4, THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 21, 1915. THE JOURNAL AS INHEPEXPKNT NEWSPAPEB , JACKSON...., ....Pnbllane Published Tery erning ept Sunday) an4 every Stiptlay morning .'t ine Jmnrni xjuiji .;"..- 4 Xj ..... .. .. 1 VuirhUl u t a I'nrl1nil Or Lrtoretl at the pMstoft'ce at Portland, tmnsinlseion Ikrourjli tie ma.Ua : i.-la matter. ' - .I'KI.KMiOXES Main 7173; Home A-6051. All , departments reached by these numbers., tell i tt-orierator what aepmtaient yon want. I Oiit)KiN AUVEKTISlXa KEPRKSENTATJ V l;njanjln a KeDtivt; Co., Branswick Blug. 2S l-nrta ve Xr lork. 1218 People' Out Kitlg., Cbff-njro. Subscription " term by mall or to any ad( dieas lu the United Mates or Mexico: :S. DAILY year $5.0 Ore month $ .5(1 SUNDAY One year. $2.50 '-. One -month $ .2J DAILY ANl) SLNDAY One year. . $7.50 i. One month .sjs 8 -.'-, i -.There is a true church wher ever one hand mets another helpfully, iantl that Is the only holy or mother church which ever was or ever shall be. 50 CliASSIC GROUND E A DING the account .of the bombardment of the forts of the Dardanelles, by a news paper correspondent who viewed the contest from the sum mit of Mt. Elias, on the island df t Or., for second t'&hc, ,.,. . u'.tness activities were reduced to paralysis. The business ! heart of the days of mythology when the sods gathered on the summit of Mt . Idia to watrh tha phh nnri flnw rf thk struggle on the plains of Troy. ! i ; The 'attempted passage of thje Dardanelles by the allied fleet stijss the imagination of the student of the lore classic ages' and of ancient ' There is no stretch o watJr ' ' , . , , . " , i i leaves. shores so rich in glorj- that Iao ir cli nt-no c- - li-Vi (n rr 1 nna ' a LLn , 4i- n,-r.t- ! .-,., , . ' ...!., , , T ; f V liUl n, u n 1 L Tr V v Hi Europe and Asia. Its traditions run back to pre jjiHLuric ituies wtieu mortals maiea i . T , x f xi . 2r- . l . 1 with Immortals and when the dejy locks of the gods distilled ambrosik, It was through this strait that ttje pioneer Jason sailed In search of the Golden Fleece. On its bearjh Laocoon and his sons struggled with the serpents. , . . . un us sanos pressed the prows . t thi fih.ins r f rriA vpnofnl cnrfi q ! of ilelas. Within sight of the allied fleet is the camp of Achilles and the Hill of Troy, the famed Ilium from the ramparts of which " Helen looked out. "The. face that launched a thousand ships and burnt the topless towejrs of Illnm." . It was here that she took old Priam up on the walls and in the language of Homer thus described the leaders of the Greeks: "Clearly the rest I behold of the dark, eyed -sons of Achata. Two, orjly two, I Bee who walk not tmong tjhe commonriers-. Castor the fl?et of foot, Polyduces, brave with the cestus,." And the poet adds "she wot not that 4hey her brothers, were at rest in the dark ground in ttie home country." - Iliiim was destroyed. Byzantium loomed. Rome was divided, and Constantinople- arose. Romans, "Greeks, C r u s a d e r s, Venetians, Christians and Turks have liv d, loved and fought over the grou nd over which the guns of the Englh h, French and Ottoman now echo. It Is truly historic ground and tqdjay the civilized world from the moun tain tops observes "the dark eyed son's of Achaia. wotting not , that those ' who walk, not: among tjhe commanders are at rest In the dark ground." a -::- ':r . pai.es :STINE'S FUTURE Jte TiuAiii ziA.xuvvii.L has ae- I scribed conditions in Palestine. Jerusalem, he says, has been cut off from the c-rld since August. The Turkish army las seized all available supplies, aind it is said has treated the Jewish and Christian population with gntat cruelty, . Hunger, disease and violence-prevail in thje city and throughout Palestine.. In Jerusalem, Mr. Zangwill says, 12,000, Turks are quartered. .Twelve regiments bloqk the rqad to Joppa; 120,000'soldiiers hold the only road-that has access to water. Thousands of Jews who fled j to Alexandria are . 'housed . in cattle sheds. Many are following them old men and women and helpljess children many dying by the wjay. What is more, Mount CaEmel,: Mount Olivet ind the Mount of - Transfiguration have been converted into military posts, from "which the Turkish soldiers kleep watch . toward the sea and over Ithe land. ; If-' the allies bombard Jobpa or any other Palestine: coast tolwn, the Turks have ansounrled they Will massacre "both Jews and Christians. What will happen when the war reaches the land where the Prince of Peace taught : men to make lpve their religion? Zangwill, though a Briton,, fears the jealousies of (the allied' countries and their Christian enemies will expose the Holy jAnd to a bitter and destructive strife. He says: - Russia , holds more property at and eiuls tuore pilgrims to the ea:red eltos than , all other nations. Russia will not abandon her dream 'of os t ge-jsing Jerusalem while she has a gun la fyria.' During 500 . years France bus . been "the. protector of the Chris tians in. the heat- east. France will ' surrender only to overwhelming fdrce. 'The right pf way across Palestine im- jierils Esrypt, threatens . Sue and the . Way to India. Great Britain will fight desperately - for Palestine. Germany appreciates the w-eilth of Palestine's mineral resouices. Germans control the banks and railroads, and 'according to Mr. Zangwill the allies have yet to discover "the strength of Jerusa lem's defenses. He says a clime . tower .built on Mount Olivet is in reality , a war tower overlooking every approach to the holy city. .18 the world to see the Holy ITO THE ENDS N' O WORD picture of business endsj of the world can. ever be adequately pain tea. It is estimated that 450,000,00i people are directly under the influence of the European convulsion. It is clalihed that an additions! 