'THE' OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER:' 12, ' 191& THE JOURNAL AM INDIPENDMT NEWSPAPER C. , JACKBOW ...PnblWbw 5 Jrabliibeu r evening (except Senda) anj ; 4 err Sunday mornlna- tt Tti Jooreal Bslld ' Ins, Broadway and tamalll t.. Wrtlt4. Or. KHurJ at tha poatoffica at fort !. Of-, lot l " triMmiMioo wi arouaa tb saails aa coat tUw mttw. TKLCf HONES Main TITS; Heax. A-06L All departmaiiU reached by taw uabm, TU the oparatcc what 1 apart map t yon waat. JjREIO.V ADVERTISING BKPBEJBENTATITE Batilimln fUotaor Co., Braaawlek Bldg., 2& rifth At.. Maw tork; -218 People' liu Bid(.. Cblcage. obaerlptloo'tarma br mall or to a a ad areas la toe Unltad But or Mexlcoi DAItT Ooa year.. ..,..O.00M One Bsooth M SUNDAY Ooa "year... tXSO I On gaoeth -23 , DAILY AND SUN DAT One rar IT. 80 I On month f -05 America asks' nothing for her- lf but what aba baa a right t sk for ha inanity Itself. WOODROVV WILSON. A arrest war leaves th country with three great armies an army of cripples, an army of mourners, and an army T thlevvs.- -tirman Proverb P.WIXG THK PKK'K jHKAT to the value of $3.- iiAi ,r,o'oo ,b beins heM by yy the farmers of Umatilla ronnty for higher prices, fl'he cah that sale of the stock fwould yield ia equivalent to $150 (for every man, woman and child the coiinty. f It Is an unfortunate situation. ifio much money kept out of the rhannelB of trade baa a depressing rffect on business. It ia caused by the ship trust. fThe trust beat the Wilson ship bill n the last Congress through the Senate filibuster, and thereby ained control of the ocean. It lies the prices of wheat charters, inrt thv nr nnur four Hnipu lit jhlgh as before the war on the Pa tcific Coast and ten times as high 'as before the war on the Atlantic. Secretary McAdoo said in bis Portland address that if Congress had promptly passod the shlp-pur-, chase bill last winter. It would Siave been easy to have secured jplenty of ships, ships which would fcow be carrying American wheat "ko famishing Europe at reasonable Sfrelght rates with higher price for the wheat of American farmers. jThe chances are that the supply 3of such ships would have been suf ficient and the example of their treasonable freight rates bo effect ive oh privately owned steamer. ttbat Umatilla wheat would all have j een sold, and the $3,160,000 be n the channels of trade. Secretary McAdoo charged In his ortland address that the sub- Idy hunters, who are of course the dipping combine, caused the de- eat of the bill. He said: What ia tha real fight In this mr hant marine controversy ? It la a tflght for subsidies. What are suh- tasldles? They are gifts from the f'nlted Btatea to favorite eorpora lona, firms and Individuals who op rat ships. Why should we give away mil lions or dollars or trie peoples monev ach year to favored ship owners var whose rates and servlcs wa av no control? Wouldn't It be more sensible for ha government to spend these trill ions in building- up a splendid naval uxillary merchant marine which can controlled and operated In tha ln- erest of all tha peoplaT Every amp owner ana every snip enopolist wants subsidies. They ould profit by them and they are lnr to make a desperate fight for cm la the next Congrasa. They fought for subsidies and gainst the Wilson ship bill in e last Congress,' and the Umatilla jtrmers and all other American armers are now paying the price ff holding their wheat or selling fat greatly decreased figures. VERMONT IX THE LEAD ERMONT is a small itate not particularly wealthy and not remarkably progressive as far 11.1 J a ; as pun iics is cuncerneu. am Jthas some excellent idnas regard ing the public health and, what a great deal more wonderful. t has the courage to put them nto practice. That class of d Is aacs which the dramatist Brleux scusses in some of his nlava has Usually been allowed to lurk In llark places. Public mention of Jhem has not been deemed polite, fjedlcal treatment has been fur tive. The afflicted concesled their rouble as well as they could and en the secret finally came out he culprit Blunk away while his fiends blushed for him. Physl jans have often made light of hese disorders. ' The danger of contamination has been belittled &be necessity for public protection as been slighted. It is onlv in jcent years "that thff disagreeable A 1 .a,..l.t If. W uujwcv lias . rOTneu evil cuius I'ae t i proper " attention in the press and fit i tha; discussions s of social re- i formers.- a- Those who believe that preven , Ion is-better than cure long' ago Xpoktthe stand that the sanie leg i .fFlitiye? precautions should be ap f lied to these diseases as to others fvhich,- are likely to be conamunl iated from -one person to another. They often poison the mostintl-mate- family relatione and lead to the permanent Impairment of health. ' In recognition , of ; these facts Vermont has. required ' physicians to report cases of these diseases Just, as they do others of a con tagious nature. And it is made a crime for persons who have ac quired such maladies to marry be fore they have been "cured. The same rules of quarantine apply to them as to smallpox. This law is a long step forward. Adequately enforced it will greatly increase the security of the public health In Vermont and remove one seri