk of an ; ( incorporated commercial company HERE was once a golden age;lngtead of to the old friend, who newspaper humor in this . js the repository of family secrets. S country: It was a time when Th- Rtrtkine "characteristic of publications comparatively ob- j government today is the rapidly narinna i rv rnnwn . f' Ceremony was devised at first, to set" ' gloss on faint deed, hollow welcomes and recanting goodness; but where there trna friendship, there needs none.- Shakespeare. WHEN; MEN AKE IDLE NO. 2 N A LAND with plenty conspicu ous on every hand, where signs I of wealth and luxury multiply faster - than anywhere else in the world; in a land whose pros perity, has become a "byword to peoples under every son and whoae vast resources have drawn multi tudes In the search of happiness and relief from want; In a land where the "soil yields its fruitage with each' unfailing season and in which-vast resources are still un touched; In such a land, why should . there be a problem of un employment, at least so far as concerns the employable, with its grim circumstances of hunger, pri vation and distress? But there Is such a problem. By the ' census returns, there were 3,523,730 unemployed persons in the United States in 1890. In 1900, the number had risen to '6,486,964. Half were out of em ' ployment .three months or less and ; 8 0 per cent of the remainder were ; idle four to six months. ; ! It is lees than 20 years ago that the people of this country first be Jganto '"give a grudging recognition lo the existence of the problem of - unemployment in good times and t in bad. It Is only recently that the average-American' has been brought to . real Use that there are always large numbers of employable per sons who need work and cannot get it. It im .LatlmatoI lhl 4 AAA AAA . . "IV : gentle words, written 1,VUV.UVU BUiirr .cuiuitou wicucoa - i-af innAcq. The. shadows are deepening around scare v became through the wit - and '' humor in their columns. ..When they were boys, men now of middle age knew all about the Danbnry News. , The Detroit Free' Press was" another pa per of national renown; on account of the writings of "M Quad," and the Toledo Blade carried into 200, 000 homes the inimitable political satire of Petroleum V. Nasby. , At Laramie, Wyoming, was a newspaper .under the classic name of "The Boomerang." A writer on it was that genius who in his time made all the world laugh with him, Bill Nye. From this ob scure town on the western plains he had a country-wide clientelle of readers., who looked for and eager ly read bis productions, copiously republished in newspapers every where. Some years earlier, but over lapping Nye's season at Laramie, there was published in a then lit tle town in southeastern Iowa an other country newspaper that was lifted into national prominence by genial humor and gentle philoso phy. The newspaper was the Bur lington Hawkeye, and the humorist nd philosopher, Robert J. Bur dette, The merriment, the smiles and the pleasure that these men gave contemporaneous -society con tributed Immeasurably to the hap piness of the time. The rollicking fun which they threw into human life was a tonic an 5 invlgorator of the race. It substituted smiles for tears, buoyancy for .misanthropy and sunshine for shadows. Notable among these evangels of Innocent merriment was Robert J. Burdette, whose sands of life have jttst run out, at his home in Pasa dena, California. Words can scarcely picture the radiance and delight that his genial personality and the beautiful symphony of his life threw along the pathway of human activity, In a world over given to the stern actualities of ex istence. No better view of what his thoughts ere, can be taken than In the sunlight of his own as follows, increasing and complex mass - or legislation. Speaking on this sub- pistol are : protests against the whole . theory of - prevention of crime. - ' - , If people are to be supplied with A FEW SMILES PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF why throw safeguards around poi- piece de resistance was literally sons?,. If it is -a wise policy. to f . I TTZ keep people from taking their own lives, why t Is it not wise - to pre-; Vent murder? Why have peniten tiaries, the noose and the electric chair?. Some Instruments of death must be tolerated because actually useful. But the revolver has no elm-ding the farmer's two young .sons, struggled unsuccess- Letters From the People lect recenUv former United States i legitimate use; r It ought not to Attorney General Wlckersham said: I bo manufactured. No more - valuable, service can oo j rendered by the bar of the country than to ascertain and point out the mnthiuf of correctinaf this evil and incidentally of convincing the public that the social well being of a people cannot be achieved by laws alone, but through a spirit of toleration and fairness and a general devotion, not to the advantage or interest of a class, but to the common weal. OUR OWN DEAD F in this country each year. It is not -probable that any lasge per-1 -centage of this great number are , out of work because unemployable. It is still less probable that there are 3.000,000 to 7,000,000 too many people in " the land. It is therefore probable that maladjust ment .in the Innumerable labor markets has something to do wltu. the problem of enforced Idleness. , 'On this theory, the German gov ernment has done more than any other nation for reducing the num ber of unemployed. Alarmed by ' industrial and business depression, that government in 1894 took measures for