450,000,000 are daily experiencing In some form or another the loss It A ' writer in the Review of Reviews' says that one , of be strangest consequences of the struggle is that : the firing . line, the more complete . conditions f. and the greater are the economic and social proDiems cine to closed markets and excessive unemployment. jt In the first month of the war, the World's trade dropped nearly 50 per cent. I The exports of the United States dropped 40 per eent.and Great Britain's diminished 45, per cent. Austrian exports dropped from $43, 500,000 to $6,000,000, while her itiports fell 65 per! cent. French exports were cut 50 per cent and imports the same. Italian exports. were reduced $14,000,000 and imports $22,000,000. In Argen tina, Brazil and Chile, trade, was cut aq average of 50 per .fcent. These are tremendous figures. They are a fearful background for the dreadful picture of! blood and sickeaing ; fields of trench-seamed more momentous as to Germany. American exports to Germany $31,301;000 for August, j 1914. It It was paralysis. Men were dazed i suspended while armies were mobilizing. Ports were crowded with i ships without cargoes. Exchange in New York on ionaou was quoted j as high as $6.50, a premium that prohibited commercial; transactions, j The fisherman in Labrador suddenly found his market jcutThe ' nitrate miner in Chile was without a bijyer. The dealer Jin bristles In Siberia and the silk merchant in China looked vainly for purchasers. The cotton grower of the South saw his markets closed and his crop, rendered worthless under its own; abundance. The trader along the African coast was shaken by the great (social convulsion and his busi- i world almost stopped beating. I ' - The Outlook is authority for the bu'i,llls wwueu uy oeJiigereiii uauuus ! ... v. . ; . i c a. s oiuenvise remuveu irom iraue sincu vast block of ships is 13 per cent vessels. It is part of the blight upon human affairs Happily, man is of magical resourcefulness. His enterprise cannot , k f . T , long in aralyBls- Whenever i here is a shifting of earth In Culebra cut, Goethals and his men and i ppliances clear ttiaway. When . iV. i ! i. the crew of Columbus was about-to -the prow of his little caravel resolutely westward. Twenty million men in the deadly I nfep lue wurm iu uiier Biaguiiiiuir, ( bugles called Europe to the colors, . . . . , . . equilibrium. Staggering under the United States is swiftly rallying its enterprise and the conquest of new fields. ! A striking advance is in the case ofj foreign commerces. This coun try is making herculean efforts to replade the 6,000,000 tons of shipping destroyed or interned during the war. merchant shipping, of which less than deep sea trade. Hundreds of coastwise f fir i r n ttnr1a in o rran ori f inn Hoof .W. V.I 1-.11 1. 1 11 V . -. 1 . W L. 1 11 hl.l.l.lilJlVll American sn ip yards. There are Pacific ship yards, thaik, can be filled coastwise vessels on the Pacific coast have gone Into foreign commerce. The. scramble to get into the foreign business is die to' the rich rewards in almost extortionate freight rates. Thus, thej steel steamer Kanawha of 1906 tons, built 13 years .ago on the Grekt-Lakes, was recently purchased for $105,000 and immediately chartered to load cotton for Bremen for $lt)0,000. Her initial trip lacked paying her purchase price. The Dacia fs another vessel charges on her one load of cotton the vessel cost him. A little steamer bought as a wreck on the Maine coast was for a time earning her owner $20,000 a month, carrying cotton from Savannah to Bremen. ', Every old sailing vessel, every steamer that can be mkde to float, is being hurried into the new and extraordinary offshore trade. Two sailing vessels bought by New York men for $30,0Q0 eaih were resold at $75,000 each, and the single cargo of American cotton carried by each to (Europe paid the new owners for their outlay. f The American merchant marine never knew Buch halcyon days. It is one great activity that, aided by congressional legislation and the (extraordinary events on earth, is reaping a gold harvest, although the enormous freight rates lay a heavy Land turned into a shamble's? Zangwill thinks so. He says pos session of Palestine will be one of the great prizes sought by the bel ligerents. FINING NON-VOTERS G OVERNOR BRUMBAUGH of Pennsylvania proposes a new method for compelling quali fied voters to use their fran chise rights at election. He says there should be a tax of $2 im posed -upon each elector, half of it to be returned when he votes at the primary and the remainder when he votes at the general elec tion. The Ne Y-rk Evening Pot does n-t approve of . the plan, saying: . It is not the formal casUng of the ballot that we want, but intelligent choice of candidates. How much rea son is there for supposing that such choice will be obtained by fin ir.rr a man for not going to the pqlls? Isi the Vote of a person who is in duced to cast it, not by a desire to exercise his privilege, . but an unwill ingness to lose a dollar, worth get ting? There is something to what the Post says, but the argument is not conclusive. The stay-at-homes as a rule lick neither intelligence nor morals. They are usually either inr