4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. -PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 30, 1916, 4 I . - I -5 S -t THE JOURNAL v AS IKDEFBDCMT KEW&PAPEB C I. JACKSON . . .Pajbllaha ipt)Uinrd crcfT say err day, aftern-un anu (napl bandar afternoon), at Tba Jvowi Bailding, fcrvadway kaBBJU Id., amv bod, ur. altered at to poafofflce at fortUni Or., for tranamlaaioa Uruugb toe malla aacond elaaa matter. ai.LXfHO.NES Main III.; Horn. A-ftBl. All eepartaoesis rvacned by tbeea number. Xll ibe operator arnt department you want. UaU.IUN ADVKttTlHIJiU KtPotaKJilAnVa Beajataln A Ktatnor Co.. Brojuwlck Bldg.. 223 rift Ave.. New, lock; lilt Peonies Uaa Bldg.. Chicago Subscription term by mall or to aay ed exeaa Id tba L'nitad Slates or Mexico: DAILY (UUUMNIi OB AFTBIiXOOHl On yar la.uu I ou moots I -W SUNDAY One year 12.50 I Od month I M DAILY IMOK.M.Vr; OR AFTEENCOS) AND 8CNDAI One year $7. so ' One month f S3 America aska nothing for fur self bnt what she has right Co aik for humanity Itself. WOODROW WILSON'. The sun does not thine for a few trees and f!-wers, but. for tlie wide world'. Joy. !So God sitf. effulgent, in Heaven, not for a, favored few, but for the universe of life, and thera In no creature so poor or low that t o nuty not lxk up with childlike confidence, and say, "My Father! thou art mule." Henry Ward Beecher. . S3 PORTLAND'S PEXSIOVED N' O MORE deserving appeal has been mado than is the Jewish Relfer movement. Many have contributed Cenerously. But has anybody no t ticed that the contributors are pro ' ductive and constructive men? It is the active workers, whether they work with capital or with I hands, that are always the givers. T Vile? oo (n t n a n .-u- li a - a u . mo, a3 i aa cai i iuoiauv.es, inn t Is little or no contribution from the fixed Income from long lease of a building site. It shares noth ing with the stricken victims in the war zone. Portland is under the blight of many such leases in which a ground renter for a long period of years pensions the owner of a limited frontage in amounts from 525,000 to $100,000 a year. Tho tenant plays his fortune, hia energy, and even his life against the lot owner's ground rent. He pays the taxes, pays the V . Improvements, pays for repairs. pays for the damage by elements, '. pays for everything and takes all the 'i Z chances, while the pensioned lot- owuer takes unearned dividends which society has to pay, making . I a burden upon workers which must f; be met whether employment and ; . $ wage are good or bad. The long leases are a blight on I a city. They produce men who -. I are not contributors to Jewish Re j lief. Rose Festivals, or other pub- lie movements. You seldom. If r j ever, scj their names on public subscription papers. If 6een at all, they a'e In amounts so small tl at they can hardly be discerned ' without a microscope. A recent applicant for a divorce alleges that it toOk him seven months to discover that his wif had false teeth, and another month to learn that she wore a wig. it was evidently a case of "Love is blind." A WISE WOMAN" T HERE is a wise woman at work among New York's criminals and delinquents. Her name is Katherine Davis. She is a doctor of medicine but her mind Is too large for the limits of any profession learned or unlearned. Dr. Davis has demonstrated her capacity to solve the problems of punishment and correction in a t number of positions. Now she is chairman of New York's parole 5 commission. It lies largely with her to fix the terms upon which X: New York's delinquents will be i paroled from prison for some time y to come. J' Dr. Davis has told the Chicago Women's club what the terms will , l; be. ' At any rate, she has explained the general principles upon which V she will act. Her first rule is ! 'that no prisoner shall be' paroled I unless his health is good. A sick : delinquent can not make his way y in the world honestly. He is sure to come back to prison, and that speedily, with increased guilt on J his head. Hence .it is better to i; fceep him there until he is a well man and able to do a full day's , work. t - This rule may appear a little i severe to sentimentalists, but it . is . sound and wholesome. We ': Should regard .prisons as we do schools. They are places in which to prepii"eH for good citizenship. Therefore it is best for the'pria- 7 oner: and best for society to keep j him In prison until he has tho : . physical Btrength to take his place j'" among good citizens. n We wish all prison officials could reason as soundly, and hu- ; manely as Dr. Davis. She has re . ; coveredTrom the 'pestiferous notion LET THE GOVERNOR G' OVfcHKOR "WITHYCOMBE should ney General Brown to go before the United States supreme court and throw Oregon's influence with that tribunal on the Bide of the waterpower grabbers. In justice to his own public record and to his own reputation Gov ernor Withyconibe should not use his high office to, further a plan In which Smoot of Utah and his cohorts seek a court decision by which to lace the enormously valuable waterpowers at the mercy of consolidated end combined power interests. The one great asset left to the people Is their waterpowers. one of the greatest of all their natural resources. We are only