ous menace to the welfare of the family. WOMEN AND DRINK STUDENTS of English condi tions have noticed among the curious consequences of the war an Increase of drinking habits among women. Many work ing men are at the front. Their wives receive an allowance from the government. The allowance is moderate, according to Ameri can notions, but to these hard worked women It is opulence. Never before in their pitiful lives have they had so much cash in their bands, paid so regularly. They do not think of laying any of it up for a rainy day. That is not the mental habit of the English poor. The only question with them is how to spend their overflowing wealth, and the only Indulgence that appeals to their imaginations Is drink. So the grog shops are enjoying unparalleled prosperity. In the same way the Saxon peasants took to drink when coal was disoovered on their farms. 88 Hauptmann depicts In some of i his plays. The English women are not alone in their-" growing predilec tion for liquor. Modern condi tions seem to predispose some classes of women to that form of Indulgence in our own country. While one area after another goes dry in the I'nited States statistics show that women in the large cities consume more intoxicants. The same economic changes that free suffragists from domestic toil for public agitation leave multi tudes of their Bisters stranded in apartments with nothing In the world to do. Untrained for useful vocations and often desplsing.them, nothing is left to these unhappy women but personal Indulgence. Fashionable frivolity claims some of their time, trashy novels claim another part of it, and in too many Instances drink fills all other gaps. "The devil finds some mischief Btill for idle hands to do." If every human being were obliged to earn a living by moderate and well paid industry we venture to believe that the "drink problem" woyld disappear almost of itself. THESE ARE THE CHARGES H AS anybody heard that a Chamber of Commerce com mittee, in an official teport after investigation, strongly condemned the methods of the Multnomah county board of relief? Have not the Multnomah county commissioners heard of it? The report was made October 14, and was published in The Journal. It made definite and very impor tant charges. It said that the board spent nearly $16,000 of public money last year with questionable efficiency. The committee charged that due to "overlapping duplication anc1 lack of proper organization and methods," the relief board is "un doubtedly spending more money than necessary." It charged that the board drifts along and follows the old beaten Tath of "charity relief." It charged that "the record sys tem is cumbersome," that the "rec ords are not extensive or detailed enough," and are "without facts which give adequate knowledge of the case." These and other damaging speci fications are set forth in the re port. The definite suggestion la made that the county could ren der more efficient charity at less expense by cooperating with regu lar charity 'organisations. Twenty-nine days have elapsed since the report was made, and things go serenely on at tha court house without a ripple on the qule; surface of public affairs. Do the county commissioners propose tp ignore the report? If so, why? MORE ABOUT BILLY SUNDAY W E HAVE heard many more or less plausible explana tions of Billy Sunday's power over his audiences Some people say he Seta up "psy chic vibrations" which affect other minds as a violin does a piano string tuned to the same pitch. Perhaps this explanation is as good as any. It leaves the mystery of the persuasive evangelist Just where it was in the beginning, and Ithat is a great merit in an expla nation. Too many of them darken counsel and leave matters more perplexing than they were In the beginning. Whatever may be the cause of Billy Sunday's Influence, it is in creasingly powerful. Today he is praised in circles which a few years ago;' spoke -of him contemptuously. No doubt he. is .the expression of a profound . -national mood which seeks ; in the ;'deep assumptions of religion .a balm for the oppressive evils of life. Billr . Sunday is particularly Jn terestin g Just now because his men tality seems to be transforming. Hitherto his theology has been ab stract, and, as some saw it, a trifle antiquated. He has appeared to shun the urgent problems of the time and deal exclusively 'with" celestial history and geography. But his thought Is changing. For some time there has been a rumor that he was going to take up "social topics," and it baa been Justified by the facts. Billy Sunday said at a meeting the other day, "many men will gladly draw their check for $10. 