THET OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL; PORTL AND,; SUNDAY t MORNING, MARCH 7, 1918, t. M. JACKSON, , , . , . eHblhf - ArTCD T14C X7AT? -- " v ' ' lotion, or laissez faire, which comes Jr l CIV 1 nc ;YYiy J" .k. to the tame thmrileiki his utmost S WE have seen in these article, the best minds in America expect to to , icare meirt f brains s away 1 from A-ubliahad eeenr aW.-Afteraoea and. moraiaa u - . . : . - i I to..;!.. . . -,fA. atrendwAy aod ZMKbUt rtMttt, ForUaad, 1 claw matte. itI.fci-UOMC8 Mala 1TJ Horn. A-eosl. Ail depArtAaenf) reached bf Umm number. ,- Ya t)M operator whet department yen want. A see a greatly enlarged foreign commerce come to fcthe United- State social problem and persuade them after the' war;' This increased ; commerce will be created by several leave- everything to unobstructed . ' .. yti,.r "natural law. .The precept which he .v.n . ki T-ro.ht ntrin aii if ewiL it will be Brati. bequeathed- to the world . was, In time at laaat. hy th arovernment to a steadfast purpose to hniid up effect "Go tell 1t to ' Evolution and poured at the sostoffioe Jrwand. Oren. Amrican domestic and foreign mmerc. It will be a new and tremendously J1 WjH be right." , " ' tVJTSTZ -,,.f!..f' productive aetor. la w economle life. . t 11; . ... . - - ; I, The devastated countries of Europe will neve to m restorer, uum laia wvii may no oe rigns m me nexi low must be rebuilt.; Industrial plant worn out by excessive use in war must hundred year, or the nett thousand, be fenewedV. Itwlll i s, generatidn' work compressed into a few ' but what nf that What I. thnn- vary country in luuropo :. : . -- - ;.- tUMKlUN ADVKMTUHMU KKPEKSKNTATIVB . . Heniamln JUntaor Co., Brunnrtok BwiWrng, ? JUS ruth Aseaae. Hew York. 121 Jreople a Use ButMinc, Ihicaso. ' - Sueacripuon terms by bmU. m to ar la Uw united iuin of VoiHi : DAILt (UOBXJMO OB AITaM0O!f) - On .i..,.I.O 0b wnth.....S .10 . SUNDAt Ort t.. '. . . S8.e I On aMatb .1 On ytf. i -jHimuj ll1 ' Mil i unnlmla s-ntlrfltlnftft In will compel parment of higher wati than in ant-ar days and tstorltmen sand years to i the iuflnlte ages of wUl demand better houttnr and more eomioru na conveniencea : im eoonomia leisure m wnlch Divine ' Evolution order established and tri vorue durlnt the period ot a war already ofyears Work out its blessed Duroosesf duration wUl not be more fban 'partly Obliterated by the coming- ef peace. OM . Xf u orK oul lTf oiessea purposes t this account, it is estimated that in Great Britain alone 600,000 bouses will be , To he sure, milUons of miserable built a soon as possible after peace 1 signed. j creatures will drag out suffering live 4. Returning soldier and saUors, used for years at the front aAd in .the and die. 0j DreTentable evils in the erviOe elsewhere te all the comfort and sustenance the country could give intepval hut that it of nnne- . m M Ht. ImnA m. nnwaffttl fitn1. MM of them Wr Oil the ' Inlervai Du " 18 , n( conse yxwt iuonamo on ArrKSNOOio ai ; straU of life In the various countries before the war, but they will never iuence compared with the frightful BUgilfAX : , M u Ai . 1H 1 M1a4 ' fliA tel -.1 t tj a - .' !. j' 4f 1A i r. dbnifM An kTO dwjk ia a wag i or i w w iwr j hBi i iU ui ireauug into iuo Bacrea ,cu- group in demanding more of the comfort and conveniences ot life, more of the, output of industrials and fields, more of those near luxuries so long denied Burke got 'his ritual of evolution plain f oik, especially, in Europe. .. v. ' 0m hi shocked Study of thd French .-America, with nearly: four years less of actual fighting, will be the , Wof,hIn, lh m -x,,-D supply source for this unprecedented demand for articles of commerce. Wita ifvolVtIon- Watching the progress o hernatural resources scarcely touchedthis country Will be looked to for a tre; that Cataclysm, from v a safe distance mendous output, and she alone, for the earlier years of Europe's reconstruction period, will be in position: to answer, the call. . ; f ; w t - These things are' ttudlenjca id dHlaiid. ;.v"They -' a challenge to Portland to begin to plan now., The best minds in New York think it highly Important to plan: now. What belter guidance for Portland to follow? . ' : 'i:-' ;-4 . W: . Portland ought, for instance,-to manufacture products that will enter into this coming world wide eommerce Portland will manufacture lutoDer BeT0iutj0li developed' and so far as flour nd some other things that wlU.be required In the process of rebuild- j Burke oouia discern it only made ing Europe. Foriiana wiu prooaoiy conunue duhoidb snips, uui yvviuu bftd matter8 worse. "He ascribed-the on a diminished scale. For whatever reduction she sustains In ship balldj.downfaU 0f religion " the' tumbrils, lng, she ought to be providing other Industries In which to give employment thft revolutionary committee. Judge to her growing Industrial population The city Is now getting the manu- P(ju ueif Xinville Robespierre, the facturing habit. She is finding herself. Haying found herself In this war ' notlne and-Thomas Paine himself lime, sne win db looiisn ana improviaeni sne aoes nut cuuwime ""no the unhappy habit the French in London he beheld one set of ideas after another, march upon Ihe stage, play what looked like ;ju destructive part for a few weeks and then van ish, or seem to vanish. 