at the threshold of the vast uses to which the powers will be applied. The benefits and blessings' that they will ultimately open up to Jfnan are immeasurable. With a little more development, electrical energy will take fires put or cities by substituting electrical heating for them. If kept out of the hands of exploiters and monopolists, It will supply heat so cheaply that the poor need never go cold. If saved fronl private ownership and over capitalization, it will make electric power so inexpensive that production and transportation and streetcar fares can be enormously reduced in cost. f Governor Withycombe may not know, what his instructions to the attorney general mean. Hut there are thousands of men and women in this state who do know. The delegates to the State Federation of Labor convention know, and tliey unanimously protested against the govern or's demand on the attorney general. And there is another crowd that knows what it means. The Gen eral Electric company knows. Directly and through subsidiary and other corporations. th General Electric controls a large part of the developed hydro-electric power of the United States. It controls 40.4 ter cent of the 2,325,000 developed power in 18 states. This control by a single corporation ampunts to 58 per cent In Oregon, 55 in Washington, 61 in New Hampshire, 70 in Colorado and 80 in Pensyl vania. The directors and heads of the corporations and subsidiary anu allied corporations, including, for instance, 4the Portland Gas com pany and the Portland Railway, Light &. Power company, know what the governor's directions to the attorney general mean. They know that it is an attempt to beat in the supreme court the provisions of the Ferris bill a3 to a federal leasing system of waterpower sites, a bill under which the benefits of the waterpowers will be forever preserved to the people by keeping them from being grabbed by private interests. The governor of Oregon has no right to throw the Influence of thU state on the side of these big interests. He as no warrant to use tho governor's office to further the schemes of men who want to seize tho waterpowers to enrich themselves by exploiting the people. The purpose of the leasing bill is to prevent power companies from capitalizing a natural resource to ten times or twenty times its true value and then collecting, unearned dividends on that fictitious capitalization throug"h increased rates for power, increased rates for heating, increased rates for lighting, increased streetcar fares, and increased rates for railroad transportation. The governor of Oregon knows that the people's school lands were stolen. He knows that the people's swamp land3 were grabbed. He knows that the people's tide lands were sequestered. He knows that the people's timber lands went into a few hands without adequate return. Knowing this, he has no right to aid and abet a scheme by which the last remaining and one of the most valuable assets of the people will go as the public lands went. The governor should recall .his letter to the attorney general, and on this great issue, take his stand, not with Reed Smoot, but for the broad welfare of the people of Oregon, their children and their children's children. that a prison should be a place of torture. Many masculine officials still retain it. Dr. Davis has laid down an other cood rule. No prisoner is to be paroled unless he has a trade by which he can live. If he has no trade it is only a question of days when he will be sent back to prison charged with a new crime. He must eat and if he can not work there is nothing for him but to beg or steal. To make this rule as humane as it should be our prisons must provide for teach ing trades to those who have none. This Is another of the thousand and one reasons why all prisons and reformatories should be madJ part of the public school system. Burglars used to ply their art above stairs almost exclusively. Since January 1 the first place they head for is the cellar. THE XEW POETRY I T 18 from the substance more than the form that "the new pootry" wins its novelty. The form is often erratic. There is no rhyme and little rhythm. Much of the so-called free verse is noth ing in the world but Jerky prose cut in lengths to suit the writer's fancy. It might just as well have been cut in any other lengths or no lengths at all. Printed as plain prose it would read as well as in the form of free verse and present more candid appearance. Litera ture ought not to try to disguise its true rank in life any more than men. So there is nothing new in the form of the new poetry, but in lu substance everything is new. p. has forsaken the customary themes of poetry, such as moonlight, vio lets, nightingales and lovelorn maids. It does not sing of Gre cian gods and Roman heroes. It is not concerned with the adven tures of dukes and the moods of highborn dames. The new poetry sings of the common people. There is an older poetry that sings of common things and sometimes mentions common people. Such is the poetry of Wordsworth, but Wordsworth wa3 an aristocrat at heart. He sees the common life, from the outside and condescendingly patronizes it in his poetry. He is always telling the lowly what they ought to do. What