000 to establish a children's hos pital and see nothing wrong in the fact that the money came out of $200,000 made from a system of child labor which crushes more children in one year than the hos pital can heal in ten." When an evangelist has pro gressed to this point we can say of him that has spiritual state is more than hopeful, he is converted. Billy Sunday championing the op pressed and speaking for the help less will be a potent force on the right side. More power to his el "bow and -more grace to his tongue. IT IS UNFORTUNATE M ANY who bought Red Cross Seals In the holiday season a year ago. and two years ago, are surprised If not pained, to learn that $4000 of the money then procured remains tin expended In the treasury of the OregfJn Federation of Women's Jubs. v Meanwhile, the trained workers of the Visiting Nurse assoclatlon who go from house to house, nurs ing and giving relief, pointing out Improper living conditions and carrying on educational effort, have been all along hampered by lack of funds in their ministrations to the incipient tuberculous. While those in the early stages of tuberculosis were slowly but surely drifting into the incurable stages, $4000 of the money con tributed for succor of the sufferers has not been applied. It is unfortunate, unfortunate In Its effect on future Red Cross sales, and unfortunate in the lives that have been allowed to pass on and out through failure to apply the saving agencies for which the money was contributed. The State Tuberculosis Sanitar ium is now overcrowded with those in the last stages, and there is a waiting list. Starting with those in the incipient stages, the great white plague relentlessly gathers in its recruits. There is constant need for every cent of Red Cross money that can be made available and it is very unfortunate that any of it has ever been permitted to remain idle. THE PASSING SHOW ONE of the revelations of the Land Products Show is the Tokay grape product of South ern Oregon. In color and flavor California can not' equal it. In else, the Cali fornia Tokay slightly excels, but Southern Oregon will remedy this defect as Its vines grow older. The lusclousness of the Josephine coun ty Tokay is the marvel of all. Strangely enough, though Port land has this year consumed sixty carloads of Tokay rraDes. but three came from Southern Oregon, twon from Josephine and one from Jack eon. The other fifty-seven cars were California Tokays. The over whelming sale of the California product is said to be due to the better organization of the Califor nia sales agencies, a defect that Josephine county will undertake to remove next year. The very excellent display of Josephine Tokays at the Land Prod ucts Show has already done much to herald the advantages and won ders of Oregon grapes. There are many fields in which the passing Products Show has ren dered high service to Oregon in dustries. EMERSON AND BROWNING IT 18 a sign of the times that another life of Emerson should be published almost simulta neously with William Lyon Phelps' new book on Browning. There is a growing demand for the older and graver authors. War lit erature has not been particularly satisfactory from any point of view. It is for the most part mere flashes in the air without much light or comfortable heat. It dis turbs the mind without settling anything. Its reasoning is vain for the most part, its prophecies shal low, its arguments trivial. Torn from their accustomed anchorage by the ruthless violence of war and war rumors, many men seek for spiritual consolation which is not to be found in the superficial liter ature of the day. So for better satisfaction they turn to the au thors of larger caliber and more serene philosophy. It Is more than commonly pleas ant to believe that Emerson and Browning are winning new read ers. Both of these writers were deeply concerned with eternal ques tions, Both of them passed over the trivial solutions wbicti flow from personal or national interest and sought for truth in the bosom of changeless reality. s To Emerson the world U a cham ber of justice where in the long run right shall prevail and wrong Shall wither. His "Essay on' Com pensation" is the most uncompro mising profession of faith in God that any writer has ma.de. Brown ing was less mystical that Emer son but not less true to the great creed of the ideal. Neither of these prophets be- tiered that the world was ruled by physical force. Neither donbted that the universe is founded on everlasting Justice. When Brown- Ing wrote "God's in His Heaven.; all's right with the world." he meant the same as Emerson does when he assures us that for every human account, 'by the very nature of things, an Inralllble balance and nobler inai. eace is not aegen inust be cast. The old song has eratln. It is merely a harder test it, "Unjust gains are dearly bought, for men than war. retribution sure will come." Em- erson would not say "retribution." His word was "compensation." The main point is that the scale will swing even before tha Almighty lays the case aside. IS WAR NECESSARY TO PRODUCE BRAVERY Prom tba Boatoo Glob. HERE are atlll in this world, es pecially In those parts of It which the war has not touched, a great men and women who believe j many that warfare is an unnatural. Inter national disease, anil that the human race will sometime throw off the shackles. They believe it la their solemn duty to combat influences which they consider unjustifiable, tnfluencea which tend to the enslaving rather than the freeing; of mankind. And the most unfair charge which has been leveled J at such persons is the charge that they are actuated by the basest and most selfish of impulses, that they treasure their own Uvea above every thing else. From an intelligently formed pub lic opinion which honestly holds that reasonable protection is necessary for this countrv. which understands Just . . - wlist such protection means, how it 1 mint be rJd for and maintained. Just why It Is necessary and for what pur poses It may Justly be used, there is little danger. j From the subtle spreading of a spirit of uneasiness, which has its j roots 1n the vague fear that Aroer- leans today are missing In some way i a great moral uplift because they have no part in the horror across the seas, whose lnstigatora Intimate that peace brings m degeneration and brand all who differ with them cowards, there la no end of danger. a A ,ess tactful, militarist philosophy 1 haa found expression through men like Bernhardt, and the oommon sense of the world has repudiated such non sense with infinite disgust But the very name doctrine In the hands of Mn4. 