dolent or thoughtless. It is not the vicious ;who refuse to vote, but those who do not take their fran chise rights seriously; those who permit iothers to run the govern ment and then spend their spare moments protesting because It is not run j to suit them, j i The votes of many of these peo ple are j worth getting.; It-is a pe culiarity of humankind that duty is often shirked, but jwhen , driven to it the shirkers make good more often than not. It is so in other affairs of life. Why is it not so with the ballot? ; L The trouble with Governor Brumbaugh's plan is. that the pen alty is ;not severe enough. A $2 fine foif refusing to perform one's duty election day ts not commen surate with the offense, i Men are fined more than that for small misdemeanors. Make the punish ment fit, the crime. In Oregon, under a law passed at the 1915 session, a citizen who fails to vote at leastj once in two years, jcannot vote again without registering. If he Votes once in the period, his vote serves as his registration and excuses him from re-registering. It is a start toward rewarding the citizen duty as ' an elector. for doing his It may some time lead to the oft-proposed plan of penalizing non-voters by tem porarily ; .disfranchising - them for absenting themselves from the polls THE WORLD affected by the warj at different the farther away one goes from demoralization there is of business slaughter as daily enacted on the Eutfobe. But here are figures far j for August were $6?,737 against was almost the wiping out of trade. by. the sudden collapse of enterprise . statement that 6,000,000 tons of iifo uccn ueouujeu, iulciucu j all v .-s I . I tup ucgiuuiug ui iuo ai This of the earth's supply of seagoing brought by European chancellories mbtiny, the bold discoverer kept embrace ot battle could not long auu iieai ty eigin niuuuia aiLKi tut; thq earth is slowly recovering its J . . . . . . . , ccuossal weight of jthe war, the forces for restoration pf the old We have eight million tons of bne-eighth has been engaged in vessels have beeh put into the there been as great activity in orders, both in! Atlantic and 1111.1 more t is -said that 60 per cent of the but $5000 of whose freight OF practically repaid her purchaser what toll on the American producer. a certain number of times. Statesmen are groping for a plan to cure the non-voting habit, be cause they realize that non-voting is at, the bottom of I many govern mental ills. j . TII03IAS MOTT OSBORNE T iiiii prison question. savs Thomas Mott ;Osborne, war den of Sing Sing prison, has to deal with only one ereat problem man. j The whole system of criminal law" is based on the old barbaric theory which regarded the treat ment of criminals is a matter of retribution, of punishment. It is gradually giving way to the civil ized theory of reform. What is needed jis a more en lightened system of justice which shall include the administration of both county jails and state prisons, a system which shall aim at edu cation rather thah punishment, which shall encourage those un fortunate men who have broken the law to learn tio adapt them selves, to the proper conditions of organized society. It is impossible for any human being or for any number of human beings to weigh and determine the exact guilt of each offender by the mere facts of his crime. It is also impossible to gauge the guilt of one as compared to another. These are things that trinscend human power, resting with! God alone. .Who can estimate the inheri tance, the early, training or lack of training, the effect of environment, the influence of others, the re sults of unforseencircumstances in order to determine the exact de gree of blame. Psychological facts are more important than material facts in ascertaining guilt. 9 If Bill Sykes were set free he would probably return to his life of theft and murder. ; j If Jose should be liberated" he would probably return to the cot-: tage of his mother, his mad pas sion for Carmen burned out, and marry the faithful Michaela and settle down to a peasant's life.. According to Mrj Os"borne's view three great principles lie at thq. base of true prison .reform. . They are: First The law jnust decree, not punishment, jbut temporary exile from society until the of fender has proven) by his conduct that he is fit to return. . j Second Society j must brand no man as a criminal but aim solely to reform the mental conditions tinder which a crime has been com mitted." -. Third The pr.ison must be , an inmate institution where every must have the largest practicable amount of individual freedom be cause "It Is liberty alone j that fits men for liberty." New York is learning from Oregon. . COPPER IS THE WAR s OON after the war began the United States protested against England's , seizure of American shipments, of copper to neutral European counl ries. But Great Britain insisted thei e was no guaranty that .the copper would no; find its way Into Germany. No contraband article has caused so much friction as has copper. The reason why the allies have defied neutral opinion in their em bargo on copper is made plain by an article in the New Yiork Sun. The writer is described by the Sun as "one of the first of living authorities on the statistics and use of copper." He discusses the pressing need of Germany for that metal for use in war. He assumes that 4,000,000 men are under arms in Gerriany and 2,500,000 in Austria, md that fighting In which 1,300,000 men are engaged on the Austr o-German side is going on daily. Th Is author ity figures that twenty rifle shots per man are fired every twenty four hours, or a total o'. 