8 THE OHI3GOIJ . SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY" TIOIINING. JANUARY Z2. 1313. AN DEPENDENT NEWSPAiPER " , C 8. JACKSON..-. ....-v. ...... .--ibliber Published erery day, afternoon and mornlnr (ex eapt Sunday afternoon! , -at Tba Journal BUd- . inc. Broadway and XimhiU.itiMt, Portland. Oregon. - .. - Entered at tha Postoffice at Portland, reton. foe jtrannmiadoa throusb the mails a second class muur. ' TELEPHONES Main T17I! Hrau. A-0S1. All dnsertmsnts reachtd br thee tramber. Tall tba operator what department you want. "FOREKJN ADVBBTlStNO BEPBESENTATTVE Benjamin at Kastnor Co.. Brunswick Baildinc. -aa rata arcnae, wow im; auw Mauen BaUdinc, CbJcaco. 1 Snbsti Hitloo terms by mail ia Orea-on and Wass- . lottos: UAILI CMOTIKWO OK AFTEKNOOS) One m..,,.. 18.00 Ona Month. .... t .50 . STJNDAT 1. .Ona ycar,.....t2.S0 I Ova month $I.25 DAtLT MO R. VINO OR AFTERNOON) AND ATTN DAT 4 Ona "ear.' . '.' . . IT.50 1 One month .... .J3.68 America htm fnrnisbedt to tha world the character of Washington, And . if our American institution had dona 'nothing else, that stone would entitle tliem to the re spect of mankind. Daniel Webstar. TO AMERICANIZE AMERICA A bill at baicm would reestab lish Washington's birthday as a holiday in the public schools of "Tha United States ?s acknowledged to be possessed of absolute freedom and independence, said Washington. "If their citizens should not be com pletely free and happy," he added, "the fault will be entirely their own." Such was his ideal freedom and happiness for the people he had struggled so hard and sacrificed so much to make free. Freedom to live out . their own lives in their own way, liberty to; play a part in the world's work unhampered by the tyrannies 'and oppressions that had always beset mankind, the right to be governed only by their own con sent and full freedom in the pursuit of happiness, was the thought that this 'great figure of the American revolution cherished for his country men, then and to come. . Under wooden crosses in France lies, a generation of Englishmen. More than a generation of French , men ' wrapped in the - tri-color, are : asleep In the valleys of France. The heroic dead of America, Italy and the others lie amid the wild flowers, the vines and the hills where liberty has Just made her great stand for survival. These dead are mute . evidence of the grand assault which the ever living, never dying doctrine of force and divine right recently made on government of, for and by the peo ple. The awful stillness of their silence Is a tremendous warning of the peril to which freedom must al ways stand exposed. , Freedom is so' sweet that we thought it- unopposed. We dozed and dreamed in our fancied but false security. We even foolishly flatter ourselves, now, after these dead have made their sacrifice for the cause, -that liberty is forever safe. We continue to forget that the struggle of the few to prey upon .the many is as old as man himself and that the" conflict between force jand . freedom will go, on until the mountains fall. -The public schools are the nursery of Ideals, fair and false. America dry Is the fruit of a generation of idealism, in the American public schools. If we have been warned by the late . attempt of. autocracy to overrun the earth, then, as ' prudent people we should begin the Ameri canization of America. . The awful sacrifices we have just made should impel us to go into that nursery where , the man and woman of the future are moulded and fashioned, and ' there, in the public schools, hold up before the-children the ideals of -America as George Washington visioned them. """ . .Except that transcendent figure that walked In Galilee, there is no nobler model for the schools than our first president. Washington Is of everlasting fame. There never !was a more majestlo character. In patience, wisdom and patriotism he stands alone. Until then history furnished no counterpart to the scene when Wash ington, resigning his commission to congress, presented a carefully item ized aooount of his personal expenses during eight ""years of war- and re fused to accept compensation of any kind. for services that freed people and " established a continental : re public. ' ijf-- !- HIs labors , were without 'price, though his , service was priceless. He asked no title, no diadem, no pre ferment, no special . honor. All the reward he sought Was his own Inner consciousness that he had helped establish for his countrymen the principle that men are created equal and 'entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. On this rests Washington's Immortality. ' . ... The bill at Salem ought to passwV , The mm federal employment bu reau is provIngeits usefulness. : Thus through the intimate touch of the central authority at Washington with ants in every .state and .all large cities, the exact status is constantly known, and on January 12 the Wash ington office reported a shortage of labor throughout the South,' and a surplus in these 12 states : Califor nia, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indi ana', Iowa, Missouri. Montana, Ne braska, North Dakota,. Oregon and Utah. HOLD YOUR BOND DO YOU know the truth i about your Liberty bond? Have you noticed how many ': people are eager to buy your bond? Have you noticed, the ad vertlsements and ; heard of the per sons who go to the industrial plants bond huntng and seen, the offers that come by mail proposing to ex change oil stock or some other stock for Liberty bonds? . Have you thought what it means when so many are eager to buy your , bond, or to swap something for it or by some means to get It away from you? ..