4. : V. L.l m mUI.LIUl,l ..HUB un way Into our souls and rankles there. It is absurd to argue that phyalcal courage Is ao rare a thing, and that the war has resulted In the renais sance of heroic qualities In men which were smouldering t their death in peace. This war proves of course that men are not afraid to die; but every day here in America men die just as nobly, give up their lives for their fellowe, and we pass it by with hardly a thought. A factory in Pittsburg Is In fHmes. A young fellow, garbed In the unin spiring uniform of an American work lngman. rushes Into that dreadful furnace and oomea out. oarrylng an unconscious yoting woman. He gom back six times, and each time stag gers to the street a human Ufa saved. He goes back a seventh time and surrenders his own life. And in Boston, where because of distance the Pittsburg firs has lost something inimt to 1865 this nation wasted $10, news value, we read that "Peter Val- ion lost his life after bringing etx unconscious girls to the street." In that horrible tragedy at Peabody small . children risked their Uvea for others. No greater heroism Is dis played on any battlefield than that which Is so frequently displayed by the modest and modestly paid firemen of our American dtlee. They are heroea of peace. a a II is not the fashion to celebrate heroes of peace. The warrior Is more often extolled In song and story, though It Is safe to say that Jew chil dren 'leave school without knowing wv"" "u w v . nm rrunn Belle," "a man that died to save men," clad In overalls and Jumper at his post In the engine room of a i,. , Uamer- In war the gallantry ef the men of one nation Is pitted against tha self sacrifice and devotion of men of an other nation. Human lives, enormous wealth, the concentrated Intelligence of one country are devoted to crush ing some other country which matches these self-same resources. But at home we hesitate about cleaning up "the dark places" because It costs money. How much good would re sult If these resources were used In as whole-hearted, as determined, as united a fight against evil and tyr anny at home! If men wish to risk their lives for humanity, to fight desperately for righteousness, there are unlimited opportunities in every country. William Lloyd Oarrlsoa hated war no less than slavery, yet the words "I will not equivocate, I will not excuse, I will not retreat a elngle Inch, and I will be heard" did not issue from the throat of a cowardly sentimental . . M , , 1st. He was assailed for his lack of religious ortnoaoxy, he was dragged through the streets 'by a mob of en- tlemen of property and standing." but he lived to see ths cause he Cham. pioned stir a natlonlo its vsry depths and to see the triumph of mor.1 , . . . r the hero of peace. Wendell Phillips had the courage to wage his fight for human liberty, te face ugly mobs, and the sneers of his own people, to fight on. though, as he said, "every tile on Cambridge roofs were a devil hooting his words." Phillips was a hero of peace. There are heroes of peace today and they ar not all men. Self-sacrifice, devotion to a cause. physical and moral courage are nobl qualities, but they are displayed la other struggle than those of nation against nation, and ustially for higher ( Letters From the People nnrKrMEf .ZZJJZ C,taon?,r .ced SOO warda la leasth and moat be ae- comnanied br tha nam and, addroaa of tb sander. If the writer does not deaire to aava tha name published, be should ao state.) DlacnaaloD la tba areateat nf all refnnnara. i It rationalises tTerytbtcc It touches. It robe principles of all falae sanctity and tbrowa them . back on tbeir reaaoaableness. If the bare no I naaonableneas. it rutbleaslr crushes them out of existence ami aeta un Its own cooclaaions In tbeir stead." Woodrow Wilson. Authorship of Good and Evil. Salem. Or.. Nov. II. To the Editor of Jrnal To one who is not weaaea 10 tne view mat ancient writ ers, even of the Bible, had an Infalli ble hold on knowledge, the controversy running in The Journal In regard to the authorship of good and evil la somewhat' amusing. i I, am not conceited enough to im agine that I ahall be able to settle a controversy which has been troubling us for the last 6000 years or more; yet a little observation and thought should. It would eem, convince anyone that in nature, outside the mind of man and possibly the higher order of animals, there is no such thing as good and evil. Most of us regard it as wrong for one man to injure another, but