26,000, 000. Each cartridge shell contains 184 grains of brass, so that the daily consumption of brass ap proximates 342 tons. Thirty tons mort would have to be added for Maxim jgun fire. Brass is also used by the artillery, and a rough guess places the .daiy consumption by this branch of the army at 105 tons. The t;otal daily consumption of brass, according to this authority's estlmat, is 477 tons, of which 72 per cept is cop per. That would meai 176,105 tons of brass in a year. , From this total, deduction is made for brass recovered from bat tlefields, but in the judgment of this statistician Germany must have 112,000 tons of the metal to fight a year. He says she cannot provide that quantity Ifrom her own resources, and hemje the ne cessity of getting copper! from the outside. These figures at the best are only estimates, but they jilluminate the whole- problem affecting cop per, and explain the copper em bargo. I SWITZERLAND'S PLIGHT G ENERAL WILLE, commander in chief or the sviss army, . has-the most ticklish job In Europe. He is expected to see that Switzerland's neutrality Is not violated. i With Austrian guns oh the east era border of his countrfy, German guns on the north, French guns "on the west, and Italian guns frown ing from the south, General Wille's job is not enviable. The fate of Belgium stares Switzerland in the face, and with the spring cam paigns about to begin the world will watch this mountaiij republic's efforts to keep out of the conflict, hoping with the Swiss ! that they may be spared the horrors of war . Switzerland was the first na tion to mobilize. On the morning of July 30, "vhen war was certain but when no nation hadj as yet de clared it, Switzerland began mobil izing her troops, and by August 4. she had 420,000 men ready for the national defense. Ever since that time she has kept this army ready for action. j It has been a tremendous drain upon the nation. Deprived of her usual sources of revenue, Switzer land has been obliged toj spend lav ishly to preserve her integrity. And now, with the probability of soon being surrounded by belligerents, Switzerland expects to b ) the storm center of hostilities, Berne dispatches say that though Switzerland suffers almost as much as though she were at war, she bears it good temperedly. Life at Berne goes on much as before. There is no business for the toitrist hotel's. The war has sl opped sup plies of wheat by way of Amster dam and the Rhine, Russia and Rbumania, and Italy has stopped cargoes at Genoa. There is a real food crisis in the counl ry. What will be Switzerland's plight should Italy join the conflict? The little country that has taught the world much concerning representa tive government will be enclpsed by a eircle of bayonets. She will be in the dead center of. the con flict, a brave little republic anxious to preserve the peace 3ut holding her national rights sacrfed. The Journal is asked) If the pro posed improvement of fMultnomah county roads to be provided for by the pending bond Issue Is to be under the supervision l the state highway department. In reply The Journal will say no. j will have no connection) The state with It, as it is purely a county matter. The work will be under the direction and supervision of John B. Yeon. Roadmaster t Often That Wjay. From the Washington Star. Richard Le Gallienne, ihe poet, was lunching at a fashionable restaurant when a man lounged into; the room in a velvet coat, soft black silk shirt, huge Windsor tie, sandals and other such-like fripperies. "Look at that!" laughed Mr. Le Gal lienne. "Oh, look at thalSr "Hush," said a magazine editor, sternly. Husn.! That's Blank, the fa, mous short story writer. You can't have genius, yjou know, without eccen tricity." "Perhaps not, said Mr, Le Gallienne, "ba.it Judging from what pie writes you can evidently have a deuced big lot of eccentricity without genius. JOURNAL NATIONAL EDITORIAL. THE . EJECTIOX OF THE TURK By WILLIAM E. ONGELBACH, Professor ot Modi 'em European History. TTnl- mltr of Pennsrrrajila : President of the ocgraphlcal Society of Philadelphia. 11 THE eastern question ' to be teolved at last? . Constantinople, after 462 yars of servitude! to th Asiatic, seems on the eve of being Wonderfully ' situated emancipated. where two cori tlnents meet. It stands In Europe; lobks upon Asia, and.- Is intersecting point of the water rote between the shores of the Black sea. and the Mediterranean on the the land route between on e hand and Ed rope and Asia on the othef. it was therte that the Roman em pile continued) for a- thousand years IbAger after Kome, the Imperial city on the Tiber, went down before the Gothic Invaders. The doom of the Christian city Bosporus waal on the ' banks of the finally sounded, how fifteenth century with evier, in the th p invasion of Europe by, the Otto- man Turks. After conquering' the K surrounding territories they captured Constantinople in 1453, The icity be- came the seac of an empire enormous In extent. Mohammedan in faith and autocratic and cruel in.' government, ... i tPor two and a half centuries after thta fall of Constantinople the Turk was on the aggressive, conquering all the lands of the lower and- middle Danube and twice pushing his hosts ori to the walls of Vienna itsejlf. Since his the last siege of that city. ;in 1683, and the power of the dominion Turk have sldwly but surely