THE ; OREGON SUNDAY: 'JOURNAL, PORTLA ND SUNDAY' MORNING. NOVEMBER .25, t 1917. ' . r 'b;.'! i5,f' ' r';r. an -J ' IV 8 .0- i 5 i 'f,- AW DfPEPXXDKXT KEWSPAPEK c. a. iAfiC8Qr, . ....... . PsbUabo fablulwd araa fiy, eftaraoea sad Barniiic z- eapt Sunday aflarnoon) tt T1m Journal BailA v Ins. Broadway ud IwUl tun. Portland, .,' Orion. . . ' Ikntarcd at tha pestof (ice tt Portland, Or., for , . tratumladM titrousU tba mall as aeoosd eiut StatUr . ' - , )MEfHUNU Main T17i Hoaaa. AU dnjartnwnt raachad by ton aombm. Ttlt tha opwrntor what dapartment yoa waat. OilJfcHi AUVKHTISIy .KEPUIUENTATIVJE n3min c mdiwt w. , ,""7" 26 hUU jtuUdine. ruts . 0W IS. lii cwiusa Cbiceta. Subscription tarne bjr mail, or U sy addreaa in .1... I'-I 4 U ... .. UmWi i V" v. DAILY (atOBNINO- OB AFTIKJTOOJf ) 1 ' V - . . M IhA 1 L H.m.f ft HA ' '. - J.-' - SUM DAT -- On year. $2.0Ona nentk. . . . . S -SB paixt (mokxixo ok asterxoom) and frn ynr. $7.60 One-. month ..... . The. aoiae of all nature criaa ta u that that ta a Uod. Veltelra. HT1V QUESTION? PEAKING of the rie&jaslty for S Portland to have a coal sup ply for fueling ships. Presi dent Corbett of the Chamber of Commerce said: ICXZISV ' ' The port commisskm has the power to provide bunkers through the law - V enacted by the last legislature. It v Heed to be aaaured that the people . ? I - wnt the bunkers built now. The Chajnber of Commerce la positively on record. 3o ahead without delay 1 our - poaltlon. Nothing could be plainer or sounder. We have often beheld the ectacle of orient-bound or Europe-bound steamers taking i t. on cargo at Portland and going 2,4 to Puget Sound to coal for the i . Toyage. Baveral times, within re (bent months, Portland has been 0i the verge of securing desira bly steamship service. One handicap that has invaria bly confronted Portland negotia tors has been the insistence of ship I . ; owners that thlB city is notx pre . pared to cheaply and adequately fuel ships. jf71ce President Wood- worth of h( the Northern Pacific I ; ' pointed out to the writer the other .t Vif .Vir t.an .fiAnH nAn4al .nnlfa wj luah iug uauDvyuucuiai a wao . regard the, lack of . facilities for coaling ships as one formidable obstacle to steamship connections at Portland. Mr. Corbett quotes two distinguished traffic men with y whom he discussed the possibility Of' steamship connections for this port. What they said to him was the following: How can you expect to brine ships here without assurance in advance that they can coal as quickly and as Cheaply as at any competitive port? Tou will not be able to talk busi- ness to ship owners until they know you have coaling facilities. - The Port of Portland has au thority to provide coal bunkers ' for ships using this harbor. Its meeting for preparing the annual budget occurs next Wednesday. In view- of all the circumstances, in view of the attitude of the Chamber of Commerce, In view of the oft expressed wish of tho ' people of Portland through the ballot for development jof shipping in this port, should there be any question as to what the action of , the port commission will be? I . . A new starting point in the live nI stock Industry was made by the I Y great stock show Just . closed in I Portland. The stockmen have gone ii-home with new standards. to at - i tain, new types to create and new .Ideals to strive for. Another for R m - 1 .1 V 1 1 V-, wara Step in auiuiu uusuauuiy ia I to be made THE NEW ANTIUFFRAGE T HE objections which tha anti suffragists at Washington have advanced to th pro posed Susan B. Anthony na tlonal amendment, do not strike us 1 " with any particular force. No doubt the good antis did the best l' they could for a bad cause, but if they had been a little "smarter' W: they would have hired .somebody to I formulate a more impressive set 3 of objections. . - The antis have dropped, at least I for this occasion their old familiar J . plaint that "votes for women would - -. break up' the home and defeat the l . . designs of an all-wise Providence." rr Perhaps the force of facts has been I Y too much even for,their prejudice I and they have thought it best to i v put In another plea. At any .rate that Is wliat 'they have done. -The Rnti-suffrace violets and rf daisies tremble to think of the ter- ribls effo'-t national .suffrage wouM have, not on the home" any longer; but cd the Socialists, anarchists and ' r.ro-Germans. All these per nicious elements would be encour aged to rise In rebellion, so we are told, ; If women were allowed to vote." It li difficult to perceive i i h ' prtcise relation; of cause . an1 i wffect which moves our beloved sisters to this apprehension,, but y doubtless they could 'explain It if the newEpapera would : give them - space enough. - . . Cur p reseat blindness to the coa nection1. between anarchism ini woman suffrage Ja doubtless a sad conseauence of mala stupidity. Had -w been gifted with acute feminine intuition It would be as clear as persuade ourselves- to spend as day. We 'mean, of course tbat.mnch xnonex on schools as we do anti-intuition to " which so, many -upon war. or 'half or a quarter as surprising truths are reveaiad as much? ' ' polities' happens to need them. CRYING IX THE NIGHT T HE .town of 1200 people in u i. - T y. Iouna Beven Churches starving their war iu utb.. w nov an uuua phenomenon in the United States. Most of us have visited suchjtowns. wor,d at aboat tbe date of the 8et. There are too many of them torly 0f New England, turned on 151,5! ? Ca2nr- Bd the theology and churchrivalry, with nr f i"-G?v, 8 "T7 I8 I dynastic ambition , intermingled. ? U?I ATlttl rclWy..explalned.i Is lt-not a little harsh for any Is divided into too manycompet ngs however learned, to condemn companies ,19 accomplish anything agencies Ufee, 8cIenCe, education very weighty in the sinful modern and inteniatlonaU8m, which Provl w .. . !'