- It means that your bond is not a scrap of paper. It means that it is as good as gold, better, in .fact. than gold, because it is becoming more and more valuable every. day., There could be no stronger proof , to you that you should hold your bond and get for yourself the value that so many others are trying f o ' take away from you. Of the more than twenty million people who bought Liberty bonds, few ever saw a bond before. It is because of that ignorance of the true value of bonds by the many that the Liberty bond sharks are. trying so hard to get something for nothing. The sharks know that the bonds will soon be worth more in the mar ket. They want that .Increase and jan get it only by depriving you and. your kind, of it. They count on your ignorance of the true value of your bond, and are hot after yoy, expect ing that in your ignorance they will be able to cheat you. They want to suck profit out of the sacrifice you made when in your patriotism you were helping your country fight the war through to victory. Hold, your bond.. It is the best material possession you have. In the increased value and increased purchasing power it .will take on, it will return you a bigger profit than any other investment you have. If you are compelled, through financial pinch, to get money on your bond, inquire at Liberty loan headquarters, or consult your banker if you have one, pr go to some legitimate broker whom you know or whom some friend will tell you about. In any event, do not sacrifice the best thing of material value you ever had or ever will have to some Liberty bond shark. The senate bill to make Washing ton's birth&yy holiday in the pub lio schbolSjpf Oregon Is ' presented by the 'laughters " of the "American RevolUto pf. whSch there are 11 chapters in' the stat.. As an organ ization, they are trying-, to keep alive the beacon .fires of liberty t lighted on the New England hills in 1776. After what we - have just passed through, howcan any member of the legislature oppose their bill? PROBLEMS OVER THERE IN MANY a way "there --has been a most delicate situation for America in the negotiations at Paris. Here is a case: During the war, America, by great exertion, by con servation and by stimulated produc tion, has amassed surplus food andH other commodities. This surplus was still below the demands of the allies. ' The armistice' suddenly freed much shipping for voyages to distant ports like Australia, from which supplies were not to be had during the war on account of the shortage of ton nage. The sending of ships to those ports left America an over-supply of commodities, with her warehouses congested, terminals crowded 1 and docks piled up. . There was a further factor: The blockade- of central - ports which re mained effective after the armistice, prevented the Amerian surplus from going in quantities to neutral coun tries and newly liberated peoples. It was a situation very detrimental to America. For weeks American - representa tives have been earnestly arguing for modiication of the blockade, says David Lawrence In the New York Evening Post. He says : It is difficult to explain all the Influ ences Involved in this delicate situation President Wilson, Herbert Hoover and Colonel House have been much con cerned with the prospect. They knew that an excellent chance to absorb United States production would be offered if neutrals adjacent to Germany were permitted to receive food from America for the next two or three months. Sud den decrease in orders from the allies for American foodstuffs while no other outlet Is available, has been disquieting to American representatives. After weeks of delicate negotiation. President Wilson's view relative to the gradual lifting of the blockade has been accepted by the allies. 'Tha effect will be to permit Americaii surplus products to go Into neutral countries as well as to newly lib erated peoples, and at the same lims liberate American products for a freer flow over the Atlantic. The agreement to use 2,000,000 tons of German shipping for; carry ing food and other ': products from America; is the first fruit of this successful ; negotiation, r; Another ; will be more ships for bringing V largely increased number of .American sol diers home. ' " h," ' - There is a great deal which, by his rj-Snce at tba scene pf-nego- ' , - - V " tlation, President Wilson Is able to, do. that could not have been ac complished 'otherwise. i '.-J . - After all, a burglar is not to be criticized for throwing up his hands In the presence of a woman ' with a revolver? He knows" first that the gun mights go off, and second, she is liable to shoot, and third, that It is better to be a live captive than a dead burglar. Nor ' does , his : sur render in the least dim the fame of Mrs. Etta Farrow, whose apartment house burglars will hereafter be skit tish about entering. . . NEITHER HOT NOR COLD MERSON says of Montaigne that E he has been more read and better: liked by men of practical mind that any other author. Perhaps our New England philos opher would have hit nearer the fact if he had linked Montaigne and Horace together in this Judgment, for both of them are very dear to read ers who seek the middle way be tween : wrangling fanatics. Both the French essayist and the Roman poet were Laodiceans neither hot, nor cold. Horace lived in an age of reaction The Romans '' had tired themselves out with fighting one another, and had finally settled down to peaceful Indifference under the despotism of Augustus Caesar, "What's the- use?" was the watch word of the age. "For the last hundred years we have been busy killing one another and what has come of it? Nothing but more kill ing. Let us take a rest and get what we can out of life," This feeling is the backbone of Horace's poetry. The "Gospel Hymn' Interprets him pretty well In the