declined. Ilbngary first asserted her freedom Irt the eighteenth century th: fight ! was over . Belgrade. In the: nine teenth came patlon of t the successive j emanci e Greeks, Roumanians, Serbians, Mointenegrjns and Bulgar ians, and in) the twentieth! of the Macedonians iand Albanians. ; Only a little peninsula back, of Constantin ople is left of the once so formidable Turkish empire in Europe. Nor is this al. . In Northern Africa the same p 'ocess of dismemberment took place till the recent conquest 'of. Tripoli i bpr Italy deprived Turkey ofj her last territory in that region. j ' The story of the rise and fall of thl.t empire is fascinating In itself. Ejut it has tin additional element of interest in tljiat It very early became up with the ambitions of the great European powers. Thug arose tiie long standing antagonism between l ussla and England because of the pfush of the former toward 'the sea. ajnd of the fear, of England lest Rus sia, by getti hg the staits, dominate the eastern Mediterranean, j In 1877, Russia threatened Constantinople, and the dissolution of Turkey In Europe seemed at hand. But British iron- clads steamed up the Dardanelles and called a halt Turkey was on the Russian bayonets, saved and the i congress cif Berlin restored all her south Bal kan land. 1 j At that time Bismarck j declared tjhat the eastern question for;Germany ras not worth the bones of a Pomer anian grenadier. A decade; later a change begap, which is usually asso ciated with the kaiser's spectacular visit to Constantinople in 1889. Since then Germariy has conquered, the Bal- ikan this region ecoriomically, And with there developed ambitious proj- ects for an lall-rail route toi the Per sian gulf and a connecting line ihrough central Asia to liai Chau. land in hand with this has come a powerful Hungarian regeneration of ! ' Austro- ! 1 ! interest In her outlet to the sea at what is less Trieste and Fiume, and, known, at Saloijika. The latter project Involved a short cut to the great (Mediterranean and Sues trade route from the Danube via the yalleys of the Mora va and the, Var- flar, with a saving of. about 2000 iniles in distance over the Toute via Hamburg a nd the English: channel. $3utj Servia blocked the way.) The re sult has been that the diplomacy of European group ) has been definitely directed to keep Iher from becoming strong, as appeared con- ppaouousiy, v vne cioso oi cae iirsi Balkan war iqmacy ok in 1913, Just as the, dip- the powers blocked the i jBalkan . stages from capturing Con stantinople during the war. All this involved a redivlsion of the . spoils. Which led tb the second Balkan i war and made jthe Servian problem the jfocal point of the diplomacy of the jtwo great European groups f powers. a for Turkey's; entering The reason Ithefc present war on the sidie of Ger many is tock lengthy to be discussed as Turk- jhere: . The outcome, so far ish rule m Europe Is concerned. is clear. But the ejection of ! the Turk rwilL not sojlve the eastern! Question. An importajit and very difficult fac tor will be removed but others re main, some In more intense jform than ftefore. ; Indeed, even now, new arid danger ous complications in the Balkans are feared from the capture of! Constan tinople. by tjhe allies and the flight of the porte from Stamboul. j - ' -Copyright. 1915. J Letters From the People . (Communications aent to Tbe I Journal for publication in, this department ahcjold be writ ten on only oie aide of the paper, abould not exceed 300 words in length and must be ac companied by the Eamu and addresa of the lender. If the writer doea oot desire to hare the came pab iehed. he thou id o slate.) "Discussion la the greatest of alii reformera. It rationalise! everything it toaefaea. It robs principles of all false sanctity and Throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have do reasonableness, it ruthlessly crashes them out of existence and seta up ita own conclusions In their stead." W'oodrow Wilson. - The Stable FlyJ . Goodnoe Hills, Wash., March 10. To the Editor of The Journal-fThe usual utte r Inel'ficiency of officialdom is sadly, lllus rated in the notice about the9 necess ty of fighting jthe house THE A PRAYER IN TIME OF WAR . i , i -, , .,,- -r : : By Alfred Noyes THOU, whpse deep ways are Whose footsteps are Is waiting at Thy Throne. ! The towering Babels that we raised Where scoffing sophists brawl, j ' ) The little Antichrists, we praised . . The night is on them all. t The fool hath said" The fool hath said And we, who deemed him wise. We who bellievedi that Thou wast dead, How shbuld we seel: Thine eyesJ . : : I .-"-'! - How should we seek 46-Thee for power Who corned Thee yesterday? i How shod Id we kneel h this Lord, 'teach us how to .prayT . Grant us the single heart once That mocks .no sac red thing; The Sword of Truth o ur fathers wore When Thou was Lo id and Let darkne$s unti darkpess tell Our deep, unspoken prayer; For, while pur souls in darkness dwell, We knbw that Thou art there. ' DEVIL WORSHIP (0111,-1915, by Dr. Frank Crane.) Is it not a- fact, asks a. correspond ent, that w ar has its good effects? Does it not pror mote : manliness, courage, 'devotion to ideals, patriot ism, and ti e like? Do We not need a war every so often to keep tliu race from ; growling soft and flabby Ariswej" : The whole war business is a delusion. It is ;aafwffatoif- a sort of dementia Sr. Frank Crane, that i disorganizes the ' entire reasoning facultyL "And these questions shjow it. ": ! It