relief.. The problem of unemployment was diagnosed as an issue of Inefficient distribution of labor, and "there was established a thoroughly coordinated "system of public employment bureaus. The empire has now more than 700 ' public employment agencies the pond and the stream la singing Itself to sleep. But there is yet a little grist in the hopper, and while the water serves I , will keep on srrindlng. And by the time the sun its down and the flow in the race is (not enough to turn the big wheel, the crist will have run out and I will have the old mill swept .and tidied for the night. I And. then for home and a cheery evening, a quiet night, lighted with stars and pillowed with sleep. And after that, the dawning, and anothes day; fairer than any I. have ever seen in this beautiful world of roseate mornings and radiant sunsets. ROM the. battlefields of Eu rope there come long , lists of dead and wounded which ex cite our sympathy and pro test against a governmental policy that makes. such condition possible. In our grief we are apt to overlook that our own country has its daily list of killed .and wounded, not from war hut from preventable disease. Attention to this is called by a bulletin recently issued by the fed eral .public health service which discloses that more than '200,000 persons die in the United States every year from so-called degener ative diseases. ! , An important factor in this great sacrifice of life is the indiscrimi nate use of drugs. Census figures show that from 1879 to 1910 the value of patent medicines and druggists' preparations increased nine fold while the population was less than doubled. Statistics also show that the mortality from dis eases of the heart, liver and blood vessels has increased , more than 100 per cent during the past thirty years. ' This marked Increase . from dis eases that are characteristic of senility appears to have .been the greatest in persons between the ages of forty and sixty. From an economic point of view this is the period of life that should be the most productive. This same downward trend of vitality in middle life is indicated (Comtaanleationa aent to Tha Journal for publication la tula department sboold be writ, tea on only one aide of the paper, abould not exceed 3UO words iu length and moat be ac companied by toe aume and addresa of tbe aender. If the writer, doea ot desire to have tbe name published, be abould ao itate.) "DhwMOTioo la the greateet of all reform era. It rationaUaea everything It toncbra. It robs . prlnciplee of U false aancttty and throws then back on their rewonableaeas. It tbey have do reasonableDsss, it rathleaa.y crashes tbeaa, est ot existence and set op Its owa concluakais In . their , etead." Woodrow WUaon. ..t , . i , r '.- ' SMALL chaxgk - , Anyway, peace is worth fighting for. .It's hard for a learned man to love learned-woman. Even - Solomon couldn't size ud a fully jto make aome J woman's thoughts by her. sighs, impression upon their; w "" ' ' - rPFoectlv - helpings, t Most women seem to be good be when tuVnSd to t .y are different from men. til- ., - - r . Although a fool and his money may , T ' h Mld BOttly, "somehow I be easily separated they are hard to wish old Dick hadn't a-died. Don't .find! .... ., your' . , , - " 1 'Wine arid women aret credit for mak ing a fool of many a man who was born that way. If. a young man's cake is "dough," he can easily find a girl -who is will i. ing to take the cake. , - - ' - Women no longer wear aprons, hence the husbands who' were tied to the strings have also disappeared. Perhaps the bill, collector has as much respect for you as he has for some others on his calling list. ' .... a 'Many a candidate who lmirln,n the from the .ntmv'. fl Aftr rh en. w uw wuvi worn are upon mm . . . - - - " - De Crop Gwen dolyn is an Intensely feminine girl. f: Miss Ryder More so 'than the rest of us? ' , : De "Crop Well, she asked a blacksmith the other day if her horse couldn't wear smaller. , shoes else "At the battle of the Modder River J an offieer observed Pat taking shelter .Thanksgiving Reflections. Portland, . Nov. l.--To the Editor of The Journal After reading our presi dent's Thanksgiving r proclamation, 1 have been trying to think how- many things we have to be thankful for. First of all, at this present time of need, a peacemaker is of great im portance, which we have In the char acter of our president, a natural born peacemaker, for which, we are " very thankful, and surely appreciate . his efforts. ,,: : " v i- AIso the success we have achieved in regard' to prohibition and also, we hope, in capital punishment. Our very unfortunate people who are so low in the scale of f humanity we hope will have time and a chance to reflect on their past lives, thereby causing them to become better, and choose to live to be of benefit to their families and to the state. We surely have pro gressed far enough aWay from bar barism to do away with so cruel an act aa to take the life of a fellow creature. If we could have a reform school, or such an establishment as would be a moral help to our unfor tunates, how much better than to kill them. 1 While we are thankful that many in America are prosperous, and can have a fine feast to enjoy, yet our happiness is not complete so long as our neigh bors are in serious trouble with war and famine for many. What is the remedy t Peace, as our president has tried to instill into the naUops, and the way to get peace on a permanent uni t think, m not to educate our Ivnuth tn kUL When those conditions are complied with,, then we will feel sure of peace that Will last, and , we will understand that bad environment has been the cause of all our trouble. So let us all put our shoulders to the gagement the officer. thinking to take Pat down a peg. said: "Well, Pat, how did you feel during the engagement?" "Feel?" said Pat. "1 felt aa if every .hair on my head ' was a band of music, and they were all playing- Home, Sweet Home.'