THE ORKUUN SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY . MOliNIfiG, DiCLliULU CO, 1Q17. a rsTtcptnmBsr KVwiPAPra C a. JACKSON., -labhwhed iwf day, sftareoo and Mormiac ease aeday aftasaoon) at ee inrwl oild ) inc. IkMdMi iat lwua attacta, Jtoruead. : atattanal a th mrriiia a fortiand- Or.- for fbCOBSa the sails aa ' nutter. - ajO.ErHONaaliaia UTS Ho), -est. Ail tevtnwMt nmM kf Um uakn Tail th gpmtoi what dapartataat yo waat. kVHKlUM AlJVaUmalHU !UCralUI'tATiJi BeafcuaJ A kaatnot Co.. Kraanrtck Baikua. " 2Kb sittA ara., NswXaca. AXIS tee! aas tVuUdim. Chleasw. ' ' ' pubacnptlao tara by snail, or te say eea as is unite Jaitad atataXor Maxieot . DAU.Y (alOUNlKO OK iRIBXOOlO ' On yal......afr.00 aa BMath. ..,.S SQ ACS DAT One ye. ...... $2. Una stonta. . . . . S Jt UalLX tAtOBMUta OK AITKIC(OOM) AMD - SUXDAT Ona rer..,....l.eiOae ....;$ M Only . the Ooldea Rule of Chrlt can bring the Goldan Aca or Man. France K. WUlard. , DEMOCRACY HATH WROUGHT T HE human mind is staggered by uie immensity ox passing events u is a iremenaous time in which to live. The thin on (it I tyesterday are cast aside as nothing, iB awumuuKu cuuciusivos 'ji i ;neariy a century or American rail- goading were thrown overboard this week by the stroke of a pen. A ; dynasty of 300 years was recently fuprootea ana tne royal family ex-la 1 In1 almrtst urMhnnt (hn .flrlrnr nf a 1 - - - . - ... ...0 bnOu I I These are but two in a series of I .unprecedented events. A little while ? X . m . I mo proposal ior governmeni l control of railways would have made America from center to clrcumfer-1 fence a seething, surging, quaking I j Vesuvius. The thunders of the coo-1 ttroversy would have made the eali I iquiver. 1 Yesterday it was done and today Ut is forarotten. Nohodv miMtinnwl g - . - w m i nobodv doubted: nobodv demurred. I Its appearance on the first page of Sthe newsoajlers attracted little more Icomment than the arrest of a Ger- man spy. So much of the unpar- lleled and unprecedented is taking piace mat cveryining is expeciea anu "nothing marveled at. i Tha takin over nf tha American . . .... ... ... I rraiirniins is ine mtantiest innnstrmi fevent that ever hanoened In tha KvorldV America's unparalleled per- ormance of sDendinsr nearlv a dozen hIIUft Hrtllar anil rnnf rartino- fni I (the expenditure of nearly twenty billions in the first year of the war was beyond any previous finan cial event on this earth. America's .outright gift of $l00,00000d to the - Jled Cross from pledges secured in t ,a week s campaign was a ntribu- t!on unmatched In history, f Yet these primal events are scarce Jy as stupendous as the placing with 3one pen stroke in one hand of all tha rail lines, the tracks, the. term I ' jn&Is, the trains, the battalions, regi -ments and divisions of employes, , the huge financial operations that yielded a net profit of more than a billion ' dollars last year, together -'with all the complex and intricate problems of operation, maintenance. . betterments, efficiency - and 'admlnis traUon. i Is the human mind under the vi cissitudes and crises of a gigantic Yvar- cataclysm - expanding ; by leaps " and bounds? Is the human brain pushing its confines outward and ? .Surging more and more toward the , Infinite ? Over the yawning abyss of ' struggle, is human thought mount ' fills uigucr suu uijucr uiu uuiiiau turpose delving deeper and deeper Into" the mysteries and problems of human existence? Men havja doubted the power of a democracy i to control itself and 'to nat - titlt h rAi'aa ' in : 1 1 rv-t a r9 .- altaoa r 4 mA ft- AnI 4h A rla v Ke f rtTck V A no 'ha TZJZi 7f thri; h! in a cry of "wh at wonders hath democracy wrought r "J The programmed watch party at the Portland Auditorium New Year's eve is a splendid plan. The old iongs are to be revived and sung. It will be an evening to revive the mem - - pries, recall the traditions and warm on love for the soil of America. We havA been concerned too little these last decades in what our country is and what It means to us. SAUCE FOR THE GANDER s AUCE for the goose should 'also be Bauce for the . gander r- The kaiser ought not to complain if he gets a dose of the medicine he has been measuring out so liberally to England. The, British - airplanes have made their first reprisal trip to .uo rvu.uuiu auu i ay pears to OO quite a success ! from the point of inn jiuuiu.. uo rejwr uu uutiierea terrible shattering when say how many women and babes were j Charles I of England lost his head. ntaawwa . m tTaalwawwa r.PMta - J ..a siam nut a railroad elation was wrecked and a munition plant blown up.' These are substantial winnings, : England has been very patient under the inflfctlon of the German airplane raios.v &ne nas ceen f too . pauent, as many believe. . But probably itwaJjlike any other business, and a king the lack of airplanes more than gen nine meekness ' under af flictlon tha prevented reprisals. It could hardly, have been wise policy to divert planes from the front in order to bomb Ger- man towns. - - '--- More airplanes appear to be avail able now and - the expedition against Mannheim is' the first result." Pres ently we Shalt read Of others. It. is just as wen for the kaiser's obedient slaves to learn m their own home what the war .they have set going really means. ' " AS ,THE