they actually do is apt to horrify him. The change to the new poetry lies in the fact that the men who write it know the common life be cause they have lived It and their verse knows no other life. It has abandoned exclusiveness in word, thought and deed. John Masefield. who is now on a visit to the United States, once earned his liv ing in New York by keeping bar in a saloon. He was a good bar keeper and the man he worked for still , values his friendship In spite of his being a poet Joseph Conrad, who puts the spirit of the new poetry Into his novels, began life as a 6ailor. Ber nard Shaw set out as a socialist orator, "then passed on into news paper writing. Arnold Bennett was a regular newspaper man ..be - iure ne Decame a novelist. An&sol 1 The toll gate system Is a re It goes. The makers of the new I minder of bygone days-and it Is RECALL HIS LETTER recall his letter requesting Attor literature have either escaped col lege influence entirely or. like Bar rie, they have managed to recover from it. They write what they have lived. Of course the standpatters and tne reactionaries will oppose the confirmation of Brandeis. STATE TEXT BOOKS T HE State Federation of La bor has resolved in favor of the state publicatiou of text books for the schools. This is a step worthy of consideration It Indicates for one thing that the producing classes take a wholesome interest in the schools. It also indicates that they have studied school problems with good results me competing puDilsners or text oooks strive to roist as many books as possible upon the schoo's auu 10 cuange mem as orten as possible. This works hardship on taxpayers of moderate means. While it is nothing for a wealthy citizen to buy his children a sump tuous outfit of books and repeat the purchase at short Intervals, it is a serious burden on a poor man. Complaints are numerous concern ing the expense of text books and they are In the main Justified. Should the state publish its own. books there need be no such com plaints. The cost or books would be diminished and changes would be far less frequent. The wire pulling maneuvers of publishers to insinuate their text book series into the schools is a cause of demoralization through out the system. The effects are not eo deplorable, perhaps, as they were in the good old days of open bribery, but they are bad enough. It is possible to ret rid of this improper influence entirely and it should be done. Should the sta.o publish its own books eastern firm? would be relieved of all concern in the matter and the schools would be freed from their inter vention. The cry of "political school books" need not trouble us. There will be just as much politics in the manufacture of school books as the people permit and no more. The chances are that the people of Oregon would not tolerate any politics at all in the business. They are the masters and their will must be carried out. After Inves tigation the Oregon Federation is convinced that the organized mt chlnery of the state government could be used to provide cheao and good text books for the schools. The feat has been done elsewhere and with complete suc cess. The opportunity to aid Europe's destitute Jews is still with us. A VANISHING INSTITUTION' T HE secretary of the Philadel phia Automobile club pre dicts that within five years the tollgate blockade in Pennsylvania will be lifted. The state is gradually buying up all toll roads and making them free to the traveling public, a quarter of a million dollars having been J set aside for that purpose. a matter of surprise that it still exists In different parts of the" United States. Even 4n Oregon there are a few barricades on the public highway which In the course of a few more years will be torn out. A notable one to pass within the last year was the old Dollar hide toll road over the Siskiyou mountains south of Ashland. It was put out of existence by the construction of the Pacific high way. While it is now archaic the toll gate system served a useful pur pose in Its day. It was based on the theory that those " who used the poblic roads should - pay for their maintenance. Another basic principle was that the money de rived from tolls was to be use-l in keeping the roads in good or der. In theory this was all right, but in practice It did not alwaya work out. The toll gatherer was not always as zealous in Improv ing the road as he was in collect ing the tax. As human nature is constituted this was quite natural Our toll gate system, as our other earry road laws was inherited from Great Britain. In the middle ages the care of the roads was given over principally to the church, which received in compen sation gifts in money, lands and livestock. Then it passed into the hands of the hermits who lived by the roadside. According to the record, Edward III in the year 1364, authorized "William Phelippe, the hermit, to set up a toll bar on the lower slope of Hlghgate Hill" to collect toll from travelers between High gate and Smithfield. To meet the demand for better roads throughout the kingdom, th? system was extended finally to turnpike companies who undertook to construct and maintain passable highways. This was the orig'u of the turnpike road as distin guished from the