- MORE SOLDIERS G' ENERAL WOTHERSPOON, chief of staff of the army, says the United States needs more soldiers. He declares we are unprepared to resist -invasion by a first class power, in no position to defend the .Panama ratinl the Phl'HnnlnAH Wnwaif nr which are filling' from 150,000 to I Alaska. He contends that the 200,000 situations a month, and probable .value of our coast de- 'whlle unemployment has not been eliminated, greater progress has' been made by Germany In reducing ,-the number ot Idle than In any other country. ' The effort to alleviate the sltu , atlon in Portland is in line with 1 the thought of the world and it ' shbuld have ' wide local sympathy and cooperation. GERMAN DYESTUFFS a MERICAN textile Industries A are seriously embarrassed be- n":.",'.'' the United State, should depart fenses is questionable. .The retiring chief of staff asks that the standing army be increased from 105,000 to 200,000' men, and that in addition there be a mobile army of 500,000 first line and 300, 000 second line troops. Congress has taken the first step toward an investigation of the national defenses. The ques tion will' be aired when the na tional lawmakers reconvene at Washington. Undoubtedly tho tIg army men will use General Woth- erspoon's , report as ; evidence that i m Ar.-..a .mi ))n to hasten in, other areas. It is a drain on ! tne nm when universal peace shall reign and war be a thing or.ine pau MRS. M. J. OL.DS. "In IJeu of the Saloon.". 4, Kalama. Wash, Nov. lt.-r-To the Ed itor of The journal-1. B. S. . of Cor vallis wants to know what ls .wM given ip lieu of the saloon. The infer ence is that working men are incap able of caring for -themselves. This I do not5 believe. Speaking for myself will say I intended by voting dry to give the workingman a good chance to stay sooer; way uo w5' -"' soon have funis of their own and will have money for coffee and books and for beds instead of flops. He Is care ful to note that religion must not be tolerated in the resorts that are to take the place of the saloons, prefer ring games. Now I will admit we will not have rained much if we only turn t men from drunkenness to gambling, as our national strength tnat must be checked if our civilization ' is to endure. . . Just as the vigor of Europe is being destroyed by the sword so is our vigor being destroyed by diseases that can be prevented. Just as the manhood of Europe is enlisting for the national defense so should the manhood and wo manhood of the United States en list in all movements looking to ward the conservation of health. NO TIME TO INDULGE T her In some ihstances more self-assertive, it has- made her wiser, it has broadened her humanity, it has given her a wider culture, it has contributed much to her social Improvement. And the, club movement in: America" has brought about many social and indus trial reforms, has accomplished much for, humanity and for the race. All of this good work of the 2,000, 000 American clubwomen has been the outgrowth of the movement start ed 46 years ago by Mrs.-Caroline M. Severance, who died in Los Angeles on Tuesday, November 1-0, 1914, at the age of 94. Fortunate was she beyond most persons in being privileged to live to see tbe splendid fruition of her idea. own nre- cinct. . - - - -.- '":: -v ' y . ' : v." :A11 tbe world loves a lover when he doesn't do his spooning in public If he does that the world feels more like kicking than lovlne- him. - - A woman's idea of a flatterer is a man who tells her that there are not sufficient words in the Knglieh lan guage to describe her many charms. . . v The manner in which foreign diplo mats in the United States address themselves to the plain people indi cates that the world has learned that in this country the people rule. . . .OREGON, SIDELIGHTS . The Kast Oregonlan ttuotes authori ties as believing city taxes in Pendle ton as well as Umatilla county taxes will be lower next year. : Pendleton's levy may be a mill lower. , . ' The Eugene Register pronounces' the city's new water supply both pure and palatable. -. It la obtained from wells recently comnleted tn a forma. tion that Insures purity at source, as wen aa auunaance. ' a Salem's new fire whistle, which was given a trial by the fire department. was found unsatisfactory because it required too great a steam pressure, It was offered at a bargain, but the authorities have turned the n offer down.- a . . Klamath Falls Herald: A new wav to. while away time In the countv la.il has. been put to use lay -L. G. Pumforl and Al Meader, two men who ar awaiung nearings nerore the grand jury. This is by doing fancy work, and the needlework tnrnwl mi) hv these prisoners is as good as tha aoue oy any woman. .