YEAR ENDS - ITH the end ' of the " history making year oC 1917 close at hand. The Joyrn&r presents today In its . news columns . a brief review of industrial and agri cultural Oregon during ; the twelve month, and includes certain - facts relative to the state's service In the war. ' : -v1;- : Eight per cent of thestate's adult male population has volunteered fpr war service. ..; Since the. declaration of war more than 20,000 Oregon .men have. Joined the, colors. .Oregon citizens have dedicated more than, 140,000,000 to war work. Subscriptions to the two Liberty loans totaled 137,001,450. More than one million dollars was pledged to the Red . Gross during the first cam paign and more than four hundred thousand do'lars to the Y. M. C A. war fund. Other appeals for finan cial help have been responded to in the same liberal way thai indicates a general appreciation of the 6pirit of giving. Marked impetus has . been given the industrial life rf tha stats and 0f Portland by the phenomenal de- velopment of the shlo buildinir in- dustrr. In 1917 22.000.000 worth of tnnn ,.. hi nM. gon yards while contracts for 140,- uuu.uuu worm were" signed, in? state's shipbuilders have niwired themselves to turn out between 150 and 160 vessels during 1918, having an aggregate tonnage of 925.000, with probability that the total wlxi . v.. j nnn w iuuuiii w muic tuau ,uw,uw iuub Of th nlAdrp1 (nnngce R9!iftnft rer resents wooden ships and 400,000 steel ships. There ore 23 shipyards I a a a a a a a m operavon in me siaie ana two lift course of establishment . Of these 25 yards, four are engaged in building steel ships and the rest wooden vessels. More than 14,000 men are now employed in the yard3 with a payroll during ian t)i more tnai $1,000,000 a month. This in dustrial development is the more remarkable in that it has been ac- compUshed in less than two years Oregon's agricultural output lo- the year totals 1327,063,000 as com pared with $325,865,000 in 1916. Th, annual yield of cereal, fruit and 'w""" "iui"i fiuuuv-w dairies shows a gain that moe tnai offsets the decrease in the re- limn fwift ltvpcfA(lr Thla rirn1iiv. ... . . - Hon t1 wealth bespeaks commonweilth of 'Material pros- PWity. - This progress and the common abundance of material things al1 around us Is basis for raitn in an important' and swiftly expanding future. Rain on the windshield is given as the reason why M. S. Bishop of Goldendale was . knocked down and seriously hurt Thursday night by a passing auto at Broadway and Hoyt But why not realize that when there is rain on the windshield you are about to seriously injure if not kill somebody? TIMES HAVE CHANGED HEN Louis XVI of Franc and his queen. Marie Antoinette, were guillotined the imagina tion of the 'world was"" pro foundly stirred by the dread eveut Mankind felt about it much as they would had a flaming comet struck the earth spreading fire and pesti lence over a whole hemisphere. The execution of Louis was talked of by high and low, by the fireside and in the senate chamber, for three quarters of a century after it w& consummated. It became a histori cal portent, marking the end of an age and the dawn of a new era. Nicholas of Russia Is much' the same sort of a man that Louis XVT was, easy, amiable and weak. Ho best of Intentions and drifted into tyranny- only because he could not not Per Jksm ra"onal,y' haps, if Nicholas and his queen had been dramatically- guillotined the world's imagination wouW hava been po uj meu- laic, As things have gone, his deposi- j " has neen Uken almost as a 1 matter of course. Nobody has been I greatly excited by IL No tears have nowea overfnis tragic aownraiu No I Pe bas hymned his fall. His dfr j thronement and exile are accepted as ordinary .incidents In the career of a modern king. It is the usual and proper ending of their adven tures. . .- LOUlS lost his throne anrl lifa at the close of the eighteenth centurr. Nicholas lost his throne, but not his Ufe. at the beinnln nf tha hn. Meth.' Somewhat mora than a ..n. I tunr elansed between tha ttvn aw.nta and in the meantime the psychology 1 Of the ; World ha Changed. "Tho I vanity that dotli hedea a tins-" an- I m . ' . M . r . By the time Louis and Maria Antol J nette had beensgulllotined there was hardly anything left of the sacred I galmour. j - As ctor Emanuel of Italy put it. j reigning - had become : "a j business I had to live up to his obligations o lose hii . Jbb. Nicholas did not live ' up V fila cb ligations. He was guilty : of precisely - the same laziness, stupidity and petty rascality that would have cost a retail gro cery salesman his place behind the counter. ; The circumstance"', that Nicholas' job 1 was on a throne in in stead of ..behind "a counter , did not matter? when : the - day of reckoning came.' He had shown ; himself , unfit tot his calling and he had to go. The . fading of the i supernatural glamour which, once hedged kings about and excused their misdeeds is bewailed . by . some of our weaker- minded poets and novelists. They set up a ' shriek whenever an Idol Is stripped ' of Its ornaments . and draa-Red . into ; the ' pitiless glare . of f act. , Romance -of the sentimental sort may suffer some loss when un worthy kings are turned out of the'r obs, but the common, run of man kind gain by It