line, "Let us gather up the sunbeams lying-all along our path. He himself condensed his phil osophy in the magio formula "Carpe Diem," which Emerson translates. "Seize the day and make the most of it for it will never come back again.' After every period of fanatic fights ing comes an Augustan Age of re action when everybody forgets what the battle 'was about, and thinks only of sucking the honey as he plucks the flowers of ilfe." It was easy for Horace to be a Laodicean neither hot nor cold, because that was the spirit of his time. It must have been hard for Montaigne, be cause he lived, not at the end of a period of contention, but at the beginning of the fiercest the world has ever seen. The year of his birth, 1533, came only a little while after Luther posted Bis Theses on the church door at Wittenberg and opened the tragedy of the reformation. His adult life coincided with the wars of. the Huguenots, which divided and ruined France for a whole half cen tury. But Montaigne contrived by somewonderful magio to be friends with' both sides. : The Guises and Catherine de Medici, the Catholio leaders, all liked him. When he was thrown into the Bas- tile on one of his rare visits to Paris they intervened and saved his life. Henry IV, the Protestant hero, liked him just as well, and went out of his way to visit Montaigne tw'ce at his little chateau not far from Bordeaux. The Bordelaise also liked him and showed it by electing him mayor of their city for two terms King Henry's friendliness to Mon taigne is not astonishing. He was Laodicean himself neither hot nor cold. And Catherine de Medici was a politician of the Machiavellian type, who had too much sense to be a fanatic at heart. She put - on a cloak of fanaticism in order to make tools of those who.- were in earnest, like our own profiteering patriots. -The tricks of that trade are very old. Neither side saw any danger in Montaigne. He was not a "menace" because he kept his ideas to himself. or only talked-, them ,to people of intelligence, who let them go no farther; It is only " the- mob and the mobocrats wb. hate the Laodi cean. So long as he; keeps within the rather . narrow,, pale of intelli gent people he is fairly safe. When Montaigne was 48 years old he left his -countrymen to fight among themselves over religion as much as they ""pleased and retired to his chateau, where he built him self a tower for. a sudy and spent the mt .o.,'lIls--'yeara,writJtpg essays. Thoseessays.!' like- Horace's ' poetry and the "Meditations of the .Emperor Marcus Aurelius." .are textbooks of the Laodicean philosophy, which can be summed up in a few simple pre cepts. -Here is an instance: Men are hopeless fools. They do not know, how to be happy and they never will learn how. No sooner do they make a little progress toward common sense and comfort, than they 'go- crazy and destroy It It is useless to try to teach them anything;. ' It is useless to try to do anything: for them. The only course for a rational man;la to keep out of the. blood-and filth fa well as he can, seize the day ' as it roea by; and amuse, himself with his pen or some other hobby. , - The. Laodicean is always a man or v woman,-of .moderate opinions. Half docs not lafflrni great deaL Heisstowo denytT He keeps; an open -mind, . always ready ' to wel come" truth and give due weight to evidence-; as-" it may turn up. The world's - greatest ' statesmen have been of the ' Laodicean type. The Emperor . Augustus himself was one, which explains why he was1 so fond V The chieT work of Augustus during his. longr reign was "to reconcile the old Roman factions,! the reactionaries whom Brutus had led and the Lib erals, who . bad -followed" Julius Caesar. Under his beneficent tyranny J they- forgot t&eir, points ;of. differ-1 ence and t thoroughly enjoyed them selves as' " slaves, together. Queen Elizabeth of England was - another Laodicean. She 'never was more of a fanatic -than the fanatics .who tore at ' each other's eyes around - her obliged .her to be. It was her in difference ' to ; their - quarrels :thtt enabled her to see her course clearly and steer the ship of state safely into harbor.- Wr". The 'long line, of English states men have been notable for their cool indifference to superstition of all sorts. Elizabeth had her Cecil, whose brain stuclc Implacably to' the main point of the game, never missing a trick, because of preference ; ,or prejudice, v The statesmen of 1688, who framed the British constitution upon the theories of John Locke, were Laodi ceans, cool, keen unexcited, thor oughly informed. They builded well, for the constitution they made, or remade, has .lasted to this day, . ever growing stronger. No supreme court has dared to wreck it by interpreta tion. Our revolutionary fathers were also of the Laodicean type, students of the French pre-revolutionary authors and indifferent to supersti tion. . Benjamin Franklin, with his ex quisite love of literature and science and . his eye keen for the "main chance, was the perfect type which they; all resembled. Washington's common r sense was as amazing as his integrity. He was devoted to the cause of the colonies, not for abstract reasons, but because he saw the practical advantages of in dependence. Had h not cooJIyad judged those advantages worth fight ing for he would have kept out of the trouble if he could. Lincoln was another Laodicean, who never permitted fanaticism to blur his mind. Surrounded with blazing zealots he remembered con stantly the wise principles of mod eration. Always ready to conciii ate,, always merciful, always with his faee to the future, still, like Washington, Cecil and Augustus, he held to his purpose inflexibly because he understood its advantages. A wise Frenchman said of the Bon Dieun that "He forgives all because he understands all." Lincoln was like the Bon Dieu in that particular and some others. The race of the Laodi ceans is ancient. Socrates is the first of them whom history re members, but there must have been many nefore him. The world has been a slaughter house age after age in spite of them. What would it have been without them? War or rumors of war in Portugal, in Russia, in Germany, In Poland and otherwhere give us glimpse of the need of a . league of nations Happily, the Paris conference .yes terday began discussions of the plan. History 1jl waiting1, to wrfte the great story of mankind set free from the turmoil,; agon and sacrifice of re current-wars. Until.