is undoubtedly true that, wr gives opportunity for bij-avery,' heroism, jjid other high spiritual qualities, jit gives an opening for discipline, efficiency, and team play. ' It is also true that cholera, sjmallppx and yellow fever) furnish coinditions where admirable human trajits. are brought out, '.where humanity noble ness shines. But for that reason shall we introduce a btishel of germs into the community? Shall we sacrifice a thousand lives Just to show how grand and noble we are? ': This is insane login. ' And It pre vails among us a deal more han we think. For example. Hardship and obsta cles are good for children; henee, kick them into the street- at an early age to shift for themselves. ;Give ithem no schooling, since the education jthey ob-. tain by their owri efforts 1 o . much WONDER FUL HISTORY From a Bulletin of the National Geo graphic Society. ) ; . ; In a paper telling something of the wonderful historjf of the lands over which Turkey has ruled .for many gen erations, William) Joseph : Sliowalteri gives some Interesting facts w lich or dinarily escape attention. He reminds the reader that except when aul and his associates crossed the Hellespont to Athens and Rcme," the ent re Bible story, from Genesis to Revelation, was lived In what has been Turlcey, and calls attention td the fact that the great empires of jthe east, the civiliza tions of the Egyptians and the Phoeni cians, the gloriek of Byzantium all Were planted on what has beenl Turkish soil. Ie also shoWs how: Kin- Sargon. ruling at the very dawn of history, con gratulated his empire upon Ms success in bringing down the high cot of liv ing. He says. In part: j "No other people possess lands of such wonderful historic interest as the Turks. Occupying a region only a third as great in area, as the United States, they have yet a territory withjn whose boundaries the greatest,; the jraost In fluential events in human histbry have occurred. i i ) i "The Bible, with little exception, Is an account of the doings of pejpple who never got beyond, what i have hitherto been the confines of Turkey. From a "single corner of the Ottoman empire arose the Babylon that tn lt day all but ruled the wo;-ld. From- that same region envy and famine conspired to send the children of Abrabjam into. Egypt, which until recently Jwas em braced in the empire, of jthe Ottomans. Thence, as they' marched back from Africa to Asia, through the wjilderness of Sin to the prorfiised land, they never once set foot offl of what cain to be Turktsh soil. And when the sl Turkish soil.- And when the star of Bethlehem arose it stood ovef a man- Ser on land, that is now Turkish soil. - ,. "In, Asiaf Mino once dwelt) Croesus, whose name to this day! expresses' the last degree of wealth. Here iwas Per gamus, whose library in its period was the finest in the) world, making "such demands for papyrus that Ptolemy was ld to prohibit tlie exportation cf that commodity from Egypt. XJbder the reign of-the Caesars, Asia Minor alone contained BOO populous cities,) enriched with all the gifts of nature and adorned with "all he refinements of art. "The civilzatijon of I the j Hittites, whose lands finajllx were ocdupled by the hosts of Israicl; the I civilization of fly, taken from a city; health bulle tin, which no diubt it:.fair;y repre sents. In the f list place, it makes no mention of the citable fiy, or "biting" fly, which is responsible for tlie spread ef that most dreadful disease, infan tile paralysis. This variety does ? not suck up liquids like the! housp fly, but lives by "biting" horses, cattlu and hu man beings,- thus spreading this and. I fear, some othr diseases.- As it will not use ordinary iiy poison, nur euic. ordinary fly traps, and is not iattiUcted by ordinary fly fbaits, its destruction j must be accomplished by other means. ; It seldom frequjents - dwellings, but generally , lingers around stables-and barns and along public highways and pity streets,, where there lis horse drawn traffic. That Portland is not too "cityfied" far it is -shown by the fact that Dos Angeles is Iwell fre quented by It, a well as other cities in California ancl all across i.he conti nent, especially the southern part. It came to America about a generation ago and is stilf spreading. To give means, for its- destruction, if it comes to Portland, or ijf It is already there, as it very probably Is, would require a half column, which I have not time to write, besides there are! officials who are much better qualified. The extra travel occasioned by the lair will probably spread it well tver here tofore uninfested territory, and If any specimens bring the germs of infantile i f Vnrniin ,11 ii ail ii l 33 E i in. the sea, not known, . dread hour? i more King. ! ! 