1 . J v - The French brain . was continually 1 intervening in French history as the Tor vrro that 4th rolth ; iBd h thmi (Nkctli findeth; And to - him tht knoolMtb II tbail b opnd. St. lk 11-10. - OMENS - T SHOULD begin to be apparent to the public service commission, the ' Portlaad council and the street IT car company that the six-cent fare Mill not be permitted to stand, if Several hundred people standing on fthelr feet and howling down a paid ingent .of the street car company at iludge McGinn's meeting at Woodlawn (Friday evening, means something. jThe summary, ejection of a man who fried to interrupt the meeting, mean ibmething. " Those hundred of people have a their brains were given them to use. Blind trust in "nature's law ' can hot hold its) own against applied in- tellifteuce. Democracy must makel itself more intelligent than autocracy! or It will go "down to ruin In, : the world-wide struggle? President Wilson is calling with the voice of an Inspired prophet to the ' democratio brain of the . United Stales, "Be tip and doing" Evolution dragged us into the war, It will drag us into other if we sit passive and let It blunder oh. It 1 a time for idea, a , time for4 thought. Brains will ultimately win the war. Brain can then so recon struct the world ' that war shall be no , more. Democratio Americans, "bend your minds to the mighty task.' . v it - TO A GARDEN By Robert Louis Stevenson Nothing the Matter . With Portland By EL 8. Haroourt FRIEND, in thy mountain-side demesne. My plain-beholding, rosy, green And linnet-haunted garden ground, .. Let still the esculents abound. Let first the onion flourish there. Rose among roots, the maided fair. Wine scented and poetic soul . , Of the capacious salad bowl. Let thyme (the mountaineer to dress The tinier birds) and wading cress, The lover of the shallow brook. From all my plots and borders look. Nor crisp ana ruddy radish, nor . Pease-cods for the child's pinafore Be lacking; nor of salad clan The last and least that ever ran About great nature's garden beds. Nor, thence be missed the speary heads Of artichoke; nor thence the lean That gathered innocent and green Outsavors the belauded pea. These tend, I prithee; and for me, Thy most long-suffering .master, bring In April, when the linnets sing And the days lengthen more and more, At sundjwn fo the garden door. And t, being provided thus, Sh ill, with superb asparagus, A book, a taper, ind a cup Of country wine, divinely sup. herself when Deace comes. . All this .is one phase In which Portland is profoundly concerned with the coming enlarged commerce that 1 to be seen 'in America. Another ohasa is the ouestion of how it will fare ith us in the matter of getting ships. Government vessel will be available to those port prepared to glve In ace all wouid g0 wen intra cargo, w iuiu uiciu jji uuiwh uu uiif b" v,.v , tfigjjj dispatch. The New York high cdmmlsslon for port and harbor development j Barke Wag a thinker and ft says in ns- report : would no't give up of using their brain's. If they would only stop think ing about their revolution, sighed Burke, and let Evolution-work it out . . . .. . . . - . i . . . . Tnose pons wnicn wm nn xnw aeYwopmrai p wu u bwi )ntrj" hnvm il4pnlv lmnrud th mind equipped to secure the increased commerce that will inevitably come after J eeplJ pressea Uie mma master of English style. Hi vvrit- of England and the United States. He was the Father of 'passivism in politics, as Adam Smith fathered the war. As . a result of this belief. New York and New Jersey are preparing to further imDrova the New Jersev. Manhattan and Long Island waterfronts. They are studying the problem now. Jn other wideawake ports, the Sams' . 1 in economics. Their combined action is in progress. philosophy-can be summed up in a It seems to The Journal to be an extraordinary opportunity for Portland. J Phrase or two such as "Letwell For ti months after the war, the railroads will remain under government enough alone, Bow to nature law, dlreotion. The discrimination of the railroads is the main influence that ;hd the like. it . . . . mm a rniiin -nriifinn aninniiisT atmnsi in n mnnPT. ine toiiv 01 nauiinK neavT t va ummi e vvvuuutiw wauwa Enat tIt Irtmvmnfl i. ThHr" mood tonnage over a route requiring five locomoUves to do what one locomotive ' worship cast a sacred aura around ft thmt. will do. through the Portland gateway could only have been created by i child lab, slum tenements, the 16- 00 tTthe artificial processes through which the railroads were able to gain enough . hour - working JZ fcprv.ntA anrt minafffnff mm who nut to absorb the increased cost of haul. wages. Tney mustn t ixe toucneu. Sh, fi7Tn 1 f iSt -th-forti- Under government direction of the roads, this influence agains Portland They are all holy because Divine Vn3 in5 ilSZSL If a vrv , ,1. will be removed. The thought under government management will not be; Evolution has brought them to pas. 5 iWhalHM Prfvat ProfIt but Publlc 6ervlce ftt 1,18 leMt C08t- Th true Uge of 1? its own good time Evolution will In. ' h a nr -ner fcography should then be realized by Portland, and will be realized if perhaps erase them. But If It does x There are tnoueanas ana tens ot , ready through oroDer and adeauate facillUes. conveniences and , not we should