- recently we of America have lived in little appre hension of conflict. But over there peoples and governments have been under constant dread and amid con stant sacrifices to be prepared. Yet America' seems to have supplied the mind and the man for pacifying and harmonizing the nations through an organized league. HUMAN WASTE OME years ago C. B. Smith, was W sentenced to the penitentiary ll for passing a worthless check at Eugene. He has been re siding, there ever since, except for an interval when he was out on a parole which he violated so that he had to be locked up again. v - 1 It is-now announced thai Smith has invented an improvement for auto-trucks which may be valuable. Even in prison, where the environ ment is not stimulative to the mental faculties, his brain 'has been at work. perhaps to the profit of the-world. The question forces itself upon one what kind of a man Smith would have been had his career been started differently. Suppose a com petent vocational leader had studied him as a child and noted his in ventive gift. Suppose there had been schools accessible where a child with the inventor's mentality could have been put in training to develop his talent. And', suppose that, after Smith had been-thus trained, he. had been provided with an opportunity to demonstrate what he was capable of. .Would' the - world have been the gainer or loser? Smith's procliv ity for passing worthless checks showed perverted ingenuity, perhaps, rather than hopeless depravity. His mind hungered for tasks .upon which it might exercise its Innate powers and not finding anylegltlmate ones it turned to the Illegitimate. It is not .agreeable ; to contemplate the wealth of undeveloped and un used, human capacity which . is per mitted to gbt to waste or to' run in 'harmf ul- channels. , . The , world Is prodigal . of " Its. human T as it Is of its inanhnate : resources; jyhtlt . we permit "nuaterpowers-io"?lie nse- less and pay. exorbitant prices for fuel, and light we can hardly be ex pected to care much for the latent capacities; in the brain of a school boy. : . , J' . It is characteristic of the savage to feast when he' has plenty and starve : when be has nothing, with no thought of providng for the future. Civilized man has risen past that kind of Improvidence, but when it comes to husbanding, his human and inanimate .resources for- his own benefit man. stands , today about where his ancestors stood a million years ago. - Letters From the People j (Coflunonleatioaa sent to The Journal far pab Scatioa in Uiia department ahoold be written on only ana aide of the paper, afceuld not exceed 100 words in lenath and must ba eicned br tba writer, waoee wnU add rate is foil must aoeompaay the eonvipution. . . The Two-thirds Vote Question Portland. Jan. 22. To the Editor of The Journal In view of too discussion i n the very recent past reg-ardinaT - the validity ef the constitutional amendment prohibiting the liquor traffic, submitted to the states by congress and which has been ratified by more than the requisite number of states, I am sure the decision of th United States supreme court II n the case of the Missouri ; Pacific Rail way company vs. the' State of Kansas, handed down January. 7. HI,, will be interesting and instructive. ' j The claim has been made by those opposed to tha constitutional amend ment referred to that it was Invalid be cause It did not . receive a two-thirds vote of all the members-elect of both houses of congress. The case depended upon the validity of the Webb-Kenydn law, which was passed toy congress over the veto of President Taf t. The . vote by which it' was so passed was two thirds of a majority, but not two-thirds of all the members-elect of both houses. Chief Justice White delivered the opinion of the court and In the course of his remarks decides that two-thirds of both houses means two-thirds of a quojum present and doing business, and not two thirds of all the members-elect. He says : "The identity between the provision of article 5 of the constitution, giving the power by a. two-thirds vote to submit amendments and -the requirements we are considering as to the two-thirds vote necessary to override a veto, makes the practice as to the one applicable to the other. At the first session of the first cona-ress In 1719 a consideration of the provision authorising the submission of amendments necessarily arose in the submission by congress of the first 10 amendments to the constitution embody ing a bill of rights. They were all adopted and submitted by each house organized as a legislative body pursuant to the constitution, by less than the vote which would have been necessary had the constitutional . provision been given the significance now attributed to it." j Indeed.1 In the case of the submission ef the first 10 amendments it was done by a two-thirds vote of a quorum and not by a two-thirds vote of all the members-elect of both houses of congress. Chief Justice White further on says ; "The construction which was thus giver