..'' ' dence may have given us for our If it is a failure on the part of good T Thus far We have done tit the allies and a triumph for the tie but evil with them, perhaps, Germans that the French, Italians, i a child Is liable to cut its flng British, Russians and all the rest ers with a knife. But should knives pursue their separate war alms be banished from the world be- regardless of , the common; cause, who can . -think it other than a calamity, almost treason to the world's , redemption, that seven lit tle churches should waggle their weak heads and wrangle over their petty creeds in the same small town? The'Wg church machines give. them what they can from mission ary funds, but even with. that help they can afford only the last pick ings of ministerial talent. Tie spiritual diet they dole out to their, congregations would delight Mr. Hoover, It is so thin, but how can Christian warriors nourish theni-, selves upon it? 4. Dr. Boyd evidently sees a vision of a renewed and vitalized Chris tianity which shall go forth con quering and to conquer. The ideal Christian is, to his Imagination, as we gather from hts teat Sun day's sermon, no pallid recluse pin ing for the world to cqme and des pising this one. He is a sturdy fighter panoplied in the full armor of the Lord, one who refuses to be ! carried to the skies on flower beds of ease," but fights "to win the prize and sails through bloody . seas." 1 By this spiritually reborn Chris-! tianity Dr. Boyd conceives that the World shall be purified of its mis- cry and sin. He Is not the first earnest apostle of reform who has thought so. Earth. has sunk time; and again into the same sloiigh Of corrupt than ' California state gov pain where It now writhes afd al- enment under railroa(j domina- ways tnere nas oeen a voice cry- Ing in the darkness, as Dr. Boyd 1 cries, that the only way to save! It was to revlva religion. St. Ben- i edict of St. Francis of Asslsl and : St. Bernard all revived religion,"-10 with preaching that left no corner ; of the civiliied world untouohed. 1 as oIne V1 ot that rev" Savonarola retired it and so did f1- "lram Johnson was an Wrcllf. St. Ignaeiua LoyoW revived othefY -The direct primary was a it from one"p!n'of 'view and Mar-, . tin Luther ni another. John ! These three products of the ra "Wesley revived .'religion, founding vtav the V01 tha hinery the Methodist kuVh for a byl of government ana gave them a product of his preaching. George - leaferv V1 amI16 0W Fox revived religion and John Cal- 8 owd thm the,waf lo vln did likewise. Surely, If reviv- ing' religion could cure the world of its pain and wickedness, we ought by this time to be In the full tide of milennium. But perhaps Dr. . Boyd is thinking of some reform Unqu'estionably each revival has accomplished something. Mankind it was before St. Francis preached his vision of renunciation. The v. u ri hh t.m. v. Trv.n wo.i.,' vlvaL The Methodist church haA ! been a boon to millions. And yet, j when all is said and done, after , flAftft ... r hoiMLr... fa t vivals. we are in the heat andind of. ma,n There has been consume civilization, church and state together. Dr. Boyd Intimates that he does 5 . 1 not IOOK IOr a boiuuuu i uur yryu- i , M iui, .An. - cation, Socialism or ..international , fir v-.v w t...i,.0 ity. There is our only hope, Eveuiad a broder and orft ,ate!- Chrlstian Science, which to many , much, he dismisses with a slight- Ing estimate. Dr. Boyd may be right He is a '"aiucV "uulfl6e "S" WUA": .CWD uCD0t0 "" a layman's point of view, me - thing might be said, not so much to oppose his deductions, as to modify them. For'one thing, we must not too hastily dismiss tt claims of sc.- eucB, cuucsuuu db luieioauunai law. They have no been in the ,nr.1A X UI. V y" Christianity.' sModern science dates only from Galileo. International law goes back to Grotius and j scarcely farther. Education trails along, weak and stumbling, with ' the bedraggled garments of medi evalism flapping about her feet. Four centuries about measure jhe life of science, international law ana eaucauon. , . The remedy which Dr. Boyd pro- poses has had more than 19 centu- what will happen 'to .its art treas ries in which to demonstrate its ures? , power. It la. premature to speak Milan is the city where JLron confldently of wjiat science can do ardo Da Vlncl painted his "Last fcr the world. ' or '.what education. Supper" on the wall .of a-convene, can do. The old saw that nobody It Is still on ibat same old wall, should say Christianity Is, a failure what is left ot it The colors are because it, haa never been tried, is faded.. The figures are barely dis perhaps even truer of