Immensely. BEVERIDGE'S MARSH.LL A LITTLE manual prepared by a Frenchman corrects the current Ignorance of his countrymen about the United States. The French are deeply. Interested In otu- domestic affairs since we have be come ' their allies. The manual is describes in the New York Evening Post, which, according to the Frenca author, is "the principal newspaper published lu Washington, D. a" Our ' geography appears to be an insoluble enigma for ' Europeans of all brands. If the kaiser and his hordes are as .misinformed about it as most other Europeans we need not worry over then" threatened Invasion. flf they plan a landing at New York: they will head for the southern point of Florida. If they aim to capture Washington they will set sail for some port on the Paclflo coast The manual Is more than usually Interesting when it describes our gov ernmental arrangements. It says that we have "no true parliamentary sys tem of government, like France and England, because our cabinet can not be dismissed when it is out of tune with the majority In congress." Our system is. In truth, more like the autocratlo Prussian government, says the Frenchman. Providence, or some other supernatural . power, gives us a president and cabinet and for the next four years we must make the best of them. There Is no way to gel rid of them until their ceremonial terms5 expire. The fixed official term which forms so conspicuous a feature of our gov ernmental machinery is a puzzle to the democratic European mind. To us it does not seem exactly "auto cratic," though most of our publicists admit that it tends to inefficiency. Energetio activity is not inspired by the calm feeling that the incumbent has an Iron grip on his officc-for four or six. or ten years, without regard to tha aerrloe. he renders.' . - The . British and French political method- is fluid. It flows out and In according to the currents of feeling in parliament. When the cabinet loses the confidence of the people's representatives it must vacate the of fices, making place lor a new set of public servants. The Jramers of our .government were actuated by two curiously op posing fears. ' On one side they feared the authority of the executive, On v -the other side they feared the people. To defend the country against a usurping executive with his horde of subordinates they dissipated the executive' authority, or thought they did, dividing It into portions so minute and conflicting that no harm could ever come of it. Their example was followed In our state city and county governments where fr 4 xecutlve, Authority was chopped into mincemeat -so fine that it could accomplish little or nothing The country experienced a general paralysis in local government until we began to revive the executive by such devices, as the commission plan Commission government will not bs limited to cities, when all Is toldL.lt will be pushed on into the state cap itals end may even break up the dire inertia of our county governments.' But: so far as the national exeoutlve was concerned , the comminution of authority effected the precise oppo site to what the fathers expected and hoped. Instead of a. feeble president surrounded by a feeble corps of ad ministrative phantoms, what we have really, evolved is a president towering over .the legislative; and judicial de partments with almost autocratic au thority." r't : ': ; i ' The authority of the exeoutlve haj proved to be the bond of unity which makes us a nation Instead of a dis integrating agglomeration .of wran gling states. Whether the president's autocratlo preeminence .Is T constitu tional' or; not Is a delicate subject upon which we do not . propose to touch. But Its astounding vigor an1 greatness presents a strange contrast with the fathers ideals of what the executive , should be In ' a republlo. The French writer ot whbm we spoko says that our, president Is "a die tator" during his term of office. The steady climb ot the national executive from his lowly position as the obedient foreman of congress and the , supreme court to the pinnacle of power bas been supported at every step by the Judicial decisions of John Marshall. ' Marshall himself did not love the president. He was in con tinual (conflict, witli Jefferson and hoped that his Interpretations of the constitution had -forever established the supremacy of congress and ; the court. But he buildcd better than he knew. Or at. least he builded some thing different from what he ex pected and wanted. " , Marshall spoke for lh centrlpetar tendency in our national life. Jeffer son spoke for the centrifugal. Both were ardent friends of liberty, bu; Marshall believed liberty 'perfectly consistent with, a strong and energedo central government while Jefferson believed, that liberty's only hope -lay the dissipation Of power among I the states. Mars hall's strategic position as chief lustioe of the nnr-pma mnrt pnahlr.i I him tn .mhiwlr h nntnlnnm' In Ha. I . . " , - I iiaiuua nuuao imiurucv uu. aicauuj i widened and deepened. Jefferson ' protested when the de cisions were made. Jackson was abl; to defy some of them. 