few are so primitive as to brand the sea as a sitjner if it knocks a rock into smithereens, or to regard plarfts as wicked on account of their death struggle with each other for existence. The idea of good and evil is a purely human conception. Moreover, we do I iiul r v rn ph mm in wi ht i im.M, n i ,.7. V. " " i ... iui vAanipir, lujiiv irsaiu ( punaav amusements as good and some as evn- There Is. of course, a fairly principles of human nature, but these are purely conceptions resulting from human experience. This by no means implies that they are of no value. Man has made Innumerable helpful inventions, and the idea of good and evil is one of these, even If men do not always agree about It. I Vl m iaa flnnfa Kl ancnTAf than Via question as to who created good and evil, la that man created both; and I may be allowed the observation that i i Hiit. . i. , i ...... i . "tuuio i v n it cmiri lu vxifu or the devil. W. F. FARGO. Evil Further Considered. Ashland. Or., Nov. 10. To the Editor . T 1. T . . 1 T If T I . iUre Wah ' 4iT II to 45:18, written about 210 years before "Cyrus, my shepherd" destroyed Babj' lon, they will learn how evil la the direct result of violating some law. He wrote, B. C. 708. Then read Jere miah 60 and 61. written B. C. 695. finA. fulfil T r ' RAll whn t Vi - mrra t . " v. wvw. .... ... m - ; city was leveled. Jehovah named Cy- rus, and called him out. (Ia. 55:1) "whose right hand I have held." He was a "war lord." For her sins the kingdom of Babylon was to be Wf rvaati ttf th man- an th- nniv un. r nan tieaata anil hind, nnulri llv there It was war. This brings evil. Yet out of it cams deliverance to the Jew. The war from 1776 to 178 was the birth agony of a new nation. Up to 1S12 we had wars. During 1812 to '14. We cut our Incisors. In i Mexico we got our eye teeth: God raised up Lincoln against Davis, Grant against Lee, Sherman against John Btone, Sheridan against Jackson, Thom as sgainst Hood, to wipe out this nation's sin, slavery. In this .war we cut our molars, and two bites, Manila and Santiago, used up Spain. "Without shedding of blood is no remission for sin," Heb. 9:22. Great sins require the greater punishment, and as a nation cannot be punished in tha "Judgment of the great day," it la punished here; hence war's hor rors. In this sense God creates evlL The Innocent suffer for the guilty. Out of this awful hideous eastern war will come a higher humanity. In ' 000,000,000 and over 800,000 men. and , is today solldfled and rich beyond Com- I pare. lei nui riu. o. i u i cm iviiun c-u In the wake of that war. AMOS DA HUFF. "The Great Hope." Portland, Nov. 11. To the Editor of The Journal Dr. Chapman's article In The Journal of Tuesday under the title, " A Lovely Fight and a Great Hope," was Inspiring. It stirred thought for the highest democracy. For democracy has not yet granted its greatest boon to humanity Just right living, in which all humanity must share, one with another. If the masses did not suffer from grinding poverty would the politician the banker, the lawyer, the doctor and the minister have the power they now wield In the destinies of the i people? j xnd the soldier, whom we long have 1 Idolized in song and sentiment, glorlfy i ing his courage and his strength, and j supplying him with weapons for de- ! Btructlo-re w. not reaping results i in this colossal strife in Europe? lords fighting for control, for power, are the crowning evidences of war worship. The Great Hope freedom, the sense of Justice and fair play must be the outcome of Europe's rebellion, or It signifies greater destruction. Life is our supreme effort. What Is this gang spirit of boys? A livell- It out. Does fining poor men for minor offenses or fining segregated women, lessen these evils? How must they procure more money to pay those fines? ' I have heard It said that war Is hell. I know poverty is hell. M. A. BUCKLEY. "Safety First" Discussed. Portland, Nov. 10. To the Editor of Ths Journal It was proper that your editorial this evening should . tone down the extravagant statement ' of the officials of the Oregon-Wash- j , . n n 1 1 . 4 ft. V.triratinn mam. na n v I aut the wlsaom of th; "safety first" i propaganda. Recently I saw in saw in an engineering Journal the surprising t1' bcked r fljures, that of every 100 persons killed by accident on raiiroad prowrty stations, yards and tracks 87 are killed .elsewhere than at road crossings. In short, for every iM m eiMwhere on or about I ths railroad, tracks. But tbe safety ' first campaign covers too thinly, howeer7t mUltitU&i V. i quently I have seen Fifth street cars bearing Tths 'Safety First" sign cross Taylor street while running at least SO miles an hour. A train on this railroad sails irrte town at 60 miles an hour, hits a wagonload of passen gers and knocks them galley-west without th-engineer or fireman no ticing ths. accident or knowing about it till informed later; and the manage mem allays public-sentiment by re- PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Eb,u4 com, over here aak- in- for another half billion dollars, J& TreSVnV of"ur neutral commerce T Portland' dance hall Inspector Is wondertnar whether some of the new dances should be prohibited by ordi nance. If he wonders a little longer