hush our murmurs, inousanas or.peope- Foriiana wno eaulDment her harbor t0 day an efficient Dart In this comina commerce! for Divine Evolution doeth all things re or tne same )na. jney came to &u experts lnsist ,9 td be 8een ,n the Vnlted states after the war. .Portland and bu(lt homes or rented . . aomes on 'the guarantee of the city; government through Its contract with uua, n 8 T" c" 18 ea"'- e itreet car company that there JW, by hei "Ute- aI: va to be "a fare ot five cents and Lcoho m'gh' . ..... a. over the frontier by this device and jio more. wnen maue w . . ,tK. j feduce the fare to four cents, they JZ th! w,sef lfc i .... hi ... uIij 1 Sb,ee.tiiron funeral wreaths are not Jheilve-cent .fare contact, saw the SSST 1st that it was a binding .7"V. 77. - " ? , , well. It is permissible to shed, all the tear you like over human misery einniflff' tft find mil whv a nntrac.t was a contract when the city wanted 80 lon.as Y0U d0 not apjfly ,your in - Twenty-six thousand gallons of logan berry Juioe means that several hundred berry pickers were busy last summer harvesting this fruit. Fifty thousand to 10,000 gallons Is the mark set by Jones Bros. A Co., 14 Alblna avenue, thi city, ae.the amount the firm will put up the coming season at it plant at Newberg, Or. Five hundred thousand gallons of apple Juice, using S0O ton of apples, is another of the company products, ahd in addition 100,000 gallons of the best grade of vinegar. These are the output of a,hlgh class, weli ordered factory lo- Catea- S.t MWMi'r mfift m na traH frnm this city. All tokr. even at this almost The day of the digging comes nigh. The home garden is to be planted. idle season for this line, 3ft persons are weeded and watched. There ought to be continued Joy in the work. Will employed at wages of s to $s.6o per day there be? Yes, in most cases, if the proper communion be established be- formen nd $2 for women, in the tween the gardener, the ground which he digs and the at first trembling lLfJlt-ISr but final,y turdy growths which nature gives him in charge. Plants won't rTcnuednwht fr i?' th unsympathetic. They are as .conscious as a maid of the pres- uv va m v v w THE SOIL HAS A SOUL Ttom the Chicaco Pot Ragtag and Bobtail r -Stories From Kverywhere The Reiura of the Uayflovrer : AN OLD man of IL fragile ia frame but with a mind crystal-clear inuta perceptions, recently thrilled all Ens- , land. Bays the Christian Herald, with a letter wnicn. he - wrote . to the London Times. The title he choea for his sub-i Ject was a singular one: The Return or the Mayflower." In the first few sen tences, the Idea he had in mind burst upon the readers like a splendid sun rise. The Mayflower, carrying St cour ageous souls, sailed out upon a track less sea "for conacienoe sake." It came back, a mighty argosy, ready to take up the great world struggle alongside of the allies also 'for conscience sake.": In both cases the going and the coming ' there was the same high motive, the love or liberty, justlo. democracy. -mere are thoughts so beautiful that they cannot die. Solon, before the Athenian senate on his defense, lifted up a hand fined with the sou. "This black earth .be my witness," he tried, letting it niter slowly through his fin gers to the ground, "that I have la bored to free the soli ot Greece to her sons." Every Grek and half the world knows these immortal words. So the old Bishop of Marlborough, when he welcomed the coming of the fleet "of the mightiest republic the world has ever seen" as "The Return of the Mayflower," expressed a thought at once so lofty and so noble that it de serve to be Imperishable. It should serve as an inspiration to all who would follow the highest ideals, for it is by devotion to the true ideal that the world must make progress. The Wont Offender Th mca who Won't impact r7 hAlrt, - Ota. how we do dftqito 'ami Him matt ot All who won't rpet " Hi ows trAjr blr bnt dm 'am. -PhUa4e)phlA Brtnins Lads - merly had no opportunity to turn to financial account this product of the rich soil Of the Willamette valley. The almost unparalleled dry summer a four-cent fare and-why a contract was. not a contract when the com-r panr Wanted a; six-cent fare. V company Insist that it was a binding ihat contract to,' beat' the 'fottrHI?' to be atl to Invent some equivalent. coffins with booze and shipping them over the deadline. If a corpse were also present it would hardly matter fare. But when the company wanted JJx-cent fare they saw the company , t0 80ma ; of thelr cust0mers. insist mat ine rive-cent xare contract Is not a contract, that it is not bind ing, that It i only a ''scrap of T "The time is not far distant when the masses will overthrow capital ism and establish a socialist Koriptv a What is more, these people saw which alone Is capable of giving a 3helr.publle authorities agree with jaiting and Just peace," is, in effect, one eompany in tne lour-cent rare the reply of the Russian soviet to xase that the five-cent fare contract president Wilson's cable to the Mos ?wa a contract and that it was : C(W oongress. We have here expla tinding; and saw the. public author!