'Nevertheless j their. work went silently and in. cessantly until thay not only leavened I but actually transformed our govern-1 mental scheme. Few students" of our history will dispute Beveridge's opln- ion that John Marshall had more, to I do with makinaT our arovernment what i (t is In practice than any' other man. Beveridge's life of Marshall, which has- now. been in circulation mors than a year, enables ordinary readers io siuay agreeaniy uie career oi mat extraordinary national figure. Most I people understand that the devouring corporations have issued from his Dartmouth college -decision as death was born of satan and sin, but com paratively few were familiar with the Story of his life until Beveridge'3 1 elaborate volumes appeared. The contest between Jefferson's ideas and those of Marshall, as Bev eridge describes It, is like, some titanic struggle Issuing in the downfall of one dynasty of demigods and the vlo lory of another. It Is Interesting to read that Jeffer son and Marshall were comparatively near relations. Jefferson was tho great-grandson and Marshall the great-great-grandson of the same an eestor. Their political ideas were Hegelian opposltes issuing from tho same .creative source and destined I tem of warfare. Tha kalser'a cruel aya to be reconciled, however unlike I tem of warfare la caatlna a atljrm of they may appear Just now. Jefferson feared centralized author ity. Marshall loved it. Between the fear of the one and the love of the .w vuD Othfer there Is no necessary conflict, It does not matter how Strong I tho executive grows as long as we contrive to hold him strictly respon sible to the peoDle. When there Is great work to be done we must commission strong hands to do it. but "should the Americah people for-1 get to be master of Its servant than inAeeA wonM onr a-ovpmmAnt 0 1 Sink down into the autocracy which our French author mistakenly thinks It has already become. The rich eastern owners of the Portland street car system are un der contract In every street fran chise granted them by the city to carry passengers at not to exceed a five-cent fare. They come in time of war with a claim that their management of; their properties has pot been profitable IfiOUgli and with demand that the contract be Droaen ana tncy o givcu a aia-cent fare. What would the publlo say If a poor devil of a teamster -with a ramiiy or ten maoe sucn a mand? de-l; FAILURES OF KULTUR N' ONE of the "sclentlflon inven tions with which Germany ex- pected to make the war 'short and gay" have come up to ex pectations. The submarines, tha Zeppelins, liquid fire, poisonous gases, indiscriminate massacres of Civilians, have all failed Of their pur-1 pose more, or less completely. The submarines have been the least disappointing of the whole series of horrors but even they have not fulfilled their early promise. The sinking of British and neutral ships Wltn tne wnoiesaie muraer or me sailors was to Starve England into snhmlwlon within a few weeks. But suD mission witnio a icw weeaa. nut many months have now elapsed andlperhapa It wUl. It Is a shame 'that the sterlings from British ports are auch things ahould take place. I Iook more numerous and cargoes more abundant .than ever before. As -for the terrible Zeppelins, their record Is one of disaster from be ginning to end. " They are so big and cumbersome that they present an 'easy mark to guns planted on the .nvl ..'nall V In 'III. irlla aln- aVUilU ana ww waa - snew w niw a0v wa. planes.; Usually when; these pom pous. monsters sally forth they are quickly brought to earth in wreck and ruin. A battle. between a Zep pelin and an airplane resembles one between a. swordfisb and a whale. The'swordfish . circles actively round nis Drey, stauuiua uiui uoio auu there until . the. moment comes for the fatal blow. Then goodby, Mr. Whale. ' - The liquid fire and so .forth wit! which kultur has enriched modern warfare add .to its horrors but do not make at tack, essentially more efr fective or defense v more dlfflculu Fortified positions were taken and lost under the old methods about the same as now. In former times war was ths business of ' a comparatively small, strictly specialized group. - Today It Is the absorbing occupation of whole peoples.; Our military men tell us , that every other interest ana diversion must either be laid aside or greatly modified ; if we propose to win the war, and .the. course of events bringi more convincing demonstration every day that they, are right about it.- In, San Francisco :, monlclpally lLlr)l ITJ :7 , VI , ,.w , " N. R. Powley and M. la. Stannard of tem Is. In turmoil. with its employes Saa Franclaco are gueata at the Port while its franchise expires In seven land hotel. . Both are offidaia of the m tmm Tt la rvnt a:t -.1 Padfic Telephone company aad are la to see how the city by the Golden r:.. a4ti ,ot - ... . vv u.., m.. lta U-1D- tion problem. I -Letters From the People i aaaf la Tha J aal faalloUoa ta tfeta 4artaMt aa id k writ- aa aa aaty aa aloa a ta mm. aaaaMI asaa4 auu varaa la. kta-ta a4 aaaat alaa Vr taa mm aa4 aadraaa af. ta a.t f 9 iU - mm a a la aaa taa aaata aabllaata h whxmM aa MaW ) Aa Appeal to Gersaaa-Anierieaas CoIdn. Or, Dae- IV To tha Editor f Ttia Journal After a caraful atody of ln r mujiary WJWiwm ni irom tnformaUon coralnc from tha most ralU- tl aouroea, T bar coma to tna oondo- aloa that kalaariam. with lta aatocratle j at em of rovarnmant. moat ba aboltahad fcr tha rood of futura caaaraUoaa. J appeal to roa Uarmaa-AmerKana