public hlghwav. To many an Englishman the collection of road toll was an- in fringement on his liberty, and there were often riots in which toll gates were torn down, bodies badly bruised and skulls crushed. While the system has been out grown, it should not be hastily condemned. To it we are much in debted for the few good roads we have. Preparedness, like charity, cov ers a multitude of things. AS TO CAUSES S PEAKING of the Youngstown strike which caused so much mischief, including a few deaths and many wound3. not long ago, the New York World says, a rew pistol shots and un limited whiskey account for the trouble." One can imagine Dog berry delivering himself of thi comment upon the Youngstown or any other labor strike, but it was naraiy to be expectea or a news paper so intelligent as the World Pistol shots accompanied the strike and there was far too much drink ing, but neither of these nor botn together account for.it. The Youngstown strike, lika many another, was an outburst very similar to the Boston Tea Party, famous in American hie tory. At the Boston Tea Party a number of people who had sat down under tyranny until it be came unbearable, rose and took measures to free themselves. They defied law and order. They de stroyed property. And our patrl otic historians praise their deeds. recording them as an inspiration and example for all future genera Hons. We daro say there was some drinking at the Boston Tea Party and if the owners of the tea thrown overboard had resisted, there might have been pistol Bhot3. But fatuous indeed would it be to say that the drinking and pos sible pistol shots caused the up rising. The cause was tyranny pressed to the point whre human nature could bear it no longer. It says in the Declaration of In dependence that "people are dis posed to suffer evils while evils are sufferable," but there comes a time when duty calls no longer for patient submission but for re sistance. The foreigners who participated In the Youngstown strike had turned out immense profits for their employers year after year. In the meantime they had lived in filthy huts under conditions too vile for a dog. They were patient under, their wrongs, for "suffer ance is the badge of all their tribe." They had learfbd to suf fer In Europe's scbool'of oppres sion but they expected better things in the United States. Since these better things never came by wait ing for them, they finally resorted to violent protest. Their behavior was regrettable but it was not un natural. Americans never have been much In the habit of examining deeply into the causes of social unrest. Superficial explanations have con tented us when the real reason lay hidden In the body of society. A cancer is none the less danger ous for being located In the inter nal organs. It may even be more dangerous for that. The social unrest which occasionally breaks out In manifestations like the Youngstown strike is a cancer which needs to be cured, and it can not be cured until it is faith fully studied and understood. To account for such portentous phs- nomena oy ascribing them to i few pistol shots and unlimited whiskey" is Nero fiddling again 1 while - Rome burns. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND For a company only flra year old, that wboaw operatk.aa are art forth In No, 32 of the aerteo dvaerfblna; aurceaafal Portland o trrprlara moat ba admitted, to have doaa x reediDfly writ. Wbat mora exartln than the vnlrerwl bamao demand fr a roof that arlll krp Ibe rain out a.ary drop of It? And who more exactinc aa a roatomer tliaa tte man tn one'a ova bom mm no matter what one triea to tell him? Vet. here la an example of aatlafartlon In hath these difficult rx.ia. Tbe alary makea tha beat of reading. THE Durable Roofing- Manufactur ing company owns two acres 'of ground at Kenton, has an out put of $260,000 a year, employs -i to 30 men, and ha a payroll of $18, 000 to $20,000 a year. Its main factory building is SOxllJ feet in size. It hajj a stock structure 40x120 feet and two stories, another building, 40x40, and several sheds. The compeny was incorporated five years ago, and It was some time later that it got Into the manufac turing field. It will be seen, there fore, that, like so many other enter prises referred to within the last monin in these columns, it is but a baby In age, yet & husky youth In the business world. Its officers are: A. E. W. Peterson president; J. A. Barbour, vice presi dent and manager; I. C. Sanford, sec retary. WHAT Ig rXTRABLE ROOFING? It is a wool felt, so prepared that It is precisely what Its name Indi cates, a very durable product, with standing all kinds of weather in all kinds of climates. The Rasmussen and Fisher-Thorsen building supply houses, give it the highest recommen dations, their Indorsements being re echoed by the Marshall-Wells Hard ware company. McNaughton & Ray mond, architects, the Portland Union Stock Yards company, and many other large concerns. The Portland Ice Hippodrome, the largest building of Its kind In the northwest. Is roofed with it, and a letter from Mr. Nep- pach, vice president of that corpora tion, praises the Durable roofing most heartily. The Carman Manufactur ing company Is another of its friends. Its thrae