education. tingulshable. , But "The Last Sup When we reflect upon what real per" Is the greatest picture ever education did for a girl Ufce Helen painted, wan as it has grown with Keller we hesitate to say j what it . time and abuse. cannot do for normal children. Men who have given their minds to the, .'subject do not pretend to -see even the - beginning of the possibilities of education. . Suppose we could Certainly science is raving 'mad Just now. Bnt It does not require much reading of history to recall tTmtM when that oliiiroliM Tiava Viun ,tt the same state. This war is one of science and politics combined wlth dynasUc ambition and eco- Bomic - greed. The Thirty Years war, to which Germany treated the cause children can not use them? - The. livestock Industry . In it3 various forms is one of the biggest wealth producers in Oregon, tt rolls up a total of 1140,000,000 a year. With Europe's herds andJ flocks - decimated and with stocks in America tremendously reduced, It will be years before supplies will be back to normal. With outlook for long continued war prices, the industry in the North west could scarcely have a brighter prospect A REFORMED RAILROAD T HE . Southern Paciflo , railroad had' to travel a long, steep and atony road before it at tained the moral elevation where President Sproule says that backdoor politics baa gone forever from ghe railroad's life. It la, so to speak, a reformed character jwun au its wicsea ways loraaKen, - and its sins repented of. When it came to ehucklng off political sins the Southern Pacific had something of a load to lose The novelist, Frank, Norris, told us in his Octopus something of the ways of the railroad with Call- fornla people In the good old times when it had politicians, leg- islators, lawyers and judges at Us beck and call. ; . Fe thlnea on rth WArA ltJ(m , ...... , JheK reform ,f ' the Sf Pa- v , ,v w""Cttl lntln ,n which the people of the chine. The Initiative and referen- ? .V" , " U j. ? bro.-n- Te lc1ora"on cfese5 nTisIbl8 ,f of flees to which men ambitloua for ?uouu - wuu lwZZ" autocra thaJ ba, l0fa beld BWay, and deced aU the In' to democracy, or rule by-the peo-e w l" "70 California from absolutism In tho gnJse of a despotic railroad system r- Slth?Tien!' head l the Southern Pacific had no part A Z delirious days. He is a different inoicaw tuau u i ;brad vision a.nd i,h purpose wulcn "1" u"' 4"s surance that the Southern Pacific . , . ., , . , ta. - never again to participate in P0"- Afd tbfe i?rtbeflr :fact that since Mr. Sproufe'a ac- Pnt ollc owara uregou nas The United States fuel adminis trator has served notice that the government will take over and operate the mines closed by oper- - ators because of failure to receive ., , ice of coal.over h lxed b the government. if the coal' operators cannot abide by government regulations as other folks must do, what fitter action than foE the government to take the mines of recreant owners and niunta them In nrndnrlnr t"h o r 0 coal, for lack f which our allie are shlTering? THE LAST SUPPER 1' ILAN, the big city of North era Italy, Is not very many miles from the mouths of the v German cannon. No- body can say how long It will bo safe. If it should be bombarded and captureTTy the cultured Huns To protect it from the invaders, should they break into Milan, the i authorities have surrounded Leon 1 1 ,. ' :". , .'- " ardo's -masterpiece with - sandbags which may be shell proof. Since 't s on the surface of the wall it , can not be removed as other great, pictures have been. - For fta safety f the Italians must trust to sandbags and luck. It is part of the avowed purpose of the Germans in this war to stroy such national monuments as they cannot carry away. They can- hot very well make off with "The Last Supper." So art lovers might unite to pray 'that they may , not j capture Milan. IN THE MAKING LAUDE M'COELOCH. nroba (, , - ' . bly the best informed man in V , - uxegou on. irrigation orgam-1 . zauon ana aeveiopment, says, "at the present rate, one millio acres, m addition to areas now ir- rigated, will be put under irriga- i tion In Oregon within 10 years.!" We are only beginning to' find! ourselves in irrigation Highly! valuable information was gained ; through the cooperative survey by . Guy Standlfer. is president of the the federal and state - governments ' Standlfer Construction company, la under an tmironriittnn nt ;n 000i Who ahlpyarda In North Portland and unoer an appropriation Of f 5 O.OOO at Vancouver 10 vessels are now under made by the 1913 legislature fer .construction. Colonel Standtfer has put inquiry into the reclamation possi- e survey was made by John T. Whistler and B. G. Hopson of the federal reclamation service, John H. Lewis, state engineer, and W. L. Powers of the Oregon Agricultural eolleg. The report of finding is authorita- Uve and dependable, and show. nuJrLTSSLi irrigable area Of at least two mil- remember the alarm with which I heard Hon acres within the State. It ' that 106 Yankees were coming- our way. find for .Tamnla that thrm in I Tne two treasures of my boyhood were nnas, ror example, that there Is a deep bay msiX9 namj Mary a an area Of 200,000 acres which hatchet I had been srlven. I carefullv can be reclaimed In tho vicinity or 185 to 65 per acre, the lower figure applying to most projects, ),,, . Other ehange .is the plan pre- Jected bythe 117 legislature un-; der which the state authenticates bond's issued by irrigation districts. It onena tha wav for financing project.