to the constitution in dealing with a mat ter of such vast importance, and which was necessarily sanctioned by the states, and aU the people, has governed as to every amendment to the constitution submitted from that day to this." . The case clearly holds that two-thirds of both houses means two-thirds of a quorum and not two-thirds of all the members-elect. This being true con cerning the provision regarding the adoption of a bill over the veto of the president, it necessarily follows that the same language used. In the submission of constitutional amendments must be given the same construction. If the con tention of those opposed to the prohibi tion amendment is correct, then no amendment to the constitution has been legally adopted, as every one of them, as is shown.by Justice White's opinion, has Seen submitted by a two-thirds vote of a quorum, and not two-thirds of all the members-eject. I think that this new agitation can safely be tout down as a bit of propa ganda on the part of those opposed; to national prohibtion, rather than as an honest attemnt to criticise the action of con cress. -EDWIN RAWTXEN, Sunt. Oregon Anti-Saloon League On Influenza Prevention Portland. Jan. 22. To the Editor! The Journal Will you kindly give space in vmir arreat and always fair paper, for a few thoughts, which no one iia" compelled to take with inordinate or undue seriousness. I simply wish to Challenge attention. So-called Spanish influenza Is one of the big things up sermost in the public mind at present. Influenza is prevalent and is the cause of suffering, but the prenx "spanisn is the cause of the epidemic It is I new name for an old. old disease. In fluenza, Spanish or otherwise, is in the becrinninr simply a severe cold. This eamrjaien against the influenza Is a cru sade of fright ; and is not altogether an unmixed benefit. Fear Is a mental condition, of much greater consequence - than . the medical profession will admit. Fear is more powerful as well as more rapid in its work of destruction than any drug known to medicine. I have had in my practice at least two deaths from shock caused by a sudden fright. They were both instantaneous and there was not anv Dosslble chance .for doubt. This. cra8a4e fills. the Jay mind with mortal tt&Pr--teW nwxing a cure doubly difficult. "-TWMUJintom of fear, when it becomes fijied, becomes a real entity and has a Wotopowerful ma lign Influence. Personally, 1 have no more fear of Spanish Influenza, germs than I have of catching the measles from the man In the moon. When doctors disagree, what are the sick to do? Hark! I wjjl give you a hint: Heat is the natural antagonist of cold. At the first appearance of the first symptoms, tmake a Judicious appli cation of heat: reverse the machinery of life which has gone wrong as a re sult of the systemic shock caused by the more or less severe ghiil. Continue the perspiring process until all pain Is relieved and soreness all gone. 1 In conclusion, -time , is most import ant. You must not hesitate. If stasis and stagnation Is allowed to take , place and congestion has become a fixed and real condition, a speedy. , restoration cannot be expected, if Indeed a, cure Is at all possible. '. . The secret of cure is counteraction In the initiative. Put no. confidence is serums ; they- are at best just, a guess. Just a speculation, . only prospective. Truth is simple, but unpopular. WILXJAM FRANKLIN PKUDEN. Judicial Presumptaousness Portland, Jan. J80.-r-To the Editor of The Journal The Journal January stated that the American Bar associa tion severely criticised the military ad ministration of justice. The instances of maladministration fully justify the statement that the workings of courts- martial were at times "unworthy of the name of Justice and law." 4 The same must be said of some court findings with regard to alleged violations of the pro hlbltlon laws and other laws. At times (Ires Imposed are exorbitant and pun ishments unreasonably severe. There are laws that have been drawn-loosely. leaving too much to the discretion, or Indiscretion, of the judge. The bone dry law is tan-American. The object of government roust be to protect the law4 abiding citlson in the enjoyment of life, liberty and property. To Interfere with the self-determination of well meaning citizens by any- state authorities, but especially Jjy the judicial, breeds bolshe-i wism. The fathers of this republic rec ognized this fact and took the supreme court out of politics. . . C COLE. With the President ; : -Harrisburg, Jan.. SO. To the . Editor of' The Journal I have believed "all along that the sentiment of the general public was with the president, on his peace mission, despite the - fact that speeches,- editorials - and cablegrams have been used against, him. The fol lowing excerpt from, a . letter which I THE FIRP OF By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow WE sat within the farm-house old Whose windows, looking o'er the bay, : Gave to the sea-breeze, damp and cold, - An easy entrance, night and day. We sat and talked until the nlfht, , Descending, filled the little room: Our faces faded from the sight, v Our voices only broke the gloom. "The very.tbnes in-which we spake' N. Had something strange, I could but mark; The leaves of memory seemed to make A mournful rustlfng in the dark. - - - v - ; Oft died the words upon our lips. ' k As suddenly, from out the fire Built of the wreck of strjuided ships, . The flames would leap and then expire. And, as their splendor flashed. and failed. We thought of wrecks upon the main... , Of ships dismasted, that were hailed i And sent no answer back again. The windows, rattling in their frames. The ocean, roaring up the beach. The. gusty, blast,, the bickering flames, -AU mingled vaguely in our. speech; Until they made themselves a. part - Of fancies floating through, the brain. The long-lost ventures of the heart, ' i That send no answers back again.