the dances will probably go out of style. , The Journal's photograph of wrecked i street cars on Eleventh street showd S8a7.ty iTfit" Ttindlng odt wmpToS tu.Wr.nldni5n-t"UrVlV th crash, but the cars dlan t. A ' beauty doctor tells girls to eat mors onions and fewer bonbons if they want to become prettier. The very ambitious might try something strang er garlic, for instance. New Tork City. Is thinking of spend ing; $385,000 killing off mosquitoes. If It costs that much to exterminate the small bloodsuckers, what would it cost to wipe out their financial cousins? President Wllnon has indorsed apple pie whipfe.ls all right, but hardly necessary. a Judge Oantenbein rules that cakes made with Chinese eggs must be so labeled when offered for - sale. The bakers e-hould not defy the law; let them use China eggs. Great Britain has put inlnit Trlah Amlffratlnn up the bars If. the order had been issued earlier a lot of would not be here. Umatilla county having raised 1175 worth of wheat this year for each Umatilla man. woman and child, no body should go hungry up around Pendleton. JOHN HAY AND From Collier's Weekly. In these hyphenated times one Is momentarily tempted to disbelieve in i .. ., .... - . . , ,, 1 possiwmy or transmutm an ine metals into Americanism, even in a miracle-working melting pot. "Let "s go slow from now on In this matter of welcoming to our shores all sorts and all nations of men," is what a good many people are Baying;, and are Justified In saying. And yet transmu tation Is possible. Americans are t.he product of the mingling of many stocks. In the new "Life and Letters of John llay." as composer! and com- ku H ' 1 I t ; D H 1 - T- m have Just reread a fragment of one of Hay's addresses spoken st a dinner of the Ohio society of New York 12 I , 1 1 C 1 1 X IOTA uaulL VII L li a ,uu ii.'h acenes of my life," said our rreat secretary of state. "If I am not that altogether deplorable creatwre, a man without a country, I am, when It comes to pull and prestige, almost equally bereft, as I am a man without a state. I was bdrn in Indiana, I grew up In Illinois, I was educated In Rhode Is land and It Is no blame to that scholarly community that I know so little. I learned my law in Springfield and my polltloa In Washington, my diplomacy In Europe, Aala and Africa, r - - - - ' I have a rarm in nw narapsnire bjib . desk room In the distriet of Columbia. And Mr. Hay has this to say about Ma , honest forbears: I "When I look to the springs from wtilch Dir blood descends, the first ancestors I ever nemo of were Scotchman, who was half English, and a German woman, who was nan French. Of my Immediate progeni tors, my mother was from New Eng land and my father was from the south. In this bewilderment of origin and experience I can only put on an rawed stress on "safety first." An other engineer admits he did not blow the whistle when approaching a road crossing where he knocked a wagon and made a killing, but after he was Interviewed by higher-ups he remem bered that he had blown the whistle, and would swear to it. And the safety first movement was again llroellghted. And yet, H would appear that notwith standing such recklessness in the operation of trains, the oommon road crossing Is relatively a very safe place. While on this subject, kindly permit me to enter a proteat through The Journal against the Oregon tax con. misslon's allowing the Southern Pacific company to knock nearly 19.000,000 off the assessed valuation of its property in this state, because some of its small branch lines did poor business last year. Property owners generally did poor business last year, but taxes have to be dug up some way. Last year the Southern Paclfio company had 8187.000.000 In Its repair and better ment fund.' which It refused to expend, although that fund was Increasing at the rate of 16,000.000 annually. One year of such Increase would complete the Natron cutoff; but that would benefit Portland cspeclaly and Oregon generally, and ts out of the question with the Southern Pacific company. No. Treat all property owners alike. ; it the railroad take its medicine along with the rest of the taxpayers, W. 8. CHAPMAN. The Preparedness Issue. Yoncalla. Or.. Nov. 10. To me Of The Journal The letter in ssue or rovemoer enuuru Y . w- Pra,n ttm m T'nclfiat. Lvuu mt. J migni i" uu ' - I of years ago, say In the SO's or 40 s, ' when the country had no particular ' interests outside of Its borders as fsr as territory was concerned, out u seems a decided anomaly at present. As far as the future reputation of "Wilson and Bryan is concerned. I for one am willing to haaaurd a comparison the two 10, 20 or 4U years nence The dictum, or advice, or wasning- ton on the war or peace question, "In time of peace prepare for war." is good enough for me, and I believe it will be approved by the American people In the present circumstances. Mr Bryan may be a good orator, but In practice hegeta off on the wrong cue, brilllan aS he Is. in some ways. Wilson, a man of fine education and INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY Philadelphia That the Pennsyl vania railroad is straining every effort to put into operation every possible piece of equipment on the system to handle the record breaking traffic moving eastward, is evidenced by an official report stating that the number of freight cars stored for repairs has besn reduced 14,124. or 41 per cent., sines April 1. On October 80 there were 20.182 bad-order ears in shopa, compared with 24. 