- naUon of why poor old Russia is ties aaln agree with the company in , prostrate, the fruits of her revolu the ait-cent fare case when the oom-; tion vanishins; and the kaiser m fair Jany insisted that the five-cent fare ' way tq set his princelings on sundry Contract I not a contract and that jt 1 not binding. These thousand and ten of Thousand of people all over Port- tana anow mat mey are Deing num- lugged. They know that . contract Ind laws and legislation have been Juggled In order to get rid of a iive-cent Tare eontraoL . You cannot . blame them for standing on their feet by the hundred and howling down a . paid agent of the street car company at their meeting. Ymi rnnnnt hlame thrones to rule over a pluoked peo pie, out of their heads iayhelr frenzy. The Hun propaganda and intrigue, secret, poisonous and penetrating, did Its deadly work. , BOLSHEVISM T HE Norwegian fishermen have given a new demonstration that the sea is the great highway along which ideas travel. .At Tremsoe, far up toward the frozen ihem.for ejecting from their meeting , north, the deep sea fishermen .have 3t man who tried to interrupt the proceedings. 3 The six-cent fare is a monumental caught the infection of Bolshevism and oalled a. monster mass meeting to publish their new convictions. The blunder. It has made the comoany ! Norwegian government deems the Jens of thousands of opponents that agnation or enough Importance to $ did not have before. It is swiftly 'inaking political junk and" political tadavers Of sundry gentlemen In pub- Jlc authority. It I in fair way to. t..1t A IV . . -, . i I i ' Mon. A grand smashup of a lot of send a warship to Tremsoe to keep order. Just at present the German govern ment looks complacently upon the spread of Bolshevism everywhere outside of Germany. The fate of hlng that ought not to be smashed Russia has taught the kaiser that fceems In fair way to happen in Port- !and If the six-cent fare imposition s not abandoned. Tou. take my house when you do take the prop that doth' sustain mv iousej you take my life, when you do take the means whereby I live.. ' ; LESSON FOR BOOTLEGGERS triumphant Bolshevism mean the breaking down of the national morale. So the more of it the better outside the sacred boundaries of the Father land. But within those borders, bo uoisnevism, tnank you. Wherever we hear of the Trotsky gospel taking new root we may feel sure that the kaiser's propagandists have been busy and successful , A radical can be as loyal to his-country as anybody else. Nine but of ten J of them are loyaL But then comes kNE" Of I the Fatherland's sorest needs is alcohol for technical use. To manufacture it requires the jhkf no food to. spare. So she exer-Jtbe tenth man with his disorganizing rise . her, ingenuity' to: get it from and paralyzing Bolshevism and spoils prance . by way of Switzerland. , j everything. Bolshevism e is nothifag 2 The tricks she'praotlee might be' hut another , word for "submission fjisef ully ; tudied v by ; Oregon boot- to the warlords. f eggers. One Of the most ingenious js to enclose abig circular tube of slcohol. in a funeral wreath. These -..imAtha rA''Mmnnal nf chMt firkn A paid agent of the street car com pany is chairman of the most import ant party organization in Portland. flowers. Placed on a grave they will At the behest of the street car om--Tist a great deal longer ; than nature'- j Pnyf the legislature eut . out of the - iclets and roses, while after? a dav pubUe service bill a provision which r two in ithe ralntheT;ook; Just? as lm'p!iedly eonfirmed; the"exlsUng retty,- So 'i the sheet: iron; funeral eontract'; for "a fare of;.lSve;?et)ts vreaths : are popular among econom- i and no more" In " Portland." - When foreigner and". the Germans would ke to Import them from France by .. ay of Switzerland.--w , . , The metal blossoms -are .wrapped the company, demanded a six-eeut fare, t the Portland city government made1 but a feeble resistance at -the public service hearings." We are be A BIG CHOIR telligence to make inything better. In the same way Burke's political evolution worships deified existing institutions The blessed; evolution ry; process had ' produced them. Henfe human hands must not touch HE 15,000 young soldiers who are them with the impious design Of to ; tune up their harmonious making them better. The sum total voices in the Montana buHding of all these divine institution com et Camp Lewis before long will nosed the divine state, to which be make a magnificent choir. Singing honor and glory forever and ever, with the heart and understanding. Perfect or imperfect as it might be, as they certainly wilL they should we must never bring our brains to make the beams of heaven bend," the task of improving it lest we to borrow the language of Lorenzo infringe upon the sacro-sanet "laws Dow, the great evangelist of a by-iof nature." Such was Burke's doo goneday. , trine. Good soldiers usually like to sing. The Burke and Adam Smith , school The Yankee boys in Franoe'sing gaily 0f nature-worshippera omitted to take on their hikes through the peasant account of the obvious truth that villages. ' The pbilus sing as they evolution is not guided by consldera- make their mad rushes over ,the top tions of human welfare. It goes its to bayonet the Boches. But it is : way like Milton's .."blind Fury with said, that the poilu songs Would not ! the abheftred shears" and slits with- do passca ior puoupauon oy any out thought of consequences, moral censor. Many