story flat roofed brick furniture stock building has this, roofing. It is one of the places where a lean would nave serious conse quences, for the reason that Its finest finished furniture is stored therein. The Portland municipal docks, the Cord Sengstake building and scores of other recently erected structures In Portland unqualifiedly indorse this home product. The newly rebuilt AlUky building. Third and Morrison streets, has been roofed with the Durable material. EVEN AUSTRALIA BUYS IT. At firs' thought one would Imagine tho Australian market a long dis tance from the Portland market. And It is: yet the renown of Durable roofing has reached that faraway land and regular shipments are made to the company's representatives there. It has a large clientele in Alaska, north' to British Columbia and south to Arizona. Oregon, Washington. California and Montana buy freely of the product, Its friends multiply ing as a knowledge of its virtues spread. Its use is permitted within the fire limits of Portland, where the regulations as to the use of In flammable material are severe, thus demonstrating Its safety, and it has proved Its durability In all kinds of climates and under all conditions. Its price is for Vi-ply, $1.25 per square; I-Ply, $1.60 per square; 2-ply, $1.85 per quare; 3-ply, $2.25 per square. The half-ply Is Intended for use on tem porary buildings, but will last three to five years. The last two grades, known' as Permanlte, If repainted In three to five year periods, will last 10 to 15 years. As the roofing can be laid by anyone of ordinary Intel ligence, following the printed instruc tions of the makers, it becomes not only all Its name Implies, but an In expensive covering for buildings. However, In the city and Its environs he company usually lays the rooflrij; at a trifling cost above the amount paid for the material, so that it Is found among the cheapest of all. notwithstanding Its durlngual!- ROOFING SPECIALTIES AND PAINTS. The Durable Roofing company does not confine itself to the one product. It makes and sells several roofing specialties, as roofing papers, paints, asphalt, shingles, etc. These have become so well known and substan tially recognized as to crests a de mand more than double that of two years ago, and six times larger than four years ago. "Our books now show as many or ders thus early in me season ti(we had recorded on the first of April, 1915, said Mr. Barbour, "and In de liveries we are 20 oars delinquent. As we had not expected so large a gain we were taken by surprise, but with an augmented force we will take car of every customer and have our decks cleared in good season. It Is not our Intention to be caught short of stock In the future. ' We haye made preparations to meet sll de mands, no matter how large, and our output for this year we have no doubt will oc almost double that of last. Our agencies in Seattle and Tacoma are also booking Increased orders. They write us that the out look Is fine, so we do not expect to have much of a breathing spell for a long time to come. "We have the only plant of the kind north of San Francisco, and the more we are known the greater will be our business. Our products make friends everywhere.' If we once get Into a neighborhood we start a con flagration, so to speak, and the name of our company Is passed from Hp to lip among all building or contemplat ing the erection of new structures or the re-roofing of old ones. . "What is our opinion of Portland as a manufacturing point? When a THE SHIP By Henry W. THOU, too, sail on, O Ship of State! Sail on, O Union, strong and great! Humanity with all its fears, With all the hopes of future years, Is hanging breathless on thy fate! We know what Master laid thy keel. What Workman wrought thy ribs of steel, Who made each mast, andtsail, and rope, What anvils rang, what hammers beat, In what a forge and what a heat Were shaped the anchors of thy hope! Fear not each sudden sound and shock, 'Tis of the wave and not the rock; 'Tis but the flapping of the sail. And not a rent made by the gale! In spite of false lights on the shore. Sail on, nor fear to breast the sea! Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee. Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears. Our faith, triumphant o'er our fears. Are all with thee are all with thee! "HUMANITY" MARTIN From the New York Times. Legislation for the prevention of cruelty to animals is modern. Affec tion for favorites of the household must be very ancient, but it must have taken time for the Instinct of domina tion In the first horse tamers to sub Bide into a sentiment of .kindness and affection for the horce. Even the Arabs are often unconsciously cruel, through ignorance to their steeds. The brutality to animals, still too notice able In some Latin countries, is prob ably a survival of the common "pagan" habit. Poems and Inscriptions to pet dogs and sparrows reflect the refine ment of a limited class. Obatlnacy, anger and the inherited cruelty of man will sometimes override even the in terest of the owner. The wldenlngs of the sympathies and the humane spirit have produced a marked and general change in the treatment of animals. In this country, at least. Instances of cruelty to