856 on April 1. Of this number 834B were on the 'lines east of Pittsburg, and -1L788 en the lines west. There have been no good-order cars stored on the system for a number of weeks, ever since, in fact, the heavy freight movement set In. ss-e AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS j In one of the hottest and most Closely contested elections ever held In Bay City. W. H. Ulmore has been reelected mayor for the fourth consec utive term. The Lane county court has ordered 60 iron road signs, to be placed at prominent crossings of the main roads of the county. The signs will be two and a half feet long by elg-ht inoher wide, with letters four inches high. "What la believed to be of no leas Importance than any of the many state conventions of which t'orvallls has had the honor to be the host," ' the Gaiette Times, "Is the Hoit. Show which comes to Corvallla No vember 16-1 7-1 S. The convention Is that of the State Horticultural society and combined with it will be the State l1 .oral association. In an editorial on the Herrniston Hog and Dairy sl:o- the Pendleton Knst Oregonian says thtre are boyn at Hermleton who have already learned moro about how to judge stock than some practical farmers learn In a life time. Complimenting the grown-ups, the Cast Gregorian sayn: rThere are settlers on the project who are taking evory possible step towards securing efficiency in the selection and handling of dairy cows and 1iok. Safe and gratifying profits constitute their reward." The Salem Journal reads a lesson of the Iind Products show, as follows: "Eastern Oregon carried away four, out of the five prises tor county exhibits at the Manufacturers' and I-and Pro ducts Show In Portland. Polk, which took second place, was the only county west of the Cascades to get "placed. ' This Is a showing of which the bunch grassers may be justly proud, and which serves notice on the famous Willamette valley that it has a com petitor in the agricultural line that will keep It hustling to excel." THE MELTING POT aspect of deep humility In any gather ing of favorite sons, ancl confess that 1 am nothing but an American." How familiar, we wonder, are the words spoken on this text by Rt. John do Crevecoeur, in that fine old book of his. "Letters from an American r'irmr?" 'revecoeur's book came out 133 years before this life of Hay, and in It he describes the American of colonial and revolutionary daya as "either an European or the descendant of an European, hence that strange mixture of Mood which you will find In no other country. I could point out to you a family (sic whose grand father was an Englishman, whose wife Was Imti:h. whose son married a frenchwoman, end whose present four sons have now four wives of different nationa." a a And the farmer letter writer con cludes that: "He la an American who, leaving behind him all his ancient prejudices and manners, receives new ones from the new mode of life, the new govern ment he obeys, and the new rank he holds. He oecomes an American oy being received in the broad lap of our great Alma Mater. Here Individuals of all nations are melted Into a new race of men, whose labore and posterity will one day cause great changes in tha world. Americans are the western pilgrims, who are carrying along with them that great masa of arts, sciences, vigor, and Industry which began long since In the east; they will finish the great circle." a The picture la enthusiastically but not. on the whole, untruthfully ren dered. John Hay would have enjoyed Crevecoeur' s "Letters" of 1783; one wonders if he ever knew them In all their friendly quaintnasaT the capacity to reavson, oan get down to ths facts on large questions a man of statesmanlike quality. The gentleman's argaant referred to would be also a rooffona for doing away with the use of firearm or clubs by the police or sheriffs of ths coun try, as also any police or other force at all for the protection of society against only "possible" dangers from lawbreakers sr the unjust la general. J. E. LUTZ. Multnomah Falls. By Luther Laurence Pratt In the wtld western woodland, where nature la free, Where Columbia roils te Its turbulent sea. Where the mountains majestle are dazzling with snow, And the blue hills are fair as ths valleys below. There's many a prospect te make the heart thrill. The bosom to tremble, the rapt eye te fill; But this scene is fairest, ef lowland or high. Where matchless Multnomah redls down from the sky. Thy waters, Multnomah, thy White misty spray, Have fallen as age after aga swept away, A wilderness treasured thee deep ia Its heart Long, long ere the Indian earns near with his dart. His taut, straining bowstring mmi sharp, cruel spear. To kin his red brother or fell the swift deer. But even the savags in awe hashed his cry. Where mighty Multnomah pours down from the sky. The red man has vanished; the white man. Instead, Looks up at Multnomah with unsov- ered head. Though thousands below these whits waters have stood. With hearts gay or grieving. souls evil or