- . . ........... a A petition is being circulated at Baker proposing a vote at the Novem ber, 1916, election to raise salaries of mayor ana euy commissioners from $1600 and $1200 respectively, to $2400 ana xitsod. This is to reverse the great siasn in salaries made at the recent election, irom $2500 and $2000 Cottage Grove Leader: While greal flocks of wild white geese were flying sou tn ward last Thursday. - night they " cl o ugni m a aense ; mtst about Eugene, Springfield and the Grove. Quite a number were killed the next niorning aDout tnese places after hav ing hovered over the towns all night, dased by the electric lights. This va riety is not common about here and a Dag of them is quite a treat torsive sportsman, me Dirds were plump an WHY WE GIVE THANKS HIS season more than ever will there be less justification for unnecessary, and extravagant expenditure for Christmas ; gambling is destructive of true man presents merely for personal or selfish satisfaction. It is a season that is going to make a heavy de mand upon the charity of the world. In" our own land there are many to be succored and from across the seas comes a wail of distress from women and children In urgent: need. . Instead of an indulgence in senseless and useless gifts why mot let the holiday expenditures take the .form of food and clothing and other necessaries for those in want, "Who giveth himself with his gifts feeds three, himself, his neighbor and me." THE NOISE NUISANCE i Ur. became the largest and almost the only manufacturer of aniline dyes, and the war has shut off imports into this country. . " t The shortage of dyestuffs in the United States is a serious problem which is being used by the high protectionists as an argument for return to prohibitive duties. A committee of the American Chem ical Society reports that dyestuffs can be manufactured in this coun- from a traditional policy and begin preparing for war. 4 There are two points of view -that : of the military man who says peace depends upon soldiers, and the -contention of many men. and women that peace depends upon fair dealing. Europe's war has brought: the issue squarely before the nation.1 .. Events Indicate that militarism is to be a live issue in this coun- itrv Tt 1 inmathtn? that affanta try. but the establishment of plants fivrvhod v., .General Wothmnn will depend upOn assurances that' present . . domestic , demand would continue. 'In other words, there muBt - be ' a tariff wall erected against German manufacturers. . Cyestuf f s are on the free list, but they have been there for less than two years. At' no time when high protection ruled in this coun try did American ' manufacturers enter into competition with the Germans. . It was more convenient to buy abroad. A protective tariff did not develop the dyestuff Indus try in the United States. may be tight' in his recommenda tions for more soldiers, but an other question is would the de mand for still more soldiers cease, if the more soldiers now 'asked were supplied. REFORMING LAWYERS 1 N HIS address before the . State Bar Association,; Judge Robert S. Bean gave some wholesome advice 'as to the best means ot counteracting the, growing criti cism ot lawyers and courts. He HE residents of the Willamette Heights district who are seek ing J6y court action to still the noise of an adjacent boil- factory have a different view from the old lady who lived in Boston. , After a visit to the coun try she declared "I am glad to get home to "the noise." There is also on record the ex perience of a night watchman who was accustomed to sleep during the day next to a boiler factory. One day the factory burned down, caus ing the man to suffer from in somnia. It would be a peculiar world if every one had the same idea about things. Yet, how much lovelier the city would be if many of the useless and excruciating noises, could be banished! ' hood. 1 am willing lor men to cnoasn for themselves, hut to bo fair to them selves they should be sober. So I sug gest that men get sober, then calmly think and decide for themselves. I feel - sure mankind will not find worse place than the average saloon to Wreck men's lives. I prefer the church or the mission to them, and am will ing to compare crowds with I. B. S. any time. Our greatest need is sober, intelli gent and industrious .men. and by re moving the saloon we take from so the vreatest hindrance to so briety, intelligence and industry. The man who feels society must carry him and. provide for. him is' either weak, lazy or vicious, and we have almshouses for the first, rags for the second, and Jails for the third. C. H. WAYMIRE. PISTOLS AND KILLINGS P' is to Personal Justice. vtnnA River. Or.. Nov' 19. To the Editor of The Journal In the article in The' Journal of November 17, relat ing to Judge Bean's address to the lawyers there are some interesting statements, but I Incline to think if we would through the press and otherwise, try to aid the cause of Jus tice and truth by worshiping the al mighty dollar less and simple honesty more, in our homes, there would not be ao much kicking at courts and law yers; for the lawyer, as a rule, is only a hired man who is supposed to do what he is paid to do.