1 more -valuable. . Beatthem, abuse and starve them, for many great men have risen from such treatment. .! ; ; ' The truth about the matter is this;, that obstacles and epposltlon do harden and develop men; t is unfor tunate for any man that he is so placed that he has nothing to .overcome; but nature, or destiny, or his own passions, or what not, always supplies the neces sary testing of strength; arid it is none of our business to oppress land -hurt in order to help men. ' To clam that we must bring on war in order-to make men heroes implies that we should favor all kinds of tyr anny to make men loye freedom, all kinds of business fraud land unjust privilege to make men work, all kinds of temptation and vicious environment to make- girls pure, universal drunken ness to m.ake- men temperate, general free love to make men loyal husbands. Doubtless if hell reigned on earth some . strong: souls would remain heav enly and rise in grandeur among the common riot. But all outside af a madhouse ought to see that it is the .duty. of society to abate " evil conditions, " lnv order that rnen's energies should be engaged on higher planes. The more we are re lieved 'from the brute struggles where we fight one another with f tbts or guns, the more we fight for better ex cellencies, and find in civic contests, in wrestling against evil customs and In trenched fraud. In the competition of art, letters, education and public ser vice, the better outlet for our forces. If we are to have warto make us heroes, let us turn about and worship the devil, -to" whom we owe all the dif ficulties we overcome. Every plea for war is! a fantastic, twisted delusion; and none more than this. ; ., -i ':. OF TURKISH LANDS Tvra Ann Rlrtnn f h o--r t fr inlnnlr. of ancient times; the civilization of . -t-gypt, rival of Persia and Chaldea the value of the heritaefl It henntath.,1 to the future; the civilization of Con stantinople and the Byzantine empire, in its day more gorgeous than any that had gone before all found their home within the boundaries of What came to be the land of the Turk.) Mohammed, and the religion which bears his name apd now claims several hundred million adherents, were also-born: In the Otto man empire, i i .-.. '..."' "The greatest of these ancient em pires was the Babylonian. The Bab- ylonians built their civlliaztion upon an irrigation ditch and made Babylonia a land teeming with people, the seat of magnificent cities, and the home of a world-conquering empire. Babylonia rivaled the valley of the Nile in pro duction. Every Greek traveler who wandered that way marveled at the luxuriousness of the crops of Mesopo tamia.. Even Herodotus) hesitated to tell the story of its fullness, lest the people for whom h wrote history might regard him as a nature faker. The hanging gardens I of Babylon stirred the admiration of;the travelers out of the west, so that they wrote them down as one of the seven wonders of the world. Nebuchadnezzar built them for his wife, Amytis, the beauti ful Mede, to rescue her from he home sickness fdr her native Median hills. . 'King Sargon, though he lived , at the dawn of history, revfewed his reign much as a president of the United States or a great .European sovereign might review mV official career. He tells us that he restored ancient ruined cities and colonized them;that he made barren tracts of land fertile: that he ga.ve his nation a splendid syfctem of reservoirs, dams, and cabals; that he protected the needy from iwant and the weak from oppression, filled the na tion's granaries with corn, brought dawn the high cost of living and found new markets for the nation's products. "r " ..'' ' )- I "Babylon's fortifications are said to have had a circumference of 65 mllesr the outer wall of; which was 30 feet high and 85 feet thick. The palace of Sargon H covered about 25 acres, and its front was twice as long sjf that ef the United States capltolj Forty-eight great winged bulls guarded Us' -entrances,. -and upon its wajl were more than two miles of sculptured slabs tell ing, the story of the king's reign " paralysis with them, an epldemlo ts certain td follow, though) of course a merely contagious disease I can not' spread like an lnfectlrrua tonn ' Mnuiii. ' - - , J,' A ly if dependent upon one of the less numerous Insects. To call attention to this danger In time is the object of called the disease "most this note. dreadful." Is so because of lt most terrible con sequences and general incurability, at least' under "regular" treatment, and while amenable to more mtinnnl mM,, of treitment. It is still an extremely formidable disease. R. 8TUEHCK. Spring Water, i Portland, March 15. To the Editor of The Journal Some I time ago la woman wrote your paper requesting information on .good springs near Port land. Eleven miles out of the city, at thej end of Oswego .lake, there is a new sumrneri resort springing up; There are, many mineral springs about the lake.; It is strange that) so few Port- landers know ot the place. It Is liter ally at their door-1 ESIDENT. Too Commonplace, j From the Pittsburg poet. -"So Lady Gladys la back from the front 7' - "Yes she couldn't find anybody Jn- teresung or romantic to nurse IS EARLY DATr!- Bjc Frad Lockley, Special BUTf Wrlta tt Th Journal. "The Whitman massacre occurred on November 29, 1847," said .-Mrs. W. F. Helm, an adopted daughter of Dr. and. Mrs. Marcus Whitman, and a survivor of the Whitman iiuibsuc re., "On the morning of the mfJasacr school Was taken up for the emigrant children at the usual time. When X went to the kitchen Homo time alter breakfast was over,- my brother John was making a splint broom and was watching the jmeal that . whx cooking for dinner. He had just finished th dishes. As I. went through the nevt room. Dr. Whitman and .Mr. Kimball were nittlng.on a e.ttep, lajktng.'- I heard Dr. Whitman Bay:- 'Vis, tlilnss do look pretty bad. If conditions .lou t get better I am. going to take my fam ily to the valley.'- My brother I'rank and my foster brother David, my sis ter Matf-i Ida. and Kllza "Spalding wne hurrying to be on time for school. The Hall i-hildren. he Saunders ililldren the Vanfielil rhii,!.. v,tt i.