good. All, all see the work of an Infinite Hand In this fair falling splendor, so peer less, so grand. While to none does ths rainbow Its promts deny Where mystlo Multnomah flows down from the aky. Portland, November 11. The Occnlt Science of Lew. From the Saturday Evening Post. Law more especially criminal law has usually been an occult science. It la still the practice In Burma, we believe, to give two disputants candles of the same six, to be lighted at the same time. The one whose candle burns longest gets Judgment against the other. Leas than a hundred years ago a de fendant tn an English criminal trial appealed to the ordeal ,of battle, and the court was more or less surprised to find that the ancient law on which he relied had never been repealed. De termining a man's guilt or Innocence by bis ability to walk on hot plow shares, or carry a hot iron, or drink a poisonous decoction, or by throwing him bound into water, has been prac ticed for ages among many peoples. Ths medieval method of letting ac cused and accuser fight It out with weapons was common over Europe. Our modest sncestors confessed their Inability to ft no tha merits of tbe cause, and so relegated the whole af fair to the intervention of supernatural agencies. Ths main differences Is that we ar Jess modest. Instead of th ordeal of battle or the old key-and-Blble test or the "sieve-witch," w have th defendant play a gam of trlp-the-court. If h can catch th Jucig putting down an I -dot over an he wins, and Is pronounced innocent Tonce oven YESTEKDAY AFTKRNOON out In South Portland I was trying to find a man who had moved away. or had changed his name. or they had changed the sum bers on the houses. or something. I Anyway I was coming down Bancroft street. - And I saw itelth Greenwood aged six. and his little brother John. and their tittle sister Kathryn and some other kids. 51 And they were holding a small piebald dog with a stub tall under a faucet In Greenwood's yard. f And I said 'What you doing -Keith?" fl "Washing him" said Keith. and I a.iked what for. "Going to take him to the Mut do I Show" s.ld Kelt h. 51 And I asked whose dog it wa. and Keith said h didn't know. ' "Had a hard time to ketch him," he said. JAnd it s that way all over town guesa. Every boy who has s dog is ; going to take him to the Armory- I tomorrow night. I f And sum, little girls have dogi 'that they're going to take too. I know thry are becauae Iorr ! Keasey got a letter from one of them. i 51 Iorr ia one of the doges of the 1 dog ahow . and there's Sam Hewitt and young Phil Matechen-- and Tommy Bwlvel and John Mann and Frank Watklns and Charley Berg - and Ed Warleln- - and Ivan Humason- - and Bill Strandborg - and a lot of other Mute - who feel that the Mut dog tha dub of do(tdom--shouM have his day as the proverb hath it. 5fAnd the little girl -who wrote the letter -to Iiorr Keasey is named Emma Vahlbusch. and she lives at 107 East Twen tieth street. 5j And this is what Kmnia wrote: I am a little alrl 13 yrara old and want to know If 1 can enter mv dog tn the show, as the paper only aald boys. I have a very dear little doele. that I would like to enter. Mis name is Patsy, which represents the names of the towns he has been in before he was two weeks old. He was born on the twenty-third (28) of rvcember. nlneteen-fourteen, on the Willam ette river Just before the boat landed In, Portland. The flrht letter of his riuine stands for the first cltr he wasi in "Port land." "A 'the second I stands ror Astoria "T Is the third I for Tillamook "g" the fourth stands for "Siuslaw" and "Y" for I "Yaqulna" the last city. ! 51 And IKirr wrote to Emma and i told her to bring Patsy. And no dog with any pedigree can get in. i And Buddy and Jean have a dog t named "Pup" out at Oak Grove. and we'd like to bring him in except 51 LISTEN W' re afraid we'd lose hifh and everybody out at Oak Grove would miss hint so. EMINENT WRITERS DISCUSS THE WAR in THE SUNDAY JOURNAL ARNOLD BENNETT ana!yie the economic aspect of the colos sil itrujfle. EDMUND ROSTAND, frejh from s visit to the French trench!, stes victory for the illlei. FRANK H. SIMONDS 18 impre8fd with the striking parallel be tween the experiences of Bel glum ind Serbia. THOMAS B. DONOVAN writea of the splendid feats performed hv the mountaineer soldiers that guard the Swiss frontiers. A WOMAN'S PACE PAR EXCELLENCE la Section four Nst SasteWy Newest Notes of Fashion By Mm. Qui Vive. How to Avoid Winter Cold By Lillian Russell. Why Dancing It Not a Mere Fad By Louis Pruning. An Embroidered Design for th Guest Towel. MAGAZINE FEATURES OF RARE MERIT "Tragedies of th Hap8bar'r, The story of Franclt Joseph's mammoth opal. "War's Bitterest Irony" An ton Lang, of Oberammergau fame, killed in action. "The Riddle of Memnon How It has been solved after 3000 years. 'Thieves Amonf Honor" A novelette with s moral by Jack Lilt. "How Portland Removes the Hyphen" An account of tbe Americanization school. "Ths Housekeeper's Council Table" Suggestions that make the day easier. "Science and Near-Science Up-to-Date" A page of Interesting articles. "Cartoon agrams" For the boys and girls, by Charles A. Ogden. 'Tom Tit Tot" By Georgene Faulkner, The Story Lady. THE SUNDAY JOURNAL "Tb Biggst Fiv-CW ! Wefth in Typ" 1 NEXT SUNDAY ,