- I have beon looking for news as to what was done by the women's mass meeting in re gard to Judge McGimi's excluding some of them from his court room when an offensive case was being tried, as I was once forcibly put out of a cotirt room in San Francisco many years ago, when a girl "was involved in a case. I didn't make any kick about it, as I did not belong in the court room, although . I was the Judge's private secretary at the time. J. M. BLOSSOM. Changing Lingo of Politics. "Girard" in Philadelphia Ledger. "Landslide"' divides honors with "sweep" in newspaper headlines. Those two words seem to denote better than any others a political overthrow. Pictures of crowing roosters once decorated the pages of newspapers when their party triumphed. That practice has entirely, died out in large towns.'' . - Bait river is another, dead one, but it has not been long since "going up Salt river" was a prophecy held up by all parties as the. coming fate of op ponents. I believe that expression originated in Kentucky, .where a small stream of that name was regarded as most difficult of navigation. Copperhead Is, likewise a mummi fied political term that once contained the most bitter insinuations. - "Slush fund" has superseded "boodle," xrhich was born with the Tweed ring exposures, For some years following the" Cleveland-Blaino battle of 1884. mugwump" was the universal name given to . independent or .bolting voters, but it is dead as Hector now.' . ; ' ' . In reconstruction days, northerners who held office in1 the south were called "carpet baggers," and that term was applied at a later, period in other places. - r ,. t v: A strict party man is now a stand patter. In tbe days when Conkltng, Cameron and Logan made their fight to give Grant a third term as presi dent same as passing the colonel a third cup ot coffee "stalwart" was the word to denote ultraorthodoxy in politics. His opponents called Washington "the stepfather of his country." "An other county heard from" originated during the Hayes-Tilden combat, as a result of the slow returns from con tested southern states. , Henry' Clay made a clever point by calling a protective tariff the "Ameri can system." "Drys" as applied to Prohibitionists was first used In Georgia and "wets"' came at the same time. "Offensive partisan" as a" political phrase originally appeared in a confi dential letter written by Postmaster General Vilas during Cleveland's first term as president. Foes of the United States constitu tion during the fight over its adoption often called it "the new breeches-" , A political organization is now a machine or a gang.; Once it was a ring. So you will see that new styles in political phraseology come as rap-j iaiy as ao styles in sporting slang or Parisian millinery.' , From Collier's Weekly. In some parts of the United States the New England custom of observ ing the festival of Thanksgiving day was long in disfavor as savoring of Puritan austerity but that is a thing of the past. It is now the most uni versally observed of American "days." It became popular as the narrowness passed out of it. and home coming, feasting and football came in. Even In old New England it was probably less marked by the Praise-God-Bare-bones peculiarities than our brethren of Cavalier predilections thought. "For, says Harriet Beeeher Stowe in "Oldtown Folks," "Great as the prepa rations were for dinner, everything was so contrived that not a soul in the household be kept from the morn ing service of Thanksgiving in tbe church and from listening to the 'xnanksglving sermon, in which the minister was expected to express his views freely concerning the politics of the country and the state ot things in society generally in a somewhat more secular vein of thought than was deemed exactly appropriate to the Lord's day." Having labored to edify his flock all the year, the parson, even in that long vanished day. took occa sion to soak them along more carnal lines on Thanksgiving. This seculari sation of tbe day naturally led to foot ball and. gourmandizlng. It was different when, in 1621. the Pilgrim fathers started it by solemn giving of thanks for the first harvest wrung from th sterile soil of Massa chusetts. Freedom to worship God was theirs as soon as the stern and rockbound coast had left their feet: bu.t food and shelter and safety from the savages was something else again. For. these blessings they thanked God. and then, let ua hope, ate to satiety of game, brown bread, corn cakes. mince pie, cranberry sauce, potatoes, squash and pumpkins. Venison pasty was within the possibilities and roast ed turkey from the woods. They had begun to suspect that the land which the . Lord had given them was indeed a goodly land. But they did not suspect how goodly. We who are their heirs in possession ot it are so accustomed to its peace and plenty that we are prone .to neg lect the duty of thankfulness. When manna, fell from the sky for the Is raelites for the first time and "the quails came P and covered tbe camp," they doutbless thanked .God for their bounties; but, long before the 40 years of feeding upon it were passed, they grumbled. They yearned- tor the flesh pots -of Egypt. They stored up too much manna, and it bred worms and stank. . Perhaps that is what is wrong witn us as a people, we have a mania for collecting too much ot the manna and piling it up in too big heaps and trying to make sure of keeping it for too long a time m tne ruture, ana -be cause it breeds the worms of social discontent and stinks with political corruption. we cease to arive thanks as sincerely as tbe Pilgrim fathers for the haunch of venison, the wild tur- aey, me nour from the rude mill. me golden Johnnycake. If, when we gathered our manna, we did met it with an omer to every man according to his eating, so that he that gath ered much would have nothing4 over, and he that gathered little would have no lack, should we not be happier and more truly filled with thanksgiving? Well, let us not quarrel about that not this year. For if there was ever a year when the last critic of thA nM Puritan festival might well come into the Thanksgiving ' camp, that year is 1914. The little band of starving Cav- aiiers in Virginia, the troon of fervent religionists at Plymouth, the band of trading Dutchmen In New Amsterdam have kept their hands on the steering