- O flames that glowed! O hearts that yearned!. : They were indeed too much akin. The drift-wood fire without that burned. The thoughts that burned and glowed within. JOURNAL MAN AT HOME By Fred Lockley (That ft is not only food and. plesaant for brethren to dwell toaether ia unity, put that the time baa come when it ia absolutely neceasery lor them ao to do. and to work in that way. beeidea, is the proposition which Mr. Lockley acta m in his article for tba day. lie sustains his conten tion with a citation from Ufa, on a workins scale, and doesn't so thousand mile from Portland for his ease in point, either. 1- On a recent Sunday night I spoke at the opera house at Camas and thereby hangs a tale. Camas - has done some unusual and noteworthy things during the past two years. To begin with. Camas, with its suburbs. Oak Point and Forest Home-, does not have a popula tion to exceed 3000, and yet on the serv ice flag of this little community there are ,240 stars. This, of course. Is par tially explained when It is understood that the Crown-Willamette paper mill, employing about 100 men, Is the dom inant industry of the community, and that many of the stars on Camas' serv ice flag represent workers in the mill. Camas is setting the pace In more ways than along the line of war work and patriotic endeavor,. The Kev. M. G. Everett, , who presided at the meeting where I - spoke, teld me some most interesting things about Camas. Mr. Kverett hails from Tennessee, is 33 years old. Is full of en thusiasm Chd energy and Is helping to make the eWorld a better place to live In. "How does It happen.' I asked, "that you are. holding services in the opera house? r "Like all small communities, we have too many churdnes," he said. "The Bap tists, Methodists. Presbyterians and Christians have churches here and each tries -to support a minister, A priest comes from Vancouver to conduct serv ices in the Catholic church, and occaj atonal services are held . in the- Gferrnan nitheran chofch. We are so; split up nto ' small and ' ineffective groups that no one church is strong enough to put oh an aggressive program to challenge the attention of men who are doing things In the Industrial world. . ' a , "When I trame. here a year ago last April as pastor of the Presbyterian church. X realized that we were not get ting anywhere along the lines of real service to the community. I realized that in .place of having two. sermons each from five pulpits here each Sun day to mere handfuls of people who represented probably less than 10 per cent of our population, it would be bet ter to have all the people hear some vital message delivered by one - man. . The day for the preaching of creed,- doc trine and dogma has, gone by. Such preaching leads only to-dry rot, decay and spiritual death. - The Ideal arrange ment .for a community eg the- size of Camas is to have a large central build ing, well equipped, with a strong preacher selected by a committee who represent the various religious and humanitarian elements of the community. He should have two helpers a young man to spe cialize in service to men along spiritual, mental and physical lines, a young fel low who 'can act; as umpire at a ball game or judge at a field meet, a good mixer and a woman to visit the women in their homcsanoT help them with all their problems. The money paid to the five preachers in this town and toward the support of the five churches could put a community program of this Icind across. Our church Is ready for such a -program. Why should not the young people work harmoniously In such a community service T They work together without friction or religious animosity In high school. Why not In religious community, work T - "When T first "proposed a union serv ice a good many shook their heads and said It would never work ; that, first of all. the people wouldn't come, and sec ondly, we couldn't raise money to finance ' celved . from a traveling salesman of Portland, and who" was not a supporter of Woodrow Wilson at the last presi dential election, proves to my satisfac tion that I am right. His letter In part reads thus s . Tou.eui be proud of the day you boosted for Woodrow Wilson, back In 1912. i He win go down In history ss ona of the greatest of Americans. It is a shame that sncn men as Penrose, Lodge and Knox "should create the im pression In Europe that there Is dis sension In the ranks of the American neonle. X have -aueationed railroad men. uiiifisra. rn taj. oeoola in all walks and ranks. It Is simply astonishing how everyone is'so staunchly .for him. 14 ooints is the rock on wntcn peace has got to rest, or all of Europe will plunge Into Bolshevism worse than Rus sia's. , It was "fot lor -the American peo ple that he went to .Europe, but for the small nations damorisg for self- determination, who would undoubtedly bo disregarded unless they had a power ful champion. ' T. J. Jr Llebkneeht -and the i War Lords St Johns, Jan. 22. To the Editor of Thef- Journal Until the armistice was signed Liebknecht was the herb of Ger many. He was ana always-nia vesD bitterly opposed to the autocraue rtue af Germany and was counted on as the man who could cause a revolution. Why did opinion change . so suddenly' abotlt this msnT ' Hjndenburg, according to our ' press, - controls the . army, that Is righting the reds,- as they. are called in Germany, and in Tne jour-nan iaai nigm we read that General Ludendorff, the German chief of staff and military 41- re-'rector, is organizing a campaign against DRIFTWOOD the plan. Last April we