indulgences are permitted to men going to their death. Years ago when it first was proposed to introduce nature studies into the schools the old-fashioned fule-of-three and rule-of-thumb people howled "Fad." They set the clock of progress and sense back, but the souled ones of 1917 cut the berry, crop much below fin.,,y the'fight over the soulless and the children were allowed to learn average," Charles w. Jones, president, """o Avmeioinj avuui irees inu ituwcrs ana weeas ana piras ana pees ana treasurer and manager, explains. "This other things which nature thinks are worth producing and looking after, accounted for our email output, it is "Nature has not been in sufficient standing among the unnatural ones of not likely we shall have another such the ordinary school board to allow her the first place in the classroom which year soon, and likely that we shall al- ch trv, fin eh h tU. whirs if if vh Vi.n t,.- i- k. fiS-bi? ofVn tt," dr ' PHW.schf01. teaching, would have caused, through hereditary tend- The drouth of last season also short- ,"7'" JS" OI l0aay t0 m"e nme raen iOT the next Seison ened the berry crop all along the coast. n "7, ,y, , t . '. , . and this created a shortage of the juice. K to ,Jlte to repine over the thing. The best must be made of it and Most of that on the Eastern market is of the garden. Proper instruction takes the drudgery out of gardening and now consumed, and At this time we are puts the pupil in sympathetic touch with the soil and the growths there having strong demand for all we have from. Dig the garden well, plant it well, tend it well and love it well, and -tui v?0 orde!f?f nJ the Huns WiI1 see neither us nor our allies going hungry. The soil has a soul, now booked for shipment to Park ft Til- ; ford, New York, one of which has start ed. And we have several other liberal orders, and from substantial buyers who realise the demand sure to exist for our delightful beverages, which satufv hut do not intoxicate. "We are having fine Somewhere in France I was walking distribution . for our fascinating and one afternoon in the public square. As healthful pure bottled goods, and the I stopped to admire a wonderfully fine more they are known the more con- monument on the sea wall someone put sumed, until It appears now that they a hand on my shoulder and said, "Hello are to be an Important factor in e- there, Portland." It was Clinton Busan Curing the ratification by the states or of Portland, who, when he wore short the constitutional', amendment making trousers, used to be one of my carrier the nation entirely prohibition." . boys on the East Oregonlan, at Pendle- ... T, T L. .. W . . 1. . O i .... Wa. M,h.r. ... -Till . V- 1 '"" orsvvoi... a more plentiful supply of the raw ma- ferial from which to brew delightful 'Zl-Z' .ai"ourt- hundreds of brilliant uniforms and the ",. v . i - -T. " V" in". well dressed women. "But those that JOURNAL MAN ABROAD By Fred Lockley Officer tot Jones Bros. Co. are s .. . . - .. r.rt.. -wr t-. kM. a t- ' I peruana ior tne wnow oi runs, ana a urer; S. P. Jones, vice president; D. C Jones, secretary. Tomorrow Article No. 5S of this series : The Harris Ice Machine Works. I ing people over here. If the Queen Of Sheba strolled Up and extended her Xarfr-n MAntln. hand and said, iut it tnere, para, jjo JrcrSOna.1 iVieilllOn lyou remember the time you treated me to ice cream and lady finger When they nati.no rnniM.ln. n I were laying the corner stone oi tne Martin Welch, well known railroad T"ld'T-S 2SJf contractor of San Francisco is an ar rival at the Benson on his return from San Francisco. . . D. A. R. Delegate at Benson Mrs. C J. Crandle and Mrs. J. M. Worden of The-Dalles are arrivals at ue senson to mien a ua nitn annual I . rt convention of the Daughters of the "Z"'" ,7 There is no mind in evolution and therefore no intelligence. If we de- slr nlellis;ennA to function in the When Peter the Hermit preached ,.nnriiiit e.t human affairs w mmst the first crusade hi audience mayi1lt it thr ni,rAive have numbered half a mllUon men.) The apparent failure of idea to And -when he was done preaching maka toe Tenoh revolution go mey au toon up me cnanu is is e-aii, ,),ni.u . a .kha the will of God," shouting it over Ideas (oreT particularly since the and ever in a massif chorus and a Prenoh revolutlon did go. straight, hundred languages No wohder their viewed btt perspective of an entire ucatui vwa urc ai, tutj . miKiiiy liar- , .t uivuj. me uujs s. irfiuip Lewis aro ao -..vaw uuing uie wiu oi uou li ae.. tne cru saders. Their songs -will feed the ; fires of, liberty In their hearts. Out " of : the seeming chaos where the guillotine, the tumbriL the down fall of religion and many other hide- - it i. a 1 1 j ...tk itx lu. "The true secret nf immm ia thrift. WUB l"luS wcur. wuuiy wuiriiuB, wic a.v? .-,aii. a a , 1:1 anrl nrlnHnallv ao Armlit a cln ' meweum ceuiury uuru. said Sir Thomas I.inton. Yon hnvA ucuiuwau iiiiu i wu war wages now, but you do not Science won its final victory over know what you will have after the Pe"" Woman ceased to be a war. , Thouirh there . win h. Tar meek-minded slave and rose Into production, the war Influence . will v- voir be nne nd ware level- what ; i going to be born when a rntiPh iaWa ttn 4,im. mA Ain nation travails In revoJutlon. then it will be to save now while i Adam, S?; nature-worshiping mi uAai r -AA, economics is iaaing iasi. mis mon- ment nffer tn liein vrt,t a. trous "economio man" has turned with its thrift stamps.