wheel of colonies and states, and while bickering at times fr tha control, have wrought so wisely that the world's mightiest and best republic uttupiea tne Deal nait or tne conti nent with a record of 200 years of unparalleled success, rapidly rising to matchless splendor and dignity. In place of a haunch of venison, the bear's loin, the fat turkey we bring to the world's table this year the meats from abattoirs more wonderful than the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, trans ported to the ends of the earth in re frigerator cars more beautiful, were we only able to see their beauty, than the chariots of Lucullus or the cara vans of Ind. For the wheaten loaf and the corn cake we bring so much golden grain and snowv flour and meal that not all tbe navies of tbe world in colonial times could . : carry it to the starving millions who look to us for bread. Instead ot the hatcheled flax for the winter's spinning, we have so much warm cotton that its very, re dundance is an embarrassment to us, and its disposal our .chief problem. Instead of the skimped measure of cranberries and wild crab apples of that day. we brlnv to the world's table Florida's , Apples' of Hesperides (and California's) In such abundance that all may take and eat; and of other apples and peaches more than any na tion ever produced in one season be fore. ' We have so tamed the shaggy con tinent that if there be any who have not plenty for this Thanksgiving Day, the fault lies, either in themselves or in our failure so to order our mat ters that Jus'Uce im rinn Of the in justice of man there is, doubtless, much reason to complain: of the nig gardliness of nature there is none. Those who in nietv decreed the first Thanksgiving Day might have been forgiven had they complained of both. .WONT BUY WHEN PRICES ARE LOW Judging from the past, it is said: 4 doubtful whether a , tariff duty As lawyers and Judges we should alone, unless it be actnallv nro-l" about it to clean house by remov- ling sure the future of dyestuff manu facture . in the United States. Americans would have to- copy German methods, for that country's monopoly of aniline dyes has been built up -In spite of tariff duties in the United States by system, ingenuity and painstaking attention to detail. . v ;. y - ; Germany's dyestuff industry was not profitable from the start, but Germany persisted and finally not aa far as we can any Just ground for popular. 1 discontent. .In this connection 'it might be pertinent to observe that it would be well if Jthe old time lawyer could be returned; he, who was the trusted adviser, the moderator of asperities and the harmonizer of difficulties. The .problem ' today is how to preserve the characteristics : and influence of. the old family coun selor in the current of . specializa tion 'arid commercialism: - What be- ORTLAND is told . that it little less than nonsense - blame the pistol for the mur-t der of 'Emma Ulrich. Justi fication of the revolver is sought in the statement, "The water that drowns the struggling swimmer ' is not to - blame . nor the "fire .-; that burns the heedless child." ' ; Such sophistry gravely put forth Is little less than an insult to .in telligence.; ; If, aa is said, "another weapon might, and doubtless would, have been used to accomplish the slayer's purpose," the fact remains that toleration of the ."revolver placed a handy instrument of 'death In tbe hands of a man who killed ! from ambush. , - If the revolver must not be sup pressed, if it cannot be blamed tor the .many... dead Emma Ulrichs, then open wide the door and fur nish - the vicious, " the weak, the insane with loaded pistols. ; Pro-3 tests'" against suppression'' of the The First Clubwoman's Work. From the San Francisco Call. The women's club has ceased to be a joke tn itself, though some of them strll may be unconsciously huniorous, On the whole, , they are ngaged in beneficial work. They are mostly prac tical. One club will devote its ener gies to a certain form of activity, an other will follow a different endeavor, a larger club will have a-number of "sections" working harmoniously aiong divergent lines. The1 general move ment is always of benefit to the com munity. A small club in a village may start a successful movement to plant shade trees along the street, while a great club in a city, like the California club of San Franeisco, will success fully undertake the protection of a no ble forest. - It once was the fashion for men and for some women todenounce women's clubs, because they "took women from the home. , as if an 'American wom an's home was a harem, in which she niost be held as a - tacit prisoner, while "deprived ; of the : only -circumstance which makes the harem toler able, the presence of ' other captives. For one home that Is injured by the women's' club, -' hundreds ?. are - made brighter, better, given a ; sierior mental environment.' .: ! '-' .