them are growing rarer. The societies for their protection have done a fruitful work. a a The earlier British legislation on the subject represents the Ideas of the time. It is significant that the comj mon law gave the dumb servants no help. Their first defense was statu tory, not for their benefit, but that of their owners. The National Humane Review for January prints part of an address by George II. Scott, secretary of the Illinois Humane society, before the American Humane association on "The Development of Legislation In Behalf of Animal Protection," which Illustrates the legal view that pre vailed well Into the nineteenth century. An act of parliament of 1682 made it a trespass for which treble damages were recoverable, "to malm or hurt horses, sheep, or other cattle." The so called Black Act of 1714, passed on ac count of the outrages committed by bands of ruffians with blackened faces, made it a felony to kill, wound, or malm cattle. But malice against the owner must be proved. For example: "In 1789, at Gloucester, a man named Pearce, In a passion, ran a sharp-pointed stick quite through the body of a company's business is growing by leaps and bounds, as is ours, its man agement can reach but one conclusion. We have unbounded confidence in Portland. We have the same confi dence in all this North Paclflo coast. Its population Is rapidly Increasing, ai.d business will grow with It. This Is obvious. For a home, speaking for myself, give me Portland and Its charming environs In preference to any other spot on, earth! "No, "there Is nothing the matter with Portland.' " Letters From the People (Communlcationa ant to The Journal for publication in tola department abould b writ ten on only one aide of the paper, ahoold sot exceed SOU worda tn lenftn and rouat ba ac companied by the name and addreaa of tba aDder. If tbe writer doea not dealra to have tha name pubUabed. be anould ao atate.) "Dlacuaalon la tbe greatest of all reformers. It ratlonallxea CTerytLlng It tourbea. It robe prtneiplra of all fala aanctlty and Lbrowa tbem back on tbelr reaaonableneaa. If they hara no reaaonableneaa. It rntbleaaiy crnabea them out of exlateoca and aeta op Ita on conclusion In tbelr atead." Woodruir Wilton. rnnrerninir the Toor lonceruing Hie I oor. Louf orovc, or, j.... , owned and operated In the Interests Editor of The Journal Your reply to of all the people Instead of for lndi the statement of your morning contem-I vldual profit, no man will own your porary that vice Is the cause of pov-J Job, nor say whether you shall work ertv, H good. If your contemporary j or not. nd ,n'r be no Incentive had in mfnd only such vices a. drunk- y l" f. -hriff to club enness, gamDiing biiiu n uiMipoiw'" i It was much In error. If It included In the term m r rr a iT tn. (1 1 Tli m I 111!).-. " " " r ; which seem to poxseis the average seem to popsefcs me voter, such mental laziness, preju- iztness. preju - dice, self-conceit and selfishness, it in that respect right. These are the T.1 . IV.. swinish elements or afflictions of most people's minds, before which it is needles to cast such pearls as the writings of Henry George, Louis F. Post, C. B. Flllebrown, Etoughton Cooley and others. We are going to "always have the poor with us," as Christ said, so Ions as we drift along In the same old ruts of custom, and do not sincerely and open-mlndedly seek the chief cause of poverty. It will take a little patient reading and study to Inform ourselves before election next November, that we may vote Intelligently on a measure that will doubtless be on the ballot. I We can do an act of sensible and ef - feotual charity at the ballot box by voting to abolish the unjust curiom that la the cause of the poverty we an- ... . nuai.y try to i'"to defend. Now if this doesn't savor! as long aa It" chief cause Is allowed of conMrV4lllim atandpatlsm and all to continue If there Is anyone who tha lnrJud,d' , cipZliB. I do"' : unwll ing to arouse from thoa, dere-j h d He tells us plainly lict dispositions and take some Inter- prepared est In the matter for the aake of the poor, let him rernemner the woras or Christ. "Inasmuch as ye have done It unto me iesi oi wiene my ur.u.rni, ye have done it unto me." Merely yot - ing ior reyreeniiic win lcu.uv.iu but little. Let every voter do his lob- bying at home at the ballot box. and not expect His representative to ai - ways know Just what the people desire without Indicating their desire by vote on the measures presented. Waiting until near election time and depending on most newspapers for the necessary Information wll not prop erly inform the voter. This Is one 1 way to exercise a little humanitarian- Urn and patriotism. It Is up to tbe voter whether he will vote himself a Job or another term of Idleness. C. A. M LAMORE. The Christ Spirit, ami War. Lyle, Wash., Jan. 25. (To the Edi tor of The Journal) The editorial In your Issue of January 24 regarding the appeal for tbe unfortunate Jewish peo ple tn the war rones strikes the right chord. 