-it offers to.out to be, ?s false4 flnce as he pay you. a money reward for - saving. : -,cru,,'vr. . ,V . L DEifOCRATIG BRAINS' W ment we omit the human and ethicffl element from our economic thinking B OWE to Burke's Influence we go astray. You can not separate more than to any . other factor the soul of the laboring man from the belief .common among Eng- his labor nor . can you peel off the lish sneaking teotle-that it is little child's human status like the fatal to apply human intelligence to shell of : a walnut when you im social .problems. Such problems must 'prison his body in your, mills. be allowed to . solve themselves by 1 r But ' fasf a Adam Smith's pure- siow ana genue evolutional - pro-; ' ly " mechanical economics, is ! fading, cesses. It is disastrous to mix mini Burke's mechanical politics is fading with politics. Just as it is disastrous faster. to mix religion or charity with business. . v . Progress Is a .very desirable thing, j Germany gained her immense mili tary advantage' over the rest of the world . by ? applying , her intelligence but we should not try to accelerate early ' to political problems . While it by using . our brains. It must b England and the other democratic permitted to come of itself . like th ; countries were muddling - along , in nowers in spring. Lioerty, and wrei-i their hiind nature-worsnip,1 making a fare come not by ; observation-, or by i god of evolution " and laissez faire taking- thought, but of their .own t Germany was using her bralrt fo solve sweet will they "broaden down from -, her political as well as her economic precedent ' to- precedent," as- Tenny son, ; the prince of -Bourbon poets. put, it ' ' r 'Burke made a political god of evo- problems. " The ' war'- has compelled them to mend - their ways. The democratic countries are learning in woe that "Ye. I suppose this is mighty fine," he said, as his eye swept the wonderful statuary and took in the hundreds and and of every charm and dellg-ht. like it can have it. I wouldn't trade would a -heap rather be at the corner of Sixth and Morrison than here In this seaport, beautiful as It is." moonllKht walk we took beside the Nile a little later that evening V I wouldn't bat an eye, and 1 would tell the lady that I remembered it as If It were yes terday. Time and again I have gone to some tiny dot on the map by auto and run across some one that would address American Revolution, which is now in session. Among the arrivals from Vancouver barracks' at the Multnomah are: H. A. from The Journal and haiuUt over and gay, "You don't remember me, but we met at the Roundup," or at wherever It hannened to be. Yesterday I ran across a man who did this very thins Harned, TL- A Doll, Lieutenant H. M. I produced a clipping from The Journal Andrew, Lieutenant Phil O. Broton. D. that I had written a long- ume ago. maiony oi tne uzta squaoron a. b. o. t. I . . ..i ..-. , W. S..Cram. a prominent lumberman f3"1 w""" " aV.'mTT h" the from Raymond. Wash., is among the W "1 wd fiends tnl S arrivals at the Benson. same old story- I found frlendB arid a , Mrs. Fred U Plerson is registered at ealntn hever fjf n . - . . . . Jr . - X3mt nt th trnooa there were irom laano tne Kmrnoman irom uong oeacn. uau - - " ,ir-.-.vft . wall Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bergenhelraer , -.. " . i.". i and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Oelli of Man- " 1. V; 7g V major d-N. D.. are registered at the Port-wearing th jg, ct Jjj D. M. Botsford of the Botsford-Tyler I oc'J- " Advertlsin agency, left last night for ago xou lZLm?.Z San Francisco. Pasadena, Img Beach you. ? . " . ZL ,T, t and Los Angeles on a recreation tour. A ot OI"', "J? . V. 5 Mt. Botsford was accompanied by Mrs. -Jean repeat the conversation we had. I Botsford. I see you arts n """v ""A"""., Mrs. R. B. Brinson. accompanied by met you they canea rwruu. her. daughter. Miss Edythe Brinson. of Weyrauch. Tou wer e prw Went ot the Albany, are arrivals at the renins. i uoramcre... uUU " v,! m.wit The Misses Agnes JHcraaaen ana i you we u " J1V Bertha,. Shields are arrival at the I ranch, xou tooa m ' V: V- Benson' from Corvalli. your ranch and . s now earn ""f W. J. Magul, aooompanled by Mrs. means of artesian water. 1"' MagUl. is registered at the Cornelius ing pieplant between the rows of young ..V.. tMM " We had a pleasant chat about Dr. and Mrs. W. B. McMakie of Walla Walls, and whue "-Z Camas. Wash., are arrivals at the ing Prof. Jones of Walla Waa Joined Seward. the circle. Presently J m Palmer em- Mrs. F. A. Bryant la registered at pioymem. secretary oi ""LJ'" 7 " the Benson fronV Colfax. Wash. M. C A-, and .SS5 The-Misses Marjorle and Lucy Han- in and we went Into the big J" son are arrival at the Seward from hall. Every J."; Corvallis. ' ' and the back of the room was full of a . t. . a etNArAA.'stfirn a at the Oregon. .. . . . . I the toys irom momu w. - - - W. N. Campbell is at the Peruana part oi una nuiw 7 TI-t from Medferd: several selections and then the meet John. H. Worms from WaHaCe la an tag was turned over to me. arrival at the Portland. r it seems a