- without the intervention j Of the speculative promoter, .O much in evidence under the Carey i act whose hoeitrrn TroWtl re- act, wnose snoestrmg projects re , suited in SO many disastrous fall- i ures. " 1 The, reclamation division of the f Interior department at Washington ; estimates tnat XiO,UOU,UUO can DOavy crocKett while on his way to-the expended In Irrigation in Oregon, mo' wner? h waa kllIed- He named . , 1x . fun I It because of the large number of bees and the conclusion is that by the to bo towi ln tt .....jit.... - .4 1 4, ... k.it 1 expenditure ' at least 'one half would be added to the taxable property of Oregon outside ot Multnomah County. The same an- tlcello was near by. I was admitted to thority fixes 100,000,000 acre's as the bar when I came' of ate and prae an area, now barren, that can he law at Pentaon and Sherman, made highly productive by Irri gation within the United States. Congressman Sinnott, after ap pearing as a witness In a Portland court, left Friday evening for his : terminus of the VL A T, railroad, home at The Dalles, and Is tbenCe!nd " eoneequenee was the shipping . . ' ,. . ! point for the cattle of the western plains to proceed in a da Or two to Xexa. Before the comnletlon-of this OT . a a i.S- wasmngton ; ror . me opening oi , roaa the cattle had been drtvenacraas congress. In his work in theilBdi Territory to Fort dge. Kan. house In cooperation with Senator , Chamberlain in the upper branch, Mr. Sinnott rendered his State a . faithful RPrv1 In tha land erant raitnrui service in tne iana gram legislation. His strong stand for the measure In the house was a : Criminals from across the state line factor in passing the Chamberlain- ! to towl a"dt.",e fiIL9i,?r0t lT , , 1 , , . . . -trouble fled back to the safety of In- Ferrlg law, giving a heavy portion , dlan Territory. The crack of the su of the proceeds from sale' of the shooter became a very common sound, grant lands to echools, roads and and life was swift and hectic other public purpbses In Oregon. .elng the temu; of the rallroadt "THE STURDY OAK" T HE STURDY OAK," which has been running as a se- j rial .tory in Collier's now comes from Henry Holt & ! rn. 1. v..i, a , . 1. Co. in book form. As might be Inferred from the title, it Is a . satire on anti-anffraze nolltlcians and machine -politics in general. , l ne OOOK, wnicn IS iar too snort. ; was written by 14 authors, each ' of whom made a masterpiece of the chapter or two he-contributed. ThA ine-nlnrltiAa nf ach author stick out all over his partin tbe(fc,8 WM a wenderfuUy colorful life. book,,but the Story is kopt running.! Texas baa the distinction of being the smoothly and the characters are .largest state in the Union and of having Mirnrfelnfflv- well unstained con. Ued under more flags than any other surprisingly wen sustainea, con- of our gtateg The &pTliaram explored sldering how many cooks stirred u first in 1528, but the-first colqny to the porridge. be established In Texas was planted by Th hro in a vouna man lust'tn French under lSalle in l85. Thla The nero is a young man just coUny wM abandohed and m 1690 th5 entering politics. He la the ma- , Spaniards established a number of mls- chine candidate for prosecuting at torney. He41ves up to his machine duty unblemished by. sens or con science until the thugs who rutfhla nnrtv nhdnrt his wife and One of - her friends. Then he experiences enlightenment and change. Th Sturdy Oak" is a lesson in mora tv.t -'m-n mnttmr luula wau - ( California expended last year $16,000,000 for state, county and. municipal government. The sum is equal to $1T8 for each producer , ... ... , . , Varv rinllor renrn. in the state. livery aoiiar repre- sentB fax money. It 1s a public senis m iuuuwx- - f cost to cause men to stop, look and listen. AIT OLD LESSON F IVE years ago If a writer had mentioned the Peloponnesian war his readers, if he had anv. would have wondered with ftnnovd frnwnft what waa ' not Ja' but conaummated. To be with annoyed rrowns wcat ne was frank u muat BOt -located in a dls- talklng about. Our own war haj trict where two carfares are collected, made "old, far-off, forgotten things We have broadmlnded men in Portland and battles long ago" a little more ! fa will donate artmnd for r, buiid- , ... . . , ling. In keeping with the breeders of the significant and Interesting. A I pacific northwest. writer .named Elmer Davis In ono oeorgk R. mokei ot our, eastern contemporaries not j ' Tji "outcast, only talks freely about the Pelop. Albany, or.. Nov. . T the EditoaW onnesian "-war but he contrives to the Journal The social derelict In Port draw a cogent leason Jrom it for in 4 to be Placed ta a stockade. The . . . . -. ,., . old order of things has changed, our too Insistent pacIfisU : jt Usedto be that if there "was any- ' -That: Old war was, like our own. .thing In your town that was not nice, a war to make the world safe for. and you. did not want it.-just send tt te democracyThe leading Ibelliger. SfSRg WC hr'Si $Z ents were Athens and Sparta. Ata-1 being. Now, keep it-at home, but keep - V . . - , v -7- . 