leased the opera house for each Suffday night for a year. The trustees of our church as sumed all financial responsibility, but oar collections and contributions have taken care of all expenses and SB per cent of the money we have spent has come from people who do not contribute to any regular church. At the first serv ice we held in the opera house we care fully checked all who-came in and found that more than 300 men attended who never went to church. They felt less constraint In coming to the opera house than, in going to church. We are reach ing a class that never goes to church and we are getting our financial sup port from, those, who .have never con- iriDutea to reugious organisations, oaaiy enough, we have never made a single plea for money. The money flows in. As an example, we took up a collection one Sunday night and1 1 found S228 in, the plates. .. "The church has not been on the job to meet the real need of the. people, and it is time we got on- the- job if we hope to -survive. . We have been long on piety but short on service. It is 'Hitne we linked up the piety of the church with the humanitarian interests of the com munlty. emphasising religion, education and patriotism. . "Who are our preachers? Men like yourself: anyone who has a messase army officers, physicians, business men men like Harry Stone and Dr. W. Kerr : professors from Reed college or the Washington State university, and 'ministers who are real men with a real purpose to lift and help. ;Let me give. you one example of the type T of sermons preached here: Last April health conditions -were bad In .Camas. We were having epidemics, while neighboring communities were Immune from them. Rev. Mark Noble, pastor of the Baptist church, who. In spite of his S4 years. Is one of the youngest . and most useful men In Camas, with myself and others, took up the matter with the military authorities, for wo are in the military health zone of Vancouver. The federal authorities sent a , nurse here. who spent three weeks investigating con ditions. Dr. Garrett, state Inspector of dairy products, with Dr. Chalmers, coun ty health officer, and an army officer from Vancouver, came to Camas and took the matter np with our Civic club and with the Commercial club. These three officials spent a day or so visiting dairy bams and back yards, looking up sewer age and sanitary conditions. They took dozens of photographs and had slides made from them.. 'Our text for the next Sunday evening at the opera house was The Gospel of Good Health and Effi ciency." These three men were the speakers. As the talks were made the slides wjre thrown on the screen. When the people in the audience saw the pic tares of their own dirty back yards they were surprised and In some cases very indignant. When they saw . the filthy conditions of some of the dairy barns from which they were buying their milk they were amazed and angry. Tou never saw such an epidemic of cleaning up in your life as took place' during the next -few days. A committee was ap pointed to make a complete survey of the town. A good many unsanitary shacks owned by Pittock at Lead batter, who own a large part of the town. were condemned and torn down. Modem toi lets replaced the disease breeding type we had suffered to exist. Dairy barns were, cleaned up. , Epidemic conditions ceased to exist. "The sectarian church that falls to get into step with the needs of man kind will die. It has no right to ask the public to contribute toward its sup port. We must practise Christian methods as well as preach, them. the Russian Bolshevik. When did these two autocrats decide to espouse the cause of the worklngman? The American people are not satisfied with the European situation,- and this is one of them. The soldiers that killed Lieb knecht and his followers were . called loyal troops. Who were they .loyal to? Surely not to the people that caused the revolution and helped to overthrow the autocracy in Europe? Also, please tell me by whose orders are Hlndenburg and Ludendorff commanding armies, and what for? 1. M. HOLCOMB. Socialist and Christian " alia Walla, Jan. 24. To the Editor of The ' Journal Patrick 0Halloran saya. There is perfect harmony between Socialism . and aU religions, including Christianity." If such is a fact, wby do i Cardinal Gibbons and all of the Roman Catholio press oppose Socialism? While I am not s Socialist Z know a few of them probably SO and not one is a Christian : in fact they talk against the church early and lsrte. A. JOHNSOV. The Fund for Mrs. Roosevelt Bandon, Jan. 1. To the Editor of The Journal I read In Tuesday's Jour nal that a bill had been introduced by Senator Smoot of Utah to give Mrs. Edith Roosevelt $5000 a year and ' free use ' of the malls. Now while we are giving, let us give the mothers of all soldiers killed .or crippled for life In France fSOOO a year and free use of the mails as long as they live. It wouldn't begin to pay them, and X think they are just as good as Mrs. Roosevelt ; perhaps a little more deserving of charity. 1 . - CONSTANT READER. Ragtag and Bobtail Stories From Everywhere Who Wouldn't Be Happy 1 I JH WELL, sah, Ah's ba5k rum wanderin' all ovuh de face o' crea tlon, said Brother Shook, (quoted In the Kansas City Star). wo had been absent for some time. "When mah yallah wife run off wld dat gamblln' man Ah quit home, and Ah's been on de gad evuh Jnce. , "Did yo kotch up wid 'emT' asked Brother Bobshy. "Did I kotch up Wld 'em? Man. -dey kept kotchln'- up wid me, de best I could do. When dat scoun'el stole mah wife Ah left so's Ah wouldn't be yuh when he brung huh back. And. bless goodness, everywhuhs Ah went dah dey. was. twell , It got to be like a bad dream. But dt whlte folks finally slapped de gamblln man in jail and mah wife's fust husband come along and she tuck up wld him. And Ah comes smllln' home to peace and happiness." . VaHllation . This weather is a cruel thing. -As heartiest as a Nero, ' ' Today it ralle like senile spring, -Tomorrow drops to aero, -Boston Transcript. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: The way our big politicians Is peerin' 'round fer a presidential candidate kinder looks like they'd fell down on gluln' Pershing to lead the elephant back to the White House. When about a million more boys gits back from France and our home tralnin' camps mebby they'll tell the bid timers of both parties Where's, a good place to git off at - , The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benent . Of Jourrfkl Readers GENERAL Representative Hawley is confined tor5 his home in Washington on account of illness. - Work on 22 buildings at Fort Whipple, Aria, has been ordered suspended by General March. ' . . William O. Sharp, ambassador- to France, sailed from New York to that country Friday. . Several hundred recruits of the Polish army sailed from New York Friday on the steamer Leviathan. Most of the work of the food adminis tration as such is expected -to be com pleted within the next month. . The Dominion of Canada has decided that all enemy interned prisoners shall be deported with the least possible delay. The steamer Empress of Asia, after an 8000-mile trip from- Liverpool, landed 1871 Canadian soldiers at Victoria Fri day, --j ' The greater portion of her 1400.000 es tate was left by Miss Mary Bums, lx Angeles avlatrix, to be used in fighting tuberculosis. . ' Johns Hopkins university is be queathed S200.000 In the will of Kugen.i G. Mergenthaler, son of the Inventor of the linotype machine. A goverrrment ' brief was filed In the supreme court at Washington Friday up holding the action of the lower court in the case of Eugene V. Debs. 'The Texas legislature has voted to amend the constitution of Texas so as to -put women voters under the same re strictions, as applied to men. The British "Who's Who" of the 1919" issue lists the commander of the Ameri can forces ttn France as "General air , John Joseph Pershing, G. C. B." Repeal of sections of the shipping act so as to permit the building of ships in American yards for foreign account Is proposed in a bill just introduced in the -senate. Three American mlneewner of Chi f-huahua were captured, by Villa a few oays ago ami released alter ne nna given them a lecture on better pay and shorter hours for employes. ."" NORTHWEST NOTES . -5 Sumnter Valley railroad, employes de clare the strike is not yet ended. Pacific college will resume work Mon day, the Influenza ban being lifted on that day. The citizens of Selah, In Clackamas county, are petitioning to have their town incorporated. - The Fischer flouring mills at Rllver ton received an order from the govern ment Friday for 2500 barrels of flour. One veasel from the Pacific fleet Is to be- assigned to Alaska waters to patrol the northern coast and assist wrecked vessels. . , ' The Northwest Parliament of Chris--tlan Ministers closed at Yakima Katur day. The Dalles was chosen as the place of meeting, next year. Increased telephone rates In Washing ton, asked by Postmaster General Burle son, were again suspended Saturday by the public service commission. Three of the most prominent women" of McMlnnvllle Mrs. K. J. Pratt, Mr. S. E. Cummins and Misis- Grace New ell died from Influenza tills week. The Washington legislature has pause,! a bill requiring one year's course In American history and government as a condition of graduation ' from high school. : , . John Flynn Of Baker has received no tification that his brother, Qutncy Klynn.' was killed in action In October. He la the fourth of Baker county soldiers, who went away on the same troop train, to die. FOREIGN The Omsk government, headed by Admiral Kolchak. Is rapidly tncreaainjf Its authority both east ana west of Omsk., - ; Ra strained are the relations between the Csecho-Slovaks and the Poles that a state of war may be declared at any moment J. J. - Hoff. Paris representative of the Standard Oil company, has been ap pointed, a- If night of the Legion of Honor.' . ' The rallied shiDning and food com mittees have- decided to furnish 270,000 tons of foodstuffs to tne starving people of Germany. The body of Rosa Luxemburg, tl.e Spartacan leader -who was killed by a mob. was found Friday in the Lund- wehr canaL , The influenza epidemic, which cauned more than 8000 death among the na tives of the Samoan islands, has about . subsided. , The Brltlshair service at the cloxe of the war was the largest In the world. She had - 21.000 planes, 1300. aeaplaneu and 103 airships.. The Australian government shas sanc tioned the formation of a company to survey an aerial route between Au , trails and the Far Ease. .When Stamps Cost Less; ? Buy More W. S.S ' Stories of achievement In tha aeeumn'a tlon of War tterinta Stamps sent te 1 he Journal and acceptable fer publication wui be awarded a Thrift Stamp.) Here's a lltue tip. - It isn't very often we let good news out so far In advance, but here goes just this once. The U. -S. A. Is going to get back to tba old - two-cent for one-ounce letter postage schedule on July 1. On and after that date it will again cost' but 1 cent to send a poml card. ' . Here's the W. 8 8. feature of it: Prepare to Invest your postage stamp savings in War Savings Stamps. In the couse of a year the average fam ily's postage bill amounts to several dollars. The saving when we get back to the old rates will be con slderatle. Invest this savings with Uncle Sam. - Thrift Stamps and 1510 War Sav ings Stamps now on sale at usual agencies. i i -i t I f,i- e