huge joke to think of my- 3eorge , Moore of Detroit Is regis- traveling over France making half- tered at the Seward. hour talks to the men. Talking U one Ruth L. 31is of Eugene Is an ar- tnm-. that C. 8. Jackson says I can not rival at the Multnomah. Here is the 'explanation. It is slm- a R. JKitt is registered at the' Port- j when you think of it. I met a young land from Boise. - boy from Denver not long ao and he John Plocher f Dayton, Ohio, is an came up-and shook bands and said, arrival at -the-Multnomah. ; "i heard you talk out at our camp not EL C Shumate 1 registered arthe ,nrAt I hooe-you can come out Oregon from Eugene. aeatn: the boys liked it fine. You see, Roy MitcheU of Red Bluff is at the minute you started to speak we Cornelius. ' ' -7' , could teU you were not a preacher. You O. V. Rotrien of Salem and the Misses )ugt kind of common, as if you Violet E. Rotsien and Susie J. Bonner ' -ittlng down talking to us. You are registered at the Perkins from Mar- weVe easy to listen to. We liked you quam. Wash. - . , tot a change from public speakers and ... Fred Jones of Albany is an arrival at tli..-. You was lust the same as If tne reTwns. . . thernn, toTtelnd: the arrival, at the Carlton from Boise, Mr. and Mrs. M. Mccjuire are regis- I wane . t th. tered at the Norton la from - American H. A. Latta of Medford is at the -w m 'm I Vt7MariTCS-trin. 1-H. Buckley of Worcegter. Mrs. A. W.' Red 1. regirtered at the Massv Carlton. a . -r Johnson, are registered at the Washlnr- Mrs. K. W. WlUIams of Cbehall te one of us got Hp and talked." So my very weakness ia proving of use. I suppose if any pfeacher heard me speak he would throw up his hands in despair. For example, last night I started my talk by saying, "You fellows are not slackers, or you wouldn't be here. You have courage and the spirit of adven ture or you wouldn't be here. You like a man that has the courage of his con vlctlons and Is a good fighter, and I am going to read you Paul's defense before Agrlppa. When it came to grit, he was an there." I read Paul's noble defense as re corded ln-the twenty-sixth chapter of . . T . . . . .. ' acu. noi a loot snuiiiea ; not a ienow budged. I am a believer In a man tak ing his religion into Bis every day life and making the best of things, being cheerful and not a grouch, so I took for my text the saying that Christ re peats time .after time: "Be of good cheer." I talked for half an hour on the two battles that must be fought out in France, th battle to defeat Germany, and the battle to go back home clean and retaining self-respect. Here, boiled down into a few lines, is the gist of my talk: - j - O CAptAin of ar Soul, 1a1 on: . 1 follow TIma, eomA drk or dswa. Only ToocbMtfe three things I ctata: Where terror stalk help in be brave! Where rifhtAoa one ems acAree endure The eirea cell, help me be pure! Where towa trow dim. end men dare do WhAt one taey Aeoned, help me be tract X never talked to a more appreciative audience. They listened, and they got what I said. They, had billed me In three-inch letters: "Fred Lockley of The Oregon Journal, the Westerner with a Punch." The only way I could make gdod and qualify as the man with the punch, was to tell them how in Pen dleton I had. run afoul of a husky fel low who not only had a punch buWused K and closed my eye with the -first jolt, and how next day as my wife and I went to church, people kept pointing me out as the fellow who had been in the scrap, until, thinking it was em barrassing for my wife, a said. "We will not go to church. This black eye of mine is too conspicuous." She said. "Go right along. You only have one black eye ; you blacked - both eye for the other fellow. It's all right" I I told the story, and after the meeting fa man came up and said, "I remember your fight with Sam. My name is Hugh Taylor. I am from Pendleton. My father's name is Moses Taylor. We used to have a farm near Athena. You have stopped there lots of times when you have been driving through the coun try." A few nights ago I met another Pen dlcton man at a meeting where I talked. He is in the engineers. He told me how the day after they landed In Eng land they had a tug of war with i team from the Royal engineers. For a while they held the Englishmen, but finally, though the Americans, man for man, were , just as strong, the men of the Royal engineers had better team work ; so they pulled the American team across the line. A very pleasant little old lady came up to the losing team and shaking hands with, each- of the men said, "You made a good try. so I am going to pin silver medal on each of you." Which she troceeaed to do. There was a lot of cheering and a good many people taking snapshots of ber pinning on the medals, so one of the American team said to an Englishman standing nearhy, "Who was that pleasant little old lady that shook hands with us and gave us the medals T' The Englishman gave, him a shocked look and saM, "That, sir, was the Queerrof England.1 When the Pendleton man was telling me about it he said, "I guess that's going some, for a man from the bunch grass country to shake hands with the Queen of England the day after, he gets to England. We folks from Pendleton are some speedy, all right. - . Not What 11 Auto Be Mrs. Limousine What do you think of the Marmon system T Mrs. Ford My goodness I I think hav ing two wives is perfectly scandalous. The Mother on the Sidewalk The mother' on the eidewtlk, aa the troop Are m rerun tr. . 