1 . : . ens for v democracy, ' Sparta for: Junkerlsm. '-The Spartans were tho most consummate Junkers earth ever bred. . ; '. . The point Is that in the midst of the war an -Inconclusive peace (was patched up, about such sv peace as the Russians threaten to drou de-'into. It gave the Spartans time to concentrate their power, play the game of Intrigue and bribery ana get good arid ready for anothe strike. Like other democracies the Athenians liked to talk. They talked while the Spartans were pre paring to fight again. We need not say what the end was. The world was not made sate for de mocracy just then. The lesson is mvwai; jusk 1 fairly obvious. - THE MAN ABOUT TOWN By Fred'LeeUey, There are some men who are-always good copy. Such a man Is Colonel 1 m.'..m b., JZa"l' m n,a "Pare tune readln the really o? S yor. 1 doubt If there is anyone in town !who more familiar with the life of Pfjeon than Colonel Standlfer. Colo- on the fombigDVe HverrirMisaiartppt j"l was-a little chap during- the Civil j "td lcI?n, standlfer recently. juried the hatchet In our g-arden to many an hour grieving- over the loss of mare and hating the Yankees for steal- m ner Bnoruy tne dose or the war we heard of her in an auuotnm county and recovered her. As a matter "v1 in nK ao noi taxen ner STSSSSSS. a samker or deserter from the Confed- epayhad a p!anter ,n Ml8. slsslppl and shorUy after the war he 'w'ent t0 Texas, where he enraged in ralsln eattle. People of the North will never underaUn(, how deeply Southerners deolored the death of Lin, coin. Jf be had lived the South would wTn? Ah rall ot tht Honey Grove. Texas, a place named by "I went to the University of Virginia, which, as you know, was conceived and built by Jefferson, whose home at Mon- Texas. As you doubtless know, those twrt are neighbors and are near . the line ot what wu then Indian Territory, now Oklahoma. In those days Indian Territory was the stamping ground and refuge of most of the criminals of the Southwest. My home town was the . . . . " - ,nlpmmt m t ttUkt tlroea wer. ex. ceedlngly lively. The cowboys In' all their picturesque lory were paid off t nd aftr moiiths on the range . re,aied. ,nd ...... o,. town waa a favorite form of relaxation. j our town was the great shipping point for buffalo hides to the market at Chicago. St. Louis and other points.. In those days the buffalo -literally dark- few years the Bame plalnB were whUenftd by their bleaching bones. Hide hunters h the hundred came in to kill the buf- ivr moil uiuw. a iivvu in inu for 2g a Durlng the latter part of the time I resided at Houston. Houston 1 the oounty seat of Harris county. I JxtotoSS county I had the honor of representing that county- for several terms In the giaiature. . ... "Houston was named for Colonel Sam Houston, the first president of the re- sions, the stone ruins of which are still to be seen around Sah Antonio and elsewhere. In 1727 Texas became a province of Spain under the title of I xejas province, tatting its trame from - the Tejas Indians. Its story is a long i-dtt ha. publio of Texas, the United states, the stars and bars of the Confederate ! States of America and at last it has come tack under Old Glory, where. thank Uod, it will always remain.' Letters From the People i , i I luemmwucatiena aant to Tbe Jearbal fer j pntutton u m departmaat ahoaid ba nt- ten on only one aide of tbo paper, aaould not ,SCNl SOU word 1D length and muat be ae- compuHt M ine name arte aearaxa ot tba arnder. If tne writer duea not daaira to bar the nam, pubUabtd be aboald eo state. - Livestock Amphitheatre Portland. Nov. 2J. To the Editor of The Journal Now that the big breeders of livestock, and eitisens of Portland. have taken up the proposition of a grand amphitheatre for the 'showing of live- stock for 1918, it must not and should A DAY IN By John Greenleaf Whittier TALK not of sad November, when a day Of warni, glad sunshine fills the sky of noon. And a wind, borrowed from some morn of tfune, Stirs the brown grasses and the leafless spray. On the unfrosted pool-of pillared pines 'Lie their long shafts of shadows he small rili, Singing a pleasant song of summer still, A line of silver down the hilislope shines. Hushed the bird voices and the hum of bees In the thin grass the crickets pine no more; But still the squirrel hoards his winter stare, And drops his nutshells from the shagbark .trees. Softly the dark green h'em locks whisper; high Above the spires of yellowing larches show Where the woodpecker and home-loving crow ,And jay and nuthatch winter's threat defy. O gracious beauty, ever new and old! O sights and sounds of Nature, doubly dear A When the low sunshine Warns the closing year Of Snow-blown fields and waves of Arctic cold I Close to my heart I fold each lovely thing Each sweet day yields; and, noUdisconsolate, ' With the calm patience of the woods I wait For leaf and blossom when God gives us spring! ' FAPAL PEACE rroia tha Wltneaa - There are a great many people who feel that the war is just the thing for our young men ; that they need the dis cipline of the camp, and the rigorous exercise of the field, and the manly courage of the combat; that, in fact, we are