- Club membership has undoubtedly raised, the American. woman to a high er plane. While it may have made Philosophy and Hate. From the Chicago Tribune. The immoderation of the philoso phers, from Eucken to Bergson, has, from the beginning of the war. caused astonishment. One after another, the intellectuals have gone pop, like corn in a hot skillet, and the judicious have grieved to see fury controlling where reason was supposed to rule. t The illumlnatl, almost without excep tion and regardless of nationality, be came advocates and special pleaders, breaking away from all Intellectual re straints, qualifying nothing, moder ating nothing, damning their enemies with an enthusiasm : that wiped out whole civilizations, ' i ' This remarkable blowing up of the philosophical temperament and break down of the - philosophical habit has been noted, from time to time. Tint without taking into consideration why there cannot, be philosophy in jar time, r necessary emotion of war is hate. ' Men trained in the military pro fession can fight without acger, and soldiers under discipline can do their work without hating the opponent f but the nations back of them must be ani mated by a desire to kill and destroy. Hate is an. essential war emotion. It is immoderate, and unqualifying. It seeks Justification of acts by finding a necessity for them in the character or acts of the enemy. , , ; To "qualify these judgments, is to weaken the. justification, and; people going to war with half a heart for it are not In the mood which promises success. .The illumlnatl do not exempt themselves from this dominance of passion, and rationality disappears, out of their processes of thought.. - - Alberta Hears Strang News. i From the Edmonton Journal, v B, E. Randall, the. religious work director, of the Portland T. M. C. A gives the Portland Oregonlan some in formation regarding ; . condition .in western Canada. - " - "Men worth fortunes," be , declares, "are unable ' to buy a loaf of bread, at the Canadian grocery stores unless they produfce the cash.- The war has paralysed -j- -business. - ' Construction work has topped. : Edmonton alone has brrowed-3,eoo.0 to pay off her treasury .- notes. Several nurnlflcent hotels built by the1 railroads; - have been' closed, and the Macdonald hotel at Edmonton, just completed, has By John M. Oskison. A man of long experience in buying and selling stocks and bonds says that at this time investors Who actually are able to raise money- to buy stocks of the sound class and good bonds don't want to buy. They say some thing like this when it is suggested that prices are so low as to Indicate bargains: . "Yes, prices seem low. But we've never faced just this kind of a situa tion before. This' war is the most terrible thing that has come upon the world there's no telling .wbat'll bap pen. To buy now would be to take a plunge into the dark. What's to pre-' vent the utter paralyzation of the in dustry .of the world through the de struction of life and capital V . : Thlfc man of experience then refers to certain other periods in the history of security pricea He goes back to 1901, when the Northern Pacific corner precipitated a price panic. Did in vestors begin to buy securities while the prices were low? They did not; they said that prices were bound to go lower. Theirs was a bad guess after the flurry prices rose steadily. In 103 oame another period of low prices investors waited to see still lower prices when certain of the big trusts collapsed. Instead, prices went up. They remained on an ascending grade until the fall of 1907. when an other stock market panic sent them tumbling. ' What did the investors say then? Something like this according to this veteran observer: "There's no precedent for this situ ation'.. Even the banks are scared, every one of them is scrambling 'for real money, and there isn't a cent to be had. Anything might happen Sure, prices are low, but I don't dare buy anything until things look more set tled. Of course, whtn things did . look more settled the prices of good securi ties began to go up, and for two years their upward progress was almost un interrupted. . . Initio another fftrry caused a drop in prices, but tbey didn't go as low as in 1907, and investors waited for them to go still lower. They, began to go up Ipstead. , ,: ': . ' Again in 1911 came an opportunity to buy at low figures; but Mr. Aver age Investor wouldn't bay because he said that business was so dull and the threat of government prosecution of big business was so ; bad that lower quotations - would be made. They weren't. There's a moral buy now? never opened its doors. - t "In Edmonton, we read a little further on, "all the schools have closed and . public work has , closed down. There is now no labor for anybody. This is. a shocking state of affairs, and the wonder Is that we were not aware in Emonton of how bad it was. But If the schools are closed, where have - the youngsters, who have been setting out as usual every: morning, presumably ; for school, been - going? Parents are .urged to make immediate inquiry. ' Aa for. the cash requirement at grocery stores, we. are inclined to think that it is a good rule, even for "men worth fortun, and ia hardly a test of whether a city is- prosperous or not. If conduction work; ha stopped, bow is It that $5,000,000 worth of building permits have been Issued in Edmonton this year?- As for the ity' borrowing, it has ; borrowed larger sums In. other years. What railway hotels have been closed that it is 1 the custom to keep open in" the winter? u . Tbe ' Chateau Macdonald is not completed. ' ' Yet, strange to say, Mr, on tbe top ' of all this, declares that "in northern Alberta? the crops are wonderful. As Edmonton draws Its economic strength mainly from north ern Alberta, it. must strike one as pe culiar that things In the. city should be as described. ,v In common "with all places " of any consequence in .America, we- have been affected by the general financial sit uation, ana in certain line of nrKnnJ r inaustry comparative . aietnesaare- vaiis. ,4.ne uregonians column rMiake It plain i that its own and every other state in the Union are going through an experience similar to ours. - Under the strain produced, by these unusual conditions there is no city or no ter ritory that has stood up under it 'bet ter than our own, and we have reason to object strongly to the statements of Mr. Randall. - . C; A - Real Mexican' Problem. ' ' From tho Indianapolis News. The question that ' Mexico is now slowly but siirely moving up against is. "What are we going to do with mi. Randall, ex-provisional presidents?" . WHAT NATION: v " ' IS RESPONSIBLE' FOR THE WAR?