1 the mother at Old Glory thAt fa WArinf la tk a?. Ifca Kata foocht to keep It tplendld; men sat fonjiit to seep It briaht; But that rug waa born of woman And htr mat- ferine day And nicht. Tla her aarriiee haa ude it, AOd once more out tit to pray For the bTAv And loyal mother ot lb boy that toe Away. There are dari of arW befor her) there Arc hour thAt che will -weep: ; There ere nifhta ot adaJouc waiting wbes ber (tar wUl banian deep; She haA beard be country ealllnA, And ha rises m to the tect; Sac baa plAoed open the altar of th nation's need ber beet. And so man thall t far cuffer is the turmoil at the tray , The cneuiah of the mother of the boy wbe toe A WAT. Ton may beast men' deeds of (lory: yea Auy teU their countce great ; . Bat to die I easier m trice than Alone to ctt ind wait And I hail the loyal mother, with the tear-stAincd face And crave, Who has fttea thf flat A soldier; ah It brsrebt of the bntl. And thAt banner we ere proud of, with its ted and bine And white, . I a last in A tribute holy to All mother' lore of nsirt.! Irs. L. H. Buckley of Worcester, Mrs. A. W. regimereu ssv r'l among the arrtvals ... at the Norton! trrBo?, -p ful,. , ; -v.A.. . , Lieutenant E. J. McGeasn or rnii- l.Q. Johnson. accCAnWied by Mrs. delphia 1. rejlaf eredajtU Whlnon. ton from Dnluth. Minn. W. W. Cofeldt is an arrival at the I Carlton from Seattle. ' - A. W. Nietman 1 a Seattle visitor at ! the Nortonla. . Dr. and Mrs. A. UL-Abrafns are among mr arrival at the NOTtOTUa. Jessie M. Cook U at the Washington from' Caldwell. : Idaho. ; ; W. "L. Cooper is registed. at, the Washington from Eugene. . - - f'., L, Mrs. H. S. Rand Jr. and Mrs. .Eseh- 889 East Idadixm Street. Ices BoblssoB, Uncle Jeff Snow Ssyst One time, when Hayes was president. down on Turkey creek In Arkansaw, a 9 little circus got caught In the mud and storm an' rented Dad's barn. Th ele phant liked his new home tremen jus, an when them circus fellers undArtuck to git - some w her es else that critter: most took the barn with him. . Ha stampeded all our stock and busted up more circus and farm machinery than would fill two or three freight cars. The railroad ele phants tuck to Uncle Sam s barn In a mighty bad storm, but when them. Wall street -'gamblers undertakes to do any more travelln' with 'em there's a-goln to bd a whole lot of politicians stampede and more political machinery busted up than would run a ordinary gojf'ment a thousand year. THROUGH THcWlNDOW The top o" tne mornm to you. -i , Ma m Erin go bragh and three cheer for the red, white and blue. ; . . it. n t '.- Even nature breathe th spirit of ;1 the day. where bursting buds herald : -the AMsraltaftlnar of new life that will anon cloths the woods, and the ttmXA and rhA muitnvi. aKd t HA hilla ' and the dales, with vestment of " verdure green. And the green grass grows all around, ail around; and the green' grass grows all around. : -r Inspiration is an right, as far as - ii ewn. uu. ti. uimni u tcri ir J without income. And the income doesn't get very far these days, euner. - - . ia vj . But why worry? Old Omar Khay- yam knew: , J : When you and I behind. the veil are past. Oh. but the long, long whs the) world shall last, lATHIt, rt Aur Mtnine mnA Armwtt9m heeds : As the sea's self should heed a- peb- ble cast. tr a - A A, B.VU las, iv W AAA SwIIIVOW uuil' ii.t - s as . ftl rj Oh, yes we almost forgot. Don't ', ' ... . . . . . I . Ml I , ' iau to ouy innii outnips xirst. uunf in the morning. " . Ml i We expect to have some idle time i on our hands When they set the ? - clocks ahead one hour. Hooray ! ftl M : rf at sat - , m Good day. . .. y ... ..f; 3 -mmm . aIEs-- ' 11 baCh are arrivals from North Yakima at the Benson. . Mrs. 3. V. Hafman of Carson, Wash., is registered at tne canton. C U Tower of Salem 1 at the Carl ton. - L. E. Carter of Salem is an arrival at the Washington. . ; : . i . wtmmmmmtm mmmmmmt . Amount to a Sane Thing ' From the Ixtensnlle Conrler-JonraAl ' - "Do you ever talk to yourself? ' "Not IntenUonally. But- frequently I suspect that my husband isn't listening. Dfv Rupert Blue i (rhmends B6ok' . 'How to Live" Receives Com- mendation of Surgeon General '? ; oi United State. : ; Ne beelth book eer embtiehed eeste- ; 7 ee(ed as ausek fseotable comment from the : AUemtarieA of the medlcsl i profeaatoa as i "Mow-to Use. . .. ; yth Utest to o(s the rsnkc of ths spots- on for thw fAAAoas hcAltb book I Dr. Knpert Blae, eorseoej seBenU ,ef the Catted ' StAtee pnblie health erriee, WAahlnatoa. s iX, era cay la euts " 'Umm t Uee is ' a traa etory ef penonei hyAaeae, told tm pialn. AtmishtierwAfd mnner ." : , Thai eptendid book tAA been Airthorteed i by And prepAred la collaboration with the Ayalrne rsfeienee board of the Life xten- : sfam istctltate b 1BV1XU rUHKU, balr t saaji, 9rofo of political eeoewaift lew ' : AHuTcrsitjr, aad XCUkXat (.XaIAM FlSa. i M. D. ., . - -. - . . The JoarnAl berteve the bone; should be ' l ia ererr hone The recnUr ceUlas price b) I , 1.- Through the cooperatlest pt The -: Joejrnal H can be obtained for attc st the J. K- UUI Co., Ueier As rraak Co., fnde, WortisAa suae , or tmvnm office. . - .. .'. .