going 'to Improve our young men physically and morally "by military training. Of course - everyone who has studied history knows that war la the worst possible thing for the physique and morale of young men. It kills off the most fit and leaves the weakling at home to propagate hie kind. It dissem inates vloe by throwing together the vicious and the sovnd with the result that the rotten apple always has the final advantage. It contaminates the barrel. War eonsumes the best years of a young man's life In a perfectly useless training which unfits him for the pursuits of peace. - Personally we believe that (his nation had to fight, and that this war is In the line of police duty against a gang of thugs and bandits, but we are under no Illusions as to the blesadngs of the mil itary caste. They are entirely negative. War la about as beneficial to the human race an an earthquake. It clears the ground for a new earth, but Is terribly bard en the Inhabitants thereof. We need, therefore, .to realize as we offer our sons to be sacrificed, that war is a perfectly senselesk method of settling human disputes by enlisting young men to shed one another's blood In order that a lot of perfectly selfish adults may Improve trade or extend their sovereign domains. But war- la not dlfferent frvm any other fight There la the aggressor and the one who is aggrieved, and the Innocent bystander, and the reseuer ef the defenseless. A. musovlar youth who would stand by and allow a domineer ing brute to beat a helpless child to death might be a pacifist but not a Saint. We are fighting because a coarse brute was trampling oat every helpless victim tha he could get his hobnailed shoes upon, and we believe that he Is Just beginning to get -properly thrashed, when the Holy fc-ather telle his children to make peace. Now we have respect for . Benedict XV, and we are Inclined to concede to htm certain paternal traditions In Kurope, but we question Whether he has played the father In this conflict. We it under lock and key. Just lock the barn, after the horse Is stolen. The poor creatures ' will be fed and clothed and not have to drift round the BoclaXjiea, to know where the next meal Is to come from. A few years ago In one ot our states. In the lumber and copper regions, women and young girls were enticed Into the locality and held as captives In stock ades, and If Ahey tried to escape they were brought back with bloodhounds. That is Just one case. There are many more. Some we know about ; some we do not. The social outcast Is the product of condition false education and a cor rupt society. We all In some way help to make those conditions. We may not think we do, and often do not think of the subject at all, unless it comes right to our door, and. then we wonder what the matter Is. Do not be too sure that It will not touch, you. or someone very dear to you. Just remember that these poor out casts are. human beings, just like your own fair daughters, and that someone loved them. They are the children of God, and the children of fond loving fathers and mothers. And the some so cial conditions that caused them to take the crooked, road are still with ua. for your children to drop Into. You can confine the effect, but until the cause of all this misery Is put under lock and key, or dug up root and branch, no one Is safe. Too much poverty, and too much wealth, makes countless millions mourn. ' NELLIE RICHARD 8. ' Naturalization Hlllaboro, Or, Nov. 22. To the Edi tor of The Journal. Please answer In The Journal: Can any alien or for eigner take out naturalization papers In tbe United States whiU we are at war with other nations, as we are at present? A SUBSCRIBER. Laurel, Or.. Nov. Jl. To the Editor of The Journal Can an alien,"" either for or against the United States, take out 'naturalisation papers 'and become a citisen of this country now. while the war la on, or not? READER. An enemy alien cannot be naturalized In the United States daring the war. In 1 other words, the naturalization courts j are forbidden by law to naturalise at this time, a German, an Austrian, a ' Bulgarian or a Turk, no matter how long they may have resided in tne country. Naturalization of an alien coming from any other than these four countries la not forbidden at this time by law.J Same System; Same -Acre I Burns. Or.. Nov. 2. To the Editor of The Journal la the same system of surveying and describing land In use In 1 Canada as In the United. States? If not. I what system is In .use, and how are gov ernment lands described 7 If by acres. Is the acre the same as In the United States 1(0 square rods? BUBSCKIBGit. A "Text for Profiteer. rroat Capper's Weakly Profiteer "I have much goods laid un for manv days.' Luke 12 :20 "Thou foot, this night thy soul shall be required of thee." - All Barkises ' "-;i.:;rrom the Waahinton Pott. T So far as can be learned not a single natriotlo Teuton has struck when Hinv- denburg ' has ordered a strategic- reaj NOVEMBER are not quarreling with Germany be cause we all covet the, same thing, and therefore should all be spanked and sent to bed. We are quarreling with Ger many because she has murdered the in nocent, and crushed under her heel every principle of decency. Is It enough, therefore, for the