I and all paopla ot Oarmaa daacant to aa i at your ralativaa, frlanda aad tha pao- pi of Oarmanjr la aranarai to aboltah lhm wu ad hta autocratic military cvarnmant and to aaaiat thara In. aa- rtaoiiahinc damocratio form or ror rth. Tajd a trSSaTt that wlU foravcr aboUah mllltariam. - From a humanitarian atand point I had hopaa that tha United StaAee would keap oat of tha European war, but whan a systam of mtlltartara bacomaa ao cruel and ruthlaaa that It sparaa neither tha lrvea of defenaelesa woman and. chU-l dran and aanarataa famillaa tar aanarta. tion, it La time that auch a m unary are- trrtK.be brought 0 a nalt and daatroyad. Aa German-Americana. I feal that we can do much in andtng tha war by ald- tna; tha German . paopla la tha , ovar throw of kalaertam and la aidlna thara I to aatabllah a reaponalhla democratale rovernmant. a rovarnmant capable of negotlatm- traatiaa of peace on a aafe and permanent baais with any nation. Aa Uerman-Americana, X feci it la our duty to help and tha war aa aooa pcaaibla. I believe that wa can ba tha meana of aavinc tha Uvea of thouaands of our brava young- man who ara now on their way to Franca, Aa a Ger man-American, it la my opinion that there can ba no peace until kaiaerlam la crushed by tha entente ail lea, or tha German paopla thamaalva cruah kalaar iam and form a new rovarnmant. Aa Garman-Amaricana let as cherish for tha homeleas paopla of Balgfum and France, whoaa horaea bava , boan da troyed and land laid waste, a kind and humane feellnc. for they ara not to blame for tha condition thay find them selves in. but ara tha innocent victims nf thai V a t uv. mii.1 mwJk wKa, I cruelty and Inhumanity on tha German people that thay do not deserve, but that wUl not ba wiped out In a generation. Aa German-American, la? u. dTur share in bringing- tha world back to raa- son and sanity, and let ua aow tha aaada of liberty and democracy In every Land wi-era autocracy rulaa. A. W. ZOEXLXSR. In avirVar Days . Portland, Dec 14. -To tha Editor of Tha Journal Thinking that your read- 'Zou'1 b 11tre'td ln.f,nt thm the civil war, I aend you a few items. I TJellfr wrltUn by co.un " viauouuvu u.ruu ui. nail di KIa .Ta . ;r"V K auu., anu oeanng aata June IX. lit.. I and tha wrltta- la a. plain aa It waa iae nay 11 was written. 1 Waa an f"w "'""rinaniaM.n wounoea at . . ui ua aionn-1 . r onomy ,- haa tn I r ... .1 ao, t tnat time ,WM 1 oapltal at Memphis. Tana, After congratuJatlng ma oa my Ira- proved condition, aba says: 1 sup- poea that you know that tha rebels bava Invaded our state. Tha man ara nocking- from ail parts of tha state to defend Indianapolis. I think that tha rebels will soon ba driven back.' After telling about her work la tha schoolroom aha says: "I like this place J"' "TT' u ST soma persona ara determined to waa tha butternut and others ara detar- minea mat tney snail not Da worn. I - T" -STIw"" Z1 I - v " ; - I Today wa came near having a battle at church. A party of ladles, all wearing but am-nut. came into church and took scats on a bench together. I It waa well known that thay had said !f. Wf? WV l 5?- rtakM their lives. uu uiai anuuicr Dairr, i who were present, had declared they would take them off or die. Tha but ternuts looked defiance and tha ant! butternuts could scarcely contain them selves In their rage. During tha serv ices ona of them pulled off a silk Jacket aha wore, aa thoueh aha waa going to pounce upon them at onea. Another lert tha church and returned In a few minutes carrying a pistol la her belt. Aa soon aa tha benediction waa pronounced I aaw another young lacy, ona or tha anti-butternuts. brandishing a dlrlf. but aha did not .(t.AV K. av,. ..... a.- . i. much tha larger party and all armed, so there was no fighting-, although tbera ware many hard words aald and many fce Tery p1 w,th 1 . .. - ,v. .... -m v... DU"ernu ww contampt. but aaa uiu vaou aa aaaaa. vawa.. ifvui jsifUH were to blame. Miss Busing and her father, were both scnooi taacbera and also a brother who waa kUlad at Atlanta on tha day of her wadding, whan aha waa I married to a Christian minister by tha 1 name or Busing-. I - ARTHUR H. mCHOLS. Guilt My finceia fraasa ta cwaatock Biy hair ts eakad with mad: I aa wadlac tarooaa loblolly black water, las Tm canine Chrfetma graiHlii that oil ta. hat right baa af thorn killed O'CoaaaD; aaathar aaatad wy I And aaea it's toa hat to' stay nair The cortala-ef-nra la aaoviaa. aad praaautly rn race Arroaa that aula of abaa-bolas to aa for a Boeha or two; I Shan rip hist ao tha SaOr and atawar huw tareaaa aaa uutmsn. Bat It's an a foonaa as rsttea aad bum! and bDod Thai seeds man raaUiig backward a thaw ran behind. tf they had tt to do ever theee rays with tha atataasMB a a Ha Mtkaned coat ef achaaalitg twonld chaace tha tana la that aearta. They played for ataaa ad ran Ufa. thay Had. col luded aad t ruined CaHl nf nalghborlna aatioest Twas thay, aot wet aania. wm mmmta. What anew na or taatr panning ar I. aa bf mae I aoaai Badder thaa ataat wt stabbing the staia that thate aareajSMmt drwdl Aad, God I ft waa all aa. rtmph) taa way that A aanaeat for thoaa who wara aakad; far taoaa ClaadiaB Taayea Berkeley. CaL ; PERSONAL MENTION Port An grlrs Lumberman In City '' Michael Earla. owner of the Earls i Lumber company of Port Angelaa. nru'hire: . Telephone Official in Tew. Waah.. la registered at tha Multnomah. ; .T !L.V . I . Baker Exeeeds Bed Croee Quota - , . Printm. inar af Baktr. who if m. THE DEATH OF By Alfred FULL knee-deep Be the winter snow, ' And the winter winds are wearily si thin ft . Toll ye the church bell sad and slow, -And tread softly and speak low, r -For the old year. lies a-dyinc. . i Old year, you mast not die j You came to us so readily. You lived with as so steadily, . . Old year, yoa shall not die. , He wit full of Joke and Jest, But all his merry quips are o'er. To see him die across the waste ' His son and heir doth ride post-haste. Bat he'll be dead before. Every one for his own. The night Is starry and cold, my friend. And the New-Year blithe and bold, my friend ' Comes np to take bis own. How hard he breathes! over the snow 1 heard Just now the crowing cock. . The shadows flicker to and fro: " The cricket chirps: the light burns, low: 'TIS nearly twelve o'clock. Shake hands before yoa die. Old year, we'll dearly rue for you: What is it we can do for you I Speak oat before yoa die. His face Is growing sharp and thin. Alack! oar friend is gone, . . Close p his eyes: tie up his chin:' Step from the corpse, and let him in That standeth there alone. And waiteth at the doon There's a new foot on the floor, my friend, And a new fsce at the door, my friend, A new face at the door. ' THE SPADE IN Albert X. Carmaa ta the Flululatohie What would ba tha degree of Interest throughout Christendom if a naw Bible ware discovered? Or to chooaa a cloaer parallel what if a whole library of ancient manu scripts, con tempo ran eoua with and com menting on tha various books of tha Bible, bad bean unearthed ta soma east ern monastery T Christendom would ba all axoa- to '"flL .! r Z . I??'"irr Vn.U I"tfoTad vividly Interesting aa they learn their contents. Tha secret traatiaa oououeaa-wiu prova o o- wuiu mir produc ia th rallgioua world when compared with tha affect of tha disco vary of a naw maas of authentic Bible literature. a a Tat that la precisely what will happen If tha British or tha allies retain posses sion of Jerusalem. Jeruealem la an un- opened mine of biblical archeology. Tha r...L- V. -... . . . . i. Mcrei clty tha spade of tha Tha varioua archeoiogical or excavator. organizations hva aant their expeditions freely to tha aM at xinavah and Babvlon and dua? J0f tSr Wrydoaneap. tta hhi ,orv . rtrlllaatlon. Their a nana Uave won from Kgypt her deepaat aacrata Ji HT( oi,t of tha Sphinx ; have un covered ancient Greoce on tha Aero polls. at CorlnUl Delphi, and hava brought to ua tha bounds of balaaaruerad Tri But whan they hava sought to , iJn, Mii f tha oi of Zlon tha Turk has stolidly xoroiaaen ao much aa a aoadafuL Tha British ara displaying great care not to disturb tha religious sensibilities f tha Atoalezna. Thay will undoubtedly continue tola policy ; and It may ba that this will seriously nmlt tha work or ex eavatora. area U tha wholesale prohibl tion of tha Turk la repealed. At Luxor, In Egypt, for example, thara la ona sec tion of tha great tarn pi a which remains v-.,- . UAh.mml.n mo,u. reats upon tna mouno or o.on. that hldea It- xna autnonuea wu not aow My dlaturbanca of tha moaqua. "...rL wm doubtleea ba ahown Mo.,em buUdinga and faallnga la tha " i.- r Jater sollcltuds U to ba expected. But thara la plenty of tha area of Jeru- ..... H.k.lw th. Una mi tin Hat thrown tha mantle or ua xnoaqua ana his tombe. Tha first Question for which an an swer wUl -probably ba sought wUl ba tha exact site of biblical Jerusalem. I That has bean by no means settled aa I yet and chiefly because tha Turks would not permit even ammg wwui" to locate tha ancient walla. Thla dcubt chiefly affects such controvar- stai queetlons aa tha location ot tha I true Calvary ana tna poasiouiiy m u I present alte of tha Holy Sepulchra ba- 1 .v. .. 1 . Pilrirv vu tin- doubtedly outalda the wall which e- lated at tha time of dinar, ret in-s traditional Calvary la waU Inside tha Pt medieval wall. Many assert .v.. w.n a.n . tha time of j the crucifixion, must hava run outslda 1 of tha alta now accepted by tha four B""f- "t I J TriJTrfl ITITl bawmaM uaa a a, - a- I Christian church ea ara not aa mini ba Imagined In Philadelphia the Epla- 1 copal lan. tha atetnoaiax. ua nwwr I tarlaa and tha Roman Catholic, but I the Greek, tha Latin, tha Coptic ana I tha Armenian. Only tha excavatov ran answer tnis aueattoa m u iu aalL Whan ba digs Into tha soil that covers ancient Jerusalem to tha nonn weat of tha Church of tha Holy Sep ulchre. wlU ba find tha wall of tha first century? II ba aoea, tna tivary under that church la obvtoualy not tha I rght ona. Tha Protestants or. rataer. I should aay, soma rrowanu put forward a rival Calvary which they call "Gordon's Calvary," that la Just outalda tna existing walL But It Is supported by no eWlenca whatever, rot even tha virtually wort hi aaa opln- Inn ot Ganeral Oordon : lor au na tld waa. whan wanting aooui u wall ona day: "If Calvary waa ou side tha present waXl In thla direction, that la a likely bill." tatered at tha Corrtellua. aays Baker haa moat auoteaaful Rad Crows onva. l na campaign commlttaa roada a giorvoua flniah Friday night. Returns snow uai tha city far exceeded lta quota. Ur and Mra. W. T. Carter and chil dren of Victoria, B. C ara gueeta at tha Multnomah. - . mm W. J. Weaver, owner of tha 1 rrnntia - hotal ef Roewbnrr and Mrs. w.r. ara srneata at the Portland." I Mr. and Mra. W. 8. Woodhouaa of SO varton are raaistared at tna i-araina. 