-1 .... . T e . v..., . ..v. iviniiiiill child reji and the others were jiath r- lng in the school room. "I went back Into the kitchen, where niy brotner John was.. Mrs. Whitman came out to get some milk for. my baby sister. Henrietta. Some Indian women openw tno kitchen door and ' 'wi'eu imo ie Kitchen. We -thought nothing of that, because they often came in unannounced. When Mrs. Whitirmn started to 'go out of the kitchen to the front room where the sick children wero, one of the sjuaws caught at her 'and tried to prevent her going. The Indian woman did not looU as if she were Joking; she looked sul len an-l angry. Mrs. Whitman avoided her, steppeU into the dining room and locked the door. This astonished me. for I had never aeon mother lock the door between the dining room and the kitchen. ; "In a moment or two the Indian women went out, and Mrs. Whitman came to the dining room door, un locked it and said: 'Come Elizabeth. It is time to take your bath,' ' she had poured the hot water Into a' large wooden tub near the stove.- "A I was bathing. Dr. 'Whitman, came in and said: 'I can't understand why so many Indiana are gathered around here this morning.' Some of the men wero out in the corral killing a beef. Mrs. Whitman always had us children bathe about 11 o'clock every morning. When the weather permit ted we, took our bath In 'the. stream near by, but at other times we had to bathe in the tub. Dr. Whltmnn picked up a paper from the table and'i Degan reading. He had hardly atarted when an Indian rapped on the door and said, in the Indian tongue: 'I want some medicine.' Mrs. Whitman looked up and said: 'Doctor, you are wanted.' "Dr. Whitman went to his medicine case under the stairs, and got some medicine and started out with it. As he stepped Into tli kitchen "he looknd back and said:- 'Wife, lock the door after me.' Mrs. Whitman stepped over to the door and locked it. This rather frightened me, because that wai?twic that morning I had Been an inside door I locked. A moment later wo heard tlm Indians' voices raised in; Joud talk and (then we heard the report of a gun and heard the window glass rattlo on the floor. Mrsi Whitman paid In a low yoice 'The Indians aVe killing us.' I 1 iitni)w,l mit- ,P int. I . J , Ini;""''"" "J"' 1 n"? K'"g i ll' ru" "l uoora. mrn. uiutirmu said: IPoor child: You muni have your clothes on.' I ran to her ami tiJie be gan helping me to dresn. .loo Lewis came to the sash- door and Mrs. Whit man, looking up. said: 'What do you want. JoeU' I.lttln Mary Ann Biii1er climbed over the fence, and, eoniln to the front door, said :' 'Th-y'vi killed father.'. Mr. Rogers, our teacher, rame. running up to the sash door and JIih. Whitman, let him in. Ho was idiot through the wrist, and the blood '. w:i'i running in "a stream.. Mm, Whitman caught up some cloth and .biintlanei his wrist. In a moment Mr. Kimball came running to the door. Mrs. Whit man let him Iri and locked, the door. One arm was broken and hu-wua hold ing the broken arm with lids other hand. He said: 'I don't know what I have done to the d- d Indians that they should want to kill me.' Mr, Kimball was a" very religious man, and to hear hirn swear In front- of Mrs. Whitman botii frightened mo and amused nus. I' wondered, what Mia. Whitman would say to him for Hwear lng. He asked' Mrs. Whitman for a drink. He said he felt too weak to go and get It- Mrs. Whitman hurried to Osborne's room and brought him a dipper of water. As ho utarted to raise It to his lips some blood from bis arm spurted In and he put It dowrf and said he couldn't drink -.bloody water. "Mrs. Hall and Mrs. Hays cam run ning over from the mansion bouse, each with a baby In her ,orms. Mrs. Whitman opened the door and they ran in. Mrs. Whitman Kaid:' 'Will yon help me brjng the doctor In?" Mr. 'Hall put her little baby on the floor, and she and Mrs. Whitman went out Into the kitchen. The Indians were gone. Mrs. Hall .cam In carrying Dr. Whitman by the shoulders, and iny foster mother, M,rs. Whitman, had him by the feet. They brought him In and laid him on the floor In the fitting room. Mrs. Whitman Immediately hur ried out Into the kitchen and bolted the kitchen door with a big wooden bolt. My brother John was lying on the kitchen floor, still breathing, but he died In a few hours. "Mrs. Whitman came in to where - - . - - - - - - - - - - an9 H4l.t .ffttn T anvthlnv.ffir vnii , He said. In a low voice, 'No.' He had two tomahawk wounds In'the back of his head." , The Ragtime Muse Gt-tling On. Dey l-s some folks always seeln' " Some one elwe's bc' pOHesion; Dat'n one way to tclt to beln' 'Way behin'vln life's procession! Dev. keeps watehln' ehbery neighbor, Always envyin' an' desirln', Twel (ley don' git time to labor, Dey's no busy wlf udmirin'. Laik er ol'; fool In er waggln Wlf a lazy rnewl bitched to It, An' dat lazy mewl er-laKKln" Same's he's skeerce got life to do it. All de white falkft n,in jial, nlttiu' In dey auton, onward strlvln'. While he watches, plumb rortfittlri' Fo" tu poke dat "mewl he's jdrivin'. Now, dey aln' no nawt o knvAvIn' How folks 'spects to pront by it. . But along dls road we're tcoin' Dey's a heap o' folks dat try It. It jes seerns dey am' no iearnln'. F;o' some people dis ain't jokln' Ef to git somewhat youah yearnln' VouJeb' tt In keep on pokln'J Two "Starts. ', From tbe Kansas City Journal. "Well, I see there was a baby hoi n in the White House recently." "Yes." "Nice start In life." '"Very.. I suppose about the same time there was a baby born in a log cabin somewhere." . - : '-- -v.': !-- V--:, -'