father te tell hts chil dren. "I am Impartial ; I do good to every one ; I beg you to cease you fighting." a m But If we have any business to be In the war at all. It Is because the war Is a righteous war ; and If It la a righteous war It cannot cease until the cause of the war Is accomplished and it Is just here that the Holy Father should have acted. He should have reproved some of his children for violating every princi ple of honor and Integrity In bis treat ment of his other children. Is Belgium no less a child than Germany? Is It enough to say to a brute who has dis honored his own sister to go back and stop dishonoring her? The nations can not accept the pope's offer of peace, for the pope's offer sidesteps the causes of the war, and treats each belligerent as though he were equally guilty. But that is a begging of the question. We re fighting with Germany, because we be lleve her to be infamously guilty. We hate war as much as does hts holiness. but we cannot stop -fighting simply be cause war is terrible. We knew that when we entered the conflict. We join with the pope In his estimate of the unhapplness of a world at war, but Is peace the only principle at stake. If so, we ought not to have entered It at all: but we entered It to establish a principle, and that, tile principle that no nation could violate every law of na tions with Impunity. Germany, thus far has chastised the thnocent. It Is all right for the innocent who has been In jured to forgive hts persecutors, but It is another tnutg lor tne moral police force of Christendom to let Germany go back unpunished."' With wttat result T That the world has been at war for three years, and accomplished nothing T What an awful waste of life and property l Better by far that the world should be ajt war for four years, and accomplish something, and that something that no potentate haa the right to deluge the world- in blood - again. In order to strengthen. or extend hie supposedly di vine right that no nation can Ignore vows, or murder women and children. or violate neutrality with impunity. PERSONAL MENTION Here From Pendleton C M. Bishop of Pendleton Is guest at the Portland. Mr. Bishop one of the owners of the Pendleton Woolen mill. - -e e e l En Route to American Lake ! Captain H. C. Abraham son. U. 8. A Is In Portland, at the Carlton, en route to American Iake. a a e Touring W astern State Mr. and Mrs. Ward Holl Ins and fam ily are registered at the Multnomah from Winnipeg. They are touring the west and are now en route to California. Mr. and Mrs. 1 tt. Houghton ef The rallea.-"are staying In Portland at the Nortonia. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bishop ef Tea kean, Idaho, are at the Cornelius. F. M. Potter, a lumberman of Astoria, Is at the Oregon. Mr. and Mra. L. W. Smith of Albany, Or., are at the Oregon for their visit In Portland. Mrs. Marie Dowd and Mrs. Elisabeth Adams of Marshfleld are visiting In Portland and are at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Clark and Mr. and Mrs. M. 8. Thomas form a party from Sedalla, at the Carlton. They will be In Portland for an extended visit.. Owen Roberts, a manufacturer from Chicago, is Id Portland on business and Is at the Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. L. Hustin of Salem are at tbe Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Caroll of Seattle are guests at the Multnomah. M. R. Manson of Seattle Is at the Nortonia. Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. . Herman of Rainier are in Portland, at the Cor nelius. James E. Walker, a lumberman from Hoqulam. Wash., is at the Carlton. F. E. CoUiater of silverton is la Port land at the Multnomah. Oscar 8. Nelson, a merchant of As toria, 1 at the Carlton. Mr, and Mrs. II. A. Wlsner of Seattle are registered at the Nortonia. W. a Woodhouse and Mrs. Woodhouse frenn Silverton are at the Perkins. Mr. Woodhouse Is a hotel man. XL B. Watson of qhehaUs Is at tbe Oregon. ' R. N. Moore from CorvalUs is a guest at the Cornelius. ' J. 8. Ramsey of Olympla la a guest at the Nortonia. Mrs. HatUe McKetrman from Pom eroy. Wash., Is at the Portland hoteL J P. Walker'of CorvalUs is resiatered nit the Perkins. L.- I. Scott from AlrTle Is at the Ore gon hotel. - E. Krigbaum from Estacada la at the Perkins. The Boy and the Hero - From tba Cbrotian Science Monitor. Boys often have a practical way of showing what they think of the men who have done their bit; ln-facthey are a good deal readier in showing apprecia tion than some of their elders. There was that boy In Birmingham, the other day, who. seeing . man of the R. f. C struggling with his kit bag on his way to a station, without saying a word took and 'shouldered the bag. At the end of the Journey he ran off. saying, as he saw the soldier dive Into hi. -pocket : "Not roe, not after what you nave done 1" There were plenty of men In that street. but only the boy thought, of carrying Rarrta and Bobtail Stories From Everywhere ITe tbta eoluma .n MaiWa .r Tv .: re lavltad to eerUIbnla arlrlnal mattar 1 ''' In pkUi-aepblcal ebeerveUoe E e- atrlkJng qootaUiftia. from ear coerce. Coo trrbntloea of tocepttonal marie wUl be mU to t tbt editor appraisal. . . . How a Russian Revolutionise. OMB of the naive and miscbieou. BOlnge