80 far as Christian charity or tbe Christ spirit Is concerned, however, it might be pertinent to ask. Where la OF STATE Longfellow cow, merely because the cow would not stand quiet. He was acquitted, because no malicious motive within the BlacK Act was shown toward the owner, but merely from an angry and passionate disposition toward the beast Itself." Lord Erskine's speech In the house of lords in 1811 paints a condition al most Incredible now. He speaks of "al most Innumerable Instances of cruelty to as 1 mala which are dally occurring." If you remonstrate with a servant, he curses you. If with a master he tells you the animal Is his own. One can imagine Uio surprise and wrath of the countryman or cockney of the time at Interference with the hereditary right of a British freeman who detested "Popery and wooden shoes and frog eaters" to beat his ox. his horne, his ass, and his wife. Then, and long aft- , erward. the lnterferer was apt to be i treated as the London cabman treated ' the sociological Mr. Pickwick Inquiring the age of the cahhorse. Indeed, in our days a strong dose of knuckles in sometimes necessary to curb a truck man's sense of dominion over the beasts of the field. ' I Lord Erskine brought In a bill, hut their lordships wouldn't pass It. Not ' till 1822 was the Martin act, punishing by fine or Imprisonment the Improper . or cruel treatment of cattle, put on the statute books. Since this was the first law for animal protection and the foun dation of all later legislation on the subject, its author should be remem bered. When there's trouble or glory, cherchez l'lrlandais, keep your eye peeled for an Irishman. Richard Mar- j tin, 1754-1H34, was a Galway man, M. P.. 1776-1826. lie loved animals, he hated the barbarity of the then rrim- 1 lnal law. He tried to stop the hanging 1 of forgers, to allow counsel to crlm- lnals. He got his act passed, despite I the resistance of George Canning and Sir Robert Peel. He was "a personal : friend" of the prince regent, who was ' false to all his friends and cruel to i acme. As George IV, that mirror of I royalty called him In Jest "Humanity Martin. A nickname to be proud of. the Chriat spirit manifest in anything In the prosecution of this war? Just think of the tragic stupidity and ini quity it presents. Millions of men slaughtered, billions of debt Incurred ) to enslave the unborn, and millions oi Innocent victims suffering unspeak able misery, and all being done In thd name of God and the Christ. Each j monarch harangues his subjects to j further blood-letting seal by telling ' them that God Is helping them do bai- I tie. The Reverends Eaton. Russell and A. A. Morrison seem pleased with this . K" to Baldpate " hell on earth, and denounce the moth-! "Why am I like a loar of bread?' ers who teach their sons the gospel i he asked. of peace and humanity. I None could ai.swer The Rev. Morrison Is quoted as say-! "Because I am freh from the Bak ing that the spirit of non-resistance r" ald walking rapidly down of the Christ is misinterpreted, and i Broadway. 8. O B he advocates preparedness for war; the same spirit that actuated the relig ious mob who set upon Hypatla, strip- ped her naked on the street, dragged : her into a church and clubbed her to ! death, cut the corpse in pieces, scraped the flesh from the bones and cast the I remnants into a fire. O religion, what I crimes have not been committed in j thy name! Just a word more to my friend and I brother, Dan O'Connor: study social- Ism. Might by brute force never made , right. Leave that to the barbarians, j Man has progressed Just In proportion Bavancou inieueciuauy. When the industries are rDllertlv.lv! An eight hour day does not etop exploitation, neither does it give . I j " J iuo .ui cioiiai ur ufi uci oi vrnir . . . . . . . e..!l .. , . . - " I labor; not even "Ford" wages. With the full social product of vour lbn- , Kl Is,.,,, )npatlmlri,' ,.nn.A "- - . ..i -. U l all manklnJ O. L. MACLEOU. In Reply to Mr. Mllllcan. Portland, Jan. 27. (To the Editor of The Journal) Please permit space for a reply to Mr. Milllcan'a prepared ness policy. The most remarkable thing about It 1 that he had the nerve to come out with the truth and tell us who It Is. mostly, that wants com pulsory military training. He says a rich man may live among thieves and robbers if he la well enough armed and quick on the trigger. He might have added, "if the thieves and rob- i msown ..no. out ne in- timate th th . v'k ,nd-robbr he pleases to I 171'" nuC ,' ?' ""' hTe i neither dlgnltv. honor nor possession for de fena It t. Ih. lnV. .. ...... alonp h ,e!m- to tnjnk Mta(( f hlm8elf, hM dignity and honor. But , pub)c a, we)1 a, government Invest! j Katlon, for tn6 laM e,K,)t or 10 Jearg prove conclusively who the thieves robbers and looters really are; 0 per cent of those rich men have become ! ,rn not only by cheating labor Jut 1 . 