- Was Austria justified in de claring war against Keryla? . Was Germany , justified . in declaring i war ugainstM Russia and France? Was England jusUfi In de claring war against Germany? These three quewions are of universal interest. ijj Kftice , the war began Jhey hale been the subject of a world-wide dis. pute. , i , . -'. zi - ; In seeking a fair an'uvver to: any and all of them tqse- must have recourse to the diplomatic ; correspondence between the several nations that preceded the outbreak of hostilities. . " James M. Beck, formerly United States Assistant! Attor ney General, makes rallies to all three of them in H e man ner of r. lawyer presenting a case in court. H He cites ; passages fftun the British and German yfiite pa pers, the. Russian, orange paper and the Belgian blue fiaper In support of his contentions. His comprehensive argu ment constitutes a compelling article entitled '"In, the gu-. preme Court of Civilization, The Case of, the Double Alli ance vs. The Trlnle. -Entente:" which Will appear in The Sun day Journal Magazine next Sunday. I ' -Professor Albert t BuNhndl Hart of Harvard, the eminent authority on American history, writes of the inevitable down fall of Turkey, declaring that the present situation means the end of- the once powerful Turk ish empire in Kurope,' regard less of the outcome of the war. He fs of the opinion9 that the Sick Man of Europe" Is dying at last and tells why,..- Mrs. W. H. Taft recently has written a book setting forth her recollections if what she properly calls "full years" In which she records her personal observation of men and event that have been making, history in recent years. , A review of the book is an intert'tJng ar. Wrfe. I i . ' " 1-4- ' . v.-i Four pages of nevii. photo graphs from the war zone show the progress of the, 'epochal conflict. One page if Jot espe cial interest, being devoted ex clusively to the actrvitlf of the Germans and the Japanese hi the Far East. . 4 "4. . . A page of rninrellane-ou mat ter including reproductions of striking - newspaper f Cartoons, little stories on q&f tighter side and Cartoonist 1 Murphy's thought on Thanksgiving In vites attention. J' - THE 8UNDAV J(Mi;Ari,f complete in- five nfrs (sec tions, magazine n-ny pic-, torlal Supplement ad comic sectionFive Cents; tie cop everywhere.. ;f NEXT SUNDAY The Ragtimeus3 Cheap SubsdtMe. Some take delight in winking. But others Joy in shirking; Some Ond a pleasure lwfting wnere signing lovera S'k; . To me the grandest toleture , That comes in fullest manure, The Joy that moat I treaaare, is to taia, talk, talk: f . In talk mankind dAllehfir.n- - . Would have no need of Jlfthtlng; . His wrongs it would be ti$rhting. Mia enemies -twouia Dai; In Joyous conversation F He could preserve the nation, : Improving all creation ? ; v un nis taiir, lais, taiK: Let each lay down his jsabre And eke his tools tsf labur. ' ..- Conversing with bis neishJior or money, marotes, cuafx; . With fruits of toil denied him, Kind nature would proVSle him. ' With food )tKe neasis iwiae nm, For his talk, talk, talk j t A Real EuTOpeanPartnerililp From the, Westminstf?! aaaette.""' The around muit be cleared by the definite repudiation of nlfuitarlsm as the goveVnlng factor in -the relation of states and of the future moulding must be found and kept !fbr the lndik penaeni euinc mo hb iret oeri opment of the smaller ;inftttonaIities each with a corporate coticIouness its own. Tbe little naticmji must have as good a claim as the fffeat to their place tn the sun." s Andj VlnaUy, per haps by a slow and gradual process,, for force, for the claahJtif competing ambitions, and for the precarious equl- ' poiae . of grouping and fialllances we must substitute a real European part nership based on the reopitlon of equal rights, established nd enforced by a common wllL 4 3 . .-. s , ,. , , , ;. .,, ,. ,,, No War Among trends. . From the 1 Philadelph Ledger. - 1 " It ami Al: fh nnartertvt DiMttnr nf the Friends yesterday thjti a mission ary, considering the' waajr said tbt Christian -standards had dot been real ised in social relations because of a lack of personal conscientiousness., if he had said "consctousniri" he wpuldi have -j been ven furtberl Within the facts and he would iav;$drawn from the history of the - Friends ,a tbeme whleh applies moat Sharply to Europe. It was the personal coiiousness "t the spiritual jeed. for, pfvijce that dis- iinguisnea ine eany prigaaa. Such a spirit, if it could barvetbfn universal- ' ly won,. would hava stopped war years'. ; A Most Vnnillitary ;pnIwiori. ; From the Kansas diyv 8 tar. V- C J W No German- general ha -announced yet that he will eat Chriatma dinner In Paris, and no Jifmniander of the allies has proclaimed; hi purpose to "eat his: Christmas f&tner tn Ber lin." Why this veratgfsaav.;.-,. 1 ,"" "' . Drjr-r--. ' Undoubtedly as ; vi vKrem t the New Yogfe World. 7 Among the; pleasures -f a Tranat lautle voyage now i tbe coxulbmty oV encountering not an I'i-.bSg but a mine. "May. in the l'. 8. -A-' winter tourg may yet become popular)?--