of Rl Milan Nvntutlnnlata. whose happiness knew no bounds after the overthrow of thexar, are told by William O. Shepherd In Kvervbodr'a. The following is representative: There Was that rreat Amt In tha vlt. Uge of Gotchina. for instance. All through the long life of Gotchina there siooa on its outskirts a palace, sur rounded by grounds that were sacred.' and inhabited by high-born folks that av peasant must always touch his cap to. When the wave of revolution rarfcail Gotchina the village folk there did their dh in helping the common folks get on top; and the uncommon folks In the palace fled. Did .Gotchina burn down the palace T No. That would have been angry work or alcoholic play, and Get china was unalcohollcaily and cheerfully playful. A peasant discovered In one . of the once-sacred ponds huge dark forms that moved about In the cool Maters. 'Fish ! The call went around like a - cry of Hre, - Before the day was over the peas- ants, with hooks and lines, were pulling out giant carp, some of them 100 yearai -old. which the high-born (elk ef the palace and their fathers before them had been nurturing like old wine. ' t un the third night there was such a barbecue of giant earp as will put tnat day down in the history of Got- . china for ever. It was Gotchina'. way 1 of showing that it had thrown off the old yoke. And." like all the,' rest of Russia, It smiled, instead of frowning ' wiin earnestness, and was happy instead of angry." fe The King of All Alibi. . Champ Clark tells this story ef a;J case brought in Missouri In which one Of the lawyers engaged tried to serve J v bis client by throwing suspicion on a certain witness during the course of his cross-examination, The first Question put waai "Tou admit that you were at the prisoner's home every evening during this period V "Yes, sir." replied the witness. "State whether you and he were in terested In any special transactlo. such as, for Instance, business or oth erwise." "Yes sir we were." "Oh. 'ho!" exclaimed the wily attor- ney. "Then you will, no doubt, be good enough to Inform us how and to ' what extent, also the nature of the business In which you were Jointly -interested." "I haven's the least objection in the world," cheerfully answered the obits Ing witness. "If yeu want to know ' I was coUrtlng his daughter!"' Unguarded Gate. Wide open and unguarded stand our gates, ' And through them presses a wild, motley throng ;f Men from the Volga and the Tartar steppes. Featureless figures of the Hoang-Ho. Malayan, Scythian. Teuton, Celt and . ' Slav. Flying the old world's poverty and -scorn : These bringing with them unknown gods and rites. Those, tiger passions, here to stretch their claws. In street and alley what strange tongues are these. . Accents of menace alien to our air. voices that once tbe Tower of Babel knew I O Liberty. White Goddess ! is tt well . To leave the gates unguarded? On thy breast 1 Fold sorrow's children, sooth the hearts of fate. Lift the down, trodden, but with the hand ef steel Stay those who to thy sacred portals 'come To waste the gifts of freedom. Have a care Lest from thy brow the clustered stars be torn . And trampled in the dust For so of old The throngtng Goth and Vandal trampled Rome, And where the temples of. the Caesar. stood The lean wolf unmolested made hir lair. Thomas Bailey A Id rich. Uncle Jeff Snow Says When butter was IS cents a pound them city fellers didn't have the IS cents any ofteher'n they now git by with (0 cents. THROUGH , I Good mernlns. . fta . If you can't lead an army atralnat the Hun; or wing a flying Bosche or sink a "sub," or patrol No-Man's land, or go over the top If you can't drive an ambulance, or carry a stretcher, or knit a sock or roll a Red Cross bandage--ft ft . If you can't buy a Liberty bond, or eat wheatless bread and meatless seals If you can't ft Do your bit ft. Teu can at least get down on your knees next Thursday and thank God that there are others ft ft - ' , Who can. New Viewpoint of Eugenics "Approved- Rules of Living Set Forth In 'How to Live" Hive ,Re- ceived Approbation of . Coun try's Most Famous Men. . EdueafJoa m heHa tbe saeat vital ef aU ib)wt the krfty aad bnauaitarias mupoaa of "How to LJ tha eat sad aaoat popular of book ee panose! byftaae. Thi splendid wort sea baas eetbotUad by and' prauared is collaboration trttk tbe brsteM rWaraace board of tbe Ufa Ki tmiam inatitute by IRVdO ViaililU. Cbairnaa. FisXaaaor of 4oUUcal Kconomr. ' Tate aniMmrty. aad'-EUUKStt LTMAM i lXS, M. D. Boaoe of the' fl neat ferahat is Ajaarloe ere aponaocs for "How to Lire," a Bums whoa are each MB,ea WiUiam H. Taft, Gaoonl WlUlaat O. tiretaa, . aarfaos (as oral; DC. Bupert Blua, V. 8- rootle baaHk aerrtea; I. U. M. Bisa, baajth eosaaia aloaar. state of Saw York ; ir. Harray Vf. . Wiles - and lr. alexandar Grebes Ball. -Tbawa SMS donate tiieir acrvtoaa to tbe life Extamkra laMitata and eoUaboratad wua fnt aaaae rata and V- 'la ts prepsna. . : Uua boob. Tha fcsola aellirif pdea fa SI. Tkreesk . tke eooparatieai of Tba Jawrmal, It ees be obtained for 6Se at tbe i. JC. GUI Co.. Mete A Frank Co.. Old. WortmaS.di gins of Jonrael baaiuaaa efflae. ee fa 1 SI yon sat tha book and a aaosth's as- mjivuem to Te Joarau. oa im tkmal os BjaU ofdera, . 4 1