0f Its portion of creation, thus being airecuy responsible for at least 7i p-r cent of the mendicants he refers to with scorn and contempt, but also by robbing and looting the public domain out vf utilities and resources of all kinds. This Is the class that, he says. J has dignity, honor and possession but they want the public they have exploited to defend them. The be nighted country of Mexico furnishes a substantial proof and example of It all. 1 let us prepare all we can, but let ' It be voluntary, not compulsory. I ( O. CEDARQUIST. It Is tlie Twentieth. Cord. Or.. Jan. 15. To the Editor of The Journal Is this the nineteenth or the twentieth century? Please print the answer In yourneper. JESSIE aTZTWARTJ. T,,e0ncG Over THIS THING of prlntlnr letter from readers of the solium In stead of writing something is caster than making a psychologic! ascent of Mount JiooO. H All I have to do -is to writ a few words and dashes like these and tack on (lie letters and send the copy up to the printers. U And they mr "Gee hut that. nut's getting by easy." J And I feel I should explain for the benefit of thoae who may - not know that a "nut" In modern Eng lish Is one who Is a little bit cracked. ' J And that's what the printers gay about me. ' ajAnd maybe I am.. J But about these get every day. letters that I J I mean to answer them. and I carry them around In my pockets affectionately until I'm all bulged out and ma makes me unload. J And one of tlirm comes . from J. K. Myers of Prnu-xiile county,school superintendent of Crook county. J And it tells me that he has taken ' I'- l-oem "Little Ihk" printed In tlie kullum a week back and made . copies of It. aiiil srnt It to every school In Crook count j . H And he has given ma credit for writing it. J And I want to wy -before It goes any further that 1 didn't write It, H It whs clipped from the Chicago News by Pr.eman 1.. Harford of Corvallls and sent to me. J And I printed It with credit to th News I think. J I've got too much credit as It i. and It keeps nic In debt. J And beside little dogs espe cially little 1U' k and white dogs- "ren t nearly ho popular with me as they were. ft And the iason l that we've been feeding the Alaekan robins out a. tak Grove. J And they have grown tame, aj And the other nlirht Pup caught one and broke its wing. J And Buddy found it struggling in the snow. and he brought It In at the top of his voice. J And Jean cried. and there was a tragic time In general. 5 And I only mention thin to show tliiit little dogs even if you are good to them and t them uleep In the house are not all thai they should be. i 51 And to Illustrate I am going to i print a little poem written by Polly ' Carr who lives In Sellwood about her little dog. J And I don't think Polly's meter Is exactly rer .ar but LISTEN Here in her poem: To' PompeL I'onijw I la our dg be ll,e moat demoted pup I've ever Men. II waa a naif. e coaxed Mm 1o adnfit ua, and ti j d think be d oerer been Any oiie'a elae (ei. He a a buutrr after trou ble and cata. And be'll aork tih df and nlgbt after rati; But when be gnea up lon with na. ba ll eat anything be fluda upon Tbe atreeta Tie l black, and fai. and aleek aa any aeal: ile a clean about tbe buuae. aod La doea Dot tx.k or itpal We prlae him very blfbly. and hit rouraf are adwe. YVbeD nf enta -ome to ,ur binjae. ha etand ba in ecu hU ujufrea and Ibe dnnf, And be d die before Le d let trouble come ta her. 11 la (edlgre! I do not know; bat IS aura be a not a 1 1 H. Ixttroauclnr Kr. TlrgU Ytimm. Virgil had Just voine from "Seven XOMZ-OmOWaT MTUSZ Back to tha Land. By iua Utiatedt. il.e office tViy Fnet. Tba world aa n,Jr- fir all of ua. So aay tb guil men old; Tba morld aa iael lie ill of ua. When aelaed by unloUera bold. Tl ere araa a dr. l"ti, Wif ago When man live! free and well; Eh had bat and jilot 10 h'w -No rtaraalte'a nurae to an ell. But thl. ala! far mo j-wd To lat tiifi emnn; Tle atrrmg ber" ro enalaet the weak. Greed aa len LinL. florin lorda and ladle began to -n'.a And lle like rite. For fellow man ner l'"t all loa. Aai took fnoi iuid tbelr rlgbta. The ferill- fieM, !:.t (iod ga aaaa Were elie.: l-v :!.le Oi bold, Teaee and I. ' r !- f e erll ran. Into tinier; nun ia aol. t E.ieh lord '";n i" lotlj fir power-An-) r-".-e .itii-, to gire him might; For gr-,i In tbflr erll baarti. An.) li.-r began to fight. Tlie t ir kn-da aubdued the wra. : uet were ktHrwn aa klngi. .v., rtei-d t. toul trir Lbein to wreak. itiev awe for luxurious thlnga. K"t tLroujh th centuries that paaae4 ;reat teenera l.el and taught Kdnrntiou nay at laat , lor liberty pepple foufbt. But real happlnem we fcara yet tn bring. For another god la tcrn -Tbe Almighty Ivtllar ta graabar than king. In itt search all lor it torn. Hnndreda of thouaar" "t arrea of land IJe untitled I" mit t tb caUooa. While In our itl.. o anany aod grxnd. Man mutt toHl 1-x.g !.r bla ratlona. Tlie land ffMn Ha Idle l.liWa lot a take. Aa tliey t It feni our father; Let the o'd earth :th hapjiltiefca abake, When agalb nan II" well ami free Joke. Teacher What does your father do? Willie He plays the trombone In the orchestra. nt he'a going away now, since the ai.te a gone dry. Teacher But what difference does Jt make )f tha Bta,e gotm dryr Willie 1 don't know, only I heard Ma say that Pa s breath Isn't Lear! so strong now. W. V. C. Song la Ro Okl. SONO IS SO OLD. LOVE IS SO HEW LET ME BE STILL AH D KXttL TO YOU. LET ME BE STILL AHD BKEATHE HO WOID. SAVE WHAT MT WUM 1LOOD SLUGS UHHEAiD. LET MT WARM BLOOD siho low or YOU SOHO IS SO FAIB. LOVE u so hew: HEBMAMM EAOEDOIV. Tncle Jeff Snow Kays: Clothes don t make the man: but ; ' ' - m ti t . Kv mmA mlfhtv hie 4 el a e.i I " J " -w mmm m IVI & Wl lers who were nothing; bat clothe racks, so rur aa I could see, vntll X rot onto myself and hung out some style,"