8. B. Wagner of Alpine. Or, la a gueet at tha Oregon. -" Mr. and Mra. T. . Browning oi xm- coma ara in i-oruano on a nwuun uiw and ara at the Multaoman. w r. Whlttea and Mrs. Edith L Whlttea of trafur are gueata at the Cor nelius. . - ' Mr. and Mra. i. w. Moore ot ixewporx are raaiaterwd at tha Waabingtoa. . -r. w. Btratford and R. A. Stratford. bualneaa man of. Vancouver, B. C, ara gueata la the city at the Portland hotel. Mr. and Mra. J. n. aiartw irwn m.w bany are m Portland ior tna .wee a rna and are at the ore-on. T. W. Robinaon from Olney la staying at the Perklna. K. C Allen ef Bherwood U ameag tha I . mt lha Park In a. I Mr.- ud Mr.- B. McDonald from St THE OLD YEAR Tennyson s OLD JERUSALEM Another phase of thla problem la tha real site of Mount Zlon. For a long time It had bean located on tha bill over looking tha valley of Hlnnom. but mora reoent authoritlea put It just below tha temple area oa tha eminence hitherto known aa OpheL Kxcavatlon la expected to uncover a great deal of Interest In this section of tha city. Hera runs tha southern wail of tha tarn pi a area: and I aa lta structures rise from a varv much i lowrar nart of th Kin ana i. ..t. I uncoverad airaady without excavation I . I . . i .a ... , . . I esung nut tantalising problems. There I remnants bare of three distinct I gatea all obvloualy entrancaa to tha I temple: aad tha Question la. To which I r. Wa. ari-n...! .V I a t. u...wi I auw uvuui im prwy weu Manunad With "tha Huldah portal" Of tha Talmud and waa probably uaad fra-l ouantlv bv Christ. It ta tha natural I entrance from tha pool of SUoam. Com- litmim iuaiuicaiiun is oopwa ior iron I ruiier excavation. Tha pool ot BUoam ItaelT, Just below this, also Calls for In-1 vaatigatioo. Accident, while dig Xing' in I connection with some sketchy' water-1 works for tha city, revealed tha under-1 grouna cnanneis by which thla pool waa ioo. ana tney uuwir tucuy to ua an- cien t oeacripuona in thla region la I round aa wau tha only intermittent a ......... spring m tna wnoia aistncx tnat is. vi.k k. , n -t.. 7 rT. v , J VT1- wm4. vu., mm v j wiu, biuuvu Mrkivu. i nis ona iiowa iiva umea a oay in tna rainy aeaaona. Possibly It has some con- aactlon w ith tha mlrafnlatu nool of Rthaada. whara tha anral troubiad' Ik. vl.H K..llna nknn.lv there la very much, of lnteraat hare for tha Intelligent, excavator. With any turn of his aoada ha mar find conf lrma-1 tion for and explanation of tha moat nnviiai .,.,.... a e a . - - In many sections of Jerusalem tha bris la vary daap. Tha Damascus gate, for examDle. ta obvloualT built rUrbt on tha top of another gate, tha upper angle I va -a uvwo auwiiwaj af " a'a - a.- rww., a 9 awk-u a aula war at aw altar al r-l aa Kawa IT! rlTr ViT irT- . A "7. . : :SVi "'r:'. is I rum iv u au leu ownamui u j-mmi surf aca. tnxgtng thara may reveal any thing, for tha debris of an ancient city. Ilka tha sand of Egypt, la a great preeerver of olden atructurea. But It la impossible to tabulate all tha question marks with which tha religious archae- oloarlst turns toward thla museum ity of biblical tlraaa Tha Judgment hall of Pilate la Just up tha hill from thla valley perhaps? Digging thara will dis turb nothing but a Turkish barracks and' that la hardly a structure that tha allies wUl hold sacred. But here wa ara on un wage oi me rnowi uunwAiRi place of all the Temple area. Thla ts ona or tne very xew aoaoiuteiy auvurmic and undisputed aultea In Jeruaalem. Its pavements cover many coveted aacrata. Tha anveetlgator had rather ba let loose bera with his pick and apada than any where alaa In Jeruaalem or even In Pal estine. But will he? Two moaquaa ara In thla area, ona of them tha moat sacred Moslem edifice outalda of Mecca. Thla, unfortunately, la tha Moaqua of Omar, which la buUt ovar tha Holy Rock. Thla rock la a part of tha top of Mount Moriah. and waa undoubtedly in thai Temple enclosure. It aaw not only thai Tem Die of Christ (of Herod), but tha Temple buUt by tha Jewa after their I exile, and tha glorious Temple or nolo-1 moo. under it la a cava vary aacreo. to i tha Mohammadana, and In tha floor 'of I that cava la aa opening Into something beneath, which no Christian haa ever I bean permitted to sea. All aorta of tra ditions excite our keen curiosity. It is aald that here ara hidden tha sacred vaaaals from tha Temple of Solomon. Ig norina history, ethers aay that here ara tha aaran-branchad eandleatick and sim ilar priceless treasuree stolen by Titus and now believed to ba at tha bottom of tha Tiber. How eagerly would tha ex cavator datva Into thla cava of mystery and promlsa ! But It la to ba feared that even a permanent British poeaeaaion of Jerusalem cannot gain for him that priv ilege. Moelem oppoaitioa wul be too strong: Helena are la tha dty for ewer 8unday aad are registered at the Multaomah. Mr. and Mra. C Ia. Powell aad fam ily of More are registered at the Wash ington for an extended visit. J. K. Ford, a bualneaa man -of Cor- vallla. la at the Oregon. C Sterling of Lebanon to Staying at the PerkSha. N. O. Moe from Dayton. Wash, la' reg istered at the CorneUua. M. M. Stewart of Aberdeen ia a guest at the Washington for the weak end. John O. Cartwall of Eugene U reg- C A. Stockton of Oak Polat U reg. iaterwd at the Portland. Mr. and ' Mrs. B. 8. Roes from Saa Franclaco, ara gueata. at .the CorneUua. E. A. Lawton of Hammond to at the Perklna, O. C. Lelter of La Grande to regla tared at the Oregon. ' Chatiee Chapel, a bualneaa sua X Boise. Idaho, ta a guest at the Waah- Ington. Mrs. O. U Baker of KcMlnnvHla Is at the Portland. . D. C Smith, from Albany, to a guact at the Oregon. Mr. K. La Home of Moaner to at the Multnomah for aa extended ' trip ta thla city. . - . Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Boas ef Hood River ar gueata at the Portland. Ragtag and Bobtail " Stortaa IVom Evrrbra tTa tut Childrra Write Food Sloe ana . . ACOMPtTITXON waa racenUy bald I am a mAn. tuxi... vui . . taa federal food- admlnUtrator of that ta. prtaea being orferad for food eon-. aervatkm poet arm. Tnouaanda of chll- raa -participated wua . poatar daaigna and food-eavlng slogans, and tha fol- -lcwlng aoocinat phraaea ara given M avampiaa of tha children's work : Ba canny with food. Peal thin and wia. Not that wa lov food laaa but wa lova , wvny more, apraaa nutter thin halo the Bammaea cat Berlin. Ba a mna. native bee. Broad and buna will beat tha Hana. Kill all cans but gar bare cana. Can untU you can t. Kvarv apud is a, bullae Save bacon until Barlla ia eh- Sava'nary beana 'twill alnk . the submarines. Wise wlvea won't waata. Kill .kalaariam In tha klt-ha Every Uooeier help Hoover. Eat fiah a good war dish. Tha nation beau that aaea eats. Pickle aad can for t?.i," Sam. Tha kitchen la your fort. Throw ' aaay your trying pan bake, broil, and loll all you can. If Tf I knaw yoa aad rm kaav h. If each of as eeald plataiy aaa. Aa4 wtth aa Outer alsfat dlvtee ' The atasaiM ot rear Iwart aad atae. I sore that aaaaid atffar baa. Aad daap our aaada la rtaadliaea; Oar tboachta woald plaaaaaUy um, " If 1 kav yoa aad yoa knew ma." The " Wrong Line He Each hour I spend with you la ' like a pearl to ma. She Aw, quit stringing me. The Flag IO. tha brlaht. Starry light. I Mt&atad rad aod blue aad whits. Ot ear flaa that Moato ia raptara troea taa atecpla'a discy baihtl It fly. I To ao lush. Till It aarmua Um vaary era. Aa It rolia iu bright watat apward till tkry ia uta lay. foe Strikat a blow I At tha fla wa'ra leiac aa. Aad aa oa trie ad Da Una spriags ta ar wUh Khaki-clad nna deep aad low. Mea o wmA. Sfttrtaa Btothara. Karavlr clad. J" " vrnv Mothar wild. staashtarad child. awaui4 threahakia. ataida dafuad. tirw. reta with raakug tiaaan. oaa (IlM. raoxiaa prayn iaM ta ma. lb thara no God aaywharer Shall thla rUe of dark aaaa sink an Earope ta aaopeirr Kaeklaai. srsad. Uaatarpiaca ot im riaht haad. Aad thay're atactnd "Tankaa OoodU. -Hall uomM, Happy Lead. u1 T 12.. w. . ,,; ,-r... al I we ro anllhmt auoaa." I wm unt I lrlaa aa wawkK aiir" r'T ... . .. , IThry rash bradlong ta the fight. Aad taa hot. nd ateod toa xxliii thraach i uw artanaa ta tbair xliaku I Ria glad, I Kaawr atd. I " mbiat that aa awr had. Taakaa ttakad with mnk sad BrNaa, aaU I i"v 11 " mmw yiac ot aUna. f rw ot Una. MUUobs wwrahl at thr abrtaa. I nT sapai ara cawtaraa wa taaa. stnpas I awn aad aura that ahioa, IWVW - M tea I rt t tta da-lpiaia. imobke yoa sad t. I Lat w ap thorn colon roaad as aa a waaaort I throwsh tha aky. IMrk raq. I at a . mm a at- 1 ' fl r 14 jpil MOW .Mil V Mart NWiffer U afeard to Jlna any fiaurnal order, fer ha Iowa ha would . ...i i ... . v.. wife to plaen him; and Ma told him ha aaa Jest right, aa ha certainly waa aw fvaa vaa-a tvauKa'vw aaa aw v si wa aaaaa worthleaa to hla family alive, tha way ha dodged work and left hla wife to support tha children, and t500 in hand with him aura dead would ba a tempta tion to any but a Christian woman Ilka Mrs. Nldiffer Is. That's why Mart don't coma over here to our house no mora. THROUGH - V. rrx. r t x f s. fllC W.IN L-( W zrteicj. I'm Just a little Thrift Stamp ft With goo on my back ' a A But I'm a sticker. I may myself. not amount to much by But neither does a drop of water,.' or a tola toa Grain of aand. or a toa toa Speck of powder on milady's noaa. But a lot of them together toa toa Ofttimea changw tha destinies of men. toi toa That's me. t toa- toa Tha mora of my kind that's licked, tha tot to Sooner wall lick tna kaiser, toa toa rm Just a Itttla Thrift Stamp toa tot With goo oa my back. toa toa But I'm a sticker. Dr. Rupert Blue',- -Commends 'Book - - How to Live Receives Cora mendAt&yn of Sorieod General of -United State. .... ... He hwlfh bwaaaaatliail ever t. tha aa-attanaa af the wediial sraaaaia as "Um ta Li." . Tha buaa ta Ma tha raaka ef tha spa, aaaa la taa liei lai haakh bwak la Us. Mm- ha ls aarataa. Waaaasatae. IX. U., wwa. aaya as aart. " Haw as A4e a a eras avary ef snmaail ayewaa, taaa aa a paua. suaarirtaarwara wth aha af mt taa Ufa ay lavuMa yiauxH. at aaliriaal aeawawar. Xahi aad mAASmmm LiiiaJt flaa, The JawrwaJ aaBawe Caa ba b aawry in. The i l.a. Tbraart th munUn ad taa Jeavme a caa aa a lar aa at taa j. a. cut Ca aaw a rtsah Oa, Okta, rulaaia al radw af .Taa Jai ttaay, la eraa ar aa aim iiiiim rTm mm etsaiaa eamtlnaa. taa ear aaaiaa. Caa trlaaa af man ail an ill aria aa ta . at taa W immaaLI , awaaaa. .